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Donald Trump
Trump and Netanyahu Speak to Press

Trump and Netanyahu Speak to Press

Trump and Israel's Netanyahu hold first joint news briefing of second administration. Read the transcript here.

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Donald Trump (00:06):

Thank you very much. That's a lot of press. Congratulations, you bring them out. You really bring them out.

(00:23)
Today, I'm delighted to welcome Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu back to the White House. It's a wonderful feeling and a wonderful event. We had fantastic talks and thank you very much with your staff. He's the first foreign head of state to visit during our administration. And Bibi, I want to say it's an honor to have you with us. Over the past four years, the US and the Israeli alliance has been tested more than any time in history, but the bonds of friendship and affection between the American and Israeli people have endured for generations and they are absolutely unbreakable. They are unbreakable.

(01:10)
I'm confident that under our leadership, the cherished alliance between our two countries will soon be stronger than ever. We had a great relationship, we had great victories together four years ago. Not so many victories over the past four years however. In my first term, Prime Minister and I forged a tremendously successful partnership that brought peace and stability to the Middle East like it hadn't seen in decades. Together, we defeated ISIS. We ended the disastrous Iran nuclear deal, one of the worst deals ever made by the way, and imposed the toughest ever sanctions on the Iranian regime. We starved Hamas and Iran's other terrorist proxies, and we starved them like they had never seen before, resources and support disappeared for them.

(02:02)
I recognized Israel's capitol, opened the American Embassy in Jerusalem and got it built by the way, not only designated it, but got it built at a price that nobody's seen for 40 years. We got it built, it's beautiful. All Jerusalem stone right from nearby, and it's something that's very special. And recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights, something that they talked about for 70 years and they weren't able to get it and I got it.

(02:36)
And with the historic Abraham Accords, something that was really an achievement that was, I think, going to become more and more important because we achieved the most significant Middle East peace agreements in half a century, but the Abraham Accords in particular, and I really believe that many countries will soon be joining this amazing piece and economic development transaction, it really is a big economic development transaction, I think we're going to have a lot of people signing up very quickly. Unfortunately, for four years, nobody signed up. Nobody did anything for four years, except in the negative.

(03:13)
Unfortunately, the weakness and incompetence of those years, those past four years, the grave damage around the globe that was done, including in the Middle East, grave damage all over the globe. The horrors of October 7th would never have happened if I were president. The Ukraine and Russia disaster would never have happened if I were president. Over the past 16 months, Israel has endured a sustained aggressive and murderous assault on every front, but they fought back bravely. You see that and you know that. What we have witnessed is an all out attack on the very existence of a Jewish state in the Jewish homeland.

(03:57)
The Israelis have stood strong and united in the face of an enemy that is kidnapped, tortured, raped, and slaughtered innocent men, women, children, and even little babies. I want to salute the Israeli people for meeting this trial with courage and determination and unflinching resolve. They have been strong.

(04:19)
In our meetings today, the prime minister and I focused on the future, discussing how we can work together to ensure Hamas is eliminated, and ultimately, restore peace to a very troubled region. It's been troubled, but what's happened in the last four years has not been good. I want to thank Prime Minister Netanyahu for working closely with my transition team, the special envoy, Steve Witkoff who's here somewhere. Steve? Stand up, Steve, please. What a job you've done. What a good job you've done. Proud of you. You've done a fantastic job. National Security Advisor Mike Waltz. Thank you, Mike, for working so well with us. Thank you.

(05:04)
We have, in addition, Marco Rubio who is on the phone right now listening to every single word that we say and he's going to be great. And Pete, congratulations. And Scott, congratulations, I see you're here. And Caroline's been doing a great job. She's really probably talked about more than anybody here. She's done a fantastic job and thank you very much, Caroline. We're proud of you.

(05:32)
But we'll only be satisfied when all of these problems are solved and we have the team to solve them and that's going to happen and it's going to happen I think very quickly. I also strongly believe that the Gaza Strip, which has been a symbol of death and destruction for so many decades and so bad for the people anywhere near it, and especially those who live there, and frankly, who's been really very unlucky. It's been very unlucky. It's been an unlucky place for a long time. Being in its presence has not been good, and it should not go through a process of rebuilding and occupation by the same people that have really stood there and fought for it and lived there and died there and lived a miserable existence there.

