2026-07-07T17:08:41.628Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/07/07/politics/netanyahu-opposes-sale-f35-jets
就在美国总统唐纳德·特朗普表示他正考虑向土耳其出售F-35隐形战斗机几小时后,以色列总理本杰明·内塔尼亚胡对这一潜在举措表示反对,即便他淡化了两位世界领导人之间的分歧。
在接受CNN采访时,内塔尼亚胡警告称,出售美国最先进的战斗机“不会让土耳其成为对美国友好的国家”。在与土耳其总统雷杰普·塔伊普·埃尔多安不断升级的争端中,内塔尼亚胡将安卡拉描述为“一个被穆斯林兄弟会渗透的政权,这个政权憎恨美国”。
“他算不上美国的模范盟友,”内塔尼亚胡告诉CNN的达娜·巴什。“他威胁要摧毁我的国家,这个独一无二的犹太国家。”
土耳其外交部长哈坎·菲丹上周在接受土耳其CNN采访时称以色列“已经成为人类无法再承受的负担”,以色列外交部长随即谴责这些言论是“典型的煽动种族灭绝”。
“这不是一股促进和平与稳定的力量。当你赋予他们这种权力时,你会看到随之而来的侵略,”内塔尼亚胡说。
内塔尼亚胡表示,他曾直接敦促特朗普不要向土耳其出售战机,并在周二表示,此举将“破坏中东的力量平衡”。
但正在土耳其参加北约峰会的特朗普表示,他愿意推翻自己在第一任期内对向安卡拉出售该战机的禁令。他将土耳其描述为美国“非同寻常的”盟友。
内塔尼亚胡淡化了与特朗普之间的任何分歧,称两人在重大问题上“看法一致”,即便特朗普周末曾表示以色列领导人“知道谁是老板”。
“他是美国总统,他做对美国有利的事,”内塔尼亚胡说。“我是以色列总理,我做对以色列重要的事,大多数时候这些事是一致的。”
曾在时任总统巴拉克·奥巴马任期内公开抨击伊朗核协议的内塔尼亚胡,迄今并未谴责美国与伊朗之间目前的停火协议。该协议结束了一场内塔尼亚胡曾推动继续进行的战争,并解除了对伊朗石油销售能力的长期制裁,以换取开放关键的霍尔木兹海峡。如果双方达成永久停火,该协议还为可能获得数千亿美元的额外制裁减免留出了空间。
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至关重要的是,该协议并未解决美以两国在2月底战争开始时提出的任何主要问题,包括伊朗的核计划、其弹道导弹生产、其对代理人的支持,或其高浓缩铀储备。被问及停火协议时,内塔尼亚胡保留了自己的判断。
“现在说会发生什么还为时过早,”他说。“总统认为他可以阻止伊朗的核计划,并且他相信可以通过谈判实现这一目标。我对此有疑虑,但我认为应该给他这个机会,他正努力实现这一目标。”
内塔尼亚胡对民主党议员的态度更为严厉,原因是该党对以色列的支持率不断下降,他特别点名批评了纽约市长佐赫兰·曼达尼,后者此前曾表示,虽然他“作为一个拥有平等权利的国家”支持以色列,但他无法支持“任何将一种宗教置于其他宗教之上的国家”。
“这太荒谬、太荒唐了,”内塔尼亚胡说,并补充道,尽管以色列是一个“不完美的民主国家”,但它仍然“比曼达尼和他的支持者所支持的这些独裁政权和可怕的暴政要好100倍”。
他还批评了密歇根州参选参议院的犹太民主党众议员黑利·史蒂文斯,因为她曾表示,他作为以色列总理的行为让美国犹太人变得更不安全。
“这让她感到不安,因为她不敢坚持真理,”他说。“她可能是在为反犹太主义找借口。”
当被问及他是否对美国国内对以色列的支持日益恶化负有个人责任时,内塔尼亚胡驳斥了这一说法,反而认为是社交媒体推动了反对声的上升。
内塔尼亚胡还谈到了被占领约旦河西岸不断升级的定居者暴力事件。他将施暴者描述为150名“少年犯”,承认该问题已经“失控到令人难以置信的地步”。他表示,警方和军方“采取了行动”,但以色列法院对被定罪的定居者暴力行为者“量刑非常宽松”。“我们的公民不能对任何人实施暴力,”他说。
尽管内塔尼亚胡发表了上述言论,但约旦河西岸的定居者暴力事件仍在激增——有时以色列士兵会袖手旁观——与此同时以色列政府正在该领土快速扩建定居点。以色列人权组织Yesh Din表示,在今年早些时候的一个月内,发生了305起定居者暴力事件,包括针对人员和财产的袭击以及土地没收。
Exclusive: Netanyahu tells CNN he opposes US sale of F-35 jets to Turkey as he downplays divisions with Trump
2026-07-07T17:08:41.628Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/07/07/politics/netanyahu-opposes-sale-f35-jets
Just hours after President Donald Trump said he’s considering selling F-35 stealth fighter jets to Turkey, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke against the potential move, even as he downplayed divisions between the two world leaders.
