Breaking History - Is This War Justified? Eli Lake Debates Iran with Robert Wright

Episode Date: April 16, 2026

Eli Lake joins Robert Wright over at his podcast NonZero, which offers “conversations with a series of people who have nothing in common except that program host Robert Wright is curious about what ...they’re thinking” . Robert views the U.S-Israel military campaign against Iran as a serious mistake and a clear violation of international law. Eli sees it as a necessary—if legally awkward—response to decades of Iranian aggression and destabilization. Who wins? You’ll have to listen to decide for yourself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, Eli. Hey, Bob. How are you? I'm good. How are you doing? I'm good. Let me introduce us. I'm Robert Wright, publisher of the Non-Zero newsletter, which I encourage people to check out.
Starting point is 00:00:11 This is the Non-Zero podcast. You are Eli Lake, a longtime sparring partner of mine, and also writer for the free press, host of the Breaking History podcast, contributing editor, a commentary. You and I have had conversations in the past, often about the Middle East, sometimes about Iran. We've tended to disagree about Iran, but possibly never as clearly as we're going to disagree now. At least that's my guess. Because we're in the middle of this war with Iran that was started by the U.S. and Israel. I think it was a really bad idea.
Starting point is 00:00:48 You think it was a good idea. I think you can start out by correcting me if I'm wrong. I'd love to be wrong about that. I think that Iran has been at, I think the United States and Iran have been at war since 1979. And I think that the current kind of battle, the hostilities, certainly began on February 28th with the decapitation strikes of the regime and Trump's 3 a.m. message. Okay. So that maybe that obviates a question I was going to ask. If you think the war's actually been going on since 1979, what I was going to say, I was going to bring up a subject that seems to matter a lot more to me than to the average person who talks about foreign policy in America. That's international law.
Starting point is 00:01:34 I was going to say, I assume you're not bothered by what seems to me a clear-cut violation of international law here. But maybe you don't think it's – I was going to say, do you think it's not a clear-cut violation of international law for us to have attacked Iran? or do you just think international law shouldn't be of overriding importance? Well, if you mean that international law says that you need a UN Security Council resolution for one sovereign state to attack another. Well, or at least that you should only attack in self-defense, which I don't think you can argue that the U.S. was, you know, that this was an attack we launched in self-defense.
Starting point is 00:02:18 And that's what the U.N. Charter says. Yes. So I'm in agreement that the UN charter and says that and that this was done outside of it. However, my caveat would be that, you know, I think international law is in a pretty sorry state right now in the world. And states like Iran kind of exist outside of international law in many ways by their tactics. So, you know, I, yes, I concede that the letter that, yes, clearly the UN Charter says that you need to have UN Security Council resolution and the United States did not obtain one. It's certainly not the first American war. It's not the first recent war.
Starting point is 00:03:07 We have a lot of examples where, you know, this kind of basic of the UN Charter has not been observed. There are some international relations theorists that said, you know, it was never really in effect. But I would say it's really eroded a lot. But there's a huge difference. I mean, I'm willing to concede that. I mean, Colin Powell and George W. Bush and Don Rumsfeld, that administration more than 20 years ago tried very hard to get a UN Security Council resolution and ultimately relied on a kind of weird argument that there were other UN Security Council resolutions that were in the breach. We don't have to rehash that now. but yes, we now are living in a different era.
Starting point is 00:03:50 But I would also say that, you know, there have been a lot of wars that did not, you know, have the UN Security Council had nothing to do with. I mean, you could look at the Russian invasions of Ukraine. You could look at the U.S. intervention in Kosovo. You could look at the war in Libya. I mean, there's just a lot that's happened where it just feels a little bit like the U.N. charter is pretty quaint, especially if you're not. Okay, but it is a treaty commitment by the United States.
