Eyal Hulata – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Thu, 25 Dec 2025 10:33:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg Eyal Hulata – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 As Netanyahu heads to meet Trump, US aid takes center stage https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/12/25/as-netanyahu-heads-to-meet-trump-us-aid-takes-center-stage/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/12/25/as-netanyahu-heads-to-meet-trump-us-aid-takes-center-stage/#respond Thu, 25 Dec 2025 10:30:45 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1111957 Recent comments by US President Donald Trump have raised questions about who initiated next week's meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, what it is meant to achieve and why it is happening now. At the same time, consistent briefings in Israel suggest Netanyahu intends to convince Trump that the conditions are ripe for another military […]

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Recent comments by US President Donald Trump have raised questions about who initiated next week's meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, what it is meant to achieve and why it is happening now. At the same time, consistent briefings in Israel suggest Netanyahu intends to convince Trump that the conditions are ripe for another military action against Iran.

But, we also know Operation Rising Lion last June achieved its objective first and foremost because it took Iran completely by surprise. To that end, a range of deceptive narratives were spread, confusing the Israeli and American public, and certainly Iran's leaders and senior Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps officials.

Israeli Air Force jets en route to strike in Iran. Photo: IDF Spokesperson's Unit DF Spokesperson's Unit

So what are we supposed to make of all this?

In the topsy-turvy reality we are living in, does it mean Israel is heading toward a coordinated strike on Iran, with or without the US? Are all these reports designed to distract everyone to enable a surprise scenario in Lebanon or Gaza? Or are they meant to divert attention from a US intention to push Israel into the next phase in Gaza, contrary to the prime minister's intent?

Or, perhaps, the meeting is meant to serve the domestic political needs of both leaders, who could use a public display of closeness amid the internal and external storms bearing down on Israel and the US?

טראמפ ונתניהו , EPA
US President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Photo: EPA

These questions are fascinating, but it is important to consider the possibility that all this chatter is indeed meant to distract attention, but from something else entirely: the Netanyahu government's growing difficulty in coordinating policy with the Trump administration on fundamental issues.

The deep strategic coordination between Israel and the US should, in recent months, have matured into the launch of negotiations to formulate a new decade long Memorandum of Understanding, known as an MOU. The current MOU is set to expire in about two years, and judging by the previous round, the process of shaping a new one should already have begun.

The previous MOU, signed in 2016, codified the web of strategic cooperation between Israel and the US. It also included an American funding package for the purchase of US-made weaponry from the American defense industry totaling about $3.3 billion a year, plus an additional $500 million package for Israel's procurement of missile interceptors.

מל"ט אמריקני נושא טילים מדגם "פרדטור" , איי.פי
A US Predator missile-carrying drone. Photo: AP

Netanyahu knows all of this well. He was prime minister then, too, and the negotiations on Israel's behalf were led by my colleague Professor Yaakov Nagel, who at the time served as acting head of the National Security Council.

Netanyahu is delaying the launch of the process, possibly because he fears Trump is not eager to approve a new MOU. On the other hand, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said publicly this week that while it is a presidential decision over which he has little influence as ambassador, he believes conditions will ripen for signing another MOU.

In a normal situation, one would add to this the fact that the previous US president signed a presidential statement given to Israel's government during his visit in the summer of 2022, in which the US committed to the continuity of MOUs with Israel even after the current one ends. True, this was during Prime Minister Yair Lapid's tenure and under US President Joe Biden, but today, unfortunately, continuity of decision-making between governments and administrations does not appear to carry much weight.

לפיד וביידן (ארכיון)
Yair Lapid and Joe Biden (archive). Photo: Emil Salman

In Washington, there are currently winds calling for cuts to US foreign aid. Unfortunately, voices are also multiplying among extremists on both the right and the left calling for an end to all US backing for Israel. Precisely because of this, it should be the perfect moment for an experienced prime minister like Netanyahu to put this issue at the center of his meeting with Trump. He should show that now is the time to make America's commitment visible for all to see, not only to Israel's security but to the value of strategic cooperation between the two countries.

This is the moment to showcase Israel's significant contribution to US national security: through procurement of US weapons systems; operating them in a real operational environment that encourages their improvement; extensive and deep intelligence cooperation that protects US forces in our region; and the opportunity to shape the Middle East in a positive direction through a partnership in which Israel bears most of the security burden.

At the same time, such an MOU would entrench Israel's standing in the region as the US' leading ally, and at the heart of a pragmatic alliance in the spirit of the Abraham Accords, cooperating against shared enemies such as Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood.

This is an issue of fundamental importance to Israel's national security. All that remains is to hope that Netanyahu addresses it as well in his meeting with Trump.

