Israeli opposition leaders have reacted to the ceasefire between Iran and the US with fury, slamming Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for failing to achieve regime change in Tehran.
Iran and the US agreed to a two-week pause in the fighting on Tuesday night following last-ditch talks to prevent the widespread destruction of Iran threatened by Trump.
Netanyahu's office claimed to support the deal despite reports suggesting Israeli officials were not consulted in the critical hours leading up to the agreement.
Israel has since lashed out by killing hundreds of people in carpet bombing across Lebanon , which it claims was not subject to the ceasefire.
"There has never been such a political disaster in all of our history," opposition leader Yair Lapid wrote on social media on Wednesday.
"Netanyahu failed politically, failed strategically, and didn't meet a single one of the goals that he set himself … It will take us years to repair the political and strategic damage that Netanyahu wrought due to arrogance, negligence, and a lack of strategic planning," he said.
Netanyahu had, in the early days of the war, vowed to "eradicate the Iranian regime" and cripple the country's ballistic missile programme.
Instead, the ceasefire leaves a more hardline leadership in power in Tehran and significant parts of its missile and drone capabilities intact.
Iran also continues to dictate terms in the Strait of Hormuz, leaving it in a stronger strategic position than it was before the war.
Yair Golan, head of the left-leaning party, The Democrats, slammed Netanyahu for overseeing "one of the most severe strategic failures Israel has ever known".
"None of the goals were achieved: The nuclear program was not destroyed. The ballistic threat remains. The regime is still in place and even emerges from this war stronger," he wrote on X.
"This is a total failure that endangers Israel’s security for years to come."
Hardliner Avigdor Lieberman, a former defence minister and current member of parliament, said the deal would allow Iran to regroup and force Israel to restart the war "under harsher conditions and pay a heavier price".
In the hours since the agreement, Israel unleashed the most destructive round of bombing in Lebanon of the current war, launching hundreds of airstrikes across Beirut and the south of the country.
The assault is threatening to upend the ceasefire, with Iran warning it will resume missile strikes against Israel if it does not halt its attacks.
Israel has insisted Lebanon is not part of the agreement, despite mediator Pakistan and Iran announcing the truce would apply across the region.