'It's not Israel's responsibility': Iranians should seize the opportunity to free themselves from dictatorship, while critics need to lay off Netanyahu
A lesson from both the Holocaust and October 7 is that when someone tells you he plans to kill you, you believe him.
When that someone is building nuclear weapons, you doubly believe him.
In a world of weakness, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (Bibi) is a lone leader of strength.
He is the only leader who isn't afraid to fight radical Islam head on while others surrender their countries.
Tiny Israel is David taking on the Iranian Goliath, which is 80 times its size, with 10 times its population.
Another lesson from the Holocaust is that what starts with the Jews never ends there.
In the 1930s the world largely ignored the rise of Hitler and the persecution of the Jews in Germany.
Instead of acting early, cowardly leaders ensured that World War II wrought the largest loss of life in history.
It is the same story with radical Islam.
World leaders lectured Israel as Muslim suicide bombers exploded in Tel Aviv's buses and Jerusalem's cafes.
Eventually the West was hit too.
In Paris, London, Madrid, New York, and Bali, Muslim extremists brought death.
Israel's precision strikes have destroyed the military leadership of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
They have severely damaged its nuclear program.
The Iranian response has indiscriminately targeted civilians in Israel.
Thankfully, unlike the Islamic world, Israel protects its citizens and invests in bomb shelters, warning sirens and rockets to shoot down missiles.
Nevertheless, there have been casualties in Israel.
Refugees from Ukraine have been killed along with Arabs and Jews.
Young children and the elderly.
Each of these murders is a war crime but don't expect the UN or international courts to get involved.
The Islamic Republic of Iran will pay for the destruction they have caused.
Israel will likely destroy their oil infrastructure, one of the only parts of their economy that contributes anything.
As Israel's Defence Minister said, because of their targeting of Israeli civilians, 'Tehran will burn'.
The Bible says: 'To everything there is a season… a time for war, and a time for peace.'
Bibi is a man who knows how to make peace and has made more peace deals with Arab countries than any Israeli leader in history.
But he also knows when it is a time for war, a vanishingly rare quality in leaders these days.
Can anyone seriously imagine Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, faced with a threat to Australia's national security, rising to the challenge in this way?
For that matter it's hard to picture the leaders of once great empires, Britain or France protecting their nations like this.
While some in Israel have disagreements with aspects of Netanyahu's domestic politics, the country is united behind him as he seeks to remove the nuclear 'Sword of Damocles' which the Islamic Republic of Iran has hung over it.
It's not tiny Israel's responsibility to free the people of Iran.
They must seize the opportunity themselves and end the extremist Islamic dictatorship that hangs gays and murders women for not wearing headscarves.
They may never get a chance like this again.
The world stood by and issued statements and sanctions while North Korea developed nuclear weapons.
Fanatical Ayatollahs with nukes would make North Korea look like child's play.
Netanyahu is wanted in the Hague on fabricated war crimes charges but it's to Oslo where he should be summoned and presented with a Nobel Peace Prize.
No man has singularly reshaped the Middle East in modern times, crushing terrorist groups and leading to the overthrow of brutal dictatorships.
If there had been an Israel and a Benjamin Netanyahu in the 1930s and 1940s, there wouldn't have been a Holocaust.
Netanyahu keeps a bust of Winston Churchill in his office. There are many parallels between the two men.
For decades now, Netanyahu has been a powerful, often lone voice in calling out the dangers of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
He went into the lion's den like no Israeli leader before him and appeared before Congress to challenge the then-sitting President Barack Obama and his Iran capitulation deal.
Churchill was often pilloried for his continued warnings about the rising Nazi danger.
Feckless leaders of the West, then as in now, were exhausted from past wars and desperate to avoid a new war at all costs.
In the 1930s, they allowed the Nazis to threaten the world and murder millions.
Netanyahu has just ensured that whatever happens, the Islamic Republic of Iran will not do the same.
The world owes an enormous debt of gratitude to Prime Minister Netanyahu.
I don't expect them to thank him but the least they can do is be quiet and get out of the way.
Australian Jewish Association CEO Robert Gregory is a political commentator on issues affecting Israel and the Australian Jewish community

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
an hour ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Iran Foreign Minister minister meets European counterparts
The Iranian Foreign Minister has been in Geneva to meet with European counterparts, who are hopeful an "off-ramp" can be negotiated within the two-week window set out by US President Donald Trump.

