Rudy Giuliani called out Argentina’s national soccer team on Thursday for canceling their exhibition match against Israel — saying “you should never succumb to fear induced by terrorists.”

The former mayor also condemned the Palestinian Authority, which advocated for the cancellation.

“No one in the US has any use for the Palestinian Authority,” Giuliani told The Jerusalem Post, blasting the PA as a “renegade group” of “terrorists and thieves.”

“We are aware of the fact that they pay salaries to convicted terrorists, including people convicted of killing Americans,” he added. “That is totally mind-boggling.”

Now serving as President Trump’s personal lawyer, Giuliani has been in Israel this week appearing at anti-terror events and publicly showing his support for the US embassy move to Jerusalem — which was denounced by PA leadership.

He told the Jerusalem Post that moving the embassy was important “for the same reason it would have been important for Argentina to go through with this game” against Israel on Saturday.

“There was only one reason,” Giuliani said. “Fear.”

The two nations had been scheduled to play a friendly exhibition at a West Jerusalem stadium — in front of an estimated 30,000 fans — but the Argentinians chose to pull out on Wednesday after reportedly receiving numerous death threats.

Israel’s minister of culture and sport, Miri Regev, said the team’s biggest star, Lionel Messi, had been specifically targeted.

“The decision for cancellation is down to one reason, terrorism,” she told reporters. “This is not a BDS event. We are talking about serious threats.”

Giuliani, however, feels like Argentina should’ve played the game anyway.

“You don’t let terrorism frighten you into not doing what you already agreed to do,” he said Thursday. “Had they not agreed to it in the first place, it would be one thing; but having agreed to it, you have to have the courage to go through with it…You get protection and move forward.”

Giuliani went on to reference his time as mayor and New York’s response to the 9/11 attacks, noting how he told New Yorkers to demonstrate how “terrorism cannot affect us.”

“Resilience is a defense to terrorism,” Giuliani said.

With Post wires