
Survey Finds Most Israelis View Iran War and US Deal as a Setback
A new survey has found that an overwhelming majority of Israelis view the recent war with Iran and the United States-Iran agreement that followed it as a setback for the Jewish state, with 92.1 percent of respondents saying the Islamic Republic emerged as the winner. The results, published Sunday, June 21, drew on responses gathered in the days immediately after the deal between Washington and Tehran was announced, and they paint a stark picture of public sentiment.
The poll questioned 3,644 Israelis between June 17 and 20 and was conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in collaboration with the Agam Institute. The mood cut across the political spectrum: even among voters who support the right-wing bloc led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, 93.1 percent said Iran had come out ahead. A further 82.9 percent believed the six-week campaign left Israel's long-term security weaker than it had been before the fighting began.
Some 86 percent of those surveyed expressed a negative view of both the outcome of the war and the agreement reached between Washington and Tehran without Israeli input. A nearly identical share, 87.8 percent, felt that Israel had failed to achieve the objectives it set for the offensive, or had accomplished only part of them. Israel and the United States had said the operation was meant to dismantle Iran's nuclear program and ballistic-missile arsenal and to topple the regime in Tehran.
(TOI/VFI News)
“Some trust in chariots, and some in horses: but we will remember the name of the LORD our God.” – Psalm 20:7