Iran war day 102: Trump warns Israel against new strikes as ceasefire holds
Iran warns fighting could restart as tensions remain high and Trump urges Israel to protect the fragile ceasefire. Iran and Israel have paused tit-for-tat attacks
Iran warns fighting could restart as tensions remain high and Trump urges Israel to protect the fragile ceasefire. Iran and Israel have paused tit-for-tat attacks against each other that had threatened to unravel the fragile ceasefire in place since April 8, but tensions remain high. Tehran has warned that fighting could resume if Israel continues with its attacks, including on Lebanon. The ceasefire is also facing pressure from growing public disagreements between Israel and the United States. According to Axios, US President Donald Trump warned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to be ācarefulā as continued strikes risk undermining the truce. The Iranian parliamentary speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said repeated Israeli violations showed there was no āgenuine will to build trustā.
He warned that the ceasefire remains brittle and could break. Here is whatās happening In Iran Israel said it targeted the Mahshahr petrochemical complex in the southwest on Monday, one of Iranās most important industrial centres. Iranian media reported no casualties, while authorities continue to assess the extent of the damage and potential economic losses. War diplomacy Israelās ambassador to the US, Yechiel Leiter, said negotiations between Washington and Tehran have ānothing to do with Lebanonā, accusing Iran of trying to connect the two issues. Speaking to Fox News, Leiter said Israeli operations against Hezbollah are separate from the US-Iran talks and warned that āLebanon will not have a future if it remains linked to Iranā.
Analysts say Israelās decision to launch new strikes on Iran despite Trumpās calls for restraint was intended to signal to the US that no lasting agreement with Tehran can ignore Israeli interests. Military historian Danny Orbach said the strikes were a message to Washington that Israel retains the ability to disrupt negotiations if it believes its security concerns are being overlooked. In the US Trump said on Monday he warned Netanyahu that the Israeli PM could find himself āon your own very soonā if he carried out further strikes on Iran. According to Axios, the president urged Netanyahu not to retaliate after Iran signalled it would halt attacks, highlighting growing tensions between Washington and Israel over the future of the ceasefire.
Phyllis Bennis of the Institute for Policy Studies said Trumpās warning to Israel would carry more weight if it were backed by concrete actions. She argued that continued US military aid, diplomatic support and weapons transfers undermine the message, leaving little reason for Netanyahu to view the comments as a meaningful shift in US policy. In Lebanon
