Ask Haviv Anything - Episode 47: Building a new Gaza, with Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib
Episode Date: October 3, 2025The day after Trump's release of his 20-point plan for an end to the Gaza war, Haviv sat down with Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib, Palestinian-American analyst and director of the Atlantic Council's Rea...lign for Palestine project, to discuss what it means.Can Hamas really be disarmed and removed from power in Gaza, as the plan envisions? Can an international force in Gaza succeed where the likes of UNIFIL and countless other international interventions in the region have failed miserably? Who in Palestinian society can push back against Hamas or build out political and military power to rival and ultimately suppress Hamas? Can Gazan society be deradicalized?Two tweets are mentioned in the conversation.1. On his transitional force idea: https://x.com/afalkhatib/status/19717477262209845412. On Hamas's withdrawal from Gaza City and regrouping in Nuseirat: https://x.com/afalkhatib/status/1972114914069086285Today’s episode is sponsored by Unpacking Israeli History, a podcast from Unpacked, an OpenDor Media brand, which I’ve had the pleasure of joining several times as a guest. Hosted by my friend Noam Weissman, the show dives into Israel’s most fascinating and sometimes controversial moments. It’s smart, nuanced, and never afraid of complexity, taking the headlines we think we know and uncovering the deeper story of how we got here.If you want more of the kind of thoughtful conversation we have here at AHA, go follow Unpacking Israeli History at https://unpacked.bio/havivUIH.And if you like what we do here at AHA, please join us on Patreon to support our work: https://www.patreon.com/AskHavivAnything.If you would like to sponsor an episode, please email us at haviv@askhavivanything.com.Musical intro by Adam Ben Amitai.
Transcript
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Hi, welcome to Ask Haviv Anything.
This is an interview that I have been looking forward to for some time with Ahmed Fuad al-Katib.
That is an Israeli pronunciation of his name.
I'm going to let him pronounce it more accurately to its proper cultural context.
I have been following Ahmed for a while.
I disagree with him on much.
I agree with him on much.
And we are recording this a day after the presentation by President Trump and Benjamin
Netanyahu of Trump's peace plan for Gaza, of the plan to end the war, the day after, the way
the plan deals with Hamas, we're going to dive into all of it.
So the timing is amazing.
And I'm really glad Ahmed is here.
Just to lay it out, he is the director of realign for Palestine.
It's a new, fairly new, Atlantic Council project that tries to challenge entrenched narratives
in the Israel and Palestine discourse and develops a new policy framework.
work for rejuvenated pro-Palestine advocacy.
That's reading their description.
God knows we can't be doing the same old thing forever and ever.
So before we get into it, I want to tell you that today's episode,
I'm very happy to tell you, is sponsored by my very good friends at Unpacking Israeli
history, a podcast from Unpacked, which is a series of podcasts, a brand from Open Door
Media.
I have joined that podcast several times to talk about different aspects of Israeli history.
It's hosted by my good friend Norm Weissman, who, you know, people who listen to this podcast will know.
The show dives into Israel's most fascinating and sometimes controversial moments and all the issues surrounding the debates around Israeli history.
It's smart, it's nuanced, it's never afraid of complexity.
It takes the headlines that we think we know, and it sort of peels them a little bit and uncovers the deeper story about how we got here.
I am myself a partner of open door media, work with them, consult with them, including on some of the episodes.
They're an organization that's reaching young Jews and the peers of young Jews, the entire cohort, with powerful and creative media that deepens their understanding of their story, of the Israeli story, of the Jewish story, the Jewish experience, that whole world.
So I know also Ahmed has worked with them.
If you want more of that kind of thoughtful conversation, the kind of conversation we have here,
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there we are having a great time except when we're talking about very sad things and then
we're having a sad time, but we're having a sad time together.
Ahmed, thank you for joining me.
Thank you for having me, brother.
It's been a long time to make him.
Yeah, and what great timing.
What great timing.
President Trump and Benjamin Seniao presented this plan.
President Trump's plan.
I mean, he apparently squeezed Nathaniel quite a bit in getting him to agree to the plan.
I will get into my view, but my view,
comes second, I'm extremely excited about this plan. You know what? We're getting into my view
first so that you can respond to it and then I really want to get yours. We're two people who love to
talk. This is going to go fine. I have to tell you that I have had one enormous frustration
with the Israelis, and it was more than frustration. If the war is about getting out Hamas and
building that new day for Gaza, then a whole lot of pain in suffering and sadness is legitimate.
And if it is not about that, then none of it's legitimate. In other words, what is the war for?
If the war is Smotrich's war to clear Gaza out of Palestinians, I have been dead set against it.
And not only that, I am absolutely, I have been convinced, and I was at some points fairly alone in the
room, that that's not Netanyahu's plan. Now, this plan is the first time, to my knowledge,
that Netanyahu commits publicly and to the American president,
in other words, with real ramifications for Israel,
that this is about the rebuilding of Gaza.
This is World War II.
This is, yes, there's mass destruction in Germany.
That's how dug in the Nazis were.
But the destruction, almost at any, the defeat at any cost.
But after the defeat, the new dawn, the rebuilding, the better day.
This plan has that.
I am thrilled about that.
And the other thing I'm thrilled about is it denies,
it denies
Hamas, well, in 72
hours the hostages come home.
In other words,
it's
which I think was put there.
I thank God it's there because I feel
these hostages every day. We Israelis,
they are us. But I
think it's there because it's in an attempt to give
Netanyahu the political cover from Smaltrich
and Benavir to be able to sell this back home
including to his own center-right base.
And so it's
all the Israeli victory conditions
in that sense. It's a Gaza without Hamas,
but also a Gaza that Israel has committed to the rebuilding of.
It's amazing.
What do you think?
But that, my friend, is also, it's Achilles heel for Hamas
in that it loses its chief bargaining chip.
And it saddens me that we're talking about human beings as bargaining chips.
Nevertheless, that is what the hostages have been for Hamas.
It sees Hamas basically surrendering that in the first three days of the plan.
