Israel
Netanyahu Blasts Macron For Calling Abbas A ‘Prince Of Peace’
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Published Nov. 13, 2025, 11:34 PM
Israel

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday condemned French President Emmanuel Macron for describing Palestinian Authority (PA) chairman Mahmoud Abbas as a “prince of peace” during their meeting in Paris.
“To bring in such a person, embrace him and say you’re the prince of peace is the opposite of reality — it’s false,” Netanyahu told Australian journalist Erin Molan on her podcast. “You cannot build peace on falsehoods. Sooner or later, these falsehoods crash on the rocks of Middle East reality.”
Netanyahu said Abbas was being celebrated in Paris despite overseeing a system that rewards terrorists who murder Jews. “The reality is that the Palestinian leader Abbas, who was feted right now in Paris, pays terrorists to kill Jews. The more Jews they kill, the more they get paid. They take care of their families,” he said.
Even after the PA tried to rebrand its terror-payment program as “welfare support” under an “independent” foundation, Abbas has insisted he will not cut “a single penny” from it.
Netanyahu also highlighted Abbas’s grip on power — now 21 years into what was supposed to be a four-year term — as well as the PA’s glorification of terrorists and continued use of schoolbooks that promote Israel’s destruction.
“My advice to Macron is: learn the facts, stick to the facts, stick to realities and don’t try to escape it,” Netanyahu said. “When you look at the facts, the force for peace, the force for stability, the force for progress, is not the Palestinian Authority, but Israel.”
During Macron’s meeting with Abbas on Tuesday, the French president announced that France will help the PA draft a constitution for a future Palestinian state. He said a joint committee would oversee “all legal aspects: constitutional, institutional and organisational,” adding that it would support efforts to finalize the framework for a Palestinian state.
Macron further praised Abbas as a “partner for peace,” claiming Abbas has “consistently” condemned terrorism — including the Hamas attacks of October 7. Abbas, however, has never publicly denounced the massacre.
France led an initiative in September — alongside Britain, Canada, and Australia — to formally recognize a Palestinian state, a move rejected by both Israel and the United States, which warned that unilateral recognition rewards the Hamas terrorist organization.
The PA has long pushed for international recognition of “Palestine” as a way to bypass direct negotiations with Israel.
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