Zürcher Nachrichten - Israel attack on Iran tests Trump promise not to be dragged into war

EUR -
AED 4.321506
AFN 74.133123
ALL 96.489261
AMD 443.812914
ANG 2.106012
AOA 1079.052127
ARS 1636.270459
AUD 1.669544
AWG 2.118095
AZN 1.995285
BAM 1.957163
BBD 2.374474
BDT 144.060347
BGN 1.938817
BHD 0.443653
BIF 3495.935132
BMD 1.17672
BND 1.494377
BOB 8.146675
BRL 6.128358
BSD 1.178941
BTN 107.332676
BWP 15.649167
BYN 3.359469
BYR 23063.705277
BZD 2.370972
CAD 1.610406
CDF 2671.154045
CHF 0.913617
CLF 0.02582
CLP 1019.486491
CNY 8.129662
CNH 8.121654
COP 4353.674456
CRC 566.504233
CUC 1.17672
CUP 31.183071
CVE 110.342798
CZK 24.242661
DJF 209.938019
DKK 7.471475
DOP 72.541763
DZD 153.092435
EGP 55.996569
ERN 17.650795
ETB 181.200497
FJD 2.614965
FKP 0.875273
GBP 0.873155
GEL 3.153671
GGP 0.875273
GHS 12.956135
GIP 0.875273
GMD 86.484649
GNF 10343.292633
GTQ 9.045378
GYD 246.643899
HKD 9.196406
HNL 31.189255
HRK 7.534063
HTG 154.528952
HUF 379.562567
IDR 19874.795007
ILS 3.680255
IMP 0.875273
INR 107.063308
IQD 1544.375752
IRR 49569.315736
ISK 144.912984
JEP 0.875273
JMD 183.68795
JOD 0.834286
JPY 182.666935
KES 151.796424
KGS 102.90415
KHR 4735.338694
KMF 493.04586
KPW 1059.079909
KRW 1704.489876
KWD 0.361111
KYD 0.982393
KZT 580.569336
LAK 25256.807544
LBP 105629.975383
LKR 364.697133
LRD 218.683255
LSL 19.077251
LTL 3.474548
LVL 0.711785
LYD 7.459323
MAD 10.801824
MDL 20.18323
MGA 5129.660307
MKD 61.628435
MMK 2470.846332
MNT 4200.601862
MOP 9.48911
MRU 46.938493
MUR 54.623322
MVR 18.120968
MWK 2044.258696
MXN 20.263383
MYR 4.59271
MZN 75.204055
NAD 19.077251
NGN 1583.57041
NIO 43.380586
NOK 11.261149
NPR 171.733542
NZD 1.976136
OMR 0.452442
PAB 1.178921
PEN 3.952053
PGK 5.064549
PHP 68.428599
PKR 329.625006
PLN 4.22393
PYG 7643.389042
QAR 4.29713
RON 5.097081
RSD 117.450964
RUB 90.480158
RWF 1721.799338
SAR 4.414149
SBD 9.474547
SCR 15.846312
SDG 707.795897
SEK 10.673089
SGD 1.493157
SHP 0.882845
SLE 28.816575
SLL 24675.222083
SOS 672.568485
SRD 44.271728
STD 24355.721112
STN 24.517182
SVC 10.315273
SYP 13014.019177
SZL 19.085619
THB 36.71542
TJS 11.14056
TMT 4.130286
TND 3.41751
TOP 2.833259
TRY 51.592908
TTD 7.979626
TWD 37.128209
TZS 3032.995115
UAH 50.996989
UGX 4225.979566
USD 1.17672
UYU 45.402011
UZS 14302.962886
VES 468.625273
VND 30559.409492
VUV 140.066225
WST 3.178578
XAF 656.414233
XAG 0.014603
XAU 0.000234
XCD 3.180144
XCG 2.12468
XDR 0.816383
XOF 656.425397
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.655511
ZAR 18.945251
ZMK 10591.890811
ZMW 22.145614
ZWL 378.903249
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.95

