Vance, Rubio strike different tone on Iran and Israel

Friday, 26 June 2026 - 19:16

Vance%2C+Rubio+strike+different+tone+on+Iran+and+Israel
President Donald Trump's administration has pushed hard to present a united front on the Iran war, but statements by his vice president and secretary of state have at times diverged over the past week, especially on the subject of Israel.

Vice ​President JD Vance, speaking at the White House last week, lashed out against Israeli critics of the preliminary U.S.-Iran deal. He suggested that Israeli bombings of civilian ‌infrastructure in Beirut — intended to weaken Hezbollah, which has been attacking Israel — were undermining U.S.-led peace efforts.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who traveled through the Gulf this week, defended Israel's military campaign in Lebanon, repeatedly describing its actions as a justified response to Hezbollah attacks. Pressed on Vance's criticism, Rubio deflected before recounting an assault by the Lebanon-based militia on an Israeli checkpoint earlier in the week.

The contrast suggests that, even as the administration has emphasized unity, ​differing worldviews are at times rising to the surface — a challenge for a White House whose political coalition is deeply divided on foreign policy matters. It also offers an ​early glimpse of the Republican Party’s future, with Rubio and Vance both seen as potential 2028 presidential contenders.

Both Vance and Rubio were dispatched on high-profile ⁠trips abroad over the past week to defend the preliminary peace accord inked between Washington and Tehran on June 17.

Vance traveled to Switzerland for a round of talks with Iranian officials. Speaking ​to reporters on Sunday, he struck a decidedly optimistic tone on the state of talks with Iran. He has also said repeatedly in recent weeks that Gulf states could fund Iran's reconstruction.

He has also ​frequently mentioned the possibility of a new, more cooperative relationship between Iran and the U.S., revealing in an interview released on Thursday that the U.S. had invited an Iranian intelligence official to serve as a deconfliction liaison with the Pentagon in Qatar.

Rubio, meanwhile, visited the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Bahrain to reassure allies — some of whom are concerned that the interim U.S.-Iran accord is too generous to Tehran — that their interests will be protected.

On ​Tuesday, Rubio said he would not ask Gulf allies during his trip to fund Iran's reconstruction, saying such a possibility was "far down the road." During a meeting with regional officials on Thursday, he emphasized ​that any deal has to be ironclad as it relates to U.S. interests and those of its allies.

"While we want a deal, we don't want a deal at any price," he said.

-Reuters


Tanzania bans political rallies ahead of youth-led protests
Friday, 26 June 2026 - 21:06

Tanzania's interior minister, Patrobas Katambi, said on Friday the government was banning ​all political rallies, less than two weeks ‌before youth-led... Read More

Ex-Trump advisor Bolton pleads guilty in classified documents case
Friday, 26 June 2026 - 20:59

John Bolton, ‌a prominent critic ​of ​US President Donald Trump ⁠who ​once ​served as his national ​security ​advisor, pleaded guilty... Read More

Falling energy prices won't defuse rising risk of civil unrest
Friday, 26 June 2026 - 20:54

A drop in oil ​prices after a fragile US-Iran truce has helped ease immediate inflationary pressure in many emerging markets, but cheaper oil alone will... Read More