You have to keep in mind that after two years of war, after what many in the region perceive as Netanyahu breaking the ceasefire agreement from earlier this year, and by not going from phase one to phase two, and I'm discussing here, the Wickoff plan that was implemented at the very beginning of the Trump administration, the second Trump administration, then you have the strike on Qatar, then you have the series.
of Israeli actions against Hamas.
So for them, it's like, well, what's to stop Netanyahu the Israelis
from finding a reason a month or two into the proposal
to basically wiggle themselves out of the ceasefire?
But let's step back a little bit and just go into my initial thoughts,
which are very similar to yours.
I blotted the plan as a very positive one for a variety of reasons.
It is a sharp U-turn from talk about effectively pushing Palestinians out,
a massive improvement from what we saw in February when President Trump declared that
in the Gaza-Riviera plan, non-plan.
But what was particularly damaging about the Gaza-Riviera is that,
gave life to the Smotritches and Ben Guirs of the world.
It gave life, I should say, to their nihilistic vision that this war isn't about
defeating Hamas and getting the hostages back.
It's about pushing the population out.
And some would contend that the designs, the tactical decisions of the war and pushing
the population down south may have been tactical decisions in service of a nefarious
political agenda. But that aside, so you have the departure from, from, like, it was like,
no, we actually want Gaza developed for Gazans. You have, to me, the most important, the
recognition that there is no this, like, massive, like, the war ends and this miraculous day after
commences. There is the recognition of a transitional phase. And to his credit, former U.S. Secretary of
state, Anthony Blinken, talked about this multiple times during the Biden administration,
about the need for a transitional period. A transitional period is different than a day after,
and we can get into it later on. But basically, a transitional period allows for
modular phased implementation of the plan. It is flexible enough to where if Hamas reneges on its promises
in certain areas or if conditions aren't ripe in other areas, you don't have the full collapse
of the agreement.
You go area by area.
You go phase by phase.
You're comfortable with slow progress, if you will.
So there is the phased implementation of a transitional period.
Then you have the effectively 1,000-mile journey towards
rebuilding and the pursuit of a pathway towards Palestinian statehood. And that basically invites
Arab involvement, invites the peacekeeping, well, it's not so much, it's a stabilization
mission. And that distinction is very key from peacekeeping forces versus a stabilization force.
And the French actually, during Unga Week, the UN General Assembly week, last week, they also
put forth something similar in terms of a regional stabilization mission, it's much faster to
stand up.
It doesn't go through as many approvals at the bureaucratic level, et cetera.
Then finally, I think it sets the stage for a resumption of what many were hoping for
before October 7th, which is Israel's regional integration through the expansion of the Abraham Accords, Saudi involvement, the Saudis come on board.
Gaza becomes part of the broader vision, if you will, for economic and geopolitical cooperation between the Arab, Muslim, and countries on one hand and Israel and the other.
And so, yes, is it ambitious?
Sure.
Does it need a lot of things to happen in kind of a linear fashion in order for it to be implemented?
Definitely.
But is it the most, I would say, comprehensive that I've seen coming out of this administration?
100%.
And so in that regard, as somebody who is from Gaza, who has family there, who lost a bunch of family there,
who still has some surviving family there, who has siblings in there right now,
I am just desperate for the end of the war,
but I also don't want all of that pain and suffering and horror to happen
so that we simply go back to rebuilding a bunch of buildings and cinder blocks,
and that's it.
I am very interested in transformation and rejuvenation.
And I did meet with Tony Blair months ago.
And, you know, he early on helped speak about,
the term reconstituted.
Gaza needs to be reconstituted, reimagined in terms of just the engineering,
the social engineering of what the territory should look like.
And so I'm hopeful and optimistic amidst a sea of pessimism, let's just say.
So you raised it and I realized I didn't introduce you properly.
Yes, you're doing this.
interesting project with the Atlantic Council.
But tell us just in two minutes so people really know what it is you just said, your story,
your background, your roots in Gaza, your connection to people in Gaza and to family members
who have died in this war.
Certainly.
So I grew up in Gaza City.
I was actually born in Saudi Arabia.
And we lived back and forth between Saudi and Gaza in the part of the 90s.
And then we lived in the Gaza midnight.
It's very common for Gaza, for doctors, engineers, nurses, teachers to work in the Gulf, build up a nest, bring that back to Gaza and build a life for their families.
And so my dad worked for the Saudi government as a doctor.
And then he actually came back to Gaza and was working for UNRWA, the not-so-controversial UN agency.
He ran their clinic eventually in the Jabalia camp in northern Gaza, the biggest refugee camp there.
I went to UNRWA schools, as I learned a lot of my English, and I grew up in Gaza, both at the, I experienced the tail end of the Oslo process and the hope and optimum.
I flew into Gaza's airport, short-lived airport on the Palestinian Airlines.
I got a Palestinian passport instead of the Egyptian travel document.
There was hope and optimism and people working in Israel and an industrial zone in the Eras area in northern Gaza Strip.
And I also experienced the sadness and the pain and the misery of the Second Intifada
and what that looked like with the bombardment, the instability.
I lost a significant amount of my hearing from a,
an IDF bombing that almost killed me and killed a couple of my friends.
I had multiple near-death experiences that prompted me at a young age to want to seek leaving Gaza.
And I benefited from a post-9-11 initiative by the State Department to come to the United States at the age of 15.
I was a junior in high school, live with a host family for a year, build cultural bridges, and then go back to
Gaza. Unfortunately,
I was about, so I finished the program here, I lived in the
San Francisco Bay Area, and then I was about to go back
to Gaza. I was stuck in Egypt, about to cross through
Rafa, but then Hamas in 2006,
in the summer, abducted Gilad Shalit, a young
Israeli soldier. And that commenced the mini-war, the
borders were closed, the European
police mission left the borders, and so
I returned to the United States and due to a variety of safety considerations.
Due to my participation of the program, I applied for political asylum.
