Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke to a joint meeting of the US Congress in Washington D.C. this past Wednesday.

“The new alliance I envision would be a natural extension of the groundbreaking Abraham Accords, those accords saw peace forged between Israel and four Arab countries and they were supported by Republicans and Democrats alike.”

Netanyahu’s speech comes as Israel is still in combat with Hamas terror from Gaza after the genocidal group crossed into the Jewish state on October 7th and killed over a thousand people.

This was the fourth address by the Prime Minister.

“Iran is virtually behind all the terrorism, all the turmoil, all the chaos, all the killings,” he said, quoting a top Hezbollah leader who called Israel a tool of America and said the “real war” is with the United States.

The Israeli prime minister repeated that closer ties between the US and Israel were needed to counter Iran, as well as terrorism in general – echoing his call for a united front against Tehran during Wednesday meetings.

“Standing in Iran’s way is one proud, pro-American democracy. My country, the state of Israel,” he said.

”When Israel acts to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons, nuclear weapons that could destroy Israel and threaten every American city, every city that you come from. We’re not only protecting ourselves, we’re protecting you.”

“We’ve jointly developed some of the most sophisticated weapons on Earth that help protect both our countries, and we also help. We also help keep American’s boots off the ground while protecting our interests in the Middle East.”

Also appearing with Netanyahu was Noa Argamani, a 26-year-old Israeli woman who spent more than eight months in captivity in Gaza and was freed by commandos.

“On the morning of October 7, the entire world saw Noa’s look of desperation as she was violently abducted to Gaza on the back of a motorcycle,” he said.

Netanyahu said Israel would not rest until it had freed all the captives and achieved a “total victory” over Hamas. At present, 135 among the total of 255 hostages taken have come back home.