(06:21)
Instead, we should go to other countries of interest with humanitarian hearts, and there are many of them that want to do this, and build various domains that will ultimately be occupied by the 1.8 million Palestinians living in Gaza, ending the death and destruction, and frankly, bad luck. This can be paid for by neighboring countries of great wealth. It could be 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 12, it could be numerous sites or it could be one large site, but the people will be able to live in comfort and peace and we'll make sure something really spectacular is done.

(07:02)
They're going to have peace. They're not going to be shot at and killed and destroyed, like this civilization of wonderful people has had to endure. The only reason the Palestinians want to go back to Gaza is they have no alternative. It's right now a demolition site. This is just a demolition site. Virtually every building is down. They're living under fallen concrete, that's very dangerous and very precarious. They, instead, can occupy all of a beautiful area with homes and safety, and they can live out their lives in peace and harmony, instead of having to go back and do it again. The US will take over the Gaza Strip and we will do a job with it too, we'll own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous unexploded bombs and other weapons on the site, level the site and get rid of the destroyed buildings, level it out, create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area.

(08:09)
It will be a real job, do something different. Just can't go back. If you go back, it's going to end up the same way it has for 100 years. I'm hopeful that this ceasefire could be the beginning of a larger and more enduring peace that will end the bloodshed and killing once and for all. With the same goal in mind, my administration has been moving quickly to restore trust in the alliance and rebuild American strength throughout the region and we've really done that. We're a respected nation again. A lot's happened in the last couple of weeks. We are actually a very respected nation again. I ended the last administration's de facto arms embargo on over $1 billion in military assistance for Israel. And I'm pleased to announce that this afternoon the United States withdrew from the anti-Semitic UN Human Rights Council and ended all of the support for the UN Relief and Works agency, which funneled money to Hamas and which was very disloyal to humanity.

(09:11)
Today, I also took action to restore a maximum pressure policy on the Iranian regime. And we'll, once again, enforce the most aggressive possible sanctions, drive Iranian oil exports to zero and diminish the regime's capacity to fund terror throughout the region and throughout the world. We had no threat when I left office. Iran was not able to sell oil. Nobody was buying oil because I said, "Don't buy it. If you buy it, you're not doing any business with the United States." And Hamas was not being funded, Hezbollah was not being funded, nobody was being funded. There would never have been an October 7th.

(09:53)
Two weeks ago, I once again designated the Houthis as a terrorist organization, trying to destroy world shipping lanes, and that's not going to happen. And over the weekend, I ordered airstrikes against senior ISIS leaders hiding in the caves of Somalia and took them out. Here in America, we've begun the process of deporting foreign terrorists, jihadists and Hamas sympathizers from our soil, just as we have people that are extremely evil and we're sending them out of our country.

(10:26)
They came from jails, they came from mental institutions and insane asylums, and they were dumped into our country, they're gang members. And we're getting them out at numbers that nobody can actually believe. And every single country is taking those people back. They said they would never take them back, and they're all taking them back and they're taking them back very gladly. And I recently signed an executive order combating the vile wave of anti-Semitism that we've seen in the aftermath of the October 7th attacks.

(10:58)
Together, America and Israel

Donald Trump (11:00):

… will renew the optimism that shined so brightly just four years ago. It was really a bright, beautiful light. We'll restore calm and stability to the region and expand prosperity, opportunity, and hope to our nations and for all people the Middle East, including the Arab and Muslim nations. Very important. We want the Arab and Muslim nations to have peace and have tranquility and have great lives. I'd like to now invite Prime Minister Netanyahu to say a few words and we'll take some questions afterwards. Thank you very much.

Benjamin Netanyahu (11:39):

Thank you, Mr. President. I'm honored that you invited me to be the first foreign leader to visit the White House in your second term. This is a testament to your friendship and support for the Jewish state and the Jewish people. I've said this before, I'll say it again. You are the greatest friend Israel has ever had in the White House, and that's why the people of Israel have such enormous respect for you. In your first term, you recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital. You moved the American Embassy there. You recognized Israel's sovereignty over the Golan Heights. You withdrew from the disastrous Iran nuclear deal. I remember we spoke about it. You said, "This is the worst deal I've ever seen. If I'm elected, I'm walking out of it." That's exactly what you did, and I think it speaks loudly for just common sense, just looking at things and seeing them as they are.