And the very day of my interview was June 14, 2007, which is the very day that Hamas violently
took over the Gaza Strip and ejected the Palestinian Authority.
but the entirety of my family, I have two brothers, two sisters, my mom and dad, they remained in Gaza.
And so, yeah, over the years, I've lived this parallel life, and I became a citizen of the United States 11 years ago.
But I've had this parallel life in the United States, but throughout there was the degradation of conditions from my folks, from my family.
and I come from a middle-class family that oscillated, you know, between being middle-class and lower-middle-class.
But, yeah, it's been difficult to, and then October 7th happened, and unfortunately, the house where I grew up in Gaza City was destroyed by the IDF, and it was bombed while my brother and his wife and the rest of my, every floor had an uncle in their family.
while they were in it.
I lost a 12-year-old niece, Farah.
But my brother and a bunch of my other folks were injured.
But my brother and his wife and children,
they pushed their way out of the rubble.
They survived.
I got his wife and children out eventually one day before the Rafat border
crossing close, but he decided to remain there.
He's there now. He is working on, he runs the field operations for a major international medical NGO.
My mom is out and a few others are out. And then there was a secondary strike that killed my dad's brother, Uncle Riyadh in the neighborhood.
The first strike was October 13th. Second was October 25th. And then the really big strike was December 14th, 2023.
and that's when 29 people were killed of,
it wiped out basically my mom's family,
and that was my second home in Rafah City,
and that was before the Rafah invasion, et cetera.
And so cumulatively, you know, this is personal.
This is very much so,
something that I'm doing because I've skinned in the game
and I want to see the rejuvenation of Gaza,
but I'll conclude just this personal segment by saying
that it is part of that tragedy that put me on the map in the sense that I had, I mean, I'm angry,
I'm upset, I'm furious.
I have all the emotions, but I made a decision not to be hateful and not to be vengeful.
And I, in fact, quadrupled down on my resentment towards Hamas and towards the,
the jihadi nihilism that they have unleashed upon our people for 18 years.
And I have chosen to connect with Israeli hostage families and survivors of October 7th
and to build bridges and to really use this as a genuine opportunity for healing and reconciliation.
And I will say that that's not kumbaya, let's hold hands, everything's going to go away.
and also I don't view myself as a traditional peace activist.
There is a mini little peace industry that I'm not interested in being a part of.
But what I view this as being is to actually normalize the act that I'm doing to make it accessible for everybody else
so that we could see more Palestinians, more Ghazans, and certainly, hopefully more Israelis,
deciding to choose healing instead of revenge.
So that's why I'm doing what I'm doing.
Thank you for that.
The scale of just the sheer human cost
is radically different between the Israelis
and the Palestinians, obviously.
But I've got to tell you, thank God for English
because I lost friends in this war.
In Hebrew, this would be a hard conversation to have.
And with you, never mind with, you know.
And in Hebrew, it's harder in my own head to give a rat's ass what the world thinks.
Because I see these ideology.
Because Hamas today says the same thing that it has always.
Razi Hamad on CNN said it this week.
And so it's never ending and they will never not come for us.
And, you know, at some point, this endless drum roll of, we're going to exterminate you all, just wait and see, we have faith, we have patience.
you don't. At some point, you know, you just lose all interest in what anyone else, anyone else
thinks. So getting out of that emotion, that's where I think my Hebrew speaking alter ego is at
and being able to have an English conversation across boundaries I experience as being able to step
out of that. So I think you just talked about a parallel life. And I think now also there's a sense
from you that I get. I hope I'm not projecting onto you my own experience, but that there is this
parallel. And so anyway, I find this very valuable. And if we disagree vehemently on some
things, that's also welcome, because it's also honest and serious. But to me, this is very
valuable. So, you know, let's get into it. So we have this Trump plan. You have said a few
things. For example, I want to challenge you on the regional stabilization force.
You have a transition concept, a transition idea. You put out a tweet that also links to things.
I'm happy to put that in the show notes so people can go and dig deep into it.
But the things Tony Blair has been talking about or has leaked about what he's talking.
I haven't seen him speak officially on this. The things that are in the plan, the French-Saudi proposal,
it's very easy as an Israeli to
write it off to be very skeptical
to kind of mock it
Unifil came into South Lebanon
to disarm Chizbalah and ended up defending,
protecting de facto Chisbalah
because the Israelis can't hit them
and Chisbalah will challenge them on the ground
and they'll always pull back
and so they would
Chazbala would actually create tunnel systems
around Unifil bases
because that's where the Israelis can't hit.
And so they ended up just protecting
Chisbala because there's just so utterly
useful.
That was the Israeli experience of the UN at all times.
Abba Eben once said,
former Israeli legendary Israeli foreign minister once said after the,
I believe the forces in the Sinai,
the separation forces of the UN in the Sinai,
as soon as the Egyptians wanted to go to war in 67, they just ran away.
And so the UN is an umbrella that doesn't work in the rain.
It works right up until there's rain.
That's Abba Eben.
Now, what the heck kind of stabilization force could possibly work in Gaza?
What the heck could it do?
There is still Hamas, and let me just add to it,
something that you have published that I found absolutely fascinating,
which is just interesting intelligence,
that, and you write about this,
and I'll put this tweet as well in the show notes.
A, Hamas has already given an order for forces to withdraw from Gaza City,
to pull back, not stand down the Israelis.
There are dozens dying in combat with the Israelis,
but not everybody in Gaza City,
and to regroup in the central.
camps, the last really part of Gaza that's still standing.
Dere al-Balacharya Nuserat camp,
farther south from Gaza City.
People can look it up on a map.
Hamas already understands that Gaza City will look like Raffach by the end if it doesn't
surrender and it doesn't plan to surrender.
And so it's already planning the next battle and it's already planning to survive.
And you specifically and explicitly right, it's planning to survive for the next phase or for
the day after so that it can make a bid to come back and take over.
There will be.
Hamas is now in a, according to you,
Hamas is now in a mode to just protect whatever can be protected
so that whenever the day after comes,
it's there to push back against whatever anyone tries to impose.
