Tel Aviv’s resilient spirit shone through as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed a crowd in Arad, site of Iran’s latest missile barrage. Rallying the world, he demanded solidarity with America and Israel to dismantle Iran’s reign of terror. ‘The evidence is undeniable,’ he proclaimed. ‘Over the last two days, Iran deliberately aimed at civilian neighborhoods—only fortune spared lives, not their evil intent.’
Delving into specifics, Netanyahu highlighted Iran’s intercontinental ballistic missile fired at Diego Garcia, the strategic US-UK outpost in the Indian Ocean. This brazen act, he argued, proves Tehran’s ability to threaten Europe directly. ‘They’re not stopping there,’ he continued, slamming Iran’s threats to choke the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s oil lifeline, as a ploy to extort global powers.
Netanyahu revealed that several nations are stepping up to support the joint US-Israel operations, though details remain vague. ‘We need more—far more,’ he urged, aligning with President Trump’s repeated calls for wider alliances. He lambasted recent Iranian assaults near Jerusalem’s sacred landmarks, including the Western Wall, Holy Sepulchre, and Al-Aqsa, calling their preservation a divine intervention.
When pressed on Israel’s response to attacks on its people, the Prime Minister was unequivocal: ‘Full-spectrum retaliation, precisely targeted. No civilians—we go after the IRGC thugs, their command structure, bases, and finances. Hard and unrelenting.’ This address from Arad marks a turning point, positioning the conflict as a global imperative rather than a regional feud, with Netanyahu positioning Israel as the frontline defender against Iranian expansionism.