Israel will not allow
the terrorist regime in Iran to develop nuclear weapons. Not now. Not in a
decade. Not ever.
transcript:
Mr. President, ladies and gentlemen, what I’m about to
say is going to shock you: Israel has a bright future at the UN.
Now I know that hearing that from me must surely come as a
surprise, because year after year I’ve stood at this very podium and slammed
the UN for its obsessive bias against Israel. And the UN deserved every
scathing word – for the disgrace of the General Assembly that last year passed
20 resolutions against the democratic state of Israel and a grand total of
three resolutions against all the other countries on the planet.
Israel – 20; rest of the world – three.
And what about the joke called the UN Human Rights Council,
which each year condemns Israel more than all the countries of the world
combined? As women are being systematically raped, murdered, sold into slavery
across the world, which is the only country that the UN’s Commission on Women
chose to condemn this year? Yep, you guessed it – Israel. Israel. Israel, where
women fly fighter jets, lead major corporations, head universities, preside –
twice – over the Supreme Court, and have served as speaker of the Knesset and
prime minister.
And this circus continues at UNESCO. UNESCO, the UN body
charged with preserving world heritage. Now, this is hard to believe, but
UNESCO just denied the 4,000-year connection between the Jewish people and its
holiest site, the Temple Mount. That’s just as absurd as denying the connection
between the Great Wall of China and China.
Ladies and Gentlemen: The UN, begun as a moral force, has
become a moral farce. So when it comes to Israel at the UN, you’d probably
think nothing will ever change, right? Well, think again. You see, everything
will change, and a lot sooner than you think. The change will happen in this
hall, because back home, your governments are rapidly changing their attitudes
towards Israel. And sooner or later, that’s going to change the way you vote on
Israel at the UN.
More and more nations in Asia, in Africa, in Latin America, more
and more nations see Israel as a potent partner – a partner in fighting the
terrorism of today, a partner in developing the technology of tomorrow.
Today Israel has diplomatic relations with over 160
countries. That’s nearly double the number that we had when I served here as
Israel’s ambassador some 30 years ago. And those ties are getting broader and
deeper every day. World leaders increasingly appreciate that Israel is a
powerful country with one of the best intelligence services on earth. Because
of our unmatched experience and proven capabilities in fighting terrorism, many
of your governments seek our help in keeping your countries safe.
Many also seek to benefit from Israel’s ingenuity in
agriculture, in health, in water, in cyber and in the fusion of big data,
connectivity and artificial intelligence – that fusion that is changing our
world in every way.
You might consider this: Israel leads the world in recycling
wastewater. We recycle about 90% of our wastewater. Now, how remarkable is
that? Well, given that the next country on the list only recycles about 20% of
its wastewater, Israel is a global water power. So if you have a thirsty world,
and we do, there’s no better ally than Israel.
How about cybersecurity? That’s an issue that affects
everyone. Israel accounts for one-tenth of one percent of the world’s
population, yet last year we attracted some 20% of the global private
investment in cybersecurity. I want you to digest that number. In cyber, Israel
is punching a whopping 200 times above its weight. So Israel is also a global
cyber power. If hackers are targeting your banks, your planes, your power grids
and just about everything else, Israel can offer indispensable help.
Governments are changing their attitudes towards Israel,
because they know that Israel can help them protect their peoples, can help
them feed them, can help them better their lives.
This summer I had an unbelievable opportunity to see this
change so vividly during an unforgettable visit to four African countries. This
is the first visit to Africa by an Israeli prime minister in decades. Later
today, I’ll be meeting with leaders from 17 African countries. We’ll discuss
how Israeli technology can help them in their efforts to transform their
countries.
In Africa, things are changing. In China, India, Russia,
Japan, attitudes towards Israel have changed as well. These powerful nations know
that, despite Israel’s small size, it can make a big difference in many, many
areas that are important to them.
