October 13, 2025

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech to the Knesset before President Donald Trump’s address hours after the release of the final 20 living Israeli hostages held in Gaza.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/live/Jh-NE0hQyk4?si=LlF–gILqfdfoK2m&t=6603; Prime Minister Netanyahu’s speech ends at the 2:19:00 mark.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netayahu’s full-throated, adulatory introduction to President Donald Trump’s Knesset speech was unprecedented in Israeli parliamentary history. While Trump was the fourth U.S. president to address the Knesset (Carter, 1979; Clinton, 1994; and Bush, 2008), Netanyahu focused his praise on Trump’s brokering of a ceasefire agreement to end the Hamas-Israel war and securing of the commitment of Muslim and Arab leaders to a vision for permanent Middle East peace. He also praised Trump for previous pro-Israeli undertakings, including moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, recognizing Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights, brokering the Abraham Accords, exiting the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA), and supporting Israeli military operations, particularly the U.S. attack on Iranian nuclear facilities and missile capabilities in June 2025.

Netanyahu spared no superlative for Trump, saying that “no American president has ever done more for Israel” while elevating Trump to a position as Israel’s “greatest friend in the White House” (obviously excluding Harry Truman and his immediate recognition of Israel’s statehood when it declared independence in May 1948).

Earlier the same day, the final 20 living Israeli hostages were released after two years in Hamas captivity in Gaza. Netanyahu had ultimate praise for the nearly 2,000 Israeli soldiers and civilians killed since the morning of October 7, 2023, and noted the thousands of Israelis wounded in the Hamas-Israel war. The prime minister ticked off Israel’s successes in killing enemy leaders Sinwar, Haniyeh and Nasrallah, seeing the ouster of Bashar Assad in Syria, and rolling back Iran’s nuclear and ballistic programs.

Casting the ceasefire as a transition to peace and hoped-for regional normalization, Netanyahu invited Arab and Muslim states to expand the “circle of peace” beyond the Abraham Accords. He announced his nomination of Trump for the Israel Prize, the state’s highest civilian honor and one never awarded to a non-Israeli. He closed his remarks with the Shehecheyanu prayer, recited upon special occasions.

Netanyahu’s speech showed the depth of Israel’s relationship with the United States and allowed the prime minister to bask in the glow of Trump’s presence for his hand in the hostages’ release and the ceasefire. But no Israeli or Palestinian official signed the Trump vision for regional peace at an international summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, later the same day. Thus, the success of the ceasefire agreement beyond the exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners and a partial IDF withdrawal (Hamas’ disarmament, Gaza’s reconstruction, additional Israeli military withdrawals, and international security and administrative arrangements) rests essentially with the Trump administration and Egypt, Qatar and Turkey, the Muslim mediators that signed on.

— Ken Stein, October 13, 2025


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: Now I know that the Teleprompters are working well, though I’m not using them, but I’m not sure about the translation, so I’ll say words in English. President Trump, the Knesset welcomes you and your distinguished delegation to Jerusalem, our eternal capital. This is your first visit to Israel since you recognized Jerusalem as our capital and moved the embassy here. Thank you, President Trump, for that.

There are many other reasons to thank you since your last visit here.

Thank you for recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights.

Thank you for standing up to the lies against Israel in the United Nations.

Thank you for recognizing in your 2020 peace plan our rights in Judaea and Samaria, the ancestral homeland of the Jewish people.

Thank you for brokering the historic Abraham Accords.

Thank you for withdrawing from the disastrous Iran nuclear deal.

Thank you for supporting Operation Rising Lion and for your bold decision to launch Operation Midnight Hammer. Boy is that — you gotta hear this. This is the most fitting name ever for a military operation because a little after midnight, you really hammered them.

My friends, this is only a partial list, but it’s enough to affirm what I’ve said time and again: Donald Trump is the greatest friend that the State of Israel has ever had in the White House. No American president has ever done more for Israel, and, as I said in Washington, it ain’t even close. It’s really not a match.

Mr. President, today, we welcome you here to thank you for your pivotal leadership in putting forward a proposal that got the backing of almost the entire world. A proposal, a proposal that brings all our hostages home. A proposal that ends the war by achieving all our objectives. A proposal that opens the door to an historic expansion of peace in our region and beyond our region. Mr. President, you are committed to this peace. I am committed to this peace, and together, Mr. President, we will achieve this peace.

We’ve done it before. We’ve done it before in the Abraham Accords, and we’ll do it again.

Mr. President, today the Jewish calendar marks the end of two years of war. That war began on October 7th on the Jewish festival of Simchat Torah. You always tell me and you tell the world, “Remember October 7th.” Mr. President, we remember.