I submit to you there's zero chance that anything headed by Tony Blair,
by the United States, by the Saudis, by the Emirates, by the Qataris,
is going to fight Hamas.
They won't even try.
And as soon as Hamas kills one British soldier, whoever it is,
nobody else is going to engage them
and they will take over Gaza no matter what.
What does the transition force look like
that deals with the reality of what Hamas actually is
and not just hopes for another UN process?
Certainly. Certainly.
And you better believe I think about this stuff
24-7 and I very much so
would loathe the idea of a UNIFL 2.0
that I am far too aware.
I mean, just the other day I saw
like a Lebanese civilian Hezbollah
plain-clothes person
literally slapped an UNIFL officer
with their full uniforms and military gear
and he just did nothing.
Like it was the most embarrassing thing ever.
So I have these layered
visions for how Gaza's security architecture will look like as part of the transitional period.
The first component is that, and this is messy, and this is more than a lot of people can
handle in an average conversation or can be explained in a tweet.
But in essence, you're going to have to have the presence of an international force that basically
secures humanitarian supplies
against looters, against merchants of death,
against overt acts of aggression
toward the truck drivers, the mass looting,
like to make sure that it goes into warehouses
to be distributed as intended.
You're going to need those forces
to basically project,
just the projection of power
can have a deterrence effect.
I had a security official that told me once about in Sinai,
when the Egyptian military rolled in there against ISIS,
the Americans told them,
what are you doing with M60 tanks and this heavy equipment
against a bunch of militants
and rolling it into different villages and different cities
and Alarish and all of that?
And what the Egyptians said, which turned the Americans confirmed was later it true, is that the mere sight of tanks and heavy equipment and armed soldiers actually had a deterring effect on the rest of the population to deter them from aggression towards the state joining ISIS, participating in criminal enterprises and activities.
in the region, in our beautiful region, the projection of force,
but also in any other regions, I would say.
Like, there is something about human psychology and the projection of force.
So that, I think, could stabilize the population and make them, you know, secure from, say,
when Hamas goes in there and starts executing people and beating them up for being suspected terror,
collaborators or for
Facebook posts that they
put out. So there's that
component there. Then there's the fact that I very
much so believe
there's going to have to be
the continuation of the fight
against Hamas, but that's
going to have to be Palestinian
led. And the problem
with that is, what does that look like? Is it
malicious? Is it the
Palestinian Authority? Is it an organized professional army? Is it like what we had with the Iraqi
military in Mosul? I don't believe the Israeli military is capable in a sustainable manner
of eradicating Hamas from the Gaza Strip. I think the Israeli military has been very
heavy-handed in the application of firepower. It has succeeded in eliminating a lot of
Hamas operatives. It succeeded in weakening their arsenals. There's been a lot of success,
but at such a heavy price and a heavy cost that it lost the goodwill of the international and
Arab worlds. It lost... Let me just challenge you on that, because we skip through the
important part. Let's imagine that the Israeli army isn't able to and can't. And in trying to,
escalator and escalated to the point of massive diminishing returns.
Okay, we're just talking strategy here, not the actual experience of people on the ground and the death toll and all that.
Just literally, it's a failure.
It can't work as a strategy.
But make me imagine something else that can.
In other words, what could?
What would this force?
What kind of Palestinian force?
What kind of international?
I asked you about international forces.
I don't believe anybody will sacrifice to destroy Hamas.
And I don't think, or remove Hamas or weakened Hamas to the point where it agrees to disarmes.
I don't think anyone out there in the world is willing to lose anything.
I agree, though.
I'm saying I agree with you.
Who's the Palestinian who can do that?
But this stabilization force can be step one in stabilizing the population.
It could be step one in getting a beachhead into Gaza that can allow for the slow entry.
You can gather intelligence.
You can gather information.
You can stabilize bubbles of civilian areas.
You can build walls around civilian areas.
You can shield civilian areas from Hamas operatives.
You can look up Sutter City and what David Petraeus.
I spoke to David Petraeus.
Right.
This is what Petraeus called the Disneyland strategy.
Make it work somewhere.
And that's the example that wins hearts and minds elsewhere.
And also, like, think of Gaza as like a north-south, east-west axis.
and, you know, you just, you have to, like, think of it as block by block or, like, you know, like, basically these areas that need to be secured.
And what is in this area? Is it a bunch of civilians? Is it open land? Is it, like, I think there is a helpful role for the stabilization force.
And where I will agree with you is that I don't believe this force. Like, the French were much more pragmatical.
and how they framed it.
They said it will eventually disarm Hamas.
President Trump's plan said,
this force will help disarm Hamas and deradicalize Hamas and Gaza.
So, so that, so, so, so, so, but my thing, though, is like,
and, and, you know, a lot of people are going to clip this video and put it out of
contact and be like, ah, Ahmad is supporting militias or whatever.
I think, for example, you look at Abu Shabab and his militia,
And we're talking in a very, like, forget morality, forget the consequence, forget whatever.
Like, Abu Shabab's model, he has been able to replicate his central node in southern Gaza and
Rafa.
He pushed it in Han Yunus.
And then he had people appear in northern, in Beitlachia, in the north.
And over time, and yes, they do get backing from the IDF, direct.
and indirect. Yes, they're able to operate. Yes, they're able to slowly build up the capacity to
basically, if they choose to be, to act ruthlessly. Now, on the one hand, people fear that
they'll become death squads. On the other hand, I have spoken to basically the head of the
whole enterprise, and it's not Abu Shabab. Abou Shab is, I would argue, is a figurehead.
I'd spoken to the head of the operations, of the whole thing, multiple times.
And I swear, man, I was so, I mean, I'm not saying he's, I mean, I think he's sincere,
but I don't know, like, I need some time to, like, he spoke of a relentless commitment to human
rights, to people's dignity, to de-radicalization, and that they will not become a death squad,
and that they will not be one, two, three, four, five.
And so he just said the biggest risk that they face is that they need armored vehicles that can withstand IEDs.
Because he said, I invest a lot of time in training my guys.
And then Hamas's IEDs are deadly.