Starting point is 00:04:21 It's a treaty we ratified. So are you saying that we really, we don't necessarily have to comply with our treaty commitments? No, I'm not saying that you don't comply with the treaty commitments. What I'm saying is that the status of the United Nations in general, I feel is kind of approaching League of Nations territory. There are aggressive states in the world. there are rogue states and that I think that there's a sense here where
Starting point is 00:04:50 I mean if we move to a slightly different issue which is the constitutional question about should Trump have gone to Congress even though I guess I'm on the hawkish side of it I would say I think he should have but again that's another norm that's been violated and that was violated before Trump as well I just think that we're just in a different
Starting point is 00:05:10 kind of period at this point And my vision of an international system that could work would be one with fewer members, but, you know, clear kind of understanding that, you know, we are all agreeing to these sets of norms. But at this point, we don't really have that world. So, I mean, that's where I'm at on that. So I'm not, I, I know, I know the UN Charter, as you do, this violated it. Yeah. And the last thing I'd say on that is, I think he said,
Starting point is 00:05:42 no, you do think we should comply with treaty commitments, but we should have violated the UN charter in this case. And I don't understand that because this is a treaty. It's a ratified treaty. And by the way, you mentioned that this violates the U.S. Constitution because... No, no. I'm not saying it violates the U.S. Constitution. I think that it violates the spirit of the War Powers Act. But I think that's another norm that has been like eroded over time. And I'm not a fan of multilateral treaties, I should say. So I like treaties with other governments, but I just think the problem here is that
Starting point is 00:06:17 if you have a world where you have a number of states that just simply live outside of international law, it creates, I think, a problem to the, you know, sort of a danger to the commons when, and it's an overall danger, if you sort of have some states that you expect to follow international law and other states like Iran
Starting point is 00:06:37 that exists outside of an international law, that you, you know, at a certain point, you know, I think they've relinquished their sovereignty. I wish there was a process, and I don't know how it would work necessarily, because I think that, you know, its allies of, you know, China and Russia would have, you know, are permanent members of the security council and they have a veto. But I think there should be a kind of process where a state like Iran, under the Islamic Republic regime, would kind of relinquish its sovereignty. which is to say they've violated so many things at a certain point you can come in and do something about it.
Starting point is 00:07:16 But that is not how international law works, but maybe if there was in my ideal world, that's how I would have it. Okay. I mean, one more point in the Constitution. The Constitution also says that the ratified treaties become, quote, the law of the land. So I would argue that violating the U.N. Charter, as you and I agree we did, is actually a violation of the U.S. Constitution. But you're using the word norm, it seems to be kind of interchangeably with laws. There is a difference, but I would agree that compliance with the law is a norm, right? It's like there are lawless societies where people routinely violate laws, and in that case, the norm hasn't taken hold. I would say I agree with you right now in international law in the world, the norm of complying with the UN Charter. has eroded, you seem to think that Iran led the way or something. I would say, no, the U.S., if you look
Starting point is 00:08:15 at the post-Cold War world, which is the world that offered a chance to kind of restore the significance of the charter and the U.N. and everything, because suddenly, you know, there were things the U.S. and the Soviet Union or then Russia could agree on, and, in fact, did agree on. The Persian Gulf War was authorized by a vote that included China and Russia. If you look at that world, that new start we had with the first Bush administration, I would say the United States has led the way in the violation of the charter. The Panama invasion under Bush 1, the, as you mentioned Kosovo, yes, we violated the UN Charter before Russia did.
Starting point is 00:09:02 And, you know, and we had more normative power than any other. country. We had more potential to restore and uphold the norm of compliance with the UN Charter than any other. And I would say we squandered it. I'm not, I don't, I mean, if we're talking about the charter, a part of the charge, it's about trans-border aggression, which I think is the heart of it. I don't, I'm not sure what, what violations on Iran's part you're talking about, but we have committed a lot of them, including the Iraq War in 2003, of course. I mean, Iran is responsible for hollowing out the state of Lebanon by arming, funding, Hezbollah. It's responsible for the Yemen Civil War, the latest one, by arming and funding the Houthis.
