Netanyahu wants to wean Israel off US military support, he tells CBS
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu plans to end U.S. military aid within ten years. He seeks to boost ties with Gulf nations. Netanyahu stated this goal in a recent interview. He believes it is the right time to reset the financial relation...

"I want to draw down to zero the American financial support, the financial component of the military cooperation that we have," Netanyahu told CBS News' "60 Minutes" program.
Netanyahu said Israel receives about $3.8 billion of U.S. military aid a year. The U.S. has agreed to provide a total of $38 billion in military aid to Israel from 2018 to 2028.
But it is "absolutely" the right time to possibly reset the U.S.-Israeli financial relationship, Netanyahu said.
"I don't want to wait for the next Congress," he told CBS. "I want to start now."
Israel has long had bipartisan consensus within the U.S. Congress for military aid, but support from lawmakers and the public has frayed since the outbreak of war in Gaza in October 2023.
Sixty percent of U.S. adults have an unfavorable view of Israel, and 59% had little or no confidence in Netanyahu to do the right thing regarding world affairs, according to a Pew survey conducted in March. Both percentages were up seven percentage points from a year earlier.
Netanyahu said deteriorating support for Israel in the United States "correlates almost 100% with the geometric rise of social media."
He said several countries, which he did not identify, have "basically manipulated" social media in a way that "hurt us badly," though he personally did not believe in censorship.
NO TIMETABLE IN IRAN
The war has led to higher gasoline prices, which contributed to U.S. inflation rising on an annualized basis in March to the highest level since May 2023.
Only after the war began did Israeli planners recognize Iran's ability to close the strait, Netanyahu said. "It took a while for them to understand how big that risk is, which they understand now," he said.
In the "60 Minutes" interview, Netanyahu declined to discuss Israel's military plans or timetable in Iran, but he addressed the potential ramifications if Iran's leadership changed.
"If this regime is indeed weakened or possibly toppled, I think it's the end of Hezbollah, it's the end of Hamas, it's probably the end of the Houthis, because the whole scaffolding of the terrorist proxy network that Iran built collapses," Netanyahu said.
Asked if it were possible to topple the Iranian regime, Netanyahu said: "Is it possible? Yes. Is it guaranteed? No."
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