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3000

    17.8

    -1.69%

  • BCC

    -1.2200

    84.38

    -1.45%

  • VOD

    -0.1300

    15.53

    -0.84%

  • NGG

    -0.5400

    90.27

    -0.6%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.76

    -0.21%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    25.57

    -0.55%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    60.85

    -0.54%

  • RIO

    -2.5900

    96.34

    -2.69%

  • RELX

    0.4400

    30.99

    +1.42%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    13.05

    -1%

  • AZN

    -0.0500

    208.62

    -0.02%

  • BP

    0.4800

    39.01

    +1.23%

  • BTI

    2.1200

    60.99

    +3.48%

Israel attack on Iran tests Trump promise not to be dragged into war
Israel attack on Iran tests Trump promise not to be dragged into war / Photo: SAUL LOEB - AFP

Israel attack on Iran tests Trump promise not to be dragged into war

For President Donald Trump, few goals on the world stage have been more explicit -- he will not drag the United States into another "forever war."

Text size:

Yet Israel's massive strikes on Iran will test that promise as never before, potentially setting up a showdown with his base as Trump decides how much support the United States will offer.

Trump had publicly called for Israel not to strike as he sought a negotiated solution, and his roving envoy Steve Witkoff had been scheduled to meet Iranian officials for the sixth time Sunday.

Trump, who hours earlier warned that a strike would cause "massive conflict," afterward praised Israeli strikes as "excellent" and boasted that Israel had "the best and most lethal military equipment anywhere in the world" thanks to the United States -- and was planning more strikes unless Iran agrees on a deal.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, however, has insisted that the United States was not involved in the strikes and warned Iran not to retaliate against the thousands of US troops stationed in nearby Arab countries.

"The US has calculated that it can help Israel and that the Iranians will obviously be aware of this, but at the end of the day, at least at the public level, the US stays out," said Alex Vatanka, founding director of the Iran program at the Middle East Institute in Washington.

The hope is that "the Iranians will do a quick cost/benefit analysis and decide it is not worth the fight," Vatanka said.

He said Iranian leaders are for now focused on staying alive, but could decide either to swallow a tough deal -- or to internationalize the conflict further by causing chaos in the oil-rich Gulf, potentially sending oil prices soaring and pressuring Trump.

- 'America First' impulse -

Most key lawmakers of Trump's Republican Party quickly rallied behind Israel, whose prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is a hero for many on the US right.

But Trump's populist "America First" base has been skeptical. Tucker Carlson, the prominent media commentator who counseled Trump against a US strike on Iran in the first term, has called fears of Tehran building a nuclear bomb overblown, saying neither Iran nor Ukraine warrants US military resources.

Trump has brought outspoken non-interventionists into his administration.

In an unusually political video this week, Trump's director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, warned after a visit to Hiroshima that "warmongers" were putting the world at risk of nuclear catastrophe.

In a speech in Riyadh last month, Trump denounced decades of US interventionism in the Middle East and said, "My greatest hope is to be a peacemaker and to be a unifier. I don't like war."

- How far to back Israel? -

Daniel Shapiro, who served as US ambassador to Israel under former president Barack Obama, said he was certain the United States would support Israel in defense against Iranian retaliation.

But Trump will face a harder decision on "whether to use the United States' unique capabilities to destroy Tehran's underground nuclear facilities and prevent an Iranian nuclear weapon," said Shapiro, now at the Atlantic Council.

"The decision will split his advisers and political base, amid accusations, and perhaps his own misgivings, that Netanyahu is attempting to drag him into war."

Lawmakers of the rival Democratic Party widely revile Netanyahu, including over Israel's bloody offensive in Gaza.

"This attack by Netanyahu is pure sabotage," said Democratic Representative Joaquin Castro.

"What does 'America First' even mean if Trump allows Netanyahu to drag the country into a war Americans don't want?" he wrote on social media.

Netanyahu has long insisted that Iran's ruling clerics -- who support Hamas in Gaza -- pose an existential threat to Israel.

The strikes came after Iran defiantly said it would ramp up output of highly enriched uranium, playing hardball ahead of US talks.

Sina Toossi, a senior fellow at the progressive Center for International Policy, said that China -- identified by Trump as the top threat -- could seize the moment, perhaps by moving on Taiwan, as it sees the United States as even more distracted.

"Even without direct involvement, Washington now faces the prospect of indefinite resupply, intelligence and diplomatic backing for Israel, just as the war in Ukraine intensifies and global crises multiply," Toossi said.

"Wars are easy to ignite, but once unleashed, they tend to spiral beyond control, and rarely end on the terms of those who start them."

R.Bernasconi--NZN