Netanyahu Fires Off a Scathing Sword at Starmer and Co.
In a high‑voltage televised tirade, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu slammed Sir Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, and Canadian official Mark Carney for what he sees as their “broad‑based call for an end to Israel’s military action in Gaza.”
What the Pep‑Pated Leaders Said
- Starmer: “Israel must stop its war in Gaza right now.”
- Macron: “We need a Palestinian state, not bloodshed.”
- Carney: “Sanctions against Israel are the way to cool the situation.”
Netanyahu, not one for diplomacy, described their stance as a slap in the face of humanity. “They’re essentially tipping the scale in favor of Hamas, letting the killers keep firing and survive another October 7,” he declared. “You’re on the wrong side of history, justice, and… well, the entire human decency spectrum.”
Netanyahu’s Patriotic Rant
His speech was peppered with a few rhetorical brand‑splashes:
- “For 18 years we’ve had a de‑facto Palestinian state—Gaza—and what did we get? A fresh wave of savage slaughter, the most brutal since the Holocaust.”
- “I cannot fathom how the leaders of France, Britain, Canada, and others manage to dodge this simple truth.”
He also accused the trio of “buying into Hamas propaganda,” which says Israel is starving Palestinian children. “We’re blasting a new wave of weapons against enemies who want us to crush,” Oren Marmorstein, a forward‑looking media spokesperson, added.
Mocking the Call for Sanctions?
Netanyahu funped that the Sanction‑talk actually keeps Hamas fattening up and letting them rebuild. “If the mass murderers, rapists, baby‑killers, and kidnappers are receiving a standing ovation from you guys, you’re not just off track; you’re on the wrong side of humanity.”
The Bottom Line
This fiery address wasn’t a diplomatic back‑and‑forth; it was a full‑blown strike. Netanyahu’s words echo the stubborn, unyielding stance of a nation that refuses to let press guns open fire on its people. And while Western leaders make the “peace” pitch, the tour de force from Israel’s premier paints a more ominous view for those saying “stop the war.”
