Netanyahu at UNGA: On Iran, Syria

On October 1, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticized the nuclear deal with Iran during his address to the U.N. General Assembly. “By fueling Iran’s aggressions with billions of dollars in sanctions relief, it makes war more likely,” he said. He also spoke at length about Iran’s policies in the region and support for proxies like Hezbollah in Lebanon. The following is an excerpt from his speech.  

 
Thirty-one years ago, as Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations, I stood at this podium for the first time.
           
I spoke that day against a resolution sponsored by Iran to expel Israel from the United Nations. 
 
Then as now, the UN was obsessively hostile towards Israel, the one true democracy in the Middle East.
 
Then as now, some sought to deny the one and only Jewish state a place among the nations.
 
I ended that first speech by saying: 
Gentlemen, check your fanaticism at the door.
           
More than three decades later, as the Prime Minister of Israel, I am again privileged to speak from this podium.
 
And for me, that privilege has always come with a moral responsibility to speak the truth.
 
So after three days of listening to world leaders praise the nuclear deal with Iran, I begin my speech today by saying: 
 
Ladies and Gentlemen, check your enthusiasm at the door.
 
You see, this deal doesn't make peace more likely. 
 
By fueling Iran’s aggressions with billions of dollars in sanctions relief, it makes war more likely.
 
Just look at what Iran has done in the last six months alone, since the framework agreement was announced in Lausanne.
 
Iran boosted its supply of devastating weapons to Syria.
 
Iran sent more soldiers of its Revolutionary Guard into Syria. Iran sent thousands of Afghani and Pakistani Shi’ite fighters to Syria.
 
Iran did all this to prop up Assad's brutal regime.
 
Iran also shipped tons of weapons and ammunitions to the Houthi rebels in Yemen, including another shipment just two days ago.
 
Iran threatened to topple Jordan.
 
Iran’s proxy Hezbollah smuggled into Lebanon SA-22 missiles to down our planes, and Yakhont cruise missiles to sink our ships.
 
Iran supplied Hezbollah with precision-guided surface-to-surface missiles and attack drones so it can accurately hit any target in Israel.
 
Iran aided Hamas and Islamic Jihad in building armed drones in Gaza.
 
Iran also made clear its plans to open two new terror fronts against Israel, promising to arm Palestinians in the West Bank and sending its Revolutionary Guard generals to the Golan Heights, from which its operatives recently fired rockets on northern Israel.
 
Israel will continue to respond forcefully to any attacks against it from Syria.
 
Israel will continue to act to prevent the transfer of strategic weapons to Hezbollah from and through Syrian territory.
 
Every few weeks, Iran and Hezbollah set up new terror cells in cities throughout the world. Three such cells were recently uncovered in Kuwait, Jordan and Cyprus.
 
In May, security forces in Cyprus raided a Hezbollah agent’s apartment in the city of Larnaca. There they found five tons of ammonium nitrate, that's roughly the same amount of ammonium nitrate that was used to blow up the federal building in Oklahoma City.
 
And that’s just in one apartment, in one city, in one country.
 
But Iran is setting up dozens of terror cells like this around the world, ladies and gentlemen, they're setting up those terror cells in this hemisphere too.
 
I repeat: Iran’s been doing all of this, everything that I've just described,  just in the last six months, when it was trying to convince the world to remove the sanctions.
 
Now just imagine what Iran will do after those sanctions are lifted.
 
Unleashed and un-muzzled, Iran will go on the prowl, devouring more and more prey.
 
In the wake of the nuclear deal, Iran is spending billions of dollars on weapons and satellites.
 
You think Iran is doing that to advance peace?
 
You think hundreds of billions of dollars in sanctions relief and fat contracts will turn this
rapacious tiger into a kitten?
 
If you do, you should think again.
 
In 2013 president Rouhani began his so-called charm offensive here at the UN. Two years later, Iran is executing more political prisoners, escalating its regional aggression, and rapidly expanding its global terror network.
 
You know they say, actions speak louder than words.
 
But in Iran’s case, the words speak as loud as the actions.
 
Just listen to the Deputy Commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Quds Force. Here's what he said in February:
 
“The Islamic revolution is not limited by geographic borders….” He boasted that Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Palestine and Yemen are among the countries being “conquered by the Islamic Republic of Iran.”
 
And for those of you who believe that the deal in Vienna will bring a change in Iran’s policy, just listen to what Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei said five days after the nuclear deal was reached: “Our policies towards the arrogant government of the United States will not change.”
 