But he says in one-on-one confrontations, and these are Bedouin fighters.
These are ruthless guys.
These are very fierce from the Tarabin clan.
they're very capable of of fighting off Hamas.
And a one-on-one, they will absolutely,
and I mean, especially against tired, exhausted,
confused, demoralized Hamas fighters.
So my point is, whether it be the Abu Shabab militias
or something like it, which in Iraq, David Petraeus,
with their awakening strategy,
that was very much so effective,
very much so in parallel with the regular army.
So you get the Palestinian authority.
The problem with Abu Shab, though, is that they're going to plateau if they're just
operating under the IDF.
So you have to be flexible in thinking, okay, the international force is going to stabilize
civilian areas.
The Palestinian Authority does heavy policing in Palestinian communities.
And then as an auxiliary to the Palestinian forces, you get these militias that all report to the shared command and control structure.
And then in addition to that, there could be another private contractor component that provides logistics, intelligence, and possibly some application of firepower in very targeted ways, like calling for a small,
drone,
airstrike
that is not
an Israeli one.
There can
definitely be
a strategy.
You mean
there's also
a sort of
Western envelope
that is
American, British,
Saudi,
they're not
Western,
obviously, but
Emiradi,
but they have,
you know,
modern drones,
modern planes,
things like that.
You foresee that.
Maybe Israeli
intelligence would
help them
see on the ground
in Gaza or
Abu Shabab would
provide that.
And those,
you can
imagine,
I'm starting to be able to imagine it.
I still don't know if it's doable.
I frankly don't know what Hamas's situation is,
and I'm not 100% sure.
Israeli intelligence is 100% sure what it is.
But you can foresee a multi-piece,
if it's synergized properly,
if it coordinates properly,
that it can function with the abilities of the IDF
plus the ground forces that are Palestinian
and therefore also more integrated deeply into Palestinian,
Palestinian refugee camps, tent encampments, etc.
That can also be committed to uprooting Hamas and is, by the way, willing to fight and die to do so?
Precisely that.
Precisely that.
And what I'm saying is that will both take time.
It can be messy.
It's not going to be articulated in advance.
Like this is what's so frustrating with some Israeli commentators and analysts.
And I get the trauma.
I get the skepticism from the NFL.
I get the like, we can't trust anybody.
I get the paranoia.
But like what's difficult, man, is like I listen and I try to engage a lot of different.
I'm not talking about you.
I try to engage a wide variety of Israelis.
I'm really interested in hearing the answer.
No, no, but, but, but like, there is no silver bullet.
Like, like, there is no, I get, like, some Israelis speak as if there is this ready to be served
formula and tachlis.
This is it.
This is going to happen.
And y'allah, your paranoia is gone.
It's not going to be UNIFL 2.0.
It's going to be a sabba.
Everything is going to be perfect.
No, guys.
The military, the IDF hasn't been able to tachlis for two years.
Like, this is messy business.
The tunnels, the civilians in between, the international
community, the Arabs and the fatigue and the hostages, et cetera.
So what I'm trying to say is right now, you've largely had a situation where it's just
the IDF and Hamas.
And so on the margins, you have a small presence of Abu Shabab.
And they're out literally, and Abu Shabab malicious.
What I, what excites me about the idea of the regional.
and international stabilization force or peacekeeping force,
however it ends up being classified,
is that then you're introducing new elements,
new people with guns,
under new legitimate umbrellas.
And then under that force could be an auxiliary attachment
of a Palestinian authority
or an Egyptian and Jordanian trained
Palestinian Authority forces,
the 10,000 number.
And then auxiliary to the auxiliary,
we could attach, have the Palestinian Authority,
unify the different clans,
and unify every person with a gun,
train them, professionalize them,
and then all of a sudden,
the 10,000 number that's been thrown out,
could become 50,000.
And boom, you have a force that is able to go
house to house, neighborhood to neighborhood,
They know Arabic, they know the areas, they know the culture, they know the cultural sensitivities.
They're not going to act in a completely ruthless foreign manner.
And they're going to take the fight to Hamas in a way that, yes, entails a lot of danger to themselves and to their lives,
but it's going to be in a way that is both culturally sensitive, but also culturally sensitive, but also cultural.
culturally ruthless at the same time. I know that sounds contradictory.
Let me be optimistic. What the plan, the Trump plan offers is that the people, if there is
such a cadre of Palestinians, they get Gaza. They get to rule Gaza. In other words, there is a huge
upside to their willingness to actually fight. We haven't seen a willingness of anyone to actually
fight in any serious way. And I mean, Abu Shabab, but in a very, very contained and narrow and under
the egos of IDF protection.
He isn't IDF.
He's taking IDF help because how else do you stand against Hamas?
But the ability to expand that, the IDF withdraws,
the ability to expand that to an entirely different
Gazan social system, right, hierarchy, political world
that can therefore, because it wants to have that control,
faces down Hamas, that's the optimistic scenario.
I take your point.
I take your optimism.
One of the things that the Trump plan also talks about is that I think largely avoids talking about,
and one of the things I really want to get your say in is the PA.
Netanyahu is, I have always, I have argued for two years, okay,
that Netanyahu wants a better day after in Gaza.
And that every time he sounds like Smotrich, it's because he needs to hold on to Smotrich.
I have sometimes been the only guy in the room arguing it.
I also have criticized Netanyahu bitterly on a thousand things.
And so it doesn't come from love of Niztiao.
I genuinely think that is his vision of the war.
And it looks like he's just committed to that,
and it looks like that is something that he's willing to do,
or at least it can be pressured by Trump into doing.
But at the same time, what Niztano, authentically, I think,
and this is true Nantaniao and not a sop to the far right,
he really genuinely thinks that the PA is,
the long term another version of Hamas. And the reason he thinks it is not that he thinks the PA
is going to, you know, launch the kind of suicidal, self-destructive and total, you know, burn everything
to the ground kind of wars that Hamas is deeply committed to for religious reasons, but that it has
the same fundamental story, that Israel is an evil, artificial thing that it is too evil to make
peace with, and it is just artificial enough to eventually fall. And so the war is always worth it.
