EXPLAINERMedia have often reported about rifts between Israeli and American leaders, but it has not changed US policy towards
Israel.US President
Donald Trump, right, greets Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu after a joint news conference at the White House in Washington, DC, the US, on February 15, 2017 [Kevin Lamarque/Reuters]Published On 18 Jun 2026The deal between the
United States and
Iran to end the US-
Israel war on
Iran has faced fierce opposition from
Israel, including Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu.
Israel has continued to bomb
Lebanon in what appears to be a violation of the deal formally signed on Wednesday by US President
Donald Trump and his Iranian counterpart,
Masoud Pezeshkian.Trump has expressed his displeasure at the continued Israeli attacks on
Lebanon. Netanyahu “has to be more responsible” in
Lebanon, the US president said at the
Group of Seven (G7) summit in France on Tuesday. “I’m not happy” with
Israel’s invasion and handling of
Hezbollah, he said.On Sunday, Trump condemned
Israel’s bombing of
Beirut, the Lebanese capital, just moments before the deal with
Iran was to be locked.The US media have published stories based on anonymous sources of rifts between US presidents and Israeli leaders, but such reported tensions have not wavered US support for its close ally. The Trump-brokered deal to end the Gaza war, experts say, gave
Israel an opportunity to deepen its occupation of the Palestinian enclave.In fact, some of the most bitter public disputes between the US and Israeli leaders have been followed by deeper security cooperation and sustained military support for
Israel.Netanyahu was scathing in his attack on former US President
Barack Obama for inking the 2015 nuclear deal with
Iran, but that did not stop the US administration under Obama from rewarding
Israel with the biggest military aid package ($38bn) in the two countries’ history.Here’s the charted history of clashes between the US and Israeli leaders that have shaped the bilateral relationship.US President
Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu meet in Washington, DC in 2017 [File: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters]What’s up with Trump and Netanyahu?
Israel has been furious at the US’s deal with
Iran that mandates ending hostilities on all fronts, including in
Lebanon.Israeli forces now control some 20 percent of
Lebanon’s territory, and Netanyahu and his cabinet colleagues have vowed that the Israeli military would not withdraw from the country’s land.In a rare move, the US president appeared to lecture
Israel over civilian casualties in its strikes on the region. “Too many people have been killed. And you do not have to knock down an apartment every time you are looking for somebody,” Trump said on Tuesday, referring to Netanyahu’s tactics in
Lebanon, which mirror
Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza.The US media has been rife with reports of simmering tensions between Trump and Netanyahu. On June 2, US-based news outlet Axios reported that Trump called Netanyahu “f***ing crazy” and berated him over
Israel’s escalation in
Lebanon, where nearly 4,000 people have been killed and 1.2 million displaced.Israeli media reported in May last year of a rift between Trump and Netanyahu over the latter’s trip to the Middle East that excluded
Israel and over Washington’s engagement of
Iran and its regional allies, the Houthis.Trump, who brokered the Gaza ceasefire, persuaded Netanyahu to accept the deal to end that war. He reportedly told Netanyahu, “Bibi, you can’t fight the world” while pushing him to sign the deal.Have US and Israeli leaders clashed before?Eisenhower vs Ben-Gurion (1956-57)Perhaps the most serious US-
Israel confrontation ever came during the Suez Crisis.
Israel had joined Britain and France in attacking Egypt after Cairo nationalised the Suez Canal, leaving then-US President Dwight Eisenhower furious.Washington feared the war would strengthen Soviet influence in the Arab world as Eisenhower publicly demanded that then-Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion withdraw Israeli forces, reportedly threatening economic and diplomatic pressure. Egypt was able to retain control of the waterway.Middle East analysts look back at this as the strongest pressure a US president has successfully exerted on
Israel.The incident happened years before the US-Israeli ties were solidified after the 1967 war, when
Israel captured the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza.Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir meets US President George Bush on November 15, 1989 at the White House in Washington, DC [Ira Schwarz/Reuters]Bush vs Shamir (1991-92)After the Gulf War, US President George Bush sought Arab-Israeli peace talks and opposed the expansion of Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.The Bush administration delayed $10b in loan guarantees sought by Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir until
Israel addressed settlement concerns.This resulted in a public standoff, with Bush infamously describing himself as “one lonely little guy” on Capitol Hill, pushing back against pro-
Israel lobbying attempts.However, it did not end up reducing the aid fundamentally, and the military relationship continued and expanded under subsequent administrations.Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, Jordan’s King Hussein, US President Bill Clinton, and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu gather on the first day of a group Middle East crisis summit meeting on October 1, 1996 in Washington, DC [Win McNamee/Reuters]Clinton vs Netanyahu (1996-99)Barely a month into office for the first time, in 1996, Netanyahu met US President Bill Clinton in Washington. That did not end well.Clinton reportedly asked his aides afterwards: “Who the f*** does he think he is? Who’s the f***ing superpower here?”While Clinton came into office deeply invested in the Oslo Accords launched under former Israeli PM Yitzhak Rabin, Netanyahu was opposed to the Oslo stipulation that called for the freezing of settlements. Netanyahu later boasted about how he undermined the Oslo process.
Israel’s settler population has grown from 250,000 in the 1990s to 700,000 today.Despite their strained ties, Clinton devoted political capital to brokering the 1998 Wye River Memorandum, which promised Palestinians faster and further autonomy. It involved intensive negotiations between Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.In May next year, the Netanyahu-led coalition collapsed, and Ehud Barak took over as
Israel’s prime minister.US President
Barack Obama, right, meets with Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu on May 18, 2009, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC [Larry Downing/Reuters]Obama vs Netanyahu (2009-16)This was perhaps the most public clash in recent decades.The Obama-Netanyahu relationship deteriorated first over Israeli settlement construction in the occupied West Bank and later over the US administration’s negotiations with
Iran over its nuclear programme.The confrontation peaked in 2015 when Netanyahu accepted an invitation from Republicans to address Congress and speak out against Obama’s
Iran policy without coordinating with the White House.Netanyahu argued the proposed nuclear agreement “paves
Iran’s path to the bomb”. Obama administration officials criticised the move, and several Democrats boycotted the address.But still, next year, Obama signed the biggest cheque to
Israel, worth over $38bn.“America’s commitment to
Israel’s security is unshakeable,” the White House said in a statement announcing the aid. “For as long as the state of
Israel has existed, the
United States has been
Israel’s greatest friend and partner, a fact underscored again today.”Is
Israel still an asset for the US?Netanyahu and Trump remain in a complicated relationship.“Trump likes Netanyahu because there is something that reminds him of himself,” said Yossi Mekelberg, a senior consulting fellow with the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House, a London-based think tank. “Someone that is transactional, self-serving, and ready to go to war – that’s appealing to Trump.”