Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s son Yair on Saturday told French President Emmanuel Macron to “screw you,” following the announcement Paris could recognize a Palestinian state later this year.
“Screw you! Yes to independence of New Caledonia! Yes to independence to French Polynesia! Yes to independence of Corsica! Yes to independence of the Basque Country! Yes to independence of French Guinea! Stop the neo imperialism of France in west Africa!” tweeted Yair Netanyahu.
Screw you! Yes to independence of New Caledonia! Yes to independence to French Polynesia! Yes to independence of Corsica! Yes to independence of the Basque Country! Yes to independence of French Guinea! Stop the neo imperialism of France in west Africa!
— Yair Netanyahu🇮🇱 (@YairNetanyahu) April 12, 2025
Responding to his son’s remarks on Sunday night, Netanyahu said Yair was “entitled to his personal opinion, although the style of his response to President Macron’s tweet calling for the establishment of a Palestinian state is unacceptable to me.
“President Macron is gravely mistaken in continuing to promote the idea of a Palestinian state in the heart of our country, whose sole aspiration is the destruction of the State of Israel,” he stated.
Netanyahu noted that “to this day, not a single official of Hamas or the Palestinian Authority has condemned the atrocities of the most horrific massacre committed against Jews since the Holocaust, which reveals their true attitude toward the Jewish state.
The premier concluded by saying he refused to “accept moral preaching about establishing a Palestinian state that would endanger Israel’s existence—from someone who opposes granting independence to Corsica, New Caledonia, French Guinea and other territories whose independence would pose no threat to France whatsoever.”
On Wednesday, Macron said that “we must move toward recognition, and we will do so in the coming months. Our aim is to chair this conference with Saudi Arabia in June, where we could finalize this movement of mutual recognition by several parties,” he said, referencing plans for a global summit on the issue in New York.
“I won’t do it for unity or in order to please someone. I’ll do it because I think that at some point it would be fair. And also because I want to take part in a collective dynamic—one that allows everyone who defends Palestine to also recognize Israel,” added Macron.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar denounced the prospective move, saying that the “unilateral recognition of a fictional Palestinian state, by any country, in the reality that we all know, will be a prize for terror and a boost for Hamas.
“These kinds of actions will not bring peace, security and stability in our region closer—but the opposite: they only push them further away,” said Sa’ar.
On Friday, Macron clarified his position: “Yes to peace. Yes to Israel’s security. Yes to a Palestinian state without Hamas,” he tweeted.
“This requires the release of all hostages, a lasting ceasefire, the immediate resumption of humanitarian aid, and the pursuit of a political two-state solution. The only path possible is a political one,” he continued.
“I support the legitimate right of Palestinians to a state and to peace, just as I support the right of Israelis to live in peace and security, both recognized by their neighbors. The upcoming conference on the two-state solution this June must be a turning point. I am doing everything I can with our partners to reach this goal of peace. We truly need it,” he wrote.
Prime Minister Netanyahu vehemently opposes recognition of “Palestine,” a state which does not exist according to international law.
“There was a Palestinian state. It was called Gaza,” Netanyahu said in a Feb. 6 interview with Channel 14. “Look what we received. The biggest massacre since the Holocaust. To establish a Palestinian state after October 7 is a huge prize, not only for Hamas [but also] for Iran.”