The United States, he vowed, will continue to be Iran’s enemy.
 
While giving the mullahs more money is likely to fuel more repression inside Iran, it will definitely fuel more aggression outside Iran.
 
As the leader of a country defending itself every day against Iran’s growing aggression, I wish I could take comfort in the claim that this deal blocks Iran’s path to nuclear weapons.
 
But I can’t, because it doesn’t.
 
This deal does place several constraints on Iran’s nuclear program.
 
And rightly so, because the international community recognizes that Iran is so dangerous.
 
But you see here’s the catch:
 
Under this deal, If Iran doesn’t change its behavior, In fact, if it becomes even more dangerous in the years to come, the most important constraints will still be automatically lifted by year 10 and by year 15.
 
That would place a militant Islamic terror regime weeks away from having the fissile material for an entire arsenal of nuclear bombs.
 
That just doesn’t make any sense.
 
I’ve said that if Iran wants to be treated like a normal country, let it act like a normal country.
 
But this deal, this deal will treat Iran like a normal country even if it remains a dark theocracy that conquers its neighbors, sponsors terrorism worldwide and chants “Death to Israel”, “Death to America.”
 
Does anyone seriously believe that flooding a radical theocracy with weapons and cash will curb its appetite for aggression?
 
Do any of you really believe that a theocratic Iran with sharper claws and sharper fangs will be more likely to change its stripes?
 
So here's a general rule that I've learned and you must have learned in your life time - When bad behavior is rewarded, it only gets worse.
 
Ladies and Gentlemen,
 
I have long said that the greatest danger facing our world is the coupling of militant Islam with nuclear weapons.
 
And I’m gravely concerned that the nuclear deal with Iran will prove to be the marriage certificate of that unholy union.
 
I know that some well-intentioned people sincerely believe that this deal is the best way to block Iran’s path to the bomb.
 
But one of history’s most important yet least learned lessons is this:
 
The best intentions don’t prevent the worst outcomes.
 
The vast majority of Israelis believe that this nuclear deal with Iran is a very bad deal.
 
And what makes matters even worse is that we see a world celebrating this bad deal, rushing to embrace and do business with a regime openly committed to our destruction.
 
Last week, Major General Salehi, the commander of Iran’s army, proclaimed this:
 
“We will annihilate Israel for sure.”
 
“We are glad that we are in the forefront of executing the Supreme Leader’s order to destroy Israel.”
 
And as for the Supreme Leader himself, a few days after the nuclear deal was announced, he released his latest book.
Here it is.
 
It’s a 400-page screed detailing his plan to destroy the State of Israel.
           
Last month, Khamenei once again made his genocidal intentions clear before Iran's top clerical body, the Assembly of Experts.
 
He spoke about Israel, home to over six million Jews.
He pledged, “there will be no Israel in 25 years.”
 
Seventy years after the murder of six million Jews,
Iran’s rulers promise to destroy my country.
 
Murder my people.
 
And the response from this body, the response from nearly every one of the governments represented here has been absolutely nothing!
 
Utter silence!
 
Deafening silence.
 
Perhaps you can now understand why Israel is not joining you in celebrating this deal.
 
If Iran’s rulers were working to destroy your countries, perhaps you’d be less enthusiastic about the deal. 
 
If Iran’s terror proxies were firing thousands of rockets at your cities, perhaps you’d be more measured in your praise.
 
And if this deal were unleashing a nuclear arms race in your neighborhood, perhaps you’d be more reluctant to celebrate.
 
But don’t think that Iran is only a danger to Israel.
 
Besides Iran’s aggression in the Middle East and its terror around the world, Iran is also building intercontinental ballistic missiles whose sole purpose is to carry nuclear warheads.
 
Now remember this: Iran already has missiles that can reach Israel.
 
So those intercontinental ballistic missiles that Iran is building - they're not meant for us –
They’re meant for you.
 
For Europe.
 
For America.
 
For raining down mass destruction – anytime, anywhere.
 
Ladies and Gentlemen,
 
It’s not easy to oppose something that is embraced by the greatest powers in the world.
 
Believe me, it would be far easier to remain silent.
 
But throughout our history, the Jewish people have learned the heavy price of silence.
 
And as the Prime Minister of the Jewish State, as someone who knows that history,
 
I refuse to be silent.
 
I’ll say it again:
 
The days when the Jewish people remained passive in the face of genocidal enemies –
those days are over.
 
