“Good morning, AIPAC. It’s always great to be
here.
But as I told President Trump yesterday, it’s especially great
to be in America’s capital now that he has recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s
capital.
Thank you,
President Trump for that historic decision. Thank you for announcing another
decision—to move the American embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem this
Independence Day. And the first ambassador to have the honor of working from
that embassy in Jerusalem is a great American ambassador, David Friedman.
David,
thank you for that terrific job that you’re doing. And you know who else is
doing a fantastic job? Israel’s ambassador to Washington – Ron Dermer. Thank
you for the terrific job you’re doing.
I want to thank Mort Freidman, Lillian Pinkus – Lillian, you don’t have to remind them how far back we go together – Howard Kohr, AIPAC’s nuclear core, everyone at AIPAC. I want to thank all of you for the work you are doing to strengthen the remarkable alliance between our two countries. Thank you.
I want to thank Mort Freidman, Lillian Pinkus – Lillian, you don’t have to remind them how far back we go together – Howard Kohr, AIPAC’s nuclear core, everyone at AIPAC. I want to thank all of you for the work you are doing to strengthen the remarkable alliance between our two countries. Thank you.
I want to
acknowledge the Israeli ministers, Israel’s representatives here in the United
States, in the United Nations, the Mayor of Jerusalem, the many Members of
Congress and the former leaders of countries who are here. In particular, I
want to acknowledge my friend, a great champion of Israel, the former Prime
Minister of Canada Stephen Harper. Stephen, stand up, please. Stephen, we never
forget our friends, and you were a tremendous friend and still are.
And finally,
I want to thank the 4,000 students who are here with us today. Four thousand
students. Thank you for cutting class to be here. So, if any of you needs a
note, you can see me later. There’s a line forming outside.
Now, what I
can see is this. Well, it’s dark, but I can see something. I can see that the
audience in this hall each year is getting bigger and bigger and bigger, 18,000
strong. I want to see all of you, and I can’t. I don’t want to stand behind
this podium. Is it okay? What the heck—I’m the Prime Minister. Thank you, yeah,
great, good to see you. Thank you. I’ll get there too. Don’t worry. Great to
see you.
So today I
want to ask you. You remember that great Clint Eastwood movie, The Good, the
Bad and the Ugly? Well, I want to talk about the good, the bad and beautiful.
The good
are all the good things that we are doing in Israel that are helping make the
world a better place. The bad are all the bad things that malevolent forces are
trying to do to Israel and to the world – and specifically, I’m talking about
Iran.
And the
beautiful – well, that I’ll leave to the last.
So first
the good news: Israel has never been stronger militarily. Tremendously strong.
That’s an
F35 fighter plane, the most advanced in the world. That’s an Iron Dome interceptor,
and many other systems that we developed with the help of America. Thank you
America; thank you successive American presidents; thank you Congress,
Republicans and Democrats alike; thank you AIPAC for helping bring this about.
You’re terrific. And this incredible military is buttressed by superb
intelligence, unmatched in the world. Can you see me? I can hardly see you. I
have to get closer. Yeah, I see you. That’s good. Superb intelligence. You
know, in the last few years, Israel’s incredible intelligence services have
foiled dozens, dozens of terrorist attacks across the world in dozens of
countries. That plane, a plane like that could have been blown out of the sky
if it weren’t for Israeli intelligence, a plane heading from Australia to the
Persian Gulf. You’re boarding planes when you leave this place. You are safer
because of Israeli intelligence. It not only protects Israeli lives, it
protects innocent lives around the world.
And we’re
able to do all this because of the extraordinary soldiers of the Israel Defense
Forces, men and women—just look at them—men and women, black and white,
religious and secular, gay and straight, Jews, Muslims, Christians, Druze,
Circassians. They come from different backgrounds, but they’re united with a
common mission: to protect the State of Israel. They keep us safe. They make us
proud.
