The Hebrew-language newspaper Israel Hayom published a revealing report from its U.S. correspondents, Ariel Kahana and Or Shaked, indicating that nuclear negotiations between the United States and Iran are at a dangerous impasse. Amid this tense backdrop, former U.S. President Donald Trump reportedly warned the Zionist entity against rushing into military action, while engaging in a phone conversation with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday evening to discuss the Iranian nuclear file.
Trump: “Iran Are Tough Negotiators”
He added, “Sometimes it’s extremely difficult. We want a deal that avoids destruction and death. I told them that — maybe it’ll succeed, maybe it won’t.”
Following the conversation, Netanyahu’s office issued a statement saying that “President Trump informed Prime Minister Netanyahu that the U.S. had offered a reasonable proposal to Iran and expects a response within days.”
Next Round of Talks on the Horizon
He continued: “They want to pursue uranium enrichment — that’s something we simply cannot accept. They want the opposite of what we’re asking. So far, they haven’t agreed to anything. I hate to say it, because the alternative is difficult. But they haven’t even given us a formal opinion yet — and that’s unacceptable.”
Trump on Gaza and the Resistance
The mention of Hamas and Iran in the same breath signals Washington’s recognition of Tehran’s indirect influence in regional dynamics — particularly concerning Gaza and the resistance movements that continue to defy Israeli occupation.
Mockery of the Freedom Flotilla
The flotilla, aiming to break the Israeli-imposed blockade on Gaza, is part of a broader global push to expose the humanitarian catastrophe inflicted on Palestinians — a cause often dismissed by Western powers under the guise of “security.”
High-Level Israeli Meetings Follow Call
After the Trump-Netanyahu phone call, the Israeli Prime Minister reportedly held a closed-door security briefing with top defense officials, including far-right ministers Itamar Ben Gvir and Ron Dermer, as well as key figures from the ministries of finance, defense, and foreign affairs.
This rapid mobilisation reflects Tel Aviv’s increasing anxiety over both Iran’s nuclear ambitions and growing resistance momentum in Gaza — where Iran’s political and financial backing continues to empower anti-occupation factions.
Talks on the Brink of Collapse
According to statements from senior U.S. and Iranian officials over the past two weeks, the ongoing nuclear negotiations — stretching across several months — are now teetering on the edge of collapse. The primary sticking point: whether Iran will be allowed to enrich uranium on its own soil under what it insists is a “peaceful civilian nuclear program.”
This issue has become the defining line between a fragile diplomatic breakthrough and the return to open confrontation.
Final Reflection
For the Muslim world, this isn’t just about nuclear enrichment or Western sanctions — it’s about sovereignty, resistance, and the right to self-determination. Iran, despite its political differences with many in the Ummah, remains a symbol of defiance against the hegemonic powers that have long dictated the fate of Muslim nations.
The unfolding tensions between Washington, Tel Aviv, and Tehran are more than geopolitical theater — they are a window into the inner workings of an imperial system desperately trying to hold onto control in a region that continues to resist.