But now I’m going to surprise you even more. You see, the
biggest change in attitudes towards Israel is taking place elsewhere. It’s
taking place in the Arab world. Our peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan
continue to be anchors of stability in the volatile Middle East. But I have to
tell you this: For the first time in my lifetime, many other states in the
region recognize that Israel is not their enemy. They recognize that Israel is
their ally. Our common enemies are Iran and ISIS. Our common goals are
security, prosperity and peace. I believe that in the years ahead we will work
together to achieve these goals, work together openly
So Israel’s diplomatic relations are undergoing nothing less
than a revolution. But in this revolution, we never forget that our most
cherished alliance, our deepest friendship, is with the United States of
America, the most powerful and the most generous nation on earth. Our
unbreakable bond with the United States of America transcends parties and
politics. It reflects, above all else, the overwhelming support for Israel
among the American people, support which is at record highs and for which we
are deeply grateful.
The United Nations denounces Israel; the United States
supports Israel. And a central pillar of that defense has been America’s
consistent support for Israel at the UN. I appreciate President Obama’s
commitment to that longstanding US policy. In fact, the only time that the
United States cast a UN Security Council veto during the Obama presidency was
against an anti-Israel resolution in 2011. As President Obama rightly declared
at this podium, peace will not come from statements and resolutions at the United
Nations.
I believe the day is not far off when Israel will be able to
rely on many, many countries to stand with us at the UN. Slowly but surely, the
days when UN ambassadors reflexively condemn Israel, those days are coming to
an end.
Ladies and Gentlemen: Today’s automatic majority against
Israel at the UN reminds me of the story, the incredible story of Hiroo Onada.
Hiroo was a Japanese soldier who was sent to the Philippines in 1944. He lived
in the jungle. He scavenged for food. He evaded capture. Eventually he
surrendered, but that didn’t happen until 1974, some 30 years after World War
II ended. For decades, Hiroo refused to believe the war was over. As Hiroo was
hiding in the jungle, Japanese tourists were swimming in pools in American
luxury hotels in nearby Manila. Finally, mercifully, Hiroo’s former commanding
officer was sent to persuade him to come out of hiding. Only then did Hiroo lay
down his arms.
Ladies and Gentlemen, distinguished delegates from so many
lands, I have one message for you today: Lay down your arms. The war
against Israel at the UN is over. Perhaps some of you don’t know it yet, but I
am confident that one day, in the not-too-distant future, you will also get the
message from your president or from your prime minister informing you that the
war against Israel at the United Nations has ended. Yes, I know, there might be
a storm before the calm. I know there is talk about ganging up on Israel at the
UN later this year. Given its history of hostility towards Israel, does anyone
really believe that Israel will let the UN determine our security and our vital
national interests?
We will not accept any attempt by the UN to dictate terms to
Israel. The road to peace runs through Jerusalem and Ramallah, not through New
York.
But regardless of what happens in the months ahead, I have
total confidence that in the years ahead, the revolution in Israel’s
standing among the nations will finally penetrate this hall of nations. I have
so much confidence, in fact, that I predict that a decade from now an Israeli
prime minister will stand right here where I am standing and actually applaud
the UN. But I want to ask you: Why do we have to wait a decade? Why keep
vilifying Israel? Perhaps because some of you don’t appreciate that the
obsessive bias against Israel is not just a problem for my country; it’s a
problem for your countries, too. Because if the UN spends so much time
condemning the only liberal democracy in the Middle East, it has far less time
to address war, disease, poverty, climate change and all the other serious
problems that plague the planet.
Are the half million slaughtered Syrians helped by your
condemnation of Israel? The same Israel that has treated thousands of injured
Syrians in our hospitals, including a field hospital that I built right along
the Golan Heights border with Syria. Are the gays hanging from cranes in Iran
helped by your denigration of Israel? That same Israel where gays march proudly
in our streets and serve in our parliament, including I’m proud to say in my own
Likud party. Are the starving children in North Korea’s brutal tyranny, are
they helped by your demonization of Israel? Israel, whose agricultural knowhow
is feeding the hungry throughout the developing world?
The sooner the UN’s obsession with Israel ends, the better.
The better for Israel, the better for your countries, the better for the UN
itself.