We remember the thousands of Hamas terrorists who stormed into our towns and kibbutzim. We remember the 1,200 people Hamas savages slaughtered in cold blood, including dozens and dozens of Americans. We remember entire families burnt alive, burnt alive as they embraced each other. We remember the beautiful young Israelis brutally gunned down at the Nova music festival. We remember the hundreds of our citizens who were dragged into the dungeons of Gaza, including 12 Americans, men and women, young and old, babies and elderly Holocaust survivors.

My friends, Mr. President, Donald, these monsters take babies as hostages.

In response to this barbaric attack on October 7th, Israel did what it had to do with indomitable courage. We set out to defend our people, to defeat our enemies and to release our hostages.

Our heroic soldiers fought like lions. They fought on the front lines of civilization and barbarism. Israel achieved amazing victories over Hamas and the entire Iran terror axis. Sinwar, dead. Haniyeh, Nasrallah, Assad, they’re all gone. Iran’s nuclear weapons and ballistic missile program, with your enormous help, Mr. President, rolled back. Half the Houthi leadership wiped out.

But the price of this victory, the price of these victories, has been heavy. Nearly 2,000 of Israel’s finest were lost, nearly half in battle. They left behind parents, spouses, siblings and children. Their love and laughter, their promise and potential were lost forever.

To the families of our fallen fighters, many of them are here, I say, “I know the depth of your pain. I know the inconsolable grief that will accompany you for the rest of your lives.” The State of Israel bows its head in eternal gratitude to our fallen heroes. Because of these heroes, our nation will survive. Because of these heroes, our nation will thrive. And because of these heroes, our nation will have peace.

Mr. President, thousands of our brave soldiers were also wounded, suffering terrible blows to body and soul. Brave soldiers like Ari Spitz. Ari is an American. Ari is an American Israeli who was injured. Ari is an American Israeli who was injured in Gaza while searching for Hamas terrorists and weapons. Two of Ari’s comrades were killed in this action, and 10 were injured. Ari was presumed dead but made a miraculous recovery despite losing three limbs. Ari, stand up for a minute alone, stand up. There you go, there. Ari, Ari, you are the spirit of Joshua. You are the spirit of David. You are the spirit of the Maccabees. You are the spirit of Israel. I salute you. We all salute you.

Sabine Tassa of Kibbutz Netiv HaAsara is watching this today from the Israeli Consulate in Los Angeles. Sabine lost her husband and her oldest son on October 7th. She is the mother of three other boys. Two of them, Koren and Shay, witnessed their father jump on a Hamas grenade to save his two sons. We all saw the film of those two boys crying out in pain: “Father is dead. Why? Why did God save me?”

Mr. President, my friend Donald. I’ve seen some very tough things in my life, but I couldn’t bring myself to watch those boys suffering again. So I didn’t see this film except once. Yet Sabine, their mother, has had the strength and fortitude to show this film across the world. And my wife, Sara, and I asked her, “Sabine, how do you do it? Why do you do?”

And she answered, “I do it to show the entire world the monsters Israel is fighting and the justice of our cause.”

This is what she’s doing once again in Los Angeles. Sabine, you can hear me now. So I want to tell you, on behalf of all of us, you embody the spirit of our biblical heroines Deborah, Ruth and Esther. You too are the spirit of Israel, and we all salute you.

Mr. President, you asked me on our many conversations during the 12-day war with Iran, you asked me, “How are the people holding up?” And I said to you, “Our people are strong.” Israelis are a nation of life with unlimited resolve to defend our country and secure our future. The people, the people give strength to our soldiers, and the people give strength to me and to my colleagues.

The Jewish people have risen from the ashes time and again, but when we formed the State of Israel and the army of Israel, we pledged never again. Never again would we be defenseless against our enemies. And that resolute strength not only assures our survival; it assures our future. It assures peace.

We have paid a high price for this war, but our enemies now understand just how powerful and just how determined Israel is. They understand that attacking Israel on October 7th was a catastrophic mistake. They understand that Israel is strong and that Israel is here to stay. And this, Mr. President, is the indispensable foundation of peace. Peace through strength.

Ladies and gentlemen, this is a momentous day, a day of great joy, as the remaining hostages come home. My wife, Sara, and I have met with the hostage families many times. There were no words to describe their agony, only tears of bottomless sorrow and unimaginable pain.

At the beginning of the war, I promised to bring all the hostages home. Today, with the indispensable help, the determined and focused help, the unremitting help of President Trump and his team, and with the incredible sacrifice and courage of the soldiers of Israel, we are fulfilling that promise.

