In a rare and dramatic display of global dissent, more than 100 diplomats from over 50 nations staged a coordinated walkout during Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s address at the United Nations General Assembly on September 26.

Led by the Palestinian delegation, the protest emptied much of the 1,800-seat chamber. As Netanyahu began defending Israel’s war in Gaza, the hall reverberated with boos, walkouts, and calls for order, symbolizing Israel’s mounting diplomatic isolation amid a nearly two-year-long conflict that has devastated the enclave.

Delegations from Colombia, Ireland, Spain, and others exited en masse. Allies such as the United States and United Kingdom were represented only by junior officials, with top envoys conspicuously absent. Outside UN headquarters, thousands of demonstrators rallied in Times Square, condemning Israel’s actions and Netanyahu’s New York appearance.


Netanyahu’s Defiance: “We Must Finish the Job”

Unfazed by the exodus, Netanyahu delivered a 25-minute, combative speech, dismissing genocide allegations as “baseless blood libels.” He vowed Israel would “finish the job” against Hamas.

Brandishing a map titled “The Curse”, he accused Iran of orchestrating proxy networks across the Middle East, including Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. He quipped: “You remember those beepers, the pagers? We paged Hezbollah, and believe me, they got the message.”

Revisiting the October 7, 2023 Hamas attacks that killed 1,139 Israelis and left 48 hostages in captivity, Netanyahu issued a stark ultimatum: “Lay down your arms, free the hostages. If you don’t, Israel will hunt you down.”

He denounced recent Palestinian statehood recognitions—now at 157 UN members—as “disgraceful” and warned that rewarding violence meant “murdering Jews pays off.” A two-state solution, he declared, was “sheer madness.”


A Broadcast to Gaza?

Netanyahu claimed his remarks were broadcast live into Gaza via hacked mobile networks and border loudspeakers. Yet, Gazan residents told reporters they received no such transmissions.

Meanwhile, Israeli airstrikes continued: at least 47 Palestinians were reported killed in Gaza City on September 26, including eight in a strike on a displaced persons’ camp in Nuseirat. Gaza health officials say the war’s death toll now exceeds 65,000, with Netanyahu facing ICC warrants for war crimes.


Shifting Alliances and U.S. Mediation

The speech came days before Netanyahu’s scheduled September 30 White House meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump—his fourth since Trump’s second term began.

Trump hinted at a possible breakthrough: “I think we have maybe a deal on Gaza. It will get the hostages back and end the war.” Yet past initiatives for Gaza governance without Hamas have faltered.

Netanyahu also warned against Iran’s nuclear resurgence, just as the UN Security Council prepares to reimpose sanctions on Tehran.


Reactions and Fallout

Critics at home and abroad blasted the address. Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid said Netanyahu had “worsened Israel’s situation” in the face of a “diplomatic tsunami.” Ireland’s Prime Minister Micheal Martin accused Israel of abandoning international law.

On social media, pro-Palestinian voices praised the walkout as a “moral stand,” while Netanyahu’s supporters lauded his resolve. Colombian Vice President Francia Márquez led the exodus, echoing her country’s push for war-crimes accountability at The Hague.

As the 80th UNGA session continues, Netanyahu’s words echo in memory of a chamber left half-empty—a stark image of Israel’s shrinking diplomatic space and the enduring fractures over Gaza.


NRIGlobe will continue monitoring developments as world leaders navigate one of the UN’s most divisive moments in recent history.

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