Donald Trump issues statement on Israel’s attack on Beirut, Bitcoin reacts

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President Donald Trump took to Truth Social to announce that Israeli troops would not proceed with a planned major operation on Beirut, following what he described as a “very productive call” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The statement came amid a string of Israeli airstrikes targeting Hezbollah installations in Beirut’s suburbs, actions Trump publicly criticized as undermining fragile peace talks.

Bitcoin responded with a 5% price increase tied to the diplomatic commentary.

What Trump actually said, and what Israel did

Trump’s statement centered on a claim that Israeli troops were being redirected away from Beirut after his conversation with Netanyahu. He framed his role as a mediator working behind the scenes, asserting that indirect communications with Hezbollah representatives had produced an agreement to cease hostilities against Israel.

Israeli military operations targeting Hezbollah-related sites in and around Beirut have been reported on multiple occasions in 2026, with strikes concentrated around June 1 and continuing through June 7-14. Trump made clear he was “not happy” with the strikes, positioning them as a direct threat to what he characterized as delicate ceasefire discussions.

The backdrop here is a ceasefire framework that was announced on April 8, 2026. Trump’s frustration appears rooted in the concern that Israeli military escalation could collapse the diplomatic architecture he’s been trying to build, particularly around a broader agreement involving Iran.

Israeli airstrikes on Beirut reportedly triggered retaliatory responses from Tehran, creating a feedback loop that made US-facilitated peace negotiations significantly harder to manage.

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