(12:48)
And of course, you also brokered the groundbreaking Abraham Accords in which Israel made peace with four Arab states. We did this in four months. Nothing happened for a quarter of a century, but in four months we were able, working together under your leadership, to have four historic peace accords. And now, in the first days of your second term, you picked up right where you left off. Your leadership helped bring our hostages home, among them American citizens. You freed up munitions that have been withheld from Israel. They had been withheld from Israel in the midst of a seven-front war for our existence. And you just freed them. You ended unjust sanctions against law-abiding Israeli citizens. You boldly confronted the scourge of anti-Semitism. You stopped funding, as you just said, international organizations like UNRWA that support and fund terrorists. And today, you renewed the maximum pressure campaign against Iran. Ladies and gentlemen, all this in just two weeks. Can we imagine where we'll be in four years? I can. I know you can, Mr. President.

(14:13)
For our part, we in Israel have been pretty busy too. Since the horrendous October 7th attack, we've been fighting our common enemies and changing the face of the Middle East. On that infamous day, Hamas monsters savagely murdered 1200 innocent people, including more than 40 Americans. They beheaded men, they raped women, they burned babies alive, and they took 251 people hostage to the dungeons of Gaza. And after this worst attack on Jews since the Holocaust, Iran and its henchmen in the Middle East were absolutely ecstatic. Haniyeh praised the massacre. Sinwar said that Israel was finished. Nasrallah boasted that Israel was, here's what he said, "as feeble as a spider's web."

(15:16)
Well, Mr. President, Haniyeh is gone. Sinwar is gone. Nasrallah is gone. We've devastated Hamas. We decimated Hezbollah. We destroyed Assad's remaining armaments, and we crippled Iran's air defenses. And in doing this, we've defeated some of America's worst enemies. We took out terrorists who were wanted for decades for shedding rivers of American blood, including the blood of 241 Marines murdered in Beirut. We accomplished all this with the indomitable spirit of our people and the boundless courage of our soldiers. The Bible says that the people of Israel shall rise like lions. And boy, did we rise. Today, the roar of the Lion of Judah is heard loudly throughout the Middle East. Israel has never been stronger and the Iran terror axis has never been weaker.

(16:23)
But as we discussed, Mr. President, to secure our future and bring peace to our region, we have to finish the job. In Gaza, Israel has three goals. Destroy Hamas's military and governing capabilities, secure the release of all of our hostages, and ensure that Gaza never again poses a threat to Israel. I believe, Mr. President, that your willingness to puncture conventional thinking, thinking that has failed time and time and time again, your willingness to think outside the box with fresh ideas, will help us achieve all these goals. And I've seen you do this many times. You cut to the chase. You see things others refuse to see. You say things others refuse to say. And after the jaws drop, people scratch their heads and they say, "You know? He's right." And this is the kind of thinking that enabled us to bring the Abraham Accords. This is the kind of thinking that will reshape the Middle East and bring peace.

(17:37)
We also see eye to eye on Iran. That's the same Iran that tried to kill us both. They try to kill you, Mr. President. They tried through their proxies to kill me. We're both committed to rolling back Iran's aggression in the region and ensuring that Iran never develops a nuclear weapon. Mr. President, ladies and gentlemen, Israel will end the war by winning the war. Israel's victory will be America's victory. We'll not only win the war. Working together, we'll win the peace. With your leadership, Mr. President, and our partnership, I believe that we will forge a brilliant future for our region and bring our great alliance to even greater heights. Thank you.

Donald Trump (18:35):

Thank you very much, Bibi. Very nice. Thank you. And JD Vance, everybody. JD, please. Vice President, stand up. He's been doing a good job. He's been working very hard on all things, but this in particular. We'll take some questions, please.

Speaker 1 (18:52):

President Trump?

Donald Trump (18:53):

Yes, ma'am. Go ahead, please. Go ahead. Yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 1 (18:57):

Mr. President, can a normalization deal with Saudi Arabia be achieved without the acknowledgement of a Palestinian state? That question for you too, Mr. Prime Minister. And Mr. President, given what you've said about Gaza, should the U.S. send troops to help secure the security vacuum?