And as long as they don't sell a different story, they're just building the next Hamas.
They're laying the groundwork culturally for just a new Hamas that has a different name.
And so the PA is not fit for purpose.
If the purpose is a Palestine that is next to us, safe, peaceful, prosperous, an emirati kind of state with Gaza and some piece of the West Bank, let's say, that also has Gaza's natural gas reserves and wants that better future.
That is not something the PA can deliver because its basic narrative about us is no different.
You will have a hard time convincing him otherwise, I think.
And my question to you is, does it have to be the PA?
And how do you get that through the Israelis?
Well, so, I mean, I think it's important to remember, like, I am no fan of the PA for a variety of people.
Yeah, let me just add to that sentence.
I'm sorry, forgive me for the interruption.
And Abu Mazen is polling like 7% in polls of Palestinians.
In other words, he's more hated in Palestine than he is in Israel.
Precisely that.
Precisely that.
And so, so like my, like there's a lot of pragmatism that drives my interest in seeing the PA sustain in some fashion and be involved in some fashion in Gaza's future than it is ideological, political, or because I think they are.
are the best that exists.
So I wouldn't dismiss the resentment that the PA has towards Netanyahu for what they feel
has been a deliberate strategy to empower Hamas in Gaza over the last 18 years since they took
over.
And a lot of that is documented.
Some of that is exaggerated.
Some of that is true.
Some of that is in between.
They feel that they, I mean, Abou Mazen feels like he continued the security coordination and he was really willing to, you know, keep the West Bank calm and that Netanyahu basically expanded the settlements, undermined him, helped delegitimize him.
Abu Mazen will claim that his lack of legitimacy comes from the fact that Israel's heavy-handed.
tactics in the West Bank is what got him there.
Some will disagree.
That's up for debate.
Then there is the fact that I think, unfortunately, as a way for the PA, which is Fetach and some of those guys, to posture against Hamas,
like the thing that I used to frustrate me the most against about the PA and their Fetheh,
guys is they would, when Hamas would be like, we're the real resistance, Fetach would say, like,
well, we're the first bullet on the Israelis. We fired the, that's their low, that's their slogan is
we're the first bullet. Some will say, we're the first bullet and we realize that's not
effective anymore. Or some will just say that we're the first bullet, like we're the real resistors.
And you Muslim Brotherhood guys, you're, you're caca, you know.
So I agree that there are some elements of Fethe who are ideologically problematic,
but I would never, not out of defense of these guys, I would never even remotely put them in the same boat as Hamas.
in that I think if their conditions are right, these guys will be interested in their VIP benefits.
They want to go to Tel Aviv and have sushi.
They want to basically have a nice, comfortable life.
They're not even remotely interested in the removal of Israel.
And in fact, Israel is a central economic foundation for their rise, and I would argue for their corruption.
I'm not saying that to blame Israel per se.
I'm just saying that like Israeli business and enterprise
and the intersection of their interests with Israeli infrastructure
and economic prowess is what enables them to be relevant.
So going back to the PA in Gaza,
you have just the list of medications, for example,
that the PA publishes for the health system
that is imported from Israel,
and like they've done a lot of work.
You have the list of, you have the passport printing.
You have, like, the students
and like the issuance of all sorts of documents
that Palestinian students around the world need.
You have a whole host of administrative functions
that the PA already does,
without which trying to reinvent the wheel of what's already there
is going to set the Palestinians back by decades.
Unnecessarily so.
So there's that component.
Then there's the belief, and I've met with some of them very senior Arab leadership.
There is a belief that they all know how pathetic the PA is in some regards and corrupt it is.
And there are some good people in the PA, but like they view their corruption as irrelevant right now.
Because they view their corruption as something that could be addressed down the road.
What they are more fearful of is as an existential crisis facing the Palestinian people.
Without the PA, there is not going to be the next PLO.
PA consortium. The Palestinians are so extraordinarily divided. I mean, I, the, like, in the English
speaking world, you know, like the six of us who are speaking out against Hamas, and like,
we're united by our hatred for Hamas, but like a lot of us, like, we have, we have interpersonal
conflict. Like, every one of us is launching their own organization. Like, with, like, what, I'm using
that is a tongue-in-cheek example for how Palestinians are so chronically divided, without the
PA, the Arabs see it, they know it. So that's why they're desperate, the Saudis, the
Egyptians, and to a certain extent, the Emirates, though the Emirates are a lot more pushy
in wanting to see new characters. So, so, and I'll just two like, two things real quick.
about the PA.
And finally, like, they deliberately, the problem with the PA is that they deliberately block
out new rising characters and leadership personalities, mid-level people, young people.
Like, the PA would look at me, and they'd be like, no, no, no, let's literally, like,
build every wall around this guy and prevent him from ever.
They would hate the fact that I speak good English.
They would hate the fact that I can design plans.
They would hate the fact that I have good connections and contacts.
They would, like, no, that's seen as a threat to them.
And I speak to so many.
Let me counter.
I'm sorry, let me counter this because you're describing a situation that I can't help feeling is parallel to many, many national movements,
especially before they found their state.
You have this elite, you have this group that is the movement,
and it is extremely jealous of its position, and it doesn't have anything.
at that position. And it pushes out and holds back. Now, for example, the Israelis had this,
but everybody had them. I mean, India had this. Everybody had this kind of, you know, early state
or pre-state kind of group. And Gurian did not open the ranks of Mapai, the ruling party
that would rule for 29 years, did not open their ranks to new Mizrahi and Sephardi Jews
from the Arab world and the Muslim world and other places. Did not open the ranks to the right,
did not open political power and bring in other groups,
ultra-Orthodox, etc., largely, sometimes a little bit,
but largely not, or Arab community, largely.
But they were exactly as jealous as what you're describing,
and as what the early founders of, again, you know, India,
a lot of post-colonial states, Algeria, etc.
But they themselves were so phenomenally competent and serious,
and they built out so many institutions,
and they understood the international invalienable,
and how to navigate the American Soviet Cold War.
