Security Council Warned Iran Nuclear Stalemate Is Creating Oversight Vacuum
Netanyahu casts Iran war as modern Exodus in Passover address In a Passover eve address steeped in biblical imagery, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday framed Israelâs campaign against Iran and its proxies through the lens of the biblical Exodus, declaring that Israel had dealt its enemies âten blowsâ echoing the Ten Plagues. Netanyahu listed strikes against Hamas, Hezbollah, Bashar Assadâs fallen regime in Syria, Palestinian terror groups and the Houthis in Yemen, alongside five direct blows to Iran â targeting its nuclear program, missile capabilities, regime infrastructure, repression forces and senior leadership. Netanyahu then pivoted to âten major achievementsâ mirroring those plagues, from a strategic reversal against Tehran to strengthened alliances, degraded enemy capabilities and Israelâs resilience. The parallel cast the modern conflict as a continuation of the Exodus narrative, in which Israel withstands existential threats and emerges strengthened. Netanyahu also urged the Israeli media and opposition to refrain from defeatist messaging, telling them to âplug into the spirit of the people, the spirit of bravery and victory of our great fighters.â On the eve of Passover, âIsrael is stronger than ever,â Netanyahu said at the beginning of his address. âThe entire world hears our lionâs roar,â he added, referencing Israelâs âOperation Roaring Lionâ with the United States against the Iranian regime, which he called âevil.â The fight features âmonumental, tremendous achievements,â he said, alongside âpainful tolls,â including the loss of four troops on Tuesday in Lebanon. He offered his condolences to the families of the fallen and expressed solidarity with the wounded. A month after the launch âof our joint campaign with the United States, we are systematically crushing the regime of terror, which for decades had called out âdeath to Israelâ and âdeath to America,ââ said Netanyahu. âIn every generation there have been those who sought to destroy us,â Netanyahu said in his address, which he delivered in Hebrew, quoting the Passover poem âVehi Sheamda,â which is in the Passover Haggadah and states that âGod always rescues us from their hands.â In our generation, Netanyahu said, âthe Ayatollah regime has made a massive effort to destroy us, to annihilate us, to take over the Middle East and threaten the whole world.â These efforts, and Iranâs nuclear program, cost nearly one trillion dollars, he said. âAnd now we can say: those trillion dollars have gone to waste.â One of the âplaguesâ that Israel dealt Iran, Netanyahu said, was comparable to the plague of the firstborns, or makat bechorot in Hebrew, in which God killed all of the firstborns of the Egyptians. The plague against Iran can be better characterized as makat bechirim, he saidâHebrew for senior officials. Israel and the United States have killed dozens of Iranian senior officials, among them the former spiritual leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei, who was killed on the first day of the campaign. Netanyahu also mentioned the killing of Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollahâs leader, in 2024, and of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar. Pharaoh tried to hurt the Hebrews even after the 10 plagues, Netanyahu recalled, âand we all know how that ended,â referencing the drowning of Pharaohâs army. Iran and its proxies are also trying to hurt Israel despite their losses, Netanyahu said, and âthe fight is not over yet.â Before the current campaign, âwe fought Iran alone. Today, we are fighting shoulder to shoulder with the United States, in an unprecedented historic cooperation between [U.S.] President [Donald] Trump and myself, and between the U.S. military and the Israel Defense Forces. Not only have we strengthened our alliance with the United States, we are also forging new alliances with important countries in the region against the shared Iranian threat. I hope that soon, citizens of Israel, I will be able to tell you more about these important alliances,â said Netanyahu. Iranâs regime is âweaker than ever,â Netanyahu continued, and âis destined to collapse.â He noted the creation of security zones beyond Israelâs borders in Lebanon, Gaza and Syria, and praised Israeli societyâs resilience. âAt a time when there were those who showed weakness and defeatism, we continued the war with full force, striking our enemies with determination and without fear,â he said. âWhile some dismissed the relationships we built, including with the United States, we stayed the course and changed the face of the Middle East. We created the conditions to expand our alliances and broaden the circle of peace around us,â he added.
Netanyahu casts Iran war as modern Exodus in Passover address In a Passover eve address steeped in biblical imagery, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday framed Israelâs campaign against Iran and its proxies through the lens of the biblical Exodus, declaring thaâŚ
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