Sunday, May 24, 2026

Trump requested Muslim leaders normalize ties with Israel if Iran deal reached — report


Trump requested Muslim leaders normalize ties with Israel if Iran deal reached — report
TOI


US President Donald Trump told the leaders of several Arab and Muslim countries in a Saturday phone call that he expects them to normalize relations with Israel if he reaches a deal to end the war with Iran, two US officials tell the Axios news site.

During a phone call, the leaders of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, and Bahrain all told Trump “we are with you on this deal” that is emerging with Tehran, one of the officials say.

Another official with knowledge of the call says Trump told the leaders he would call Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu next, and that he hoped he would join a group call with the Muslim and Arab leaders in the future.

Trump then said he wanted those countries that have yet to join the Abraham Accords to do so and normalize relations with Israel, the two officials say.

Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Pakistan have never established formal ties with Israel.

“There was silence on the line and Trump joked and asked if they are still there,” one of the officials tell Axios.



IDF frustration grows over emerging Iran deal: 'Buying temporary quiet for long-term nuclear threat'


IDF frustration grows over emerging Iran deal: 'Buying temporary quiet for long-term nuclear threat'



Senior IDF officials are expressing deep frustration over the emerging agreement between the Trump administration and Iran, describing the framework published so far as “a bad agreement for Israel.”

According to senior military officials, the deal does not provide a sufficient answer to Iran’s nuclear program, which Israel views as its central strategic threat. They are also concerned that it fails to address Iran’s ballistic missile project, which Tehran could accelerate quickly.

The IDF is also especially worried about a possible ceasefire arrangement in Lebanon involving Hezbollah.

“The agreement must not include Lebanon,” a senior defense official said.
IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir visited Northern Command on Sunday and approved fire plans for the continuation of fighting against Hezbollah, including deep inside Lebanon. However, according to defense officials, those plans have not been approved at this stage by the political echelon, in part because of U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to advance the diplomatic move with Iran.

“The IDF continues to monitor regional developments, is prepared to immediately return to high-intensity fighting and to further weaken the Iranian terror regime and its capabilities,” Zamir said. “We will maintain readiness and operational flexibility for as long as required.”
During the visit, Zamir said the IDF continues to operate against Hezbollah across all dimensions.
“We are determined to deepen the damage to Hezbollah across all of its systems,” he said. “The damage to the terrorist organization is systematic and consistent. We will not let up.”
Zamir later visited the headquarters of the 401st Brigade, met with the acting brigade commander and spoke with commanders and troops. He also addressed the serious wounding last week of the brigade commander, Col. Meir Biderman, in southern Lebanon, and praised the combat spirit of the brigade’s commanders.

Israeli officials say Trump envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner were the driving forces behind the scenes in advancing the understandings with Tehran, pressing the president to “close the event” and bring about rapid regional stabilization, even at the cost of Israel’s security.

Defense officials are especially concerned that the agreement could leave Iran as a “nuclear threshold state,” meaning a country that retains the knowledge, infrastructure and enriched material needed to break out toward a nuclear weapon in a short period of time.

The IDF believes that halting the fighting without fully dismantling Iran’s enrichment facilities and removing enriched uranium from Iranian territory could allow Tehran to rebuild its capabilities under an American diplomatic umbrella.
“Iran must not emerge strengthened,” a senior IDF official said. “They must not be allowed to come out stronger.”
There is also disappointment at IDF headquarters that the emerging agreement does not deeply address Iran’s ballistic missile program or its network of proxies across the region.
Defense officials warn that renewed money flows to Tehran as a result of sanctions relief could help rebuild Hezbollah, the Shiite militias in Iraq and the Houthis.
A senior defense official said Israel fears the deal could amount to “buying temporary quiet at the price of a long-term threat.”


Trump said to assure Netanyahu he will thwart Iran nuke program as Israel fears ‘very bad’ deal


Trump said to assure Netanyahu he will thwart Iran nuke program as Israel fears ‘very bad’ deal


Israel deeply concerned over plan that gives Iran time, money, falls short of key security needs, with regime’s nuclear activities only up for discussion later, no commitment to export uranium stockpile, terror proxies intact

US President Donald Trump sought to reassure Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a phone call that a final agreement with Iran will fully dismantle Tehran’s nuclear program, a senior Israeli official said in a statement on Sunday, as details emerged of a deal being cobbled together with Iran that appeared to leave central Israeli and American demands unmet and prompted profound concerns in Jerusalem.

