Economist Jeffrey Sachs Slams Netanyahu as 'Disaster' Behind Trump's Iran Policy
Sachs tells Tucker Carlson that Netanyahu's 'fanatical' agenda has driven US Iran war decision, costing 'America a fortune'
Quick Look
- American economist Jeffrey Sachs has criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, claiming Trump's decision to attack Iran was driven by what Sachs called Netanyahu's 'fanatical' and misguided agenda.
- In an interview with Tucker Carlson, Sachs said Netanyahu 'has the wrong framework of the world' and described him as 'a disaster.' The comments come as Trump extended a ceasefire with Tehran indefinitely while maintaining a naval blockade of Iranian ports.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
This article presents criticism of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's influence on US President Donald Trump's Iran policy. The economist's comments come amid ongoing US military action against Iran and debates over whether Trump's decisions were driven by Israeli interests.
American economist Jeffrey Sachs has sharply criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, arguing that US President Donald Trump's decision to attack Iran was heavily influenced by what he described as Netanyahu's "fanatical" and misguided agenda. Trump has repeatedly faced criticism, both domestically and internationally, for pursuing policies widely seen as closely aligned with Israeli interests across both his first and current presidential terms. Analysts and political opponents have often pointed to a broader shift in US foreign policy that allegedly favors the agenda of the Jewish State under Netanyahu. "Trump's decision basically led by Netanyahu," Sachs told US conservative journalist and podcaster Tucker Carlson. In a video interview published on Friday, the economist noted that Netanyahu has an agenda, stressing that the US president bought into what Sachs called the Israeli prime minister's wrong understanding of the world. "His agenda, in my mind, is fanatical and wrong, and has been mistaken for 30 years, and has cost America a fortune," Sachs said. "I think the man is a disaster, I think he has the wrong framework of the world, just a wrong understanding." The comment comes as Trump extended the ceasefire with Tehran indefinitely on Tuesday to allow time for a potential deal, while keeping an American naval blockade of Iranian ports in place. The US Democratic Party and some Republicans, as well as former US National Counterterrorism Center chief Joe Kent, have argued that Trump had been pressured by Israel to launch the Iran war. Kent, who resigned from his position last month in protest of the war, has claimed that intelligence agencies could not confirm Trump's allegations that Iran has been pursuing nuclear weapons. Iranian officials, including Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, have framed the conflict as Trump betraying his "America First" agenda in favor of "Israel First." Last week, Carlson slammed Trump's Middle East policies, claiming that the president's true religion is "Israelism" rather than Christianity. Trump's former supporter argued that the US had launched the war against Iran "on behalf of Israel" and "at the instigation of Israel."
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Continued diplomatic negotiations between US and Iran over nuclear program
Possible · Within weeks
Pressure from Congress to reveal intelligence on Iranian nuclear weapons
Likely · Within weeks
Further criticism of Trump's Israel policy from both parties
Very likely · Within weeks
Open Questions
- What specific evidence links Netanyahu to Trump's Iran war decision?
- Will the ceasefire lead to a lasting peace agreement?
- How will US-Iran relations evolve under continued naval blockade?




