Greg Gutfeld on Fox News' 'The Five' citing 1980s Trump quotes on Iran policy.
Greg Gutfeld on Fox News' 'The Five' citing 1980s Trump quotes on Iran policy.
Image generated by AI

Gutfeld pushes back on claims Israel is driving Trump’s Iran policy, citing Trump’s past comments

Image generated by AI
Fact checked

Fox News host Greg Gutfeld argued on "The Five" that President Donald Trump’s posture toward Iran reflects Trump’s own long-standing views rather than pressure from Israel, pointing to Trump remarks from the 1980s that advocated a hardline approach during the Iran hostage crisis and the Iran-Iraq war.

Greg Gutfeld, a co-host of Fox News’ "The Five," criticized claims that President Donald Trump’s Iran policy is being driven by Israel, arguing that Trump has publicly voiced tough views on Iran for decades.

During the segment, co-host Dana Perino said the criticism surfaced early in the current conflict, summarizing it as the allegation that “Israel made Trump do it.” Perino added that Trump and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt have rejected that characterization.

In the exchange, Gutfeld said critics across the political spectrum have advanced versions of the argument that Trump is acting at Israel’s direction in attacking Iran. The Daily Wire’s account of the segment cited figures including Tucker Carlson, Steve Bannon and Rep. Ilhan Omar as examples of commentators and politicians who have raised claims about Israeli influence.

Gutfeld responded by pointing to Trump’s earlier remarks, saying the idea that Israel is dictating Trump’s actions “has been disproven by history” and arguing that Trump “telegraphed” his position decades ago, including references to Iran’s Kharg Island.

Trump made comments along those lines in a 1980 interview with Rona Barrett amid the Iran hostage crisis, describing the situation as “a horror.” When Barrett suggested he was advocating U.S. troops going into Iran to bring the hostages out, Trump replied: “I absolutely feel that, yes.”

Trump also made similar remarks in a 1988 Guardian interview by Polly Toynbee (published as “Towering Trump”), in which he said he would be “harsh on Iran” and added that if Iran fired “one bullet” at U.S. forces or ships, he would “do a number on Kharg Island” and “go in and take it.”

A clip of the "The Five" discussion circulated on X in a March 18, 2026, post from the account TV News Now, which the Daily Wire linked in its write-up.

What people are saying

Discussions on X predominantly support Greg Gutfeld's argument that Trump's Iran policy stems from his own long-held views since the 1980s, not Israeli influence. Conservative influencers shared clips from 'The Five,' praising Gutfeld for debunking the narrative as historically inaccurate and antisemitic. High-engagement posts emphasized Trump's consistency on Iran threats, including targeting Kharg Island. Skeptical voices framing U.S. policy as Israel-driven appeared less directly tied to Gutfeld's rebuttal.

Related Articles

Dramatic split-image illustration depicting Iranian military evacuation amid closed airspace and Trump announcing policy shift, symbolizing US unpredictability in potential strike tensions.
Image generated by AI

Trump's unpredictability creates tension with Iran over potential strike

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Iranian airspace closed on Wednesday night amid signs of an imminent US attack, but no strike occurred, leaving experts to describe it as part of President Trump's characteristic unpredictability. Military assets moved and bases partially evacuated, yet Trump shifted his tone, stating that killings in Iran had stopped. Analysts view this as a psychological operation to confuse Tehran while US forces reposition.

During a Saturday broadcast of 'The Weekend: Primetime' on MS NOW, formerly MSNBC, co-host Antonia Hylton criticized the language used by President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to describe Iran and its proxies. Hylton described the rhetoric as arrogant and racist, accusing it of portraying Iranians as savages and subhuman. The segment highlighted concerns over messaging amid ongoing U.S. military action against the Iranian regime.

Reported by AI

Young supporters of President Donald Trump voiced frustration over the ongoing war in Iran during the Conservative Political Action Conference in Grapevine, Texas, revealing a generational split in the Republican base. One month into U.S. strikes alongside Israel, attendees debated interventionism while older conservatives cheered the campaign. Trump skipped the event for the first time in a decade amid these tensions.

An internal firestorm at the Heritage Foundation over its president’s defense of Tucker Carlson after an interview with white nationalist Nick Fuentes has exposed deeper rifts on the right over Israel. While staff and some donors recoiled, new polling shows younger conservatives growing more skeptical of the U.S.-Israel relationship.

Reported by AI Fact checked

In a nearly three-hour interview filmed at Ben Gurion Airport, Tucker Carlson questioned U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee about Christian Zionism and biblical claims to territory. Huckabee said it would be “fine” for Israel to “take it all” when pressed about land described in Genesis, remarks that drew condemnation from Arab governments and fueled a broader debate over U.S. support for Israel and the Gaza war.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited the site of a deadly Iranian strike in Beit Shemesh, where nine people, including four teenagers, were killed. He thanked U.S. President Donald Trump for supporting efforts against Iran, describing them as a bid to save the world from a nuclear-armed regime. The remarks came amid escalating tensions following a joint U.S.-Israeli attack on Iranian military sites.

Reported by AI

President Trump justified U.S. strikes on Iran's nuclear program despite oil prices topping $100 per barrel, following Iranian attacks on tankers that disrupted Gulf shipping. He prioritized preventing Iran's nuclear armament over short-term energy costs, announcing further measures to ease U.S. gas prices.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline