Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was unequivocal on Friday, insisting that Israel had not dragged anyone into the war with Iran and that the country was simply winning it. He announced that Iran had lost all uranium enrichment and ballistic missile capabilities after twenty days of fighting. Netanyahu expressed confidence throughout the press conference that the conflict was moving rapidly toward its conclusion and that the end would come sooner than most people expected.
The prime minister addressed the Trump-Israel relationship with clarity and candor. He described their coordination as historically unprecedented and framed Trump as the alliance’s leader. Netanyahu disclosed that Trump had brought his own independently formed and deeply analytical understanding of Iran’s nuclear threat to their discussions, contributing insights that enriched their shared strategic framework.
Netanyahu confirmed Israel struck the South Pars gas complex alone and acknowledged Trump’s personal request to hold off on further attacks on Iranian gas facilities. He presented both facts transparently, treating them as natural features of a close and functioning alliance. Netanyahu maintained throughout that Israel’s operational independence remained fully intact.
On the Hormuz issue, Netanyahu dismissed Iran’s closure threats as empty blackmail. He proposed pipeline corridors from the Arabian Peninsula to Israeli and Mediterranean ports as a lasting structural solution. Netanyahu argued this would create durable energy resilience and permanently neutralize one of Iran’s most feared geopolitical weapons.
Netanyahu ended with observations about Iran’s visible leadership dysfunction. He noted Mojtaba had not appeared publicly since the conflict began and said he was genuinely unsure who was governing the country. Netanyahu pointed to fierce competition among Tehran’s power factions and concluded that this internal chaos, combined with military losses, was pushing the war toward a faster-than-expected end.