Donald Trump (19:15):

Saudi Arabia is going to be very helpful and they have been very helpful. They want peace in the Middle East. It's very simple. We know their leader and their leaders very well. They're wonderful people, and they want peace in the Middle East. As far as Gaza is concerned, we'll do what is necessary. If it's necessary, we'll do that. We're going to take over that peace and we're going to develop it, create thousands and thousands of jobs, and it'll be something that the entire Middle East can be very proud of. But everybody feels that continuing the same process that's gone on forever, over and over again, and then it starts and then the killing starts, and all of the other problems start and you end up in the same place. And we don't want to see that happen.

(20:02)
So by the United States with its stability and strength owning it, especially the strength that we're developing and developed over the last fairly short period of time, I would say really since the election, I think we'll be a great keeper of something that is very, very strong, very powerful, and very, very good for the area, not just for Israel, for the entire Middle East. Very important. And we'll, again, have thousands of jobs and there'll be jobs for everyone. Not for a specific group of people, but for everybody. Okay. Please.

Benjamin Netanyahu (20:36):

I think peace between Israel and Saudi Arabia is not only feasible. I think it's going to happen. I think if we had another half a year in your first term, it would've already happened.

Donald Trump (20:48):

It's true. Many, many more. I agree. Many more nations.

Benjamin Netanyahu (20:52):

I think you can't prejudge and pre-guess how we'll achieve it, but I'm committed to achieving it. I know the president is committed to achieving it, and I think the Saudi leadership is interested to achieve it, so we'll give it a good shot and I think we'll succeed.

Donald Trump (21:11):

Yeah, please. Go ahead.

Speaker 2 (21:13):

First of all, President Trump, did you hear from Prime Minister Netanyahu at your meeting guarantees that a ceasefire would hold, including phase two? And Prime Minister Netanyahu, [inaudible 00:21:25]. Why are you refusing to set up a national commission to investigate failures [inaudible 00:21:30]?

Donald Trump (21:30):

Well, I can't tell you whether or not the ceasefire will hold. We've done, I think, a very masterful job. And we weren't helped very much by the Biden administration. I can tell you that. But we've gotten quite a few hostages out. We're going to get more out, but we're dealing with very complex people and we are going to see whether or not it holds. We certainly want to have more come out. They've come out damaged in many ways. Damaged. Very damaged

Donald Trump (22:00):

… people, but they're going to get better and they're going to be strong and they're going to have a good life. And we hope to get as many as possible out. Whether or not it holds, I don't know. We hope it holds, we hope it holds.

Benjamin Netanyahu (22:12):

I think that the appropriate time, which I think will enable us to really investigate what happens, what were the causes of the failures by an independent commission that will be accepted by the majority of the people. We don't want it accepted by one half of the people and not the other. I think we should have it and we should find out exactly what happened. I'm insisting on it, and believe me, it'll surprise a lot of people when it happens.

Donald Trump (22:46):

Kelly, Kelly, go ahead, please.

Speaker 3 (22:48):

Mr. President, you're outlining something that is really quite striking tonight. You are talking about… Thank you, Mr. President, Mr. Prime Minister. You are talking tonight about the United States taking over a sovereign territory. What authority would allow you to do that? Are you talking about a permanent occupation there, redevelopment? And Mr. Prime Minister, do you see this idea as a way to expand the boundaries of Israel and to have a longer piece, even though the Israeli people know how important that land is to you and your citizens, just as the space is inherited by the Palestinians as well?

Donald Trump (23:29):

I do see a long- term ownership position and I see it bringing great stability to that part of the Middle East and maybe the entire Middle East. And everybody I've spoken to… This was not a decision made lightly. Everybody I've spoken to loves the idea of the United States owning that piece of land, developing and creating thousands of jobs is something that will be magnificent in a really magnificent area that nobody would know. Nobody can look because all they see is death and destruction and rubble and demolished buildings falling all over. It's just a terrible sight. I've studied this very closely over a lot of months and I've seen it from every different angle, and it's a very, very dangerous place to be and it's only going to get worse. And I think this is an idea that's gotten tremendous… And I'm talking about from the highest level of leadership, gotten tremendous praise. And if the United States can help to bring stability and peace in the Middle East, we'll do that. Bibi.