And they built out an IDF from nothing.
The IDF that did what it did in 56, 56 was not generally considered a successful war,
but the military aspect of it was extraordinary,
and it was a state that was rationing eggs to children until, I think, 54,
because there wasn't enough food in the country.
It was a third world country that absorbed,
that doubled its population because of the emptying of the Arab world.
And so you had an elite that was everything wrong with, you know, in terms of gatekeeping that you're describing.
But they themselves were extraordinarily good nation builders.
And what the problem with the PA from a Palestinian side I'm suggesting is that you don't have the second part.
In other words, okay, gatekeep, fine, everybody gatekeepers.
Who doesn't gatekeep?
Especially the people who, everything depends on them having that position.
But they're ruining it.
They can't do a damn thing.
They can't build anything.
I mean, you look at the power grid of Janine.
Never mind the, you know, if you get into the mismanagement of everything that's actually under the PA, okay?
And yes, they're operating under the Israeli military rule and it's impossible.
But the things that are purely them are the things that look the worst in the West Bank.
And so you have the deep incompetence that maybe is going to cost them everything.
What about not, what about toppling the damn thing and building something completely new just because it won't deliver what,
you hope it delivers.
I mean, that's the challenge, right?
That's the issue is I don't see, like, there are so many Palestinians in Gaza who are truly,
truly upset with the Palestinian authority having not done enough during the war since October 7th
to renounce Hamas.
Why did it take Abu Mazen a year to?
denounce October 7th because he was worried about his legitimacy. Why did it take the Palestinian
authority this long to call on Hamas to release the hostages? Why hasn't Abu Mazen declared Hamas a
terror organization or threatened to declare them a terror organization retroactively? Did you know
that Sinwar up until October 7th was receiving a salary?
as a former prisoner in Israel from the Palestinian Authority.
Why hasn't the Palestinian Authority severed all contacts with active Hamas members in Gaza?
And so I share with you the frustration.
I really do.
I simply am of the belief that for the Palestinian National Project to have any hope of maturing into statehood,
this is what we have.
This is, and it's not good enough.
We deserve better.
I despise the fact that the international community is heaping statehood recognition onto a political class that has basically no legitimacy amongst its people.
But we should actually also address that a little bit.
Part of the problem, and this will upset some of my fellow Palestinians.
We do have our own internal problems as to why the PA is viewed as illegitimate.
People talk smack about the PA until they want their monthly salary or paycheck.
People talk smack about the PA until they want to issue a document or go to a school or a hospital.
People want to talk smack about the PA until they want to use financial transactions.
actions that the financial authority within the PA system have built over the last 30 years
that didn't exist before Oslo.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that part of that lack of legitimacy comes from the
fact that people view the PA as not radical enough, as not pro-resistance enough, as not pro-hamas
enough, as not pro-herd intifada enough.
and some people they want to have their cake and eat it too.
Some people they want the stability and to get married and to have kids and the monthly salaries
and they want all the benefits of a stable society.
But when there are consequences for terror or for a third intifada or for random acts of violence
or for car ramming or shootings or October 7th, then they're like,
oh no, this is so terrible, this is horrible. And I think there's a messaging issue that the PA has not been, and a lot of Palestinian leadership have been quite frankly too cowardly to share with our people. They're too cowardly to tell our people that there is no right of return. There is no heifa, yafa, and ACCA. There is no return of millions of descendants of refugees to what is now mainland Israel. I would not go back and say,
sorry, I would not go as far as saying, however, that the PA and Fetach and others are just biting their time until Israel disappears and collapses.
I would not go and say that they're not willing to truly recognize Israel and evolve that relationship.
And I would actually say that behind any public posturing they do to manage the population, there are
all going to Israel and buying wine and they're all sitting down.
I sat down in Geneva with a series of Palestinian officials.
And it was the whole meeting, and it was Israelis and Palestinians, as well as a series of
other NGOs meeting together.
A series of folks being there to discuss peace post-October.
is the first convening of Palestinians and Israelis after October 7.
And the whole thing was made Chatham House rules.
You can't discuss it.
It's like under the table just for the Palestinian officials, just for covering their participation.
So like behind the scenes, like they were sitting with Israelis and it was like, we were all like best.
friends and stuff. So, like, that's what is missing in the PA is to break that public-private seal
and message that publicly. And I think then you might stand a chance of convincing Beebe and other
skeptics in Israel that their presence in the Gaza Strip as part of a transitional phase is not so bad
after all. If they could do that, then they wouldn't be them. If they could do that,
It would be a different PA, and it would not look the way it looks.
I remain skeptical, not that it's a good or bad thing,
if it is part of this larger thing spearheaded by a Trump administration
and a military that is willing somehow, this multi-arm thing you describe,
that can actually face Hamas, and even if it begins slow,
but then it finally does actually do the work,
and the Israelis have battered Hamas enough for it to be doable,
and all these conditions all come to fruition,
which is what is needed.
So maybe it's doable in the sense that we'll fail until we succeed, right?
Which is generally how things work.
I am willing to say that, you know, if it's part of that larger thing, gee, you know, that's very optimistic.
I'm unconvinced that that's the PA.
I'm sorry.
You have a right to.
What I will say, though, briefly, is that what I am hoping for in the not-so-distant future is that,
if you create the right environment, there are thousands and thousands of Palestinians,
and I say this regularly, mid-tier-level professionals, the academics, the technocrats, the bureaucrats,
the teachers, the doctors, the poets, the engineers, the commentators, people that you and I,
we don't know their names.
Some of their names are known.
Some of them are well-known.
and some of them have Facebook and Twitter profile.
Some of them don't.
But if you create a space that can allow them to rise,
they will absolutely perform miracles in terms of governance,
nation building, state building,
and capacity creation and capacity building.
And I am confident that, you know,
the Gaza Strip has the highest per capita rate of PhDs,
the highest per capita rates of master's degree as well.
And the Palestinian territories, the lowest illiteracy rates in the entire Arab region.