Starting point is 00:09:48 It's responsible, in part at least, for the horrors of the Gaza War because of its longstanding relationship with Hamas, although it was strained because Iran also then supported Bashar al-Assad when he was in the middle. of his horrific slaughter with the use of chemical weapons against his own people. Iran is kind of a serial violator of international sanctions until the JCPOA it had illegally pursued
Starting point is 00:10:16 clandestine nuclear programs. That's not, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, Israel. Israel's not a member. It's not a signatory of the NPC. I want to start at the beginning. Go ahead and finish and we'll get to NIC. All right, well, I'm just saying, I mean, Iran
Starting point is 00:10:29 in every definition is a rogue state, From its very beginning, the Islamic Republic, the revolution is, you know, we see within a few months, they hold the embassy hostage. They send out assassins to kill the first interim prime minister. They have, we know from court documents, they tried to hire killers to try to assassinate Donald Trump when he was out of office, not to mention Massia Linajad. And you're against assassinating heads of state, right? You would not support any country that would do such a thing? Well, I celebrated the ending of Hominee and his various henchmen. That's kind of my point, yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:06 Well, except I'm saying that like this for Iran, this is a behavior that goes back a long way. And part of the reason why I celebrate Homene's demise is precisely because of, you know, their rogue and despicable kind of state behavior. I mean, there's a whole series of things. I mean, I don't want to have to go through everything. But, like, you know that, like, you know, the Iran. were behind the assassination of like Kurdish dissidents in Germany and Austria, on and on. It's like this whole list. Henry Kissinger, when he was alive, had a great kind of quip about Iran, which is it has to decide whether it wants to be a country or a revolution.
Starting point is 00:11:50 And it has tried to spread, you know, an Islamic revolution, which I think is, you know, an authoritarian kind of debased ideology. that as general is kind of hostile to things that I care about. And that, you know, we haven't even discussed how it treats its own citizens, which is despicable. So I just look at everything that Iran does, and I really don't put it in the same category. In the case of Panama, you had a short war to remove, you know, a drug-running dictator in the case of Kosovo. you had a bombing campaign that effectively halted. I'm sorry, Noriega. Sorry, go ahead.
Starting point is 00:12:34 Noriega. And you had a bombing campaign that effectively halted Slobodan Milosevic's efforts to cleanse Kosovo, of its Albanians. I do think that, and I just want to make one other point that's kind of related, which is that we sometimes get caught up in this, but international laws, you know, not the same as a domestic law, because it relies to it. I mean, who enforces international law? And the United Nations does not have its own army.
Starting point is 00:13:03 It relies on the United States to, you know, to kind of carry the load. And so I just don't really look at international law in the same way, just because I think in that sense it's more ephemeral. So that's why I reject your effort to try to say, we're the number one rogue state. And even in a case like Iraq, you know, leaving aside that there was an effort to try to bring on the UN Security Council, I mean, in Iraq, I mean, it was not a, it was not equivalent of like Russia's invasion of Ukraine. There was not an effort to, you know, kind of occupy Iraq indefinitely and make it the 51st state. It was an effort to.
Starting point is 00:13:52 But we did occupy it. Well, yes, but what do we do when we invaded Iraq? And I would know that there's, I don't think there's any plan for like a serious basis. Well, I don't want to get, I don't want to get off on Iraq. What do we do? No, no, what we did was we help them write a constitution and they've had successive elections. That's not what like Russia's doing in Ukraine. Russia's, I mean, well, I don't want to get under.
Starting point is 00:14:14 I mean, yeah, we had elections that we kind of tried to put our finger on the scale of and that's what Russia might do if they did ever seize control of Ukraine. But anyway, the, the, um, let me. Let me just give at the beginning. So you've said a lot of things about things Iran has done in the context of international law. I think some of the things you mentioned are not covered by international law. Let me say what I was trying to focus on was the core of the Uren charter, the bedrock of international law, the trans-border aggression. And you started out in your list of Iranian crimes by saying they hollowed out Lebanon by supporting Hezbollah. Well, as no doubt
Starting point is 00:14:54 you know, Hezbollah's origins begin with Israel's invasion of Lebanon, trans-border aggression and violation of the UN Charter. Hezbollah begins as an organization of resistance against Israeli occupation. Does Iran see the opportunity to develop a junior ally? Absolutely. And we can talk about that, but it's just kind of ironic to me that the beginning of that episode is a clear violation of international law by Israel. Why did Israel feel the need to invade Lebanon?
Starting point is 00:15:27 Because the PLO had found a home there. And the PLO was conducting a number of cross-border raids and it was threatening. I mean, like the PLO was using Lebanon as a base to attack Israel. Look, maybe it's conceivable that there's a stronger argument against my claiming that that was a clear-cut violation of law than I appreciate. But I wouldn't say, Hezbollah's origins lie with the invasion and occupation of Lebanon by Israel. From the very beginning, the Iranians were there with a mission, much the way the more aggressive, you know, sort of side of Soviet foreign policy. Well, do you agree that Stalin, we were trying to promote an Islam revolution.
