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"If the Arabs put down their weapons today, there would be no more violence. If the Jews put down their weapons today, there would be no more Israel."
This stark, binary statement by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has long been one of the most repeated and most disputed quotes in conversations around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Today, with Israel and Iran having fought two direct wars in less than a year, it reads less like political rhetoric and more like a doctrine in active use.
What it says
Netanyahu's argument is one of survival. Israel, he contends, only exists because it defends itself. Remove that defence, and the state ceases to exist.
Armed resistance from its adversaries is framed as the sole driver of violence. He implies that peace is a choice being withheld by one side alone.
The quote is deeply contested. Critics argue it erases the structural conditions that fuel the conflict, which are decades of occupation, displacement, blockades and the denial of Palestinian statehood. It places all moral responsibility on one side while ignoring state violence and the lived reality of Palestinians.
Supporters, however, argue that it reflects a genuine asymmetry. They say that Israel's adversaries have, at various points, openly called for its destruction while Israel has repeatedly entered peace negotiations.
The quote also has a disputed origin. It is widely attributed to Benjamin Netanyahu. But, some researchers trace similar phrasing to earlier sources, including versions linked to former Israeli PM Golda Meir. Its exact first use remains unclear.
Where it comes from
The quote was written with Palestinian armed groups in mind. But the years since have turned its logic into an active foreign policy toward Iran.
In 2024, the Iran-Israel proxy conflict escalated into a series of direct confrontations between the two countries. Then, in June 2025, the conflict crossed into open war.
The conflict did not end there. On 28 February 2026, following failed nuclear talks and renewed regional tensions, Israel and the United States launched massive coordinated strikes on Iranian infrastructure and leadership.
That initiated the full-scale ongoing war, the most direct and sustained military confrontation between Israel and Iran in history.
For Netanyahu, all of this is the quote made real. Iran does not recognise Israel's right to exist. It built and funded the Axis of Resistance, Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, precisely to apply pressure on Israel through proxies. Israel, in Netanyahu's framing, had no choice but to act.
The quote resonates with those who see Israel's security concerns as legitimate and existential. It frustrates those who believe the framing ignores the cycle of provocation and response that both sides contribute to.
The civilian populations on all sides bear the cost. Iran's stated hostility toward Israel is real and documented. So is the devastation experienced by ordinary people in Gaza, Lebanon and now Iran itself.
No single quote can carry the weight of this history. But, Netanyahu has spent his career governing as though this one should.
Related readings
The Lemon Tree by Sandy Tolan
It’s a deeply human account of two families, one Israeli and one Palestinian, connected by a single home.
My Promised Land by Ari Shavit
It’s an Israeli journalist's honest, sometimes painful reckoning with his country's history.
Twilight War by David Crist
This is a detailed history of the covert and overt conflict between the United States and Iran.
The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Ilan Pappé
It’s a controversial but widely-read account by an Israeli historian that presents the Palestinian perspective on 1948.

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