Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

EXCLUSIVE: Confronted by anti-Israel UN official, Ambassador Danny Danon fires back

Jeffrey Sachs, a pointed critic of Jerusalem, had a request from Russia and China for him to brief the Security Council denied.

Danny Danon
Danny Danon, the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, addresses the 15th plenary meeting of the General Assembly at U.N. Headquarters in New York City on Oct. 1, 2025. Credit: Rick Bajornas/U.N. Photo.

Anti-Israel economist and policy analyst Jeffrey Sachs attempted to confront Israel’s United Nations envoy on Saturday following a U.N. Security Council meeting, in footage obtained exclusively by JNS.

Sachs, a Columbia University professor and adviser to U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, regularly espouses anti-American and anti-West positions in media appearances, mixed with heavy criticism of Israeli government policies.

He has claimed on multiple occasions that the American government and congress is controlled by Zionists.

Russia and China requested that Sachs serve as a civil-society briefer at Saturday’s emergency council session on Iran.

Briefers are regularly called upon to provide independent, on-the-ground expertise to the Security Council, helping to shape policy. It’s unclear what expertise Sachs would have brought, as the United Kingdom, serving as council president, rejected the request.

In the video, taken from the floor of the council chamber, Danon can be heard saying after Sachs approached: “Mark my words. Every place, every time,” adding what sounds like, “We will protect your people.”

To which Sachs responded: “Esther and Auschwitz. Those are your two ideas. Very clever.”

The retort was in reference to comments Danon made during the council session, recounting the story of Purim, when “Queen Esther refused to remain silent” when Haman, a Persian minister, plotted to wipe out the Jews.

“She stepped forward. She spoke up,” Danon said, calling it “not only an ancient lesson. It is a modern one.”

He drew a parallel to his visit in recent days with dozens of U.N. ambassadors to the Auschwitz concentration camp.

“We stood in a place that shows what happens when radicalism and extremism grow and no one stops it in time,” said Danon. “Winston Churchill understood what Queen Esther understood long before him: When destruction is declared and weapons are being prepared and assembled, leaders must act.”

Danon finished the conversation, telling Sachs “you are welcome to support Iran and Hamas,” adding “you can fly there if you want to,” before Sachs walked away.

Sachs serves as head of the U.N. Sustainable Development Solutions Network and advises Guterres on related issues. He is also a commissioner of the U.N. Broadband Commission for Development.

Days before taking office last January, Trump shared on social media a clip of Sachs ranting against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, calling him a “deep, dark son of a bitch” who drags the United States into “endless wars” thanks to the power of pro-Israel lobbying groups.

Trump never clarified his reasons for posting the video.

Mike Wagenheim is a Washington-based correspondent for JNS, primarily covering the U.S. State Department and Congress. He is the senior U.S. correspondent at the Israel-based i24NEWS TV network.
“Would you wait until the drones were buzzing over Paris?” Danny Danon, the Israeli ambassador to the global body, asked his French counterpart.
“It is very easy to lose hope, and even when you have hope, it requires more,” said Robert Milgrim, whose daughter Sarah was killed by a gunman outside the Capital Jewish Museum.
The purpose of the legislation is to reduce the power of Israel’s attorney general, who both advises the government and manages criminal proceedings against elected officials.
Israel’s stance was reflected in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s call with U.S. President Donald Trump, said Israel Katz.
Ibrahim Hilo held Oron Shaul’s body for nearly a decade before his remains were recovered in a 2025 Gaza operation.
National Artificial Intelligence Directorate head Erez Eshel said Israel’s competitive edge lies in applying artificial intelligence to real-world challenges.