Ladies and Gentlemen: If UN habits die hard, Palestinian
habits die even harder. President Abbas just attacked from this podium the
Balfour Declaration. He’s preparing a lawsuit against Britain for that
declaration from 1917. That’s almost 100 years ago – talk about being stuck in
the past. The Palestinians may just as well sue Iran for the Cyrus Declaration,
which enabled the Jews to rebuild our Temple in Jerusalem 2,500 years ago. Come
to think of it, why not a Palestinian class action suit against Abraham for
buying that plot of land in Hebron where the fathers and mothers of the Jewish
people were buried 4,000 years ago? You’re not laughing. It’s as absurd as
that. To sue the British government for the Balfour Declaration? Is he kidding?
And this is taken seriously here?
President Abbas attacked the Balfour Declaration because it
recognized the right of the Jewish people to a national home in the land of Israel.
When the United Nations supported the establishment of a Jewish state in 1947,
it recognized our historical and our moral rights in our homeland and to our
homeland. Yet today, nearly 70 years later, the Palestinians still refuse to
recognize those rights – not our right to a homeland, not our right to a state,
not our right to anything. And this remains the true core of the conflict, the
persistent Palestinian refusal to recognize the Jewish state in any boundary.
You see, this conflict is not about the settlements. It never was.
The conflict raged for decades before there was a single
settlement, when Judea Samaria and Gaza were all in Arab hands. The West Bank
and Gaza were in Arab hands and they attacked us again and again and again. And
when we uprooted all 21 settlements in Gaza and withdrew from every last inch
of Gaza, we didn’t get peace from Gaza – we got thousands of rockets fired at
us from Gaza.
This conflict rages because for the Palestinians, the real
settlements they’re after are Haifa, Jaffa and Tel Aviv.
Now mind you, the issue of settlements is a real one and it
can and must be resolved in final-status negotiations. But this conflict has
never been about the settlements or about establishing a Palestinian state.
It’s always been about the existence of a Jewish state, a Jewish state in any
boundary.
Ladies and Gentlemen: Israel is ready — I am
ready — to negotiate all final-status issues. But one thing I will never
negotiate: our right to the one and only Jewish state.
Wow, sustained applause for the prime minister of Israel in
the General Assembly? The change may be coming sooner than I thought.
Had the Palestinians said yes to a Jewish state in 1947,
there would have been no war, no refugees and no conflict. And when the
Palestinians finally say yes to a Jewish state, we will be able to end this
conflict once and for all.
Now here’s the tragedy, because, see, the Palestinians are
not only trapped in the past; their leaders are poisoning the future.
I want you to imagine a day in the life of a 13-year-old
Palestinian boy. I’ll call him Ali. Ali wakes up before school; he goes to
practice with a soccer team named after Dalal Mughrabi, a Palestinian terrorist
responsible for the murder of a busload of 37 Israelis. At school, Ali attends an
event sponsored by the Palestinian Ministry of Education honoring Baha Alyan,
who last year murdered three Israeli civilians. On his walk home, Ali looks up
at a towering statue erected just a few weeks ago by the Palestinian Authority
to honor Abu Sukar, who detonated a bomb in the center of Jerusalem, killing 15
Israelis.
When Ali gets home, he turns on the TV and sees an interview
with a senior Palestinian official, Jibril Rajoub, who says that if he had a
nuclear bomb, he’d detonate it over Israel that very day. Ali then turns on the
radio and he hears President Abbas’s adviser, Sultan Abu al-Einein, urging
Palestinians, here’s a quote, “to slit the throats of Israelis wherever you
find them.” Ali checks his Facebook and he sees a recent post by President
Abbas’s Fatah Party calling the massacre of 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich
Olympics a “heroic act.” On YouTube, Ali watches a clip of President Abbas
himself saying, “We welcome every drop of blood spilled in Jerusalem.” Direct
quote.
Over dinner, Ali asks his mother what would happen if he
killed a Jew and went to an Israeli prison. Here’s what she tells him. She
tells him he’d be paid thousands of dollars each month by the Palestinian
Authority. In fact, she tells him, the more Jews he would kill, the more money
he’d get. Oh, and when he gets out of prison, Ali would be guaranteed a job
with the Palestinian Authority.