And so I feel confident that our folks with the right leadership creating the condition,
I don't want the leadership to inspire.
Our people are self-inspired, okay?
The leadership, like, we're not, we've long given up.
on the leaders somehow miraculously.
There is no Palestinian Mandela or Gandhi.
What we need is the leadership to create the minimal conditions
for the aforementioned categories
to rise to the mid-tier professional class,
to create a new class of Palestinian professionals,
coupled with external support and endorsement
and that shifting of political,
life in Gaza to become more than Hamas or Fetheh.
That's the problem right now, is that you have
Palestinian political life for the past,
especially three decades, in general forever,
but especially the last three decades, is this very binary,
like if you want to be in politics, you have to be with Hamas or with Fethe.
And I'm thinking about, like, fundamentally re-engineering
the Palestinian landscape such that I can be a secular, I can be a nonpartisan, I can be a part of this
apolitical politics, if you will. I can be, you know, it's sort of like we do have a professional
managerial class in the United States. We also need to account for the working class in Gaza.
And I don't mean this in like Marxist terms or whatever, but you have a heavy working class. You have a poor
class, you have the refugee class, you have people that have been segmented and broken down,
and some of that needs to be reshuffled.
Like some of the folks who are less, quote unquote, less educated, I've actually seen them come up with
the most revolutionary ideas, like a good friend of mine, let's just call him Ashraf,
who has been offering political commentary about, and this man is like, this man,
didn't even finish high school, by the way.
And he talks about peace with Israelis.
He talks in like very daring ways on Facebook.
He talks about like rejecting Palestinian violence.
He talks against Hamas and the PA.
He talks against the cultural norms because our society, we have internal problems.
And this guy is talking in a way that no college educated Palestinian in Gaza
would dare on their own, too, because, oh, I'm going to upset people.
So, like, that's where I think they're there, the Palestinians of Gaza, the Renaissance
of Gaza is there.
It's ready.
And I want to use the opportunity that maybe this deal could be the beginning of that,
I call it, the thousand-mile journey towards, you know, that's search humanitarian aid,
let's stop the killing, release the hostages, let's create beach heads for different
entities, four of fours, four more different people with guns so that it's not just Hamas or the
IDF, but also let's create pockets of like complete intellectual freedom, like Hamas-tharral zones
so that Gazans can actually speak their minds. And I'll conclude with this. I very much so
believe there is an element of this war, as much as it has been horrendous, that is actually
indirectly help de-radicalized people. And what I mean by that is that the destruction and the
death and the pain and the horror has made it such that folks and Hamas's behavior and the consequences
of October 7th and the way that Hamas and Iran and the collapse of the armed resistance
narrative and just that like, you know, all of these things, the linear progression of the
collapse of Hamas's narratives and its allies and proxies.
And then how Hamas behaved during the war towards the people of Gaza and stealing the
aid and dragging its feet with the ceasefire negotiations.
I think there will never be a Hamas two point on a massive scale.
Hamas will always have ideological supporters.
That's a given.
But Hamas will never, neither Hamas nor a Hamas 2.0 will never be able to.
to brainwash Gazans or other Palestinians in the way that it once could have.
It will never be able to say, oh, gee, let's try this again.
Oh, gee, let's redirect billions of your resources to build tunnels and build resistance
and let's isolate you from the rest of the world for two decades so that we can fight
off Israel for the mother of all battles in which we literally gave directives to evacuate.
and we lost miserably to the IDF.
Like, I genuinely believe that, and again,
it's not just the consequences of October 7th,
but because there's always been ideological opposition to Hamas,
but it's the totality of the package.
I think there will never be any party capable
of like brainwashing people into the armed resistance narrative.
Ahmed, thank you for joining me. I hope you're right. My sense is that if you want to understand a conflict, go to the stories people are telling, to the narratives.
One of the things I love, as I said, about the Trump plan is that that new day is on paper with Israeli agreement before the American president.
And so Hamas now has to explain to Palestinians why it would refuse. Why would you refuse the rebuilding with the Arab world behind you?
That is now, you started this by saying, well, I asked you, what do you think of the plan?
You say, well, Hamas, why would they agree to this?
Right? Well, it's to stop the Israelis in a month from reneging and killing them all.
They don't have hostages.
And I think that the simple answer is also, but, you know, the Israelis have committed before, you know, a trump that they need to have that better day after.
And so now how can Hamas refuse and say, I used to pretend I'm standing in the way of the Israelis.
Now I'm actually have to explain to you why I'm standing in the way of the Arab rebuilding and the American rebuilding.
That's a story.
And Hamas doesn't have an answer to that story.
And so if, as you say, the story is changing, I have met these Palestinians.
Grew up, spent almost all my life living in Jerusalem, made a point of meeting Palestinians.
Some of them are more radical than you'd think.
The middle class who speak beautiful English and communicate with Israelis, then explain to you why you're a colonialist project doomed to fail.
But a lot of them are really just out to build and accept Israelis and understand that Israelis are people that's not going anywhere.
So, you know, if this creates those conditions, if that's the silver lining of the war,
it's not a bad silver lining.
It's not a bad silver lining.
And I was specifically referencing the Gaza Strip, by the way.
I will be honest with you and say, I've never been to Jerusalem.
I've never been to the West Bank.
And Hamas is popular in the West Bank for a whole host of other reasons.
But that's for another podcast.
But I believe in a Gaza-first approach,
to create a model, a successful blueprint for what effective Palestinian self-governance looks like,
what a de-radicalized population looks like, what a transformed territory that's well-integrated
in the region looks like. And that is my hope, and that is my goal and aspiration.
If others who have the benefit of connectivity with the world and access to, I mean, Ghazans have been isolated.
Gazans don't have the privileges that many in the West Bank and in East Jerusalem and in Jerusalem in general have.
So if that's what people choose, then that's really on them.
Gazans didn't have that choice.
It was Hamas chose for them.
And that's what I'm hoping to change.
Thank you, Ahmed.
Thank you for joining me.
Thank you, brother.
