Right-wing radio host and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones says he has settled a lawsuit filed by Greek yogurt giant Chobani.

The host apologized on Wednesday, reversing course from previous claims that he would never back down in the defamation case.

Jones read a brief statement at the end of his radio show saying he had retracted previous stories and tweets about Chobani, according to the Los Angeles Times.

'During the week of April 10, 2017, certain statements were made on the Infowars, Twitter feed and YouTube channel regarding Chobani, LLC that I now understand to be wrong.

Right-wing radio host and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones (pictured) says he has settled a lawsuit filed by Chobani. The host apologized on Wednesday during his show saying he regrets that we mischaracterized Chobani, its employees and the people of Twin Falls, Idaho

The company filed the lawsuit seeking damages in excess $10,000 in Idaho District Court in Twin Falls, where it operates the largest yogurt plant in the world. But Chobani didn't issue a comment on the settlement and would only say the matter has been resolved

'The Tweets and video have now been retracted, and will not be re-posted,' Jones said.

The company filed the lawsuit seeking damages in excess $10,000 in Idaho District Court in Twin Falls, where it operates the largest yogurt plant in the world.

Chobani didn't issue a comment on the settlement.

The company had initially argued in its lawsuit that Jones and his InfoWars website posted fabricated stories in April that linked Chobani owner Hamdi Ulukaya and the company to a sexual assault case involving refugee children.

'On behalf of Infowars, I regret that we mischaracterized Chobani, its employees and the people of Twin Falls, Idaho, the way we did,' Jones added.

Chobani's complaint in April said InfoWars released a video on April 11 falsely claiming that the company was 'importing migrant rapists,' with the goal of causing customers to boycott its products.

'[Jones] is no stranger to spurious statements. He has claimed that the U.S. government orchestrated the 9/11 attacks and the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut,' Chobani's attorneys wrote, according to Bloomberg News.

'Mr. Jones has now taken aim at Chobani and the Twin Falls community.'

Chobani had argued in its lawsuit that Jones and his InfoWars website posted fabricated stories in April that linked Chobani owner Hamdi Ulukaya (pictured) and the company to a sexual assault case involving refugee children

Chobani's complaint in April said InfoWars released a video on April 11 falsely claiming that the company was 'importing migrant rapists,' with the goal of causing customers to boycott its products

During the video, an Info Wars reporter, David Knight, republished statements that claimed the Chobani plant brought 'crime and tuberculosis' to Twin Falls, something originally published on Breitbart.com, since it opened the plant five years ago.

It also pointed out previous reports of the company's supposed willingness to hire refugees in Twin Falls, which has a refugee resettlement center, according to the outlet. The video was called 'Idaho Yogurt Maker Caught Importing Migrant Rapists'.

Despite the incendiary headline, the accusation never appeared in the video or was backed up by any facts, says Chobani lawyers.

Jones (pictured) read a brief statement at the end of his radio show saying he had retracted previous stories and tweets about Chobani

The video mentioned Ulukaya's supposed support of refugees in Twin Falls, and then linked that to a story about three Twin Falls refugee boys who admitted to charges involved in the assault of a five-year-old girl at an apartment complex.

Jones has been in the news for his contentious child custody battle with his ex-wife, Kelly Jones, over their three children, ages nine to 14.

A little over two weeks ago, Jones’ ex-wife won the right to determine who his three children would live with.