Benjamin Netanyahu (24:36):

I mentioned again tonight our three goals, and the third goal is to make sure that Gaza never poses a threat to Israel again. President Trump is taking it to a much higher level. He sees a different future for that piece of land that has been the focus of so much terrorism, so many attacks against us, so many trials, and so many tribulations. He has a different idea and I think it's worth paying attention to this. We're talking about it. He's exploring it with his people, with his staff. I think it's something that could change history and it's worthwhile really pursuing this avenue.

Speaker 4 (25:24):

Mr. President?

Donald Trump (25:25):

Yeah, please go ahead. Go ahead.

Speaker 4 (25:26):

I have a question for you. Can you hear me?

Donald Trump (25:30):

Yeah.

Speaker 4 (25:32):

So before rebuilding Gaza again, obviously all the hostages and… One of them is Edan Alexander, an American soldier who is alive. How will you be assured that you'll take out all the hostages and then rebuild?

Donald Trump (25:49):

It's very hard to get all the hostages. The word is all, and we are working very hard so far. It's been moving along fairly rapidly, pretty much on schedule. I'd love to have them all out at one time, but we're taking them out and tomorrow more are being released and over the days more, and then we'll go into a phase two, but we'd like to get all of the hostages. And if we don't, it will just make us somewhat more violent, I will tell you that because they would've broken their word. Mr. Witkoff and his entire group have been working 24 hours round the clock, and they want them out and promises have been made to them. And we'll see whether or not those promises will be kept. But we want all the hostages. That's right.

Speaker 4 (26:37):

How much time do you think it'll take?

Speaker 5 (26:40):

Mr. President, do support Israeli sovereignty in Judean Samaria, areas which many believe is the biblical homeland of the Jewish people?

Donald Trump (26:49):

Well, we're discussing that with many of your representatives. You're represented very well and people do like the idea, but we haven't taken a position on it yet, but we will be making an announcement probably on that very specific topic over the next four weeks. Go ahead, please.

Speaker 2 (27:12):

Thank you so much, Mr. President. You just said that you think all the Palestinians should be relocated to other countries. Does that mean that you do not support the two-state solution?

Donald Trump (27:27):

It doesn't mean anything about a two-state or one state or any other state. It means that we want to give people a chance at life. They have never had a chance at life because the Gaza Strip has been a hellhole for people living there. It's been horrible. The Hamas has made it so bad, so bad, so dangerous, so unfair to people, and by doing what I'm recommending that we do… It's a very strong recommendation… But it is a strong recommendation. By doing that, we think we're going to bring perhaps great peace to long beyond this area, and I have to stress, this is not for Israel. This is for everybody in the Middle East, Arabs, Muslims. This is for everybody. This would be where they can partake in terms of jobs and living in all of the other benefits. And I think it's very important.

(28:18)
It just doesn't work the other way. You can't keep trying. It just has been going along for so many decades you can't even count. You just can't keep doing… You have to learn from history. You can't keep doing the same mistake over and over again. Gaza is a hellhole right now. It was before the bombing started, frankly, and we're going to give people a chance to live in a beautiful community that's safe and secure, and I think you're going to see a tremendous outflowing of support. I can tell you I spoke to other leaders of countries in the Middle East and they love the idea. They say it would really bring stability and what we need is stability. Yes, sir. Please. Go ahead.

Speaker 7 (29:03):

Thank you. Are you still committed to imposing sanctions on the ICC despite the move being stalled in the Senate? And please a question for the Prime Minister as well. The president has been very clear about his desire to achieve a deal with Saudi Arabia. How do you settle this if Israel is required to renew the war against Hamas in the future?

Donald Trump (29:25):

Go ahead, Bibi.

Benjamin Netanyahu (29:27):

I think everybody understands that just as the President fought and defeated al-Qaeda and ISIS, that we can't leave Hamas there because Hamas will continue the battle to destroy Israel. In this temporary ceasefire, one of the leaders comes out, you know what he says? "We're going to do October 7th again, except we'll do it bigger." So obviously you can't talk about peace neither with Hamas or in the Middle East if this toxic murderous organization is left standing, any more that you could make peace in Europe after World War II if the Nazi regime was left standing and the Nazi army was left standing. You want a different future? You've got to knock out the people who want to destroy you and destroy peace. That's what we're going to do. I think that will also usher in actually the peace with Saudi Arabia and with others, and I think there'll be others too.