Starting point is 00:16:05 From the very beginning, you're right. Hold on. I wanted to say, yes, you're right that it started as a incurgency against Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon. However, from the very beginning, they were also an instrument of Iranian statecraft. I mean, there's a reason why this big scandal of the Reagan administration involved sending arms for hostages. It was because the Iranians were getting the arms and instructing its clients to release hostages that it had taken. So I think that that shows something more than just sort of an organic group that Iran saw a moment of opportunity. And most scholars of Hezbollah today acknowledge that it is an extension of Iran.
Starting point is 00:16:46 And as such, you know, Iran gave it a hundred thousand or more missiles aimed solely for the destruction of Israel, which is like, you know, it was basically creating an Iranian kind of border with Israel. So that is what I mean. But more importantly, like what is that, what I'm saying, that to me, all of their activities, basically sponsoring an organization that is committed to the Iranian regime's goal, which is destroy Israel, that places the. the security of Lebanon, the delicate political balance in great danger. And finally, we have a situation which is finally the case where you see leading members of the Lebanese government in the last three or four weeks have now finally said, as a law organization. They have expelled the Iranian ambassador. I mean, there's a reason why you're seeing these other Lebanese politicians finally saying enough is enough, because Iran basically,
Starting point is 00:17:45 I would say kind of had a sort of stealth or proxy invasion of the country. Okay. Let me say just a few things in serial here. You know, when you say Iran gave them weapons solely for the destruction of Israel, we can save this argument for later in the conversation. I'm sure you're aware of the view that actually from Iran's point of view, these so-called proxy groups, I think in some ways that's the most leading term. but in any event have a largely deterrent function. That is to say their ability to threaten Israel
Starting point is 00:18:24 was supposed to keep Israel from attacking Iran. And indeed, we saw that once Hamas and Hezbollah were completely degraded, Israel proceeded to start attacking Iran. So it seems that's not a crazy idea. We can save that argument for later. You brought up the nuclear issue in the context of international law. That's kind of confusing to me because, Iran has not violated, I mean, the non-proliferation treaty, which Iran is a party to, does permit you to enrich uranium.
Starting point is 00:18:58 We had a nuclear deal with Iran that allowed us a degree of transparency that no other nation has in terms of monitoring and surveillance. We knew what was going on there. Trump decided to pull out. Israel wanted him to pull out, and that helped. get us where we are today, but the point is it's not a violation of international law for them to enrich. And by the way, if they want to develop a nuclear weapon, all they have to do to do that in compliance with international law is give whatever it is three months, six months notice that they're getting out of the nonproliferation treaty, and they do that. And in that case,
Starting point is 00:19:34 they would have exactly this status in international law that Israel has, which is it has nuclear weapons, and it's not a party to the NPT. So that is not, I think, a serious international law issue. I would say further, a lot of people ask, like, wait, why does Israel get nuclear? A lot of people in Iran asks us, why does Israel get nuclear weapons if Iran doesn't? I'd be delighted with a regional, like, nuclear-free agreement with intrusive inspections that, and, you know, Israel, let's go, are their nuclear weapons and there's no nuclear weapons of region, that would be great. But I think a lot of people ask why Israel is entitled to get them, whereas if anyone else wants to get them, even in compliance with international law, Israel gets to just bomb the shit
Starting point is 00:20:22 out of them in flagrant violation of international. The last thing is on this assassination thing. I mean, come on. I mean, first of all, the various things you listed, some of them I'm not conversing in, some of them I am conversing in. I'm not acknowledging that there was any kind of, that all of the assassination and or actual assassinations happened. I don't know in some cases, but I will say that surely you would agree. No nation has done more to normalize assassination, broadly speaking, heads of state, everybody else than Israel, right? I mean, that's kind of what the movie Munich
Starting point is 00:21:00 is about. You've seen the movie, right? Like after the Olympic, the Black September thing in the Munich Olympics, you know, these terrorists killed these Israeli athletes. It was a horrible thing. But Israel, you know, decided. CIA and the KGB killed an awful lot of people. I mean, I don't know what to say. I mean, okay. Listen, I don't want to get caught up. I find that to be a pretty. All that was before Iran. So you're saying, yes, it was normalized. I didn't say that Iran was the only country that ever. I was listing all the things that Iran had done. that in my view make it a rogue state, but let me just go back to the nuclear thing, because I think you've got some of it but jumbled.
