For Benjamin Netanyahu, the deal reads at home as a verdict on him. The Washington Post called the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding "an informal referendum on Netanyahu's tenure" ahead of Israeli elections this autumn 1; a PBS analyst called it a "strategic defeat" for Israel; Haaretz called it Netanyahu's "second worst fiasco" after 7 October 2. Critics say he led Trump into the war while overpromising the result, then misjudged the President's appetite for a long fight.
Netanyahu was sidelined from the diplomacy that ended it. The mediation ran through Qatar, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, none of it through Jerusalem . His own cabinet has repudiated the terms he was not consulted on: National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir says "Trump's agreement does not bind us", and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich rejected the memorandum from the Knesset floor.
At a press conference Netanyahu insisted "as long as I am Prime Minister, Iran will not get nuclear weapons". That is a promise about the exact question the memorandum he was excluded from has deferred for 60 days. A leader who staked his standing on stopping Iran's bomb now faces an autumn election on a deal he did not write, cannot bind and which postpones the one outcome he built his career on guaranteeing.