Now, I know
there are quite a few veterans of the Israeli army here. So I want you to stand
up. I want you to be recognized. Stand up please.
But the
good news doesn’t stop merely with Israel’s strong military. It continues with
Israel’s strong economy. It’s a tremendously strong economy, and I’ll tell you,
we made it stronger by moving Israel to free market principles, which unleashed
the spark of genius embedded in our people, into innovation, entrepreneurship.
And there is a revolution taking place. This couldn’t happen at the better
time. Look at the ten leading companies in 2006: five energy companies, one IT
company, Microsoft. And a mere 10 years later, 2016, a blink of an eye in
historical terms, it’s completely reversed. Five IT companies, one energy
company left. The true wealth is in innovation. You know these companies:
Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Facebook. Guess what? They all have research
centers in Israel. All of them, major research centers. And they’re not alone.
There are hundreds more. And there’s a reason, something is going on. It’s a
great change. It’s—you want to hear jargon? It’s one sentence. This is a
terrible sentence, but I have no other way to say it. It’s the confluence of
big data, connectivity and artificial intelligence, okay? Do you get that? You
know what that does? It revolutionizes old industries and it creates entirely
new industries.
So here’s
an old industry that Israel was always great in: agriculture. We were always
good in agriculture. But now we have precision agriculture. You know what that
is? See that drone in the sky? He’s connected to a big database. And there are
sensors in the field, and in the field there’s drip irrigation and drip fertilization.
And now we can target, with this technology, the water that we give, the
fertilizer that we give down to the individual plant that needs it. That’s
precision agriculture. That’s Israel. Unbelievable.
You know,
we were always good in water. I want you to see how good we are. So, we recycle
almost 90% of our wastewater. The next country, with less than 20%, is Spain.
You can see how Israel, what it does for water, what it does for the
environment. So when you take these two things, agriculture and water, and the
other technologies that we apply in both, we can change the world. We are. I
just heard about an African woman in Africa, has to walk eight hours a day to
give water to her children – four hours one way to a well, four hours back. And
a young Israeli company brought in this technology that improves on Moses. You
remember Moses? He brought water from a rock? They bring water from thin air.
They bring water to Africa, to millions of people in Africa – Israeli
technology!
And I was
just recently in India. That’s my friend, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, great
friend. I’m showing him cherry tomatoes. This is in Gujarat, India. This is
Israeli technology. And what I heard there was fantastic. Famers came from the
region. There’s an experimental farm there and a place where Israel gives
technology knowhow to India famers. Sixty-five percent of India’s population
are farmers. And one farmer after the other gets up and says: Because of
Israeli technology, I’ve increased my crop yields and my income three times,
four times, five times. Israel is changing the world in India, in Asia, in
Africa, in Latin America, everywhere.
These are
the old industries. Now, there are new industries. Israel is literally, how can
I say this: Israel is literally driving the world. I’m talking about autonomous
vehicles. Israel is a world leader in autonomous vehicles. Five hundred tech
companies that sprang up almost instantaneously. And one of them, MobileEye up
there on the left, was just sold to Intel for the paltry sum of 15 billion
dollars. But the interesting thing is that Intel said to them, “Here are the
keys to our 30 worldwide autonomous vehicle businesses. You run it.” Israeli
technology is driving the world!
And one
last industry – there are many more – but one more that you’re all familiar
with. You have bank accounts? You should, okay? Well, you don’t want anyone
hacking into them, right? Or into your cars, or into the planes you ride? You
need cybersecurity. Everybody needs cyber. Israel has become a world leader in
cybersecurity. Look at how much they invest in the hundreds of Israeli startup
companies, tremendous companies. But here is another factor that you should
now. Israel’s population is how much? Who knows? Class? Eight million? It’s
closer to nine, but it’s about between eight and nine million, that’s correct.
And what percentage of that is of the world’s population? Oh come on. It’s
one-tenth of one percent. So, what percentage do we get of the world global
investment in cybersecurity, in private investment in cybersecurity? We’re
one-tenth of one percent of the world’s population, and we get a whopping 20%
of global, private investment in cyber. We’re punching 200 times above our
weight. Not two times, not ten times, not a hundred times – 200 times above our
weight. That’s very strong.
Now here’s
how the dots connect. Because we have this tremendous capacity for security and
intelligence, and because we have this tremendous capacity for civilian
technology, for making the lives of people richer, safer, more productive, many
countries are coming to Israel because they want to share with us these
benefits.
And that
creates the third great change, which is a flourishing of Israel’s diplomatic
relations around the world. You know, when I joined the Foreign Service 105
years ago, as the DCM to this city, Washington, the number two in our embassy,
I think we had about 80 or 90 countries with whom we had diplomatic relations.
Now the number is 160, and there are very few countries left. By the way, what
are we doing with Greenland? We got to do something with Greenland. They must
have some satellite needs or something that we could do there. But we are
coloring the world blue. I’ve been to Africa three times in 18 months. I’ve
been to South America, to Latin America. Can you imagine in the 70 years of the
history of Israel a prime minister of Israel never went south of Texas? I mean,
I love Texas, but we went to Argentina. We went to Argentina, to Colombia, to
Mexico. And they say come back, come back. We want more. That is changing. All
these countries are coming to us: India, China, Mongolia, Kazakhstan, all of
them, Azerbaijan, Muslim countries. First time I visited Australia –
tremendous. Far away though. So we’re coloring the world blue. And you know
what? The numbers… You remember people talked about Israel’s isolation? Pretty
soon, the countries that don’t have relations with us, they’re going to be
isolated.
There are
those who talk about boycotting Israel? We’ll boycott them.
So, the
good news is very good, and it’s getting better. The bad news, and that’s the
bad news, is that bad things are getting worse, and they’re very bad. And when
I talk about that, we have to deal with this challenge. And I’m thinking
specifically: What do we do about Iran? The force behind so much of what is bad
is this radical tyranny in Tehran. If I have a message for you today, it’s a
very simple one: We must stop Iran. We will stop Iran!
When I last
spoke here, I warned, tried to warn the world about a nuclear deal that was a
threat to the survival of Israel, the security of the region, the peace of the
world. I warned that Iran’s regime had repeatedly lied to the international
community, that it could not be trusted. I warned that the deal gives Iran a
clear path towards developing a nuclear arsenal in little more than a decade.
And I warned that by removing Iran’s sanctions, Iran’s regime would not become
more moderate and peaceful, but more extreme and belligerent, much more
dangerous.
And, ladies
and gentlemen, that’s exactly what has happened.
Here is
what Iran is doing today.
Darkness is
descending on our region. Iran is building an aggressive empire: Iran, Iraq,
Syria, Lebanon, Gaza, Yemen, more to come. Now Iran is seeking to build
permanent military bases in Syria, seeking to create a land bridge from Tartus,
from Tehran to Tartus on the Mediterranean. And in addition to moving its army,
its air force, its navy to Syria to be able to attack Israel from closer hand,
it’s also seeking to develop, to build precision guided missile factories in
Syria and Lebanon against Israel.
I will not
let that happen. We will not let that happen. We must stop Iran. We will stop
Iran.
Last week,
we read in the Book of Esther about an earlier Persian attempt to exterminate
our people. They failed then. They’ll fail now. We will never let Iran develop
nuclear weapons – not now, not in ten years, not ever.
President
Trump has made it clear that his administration will not accept Iran’s
aggression in the region. He has made clear that he too will never accept a
nuclear-armed Iran. That is the right policy. I salute President Trump on this.
And the President has also made it clear that if the fatal flaws of the nuclear
deal are not fixed, he will walk away from the deal and restore sanctions.
Israel will be right there by America’s side. And let me tell you, so will
other countries in the region.
