World · Full coverage

How Trump’s Iran Policy Reversed from Total War to a Deal

How 2 Israeli newsrooms covered this story — translated into English and compared side by side.

How Trump’s Iran Policy Reversed from Total War to a Deal
100% right-leaningFirst reported by Arutz Sheva · 15 hours ago
Right 2

What happened

An Israeli-style reconstruction says Donald Trump went from threatening to destroy Iran to accepting a June 2026 deal that leaves Tehran richer and more secure. The article traces that reversal through Trump’s posts, the U.S.-Israeli campaign against Iran, and the economic pressure that followed.

  • 01Trump moved from threatening Iran’s destruction to accepting a sweeping June 2026 understanding.
  • 02The article says the war failed to collapse Iran and instead triggered economic pain and retaliation.
  • 03Trump’s own posts in January and February 2026 called for protests, surrender, and regime change.
  • 04At the G-7, Trump said Iran’s new leaders were “smart” and claimed missiles were “not the problem.”
  • 05The deal reportedly restores Iranian oil revenue and releases vast sums through regional channels.

Summary translated & synthesized from the sources below by baba. Read each original for the full report.

Full coverage · 2 outlets

The same event, reported separately by each newsroom. Open a few to compare what each emphasizes — and what they leave out.

Kikar HaShabbatRight · Hebrew6 hours ago
How Trump’s Iran Policy Reversed from Total War to a Deal
Arutz ShevaRight · Hebrew15 hours ago
Trump’s Iran Deal Will Ultimately Benefit Israel, Editorial Argues

Related stories

From threats of 'hell' to a deal: Why Trump backed away from confronting IranJun 17, 2026Trump’s Iran Track Is Framed as a Strategic Sellout for Market GainsJun 15, 2026Trump’s Iran Shift Could Open the Door to Sanctions Relief and a Nuclear DealJun 17, 2026Trump's Interim Iran Deal Could Strengthen Tehran, Israeli Commentator WarnsJun 13, 2026Trump Reverses Course on Iran Strike Plans AgainJun 12, 2026Trump’s Iran Policy Has Shifted, Except on Nuclear Issues2 days ago