ed note–another eye-opener that every war-weary Gentile with a vested interest in his/her own future survival needs to read, understand, and take deeply to heart.
Firsto, ladies and Gentile-men, doubtless will erupt the obligatory tidal wave of stupidity on the part of the ‘Trump is owned by d’Jooz’ types who will immediately and without a micro-second’s worth of critical thought or careful analysis, jump on what POTUS DJT said as ‘proof’ of Donald Trump’s subordination to the terrorist Jew Netanyahu in his promise to ‘help him out’.
Remember, ladies and Gentile-men, this is the same POTUS DJT who, in his interview with the very same Barak Ravid whose story appears below, said of Netanyahu–

–the same Netanyahu whom POTUS DJT personally blamed for the Oct. 7th attacks and, in going one step further, said that Netanyahu should be thrown out of office as a result.
So, when POTUS DJT says he is going to ‘help’ him (Netanyahu) ‘out’, what he is saying in his own coded language is that he is going to see to it that Netanyahu is ‘helped’ out of OFFICE.
Besides the fact that POTUS DJT knows that it was Netanyahu who was the source of all the trouble for him from 2016 to 2020, including but not limited to Covid 19, the 2 Impeachments, the stolen election, the criminal prosecutions, etc, he also knows that as long as Netanyahu remains in power that the very real likelihood of WWIII/Armageddon exists, and, as the POTUS has made very clear, preventing the Jewish plan of incinerating the entire world is prioritas primas.
At the very least, what he is signaling to Netanyahu personally is that the only hope that the terrorist warlord has of staying out of prison is Trump’s influence in Israel, and that the only way he will remain ‘free on bail’ is if he steps down as PM.
Therefore, ladies and Gentile-men, look past the one-dimensional ‘analysis’ that undoubtedly (and unfortunately) prevails as the dominant narrative within both the mainstream and alternative media right now relative to all of this, and instead interpret what DJT is really trying to say here, which is that Netanyahu must go before he succeeds in blowing up the entire world.
Barak Ravid for Axios
President Trump told CBS’ ’60 Minutes’ that he’ll ‘be involved’ in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s corruption trial ‘to help him out a little bit.’
Why it matters: Trump has repeatedly intervened in Israel’s judicial system and domestic politics over Netanyahu’s ongoing trial.
What he is saying: Trump told interviewer Norah O’Donnell that Netanyahu is a ‘very talented guy’ and the kind of leader Israel needed in wartime.
‘I don’t think they treat him very well. He’s under trial for some things, and I don’t think they treat him very well,’ he said, adding: ‘We’ll be involved in that to help him out a little bit, because I think it’s very unfair.’
The interview was taped Friday and aired Sunday.
Flashback: During his address to the Israeli parliament last month, Trump went off script and urged President Issac Herzog to pardon Netanyahu, who is standing trial on three corruption charges.
‘Cigars and champagne, who the hell cares about this?’ Trump said, referring to alleged illicit gifts mentioned in one of the charges.
Trump later told reporters that Netanyahu was the one who asked him to bring it up in the speech.
Trump also called for the cancellation of Netanyahu’s trial in a string of posts on Truth Social in June.
The big picture: Netanyahu is standing trial for charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three separate cases.
He’s accused of accepting more than $200,000 in gifts from wealthy businessmen, and of granting regulatory benefits worth hundreds of millions of dollars to a telecom tycoon in exchange for favorable news coverage.
The trial has stretched on for four years, in part due to Netanyahu’s repeated legal delay tactics. The former head of Israel’s domestic security agency has accused the prime minister of trying to use his executive powers to stall the case.
Driving the news: In the interview, Trump acknowledged he ‘had to push Netanyahu’ to get the Gaza peace deal.
Trump added ‘I didn’t like certain things that he did, and you saw what I did about that.’
Trump claimed the ceasefire in Gaza was ‘solid’ and not fragile, though it has faced serious challenges.