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The major opportunity Trump is giving Israel? Not what you think https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/02/09/the-major-opportunity-trump-is-giving-israel-not-what-you-think/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/02/09/the-major-opportunity-trump-is-giving-israel-not-what-you-think/#respond Sun, 09 Feb 2025 15:24:33 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1033523 The meeting between former President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was, undoubtedly, one of the warmest encounters we have seen in many years. As a former National Security Adviser for Israel, I participated in two meetings between Israeli prime ministers and President Joe Biden. The meeting between Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and […]

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The meeting between former President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was, undoubtedly, one of the warmest encounters we have seen in many years.

As a former National Security Adviser for Israel, I participated in two meetings between Israeli prime ministers and President Joe Biden. The meeting between Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Biden in the Oval Office was characterized by a declaration of commitment to Israel's security and preventing a nuclear Iran. Similarly, during Prime Minister Yair Lapid's meeting with Biden in Jerusalem, the "Jerusalem Declaration" was signed, consolidating all US presidential commitments to Israel in a single document.

Despite the importance of those meetings, Trump is a different kind of president, and these are different times. His meeting with Netanyahu was significantly unique. The numerous executive orders Trump has approved in recent weeks and his firm declarations of support for Israel, have likely exceeded even Netanyahu's expectations.

The Iranian issue was notably absent from Trump's public statements, though it should have been a key topic. Hopefully, in their private discussions, Netanyahu received clear commitments from Trump regarding heavy pressure on Iran, avoiding a hasty and harmful nuclear agreement, and supporting Israel in preparing for military action if necessary.

However, in this article, I want to focus on Trump's statement regarding his desire for a complete evacuation of Gaza and transforming it into a global Riviera. Netanyahu appeared surprised by Trump's remarks, and much has been written about how neither he nor his team were aware of such a plan in advance. Israeli supporters of population transfer were the first to seize on the statement, celebrating it as though Trump had endorsed and would personally implement their extreme policies.

Trump welcomes Netanyahu at the White House. Photo: AFP

But that is not the case. It is no coincidence that Secretary of State Marco Rubio and National Security Adviser Michael Waltz immediately clarified that the US does not intend to use military force in Gaza and does not support the forced removal of the Gazan population. At most, the US envisions a temporary evacuation to facilitate reconstruction, with residents returning to newly built homes.

While too many in Israel are eager to believe that the Americans will solve the Gaza problem for us, and that we will wake up one morning to find the Strip empty of its residents, it is crucial to face reality. For too many years, Israel has waited for the Gaza problem to resolve itself in one way or another, but in truth, it is Hamas that has continued to grow stronger.

Even this week, as the Washington press conference took place, Hamas continued to solidify its control over Gaza, its grip on humanitarian aid and its dominance over the streets. The images of the hostage release last Saturday only illustrates how swiftly Hamas reasserts control.

The Palestinian population in Gaza will not simply disappear. While some may wish to leave if given the opportunity, the majority will remain and cling to what little they have left. I believe that aside from a fringe minority in Israel, most Israelis understand that the forced evacuation of such a large civilian population is neither feasible nor acceptable.

President Donald Trump. Photo: AP, AFP

Instead, Rubio and Waltz's statements suggest that the real opportunity Trump is offering Israel lies in making it unequivocally clear to regional actors that the time has come for them to take their role seriously in transforming Gaza into a safe, Hamas-free zone. Recent American media reports detail contacts made by Netanyahu's representatives in the final months of the Biden administration with Gulf states regarding their involvement in the "day after" scenario, assisting in civil governance and maintaining public order. These reports indicate that Netanyahu himself saw such an approach as viable.

Rather than continuing this momentum and working to establish a civil governance alternative in Gaza, supported by the Gulf states and pushing Hamas out of power, Netanyahu now appears to be embracing a fantasy of completely emptying the Strip. He is doing so despite knowing that this is not what the Trump administration means and that such a scenario is impossible without the unacceptable forced removal of all Gazans.

The prime minister would be far better off focusing on fully securing the release of the remaining hostages and ensuring their safe return home. At the same time, he should leverage the significant diplomatic opportunity Trump has presented to upgrade and solidify the plan Israel has been developing in recent months. With Trump's backing, the Gulf states' commitment to expelling Hamas from Gaza could be significantly stronger, and their financial resources for rebuilding, replacing Hamas' radical education system, and maintaining public order to prevent Hamas' resurgence would be considerably greater.

This is the major opportunity Israel has been given by the Trump administration, and it must not be squandered.

Dr. Eyal Hulata is Israel's former National Security Adviser and Head of the Israeli National Security Council. He is currently a senior research fellow at the FDD in Washington

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