According to an analysis published by Iran’s Mehr News Agency on June 10, citing a recent Axios report, a widening gap has emerged between US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over how and when to end the conflict in West Asia—a divergence the Iranian outlet frames as rooted in each leader’s domestic political needs rather than strategic disagreement. The core argument advanced by Mehr is that the two leaders share overarching goals but face opposite political incentives. Both seek to contain Iran’s regional influence and have long emphasized close security cooperation. Yet according to the analysis, Netanyahu requires the continuation of war to sustain his political position, while Trump needs it to end in order to preserve his. The Axios report cited by Mehr described intensive contacts between Washington and Tel Aviv following reciprocal missile strikes between Iran and Israel. Trump was reportedly concerned that the region was sliding toward an al...
As the US-Israel war on Iran approaches its 100th day, few states illustrate the conflict’s regional spillover more sharply than Kuwait. Geographically wedged between Iraq and Saudi Arabia and hosting some of the largest concentrations of US military personnel in the Gulf, the small emirate has become an unwilling frontline in a war it neither sought nor declared. Since Iran launched retaliatory strikes across the Gulf on February 28, following the US-Israeli opening salvo that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Kuwait has absorbed repeated barrages. Iranian drones struck Kuwait International Airport and the Ali Al Salem Air Base, which houses Italian forces, while another drone hit the US garrison at Camp Buehring in the country’s northeast. A separate missile attack targeted a makeshift operations center near the civilian port of Shuaiba, killing six US soldiers and wounding dozens.  The human toll for Kuwait itself has been significant. In the strikes against the country, four sol...