
Israeli Finance Minister and Religious Zionist Party chairman Bezalel Smotrich said Israel has no choice but to confront the Iranian regime, which he described as a direct danger to the country’s survival, in an interview with Arutz Sheva.
“Our position is clear,” Smotrich said. “The Iranian regime is a regime of terror. It openly declares its desire to destroy the State of Israel and backs those words with actions, producing conventional and non-conventional weapons and constructing a ring of fire around us. This is not something we can live with. Either it destroys us, or we destroy it.”
Turning to Israel’s ties with Washington, Smotrich said that while disagreements may exist about the best approach to Iran, cooperation remains unusually close. “I believe the relationship between the current U.S. administration, the State of Israel, and the current prime minister is closer than I have ever seen,” he said. “I hope we will also reach an understanding regarding Iran.”
Smotrich again rejected the idea of negotiating with Tehran, warning against any diplomatic compromise. “We believe there should be no agreement at all, and certainly not a bad one,” he said. “If there is an agreement, it must include a demand that Iran halt the production of ballistic missiles that threaten Israel and stop financing terrorism and its proxy forces throughout the region.”
Asked whether Israel is prepared to take military action against Iran, the finance minister refused to go into specifics. “Do not expect me to discuss this in the media,” he said. “All options are always on the table.”
The interview also touched on friction with charedi parties over the national budget, with Smotrich cautioning against politicizing fiscal decisions. “Using the budget as a weapon is irresponsible,” he said.
He stressed that he intends to continue pursuing his economic program, including lowering taxes, dismantling monopolies, boosting competition in banking, and reducing borrowing costs. “I expect the charedi parties to act responsibly toward the State of Israel,” Smotrich said.
In closing, Smotrich addressed the disparity between his party’s influence in government and its showing in opinion polls. Despite playing a central role in wartime decision-making, economic policy, and settlement development, the Religious Zionist Party has struggled to convert that impact into electoral strength, with recent surveys suggesting it may fall short of entering the next Knesset. Citing the late minister Uri Orbach, Smotrich said, “We succeeded too much.”
He argued that the national-religious community is raised to integrate fully into Israeli society, which can make some voters uneasy about supporting a party seen as serving a single sector. Rejecting that label, he said his aim is to present the principles of “the people of Israel, the Land of Israel, and the Torah of Israel” as the foundation of the country’s mainstream identity.