Netanyahu said reports of a break with Trump were overstated, saying the two leaders see eye-to-eye "99% of the time" even as Washington pursues nuclear talks with Tehran.
On Iran, he drew a hard red line: deal or no deal, Iran will not get a nuclear weapon while he is prime minister, and any acceptable outcome must remove enriched material and dismantle enrichment sites.
Pressed on Trump's remarks that Netanyahu "knows who the boss is" and could have "no choice" but to accept a U.S.-Iran deal, Netanyahu said disagreements are handled directly and he would judge negotiations only after they end.
Netanyahu also pushed back on Vice President JD Vance's warning not to attack Trump over the deal, while still calling Trump Israel's greatest friend in the White House.
Beyond the talks, he warned that rising antisemitism among younger Americans and anti-Israel sentiment in the U.S. threaten the broader solidarity he says underpins the U.S.-Israel alliance.