President Donald Trump claimed in remarks from Mar A Lago on Monday that a pardon for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is imminent, but at least one Israeli leader has denied the claim.
Here’s the crux: Israeli President Isaac Herzog is pushing back against Trump’s assertion that a pardon for Netanyahu, who’s tangled in corruption charges, is “on its way,” while Netanyahu meets with Trump at Mar-a-Lago to hash out a Gaza peace plan.
Let’s rewind to 2019, when Netanyahu was indicted on serious charges of bribery, fraud, and breach of trust during his fourth and fifth terms as Israel’s leader. These accusations, involving several prominent Israeli businessmen, have kept him in court since 2020.
Before the trial even kicked off, Netanyahu tried to shield himself by requesting immunity from the Israeli Parliament. That didn’t pan out, and the legal storm has raged on.
Fast forward to November—exact year unspecified in reports—when Netanyahu turned to Herzog’s office with a pardon request, arguing that constant court appearances are splitting the nation after the horrific terrorist attacks of October 7, 2023. He also claimed they’re hampering his ability to steer the Gaza war’s wind-down.
Enter Trump, who’s never shy about making waves, meeting Netanyahu at Mar-a-Lago to discuss a peace plan for Gaza. During this powwow, Trump told reporters on Monday that a pardon for Netanyahu is coming soon.
“I think he will. How do you not? He’s a wartime prime minister who’s a hero,” Trump declared to the press in Florida. Call it classic Trump—full-throated support for a leader he admires, but let’s be real: pardons aren’t his jurisdiction in Israel, and conservatives value the rule of law over personal loyalty.
Trump doubled down, adding, “How do you not give a pardon, you know?” While his heart might be in the right place, many on the right would argue that justice systems must play out without foreign interference, even from a friend like Trump.
Now, Herzog’s office is setting the record straight with a firm rebuttal. “There has been no conversation between President Herzog and President Trump since the pardon request was submitted,” they stated clearly.
Instead, Herzog spoke with a Trump administration official to outline where the pardon process stands. That explanation, per his office, matches what he’s told the Israeli public—no special deals, no secret chats.
Still, Trump’s comments suggest he’s been given a different impression, which raises questions about miscommunication or wishful thinking. For those of us skeptical of elite backchannels, this discrepancy demands clarity.
From a conservative lens, this saga isn’t just about Netanyahu’s fate—it’s about sovereignty and the principle that no leader is above the law. If Trump’s enthusiasm for a pardon muddies the waters, it risks looking like meddling in another nation’s judicial process, something the left would howl about if the roles were reversed.
American patriots, especially those wary of overreaching globalist agendas, want to see Israel handle its own affairs without outside pressure skewing the scales of justice. Let’s support our allies, sure, but not by undermining their legal systems or dodging accountability. Investigations must proceed, full stop.