According to multiple reports, confirmed by Israeli officials, the initial deal will focus on extending an existing ceasefire for another 60-days and opening the choked Strait of Hormuz to vital shipping, with the key issue of Iran’s nuclear activities relegated to discussions during that period, and no requirement for Iran to export its stockpile of highly enriched uranium. In addition, the plan is said to include a ceasefire in the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Lebanese terror group Hezbollah, but does not include disarming the Iran-backed group.

Trump “clarified that he will stand firm in the negotiations on his longstanding demand for the dismantlement of Iran’s nuclear program and the removal of all enriched uranium from Iranian territory, and that he will not sign a final agreement without these conditions being met,” the unnamed senior official said.

The call took place on Saturday night.

Washington was keeping Jerusalem updated on the negotiations “over a memorandum of understanding to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and enter negotiations toward a final agreement on the points that remain in dispute,” the statement read, adding that Netanyahu thanked Trump for his “exceptional commitment to Israel’s security.”

Trump had declared on Saturday afternoon that the US and Iran were finalizing a deal to end the war, saying that the Memorandum of Understanding “has been largely negotiated” and would be announced shortly. The New York Times reported that the US has almost completely excluded Israel from the negotiations.

For his part, Netanyahu told Trump that Israel will retain its freedom of action against “all threats in all arenas,” the official said. “The prime minister emphasized that Israel will preserve its freedom of action against threats in all arenas, including Lebanon, and President Trump reiterated his support for this principle,” the official said.

The phone call came after last week, the two leaders were said to have held a tense conversation about how best to proceed with Iran. Netanyahu was said to have favored renewing strikes while Trump wanted to give more time for diplomacy.

Netanyahu will hold a limited security cabinet meeting Sunday evening to discuss the emerging US-Iran deal, an aide to one of the attending ministers confirmed to The Times of Israel.


There has been no public statement from Netanyahu or other senior ministers amid the growing reports of a nearing deal.

However, the Maariv outlet cited an unnamed member of the security cabinet as saying in a private conversation that if the reported terms of the deal are accurate, then it was “very bad.”

According to the outlet, Israeli officials are most worried that the subject of Iran’s nuclear program has been pushed down below reaching a ceasefire and opening the Strait of Hormuz.

Closure of the strait, which Iran blockaded as a war tactic and which usually carries a fifth of the world’s oil supply, rattled global economies, putting pressure on the US to resolve the issue.

The source told Maariv that the concern is that the deal gives Iran “time, money and regional quiet, without a real dismantling of its nuclear and terror capabilities.”

According to Axios, the memorandum of understanding that is expected to be signed by the US and Iran and ushers in a 60-day ceasefire extension, contains a clause that would end fighting between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon. The report said Israel will be permitted to strike Hezbollah if the terror group instigates or carries out attacks.

A senior Iranian source told Reuters on Sunday that Tehran has not agreed to hand over its highly enriched uranium stockpile under the preliminary agreement, though both Axios and The New York Times cited officials as saying that was part of the deal, which also envisions the US lifting some sanctions on Iran, enabling it to trade in oil, thereby removing what had been a key pressure tactic by Washington to push Iran into a nuclear deal.





Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian says Tehran is ready to assure the world that it is not seeking nuclear weapons, as a preliminary deal between Iran and the US begins to emerge.

“We are not seeking unrest in the region,” he tells IRNA, claiming instead that “the one seeking to destabilize the region” is Israel.

Iran, which is avowed to destroy Israel, has a stockpile of more than 400 kilograms of uranium that has been enriched to a point that it is a short technical step from weapons-grade. Israeli officials have said it is sufficient for 11 nuclear bombs if enriched further.

Tehran has long claimed that it is not seeking nuclear weapons, despite the fact that it has enriched uranium to a level that the UN atomic agency says has no civilian use.

Pezeshkian also says that Tehran’s negotiating team “will not compromise the country’s honor and pride in any way.”




The slow American retreat from Europe has already begun


The slow American retreat from Europe has already begun


2025 can be seen as the year in which the united anti-Russian coalition fell apart. In essence, there are now three distinct players acting against Russia (Ukraine, Europe, the US), and each has its own interests. Analyst Sergey Poletaev has prepared a series of articles in which he analyses the position of each player, their goals and interests in the conflict, and suggests how Russia might respond. 

Today we focus on the United States. Read the first part about Ukraine here.

Resignation from the role of leader

Since the Trump team’s rise to power, US politics has undergone a profound, one is even tempted to say historic, shift: The US is moving away from its role as the ‘leader of the free world’ and seeking to focus on its own interests.

While in the first half of 2025, it seemed that this was merely a whim of Trump’s, and that the US could not be diverted from its course of maintaining its hegemony, by the end of the year, it had become clear that the Trump administration was seeking to reset relations with all global players. We will not be discussing today the extent to which Trump has been successful; what matters to us is his motivation.

