PM Netanyahu on opening of the UN General Assembly

PM Netanyahu on opening of the UN General Assembly

  •   Comments on statements by Obama and Rouhani
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    It is no coincidence that the speech by Iranian President Rouhani lacked both any practical proposal to stop Iran's military nuclear program and any commitment to fulfill UN Security Council decisions. This is exactly Iran's strategy – to talk and play for time in order to advance its ability to achieve nuclear weapons.
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    PM Benjamin Netanyahu PM Benjamin Netanyahu Copyright: PMO webcast
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    (Communicated by the Prime Minister's Media Adviser)

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (Tuesday, 24 September 2013) made the following statement on the opening of the UN General Assembly:

    "I appreciate President Obama's statement that 'Iran's conciliatory words will have to be matched by action that is transparent and verifiable,' and I look forward to discussing this with him in Washington next week.

    Iran thinks that soothing words and token actions will enable it to continue on its path to the bomb. Like North Korea before it, Iran will try to remove sanctions by offering cosmetic concessions, while preserving its ability to rapidly build a nuclear weapon at a time of its choosing.

    Israel would welcome a genuine diplomatic solution that truly dismantles Iran's capacity to develop nuclear weapons.

    But we will not be fooled by half-measures that merely provide a smokescreen for Iran's continual pursuit of nuclear weapons.

    And the world should not be fooled either."


    Following is Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's response to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani's speech to the UN General Assembly:

    "As expected, this was a cynical speech that was full of hypocrisy. Rouhani spoke of human rights even as Iranian forces are participating in the large-scale slaughter of innocent civilians in Syria.

    He condemned terrorism even as the Iranian regime is using terrorism in dozens of countries around the world.

    He spoke of a nuclear program for civilian purposes even as an IAEA report determines that the program has military dimensions and when any rational person understands that Iran, one of the most oil-rich nations, is not investing capital in ballistic missiles and underground nuclear facilities in order to produce electricity.

    It is no coincidence that the speech lacked both any practical proposal to stop Iran's military nuclear program and any commitment to fulfill UN Security Council decisions.

    This is exactly Iran's strategy – to talk and play for time in order to advance its ability to achieve nuclear weapons. Rouhani knows this well. He bragged that a decade ago, he succeeded in misleading the West so that while Iran was holding talks, it simultaneously advanced its nuclear program. The international community must test Iran not by its words but by its actions."

    On the instruction of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli delegation to the United Nations absented itself from Rouhani's speech in order not to grant legitimacy to a regime that does not recognize the existence of the Holocaust and which publicly declares its desire to wipe the State of Israel off the map. "As the Prime Minister of Israel, the state of the Jewish people, I could not allow the Israeli delegation to be part of a cynical public relations ploy by a regime that denies the Holocaust and calls for our destruction."

    Just last week, Rouhani, like Ahmadinejad before him, refused to recognize the Holocaust as an historical fact.

    When Iran's leaders stop denying the Holocaust of the Jewish people, and stop calling for the destruction of the Jewish state and recognize Israel's right to exist, the Israeli delegation will attend their addresses at the General Assembly.