Trump says ‘there would be no Israel’ if not for him after clash with Netanyahu

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by ConversationLow9545

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Donald Trump has claimed that “there would be no Israel” if not for him, as he denied he had been “tricked” into the ongoing conflict with Iran.

The US president and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently had a furious call over the war, according to an Axios report, with Trump said to have called his counterpart “crazy”.

In a wide-ranging interview with the conservative podcast Pod Force One released on Wednesday, Trump pushed back at suggestions he had been manoeuvred into starting the war three months ago.

“I’m the one that started it,” the president insisted. “I started it because we can’t let them [Iran] have a nuclear weapon. If there wasn’t me there would be no Israel right now.”

During the interview, the president was asked directly about the call with Netanyahu and whether reports of the ill-tempered exchange were accurate.

open image in gallery Donald Trump reportedly had a heated call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ( AFP/Getty )

“Axios reported that you had a phone call with BB Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, in which you were angry with him,” podcast host and conservative commentator Miranda Devine said, before detailing the claims.

“You said ‘are you f***ing crazy’, ‘what are you f***ing doing’, ‘I helped you stay out of jail’. Is that true? Did you speak to him in those terms?

Trump responded: “I did. I wouldn’t say angry, I was a little bit perturbed at his constantly fighting with Lebanon. At some point I said, ‘Bibi you’ve got to stop this. You’ve got to stop it’.”

But he insisted that the pair remain cordial.

“We have a very good relationship,” Trump added. “I like him a lot. I’ve worked very well with him.”

open image in gallery Trump said he wanted to meet Iran's current supreme leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei ( AFP/Getty )

The president’s latest remarks come as US and Iran exchanged fresh strikes in the region on Wednesday, with discussions on a ceasefire agreement appearing to have reached a stalemate. Iran has insisted that any ceasefire deal is applied to Lebanon, where fighting between Israel and Hezbollah has continued.

Trump insisted that Iran has agreed not to have a nuclear weapon in the interview but said the regime could still “change their mind”.

“I did have to say we have to do something about Iran, because regardless of how well we’re doing [economically] we can’t let them have a nuclear weapon,” he said. “They’ve already agreed they’re not going to have a nuclear weapon.”

“I mean, now they can change their mind, but that was one of the things they’ve had to agree, they’ve agreed to that. That was the big thing.”

Trump also said that new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei has been involved in discussions with the US and that he is giving his approval in talks. He added that he will “probably” meet with Khamenei at “some point”.

open image in gallery Smoke rising from the site of an Israeli strike that targeted the village of Kfar Tibnit in Lebanon on Wednesday ( AFP/Getty )

The new supreme leader has not been seen in public since his father Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in US-Israeli air strikes on 28 February. He is reported to have been seriously injured in the attack but has continued to issue instructions, according to reports.

The lack of progress on a peace deal has led to fresh fears the region could be plunged into further chaos.

One person was killed and at least 63 were injured after an Iranian drone strike hit Kuwait International Airport on Wednesday, authorities said. Bahrain also reported intercepting Iranian drones and missiles in its airspace.

Iran accused the US of violating a ceasefire agreement and said that Kuwait and Bahrain bore “direct and clear responsibility” for attacks against Iran.

The US military said it had launched strikes on an Iranian military ground control station on Qeshm Island in the Strait of Hormuz in response to the attacks on Bahrain and Kuwait.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps acknowledged the attacks but said the strikes were in retaliation for attacks on Qeshm Island.

Trump has claimed that reports that discussions have ended are “false” and insisted that they are ongoing. However, Iran’s state news agencies have reported that Tehran’s negotiators and US representatives had stopped exchanging messages days ago.

bxzidff on June 4th, 2026 at 02:03 UTC »

Is this even a genuine conflict? Or one that is played up because they've found at that it's better optics to not be seen as so incredibly close when a majority of even young Republicans hold a negative view? Hard to prove without any change in policy, which wouldn't happen for a minor disagreement anyway

AnomalyNexus on June 3rd, 2026 at 18:49 UTC »

He always seems to know what to say to offend everyone

Tulipage on June 3rd, 2026 at 18:33 UTC »

It's strange that even someone who's the president of the United States, theoretically the single most powerful person on Earth, can still have delusions of grandeur. The second Trump administration has introduced us to so many things previously thought impossible.