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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
9MAR

Netanyahu sidelined by the deal on Iran

3 min read
06:08UTC

The Washington Post called the memorandum an informal referendum on Netanyahu's tenure; he was excluded from the diplomacy that ended the war and his cabinet now repudiates its terms.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Netanyahu faces an autumn election on a deal he was excluded from negotiating.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Israeli newspapers and media commentators are treating the Islamabad deal as a personal verdict on Benjamin Netanyahu, separate from foreign policy as a whole. He pushed the US into military action against Iran, promised it would end the nuclear threat, and found he had no seat at the table when the deal was made. Qatar, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey ran the mediation; Netanyahu did not attend any round. The deal defers the nuclear question for 60 days, which was the exact question Netanyahu said military action would answer. His coalition partners Ben-Gvir and Smotrich have said publicly the deal does not bind Israel. Netanyahu at a press conference promised Iran would never get nuclear weapons on his watch, but the 60-day talks, from which he was excluded, now control that question.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Netanyahu's exclusion from the Islamabad process has a structural cause separate from any personal failing. The mediation ran through Qatar, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey because all four maintain active diplomatic channels with Tehran. Israel and Iran have been in active military confrontation since February 2026; no mediation requiring Iranian consent can include the party Iran is fighting as a co-mediator.

The political crisis at home follows from a promise Netanyahu could not keep: that the US military campaign, which Israel helped design, would produce verifiable Iranian nuclear disarmament. The Islamabad MOU defers that question for 60 days, which his coalition partners, Ben-Gvir and Smotrich, have read as a failure of the campaign's explicit goal.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Israel's autumn election produces a coalition including Ben-Gvir and Smotrich in stronger roles, Israeli repudiation of the MOU's Lebanon terms becomes government policy rather than ministerial dissent.

  • Consequence

    Netanyahu's exclusion from the Islamabad process has permanently altered the US-Israel alliance dynamic: Washington negotiated a Middle East settlement that its closest regional partner repudiated on the day of signing.

First Reported In

Update #130 · Trump signed the war over; it kept going

Haaretz· 17 Jun 2026
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