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Vol. I · No. 163
Friday, 12 June 2026
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Opinion

Trump's Iran Gambit Is Bad News for Bibi — and That's the Point

A US-Iran rapprochement is taking shape, and Israeli leadership is watching from the sidelines with alarm. The question is whether the White House sees this as diplomacy or leverage.
/ @presstv · Telegram

Something unusual is happening in the architecture of Middle Eastern power. The United States and Iran are negotiating a deal that, just two years ago, would have been classified as fantasy. President Trump confirmed on 23 May 2026 that the two sides have "largely negotiated" an agreement, with final details expected shortly. A separate report cited by The Washington Times suggested an announcement could come within 24 hours. The market is pricing the odds at 70 percent that the Hormuz Strait blockade ends by month's end.

And somewhere in Jerusalem, Benjamin Netanyahu is not a happy man.

The South China Morning Post laid out the geometry plainly on 25 May: a US-Iran peace agreement is structurally incompatible with the Middle East that Netanyahu has spent the past decade engineering. His political survival has depended on a regional order defined by Iranian isolation, US Gulf-state alignment with Israeli interests, and the normalization deals — the Abraham Accords model — that positioned Israel as the indispensable regional partner. A negotiated thaw between Washington and Tehran collapses that architecture at its foundation.

The Normalization Gambit That Wasn't

Netanyahu's preferred endgame was never a two-state solution or a durable Palestinian settlement. It was a stacked deck: Iran contained, Arab states incentivized to accept Israeli primacy through shared security arrangements, and American backing made permanent through institutional and legislative lock-in. The Abraham Accords were the centrepiece — a model that bypassed the Palestinian question entirely and created a new regional alignment. Saudi normalization was the grand prize that never materialized under Biden, and that failure has gnawed at the Israeli right ever since.

Now comes Trump, potentially delivering something far more consequential than a Saudi deal: direct US-Iranian détente. This is not a reward Israel requested or expected. It is, from Netanyahu's perspective, a strategic reversal dressed up as diplomacy.

The Trump administration has framed the deal as a peace initiative — mutual concessions, sanctions relief for Iran, Hormuz de-escalation in exchange for nuclear constraints and regional restraint. That framing is not wrong, but it is incomplete. The deal also repositions the United States as a broker with Tehran rather than a guardian against Tehran, and that shift alone has consequences for every Gulf state, every Israeli security calculation, and every assumption embedded in a decade of US regional policy.

The Saudi Variable

Here is the part that gets less attention: Riyadh is not displeased. The sources do not speak directly to Saudi positioning, but the structural logic is clear. Saudi Arabia has its own Iran dossier — a rivalry that plays out across Yemen, Iraq, and the Gulf — and direct US-Iranian negotiations potentially create a channel that the Saudis can use, or at least monitor. The Abraham Accords model assumed American muscle was permanently deployed on the Israeli side of that ledger. A détente changes the weight distribution.

The Polymarket odds — 70 percent chance of Hormuz blockade lifting by month's end — suggest the financial markets are treating this as a high-probability event. That confidence is itself a signal. Either the administration has given market participants enough signal to price the outcome, or the announcement cadence from Washington has been calibrated to move sentiment in advance of the formal deal. Either way, the market is ahead of the diplomatic press release.

What remains genuinely uncertain is the sequencing. Trump himself acknowledged on 25 May that the deal is not "fully negotiated yet" and that differences remain between the two sides. That is not diplomatic boilerplate — it is a substantive caveat. The gap between "largely negotiated" and "fully negotiated" is where implementation questions live: verification mechanisms for nuclear constraints, the status of Iranian proxy relationships across the region, the fate of sanctions architecture, and whether any of this touches the question of Iranian missile programs. The sources do not specify which differences remain open.

The Leverage Reading

There is a second interpretation of what is happening, and it deserves equal weight. The Trump administration has form in using the threat of a deal as a negotiating tool. Announcing a potential US-Iran rapprochement — even incomplete — exerts pressure on multiple parties simultaneously. It signals to Gulf states that American commitment is conditional. It pressures Israel to accept arrangements it would otherwise resist. It creates leverage for a better deal later, or at least a deal that looks like American leadership rather than American retreat.

If that is the operative logic, the 70 percent Polymarket figure is not a prediction — it is a tool. Announcements create facts on the ground. The closer the market price moves to certainty, the more uncomfortable each party becomes with the alternative. That is the standard playbook, and the administration has used it before.

But even as leverage, the move has structural consequences that outlast the negotiation. Once a channel opens, it is difficult to close. Once the Hormuz question is addressed, even partially, the architecture of maximum-pressure sanctions begins to fray. The constituency for normalization — in Tehran, in Washington, in the Gulf — does not disappear when the deal is announced or when it runs into implementation trouble.

The Stakes for Israeli Policy

For Netanyahu, the worst-case scenario is not a bad deal. It is a deal that works. A successful US-Iran détente, even a limited one, validates the proposition that engagement — not containment — is the viable American approach to Tehran. That proposition is fundamentally incompatible with the security framework that Israeli leadership has built its regional strategy around.

The sources do not indicate how the Israeli government has responded to the emerging deal, and silence from Jerusalem is notable in itself. Public disagreement with a sitting American president carries costs, particularly when that president is the same one who moved the US embassy to Jerusalem and recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights. The diplomatic debt is real, and Netanyahu knows it.

What we are watching, then, is not simply a bilateral negotiation between the United States and Iran. It is a pressure test for an entire regional order — one that Israeli policy has shaped for a generation. Whether the deal succeeds or fails, the question it raises will not go away: what is American power actually for in the Middle East, and who gets to decide?

This publication covered the emerging US-Iran talks primarily through Cointelegraph's breaking wire and the SCMP's analytical framing. The Polymarket odds provided market-contextualization absent from wire coverage. The dominant framing across outlets treated the deal as a diplomatic breakthrough; Monexus foregrounded the structural tension with Israeli regional assumptions.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://x.com/polymarket/status/1923524677769830809
  • https://x.com/unusual_whales/status/1923456748965278019
  • https://t.me/Cointelegraph/68478
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire