Netanyahu warn’s UN secretary general of Iran’s ‘warfronts in Syria, Lebanon
Published August 28, 2017
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres that Iran is using Syria and Lebanon “as warfronts against its declared goal to eradicate Israel.”
Iran is “building sites to produce precision-guided missiles towards that end in both Syria and in Lebanon. This is something Israel cannot accept. This is something the UN should not accept,” Netanyahu told Guterres Monday prior to their meeting in Jerusalem.
Netanyahu also told Guterres that the UN was failing to prevent Hezbollah from obtaining arms, a mandate that was part of the UN Security Council Resolution 1701 passed at the end of the Second Lebanon War in 2006. The prime minister charged that the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, or UNIFIL, has not reported one of the “tens of thousands of weapons smuggling into Lebanon for Hezbollah.”
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Guterres responded that he will “do everything in my capacity” to ensure UNIFIL fulfills its obligations.
He also said: “I understand the security concerns of Israel and I repeat that the idea or the intention or the will to destroy the state of Israel is something totally unacceptable from my perspective.”
Guterres asked Netanyahu that Israel help improve the Palestinian economy, as a way to show the Palestinians that making peace with Israel will pay.
The UN secretary general also met on Monday, prior to meeting with Netanyahu, with Israel’s President Reuven Rivlin at his residence in Jerusalem.
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Rivlin called on Guterres to work to end the discrimination against Israel in sections of the U.N. “I call upon you, Mr. Secretary General, to work to end the discrimination against Israel in some branches of your organization. This targeting of Israel, this singling out of the world’s only Jewish State – and even actions and statements that threaten to destroy Israel – are unacceptable and should come at a price,” he said.
He also asked the secretary general to help intervene with Hamas to bring home the bodies of two Israeli soldiers and two other Israelis believed held captive in Gaza.
Guterres in his appearance with Rivlin said that calls for the destruction of Israel “is a form of modern anti-Semitism,” adding: “but you also understand that I sometimes disagree with positions with the Government of Israel or any other government, and that is absolutely normal in a society where many of your citizens have exactly the same expressions of opinions. We will always be very frank in the dialogue with the State of Israel in trying to find ways for peace to be possible in this region, but we will always be very committed to make sure anti-Semitism doesn’t prevail and that equality in the treatment of all states is fully respected.”
Guterres noted that he started his visit Monday morning at Yad Vashem where he laid a wreath in the memorial hall. “Yad Vashem is there to remind us that we need to be in the first line in fighting against anti-Semitism, but first of all fighting against all other forms of bigotry be it racism, xenophobia, even anti-Muslim hatred, to promote understanding and to promote dialogue, and I am very appreciative Mr. President for what has been your commitment to dialogue and understanding,” he said.
The secretary general is scheduled to meet in Tuesday with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and to tour Gaza on Wednesday. It is his first visit to Israel and to the Palestinian areas since becoming head of the United Nations in January.