Not being passive means speaking up about those dangers.
 
We have. We are.
We will.
 
Not being passive also means defending ourselves against those dangers.
           
We have. We are.
And we will.
 
Israel will not allow Iran to break-in, to sneak-in or to walk-in to the nuclear weapons club. 
 
I know that preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons remains the official policy of the international community.
 
But no one should question Israel’s determination to defend itself against those who seek our destruction.
 
For in every generation, there were those who rose up to destroy our people.
 
In antiquity, we faced destruction from the ancient empires of Babylon and Rome.
 
In the Middle Ages, we faced inquisition and expulsion.
 
And In modern times, we faced pogroms and the Holocaust.
 
Yet the Jewish people persevered.
 
And now another regime has arisen, swearing to destroy Israel.
 
That regime would be wise to consider this:
 
I stand here today representing Israel, a country 67 years young,
but the nation-state of a people nearly 4,000 years old.
 
Yet the empires of Babylon and Rome are not represented in this hall of nations.
Neither is the Thousand Year Reich. 
 
Those seemingly invincible empires are long gone.  
 
But Israel lives.
 
The people of Israel live.
 
The re-birth of Israel is a testament to the indomitable spirit of my people.
 
For a hundred generations, the Jewish people dreamed of returning to the
Land of Israel.
 
Even in our darkest hours, and we had so many, even in our darkest hours we never gave up hope of rebuilding our eternal capital Jerusalem. 
 
The establishment of Israel made realizing that dream possible.
 
It has enabled us to live as a free people in our ancestral homeland.
 
It's enabled us to embrace Jews who've come from the four corners of the earth to find refuge from persecution.
 
They came from war-torn Europe, from Yemen, Iraq, Morocco, from Ethiopia and the Soviet Union, from a hundred other lands.
 
And today, as a rising tide of anti-Semitism once again sweeps across Europe and elsewhere, many Jews come to Israel to join us in building the Jewish future.
 
So here’s my message to the rulers of Iran:
 
Your plan to destroy Israel will fail.
 
Israel will not permit any force on earth to threaten its future. 
 
And here's my message to all the countries represented here:
 
Whatever resolutions you may adopt in this building, whatever decisions you may take in your capitals, Israel will do whatever it must do to defend our state and to defend our people.
 
Distinguished delegates,
 
As this deal with Iran moves ahead, I hope you’ll enforce it…how can I put this? With a little more rigor than you showed with the six Security Council resolutions that Iran has systematically violated and which now have been effectively discarded.
 
Make sure that the inspectors actually inspect.
 
Make sure that the snapback sanctions actually snap back.
 
And make sure that Iran’s violations aren’t swept under the Persian rug.
 
Well, of one thing I can assure you:
Israel will be watching… closely.
 
What the international community now needs to do is clear:
 
First, make Iran comply with all its nuclear obligations.
 
Keep Iran’s feet to the fire.
 
Second, check Iran’s regional aggression.
 
Support and strengthen those fighting Iran’s aggression, beginning with Israel.
 
Third, use sanctions and all the tools available to you to tear down Iran’s global terror network.
 
Ladies and Gentlemen,
 
Israel is working closely with our Arab peace partners to address our common security challenges from Iran and also the security challenges from ISIS and from others.
 
We are also working with other states in the Middle East as well as countries in Africa, in Asia and beyond.
 
Many in our region know that both Iran and ISIS are our common enemies.
 
And when your enemies fight each other, don’t strengthen either one – weaken both.
 
Common dangers are clearly bringing Israel and its Arab neighbors closer. 
 
And as we work together to thwart those dangers, I hope we'll build lasting partnerships – lasting partnerships for security, for prosperity and for peace.   
 
But in Israel, we never forget one thing. We never forget that the most important partner that Israel has has always been, and will always be, the United States of America.
 
The alliance between Israel and the United States is unshakeable.
 
President Obama and I agree on the need to keep arms out of the hands of Iran’s terror proxies.
 
We agree on the need to stop Iran from destabilizing countries throughout the Middle East.
Israel deeply appreciates President Obama’s willingness to bolster our security, help Israel maintain its qualitative military edge and help Israel confront the enormous challenges we face.
 
Israel is grateful that this sentiment is widely shared by the American people and its representatives in Congress, by both those who supported the deal and by those who opposed it.
 
President Obama and I have both said that our differences over the nuclear deal are a disagreement within the family.