A new survey shows 63% of Israelis express concern for Israel's future over the emerging U.S.-Iran agreement, according to a report. The finding deepens a weeks-long trend of public unease with the deal's terms as skepticism of U.S. and Iranian intentions persists.
A fresh survey published Saturday indicates that 63% of the Israeli public fears for the country's future because of the emerging U.S.-Iran agreement. The finding adds to a weeks-long wave of growing public and official alarm over the deal's terms.
The poll follows a series of reports and surveys over the past week reflecting deepening Israeli skepticism. An Israel Hayom poll from Thursday night found that 71% of Israelis do not trust President Donald Trump to safeguard Israeli interests in the negotiations. Other surveys this week recorded majority negative views of both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Trump over their handling of the agreement.
The cumulative data strengthens the picture of a broad cross-section of Israeli society — beyond government and security circles — increasingly uneasy about the strategic implications of the framework being shaped between Washington and Tehran. No additional breakdown by demographic or political affiliation was included in the current report.
- DevelopingPoll: 71% of Israelis do not trust Trump to look out for them in Iran deal
- StrongIsraeli officials raise alarms over emerging US-Iran deal, cite flaws
- StrongSenior Israeli official slams emerging Iran deal as 'shocking' for Israel
- DevelopingMajority of Israelis negative on Netanyahu, Trump over Iran deal, new poll shows
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A single-sourced dispatch is never rated Confirmed or Strong. Its Signal strengthens only when a second, independent source corroborates it.
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