Unpersuaded by Netanyahu, Trump Pushes Diplomacy With Iran and Hamas

Rejecting Israel’s Case for Escalation, the U.S. President Channels Churchill’s Postwar Belief in Negotiation Over Preventive War

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Donald Trump.

Diverging views on diplomacy and military force continue to shape tensions between Washington and Jerusalem.

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WASHINGTON, DC — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu famously sees Winston Churchill as his model of wartime leadership.

A bust of Britain’s World War II prime minister keeps a stern and watchful eye over his office, and the premier regularly invokes Churchill in his landmark speeches, especially in his addresses to the US Congress. (Netanyahu surpassed Churchill as the world leader to give the most such speeches when he delivered his fourth in 2024).

Yet while Netanyahu presents Churchill in his speeches as a brave lone voice insisting on the necessity of war against evil over naive diplomacy, in fact, after World War II, the British prime minister argued for high-level Cold War diplomacy to avoid military conflict. “Meeting jaw-to-jaw is better than war,” said Churchill during a 1954 luncheon in Washington, DC.

And though Netanyahu may mold himself after the wartime bulldog, US President Donald Trump has displayed a clear preference for the postwar Churchill’s approach.

Trump is certainly willing to order the targeted use of US military force — as seen in Yemen, Iran, Syria, Venezuela, Somalia and Nigeria — but he believes in giving direct talks and international summits a chance.

In his October Sharm El-Sheikh summit marking the ostensible end of the fighting in Gaza, Trump had world leaders standing awkwardly behind him as he called them up one by one to thank them.

Read the full story at Times of Israel.

Published originally on February 12, 2026.

Lazar Berman is the diplomatic correspondent at the Times of Israel, where he also covers Christian Affairs. He holds an M.A. in Security Studies from Georgetown University and taught at Salahuddin University in Iraqi Kurdistan. Berman is a reserve captain in the IDF’s Commando Brigade and served in a Bedouin unit during his active service.
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