A telephone conversation between former US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been described by diplomatic sources as 'crazy' and threatens to upend a delicate peace initiative backed by the United Kingdom. The call, which took place late Tuesday, reportedly saw Trump urging Netanyahu to take a harder line against Iran, directly contradicting ongoing British-led efforts to de-escalate tensions in the region.
According to officials familiar with the conversation, Trump dismissed the UK's diplomatic approach as 'weak' and suggested that Israel should consider military options to halt Iran's nuclear programme. This intervention comes at a critical juncture, with British envoys having spent months shuttling between Tehran and Jerusalem to establish a framework for negotiations.
The UK foreign office expressed 'deep concern' over the call, noting that it undermines the progress made in recent weeks. 'We have been working tirelessly to create a pathway to peace, and such reckless interference is profoundly unhelpful,' a spokesperson said. The British initiative, which involves phased sanctions relief in exchange for verifiable nuclear restrictions, had gained cautious support from European allies and some Gulf states.
The call's timing is particularly damaging. Just days earlier, Iranian and Israeli representatives had held indirect talks in Oman under British auspices, the first such engagement in over a year. Sources close to the talks described the atmosphere as 'cautiously optimistic' before the Trump-Netanyahu exchange.
Netanyahu's office has not publicly commented on the call's content, but Israeli officials acknowledged that the prime minister received 'friendly strategic advice' from Trump. However, diplomatic insiders suggest that Netanyahu may now recalibrate his position, given Trump's influence among hardline elements in his governing coalition.
The fallout has already reached the UK parliament, where opposition MPs demanded an urgent statement from the foreign secretary. Labour's shadow foreign secretary described the intervention as 'an act of sabotage against international diplomacy' and questioned whether the UK could continue its mediation role without US support.
From a climate perspective, the heightened tensions risk diverting attention from the region's pressing environmental challenges, including water scarcity and desertification. But the immediate concern remains the nuclear dimension. Iran's enrichment levels have crept closer to weapons-grade, and any escalation could trigger a cascade of events reminiscent of the 2015 crisis.
This development underscores the fragility of diplomatic progress in a region where personal relationships between leaders can override institutional frameworks. The coming days will test whether the UK-led process can survive such a direct challenge, or whether the 'crazy' call marks the beginning of a new, more dangerous chapter in Iran-Israel relations.









