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In a Shift, Trump Tells Netanyahu ‘I Will Decide’ What Is Right for Israel

October 27, 2025
in News
A New Dynamic in the Trump-Netanyahu Relationship
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The parade of Trump administration officials to Jerusalem over the past week to ensure Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sticks to the cease-fire in Gaza drew a catchy shorthand in the Israeli news media, playing on the prime minister’s nickname: “Bibi-sitting.”

Beyond the supposed adult supervision being given to a sovereign ally, however, was a more striking change. A distinct new phase in the U.S.-Israel relationship is being cemented, particularly in the relationship between the two countries’ leaders.

In President Trump’s first term, he showered Mr. Netanyahu with political gifts, including recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and recognizing Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights.

Early in his current term, too, Mr. Trump indulged Mr. Netanyahu, briefly feeding right-wing Israelis’ fantasies of depopulating and developing the Gaza Strip as a Middle Eastern “Riviera.”

He then backed Mr. Netanyahu in March when he broke a cease-fire with Hamas. And he delivered an entirely new level of support to Israel by deploying B-2 bombers to strike Iran’s nuclear sites in June.

“The term used in Israel was that he works for us,” Reuven Hazan, a professor of political science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said of Mr. Trump. “Everybody thought that Trump was mouthing words that Bibi wrote for him.”

That is no longer the case.

Rather, Mr. Trump has increasingly aired his frustrations with Mr. Netanyahu. One early example was Mr. Trump’s eruption at the prime minister over an Israeli airstrike on Iran in June after a cease-fire had been reached in that 12-day war.

After Israel’s botched airstrike on Hamas negotiators in Qatar last month, Mr. Trump, meeting with Mr. Netanyahu in the Oval Office, forced him to call the Qatari prime minister and apologize.

Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, elaborated in a “60 Minutes” interview on Oct. 20.

“I think he felt like the Israelis were getting a little bit out of control in what they were doing,” he said, “and that it was time to be very strong and stop them from doing things that he felt were not in their long-term interests.”

It was an extraordinary revelation by Mr. Kushner, who indicated that Mr. Trump believed he was acting in Israel’s interests and that Mr. Netanyahu was not.

Mr. Trump went on to push Mr. Netanyahu into agreeing to his Gaza peace plan — including an acknowledgment of Palestinian aspirations to statehood, which the Israeli leader adamantly opposes. A day later, Mr. Trump told Axios: “He’s got to be fine with it. He has no choice. With me, you got to be fine.”

For all of his tough talk toward Mr. Netanyahu, Mr. Trump and his aides remain supportive of Israel, as he demonstrated abundantly on his trip to Jerusalem this month. And he continues to threaten Hamas with harsh action if it fails to meet its commitment to return all the bodies of Israelis — though in a social media post on Saturday, he made it clear that “other countries” would be the ones to “take action” against Hamas if it did not comply.

Israelis have begun to question how long the United States will keep up the pressure if Mr. Trump shows signs of losing interest.

“He doesn’t have staying power,” Mr. Hazan said. “He can’t continue to be the Bibi-sitter. And he can’t continue having people flying in. The question is: Who will break first?”

The president hasn’t just asserted his dominance over Mr. Netanyahu in relation to Gaza. Mr. Trump told reporters in mid-October that when it comes to a potential two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians, “I will decide what I think is right.”

And in an interview with Time magazine, Mr. Trump was asked whether he believed Marwan Barghouti, a popular Palestinian figure convicted in 2004 on terrorism charges for his role in attacks that killed five people, should be released from Israeli prison.

Mr. Barghouti was not among the 250 Palestinian prisoners serving long sentences whom Israel released in a trade for hostages held in Gaza. Mr. Trump said he had just been discussing the idea of releasing Mr. Barghouti, adding, “I’ll be making a decision.”

I, he said again. Not we.

Mr. Trump has also rejected, in increasingly emphatic terms, the idea that Israel would annex parts of the occupied West Bank. This is a longstanding goal of Mr. Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition partners and one that has gained support since a host of countries recognized Palestinian statehood last month.

“It will not happen,” Mr. Trump said in the Time interview. “Israel would lose all of its support from the United States if that happened.”

The U.S. effort to sustain the truce in Gaza appears to have constrained Mr. Netanyahu as well.

On the ground, Israeli officials are accustoming themselves to a new arrangement in which U.S. counterparts appear to be taking a more assertive role in maintaining the cease-fire. When Israel threatened to stop all humanitarian aid from entering Gaza after two of its soldiers were killed on Oct. 19, the order was reversed within hours, and trucks carried aid into Gaza the next day. Israeli news media attributed the reversal to U.S. intervention.

The details of that arrangement are taking shape at a new Civil-Military Coordination Center, set up by about 200 U.S. military personnel in Kiryat Gat, in southern Israel. Both Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio toured the center last week.

U.S. military officials said the center would monitor the fulfillment of the cease-fire agreement and help facilitate the flow of humanitarian, logistical and security assistance from international counterparts into Gaza.

The United States has even begun operating drones over Gaza, suggesting that officials want to have their own understanding, independent of Israel’s, of what is happening.

It is all quite a bit for Israelis to process.

It was not so long ago that Mr. Netanyahu plastered giant campaign billboards on skyscrapers in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv showing his face alongside Mr. Trump’s, with a slogan proclaiming him in “another league.”

Now, Mr. Netanyahu appears diminished in stature next to the president, Mr. Hazan said, like the governor of a state rather than the leader of a country.

A survey by Israeli’s public broadcaster on Sunday found that 48 percent of Israelis believed Israel had become a “U.S. protectorate.” Only 29 percent disagreed.

In remarks to his cabinet on Sunday, Mr. Netanyahu felt compelled to address the issue head-on.

“Israel is an independent country,” he said, repeating himself moments later.

That he had to say so — twice — was its own admission.

It is a far cry from the days when Mr. Netanyahu seemed to revel in his battles with American presidents, and often won them.

He defied President Joseph R. Biden Jr., saying Israelis would “fight with our fingernails” if Mr. Biden cut off arms shipments.

He defied President Barack Obama by addressing Congress to denounce Mr. Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran. And he enraged President Bill Clinton so much that Mr. Clinton asked, in memorably salty terms, just whose country was the superpower.

Israel is heading into an election year, though the date of the vote is not yet known. Mr. Trump has repeatedly been the bearer of very generous gifts to Mr. Netanyahu before his re-election campaigns.

But Mr. Trump is now making clear that he can also pose a threat to the prime minister.

“I think Bibi understands better than Trump that Trump can undermine his electoral prospects with one social post,” said Nimrod Novik, who was an adviser to former Prime Minister Shimon Peres and is now a fellow at the Israel Policy Forum.

“The moment Trump distances himself from him — either by saying, ‘This guy is bad news,’ or even more softly, by saying, ‘I will work equally closely with any Israeli prime minister’ — that’s enough to affect things.”

Which raises a somewhat fanciful but nonetheless intriguing question.

If Mr. Netanyahu’s political weakness, Mr. Trump’s outsize popularity among Israeli voters and Mr. Trump’s drive for a peace agreement all endure, might Mr. Netanyahu conclude that the key to his political survival is not blocking a Palestinian state, but making one possible?

David M. Halbfinger is the Jerusalem bureau chief, leading coverage of Israel, Gaza and the West Bank. He also held that post from 2017 to 2021. He was the Politics editor of The Times from 2021 to 2025.

The post In a Shift, Trump Tells Netanyahu ‘I Will Decide’ What Is Right for Israel appeared first on New York Times.

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