The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
Iran Foreign Minister minister meets European counterparts
The Iranian Foreign Minister has been in Geneva to meet with European counterparts, who are hopeful an "off-ramp" can be negotiated within the two-week window set out by US President Donald Trump.

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
European talks with Iran yield no obvious breakthrough
Military operations could slow Iran's nuclear program, but in no way could they eliminate it, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said. 'We know well – after having seen what happened in Afghanistan, in Iraq, in Libya – how illusory and dangerous it is to want to impose regime change from outside.' Loading Barrot also said that European nations 'invited the Iranian minister to envisage negotiations with all parties including the United States, and without waiting for the end of the strikes'. He said Araghchi agreed 'to put all the issues on the table, including some that weren't there before' and 'showed his disposition to continuing the conversation that we started today, and for the Europeans to help facilitate, including with the United States.' EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said, 'we agreed that we will discuss nuclear but also broader issues that we have, and keep the discussions open'. Araghchi also addressed reporters outside the meeting venue after the talks ended. He expressed support for 'a continuation of discussions with the E3 and the EU and expressed his readiness to meet again in the near future'. He also denounced Israel's attacks against nuclear facilities in Iran and expressed 'grave concern' on what he called 'non-condemnation' by European nations. US considering how to proceed Lammy travelled to Geneva after meeting in Washington with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and US President Donald Trump's Mideast envoy, Steve Witkoff. Trump has been weighing whether to attack Iran by striking its well-defended Fordow uranium enrichment facility, which is buried under a mountain and widely considered to be out of reach of all but America's 'bunker-buster' bombs. He said on Wednesday (Thursday AEST) that he'd decide within two weeks whether the US military would get directly involved in the war, given the 'substantial chance' for renewed negotiations over Tehran's nuclear program. He said on Friday he might support a ceasefire 'depending on the circumstances', adding that Europe would not be able to help much in the conflict. 'Iran doesn't want to speak to Europe. They want to speak to us. Europe is not going to be able to help in this one,' Trump said. Loading Israel says it launched its airstrike campaign to stop Iran from getting closer to being able to build a nuclear weapon. Iran and the United States had been negotiating over the possibility of a new diplomatic deal over Tehran's program, though Trump has said Israel's campaign came after a 60-day window he set for the talks. Barrot said that 'we wanted to open a discussion with the Iranian foreign minister because we believe that there is no definitive solution by military means to the Iranian nuclear problem – military operations may delay it, but they can't eliminate it'. 'We are not seeking negotiations' Iran's supreme leader rejected US calls for surrender on Wednesday and warned that any military involvement by the Americans would cause 'irreparable damage to them'. Before Friday's talks, Araghchi said in an interview aired by Iranian state television that 'in the current situation, as the Zionist regime's attacks continue, we are not seeking negotiations with anyone'. He said that 'we have nothing to discuss with the United States, which is a partner in these crimes', and Tehran rejected negotiations with the Americans. 'As for others, if they seek dialogue, not negotiations, which don't make sense right now, we have no problem with that,' he added. He said the discussion overnight would focus 'solely on the nuclear issue and regional matters', and Iran would not hold talks on its missiles with anyone. Threats to reinstate sanctions Just before meeting the European diplomats, Araghchi made a brief appearance before the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva. He said that Israel's 'attacks on nuclear facilities are grave war crimes', and insisted that 'we are entitled … and determined to defend our territorial integrity, national sovereignty and security with all force'. Iran has long insisted its nuclear program is peaceful, though it was the only non-nuclear-armed state to enrich uranium up to 60 per cent, a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90 per cent. The three European countries played an important role in the negotiations over the original 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers. But they have repeatedly threatened to reinstate sanctions that were lifted under the deal if Iran does not improve its co-operation with the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency.