
The long-standing strategic alliance between the United States and Israel has descended into unprecedented acrimony this week. Mainstream Israeli publications and political figures are openly accusing US President Donald Trump of abandoning the Jewish state to its foremost regional adversary following a breakthrough interim agreement with Iran.
The initial diplomatic pact—which establishes the broad parameters to bring an end to the active, joint US-Israeli military campaign against Iran—has triggered a wave of public shock and political fury across Israel. Editorial pages and news broadcasts are dominated by a profound sense of betrayal, with commentators widely panning the diplomatic move as a dangerous strategic capitulation.
The most scathing indictment of the White House appeared in Israel Hayom, a widely circulated Hebrew-language daily traditionally recognized for its staunchly conservative, pro-Trump editorial stance. The newspaper is owned by the estate of the late billionaire casino mogul and influential Trump mega-donor Miriam Adelson.
Written in the form of an open letter to the US President, a blistering op-ed penned by journalist Danny Zaken went as far as to accuse Trump of executing a “surrender agreement with a murderous and cruel terror regime.” The piece, titled “You could have been the greatest president of all, but you failed,” pulled no punches, claiming the administration had gravely compromised the security interests of the enlightened world and “turned the hourglass over to a new war.”
”You betrayed us, the Israelis,” Zaken wrote, further arguing that the sudden shift vindicated Trump’s domestic critics. “The broad smile on former President Barack Obama’s face contained so much mockery toward the man who had described his agreement as the worst ever,” the text noted, drawing a direct, painful comparison to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear deal that Trump famously dismantled in 2018 during his first term in office.
Regional analysts note that the fierce media backlash underscores how rapidly the political landscape has shifted for the American president in the eyes of the Israeli public.
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”Donald Trump was until recently the most popular foreign figure in Israel—but he has now been turned into a villain,” observed Hagai Ram, a professor at Ben Gurion University and author of Iranophobia: The Logic of an Israeli Obsession.
According to Ram, the current climate is driven by an deep-seated “all-encompassing sense of American betrayal,” coupled with long-standing systemic anxieties regarding Iranian regional hegemony. The anxiety has only been magnified by local media reports framing the diplomatic breakthrough as an “Iranian trap” that offers Tehran billions of dollars in economic relief and formalizes the reopening of the crucial Strait of Hormuz without completely dismantling its nuclear or ballistic missile capabilities.
While the Trump administration maintains that the interim memorandum of understanding guarantees Iran will never be permitted to develop operational nuclear weapons, Israeli political leaders from across the political spectrum remain deeply unconvinced. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his allies have actively sought to decouple their localized military campaign against Iran-backed groups like Hezbollah from Washington’s broader diplomatic off-ramp, vowing to protect Israel’s security borders independently if necessary.


