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TLF SPECIAL: Understanding (At Least Trying It) The widening Message Gap between Washington and Jerusalem
The clearest takeaway from the latest public remarks is that Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu are now signaling two different political timelines for the same war. On March 9, Trump told CBS News that the war was “very complete, pretty much,” argued that Iran had “nothing left in a military sense,” and said the operation was “very far ahead of schedule,” while separately telling reporters that it would be “ended soon.” On March 10, by contrast, Netanyahu said Israel was “breaking their bones — and we are not done yet,” framing the campaign not as a near-finished operation but as an ongoing effort to weaken Iran’s ruling system and encourage internal political rupture. That difference matters because both leaders are speaking to different strategic pressures. Trump’s language reads like an attempt to compress expectations, reassure markets, and show that U.S. objectives are limited and largely achieved. Even when he warned that Iran would face far harder blows if it ...