Amid growing domestic backlash and a deepening energy crisis, President Donald Trump took to social media Monday to claim full ownership of the war with Iran, explicitly denying that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “talked him into” the military campaign.
Responding to allegations from political opponents and segments of his own base, Trump asserted that his “lifelong opinion” on Iranian nuclear capabilities—intensified by the events of October 7, 2023—was the true driver of the war. “Israel never talked me into the war with Iran,” Trump wrote on Truth Social, even as critics point to Netanyahu’s six visits to the U.S. this past year as evidence of heavy lobbying.
The President’s defense comes at a sensitive time:
Intelligence Disputes: National Security official Tulsi Gabbard testified in March that there is no evidence Iran is currently building a nuclear weapon.
Policy Shifts: Trump previously claimed his June 2025 strikes had already “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear program, leading many to question the necessity of the current campaign.
Political Pressure: Democratic opponent Kamala Harris has labeled Trump a “weak leader” following Netanyahu’s agenda at the expense of American safety.
Domestic fallout
The human cost of the conflict is being felt sharply at American gas pumps. Despite the current two-week truce, petrol prices remain stubbornly above $4 per gallon, a significant jump from pre-war levels under $3.
The ongoing U.S. naval blockade and Iran’s periodic closures of the Strait of Hormuz have throttled global supply, leaving the U.S. economy grappling with sustained inflation. While Trump touts foreign policy “wins” elsewhere—such as the January abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro—the Iranian theater remains a source of severe economic and political friction.
The war, which began in late February with joint U.S.-Israeli strikes that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and hundreds of civilians, is currently in a state of “suspended animation.”
| Key Metric | Status as of April 20, 2026 |
| Ceasefire Status | Expires Tuesday, April 21 at 8 p.m. EST |
| Oil Prices | Brent Crude up 4.8% to $94.69/barrel |
| Mediation | Second round of talks starting in Islamabad, Pakistan |
| U.S. Presence | VP JD Vance leading delegation to Pakistan |


