Danny Danon: ‘Hamas Will Not Stay Here, Period’
Israel’s Ambassador Danny Danon offered a sweeping, hard-edged assessment of Israel’s security landscape and diplomatic horizon during a one-on-one conversation with Arutz Sheva — delivered in the brief window between two meetings with newly appointed U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz. Danon said the whirlwind tour he and Waltz conducted along Israel’s borders was intended to give the incoming Trump administration an unfiltered view of the dangers Israel continues to confront.
Danon described their shared visit to the Gaza periphery — including a stop with the family of fallen soldier Ran Gvili, whose remains are still held by Hamas — as a stark reminder of why the organization cannot be permitted to retain power. “Hamas will not stay here. Period. With all due respect to reconstruction and humanitarian issues, the main focus should be on the fact that Hamas cannot stay in power in Gaza,” he declared.
Pressed on whether President Donald Trump’s eagerness to move swiftly on diplomatic initiatives might produce pressure on Israel, Danon argued that Trump’s own plan provides clear guardrails. He emphasized that the document itself requires Israel to secure the release of every hostage before any political process moves forward. “When you read the resolution and the initiative of President Trump, it says very clearly that the next stage will be after all the hostages are back home and we are going to insist on this point that all of them must come back home,” he said.
Aerial assessments of the Golan Heights brought Waltz face-to-face with the volatility simmering along the Syrian frontier. Israeli troops attempted to apprehend a terrorist in Quneitra during the visit, though the suspect fled. Danon used that moment to stress that Israel will not allow Syria to become a repeat of Lebanon. “We want to see results on the ground. We learned the lesson. We saw what happened in Lebanon. We made a mistake allowing Hezbollah to build their forces on the border. We are not going to repeat that mistake on the Golan Heights. We will not allow those militias to build their presence, their bunkers, tunnels on the Golan Heights.”
Regarding Lebanon, Danon said Hezbollah’s attempts to rebuild under cover of a ceasefire are unacceptable, and that Israel expects Beirut to take real action — not simply issue statements. “The Lebanese government are talking about efforts to neutralize, but we want to see actions. It’s not enough to declare. If they will not take the necessary steps, we will have to step in and neutralize. We are not going to wait forever for the Lebanese government,” he warned.
Danon added that Washington would not fault Israel if it is forced to intervene. “If Lebanese will deal with that, that’s okay. If they will not deal with us, our colleagues in DC will understand that we have no other choice,” he said.
On the diplomatic front, Danon brushed aside recent European-backed attempts at the UN to advance Palestinian statehood as hollow political theater. He said the moves “has no meaning” and thanked the United States for opposing them, while accusing Spain, Norway, Ireland, and Slovenia of amplifying “anti-Israel propaganda at the UN and in the EU,” even amid the Gaza ceasefire.
Despite ongoing military operations, Danon said he sees Arab and Muslim countries edging closer to Israel in unprecedented ways. “I can feel it and I see that Muslim leaders and leaders from the Arab League are getting closer to Israel. We have better dialogues and I think it will happen sooner than later. I’m very optimistic about it. I know that President Trump it’s on his agenda to make it happen and I believe it will happen very soon.”
When asked whether future normalization — including with Saudi Arabia — might hinge on Palestinian statehood, Danon pointed to the existing peace treaties with Egypt, Jordan, the UAE, Bahrain, and Morocco, none of which required the establishment of a Palestinian state. He argued that Arab leaders understand there is simply “no viable partner” within the Palestinian leadership, citing Hamas’s rule in Gaza and dysfunction inside the Palestinian Authority.
Danon praised Ambassador Waltz — a former U.S. Army Green Beret commander — as “a friend of Israel, of the Jewish people, very committed, very knowledgeable,” noting that his military background gives him an instinctive sense of the stakes Israel faces. “The fact that we actually have to fight for our freedom and that’s what we are doing for the last 24 months the entire n20ation fought. we called the reserves, 400,000 people showed up. He gets it.”
{Matzav.com}
