THB that Israel is a Greater Threat to Regional Stability than Iran Full debate
VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT
[applause]
>> Thank you, Mr. President.
>> [applause]
>> Thank you.
A friend of mine recently told me to
avoid making my first paper speech on a
controversial motion. So, it is a relief
to start with something as
uncontroversial as this.
I was also warned my employment options
might be limited if I went too hard on
Israel. So, I'm very sad to say that
Netanyahu's press office will sadly be
denying my application.
I would like to begin by thanking the
President once more for giving me the
opportunity to make my first paper
speech.
And what a motion to begin with. Few
propositions could be quite so
straightforward.
This house believes that Israel is a
greater threat to regional stability
than Iran.
And really, what a gift of of a motion
that is.
Israel makes the great the case for us
quite effortlessly.
Violation after violation of ceasefires,
repeated invasions and occupations,
broken promises, and acts of aggression
dressed up as defense. There has rarely
been an easier case to argue in this
chamber.
The dominant argument in
international relations discourse,
peddled for the last couple of decades
in the United States and the Western
world, is that Iran is the principal
threat and source of instability in the
Middle East. But it is essential to look
deeper and ask which state has launched
more destructive wars, attacked more of
its neighbors, and killed more
civilians. The uncomfortable answer is,
of course, Israel.
Never again will I be presented the
chance to argue for or against a nation
that proves my point for me, offering a
wealth of historical and recent
examples.
Imagine this, as Israel did 2 months
ago, striking Hamas peace negotiations
in an US-allied state while it was
hosting ceasefire talks to end your own
war.
It sounds surreal, but that is the
nature of Israel.
And looking to the past does not paint a
much rosier picture.
From killing British diplomats in the
bombing of the King David Hotel in
Jerusalem to providing military aid to
anti-Assad rebels as recently as 2018,
Israel has consistently posed an
existential threat to stability in the
Middle East.
Even those countries which leaders with
leaders with what President Trump gently
refers to as rough past, for instance,
South Africa and Syria, have seen their
figures moderate once in power. Trump
recently joked about Ahmed al-Shara,
Syria's current interim president, who
once had a $10 million US bounty on his
head for being a terrorist.
But Israel's [snorts] own leaders, whose
early years were defined by terrorism
against the colonial powers, sabotage
and espionage, never left those
tendencies behind. The terror tactics of
their pre-power years continued and in
some cases even intensified during their
time in office.
Look to the Sabra and Shatila massacre,
enabled by Israeli forces,
if you want proof of what those
so-called rough past produce in power.
Now, the opposition will insist that
Iran's nuclear program is the great
destabilizing force in the Middle East,
as Katie has already enlightened us. But
they will fail to tell you how Israel
got its own nuclear weapons. Israel
obtained them entirely without
international approval and at least
initially against the wishes of its own
sponsor, the United States.
France helped build the Dimona reactor
under the convenient label of a textile
factory. American source materials
featured in long-running allegations and
the NUMEC affair left open suspicions
about diverted US uranium.
All of this was done under a shroud of
deep secrecy
with Israel partnering with
South Africa.
With its own alleged apartheid policies
that treat Arab citizens as second-rate,
it is no wonder it is no wonder that the
two found so much in common.
After Kennedy, who had the audacity to
push for inspections of Dimona was
assassinated, US policy shifted and
later presidents quietly acquiesced.
The result, Israel's undeclared nuclear
arsenal, tied America to endless
entanglements, reinforced Arab fears of
a nuclear-armed outlier, and helped
drive other states, including Iran, to
seek their own deterrent.
At almost no point in its history has
Israel acted in very good faith when it
comes to peace. Consider the Lebanon
example. Into the In the 2006 war,
Israel dropped up to 4 million cluster
submunitions in the final 72 hours
alone, and that was 90% of its total
use. This was after the UN resolution
had already passed.
Or take Gaza. Even after the ceasefire
was agreed, the IDF, apparently curious
how
it stockpiles of Iran, dropped a few
delayed gifts before the truce fully
took hold.
You might like to think that these are
unfortunate one-offs. They are not.
Israel has a habit of killing ceasefires
almost the moment they are thought up.
In the month or so since the latest
ceasefire, Israeli attacks have killed
at least 242
Palestinians and injured more than 600.
And the pattern is brutally predictable.
On the 19th of October 2025, Israel
shattered the US-brokered Gaza truce
with a wave of strikes that killed 26
civilians across camps and homes,
including children.
Two days later, the Vice President of
the United States, J.D. Vance, jetted in
for a friendly visit.
While Washington pressed ahead with over
$10 billion in arms notifications this
year alone.
During the fragile 2025 January
ceasefire, Israel committed over 1,000
breaches, including air strikes on
civilian areas, areas, grounded
incursions and wrong along the yellow
line, and a total aid blockade that
choked off food, fuel, and medicine.
It then refused phase two, kept the
blockade, and killed hundreds of
Palestinians, including 270 women and
children.
And what followed? A $4 billion
emergency aid package, which included
expedited US deliveries, faster weapon
shipments, and Iron Dome upgrades as
Washington vetoed not one, not two, but
three UN resolutions calling for
restraint amid the chaos.
Israel is uniquely susceptible to
breaking ceasefires because conflict
keeps the weapons flowing. It ensures
the money, the visibility, and the
illusion of existential siege that
underwrites its foreign policy.
Without conflict, Israel has no leverage
over its allies. Stability, to put it
simply, threatens Israel's ambitions.
And what of Israel's relationships?
Israel is a bad friend. It stress tests
its alliances to breaking point,
brushing off US cautions, and
humiliating its partners in public.
Iran, for all of its flaws, at least
maintains a few enduring friendships.
Israel is a broken record player whose
only party trick is bombing its
neighbors and betraying its allies. For
years, under the ironically named
Operation Good Neighbor, Israel funneled
aid, cash, and weapons to anti-Assad
rebels, including groups affiliated with
the al-Nusra Front, al-Qaeda's Syrian
branch.
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