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The Shield Against Nuclear Threshold Status

"Iran Should Not Be Involved at All": President Demands Global Action to Sever Tehran's Tentacles

In a powerful international broadcast, the Israeli president warned that a permanent peace treaty is completely impossible while Iran utilizes its heavily armed terror proxy to hold an entire neighboring nation hostage.

Tehran city
Tehran city (Photo: iz_zi / Shutterstock)

An extraordinary diplomatic warning issued by the Israeli head of state has highlighted the severe strategic vulnerabilities threatening the Middle East, directly addressing the limitations of Western mediation efforts. Israeli President Isaac Herzog participated in an extensive broadcast interview on Fox News today, offering a candid and critical assessment of global negotiations while mapping out the essential requirements for enduring regional security. The executive address serves as a vital counterweight to ongoing international talks, drawing a firm line against foreign interference and establishing the non, negotiable conditions necessary for actual regional stabilization.

The state president focused heavily on the deep structural paralysis within the neighboring state, questioning the validity of diplomatic declarations that ignore the physical reality on the ground. Herzog challenged international observers to look closely at the core obstacle to regional harmony, asking directly, "how can you reach peace between Israel and Lebanon when Hezbollah hijacks Lebanon?" He described the proxy group as a destructive entity that completely blocks regional progress, stating that "Hezbollah opposes peace, repeatedly violated the ceasefire, and is a terror organization armed from head to toe by Iran."

Herzog argued that any lasting diplomatic arrangement must permanently strip Tehran of its regional leverage, urging global powers to take a definitive stance against the clerical regime. The president emphasized that "a peace agreement between Israel and Lebanon cannot exist if Iran has such great influence and tries to push itself into the war in Lebanon through a recognized terror organization called Hezbollah." He called for a unified international front to isolate the Islamic republic, asserting that "Iran should not be involved at all in the crisis in Lebanon, the world must stand against it and make it clear that Iran cannot be involved in Lebanon."

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The president balanced this sharp geopolitical critique by expressing a profound, long, term desire for civilian normalization, recounting his recent physical tour along the tense northern border where he chose to speak directly to the neighboring populace. Herzog clarified that "Israel has no territorial ambitions whatsoever in Lebanon, we have no substantive disputes with Lebanon," while sharing his personal hopes for a future free of active war, stating, "we want peace, and my dream is to take a car and drive all the way to Beirut."

However, the realization of this vision remains entirely dependent on the physical removal of active threats, a burden that currently rests solely on frontline combat teams. Herzog noted that "someone has to do the job, unfortunately these are our soldiers, I do not see anyone else doing it, unless a diplomatic solution is achieved that makes it clear that Hezbollah is disarmed and is no longer able to prevent the path to peace."

Addressing the delicate nature of bilateral relations with Washington amid these complex security demands, Herzog confirmed that an open, honest, and continuous dialogue is being maintained at every executive tier. He explained that "we are definitely not opposed to a diplomatic outcome of the war, but we raise concerns that are legitimate." Highlighting Israel's unique position on the frontlines of global stability, the president reminded international partners that "Israel and the US have very close relations based on trust, we can disagree in our opinions, and raising legitimate concerns is completely legitimate, because Israel is at the forefront of this war." He concluded by noting that "we are the ones absorbing Iranian missiles and their proxies, and we are working together with the United States to ensure that Iran does not achieve nuclear capability and does not become a nuclear threshold state," while explicitly adding that "we respect President Trump's efforts and raise legitimate concerns that need to be properly discussed."

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