Ladies and Gentlemen: All this is real. It happens every
day, all the time. Sadly, Ali represents hundreds of thousands of Palestinian
children who are indoctrinated with hate every moment, every hour.
This is child abuse.
Imagine your child undergoing this brainwashing. Imagine what
it takes for a young boy or girl to break free out of this culture of hate.
Some do but far too many don’t. How can any of us expect young Palestinians to
support peace when their leaders poison their minds against peace?
We in Israel don’t do this. We educate our children for
peace. In fact, we recently launched a pilot program, my government did, to
make the study of Arabic mandatory for Jewish children so that we can better
understand each other, so that we can live together side-by-side in peace.
Of course, like all societies, Israel has fringe elements.
But it’s our response to those fringe elements, it’s our response to those
fringe elements that makes all the difference.
Take the tragic case of Ahmed Dawabsha. I’ll never forget
visiting Ahmed in the hospital just hours after he was attacked. A little boy,
really a baby, he was badly burned. Ahmed was the victim of a horrible
terrorist act perpetrated by Jews. He lay bandaged and unconscious as Israeli
doctors worked around the clock to save him.
No words can bring comfort to this boy or to his family.
Still, as I stood by his bedside, I told his uncle, “This is not our people.
This is not our way.” I then ordered extraordinary measures to bring Ahmed’s
assailants to justice and today the Jewish citizens of Israel accused of
attacking the Dawabsha family are in jail awaiting trial.
Now, for some, this story shows that both sides have their
extremists and both sides are equally responsible for this seemingly endless
conflict.
But what Ahmed’s story actually proves is the very opposite.
It illustrates the profound difference between our two societies, because while
Israeli leaders condemn terrorists, all terrorists, Arabs and Jews alike,
Palestinian leaders celebrate terrorists. While Israel jails the handful of
Jewish terrorists among us, the Palestinians pay thousands of terrorists among
them.
So I call on President Abbas: you have a choice to make. You
can continue to stoke hatred as you did today, or you can finally confront hatred
and work with me to establish peace between our two peoples.
Ladies and Gentlemen: I hear the buzz. I know that many
of you have given up on peace. But I want you to know – I have not given up on
peace. I remain committed to a vision of peace based on two states for two
peoples. I believe as never before that changes taking place in the Arab world
today offer a unique opportunity to advance that peace.
I commend President el-Sisi of Egypt for his efforts to
advance peace and stability in our region. Israel welcomes the spirit of the
Arab peace initiative and welcomes a dialogue with Arab states to advance a
broader peace. I believe that for that broader peace to be fully achieved the
Palestinians have to be part of it. I’m ready to begin negotiations to achieve
this today – not tomorrow, not next
week, today.
President Abbas spoke here an hour ago. Wouldn’t it be better
if instead of speaking past each other we were speaking to one another?
President Abbas, instead of railing against Israel at the United Nations in New
York, I invite you to speak to the Israeli people at the Knesset in Jerusalem.
And I would gladly come to speak to the Palestinian parliament in Ramallah.
Ladies and Gentlemen: While Israel seeks peace with all
our neighbors, we also know that peace has no greater enemy than the forces of
militant Islam. The bloody trail of this fanaticism runs through all the
continents represented here. It runs through Paris and Nice, Brussels and
Baghdad, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, Minnesota and New York, from Sydney to San
Bernardino. So many have suffered its savagery: Christian and Jews, women and
gays, Yazidis and Kurds and many, many others.
Yet the heaviest price, the heaviest price of all has been
paid by innocent Muslims. Hundreds of thousands unmercifully slaughtered.
Millions turned into desperate refugees, tens of millions brutally subjugated.
The defeat of militant Islam will thus be a victory for all humanity, but it
would especially be a victory for those many Muslims who seek a life without fear,
a life of peace, a life of hope.
But to defeat the forces of militant Islam, we must fight
them relentlessly. We must fight them in the real world. We must fight them in
the virtual world. We must dismantle their networks, disrupt their funding,
discredit their ideology. We can defeat them and we will defeat them.
Medievalism is no match for modernity. Hope is stronger than hate, freedom
mightier than fear.
We can do this.
Ladies and Gentlemen: Israel fights this fateful battle
against the forces of militant Islam every day. We keep our borders safe from
ISIS; we prevent the smuggling of game-changing weapons to Hezbollah in
Lebanon; we thwart Palestinian terror attacks in Judea and
Samaria — the West Bank — and we deter missile attacks from Hamas-controlled
Gaza.
That’s the same Hamas terror organization that cruelly,
unbelievably cruelly, refuses to return three of our citizens and the bodies of
our fallen soldiers, Oron Shaul and Hadar Goldin. Hadar Goldin’s parents, Leah
and Simcha Goldin, are here with us today. They have one request – to bury
their beloved son in Israel. All they ask for is one simple thing – to be able
to visit the grave of their fallen son, Hadar, in Israel. Hamas refuses. They
couldn’t care less.
I implore you to stand with them, with us, with all that’s
decent in our world against the inhumanity of Hamas – all that is indecent and
barbaric. Hamas breaks every humanitarian rule in the book, throw the book at
them.
Ladies and Gentlemen: The greatest threat to my country,
to our region and ultimately to our world remains the militant Islamic regime
of Iran. Iran openly seeks Israel’s annihilation. It threatens countries across
the Middle East, it sponsors terror worldwide.
This year, Iran has fired ballistic missiles in direct
defiance of Security Council Resolutions. It has expended its aggression in
Iraq, in Syria, in Yemen. Iran, the world’s foremost sponsor of terrorism,
continued to build its global terror network. That terror network now spans
five continents.
So my point to you is this: The threat Iran poses to all of
us is not behind us; it’s before us. In the coming years, there must be a
sustained and united effort to push back against Iran’s aggression and Iran’s
terror. With the nuclear constraints on Iran one year closer to being removed,
let me be clear: Israel will not allow the terrorist
regime in Iran to develop nuclear weapons – not now, not in a decade, not ever.
Ladies and Gentlemen: I stand before you today at a time
when Israel’s former president, Shimon Peres, is fighting for his life. Shimon
is one of Israel’s founding fathers, one of its boldest statesmen, one of its
most respected leaders. I know you will all join me and join all the people of
Israel in wishing him refuah shlemah,
Shimon, a speedy recovery.
I’ve always admired Shimon’s boundless optimism, and like
him, I too am filled with hope. I am filled with hope, because Israel is
capable of defending itself by itself against any threat. I am filled with
hope, because the valor of our fighting men and women is second to none. I am
filled with hope, because I know the forces of civilization will ultimately
triumph over the forces of terror. I am filled with hope, because in the age of
innovation, Israel – the innovation nation – is thriving as never before. I am
filled with hope, because Israel works tirelessly to advance equality and
opportunity for all its citizens: Jews, Muslims, Christians, Druze, everyone.
And I am filled with hope, because despite all the naysayers, I believe that in
the years ahead, Israel will forge a lasting peace with all our neighbors.
Ladies and Gentlemen: I am hopeful about what Israel can
accomplish because I’ve seen what Israel has accomplished. In 1948, the year of
Israel’s independence, our population was 800,000. Our main export was oranges.
People said then we were too small, too weak, too isolated, too demographically
outnumbered to survive, let alone thrive. The skeptics were wrong about Israel
then; the skeptics are wrong about Israel now.
Israel’s population has grown tenfold, our economy fortyfold.
Today our biggest export is technology – Israeli technology, which powers the
world’s computers, cellphones, cars and so much more.
Ladies and Gentlemen: The future belongs to those who
innovate, and this is why the future belongs to countries like Israel. Israel
wants to be your partner in seizing that future, so I call on all of you:
Cooperate with Israel, embrace Israel, dream with Israel. Dream of the future
that we can build together, a future of breathtaking progress, a future of
security, prosperity and peace, a future of hope for all humanity, a future
where even at the UN, even in this hall, Israel will finally, inevitably, take
its rightful place among the nations.
Thank you.