Starting point is 00:21:40 Israel became a nuclear power before there was an NPT and has declined to join the NPT. Israel is also not a declared nuclear power. And we don't, and the big concern that as a result of a sort of secret agreement in 1971 or 1970, I forget exactly what year between the U.S. and Nixon and Golda my ear, was that Israel would not become a declared nuclear power. And as a result, it kind of worked because there wasn't a proliferation cascade in the Middle East.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Everybody knows Israel has nuclear weapons, but only Iran has sought nuclear weapons. But I want to get back to the NPT. You're right. Wait. What do you mean? First of all, they were not seeking, I mean, they abandoned a nuclear weapons per se program in 2003.
Starting point is 00:22:28 I want to, like, before we got that, there, I want to just explain how Iran is a violator of the NPT, because Iran violated the NPT by building secret industrial size enrichment facilities without declaring it to the International Atomic Energy Agency. This was the crisis of the first year of the Obama administration when the U.S. discovered Fordo. Before that, there was the discovery of Natanz. Now, the way the NPT works, is you're supposed to be up front. You're not supposed to build them underneath mountains.
Starting point is 00:23:05 And as Israel has learned when it found the secret archives of the nuclear program and as the U.S. intelligence and the IEA learned later, there was a much, there were plenty of these sites that were for a nuclear program
Starting point is 00:23:19 that were never declared to the IAEA. So that itself is an enormous violation. But let's just take a step back from that. Iran is a fanatic regime that is based on an ideology that is seeking to spread an Islamic revolution. That is what they, every day, death to Israel, death to America. So there's a difference between a country like that acquiring a nuclear weapon and a
Starting point is 00:23:49 country like Israel or America or France having nuclear weapons. And so I don't like the fact that Pakistan has a nuclear weapon, but I would say the prospect of the Iranians getting a nuclear weapon is even like worse than Pakistan, which has a shady Islamist security force. So that's where I just think that like you're you're kind of glossing over things. And finally, I think I do think it's very important. And so that's why when you sort of make this comparison, Israel develops a nuclear weapon before there's a nonproliferation treaty. They obviously declined to sign the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. Iran signs the nuclear
Starting point is 00:24:31 and then, you know, is trying to cheat that nuclear proliferation treaty. So, I mean, that's where I would say it's apples and oranges. As for Israel, I'm not, I'm stipulating that Israel is in compliance with international law. My only point is that Iran can develop a nuclear weapon
Starting point is 00:24:52 in compliance with international law if it gives the three months or six months notice of withdrawal from the NPT. That's all I'm saying. As for Iran itself. I mean, I don't want Iran to get a nuclear weapon. Do you? I'd rather they didn't.
Starting point is 00:25:06 But that was under control. We had that under control. And then Trump, with Israel's active support, got out of the Obama deal. And with which Iran was clearly compliant. And you support, did you support withdrawal from the deal, which had this incredibly intrusive inspection and monitoring? If I'm being honest, at the time, I said that Trump should. should use the leverage of the threat to withdraw to get a better deal.
Starting point is 00:25:32 But now in retrospect, I'm in favor of it in retrospect. But at the time, I wrote columns saying that it was an opportunity that, you know, to use American leverage to try to get a much better deal than what the, and I would just argue that I don't think that the Obama deal in any way got us out of the woods because what it was relying on was a kind of promise. I mean, like, a good deal would have been to basically pursue the policy that we have, that we were, that was U.S. policy up to then, which is that you can have nuclear power, but you cannot enrich the power in your own country.
Starting point is 00:26:12 And that was called a one-two-three agreement. That was what the United Arab Emirates basically agreed to. It's what a lot of other countries had agreed to. We make an exception to this kind of understanding because of Iran that it already, as I said, It built up a massive industrial kind of enrichment capability. My problem in the simplest terms with the nuclear deal was that it left that massive industrial enrichment capability in place. So Iran could become effectively a threshold nuclear power and still be in compliance with what it was the joint comprehensive framework, whatever, the JCPOA, agreement. So that's the issue, that we're basically at the end of the process, relying on the
Starting point is 00:27:02 Iranians to just keep their word, which I think would have been a bad idea. Well, no, I mean, the deal, the thing about it was, and first of all, I mean, enriching it on their own soil, I don't think was, I mean, that was like a normative thing, right? Like, that wasn't a violation of the NPT per se. But in any event, No, no, I'm agreeing with you that he allows for it. That's all declared. And it was so transparent that, yes, I do think Iran wanted to, for strategic reasons, remain a threshold state. They thought that that might help, for example, you know, defend against Israel, I think.
