Netanyahu is saying the uranium issue is not settled, even after the ceasefire announcement.
That keeps the region on edge because the next step could be a deal, or it could be another round of war pressure.

The move
After President Trump announced a ceasefire, Netanyahu said Iran’s enriched uranium will be removed one way or another. He framed the pause as part of a larger campaign, not the end of it. He also said the fight against Hezbollah must continue, which tells you Israel is still trying to shape the whole battlefield, not just one front.

Why this fits Global Power Plays
This is a story about cross-border leverage and the use of military pressure to force diplomatic terms. The core mechanism is not domestic politics or messaging; it is international coercion, alliance management, and the contest over nuclear material in a regional conflict. The ceasefire matters, but only as a stage in a larger geopolitical struggle.

Who this hits
Iran’s leadership is under pressure to answer demands over its uranium stockpile. Israel is trying to lock in gains while keeping military options alive. The White House is also exposed here, because any ceasefire that does not settle the nuclear issue can pull the U.S. back into the center fast. People across the region live with the risk that a bargaining failure turns into another strike cycle.

What to watch next
- Watch for any real diplomatic channel on uranium removal, inspection, or transfer.
- Watch whether Israel keeps framing the ceasefire as temporary, which would keep military pressure in play.
- Watch for U.S. statements that either back a deal or give cover for more escalation.