As we
counter Iran’s aggression, we should always remember, we should always remember
the brave people of Iran: their suffering, their hopes, their courage. Women
are jailed for removing their hijabs. Students are tortured, tortured and shot
for advocating freedom. We stand with those in Iran who stand for freedom. Now
I believe that a day will come when this horrible tyranny will disappear, will
perish from the earth and at that point, the historic friendship between the
people of Israel and the people of Persia will be reestablished. Today we have
Haman. Tomorrow we’ll have Cyrus and friendship and peace.
My friends,
as we work together to confront the bad, there is also potential to advance the
good that paradoxically comes from the bad, because most of the states in our
region know—they know very well, believe me—that Israel is not their enemy, but
their indispensable ally in confronting our common challenges and seizing our
common opportunities. That is true for Egypt and Jordan, Israel’s long-time
peace partners, but it’s also true for many other Arab countries in the Middle
East. Israel remains committed to achieving peace with all our neighbors,
including the Palestinians. President Trump has made it clear that he is
committed to peace. I have made it clear that I am committed to peace. We
appreciate the efforts of President Trump’s superb team—Jared Kushner, Jason
Greenblatt and Ambassador David Friedman. Thank you all. Thank you all for your
hard work for peace.
But to get
peace, to get peace President Abbas has to embrace peace and to stop supporting
terror. Raise your hands high if you agree with me that President Abbas should
stop paying terrorists who murder Jews. You know how much he pays? He pays
about $350 million dollars a year to terrorists and their families, each year.
That’s about a little less than 10% of the total Palestinian budget. That’s an
incredible number. He pays Hakim Awad. Hakim Awad is the terrorist who murdered
this beautiful family of Ehud and Ruth Fogel and their three children,
including a 3 month-old baby girl, Hadas. So he pays Hakim Awad, this murderer,
and over the lifetime of this killer, he will be receiving two million dollars.
I have a
message for President Abbas: Stop paying terrorists. Because what message does
this send to Palestinian children? It says murder Jews and get rich. And I
believe President Abbas should find better use for this money—to build roads,
schools, hospitals, factories. Build life, don’t pay death. Invest in life.
Invest in peace.
Israel
hopes that the passage of the Taylor Force Act will make clear to President
Abbas that America has zero tolerance for terror.
Ladies and
Gentlemen,
I’ve spoken
about the good and the bad – there’s plenty of both. But I want to end with a
few words about the beautiful – the beautiful alliance between Israel and the
United States of America, the beautiful alliance that has brought all of you
here to Washington, the beautiful alliance that you work day in and day out to
make stronger and to make better.
What is
this beautiful alliance made of? It’s made of our shared values. That’s the
well-spring of the great alliance between our two countries. And all you have
to do is leave this room, leave this hall, and you walk around a few blocks
from here, and you see these majestic monuments , you can learn from them all about
our common values. You know, they come from a certain book, a great book, a
good book. It’s called the Bible. It said that all of us are created in the
image of God. And those words inspired Jefferson when he declared in the
Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal. All women too, by
the way.
And that
book inspired Abraham Lincoln in the darkest days of America’s Civil War. He
found inspiration in the words of our greatest king, King David, when he said
that the wounds of a divided America would heal and that the judgements of the
Lord are true and righteous. Just as the stirring words of the Prophet Amos
inspired the great Martin Luther King when he stood before the Lincoln Memorial
and promised to carry on his struggle until justice runs down like water and
righteousness like a mighty stream.
They values
are an inseparable part of America’s story. They’re an inseparable part of
Israel’s story. And today, together, we are writing a new chapter in our common
story, a story of freedom, of justice, of peace, of hope. And it is because we
are inspired by the same ideas, because we are animated by the same values that
America and Israel have forged an eternal bond that can never ever be broken.
Thank you,
AIPAC. God bless Israel. God bless America. And God bless the Israel-America
alliance.”