Starting point is 00:27:41 And although I can't read their mind. Who knows what they wanted. But the point is, we would know if they were breaking out and went on a headlong rush, thanks to the Obama deal. we would have known, and it would have been months and months before they could develop an actual nuclear weapon, and you would know. Even Obama acknowledged the end of the deal, it would be a matter of weeks. So that's not true of me months and months. Oh, I don't think that's true. To put it on a warhead?
Starting point is 00:28:09 To put it on a, well, anyway, I mean, this is a little technical. And my head spins from it, too, but I'm saying if you go back and you look at what the warehouse of archives that's, the Israelis liberated from downtown Tehran, you find that they had everything in place pretty much. And I don't buy the, I mean, I think that the 2003 assessment, by the way, that they were not, they'd chosen to abandon their path for a weapon is based largely on a fatwa from the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini. And I would just point out that they probably would have stayed to it. But the thing about, you know, fatwas in the Shia faith is that they die with the Ayatollah.
Starting point is 00:28:51 And, yeah, and maybe you shouldn't have killed him, but anyway. Well, okay, he was like, but my point is that I just think that they, the plan was to have everything in place and then either become a threshold nuclear net. But this gets to like a deeper point, which is that, again, I would like for there only to be one country with nuclear weapons America. But there's a difference between Israel or England having nuclear weapons versus, um, I'm. country like Iran, which I mean, you don't deny that they. This is where I disagree. And I think you have to understand a lot of people do disagree. And I would just say, I would say, at a minimum, it's far from evident that there's a
Starting point is 00:29:36 clear-cut difference between the two. And I would say that I think in general what we've seen here is that you see such an obvious kind of moral distinction between Iran and Israel that it's just, we have no compliance to act as if Iran, we have no obligation to act as if Iran. if Iran is a normal state. But I think you need to at least understand the perspective that that's not obviously true, that if you were like this impartial observer on Mars, I mean, look, like right now, you would look down and say, look, wait, Israel is at the moment, maybe you'll disagree with
Starting point is 00:30:15 this terminology, but ethnically cleansing Lebanon, ethnically cleansing Gaza, ethnically cleansing the West Bank, a shitload of violations of international law. They bomb Syria at will, even after a friendly regime takes over, and so on. And I would say that if you go back a long way, even, and first go over the list of terrible things Iran has done. and we go through them all and figure out which ones are well-substantiated and which ones aren't or whatever. A lot of people would still go back and say, look, Israel has been committing what used to be considered atrocities for decades, like these assassinations and so on. I'm not even saying, and I want to emphasize, I'm not really taking that view right now. I mean, I think it has its appeal, but my main point is I'm not sure you'll appreciate. how from just a fairly remote vantage point, it's just far from clear, especially in the wake of the last two years.
Starting point is 00:31:25 But it's far from clear that Iran is a bad guy and Israel's good guy. Now, I know if you're the average American, you take that for granted. I would argue that that's because our perception of Iran has been mediated by a media in America. That is biased. And look, happens all the time. I would say the same thing about the Ukraine, Russia. a war. Ukraine's our ally. Israel's our ally. This slants are our coverage of... What? What? Right? I'm sorry. There's a lot you've said. Okay. Go ahead. And I guess I would respond like this. It feels to me like the argument that you're making. And at one point you said, I'm not even saying I are, but you're saying a lot of people are saying. Well, for present purposes, I'm just trying to get you to step back and say, wait a second. I want to address the people who think that Israel's the bad guy
Starting point is 00:32:15 or Israel's the terrorist. I'm not even saying they're the bad guy. I'm saying it's not self-evident to a lot of people, including me, that Iran is a clearly worse actor than Israel. That's not clear to me. All right. Well, it's very clear to me, but
Starting point is 00:32:30 let me just explain what I think the error is in your kind of telling of recent history or the current state of things. When you talk about, first of all, like, let's just start with Gaza. Israel withdraws from Gaza in 2005. And as soon as Israel withdraws,
Starting point is 00:32:52 there's this one sort of an interim period. There are elections, and Hamas wins for the legislature. And then eventually Hamas conducts a kind of coup of the Palestinian Authority presence. You skip something. Wait a second. I'm getting to it.