It has been a long journey to get here. In the first week of the war, our brave soldiers put military pressure on Hamas, and the international community put diplomatic pressure on it. This enabled us to secure the release of over 100 hostages. In heroic rescue attempts behind enemy lines, Israel’s special forces rescued eight live hostages and brought back the remains of dozens more.

But as time went on, we all know what happened. The diplomatic pressure was turned on its head. More and more governments bought into Hamas’ false propaganda. More and more governments succumbed to antisemitic mobs in their own countries. They just turned on Israel. They called for us to surrender to Hamas’ demands to leave Gaza immediately. They said end the war without committing to disarm Hamas, without committing to demilitarize Gaza.

Had Israel succumbed to those demands, not only would Sinwar, Nasrallah, Assad, and Iran’s missile and nuclear programs remained intact, not only that. Because in no time the Hamas killers would be back on the border fence, ready to repeat the horrors of October 7th again and again as they vowed to do.

But just at that point, just at that point of maximum pressure on Israel, a man named Donald J. Trump was elected president of the United States. And, ladies and gentlemen, overnight, overnight, everything changed, everything.

Mr. President, thanks to your unequivocal backing of Israel, we secured a second hostage deal within weeks of your election. And in the months that followed, we worked closely together to forge a path to bring the remaining hostages home and end the war, end the war in a way that ensured the disarming of Hamas, that demilitarization of Gaza and that Gaza would never again pose a threat to Israel.

Two months ago, you fully backed my decision to send the IDF into the last Hamas stronghold in Gaza City. You shared my view that this military pressure would help free the hostages. And despite all the criticism, all the naysayers, we were right. Hamas caved in. And two weeks ago you succeeded in doing something miraculous. You succeeded in doing something that no one believed was possible. You brought most of the Arabs. You brought most of the world behind your proposal to free the hostages and end the war.

I want to thank Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner and Ron Dermer for their great contribution to this effort. And I want to thank our negotiating team. I believe that the close cooperation between the two of us, between our two nations, combining Israel’s military pressure and President Trump’s unmatched global leadership — I have to tell you, I’ve seen a lot of American presidents, seen them all in the time that I’ve been here, and I’ve been here quite a long time. I’ve never seen anyone move the world so quickly, so decisively, so resolutely as our friend President Donald J. Trump.

With our military pressure and President Trump’s global leadership, we achieved this historic moment. It is a moment of indescribable joy as our nation embraces our sons who are coming home. Mr. President, this week Jews around the world, Jews around the world are going to read the Book of Ecclesiastes, Kohelet, in the Bible. The Bible has many miraculous moments. One of them was your decision to bomb Fordow. I think it was a pivot of history because it wasn’t meant only to bomb Fordow. That action and your previous action of taking out Qasem Soleimani, the architect of death, I think that changed the balance of power in the world. You brought America back again to the driver’s seat.

Now I said that we’re going to read this week the Book of Ecclesiastes. It has — it’s not a book of action. It’s a book of meditation, of thought, of perspective of life and on death. And in this book we read the immortal words of King Solomon: “To everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven. A time for peace, and a time for war.” The last two years has been a time of war. The coming years will hopefully be a time for peace. Peace inside Israel and peace outside Israel.

I look forward to continuing marching with you on the path we pave together with the Abraham Accords. Under your leadership, we can forge new peace treaties with Arab countries in the region and Muslim countries beyond the region. Abraham’s children will work together to build a better future, a future that will unite civilization against barbarism, light against darkness, and hope against despair.

And, my friends, I believe that with President Trump’s leadership, this will happen a lot faster than people think.

As prime minister of Israel, I extend my head to hold those who seek peace with us. No one wants peace more than the people of Israel. Israel will always remain vigilant in defending itself, and Israel will always remain full of hope. Hope is our national anthem. Hope is our creed. Hope is our strength. It is time, my friends, to realize that hope and expand the circle of peace.

Mr. President, thank you for all you have done for us. I have submitted your nomination to be the first non-Israeli recipient of the Israel Prize, Israel’s highest award. As to that other prize, it’s just a question of time; you’ll get it. But I want you to get the Israel Prize, our highest award to our greatest friend.

When others were weak, you were strong. When others were fearful, you were bold. When others abandoned us, you stood by our side. On behalf of the government and people of Israel, I thank you for your extraordinary friendship. Thank you for helping bring our hostages home. Thank you for supporting Israel’s march to victory. Thank you for paving a path to peace.

[Netanyahu briefly switches to Hebrew, including the Shehecheyanu prayer, thanking God for giving us life, sustaining us and enabling us to reach this season.]

May God bless you and your family, Mr. President. May God bless America. May God bless Israel, and may God bless the covenant between our two promised lands. Thank you, Mr. President.