Bernie Sanders Sparks Uproar in Senate: “Stop Funding Netanyahu!” Fiery Speech Goes Viral

Enough is Enough: Bernie Sanders Ignites Senate with Viral Demand to Halt Multi-Billion Dollar Military Aid to Netanyahu’s Government

Ông Netanyahu phản ứng trước việc Anh công nhận Nhà nước Palestine.

In a moment that has already etched itself into the annals of 21st-century American political history, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) stood before a hushed United States Senate to deliver a searing indictment of the current administration’s foreign policy. With a tone that oscillated between cold statistical precision and raw emotional fervor, Sanders moved to discharge Senate Joint Resolution 138, a legislative maneuver designed to force a vote on blocking the sale of specific military equipment to Israel. The speech, which has since gone viral globally, represents a watershed moment in the domestic debate over the Middle East, as Sanders positioned himself as the voice of a frustrated American public that is increasingly weary of funding foreign conflicts while struggling with economic hardships at home.

The Economic Context: A Nation at the Brink

Sanders began his address by grounding the high-stakes geopolitical debate in the kitchen-table realities of the American voter. He reminded his colleagues that 60% of the U.S. population is currently living paycheck to paycheck, struggling with the rising costs of groceries, housing, and healthcare. With a national debt hovering at a staggering $37 trillion, Sanders argued that the American people—regardless of their political affiliation—are demanding fiscal responsibility.

“The American people… do not want us to continue spending billions of their taxpayer dollars in support of the illegal, horrific, and expansionist war policies of the Netanyahu government in Israel,” Sanders declared. He noted that since October 7, 2023, the U.S. has provided over $21 billion in military aid to Israel, a figure that he believes has crossed the threshold of what is morally and economically defensible.

The Human Toll of the Gaza Conflict

‘Today, I Will Be Forcing The Senate To…’: Bernie Sanders Calls Congress To  Stop Arms Sale To Israel

While acknowledging Israel’s absolute right to defend itself following the barbaric Hamas attacks of October 7, Sanders drew a sharp line at the nature of the subsequent military campaign. He accused the Netanyahu government of waging an “all-out war of unspeakable destruction against the entire Palestinian people,” citing expert conclusions that the actions constitute a genocide.

The statistics Sanders presented were harrowing. Out of a population of 2.2 million in Gaza, over 72,000 Palestinians have been killed and 170,000 wounded—roughly 10% of the total population. To bring the scale of the tragedy home, he noted that if a similar percentage of Americans were casualties, it would equal over 30 million people dead or wounded.

He detailed the systematic dismantling of Gaza’s infrastructure, including:

Housing: Over 90% of housing units damaged or destroyed, forcing the majority of the population to live in tents.

Education: The demolition of all 12 universities and hundreds of schools.

Healthcare: The bombing of over 90% of hospitals and the deaths of 1,700 healthcare workers.

Basic Needs: A blockade that has led to widespread malnutrition and hundreds of deaths by starvation.

The West Bank and the “Model in Gaza”

Sanders’ indictment extended beyond the borders of Gaza into the West Bank, where he claimed Israeli soldiers and settlers have killed over 1,000 Palestinians, including 233 children, and demolished 6,000 homes since late 2023. He argued that these are not the actions of “extremist out-of-control settlers” but are consistent with official government policy.

He quoted Prime Minister Netanyahu directly, stating, “There will never be a Palestinian state,” a sentiment echoed by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who reportedly bragged about “burying” the idea of Palestinian statehood. Sanders warned that the bulldozers currently being sold to Israel are the very tools used to make a two-state solution physically impossible.

The Iranian Conflict and Global Economic Fallout

One of the most explosive claims in Sanders’ speech concerned the widening scope of the conflict. He alleged that Netanyahu successfully convinced President Trump to engage in an “unprovoked and unconstitutional war on Iran.” Sanders noted that for 40 years, Netanyahu has sought U.S. participation in a war against Iran, and he finally found a willing partner in the Trump administration.

This war, according to Sanders, has already resulted in the deaths of 13 American soldiers and thousands of civilians in Iran and Lebanon. Beyond the human cost, he linked the conflict to the economic pain felt by Americans, specifically citing gas prices that have surged toward $4 a gallon in states like Vermont.

Lebanon: The New Front of Expansion

The Senator also sounded the alarm on what he described as a “full-blown war of expansion against Lebanon.” He reported that Israel is currently occupying 14% of Lebanese territory and that Defense Minister Israel Katz has announced plans to demolish all Lebanese border villages, explicitly citing the “model in Gaza” as the blueprint. Sanders emphasized that these are no longer threats but “promises” being carried out by an extremist government.

A Shift in Public Sentiment

Sanders concluded his speech by highlighting a massive shift in American public opinion. Citing recent Pew and Quinnipiac polls, he noted that 80% of Democrats and 41% of Republicans now view Israel unfavorably. Perhaps most tellingly for his colleagues, 60% of all Americans—including 37% of Republicans—oppose sending more military aid to Israel.

“The time is long overdue for members of the US Senate to start listening to the American people and not to AIPAC,” Sanders urged. He called for a “yes” vote on his resolutions to block $151 million in 1,000-pound bombs and $295 million in bulldozers, framing it as the only formal mechanism Congress has to stop the fueling of a conflict that has moved far beyond the bounds of international law.

As the viral video of the speech continues to gather millions of views, the pressure on the Senate to act has never been higher. Sanders has laid down a gauntlet that challenges the very foundation of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, demanding a pivot toward humanitarian law and domestic economic stability.