Starting point is 00:33:08 Yeah. Okay. And as soon as Hamas takes control of Gaza, it begins launching a series of rocket wars. And those rocket wars then compel Israel to effectively close its border and try to, you know, monitor things that are coming in because they don't want the people, the sovereigns of Gaza, to have those rockets.
Starting point is 00:33:31 Egypt also closes the border. And in that process, Hamas continues sort of treat the population of Gaza as a kind of human sacrifice because it's more important to Hamas to destroy Israel than to build anything approaching a state for the Palestinians who are so cursed to live under them. And ultimately it culminates in October 7th,
Starting point is 00:34:02 which was a kind of, I would argue, almost a national suicide mission because of the utter brutality of the end rape and murder spree. In the case of Lebanon, you know, and I think there is room to argue about, you know, the taxes and the strategy and there's all kinds of things. But on just a sort of moral level, it's not that Israel out of the blue is deciding
Starting point is 00:34:26 to do that. Israel is responding to hundreds of rockets that are being, missiles being fired by Hezbollah, and where do they fire their missiles and rockets from? They fire them from homes. This has been, this has been, you know, documented over. and over again, but it's basically kind of almost a mafia-like operation where they say, you know, we need you to put this in your garage or whatever and when the time comes. So that is a reality that Israel has to deal with.
Starting point is 00:34:53 So when they are going in, you know, I don't know how much of the ground force, how long that ground forces, but, and I would concede that Israel cats is a terrible kind of international spokesman for the state of Israel, their defense minister. But, you know, there's a reason why they're going in and they're saying we've got to make sure that this whole area south of Latani is cleared because that has been a staging ground for these missile attacks, which basically makes the northern part of the country uninhabitable. You know, so that's for me, I just think it's kind of a chicken and egg thing, which is to say Iran is committed to destroying Israel. It says, I don't think it has the capability of destroying America. it's a core part of its, of the regime's identity. And I'll go one further, which is that I actually think that they are, I mean, I think we've seen because there have been so many uprisings in Iran, you know, since 1999.
Starting point is 00:35:51 But I don't think that what the Islamic Republic offers, which has prioritized its pursuit of revolution and pursuit. of the negation of the Jewish state, I think it's an anomaly in Iranian history. I think it's kind of un-Iranian. And that's why I don't think that that regime has legitimacy. But that's what Israel is kind of dealing with. So you can understand that it's very different than just a random state having a nuclear weapon. It's a state that is committed to Israel's destruction trying to get a nuclear weapon. And the reason why I would say that the JCPOA was inadequate and,
Starting point is 00:36:32 bad deal was because it basically allowed Iran to keep its nuclear industry. It allowed Iran, it lifted any sanctions, so they were allowed to build up their conventional missiles, which go hand in hand with the threat of a nuclear weapon. And it infused it with cash, with all the sanctions relief, plus the cash bribe for the release of dual national Americans who had been unfairly held in Iranian jail. So it's like that's why I don't want Iran to get a nuclear weapon because the nature of that regime is very different than. Now, there are foreign policy realists that's a school of thought, as you know, who think that the ideology or of a particular government or regime is immaterial states pursue their interests. I don't buy that.
Starting point is 00:37:24 I just think that that I think there's a huge difference between a state that is organized like Iran is today versus a kind of. of a normal nation state. So that's how I would put it. Okay. A couple of things. We started in your Hamas narrative, when I said you left something out. I would encourage people to find a piece I wrote a couple of years ago now, an non-zero. I think it's on the right column of the homepage because it was relatively, it had, it was relatively favored by readers or something compared to my other stuff. And it's called The Truth About Hamas. And one thing it details, I'm sure you know the basics of the story, is that before the coup you talked about, the, what happened to us, America said, let's hold elections for a Palestinian government.
