Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Saturday evening that Israel is not a party to the memorandum of understanding between the US and Iran, but that Israel has clear interests regarding it. He did not elaborate which interests or whether Israel has received guarantees. The statement comes amid domestic political debate over the emerging framework.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated Saturday evening that while Israel is not a direct signatory to the emerging US-Iran memorandum of understanding, the country has interests it intends to protect. Speaking at 21:10 Jerusalem time, Netanyahu did not specify the nature of those interests or whether Washington has provided any guarantees. His remarks come as the framework deal, which also involves Lebanon, continues to generate sharp political debate in Israel. Earlier Saturday, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir called the Lebanon component a 'big mistake' and demanded a cabinet vote, as The Zioneer reported. Netanyahu's more measured tone contrasts with Ben-Gvir's outright rejection, suggesting the government may be navigating internal divisions over the multi-front diplomatic process.
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