Transcripts
Biden and Netanyahu Meet in Israel Transcript

Biden and Netanyahu Meet in Israel Transcript

President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke together in Tel Aviv, Israel, at the start of a high-stakes trip amid the backdrop of war, high regional tension, and a humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Read the transcript here.

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Benjamin Netanyahu (00:00):

I want to thank you for coming here today and for the unequivocal support you have given Israel during these trying times, a support that reflects the overwhelming will of the American people. I’ve seen your support every day in the depth and breadth of cooperation that we have had since the beginning of this war. A level of cooperation that is truly unprecedented in the history of the great alliance between our two nations. We see that support in your steadfast commitment to provide Israel with the tools we need to defend ourselves. We see that support in the clear message you’ve sent our enemies not to test our resolve, and in the two American carrier battle groups that you sent to the region to back up those words with action.

(00:55)
But above all, Mr. President, the world sees that support and the moral clarity that you have demonstrated from the moment Israel was attacked. You’ve rightly drawn a clear line between the forces of civilization and the forces of barbarism. You described what Hamas did as sheer evil. It is exactly that. Hamas murdered children in front of their parents and parents in front of their children. They burned people alive. They raped and murdered women. They beheaded soldiers. They searched for the secret hiding places where parents hid their children. And just imagine, Mr. President, the fear and the panic of those little children in their last moments as the monsters discovered, found out their hiding places.

(01:53)
Hamas kidnapped women, children, elderly Holocaust survivals. I know you share our outrage on this, and I know you share our determination to bring these people back. On October 7th, Hamas murdered 1,400 Israelis, maybe more. This is in a country of fewer than 10 million people. This would be equivalent to over 50,000 Americans murdered in a single day. That’s 20 9/11s. That is why October 7th is another day that will live in infamy. Mr. President, you rightly said that Hamas is worse than ISIS. The German chancellor who visited here yesterday said that Hamas were the new Nazis. You’re both right. And just as a civilized world united to defeat the Nazis and united to defeat ISIS, the civilized world must unite to defeat Hamas.

(02:56)
I can assure you, Mr. President, Israel is united to defeat Hamas and we will defeat Hamas and remove this terrible threat from our lives. The forces of civilization will prevail for our sake, for your sake, for peace and security in our region and in the world. Mr. President, for the people of Israel, there’s only one thing better than having a true friend like you standing with Israel, and that is having you standing in Israel. Your visit here is the first visit of an American president in Israel at a time of war. It is deeply, deeply moving. It speaks to the depth of your personal commitment to Israel. It speaks to the depth of your personal commitment to the future of the Jewish people and the one and only Jewish state. So I know I speak for all the people of Israel when I say, thank you, Mr. President, thank you for standing with Israel today, tomorrow, and always.

Joe Biden (04:05):

Mr. Prime Minister, thank you very much. Look, folks, I wanted to be here today for a simple reason. I wanted the people of Israel, the people of the world to know where the United States stands. I’ve had my great Secretary of State here, he’s been here for a lot, but I wanted to personally come and make that clear. Terrorist group, Hamas, has slaughtered, as has been pointed out, over 1,300 people. And it’s not hyperbole to suggest slaughtered, slaughtered, including 31 Americans as part of that. And they’ve taken scores of people hostage, including children. You said, “Imagine what those children hiding from Hamas were thinking,” it’s beyond my comprehension to be able to imagine what they’re thinking, beyond my comprehension.

(05:01)
They’ve committed evils and atrocities that make ISIS look somewhat more rational. Americans are grieving with you. They really are. And Americans are worried. Americans are worried because we know this is not an easy field to navigate what you have to do. But the fact is that Israel, as they responded to these attacks, seems to me that they have to continue to ensure that you have what you need to defend yourselves, and we’re going to make sure that occurs as you know. And we have to also bear in mind that Hamas does not represent all the Palestinian people, and it has brought them only suffering. Years ago, I asked the Secretary of State when he and I were working in the Senate to write something for me.

(06:06)
He wrote a line that I think is appropriate. He said, “It’s not we lead…” Well, I won’t go into it. I’ll wait until later. I’m taking too much time. But the point is this, I was deeply saddened and outraged by the explosion at the hospital in Gaza yesterday. And based on what I’ve seen, it appears as though it was done by the other team, not you. But there’s a lot of people out there not sure. So we’ve got to overcome a lot of things. And it also means encouraging lifesaving capacity to help the Palestinians who are innocent, caught in the middle of this. Well, at any rate, that’s who we are. Not just me, but I mean that’s who the United States is. And it’s just not the example of our power.

(07:04)
The power example is almost as important. The world’s looking. Israel has a value set like the United States does and other democracies, and they’re looking to see what we’re going to do. So, Mr. Prime Minister, I’m very happy to be back in Israel with you. Thank you for having me, and I’m looking forward to having a thorough discussion about where everybody goes from here. But thank you. And I want to say to the people of Israel, their courage, their commitment, their bravery is stunning. It’s really stunning. I’m proud to be here.

Benjamin Netanyahu (07:49):

Thank you.

Speaker 3 (07:49):

[inaudible 00:08:15].

Speaker 4 (08:14):

Right. Well, you just heard the US President speaking sitting beside Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister. And Joe Biden said, or certainly underlined, that the US will provide whatever support Israel needs. He said, “The world is watching. Israel has a set of values like the US has, and it is important that they stick to those.” I want to bring back CNN’s White House correspondent, Arlette Saenz, in Washington, and I think the words that we heard from President Biden there go a long way to addressing what you and I have been discussing in the last hour or so, the delicacy with which Joe Biden will need to walk a line here given what happened in Gaza last night with the attack on the hospital, hundreds of people died while he said, “I understand that there is some confusion as to who was behind that attack.” He was pretty emphatic that we need to sort of calm things down at this point. This is difficult, isn’t it, for Joe Biden, Arlette?

Arlette Saenz (09:29):

Yeah. It’s a very complicated and dynamic situation that the President is trying to navigate at this moment. He made this trip to Israel with the intent of trying to show that steadfast support that the US is ready to commit to Israel as it wages its war against Hamas. You heard the President saying there that the US stands ready to offer support to the country as well as the President trying to make this symbolic show of force to the Israeli people. You saw him on the tarmac embracing Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu. You see him side by side with him, vowing that the US will continue to support him. But the President also made some points about the future of this war as well as talking about the civilian impact that is occurring on the ground there.

(10:19)
It was important to note that the President said, “Hamas does not represent all Palestinian people.” You have seen this concern spreading among Arab allies about the fact that there are civilians caught in the middle of this fight between Israel and Hamas and Arab countries urging Israel to exercise some restraint in that manner. I also think it was important, as you heard the President talk about that blast in that hospital in Gaza. He said he was deeply saddened and outraged. And from the President’s perspective, based on what he has seen, he believes that it was done by the other team, but says that there are still some questions out there from other people.

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