Vice President JD Vance came out swinging this week, firing a direct shot at Israeli officials who have been openly critical of President Trump and his Iran memorandum of understanding.

At a Thursday press briefing, Vance made it clear that Israel’s cabinet might want to rethink biting the hand that feeds them, especially when that hand belongs to the only world leader still firmly on their side.

The dust-up follows reports from Axios claiming that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is outraged over the memorandum of understanding’s ceasefire clause involving Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon.

According to the report, Netanyahu’s government has no intention of withdrawing troops from Lebanon, viewing the clause as a constraint on Israel’s military freedom.

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In short, he’s refusing to play ball.

Trump has already expressed sharp criticism of Israel’s recent strikes in Beirut, Lebanon, which he says nearly derailed the delicate diplomatic deal with Iran.

“You don’t have to knock down an apartment house every time you’re looking for somebody because there are a lot of people in those apartment houses, and they’re not all Hezbollah, that I can tell you,” Trump said while condemning the reckless military actions.

Trump added that he was furious when Israel attacked Beirut only two hours before the agreement was set to be signed.

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“It wasn’t like in the southern side, and you know, it was in Beirut. I did not like that. I let him know that I didn’t like it, not at all,” he said, noting that this kind of aggression puts everything on the line.

As The Gateway Pundit previously reported, the media circus was quick to pounce on the Trump administration, feeding talking points that painted the deal as a sellout to Iran and Hezbollah.

Not surprisingly, liberal networks and Israeli outlets sympathetic to Netanyahu went into a frenzy.

One Channel 14 host even hurled an antisemitic insult at Trump’s envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, accusing them of financial betrayal.

It was the sort of cheap media stunt that is par for the course these days.

Even some conservative pundits chimed in with criticism, including Fox News host Mark Levin, who blasted the idea that Israel should stay tied to the deal.

He accused Trump of caving to Iran, missing the bigger picture that Trump’s diplomacy has been strengthening America’s influence, not weakening it.

Vance, however, was not going to let that kind of talk go unchallenged.

Responding to a question from The Gateway Pundit’s Jordan Conradson, he made a fiery defense of both Trump and American generosity toward Israel.

“Over the last three months, two-thirds of the defensive weapons that have protected your homeland have been built by American hands and paid for by American tax dollars,” Vance noted pointedly.

He said that reports of Netanyahu “fuming” do not match any of his own conversations with the Israeli leader but hinted that some messages might be different behind closed doors.

That comment alone spoke volumes about the behind-the-scenes tension between Washington and Jerusalem.

Then came the moment that turned heads nationwide.

Vance declared, “Donald J. Trump is the only head of state in the entire world who is sympathetic to the nation of Israel at this moment in time, and he happens to be the head of state of the world's superpower. If I was in the cabinet of the Israeli government, I might not be attacking the only powerful ally that I have anywhere left in the entire world.”

His message was sharp and unapologetic.

Israel’s internal critics need to stop seeing Trump as an adversary and start realizing that without the United States, Israel would be far more isolated on the global stage.

Vance’s criticism went straight to the heart of the matter: gratitude and realism.

Vance did not stop there. He reminded reporters that many of the weapons keeping Israel safe are courtesy of American taxpayers, not Israeli coffers.

“The problem for Israel is not Donald J. Trump, and anybody in Israel who thinks their biggest problem is the President of the United States needs to wake up and smell the reality of the situation that country is in,” Vance said.

That comment alone made it clear he was not entertaining the idea that Trump had done anything but stand firmly with Israel.

Conradson pressed further about whether Netanyahu’s fuming could torpedo the deal, but Vance brushed aside speculation.

“I don't want to get into hypotheticals that could torpedo the deal because I think the president's expectation is that all of our friends, the Israelis, the Arabs in the region, we're going to work together and actually see this deal to completion,” Vance explained.

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His measured yet cutting remarks showed that the administration is walking a tightrope between holding allies accountable and keeping a fragile peace intact.

The Israeli government may want to consider that a fight with Washington would be the last thing it can afford right now.

It was a moment that captured the Trump-Vance administration’s blunt style of diplomacy.

No backroom whispers.

No polished talking points. Just an American leader making it abundantly clear that loyalty cuts both ways.

Vance’s mic drop moment will likely reverberate across both Jerusalem and Capitol Hill, reminding allies everywhere that respect is not optional when America is footing the bill.

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