In an interview with CNN, Netanyahu warned that the sale of America’s most advanced fighter aircraft “doesn’t make Turkey a friendly state to the United States.” In part of an escalating dispute with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Netanyahu described Ankara as “a regime that’s infected with the Muslim Brotherhood, which hates the United States.”
“He’s not exactly a model ally of the United States,” Netanyahu told CNN’s Dana Bash. “He threatens to destroy my country, the one and only Jewish state.”
Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said in an interview with CNN Turk last week that Israel has “become a burden that humanity can no longer bear,” prompting Israel’s foreign minister to condemn the remarks as “textbook incitement to genocide.”
“This is not a force for peace and stability. When you give them that power, you’re going to see aggression in its wake,” Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu said he’d urged Trump directly not to sell the jets to Turkey, saying Tuesday that doing so would “destroy the power balance in the Middle East.”
But Trump, who is in Turkey as part of the NATO summit, has indicated he is willing to overturn a ban on the sale of the jet to Ankara that he put in place during his first term. He described Turkey as an “extraordinary” ally of the United States.
Netanyahu downplayed any divisions with Trump, saying the two see “eye-to-eye” on major issues, even after Trump said over the weekend that the Israeli leader “knows who the boss is.”
“He’s the President of the United States. He does what is good for the United States,” said Netanyahu. “I’m the Prime Minister of Israel, I do what is what is important for Israel, and most of the time these things are identical.”
Netanyahu, who publicly railed against the Iran nuclear deal under former President Barack Obama, has so far held back from condemning the current ceasefire agreement between the US and Iran. The agreement ended a war that Netanyahu was pushing to continue and lifted longstanding sanctions on Iran’s ability to sell its oil in exchange for opening the critical Strait of Hormuz. The pact also floats the possibility for hundreds of billions of dollars in additional sanctions relief should the two sides reach a permanent truce.
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Crucially, the agreement fails to address any of the major issues the US and Israel set out at the start of the war in late-February, including Iran’s nuclear program, its ballistic missile production, its support for proxies or the stockpile of highly enriched uranium. Asked about the ceasefire agreement, Netanyahu reserved his judgement.
“It’s too early to say what will happen,” he said. “The president believes that he can stop Iran’s nuclear program, and he believes he can do it through negotiations. I have my doubts, but I think he should be given the chance, and he’s trying to achieve that.”
Netanyahu took a far harsher attitude toward Democratic lawmakers over the party’s declining support for Israel, at one point singling out New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani over his previous comments that while he supports Israel “as a state with equal rights,” he could not back “any state that privileges one religion over the other.”
“It’s ridiculous, it’s absurd,” Netanyahu said, adding that while Israel is an “imperfect democracy,” it is still “100 times better than these dictatorships and these horrible, horrible tyrannies that Mamdani and his supporters support.”
He also criticized Rep. Haley Stevens, a Jewish Democrat running for Senate in Michigan, over her comments that his actions as Israeli prime minister had made American Jews less safe.
“It’s made her uncomfortable because she can’t stand up for the truth,” he said. “She’s trying to probably excuse antisemitism.”
Pressed on whether he bore any personal responsibility for the deteriorating support in the US for Israel, Netanyahu dismissed the suggestion, arguing instead that social media was driving the rising opposition.
Netanyahu also addressed an ongoing surge in settler violence in the occupied West Bank. Describing the perpetrators as a group of 150 “juvenile delinquents,” he acknowledged the issue has “blown up beyond belief.” He said the police and military “take actions,” but the courts in Israel “are very lenient” against those convicted of settler violence. “Our citizens cannot practice violence against anyone,” he said.
Despite Netanyahu’s statements, the West Bank has seen a surge of settler violence – some with instances of Israeli soldiers standing idly by – in conjunction with the Israeli government rapidly expanding settlements throughout the territory. In a one-month period earlier this year, Israeli human rights group Yesh Din said there were 305 incidents of settler violence, including attacks on people and property and land seizures.
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