Front Burner - The unanswered questions of the Iran strike
Episode Date: June 26, 2025On Tuesday, Donald Trump angrily swore about his frustrations with Israel and Iran after both countries exchanged missile fire just before the ceasefire Trump helped negotiate.So far, the fragile ceas...efire has held. However as more information comes out about the extent of the damage done to Iran’s nuclear facilities and their plans to continue their nuclear program, will it last? Will the U.S. be able to engage in diplomacy with Iran after joining Israel’s bombing campaign? And after Trump publicly chastised Israel, what does it tell us about the U.S.’s relationship with Israel right now?Our returning guest is Gregg Carlstrom, longtime Middle East correspondent with The Economist and author of the book “How Long Will Israel Survive? The Threat From Within”. For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts
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I'm Jamie Poisson.
On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump's frustrations with the Middle East were laid bare, to say the least.
We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the fuck they're doing.
Do you understand that?
This came after he announced a ceasefire between Israel and Iran on Truth Social Monday night.
Both countries exchanged missiles after the announcement, raising confusion as to whether
the ceasefire was indeed happening.
But since Tuesday morning, the fragile ceasefire has held, one that Trump insisted both sides
wanted equally.
What remains now is the tension between Trump and his Israeli allies after his outburst.
NBC reported that Israeli leadership were stunned and embarrassed by the way the president
lashed out at them and Iran.
So to help us understand where things stand and what this could mean for the conflict
moving forward, I'm joined again by Greg Karlstrom. Greg is a long-time Middle East correspondent with
The Economist and author of the book, How Long Will Israel Survive? The Threat From Within.
Greg, thank you so much for making the time again to come onto the show.
Thanks for having me.
It's been a very fluid few days to say the least.
So I just want to timestamp our conversation right now.
You and I are speaking at 2pm Eastern on Wednesday.
I believe you're in Doha, right?
So it's probably it's nighttime there.
Where do things sit with the ceasefire
between Iran and Israel right now?
Well, it's holding for now after some,
after a bit of a rocky start on Tuesday morning here,
local time, which I think was not surprising to anyone.
I mean, just about every time there's a ceasefire
in this region, someone tries to get in one last lick after
it was meant to start.
We saw that in November when there was a truce between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon, which
was violated an hour or two after it began.
Every time there's been a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, going back many years, we've
seen that.
No one was terribly surprised, I think,
that the Iranians fired one last volley of missiles and then the Israelis tried
to retaliate for that after it was supposed to begin. But since then, for I
guess about 36 hours now, it has been holding.
Trump has claimed that Iran's nuclear sites are, quote, obliterated, though
reports from the Defense Intelligence
Agency, the Pentagon's intelligence arm, are saying that the U.S. strikes over the
weekend didn't destroy the core components of their nuclear program and may have actually
only set it back a few months.
The White House and Trump have disagreed with this assessment.
It was, I believe it was total obliteration.
They're not, can you imagine after all that, they're going to say, oh, let's go and do Trump have disagreed with this assessment. It was, I believe it was total obliteration.
They're not, can you imagine after all that, they're going to say, oh, let's go and do
a bomb.
What has Iran said about the extent of the damage to their program?
Do we have any kind of other independent analysis here?
We don't have any independent analysis and I think it's going to be sometime before we
get any.
Iran initially tried to downplay the damage from these strikes.
So shortly after they took place over the weekend, the Iranian messaging was that they
didn't do much damage and particularly at Fordow, which is that underground facility
built into the side of a mountain, the Iranians insisted that the damage was just on the surface.
The messaging has changed a little bit over the past day or so.
They've acknowledged that there was some damage to their nuclear program.
But I think unless the IAEA, the UN's nuclear watchdog, is allowed to actually go in and inspect these facilities, which they had done up until quite recently, up until the war started.
Unless they're allowed to do that, we're not really going to get independent confirmation one way or the other. Iran obviously has an incentive not to publicize the full extent of the damage. Trump has an incentive to exaggerate it. We just don't know at this point.
Do you think that IAEA will even be able to do that? I know Iran's parliament has approved a bill
to suspend cooperation with the agency, right? They have, and I think it's going to be a tough
sell, let's say, with the Iranian government. The bill that parliament passed that parliament passed, a lot of what parliament does in Iran is basically
just a recommendation and that decision will ultimately be up to Iran's National Security
Council up to the supreme leader.
So the fact that parliament did it doesn't necessarily mean Iran is going to take the
step of withdrawing from the NPT and kicking out the IAEA. But there are a lot of people in the Iranian government military right now who are very
suspicious of the IAEA, who are accusing it with no evidence, I should say, but they're
accusing it of somehow collaborating with Israel.
That's how the agency is viewed inside of Iran right now.
And so there will be a lot of people, I think, urging Iran to suspend cooperation.
What do we know right now about personnel or knowledge that was taken out in these strikes? I'm thinking about the nuclear scientists, right? The people who have the knowledge to do this kind of stuff.
You know, it's a bit opaque, right? We know that, according to the Israelis,
a number of very senior nuclear scientists, people that Israel describes as
key figures in Iran's nuclear program, assassinated. And obviously, that's going to be a blow to the program.
At the same time, this is a program that's
been going on for decades, right?
It's not like there's only a handful of people in Iran
who understand the nuclear fuel cycle
or who understand steps that you might take towards weaponization,
towards building a bomb.
That knowledge is somewhat more dispersed at this point. So we can say that it's a blow to the program, but the idea
that killing a handful of scientists somehow derails it for good, I think is probably farfetched.
SETHA NARANG Trump says that the U.S. will be meeting with Iran next week. Iranian Foreign
Ministry spokesman told Al Jazeera that, quote,
while they, U.S. officials, have been talking about diplomacy, they green-lighted the Israelis
to attack Iran, they, the U.S., torpedo diplomacy.
Do you think that the U.S. will be able to prove that they're serious about diplomacy
here, you know, when it comes to next steps? I think there are two questions.
One is will the US and Iran want to make a deal sort of in the abstract?
And then the other question is, can they actually make a deal that will satisfy American and
now Israeli demands?
And I think on the first question, Iran doesn't really have a choice but to negotiate at some point
with the United States.
It's obviously mistrustful of the US in general and of Donald Trump in particular, not just
because of what happened over the past two weeks, but going back to Trump's first term
when he tore up the previous nuclear agreement with Iran, He assassinated Iran's top general.
He's someone who is considered very untrustworthy in Iran.
But if Iran wants to make a deal and it needs to make a deal to make the ceasefire durable
and to prevent, I think, future Israeli or American attacks on its nuclear program, it
has to make that deal with the US.
Nobody else can sort of guarantee that deal.
On the other question though, sort of can they make a deal?
Can they meet America's demands?
The issue before the war, going back to April when Donald Trump started negotiating with
Iran was can Iran continue enriching uranium under a new agreement or does it have to forego
the right to enrich uranium domestically?
Trump insisted it give up that right. Iran insisted on keeping that right. That was the
main sticking point in negotiations for months. And it's still a sticking point. I haven't
seen any signs that Iran is willing to concede that point, even though now its two main enrichment
facilities have probably been heavily damaged. They're still insisting in public in their statements over the past few days on keeping
the right to enrichment.
And I think as long as they're not willing to budge on that, it's going to be very hard
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Let's talk about that outburst from Trump on Tuesday, please, if we could. So before he swore, right, he told reporters, quote,
I'm not happy with Israel.
You know, when I say, okay, now you have 12 hours,
you don't go out in the first hour
and just drop everything you have on them.
So I'm not happy with them.
I'm not happy with Iran either.
He was not mincing words there, right? He was visibly frustrated. And just, I'm so
curious what was going through your head when you saw that from the president.
I thought it was actually quite relatable. I mean, I think all of us who
work on the Middle East are kind of cranky and sleep-deprived at this point.
So watching Trump react that way, that was how we're all feeling right now.
I mean, I think, you know, I get it.
I think over the weekend when Trump approved these American strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities,
there was an understanding clearly with the Israelis that if America was entering the
war, America had ownership of the war at that point, right?
It wasn't just Israel's war in Iran.
America had a stake in it too.
And the quid pro quo there was that if America bombed Fordow
and these two other facilities,
that that would essentially be the end of the war,
that Trump would then want a ceasefire shortly afterwards.
He communicated that to Prime Minister Netanyahu in Israel,
the Qataris communicated that to Iran. I think Trump probably went to bed on Monday night
in Washington thinking that everybody had agreed to a ceasefire and then woke up in
the morning and it seemed like it was falling apart and was understandably peeved about
that because he thought he had an understanding with the Israeli prime minister.
And would it be the first time that Prime Minister Netanyahu
told an American president, yeah, yeah, we have a deal,
and then tried to almost wriggle out of it?
Well, do you think that outburst worked
to kind of get the Israelis in line there?
Because I note like earlier that same morning,
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz had said, quote, I have instructed the IDF to respond forcefully to Iran's violation of the ceasefire with intense strikes against regime targets in the heart of Tehran.
You know, every conversation that I have had with Israeli officials current or former since November, since Donald Trump was reelected.
They have told me Benjamin Netanyahu is afraid of Donald Trump in a way that he is not of
other American presidents because Netanyahu has spent so long building Trump up as Israel's
greatest friend, Israel's greatest defender.
This is someone that he can't then turn around and cross.
If he does so, he's going to risk a lot of his support in America. The Republican party will
side with Donald Trump over Bibi Netanyahu. That's different from, you think about Joe Biden,
the last year that he was in office in 2024. Every week or two, there was a news story about how
Joe Biden is sick of Benjamin
Netanyahu and the relationship is breaking down. And, you know, Biden is about to lay down the law
and tell him to end the war in Gaza. And that never happened, right? It never seemed as if
Netanyahu was actually afraid of Biden, which is why time and time again, he sort of did everything
he could to sabotage Biden's efforts at a
ceasefire. He just can't do that with Donald Trump.
Can you tell me more about why you don't think that he can do it with Donald Trump?
I mean, look at how every world leader is dealing with Trump right now. He is, I'm trying
to find the word. I mean, he is unpredictable.
That's probably an understatement.
Everybody is worried about, if you get on his bad side,
what he might do.
And I think that's particularly true for Israel.
I mean, put yourself in Netanyahu's shoes right now.
He has been dependent for the past 20 months
on American support.
He has needed American military resupply so that Israel
could fight wars on multiple fronts. He's needed American help defending Israel from
ballistic missiles fired from Iran, obviously diplomatic support at the UN and elsewhere.
More than $20 billion of American military aid since October 7th, Israel could not have fought these wars without the
United States.
I think Netanyahu was acutely aware of that.
If you piss off Donald Trump, does some of that support go away?
Look at how he treats other close allies in NATO, for example.
Look at how he treats Canada.
Look at how he treats people who have been American allies for many, many decades.
Look at how transactional and fickle Trump is with them.
And then imagine you're Netanyahu.
You don't want to risk that happening to Israel as well.
Right, right.
And so it was just fascinating to hear you say that you're talking to people in Israeli
or around Israeli leadership who actually think that that could legitimately happen.
Like that they could use sanctions
or that they could actually halt military aid,
that he would actually do it.
There's also the diplomatic stuff
that's happening recently, right?
I'm thinking of like Steve Witkoff,
how he was able to get Israel to come to the table
and agree to a ceasefire deal with Hamas
at the beginning of the year.
In part, using like some strong arming, including demanding that Netanyahu come meet him
while he was observing Shabbat.
And then they've kind of gone around Netanyahu, too,
a couple of times, too.
I'm thinking about recently, didn't they
negotiate directly with Hamas for hostage releases, this kind of stuff?
Is this very unusual?
Yeah.
Right.
I mean, it is.
America has not had any direct interactions with Hamas for decades.
Hamas is a proscribed terrorist organization in the US, and so you cannot talk to them.
So having Trump's hostage envoy, Adam Bolller, hold these direct talks with Hamas to secure the release of an American Israeli hostage, he had dual citizenship of both countries that yeah, that was shocking to a lot of people in Israel, all the more so because it was done without notifying Israel, they found out about it, because their own intelligence agencies were spying on the particular member of Hamas who was the interlocutor there, but they weren't
notified by the Americans. So Trump is willing to do these things that other presidents have
not been willing to do with regards to Israel. And he also has a big chunk of his coalition
that is very critical of the relationship that America has historically
had with Israel. His decision to carry out these strikes on Iran was not popular with
people like Steve Bannon, his first term advisor, with other members of this MAGA coalition
who worried that-
Yep, Tucker Carlson.
Exactly. You know, Trump campaigned on, I'm not going to get us into wars
in the Middle East.
And then he turned around and got America
into a war in the Middle East.
And OK, for now, it was just a single strike on one day.
But there's big fear that it won't end there,
that this is going to become a longer term commitment.
So he did something to support Israel
that was very unpopular with many of his supporters. And do you think that his stranglehold kind of on the party itself also gives him some
leeway too? That he might not face the same kind of blowback in Congress that other presidents
might have faced?
Yeah, I mean, I think he can do just about anything, right?
And the Republican Party will find a way to contort itself to get behind it.
So Trump ordering these strikes on Iran, you know, that was quite a popular decision with
the more hawkish elements of the party.
People like Lindsey Graham, for example, the senator from South Carolina. But if Trump hadn't done that, I'm sure people like Graham would have found a way to support
him in not doing it and to say that actually, you know, he made a brilliant decision and
he never should have done this. So I know in 1982 Ronald Reagan, then President Ronald Reagan famously halted arms and jet
shipments to Israel to pressure then Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin to halt a bombing
campaign on southern Lebanon.
Do you see any parallels between that moment and today?
I don't think we're there yet. I think the things that Trump has done, like carrying out direct talks with Hamas, like
ending the U.S. bombing campaign against the Houthis in Yemen, even though the Houthis
were still bombing Israel.
campaign against the Houthis in Yemen, even though the Houthis were still bombing Israel. He did those things, you know, arguably out of a sense that there was an American national
interest at stake, getting back a hostage who had American citizenship and ending a
bombing campaign that was turning out to be very indecisive and costly and wasteful.
I think to go a step further than that, to impose punitive sanctions on Israel, I think
there'd have to be some interest at stake there as well.
Now, if Trump feels like we need to make a deal with Iran, you know, we've hit them hard
now and it's time for diplomacy and the war needs to end, and Israel had decided to go
ahead with the war over his objections, I think at that point, you would probably
see Trump start to contemplate more punitive measures.
But I think, absent that, I think
Netanyahu would have to give him some reason to do it.
And I'm not sure he's quite given him
enough of a reason yet.
We've talked a little bit today about where things could
go with negotiations with Iran next, even though that does seem like quite a
tall order considering the sticking points that you talked about. Before we go, I would love to
hear your thoughts on where things could go with Gaza. Do you have any sense that Trump will now
turn his attention back to what is happening in Gaza. Will it be part of a larger negotiation?
Might we see a ceasefire there now?
My, I mean, I hope, first of all, I really hope there is.
There should have been a ceasefire long ago in Gaza.
But my, my concern is I think what a lot of American presidents have done historically is they are willing to restrain Israel when it comes to things that Israel is doing in other countries, in Lebanon, Syria, Iran.
As we've seen Trump do, you know, he's tried to obviously limit the campaign in Iran, to some extent limit what Israel is doing in Syria,
but then at the same time,
give Israel essentially free rein
to do what it wants with the Palestinians.
And I worry that we're gonna end up there as well,
that Gaza is just not going to get enough attention
in the White House.
That's what we saw earlier this year.
There was a bit of attention during the transition
where Trump was engaged, as you said before, with strong arming Netanyahu into a ceasefire.
But by March, when Netanyahu decided to abandon that ceasefire, Trump had really lost interest
in Gaza. And so there was no pushback from the White House to try to keep Israel in that
ceasefire. And since then, we haven't really seen a serious effort
to revive it.
So I'm not sure that push is going to come from Washington.
There is some talk in Israel right now
that Netanyahu is politically buoyed by the war in Iran
over the past two weeks.
It's been broadly supported by the Israeli public
and it's helped his poll numbers.
So there's some talk that maybe now he
will think about calling a snap election in the next few months,
trying to reconfigure his coalition so he's not
then as dependent on the hard right.
And as part of that, perhaps he'll
be willing to talk about a ceasefire in Gaza, which
is what most Israelis want.
60 to 70% of Israelis in every poll for months now have supported a hostage deal and a permanent
end to the war in Gaza.
So if Netanyahu now thinks that his political fortunes have improved and it's time for an
early election, if he's going to do that, I think there's a chance that he would then,
for entirely
self-interested political reasons, decide that this is the moment to finally make a deal in Gaza.
Okay, Greg, thank you so much for this.
Thank you. My pleasure.
All right, that is all for today. I'm Jamie Poisson.
Thanks so much for listening.
Talk to you tomorrow.