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Trump says Netanyahu 'knows who the boss is' ahead of White House meeting the week of July 13

An Axios exclusive on July 4 reported Trump said the Israeli PM requested a US visit for as early as the following week; the two leaders agreed on a July 3 phone call; Lebanon operations, Iran nuclear talks and Gaza are on the agenda for their first meeting since Israel's war with Iran

Leaders·Conflicts· pending-decision How Wars Actually End·Who Decides ·30 takes · ·rbtfl upd Jul 6, 2026
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The split

The same story, as told by newsrooms in different countries. Their words, attributed and linked.

United States

Axios

“Trump on Netanyahu: 'He knows who the boss is.' On Iran: 'They're dying to settle.' Both comments in the same Independence Day Axios interview.”

US political media, exclusive phone interview with Trump on Independence Dayread the original ↗

Israel

Times of Israel

“Trump says Netanyahu knows who the boss is, will meet him in Washington as soon as next week.”

Israeli news-of-record, detailed parsing of the Lebanon-tensions subtextread the original ↗

Israel

Haaretz

“Trump's 'he knows who the boss is' framing sets a clear expectation: Netanyahu must show movement on Lebanon to justify the White House invitation.”

Israeli liberal broadsheet, critical of Netanyahu's Lebanon calculusread the original ↗

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Summary

US President Donald Trump told Axios in a July 4 interview that Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had requested a White House meeting and could visit "as early as next week," pointing to the week of July 13-14 after Trump returns from the NATO Ankara summit (July 7-8). Trump's phrasing, "He knows who the boss is," came in response to questions about US-Israel tensions over Israel's continuation of Lebanon military operations beyond the scope of the January ceasefire with Iran. Netanyahu's office confirmed a July 3 phone call in which both leaders agreed "to meet soon in the US." It would be their first face-to-face since the Iran-Israel war and the US-Iran ceasefire MOU. Trump also said in the same interview that Iran "is dying to settle" on nuclear negotiations, with a new round of talks scheduled for July 9.

The split

US media (Axios, Newsweek, CNN) parsed the "knows who the boss is" framing as Trump asserting dominance inside an alliance where Netanyahu has historically extracted concessions from multiple US presidents. Israeli press diverged: Times of Israel presented it as a reference to the structural relationship, while Haaretz argued it signals Trump will demand demonstrable Lebanon concessions from the meeting. Arab and Gulf outlets (Al Jazeera, Sky News Arabia, CNN Arabic) ran it primarily under the Lebanon angle, their primary concern being whether a public Trump-Netanyahu encounter produces pressure to halt Israeli operations. Russian state media (RIA Novosti) framed it as evidence US-Israel tensions are manageable and will not derail the Iran nuclear process. South Asian press (Dawn, Tribune India) highlighted the nuclear talks timing.

By the numbers

  • Week of July 13-14, expected date of Netanyahu's White House visit
  • July 7-8, NATO Ankara summit (Trump's immediate prior commitment)
  • July 3, date of the Trump-Netanyahu phone call (confirmed by Israeli PM's office)
  • July 4, date of Axios exclusive interview
  • July 9, next scheduled round of Iran-US nuclear talks
  • January 2026, the Iran-Israel war (the last major event before this first post-war meeting)

Why it matters

Three live agenda items will dominate the meeting. Lebanon: Israel has continued airstrikes on Hezbollah infrastructure beyond the January ceasefire terms; Trump has told Netanyahu to "wrap it up" without threatening consequences. Iran: the nuclear track is proceeding through Iran's Foreign Ministry, and the US wants assurances the post-Khamenei transition has not derailed it; Trump's "dying to settle" language suggests Washington is confident. Gaza: a final-status deal remains the longest-running unresolved item. The "knows who the boss is" framing signals the relationship is functional, but on explicit US terms.

What to watch

  • Whether the meeting happens the week of July 13-14 or is delayed by the Ankara schedule
  • What joint statement, if any, emerges on Lebanon: a framework for Israeli withdrawal or continued ambiguity
  • Whether Iran's post-Khamenei nuclear negotiators respond to the Trump-Netanyahu encounter before or after July 9
  • Netanyahu's coalition stability at home: his trial proceedings and right-wing coalition partners shape how much flexibility he arrives in Washington with

The briefing, by email