Trump and his deputies have expressed their frustration with Israel in language far more blunt and excoriating than Biden ever deployed.

 

ed note–as always, lots of ‘must knows’ that every war-weary Gentile with a vested interest in his/her own future survival needs to understand about all of this.

 

Firsto, ladies and Gentile-men, a theme that appears often here on this humble little informational endeavor, which is that anyone seeking to achieve any kind of functional undestanding of what is going on in the Middle East as it relates to the terrorist Jewish state must, repeat, MUST, read what it is that the Jews themselves write. It is not enough to get all your ‘education’ and ‘enlightenment’ on this or any other thorny issue where the Jews are involved from videos on YouTube, Rumble, or Bitchute.

 

Now, having said that, as it relates to the piece below in describing the relationship that exists between POTUS DJT and the terrorist warlord Netanyahu, nota bene the following–

 

As our unesteemed Hebraic author makes very, very, clear, the ‘energy’ existing between POTUS DJT and the terrorist Jew Netanyahu is certainly not ‘the norm’. Not only is POTUS DJT using language and engaging in powerful political actions that run contrary to what the Jews demand (and, just as importantly, HAVE DEMANDED from other US Presidents and received) but as well, at least by superficial appearances, the deadly viper Netanyahu is not striking back as he is biologically and gravitationally inclined to do.

 

That is, of course, is not striking back YET, or at least as far as any of us can see…

 

The point is, fellow Gentiles, that despite the tidal wave of stupidity that unfortunately prevails and predominates within those discussional ‘circles’ these days where various ‘experts’ claim that the relationship between POTUS DJT and the terrorist Jew Netanyahu is not just ‘submisssive’ on the part of the POTUS, but indeed, far exceeds the submissiveness of all previous US Presidents combined, this is simply not the case, AT ALL.

 

Indeed, as events make clear on a daily basis, there is a war going on between POTUS DJT and the Kapo di Tutti Kapi of the Kosher Nostra Krime Konsortium, Beelzu-Bibi Netanyahu, and all one need do in coming to this conclusion for him/herself is to read what the Jews themselves are saying on the issue and who, despite their penchant for dishonesty and duplicity, nevertheless, have nothing to gain and everything to lose by lying about it.

 

 

Ron Kampeas for the Jewish Telegraph Agency

 

When Benjamin Netanyahu met with Donald Trump in February, the Israeli prime minister’s first meeting with the president in his second term, he made clear that he hoped the days of ‘daylight’ between the two countries were gone.

 

‘When Israel and the United States don’t work together, that creates problems,’ Netanyahu said then. ‘When the other side sees daylight between us, and occasionally, in the last few years, to put it mildly, they saw daylight – then it’s more difficult.’

 

The dig was at President Joe Biden and the differences between him and Netanyahu over Israel’s conduct of its war with Hamas in Gaza.

 

Trump and his deputies have since then expressed their frustrations with Israel in language far more blunt and excoriating than Biden ever deployed and have put their finger on the scale in shaping Israeli leaders’ actions and words more than Biden ever tried to do.

 

‘Frankly, it’s baffling to me that somehow the President continues to get away with it,’ said Halie Soifer, the CEO of the Jewish Democratic Council of America.

 

Soifer noted that there was barely any pushback when Trump took actions that undermined Israel, including brokering a separate deal with Houthis in Yemen that allowed it to continue attacking Israeli ships while allowing American ships to pass, and visiting Qatar, a backer of Hamas, but not Israel, during a Middle East tour earlier this year.

 

She said that what was striking about Trump’s actions was not necessarily the results, but rather the underlying assumption that he must be obeyed.

 

‘He has actually pushed Netanyahu quite a bit and used pretty sharp language in the process, and the extent to which he has threatened, I would say, is language that would be wholly unacceptable if it were a Democrat in any circumstance,’ she said.

 

She offered an example: ‘He was emphatic in saying that Israel should not be annexing the West Bank and said that Israel would lose ‘all support from the United States’ if it happened.’

 

Indeed, Netanyahu and his supporters have waged rebellions and won concessions over far less significant incursions against his authority.

