Triggernometry interviews Benjamin Netanyahu | WATCH
In a fiery interview, Netanyahu warns the West: Israel is fighting for civilization itself. Recounting the October 7 massacre, exposing Iran-backed terror, and calling for deradicalization, he paints a stark picture of a world under siege and urges urgent action before it’s too late.

In a gripping interview with Triggernometry, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivered a passionate defense of Israel's fight against what he calls a battle of civilization against barbarism. Speaking candidly about the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack and its aftermath, Netanyahu painted a vivid picture of a nation under siege, not just by terrorists but by a global propaganda war that he says Jews have been losing for 2500 years. His remarks, laced with historical analogies and unapologetic resolve, explained Israel's determination to prevail in a conflict he frames as existential, not just for Israel, but for the West.
A Morning of Horror: October 7, 2023
Netanyahu recounted the chilling moment he learned of Hamas's invasion at 6:29 AM on a quiet Shabbat morning. "I got a phone call from my military secretary informing me that we've just been invaded," he said, recalling his immediate question: "Is it a full-scale invasion?" Upon confirmation, he rushed to Israel's military headquarters in Tel Aviv, mobilized hundreds of thousands of reservists, and declared war. The attack, which killed 1200 people and saw atrocities like rape, beheadings, and the burning of babies, was, in his words, "savagery on a scale we haven't seen since the Holocaust."
He described the emotional toll as secondary to the urgency of action. "You're concerned with decisions, not wallowing in the mire," he said, emphasizing the need to focus on winning the war. Yet, the brutality, documented by Hamas with GoPro cameras, left an indelible mark. "This is not what beasts do," he remarked, calling the conflict a fight against barbarism that threatens not just Israel but global civilization.
The Iranian Axis and Intelligence Failures
Netanyahu revealed new insights into the attack, describing it as part of an Iranian-orchestrated terror axis aimed at annihilating Israel through a multi-front assault involving Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, and others. He suggested Hamas acted prematurely, disrupting Iran's plan for a synchronized invasion, which allowed Israel to mount a counteroffensive. The 12-day war with Iran, dubbed the Rising Lion Operation, was a point of pride for Netanyahu, who praised Israeli soldiers for their biblical resilience: "The people of Israel will rise like lions."
However, he faced tough questions about Israel's intelligence failures. Despite Israel's renowned penetration of groups like the Islamic Revolutionary Guard and Hezbollah, the scale of Hamas's tunnel network, larger than the London Underground, caught the nation off guard. Netanyahu attributed this to a mindset that Hamas was deterred, a miscalculation now under investigation. "We knew about the tunnels, but not the full extent," he admitted, promising an impartial inquiry to probe the lapses from the top down.
Qatar, Hamas, and the Money Trail
The interviewers pressed Netanyahu on allegations that Israel allowed Qatar to funnel money to Hamas, strengthening it against the Palestinian Authority to prevent a Palestinian state. He dismissed this as hogwash, arguing that the monitored aid was a fraction of Gaza's billions and meant to prevent humanitarian crises like disease or famine. Instead, he accused Hamas of diverting funds to build an underground terror city. Netanyahu, who resigned in protest when Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, warned then that it would become a terror bastion, a prediction he says came true.
A Propaganda War and Western Weakness
Netanyahu didn't mince words about Israel's dismal performance in the global PR battle. "We're definitely not winning," he said, likening modern accusations of genocide and starvation to medieval blood libels against Jews. He rejected claims of ethnic cleansing, pointing to Israel's efforts to minimize civilian casualties through millions of texts and calls urging Gazans to evacuate, efforts he says are unmatched in urban warfare. "If we wanted to commit genocide, we would have done it in one afternoon," he declared, contrasting Israel's restraint with the Allies' tactics in World War II.
He lambasted Western leaders, particularly UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, for considering recognition of a Palestinian state, calling it a dangerous reward for Hamas's savagery. "They recognize Israel's right to defend itself, as long as we don't exercise it," he quipped, urging Starmer to question what pro-Palestinian protesters say about Britain itself. Netanyahu argued that these radicals, who burn Israeli and Western flags, threaten not just Israel but the entire West.
A Call for Deradicalization and Historical Awareness
Looking to the future, Netanyahu acknowledged the challenge of coexisting with a radicalized Gazan population. He proposed a bold solution: deradicalization, drawing parallels to post-WWII Germany and Japan, and even successful programs in Gulf states. "You not only reconstruct Gaza, you deradicalize Gaza," he said, admitting it's a heavy lift but necessary for peace.
His final plea was for the West to rediscover history. "This is an ahistorical generation," he warned, stressing that ignoring the past, like Churchill's warnings about appeasement, leaves societies vulnerable. He urged the West to take threats seriously, noting that Israel fights not just for itself but as a bulwark against Islamist radicals targeting Europe and the U.S. with intercontinental missiles. "We have nowhere to flee," he said. "We're fighting them on your behalf, too."
A Defiant Vision
Netanyahu's interview was a masterclass in defiance, blending personal resolve with a broader call to arms for Western civilization. While acknowledging Israel's PR struggles and internal divisions, such as inflammatory comments by ministers like Bezalel Smotrich, he insisted the focus must remain on winning the war and securing peace through strength. As he navigates a world of bots, biased media, and shifting Western sentiment, Netanyahu's message is clear: Israel will not crumble, and the West must wake up before it's too late.