Become a Member
Opinion

Trump’s Truman Moment

When the history of Israel is written, they may stand side by side as two of the most consequential US leaders for the safety and security of the Jewish state

June 18, 2025 14:51
Elbaum.png
US President Harry S. Truman (1884 - 1972) speaking to Congress on October 23, 1945 (left) US President Donald Trump (right) addresses a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on March 04, 2025 (Image: Getty)
2 min read

At first glance, few American presidents could seem more different than Harry Truman – the humble haberdasher turned statesman – and Donald Trump, the billionaire businessman and deal maker. Yet when the history of Israel is written, they may stand side by side as two of the most consequential US leaders for the safety and security of the Jewish state.

The Jewish people’s enduring debt to Truman stems from his singular decision to recognise the nascent state of Israel just 11 minutes after its declaration of independence. It is difficult today to grasp the enormity of this act – or the political courage it required. Truman’s decision was strongly opposed by his Secretary of State, George Marshall, the military hero Winston Churchill once called the “organiser of victory” in World War II. Marshall not only opposed recognition but warned Truman that he would publicly oppose him in the 1948 election if he went ahead with it.

Today, 77 years on, Israel faces a vastly different global landscape – yet another moment of existential consequence looms. The span of time between Truman’s 1948 decision and the end of the Holocaust is roughly the same as that between October 7, 2023, and today. Once again, a US president confronts a fateful choice: whether to act decisively against a threat that imperils nearly seven million Jews and millions of other Israeli citizens. Even considering the profoundly consequential, pro-Israel steps taken during his first terms, Trump now faces a moment unlike any other American president’s – with only Richard Nixon in 1973 coming remotely close.

Like Truman, Trump faces opposition from influential voices in his own orbit. Tucker Carlson – described by Politico as “perhaps the highest-profile proponent of Trumpism” – has labelled advocates for strong US support for Israel as “warmongers” and questioned their loyalty to America. Steve Bannon, a central architect of Trump’s political rise, has echoed similar sentiments.