Inside Trump, Netanyahu's tense call over Iran war
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Iran's Revolutionary Guard says any new U.S. or Israeli attacks will be met with retaliation "in places you cannot even imagine."
Netanyahu spoke out against a diplomatic deal being pursued to end the Iran war, while Trump said he would continue to pursue an agreement preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.
Despite disagreement with Netanyahu, Trump maintained a united front in public about their Iran plan. He told reporters that Netanyahu "will do whatever I want him to do" on Iran, though he also said they had a good relationship.
Netanyahu, in his first interview since Israel and the United States jointly launched military strikes against Iran on Feb. 28, told CBS' Major Garrett that the war in Iran is "not over," specifically pointing to dismantling uranium enrichment sites and removing the uranium before Iran can produce ballistic missiles.
Trump is weighing restarting military action on Iran and will speak with Netanyahu on Sunday amid reports of Iranian deception and delay tactics.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office says that he secretly visited the United Arab Emirates during the Iran war.
The bill, titled “Reciprocal action by military and security forces of the Islamic Republic,” is one of several pieces of legislation aimed at formalizing the threats made by the regime.
Former Defense Secretary Robert Gates told CBS that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made essentially the same case for striking Iran to the Obama administration in 2009 that he later successfully made to President Trump.