 

Yet the prime minister, who just over a year ago was deploying social media videos and a speech to Congress to criticize Biden, has been silent in the face of the blunt and at times vulgar broadsides he has endured from Trump and his top deputies.

 

Vice President JD Vance, speaking to college students this week, further underscored the conundrum facing Netanyahu and pro-Israel voices when he emphasized that he did not see US support for Israel as sacrosanct and noted that Trump makes up his own mind when it comes to Israel.

 

‘When people say that Israel is somehow manipulating or controlling the President of the United States, they’re not manipulating or controlling this President of the United States,’ he said.

 

Joel Rubin, a former deputy assistant secretary of state in the Obama administration, said Netanyahu was in a bind because Republicans in Congress, who, in any other circumstance, would confront a President who criticized Israel, are afraid of Trump.

 

‘They’re willing to fall in line if that’s what he wants,’ Rubin said. ‘They may try to do their work [lobbying for Israel] behind the scenes.’

 

 

Democrats’ fallout with Netanyahu

 

Democrats, having fallen out with Netanyahu because of tensions during the Obama and Biden presidencies, are not going to step into that breach, said Rubin, who was the Jewish outreach official during the 2020 presidential campaign of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a strident Israel critic.

 

‘Do Democrats want to take issue with that, that Trump is acting like he’s the prime minister of Israel, or do they kind of agree with some of that he’s doing?’ he said.

 

It was during the June Iran war that Trump told the press outside the White House that Israel and Iran ‘don’t know what the f— they’re doing.’ Last week alone, Vice President JD Vance called the Knesset ‘stupid’ for voting to annex the West Bank, and Steve Witkoff, Trump’s top Middle East envoy, said the administration felt ‘betrayed’ by Israel’s strike on Hamas targets in Qatar.

 

The remark evinced barely a whimper from Israel, a stark contrast with the weeks of agonizing that eventuated when an anonymous Obama White House official in 2014 called Netanyahu ‘chickens–t’ for dithering on peace and on how best to confront Iran.

 

The ensuing diplomatic turmoil culminated in an apology to Netanyahu from the White House and from then-Secretary of State John Kerry.

 

Trump not only doesn’t do apologies, he has a track record of sacking anyone who works for him who does.

 

In fact, when apologies are forthcoming in the US-Israeli relationship, they are from the Israeli side. In a White House meeting last month, Trump made a show of getting Netanyahu to apologize to Qatar’s prime minister for the strike.

 

Netanyahu’s far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, groveled in a televised apology for having advised Saudi Arabia to ‘keep riding camels in the desert’ if the kingdom conditions a peace deal on a path to Palestinian statehood, remarks that infuriated the Trump administration, which is trying to bring the Saudis into the Abraham Accords the normalization deals Trump brokered in 2020 at the end of his first term.

 

Netanyahu scrambled to tamp down the significance of the Knesset vote during Vance’s visit, which called for the annexation of the West Bank, after Vance called the vote ‘a very stupid political stunt, and I personally take some insult to it.’

 

The vote, Netanyahu said, was ‘a deliberate political provocation by the opposition to sow discord during Vice President JD Vance’s visit to Israel.’

 

It was a striking contrast with the last time the Israeli right wing thumbed its nose at a visiting prime minister, when Biden visited Israel in 2010 to emphasize the US-Israel friendship – and Israel announced plans to build in a disputed portion of Jerusalem.

 

VP Biden and then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton rebuked Netanyahu – but in private, not on the Ben Gurion Airport tarmac, as Vance did. In response, Netanyahu deployed his diplomats and pro-Israel advocates in the United States to complain that the American reaction was over the top.

 

Biden believed he had a close relationship with Israel and was, in fact, reluctant to press Israel hard as it retaliated against Hamas for its October 7 2023 attacks and came under fire from Democrats for not doing enough to leverage US aid to contain Israel.

 

To the degree that Netanyahu has expressed unhappiness with tensions between Israel and the Trump administration that seeks to roll back US military alliances, including with Israel, it has been only through leaks.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discover more from The Ugly Truth

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading