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Shortly after Charlie Kirk’s death, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke about a letter that Kirk had sent him in May 2025. Quoting at length, Netanyahu claimed the letter proved Kirk’s “unshakeable” love of Israel.
On Monday, what purports to be that letter, dated May 2, 2025, was published. It contains the same excerpts Netanyahu cited but also shows Kirk pleading with him for help in launching a full-blown PR campaign to win back Israel’s critics.
Kirk’s close friend Candace Owens pushed back, saying Netanyahu misrepresented the letter and insisting Kirk was “falling out of love with Israel” in the weeks before his death. By Kirk’s own admission, he was openly questioning his allegiance to the Israeli government, a shift the alleged letter does not reflect. If this is indeed the letter, Netanyahu didn’t misquote it, but he clearly used it as propaganda to obscure Kirk’s shaken loyalty.
Two details in the letter are especially troubling. First, Kirk appears to argue that Israel should better sell a war with Iran. But Kirk publicly opposed war with Iran. Are we to believe that on May 1 he denounced war with Iran and then, on May 2, urged Netanyahu to market it better?
This sentence is also especially bothersome: “We were promised there were WMD’s in Iraq which proved to be a lie.”
Netanyahu knows this because he was one of those liars. He testified to Congress in 2002 that Iraq had WMDs. Charlie Kirk would have known this so the question is: did he include that line as a veiled dig at Netanyahu, or had he simply forgotten?