The reasons for such a radical shift in policy are clear: For decades, both left-liberal (Democratic) and neo-conservative (Republican) administrations refused to acknowledge reality and behaved as if it were still 1991, the world was celebrating the ‘end of history’, and all nations were looking with hope towards the City on the Hill, reverently acknowledging the leadership and authority of the US.

This policy reached its peak, and inevitable collapse, following the start of Russia’s military operation in 2022. The attempt to isolate Moscow effectively divided the world into two camps: Those which, whether out of conviction or under duress, stood up for the ‘rules-based order’, and those which effectively refused to abide by those rules. The latter turned out to be in the majority, and something had to be done about it.

Trump proposed a solution: America will no longer impose its rules on anyone, nor will it pretend to act on behalf of all humanity (often forgetting about itself). The US has its own interests and sufficient strength to defend them.

Thus, from being a key front in the struggle for world order, support for Ukraine has turned into a millstone around Washington’s neck. They cannot abandon it (too much has been invested, and opposition is too strong even among Trump’s closest allies, let alone the rest of the American establishment), but there is no point in dragging it along any further.

In effect, the US has offloaded the conflict onto Europe and let things take their course. This doesn’t mean that Trump wants Kiev to lose – it’s in his interests to preserve the current regime in Kiev, but he isn’t prepared to go to the mat for Ukraine, nor is he prepared to pour billions and political capital into the bottomless Ukrainian pit as his predecessor did.

The Beijing Triangle

In principle, Trump would prefer to freeze the Ukraine conflict and gain the opportunity to restore some of the relationship with Moscow. Like several of his predecessors, Trump understands that America’s main foreign policy rival is China, not Russia. However, Trump is the first to have attempted to do something about this, to have tried to at least somewhat slow down China’s expansion, which until last year seemed unstoppable.

First and foremost, the US is seeking to restore order in the New World by pushing China out of the region. The most notable step in this regard was the coup in Caracas, orchestrated with the involvement of the Pentagon, and the subsequent restoration of American control over Venezuelan oil exports. This has been a visible success.

Next on the agenda was a ‘remake’ of the Venezuelan scenario in Iran. As in Venezuela, China is the main buyer of Iranian hydrocarbons, and bringing Iranian oil exports under control would deal a second blow to Beijing.

More...


Payback With Fury: Russia Hammers Ukraine With Oreshnik, Iskander and Kinzhal Missiles


Sputnik



The Russian army unleashed a massive retaliatory strike with Oreshnik ballistic missiles, against military command facilities, airbases, and defense industry enterprises of Ukraine, the Russian Defense Ministry said on Sunday.
"In response to Ukraine's terrorist attacks against civilian facilities on Russian soil, the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation delivered a massive strike using Oreshnik ballistic missiles, Iskander aeroballistic missiles, Kinzhal hypersonic aeroballistic missiles, Zircon cruise missiles, air-, sea-, and ground-launched cruise missiles, hitting unmanned aerial vehicles, military command facilities, airbases, and Ukraine’s arms factories," the ministry's report stated.
The objectives of the strike have been achieved, and all designated targets have been hit, the Russian Ministry of Defense emphasized.


Ukraine lost over 265 soldiers in combat against Russia's Vostok battlegroup, over 175 Ukrainian soldiers were eliminated by Russia's Sever battlegroup, over 305 by the Tsentr battlegroup
Up to 180 Ukraine's servicemen were neutralized by the Zapad battlegroup, up to 90 by the Yug battlegroup, and over 50 by the Dnepr battlegroup


Over 50 Reporters Head to Site of Brutal Ukrainian Attack on Starobelsk College Dormitory
Twenty-one students died and dozens more were injured as a result of the Ukrainian drone attack on a high school building and a dormitory in Starobelsk, the Lugansk People's Republic, on Friday night. 
More than 50 foreign journalists have headed to the scene of the attack carried out by the Ukrainian military on a college dormitory in Starobelsk in the Lugansk People's Republic (LPR), Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Sunday.
“Today, media representatives from 19 countries have arrived in the Lugansk People’s Republic: Austria, Brazil, Britain, Hungary, Venezuela, Germany, Greece, Spain, Italy, Qatar, China, Cuba, Lebanon, the UAE, Pakistan, the United States, Turkiye, Finland, and France.

"Tokyo prohibited its journalists from taking part in the trip. The BBC officially declined. CNN is on vacation”, the Russian Foreign Ministry’s spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, said.
On the night of May 22, Ukraine attacked an academic building and dormitory at the Starobelsk Professional College, which is part of the Lugansk State Pedagogical University. There were 86 students and an employee in the building at the time.