Donald Trump (30:30):

Yes, ma'am. Go ahead.

Speaker 8 (30:31):

I'm from Afghanistan. My name is Ms. [foreign language 00:30:34]. Afghan suffrage woman. Have high expectation from you. Do you have any plan to change the Afghanistan situation? Are you able to recognize Taliban because I'm an Afghan journalist, Afghan suffrage woman. Any comment about Afghanistan? What's your future plan for Afghan people, especially Afghan-?

Donald Trump (30:51):

I have a little hard time understanding you. Where are you from?

Speaker 8 (30:54):

From Afghanistan.

Donald Trump (30:57):

Actually, it's a beautiful voice and a beautiful accent. The only problem is I can't understand a word you're saying, but I just say this, good luck. Live in peace. Go ahead, please. That's okay. Yeah, please.

Speaker 6 (31:16):

Mr. President, you said earlier today that it was tough for you to implement these sanctions on Iran, but you did indicate that you were willing to negotiate with them. What would that look like and are you in conversations with them? And the same to the Prime minister. Thank you, sir.

Donald Trump (31:30):

I hated doing it. I want Iran to be peaceful and successful. I hated doing it. I did it once before and we brought them down to a level where they were unable to give any money. They had to survive themselves and they had no money… They were essentially broke and they had no money for, as I said, Hezbollah, they had no money for Hamas. They had no money for any form of terror. If you call it the 28 sites of terror, they had no money for any of it. They had to do their own and focus on their own well-being, and I hated to do it then and I hate to do it just as much now. And I say this and I say this to Iran who's listening very intently. I would love to be able to make a great deal, a deal where you can get on with your lives and you'll do wonderfully.

(32:24)
You'll do wonderfully. Incredible people. Industrious, beautiful, just an unbelievable group of people in Iran, and I know them well. I have many friends from Iran and many friends that are Americans from Iran, and they're very proud of Iran. But I hated to do it, just so you understand. And I hope we're going to be able to do something so that it doesn't end up in a very catastrophic situation. I don't want to see that happen. I really want to see peace, and I hope that we're able to do that. They cannot have a nuclear weapon.

Donald Trump (33:00):

It's very simple. I'm not putting restrictions. They cannot have one thing. They cannot have a nuclear weapon. And if I think that they will have a nuclear weapon, despite what I just said, I think that's going to be very unfortunate for them. If on the other hand they can convince us that they won't, and I hope they can, it's very easy to do, it's actually very easy to do, I think they're going to have an unbelievable future. Yeah. Please, sir. Go ahead.

Speaker 9 (33:28):

Thank you, Mr. President. You just laid out your plan for Gaza.

Donald Trump (33:32):

Yes.

Speaker 9 (33:32):

Can you lay out your plan for Ukraine? And also-

Donald Trump (33:36):

For Ukraine?

Speaker 9 (33:37):

For Ukraine, yes. You consider yourself a strong leader. You blamed your predecessor for letting Russia to take over Ukraine. Will you demand from Putin to get out of Ukraine, from sovereign territory of Ukraine?

Donald Trump (33:53):

So we are dealing right now in the subject. I don't want to spend a lot of time because we're here for another reason, but we are having very good talks, very constructive talks on Ukraine. And we are talking to the Russians. We're talking to the Ukrainian leadership. It would've never happened. That would've never happened. It should have never happened. I get reports every week. The number of soldiers, mostly soldiers now, the cities have been largely demolished. You talk about a very sad site to see. We talk Gaza. Well, many of these cities look as bad as Gaza, and worse, what's happened to them. And I want to see that end. And I want to see it end for one simple reason, the life of young people being absolutely obliterated on both sides. You probably have 700,000 Ukrainian soldiers dead, 800,000, maybe more Russian soldiers dead.

(34:47)
It's very flat land and the only thing that's going to stop a bullet is a human body, in this case, usually soldiers. And the numbers are staggering when you hear the real numbers in Ukraine, what the numbers are, and this doesn't include the cities that have been demolished and all of the people that were killed. So I want to see it stopped. We're having very good talks and I think we're going to get it. I think something will be… Hopefully dramatically, it will rise above everything. You have to. You can't let this continue. This is an absolute slaughter that's taking place on the beautiful farmlands of Ukraine, and we have to stop it. We can't let this continue. It is a human tragedy and we're going to try very hard to stop it. Yeah, please. Go ahead, sir. Go ahead.

