Netanyahu Breaks Silence on Iran Deal: “The Threat of Immediate Destruction Has Been Removed”
Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu addressed the nation on Monday evening, offering his first public response to the newly announced agreement between the United States and Iran and outlining Israel’s position going forward.
Opening his remarks, Netanyahu reiterated that preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons remains the central mission of his public life and vowed that the agreement would not alter that commitment.
“My life’s mission is the fight against the Iranian nuclear program. With or without an agreement – Iran will not have nuclear weapons, not today or tomorrow. People ask what we have achieved, and the answer is: we have removed the threat of immediate annihilation from us,” Netanyahu said.
The prime minister pointed to the economic damage inflicted on Iran in recent years, arguing that the cumulative impact has been massive and far-reaching.
He added, “We caused enormous damage to Iran’s economy, some estimate it at a trillion dollars.”
Despite the diplomatic developments, Netanyahu stressed that Israel’s confrontation with Iran and its regional network remains ongoing and warned against any sense of complacency.
“The struggle is not over and done with, we must continue to stand guard, be strong and determined, and defend ourselves as much as necessary. This is true against Iran’s terrorist arms, and not only against it,” Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu also referenced the security doctrine he adopted following the October 7 attacks, saying Israel will no longer tolerate hostile forces entrenching themselves along its borders.
The Prime Minister emphasized, “After October 7, I established a simple principle – we will not allow terrorist organizations to establish themselves on our borders. We have broken through the barrier of fear and we are harming those who seek our lives.”
Turning to his relationship with President Trump, Netanyahu acknowledged that the two leaders do not always agree on every issue, but said Israel must remain focused on protecting its own security interests.
Addressing his relationship with the US president, he said, “Trump is the President of the US and I am the Prime Minister of Israel. There are times when President Trump and I do not see eye to eye. We need to stand up for Israel’s security interests wisely.”
When asked whether he planned to mount the same type of public opposition to Trump’s agreement that he once expected Israeli leaders to direct toward President Obama’s nuclear accord, Netanyahu argued that the situations are fundamentally different.
Asked if he intends to fight against Trump’s nuclear deal like he expected the previous government to fight against Obama’s, Netanyahu rejected the comparison.
“The basic difference between the situation then and the situation now is that every agreement is accompanied by a credible military threat (on Iran). Then, there was no military threat. Today, because of what we did, not only the US, but also because of us, because we went in with 14,000 bombing runs, that’s the biggest difference, there is a credible military threat,” Netanyahu explained.
{Matzav.com}