Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu used a major address at the JNS International Policy Summit on Sunday to highlight what he described as Israel’s unprecedented military achievements against Iran and its regional terror allies, while pledging that Israel will continue acting aggressively to safeguard its security.
At the outset of his remarks, Netanyahu pushed back against competing narratives surrounding his relationship with President Donald Trump, arguing that both leaders make decisions based on their respective national interests rather than acting at one another’s direction.
“In the United States, they say that President Trump does everything that I ask him to do, and in Israel, they say that I do everything he wants me to do. Neither is true,” Netanyahu said. “We’re leaders of independent and proud countries. We stand for our interests. I stand for the interests of Israel and for its security.”
Reflecting on key decisions made during the war, Netanyahu said he repeatedly ignored advice urging restraint and instead chose a more aggressive course of action against Israel’s enemies.
“They told me not to enter Rafah. I entered Rafah. I was told not to strike Hezbollah. We struck Hezbollah. They told me not to confront Iran. We confronted Iran,” Netanyahu said.
The prime minister argued that those actions prevented a catastrophic outcome and eliminated what he viewed as a direct threat to Israel’s survival.
“We prevented Iran from carrying out a plan to annihilate us. And today, they would have had a nuclear weapon, an atomic bomb to do so. We prevented that from happening,” he said.
Netanyahu credited the combined efforts of Israel and the United States with carrying out a historic military campaign that severely damaged Iran’s strategic capabilities. He said the operation targeted nuclear facilities, key scientists, military assets, and critical economic infrastructure.
“We created the conditions for its future fall. That is what will be the real triumph – when the Iranian people take their own destiny in their hands and they knock out this brutal regime that is terrorizing them and terrorizing the rest of the world,” he said.
Turning to Iran’s network of regional proxies, Netanyahu said Israel had fundamentally altered the balance of power by striking major terrorist organizations and eliminating senior leaders.
“We shattered Iran’s terror axis,” Netanyahu declared, noting the elimination of Hamas leaders Yahya Sinwar, Ismail Haniyeh, and Mohammed Deif, along with tens of thousands of terrorists.
Netanyahu also credited Israel’s military operations in Gaza with securing the return of hostages held by Hamas.
“We brought back every single hostage. Every last one of them,” he said. “We got them back because we put our brave soldiers, our incomparably heroic soldiers, right into their stronghold in Gaza.”
Discussing the northern front, Netanyahu pointed to what he described as a devastating blow against Hezbollah’s military infrastructure and operational capabilities.
“We took out Nasrallah. We decimated Hezbollah’s military machine. We prevented the Radwan force from invading the Galilee. We destroyed over 90% of the 150,000 rockets and missiles that Hezbollah amassed against us,” he stated.
The prime minister stressed that Israel has no intention of relinquishing strategically important security zones as long as threats remain.
“We established a security zone in Gaza. We established a security zone in Syria. We established a security zone in Lebanon. And we shall keep it as long as is necessary to protect our people,” he said.
Netanyahu said one of the most significant outcomes of the conflict has been a shift in Israel’s military doctrine, replacing reactive policies with proactive action.
“We changed Israel’s security doctrine. We initiate, we attack, we surprise, and we attack those enemies that seek our destruction before they have a chance to do so,” Netanyahu said.
Speaking shortly after participating in ceremonies marking five decades since the death of his brother, Lt. Col. Yoni Netanyahu, during the Entebbe rescue mission, the prime minister linked Israel’s current struggle with warnings he said his family recognized years ago regarding Iran’s ambitions.
“No matter what happens in the talks, with an agreement, without an agreement, I pledge to you that Iran, as long as I’m prime minister, will never have a nuclear weapon. Never,” Netanyahu said.
He also defended Israel’s continued deployment in southern Lebanon, arguing that any responsible government would take similar steps to shield its citizens from cross-border threats.
“As long as we need to protect our people, we will remain in the security zone in South Lebanon,” he said.
Addressing international criticism of Israel’s military operations, Netanyahu insisted that the IDF goes further than any other military in the world to reduce civilian casualties while targeting terrorists.
“No army goes to such lengths like the Israeli army to target terrorists and minimize civilian casualties. We should be commended for it, not condemned,” he said.
The prime minister argued that no country facing similar attacks would behave differently from Israel and defended the establishment of buffer zones to neutralize threats.
“No country would be asked to do otherwise. Now, you imagine the United States. Across the border, you have thousands, an army of thousands of terrorists who pellet your cities and your towns with rockets and ballistic missiles and killer drones. They kill your soldiers, they kill your citizens, they kill your children. And they threaten them every day. Well, what would America do? Would it say, well, there’s nothing we can do? Let’s hold our fire? Is that what America would say?”
“No, you know damn well what America would do. It would cross the border, create a security zone, kill the terrorists and protect its people until the threat is removed. That’s exactly what we are doing. And let me tell you something else. No country would do it better. No country would do it better because the terrorists do not just target civilians, they also hide among their own civilians,” Netanyahu said.
Concluding his address, Netanyahu turned to the global rise in antisemitism and urged Jews worldwide to respond with confidence and determination rather than fear.
“Stand up. Don’t cower. Don’t be afraid. Fight back, because people will only respect us if we respect ourselves,” he said. “Stand up for the truth. Stand up for Israel. Stand up for the Jewish people. Stand up for the Jewish future.”
{Matzav.com}