[Salon] Netanyahu in Turtle Bay



https://link.foreignpolicy.com/view/644279f41a7f1f1e29de6831lykhc.e3o/478b1912

 Netanyahu in Turtle Bay

People gather on a street in Beirut around the rubble of a hole created by an Israeli airstrike. Smoke billows up from the impact site, and some orange flames are visible in it. Battered midrise buildings loom on either side.

People and rescuers gather near the smoldering rubble of a building destroyed in an Israeli airstrike in Beirut’s southern suburbs on Sept. 27.Ibrahim Amro/AFP via Getty Images

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Friday, just one hour before the Israeli air force targeted Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah in a strike on the group’s headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon. The strike killed at least two people and injured 76 others, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry. It is unclear if Nasrallah was harmed in the attack.

The two near-simultaneous events presented a dramatic split screen as Western diplomats scramble to avert a potentially catastrophic all-out war between Israel and the Iran-backed militant group.

The Pentagon said on Friday that Israel did not give the United States advance notice of the attack and that Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin learned of the strike as it was underway, during a phone call with his Israeli counterpart, Yoav Gallant.

In the wake of the strike, the Israeli prime minister cut his visit to New York short and is now scheduled to return to Israel on Friday evening, Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Danny Danon confirmed.

Netanyahu used his address to UNGA to rail against Iran and its proxies as well as to denounce the world body as an “anti-Israel flat earth society.” The comments came a day after he appeared to reject a U.S.-backed proposal calling for a cease-fire in Lebanon.

In his speech, which came almost a year after Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, Netanyahu underscored Israel’s right to defend itself against “savage enemies” who seek Israel’s “annihilation,” including Tehran-backed militant groups such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, and Hamas in Gaza. Complete with the use of stylized maps as props, Netanyahu warned that Iran’s aggression and radicalism poses a “dark future of despair” for Israel as well as others in the region.

“I have a message for the tyrants of Tehran: If you strike us, we will strike you,” Netanyahu said. “There is no place in Iran that the long arm of Israel cannot reach, and that is true of the entire Middle East.”

Swaths of seats in the cavernous General Assembly Hall sat empty during Netanyahu’s address, as thousands of anti-war and pro-Palestinian protesters gathered outside the U.N. headquarters in Midtown Manhattan. Supporters in the balcony, including families of Israeli hostages flown in with the prime minister, cheered at several points during the speech.

Israel’s military offensive in Gaza, which began last October, has killed more than 41,000 Palestinians and displaced more than 2.1 million people. With the onset of that war and in solidarity with Hamas, Hezbollah began launching rocket, missile, and drone attacks against Israel; the two sides have traded fire across the Israel-Lebanon border almost daily ever since. That conflict has escalated dramatically in recent days, with Israel’s most recent bombing campaign in Lebanon killing more than 700 people since Monday alone.

World leaders, including Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Lebanese Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib, took to the UNGA stage this week and condemned Israel, calling for an end to its fighting in Gaza and Lebanon.

“This madness cannot continue,” Abbas said  in his speech on Thursday. “The entire world is responsible for what is happening to our people,” he added, explicitly slamming the United States for blocking three draft U.N. Security Council resolutions over the past year calling for an immediate humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza.

In his speech, also on Thursday, the Lebanese foreign minister said that “the future of Lebanon’s people is imperiled.” “What we are currently experiencing in Lebanon is due to the absence of a sustainable solution to the root of the crisis, which is occupation,” he added.



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