Speaker 10 (35:44):

Mr. President-

Speaker 11 (35:44):

Thank you very much.

Speaker 10 (35:45):

Mr. President, what's your view about the Palestinian leader Abbas' role in all the regional changes you want to do? And the question for Prime Minister, what's your view on President Trump wanting to reach a deal with Iran and not a much more active military [inaudible 00:36:00]?

Donald Trump (36:01):

Go ahead, Bibi. Go ahead.

Benjamin Netanyahu (36:02):

I think the president just said something that I think is the pivot of everything that we're talking about. He said, "Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon," and we fully agree with that. If this goal can be achieved by a maximum pressure campaign, so be it. But I think the most important thing is to focus on the goal, which the president just did, and I fully agree with him.

AUDIENCE (36:27):

[inaudible 00:36:29].

Donald Trump (36:32):

Well, I said it and he said it very well. It's a campaign of pressure to see if we can get something done. He doesn't want to do what some people think will automatically happen because they're very difficult people to deal with, as you know. But if we could solve this problem without warfare, without all of the things that you've been witnessing over the last number of years, I think it would be a tremendous thing.

AUDIENCE (36:59):

[inaudible 00:37:00].

Donald Trump (37:00):

Go ahead, please.

Speaker 12 (37:01):

Mr. President, do you have any plans to visit Israel soon?

Donald Trump (37:07):

To visit where?

Speaker 12 (37:10):

Israel.

Speaker 13 (37:10):

And Gaza too.

Donald Trump (37:10):

Well, I love Israel. I will visit there and I'll visit Gaza and I'll visit Saudi Arabia and I'll visit other places all over the Middle East. Middle East is an incredible place. So vibrant. So it's just one of the really beautiful places with great people. And I think a lot of bad leadership has taken place in the Middle East that's allowed this to happen. It's just terrible. And that includes on the American side, by the way. We should have never gone in there a long time ago. Spent trillions of dollars and created so much death. So it then includes Americans, but yeah, I'll be visiting a lot of different places in the Middle East. I've been invited everywhere, but I will be visiting some, yeah. Okay.

AUDIENCE (37:58):

[inaudible 00:37:58].

Donald Trump (37:58):

Let's go, Kaitlin. Go ahead, Kaitlin.

Kaitlin (38:01):

Thank you so much, President Trump.

Donald Trump (38:04):

Kaitlin, go ahead.

Kaitlin (38:04):

Just a follow-up on what you were saying there-

Donald Trump (38:06):

Go ahead, please.

Kaitlin (38:06):

Just a follow-up on what you were saying about the Gazans leaving Gaza and going to other countries. One, where exactly are you suggesting that they should go? And two, are you saying they should return after it's rebuilt? And if not, who do you envision living there?

Donald Trump (38:18):

I envision world people living there, the world's people. I think you'll make that into an international, unbelievable place. I think the potential in the Gaza Strip is unbelievable, and I think the entire world, representatives from all over the world will be there and they'll live there. Palestinians also. Palestinians will live there. Many people will live there, but they've tried the other and they've tried it for decades and decades and decades. It's not going to work. It didn't work. It will never work.

(38:52)
And you have to learn from history. History, just can't let it keep repeating itself. We have an opportunity to do something that could be phenomenal, and I don't want to be cute. I don't want to be a wise guy, but the Riviera of the Middle East, this could be something that could be so bad, this could be so magnificent. But more importantly than that is the people that have been absolutely destroyed that live there now can live in peace in a much better situation because they're living in hell, and those people will now be able to live in peace. We'll make sure that it's done world-class. It'll be wonderful for the people. Palestinians, Palestinians mostly we're talking about. And I have a feeling that despite them saying, "No," I have a feeling that the king in Jordan and that the General president, but that the General in Egypt will open their hearts and will give us the kind of land that we need to get this done, and people can live in harmony and in peace. Thank you all very much. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you.

AUDIENCE (39:57):

[inaudible 00:39:58].

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