Starting point is 00:38:15 Yeah, okay. As it happened, okay, so Hamas won the election. I mean, they didn't win a majority of the vote, but because of the way it worked and various things, they wound up in control of the legislature. And it was very, it was kind of a quasi-party. elementary balance, you know, system where there was the prime minister was going to have a lot of, you know, the legislature had a lot of power. So, well, we decided, you know, and we said, we said explicitly, yeah, it's fine for Hamas to run. It's an election. But we didn't say, we didn't say they could win. So once they won, we, in effect, sponsored a coup against Hamas. And that led to this whole civil war. And there was this moment when it was being, the Civil War, there was mediation going on in Saudi Arabia, when the leaders of Hamas were saying some pretty damn moderate things. The truth is, neither of the United States nor Israel, I think, wanted to follow up on those, so they didn't
Starting point is 00:39:15 really get pursued. We'll never know what happened if we had tried at that point to nurture moderate elements. But anyway, I'd encourage people to read the piece, look into that. Moderate elements of Hamas? Well, I'm just saying they were saying, they were saying things. They were saying a two-state solution was okay. I mean, they weren't. Well, look at what they said. Read my piece. Okay, I'm happy to look at what they said. But Bob, Bob, yeah. Let me offer a note of comma tea with a tea. It was a massive error on the part of the Bush administration and also the government of Ariel Sharon, or maybe it was Ehudal-Almore when the election happened. To Hamas should have never been allowed to run in the
Starting point is 00:39:58 elections, full stop. And the reason I would argue they should not have been allowed to run in elections is because they were an armed faction. And that we also... So are the people we supported in the coup against. And then I'll say another thing. In fact, we gave them some of the arms. They also shouldn't have run because we knew they were not committed to the democratic process. And by the way, now that's not a question of speculation. How many elections have there been since then? How many elections has a moss held? None. So, I am not one of these people There's an argument that
Starting point is 00:40:32 Some Israelis have made Which I disagree with entirely Which is that Well you know the people voted for Hamas I say no they people voted for Hamas 20 years ago once and they haven't had a chance To correct their error And therefore I see
Starting point is 00:40:49 The Gazans as victims as of Hamas And I've written a couple of things on this myself Where I've said you know This is a test. terrible situation for the average Ghazan because they're double victims of both Hamas and the Israeli war. So I think that, you know, the empathy that we should have for Palestinian suffering should compel you to pursue real regime change. And one of the problems with the war fight, the wars, the rocket wars that led up to October 7th is that they were always,
Starting point is 00:41:28 the theory of the Israelis was that we would just hit a bunch of things and bomb them, and that would be a deterrent. I don't think you deter, you know, religious fanatics, authoritarian fanatics that way. I think that, especially since for them, and at least in terms of the battle space of public opinion or narrative battle space, the suffering of the people they purport to rule is a bonus. And we know this of how they decide, how they have chosen. into fight and how they have built the tunnel networks that they don't allow their citizens entry into, you know, after they conduct the horrors of October 7. So my point here is only to say that we are in agreement insofar as they should have never
Starting point is 00:42:12 been allowed to run an election. They're anti-democratic forces. No, I didn't say that was my view, so we're not necessarily agreement there. I think if you're going to have an election, the outcome should be respected, and you should give the winner a chance to rule and see whether they're going to deliver on their promise to ruled decently. We didn't give me the case. I agree that the Bush administration created a problem and they should have, the mistake was allowing Kamas to run in the election. And I think the mistake in general was thinking that there was a way to moderate political Islam by allowing political Islamists to
Starting point is 00:42:42 have power. I think we have to just come to terms that like political Islam is, and I hope that at the end of this conflict with Iran, there is no more Islamic Republic in that country. And it is relegated to the dustbin of history. But I think we have to, like, recognize that the Muslim Brotherhood and political Islam as a movement is a vicious and foul ideology that really does deserve to be, you know, in the same, you know, landfill as communism, Nazism, et cetera. And that's really, I think it's, I think that was a big delusion. And I remember coming on the show after I was like in Egypt. And I remember saying, like, you know, because I'd met, you know, under Hasey Mubarak, the old dictator. I'd met members of the Muslim Brotherhood, and they were charming.
Starting point is 00:43:31 They spoke English, they understood politics. There were a lot of things I liked about the moderates that I met. And then if you kind of continue to follow the story, what you found is none of those moderates were part of what happened once they finally won an election. No, they were going full steam ahead. So my point is that we have to just understand that political Islam, the ideology of Saeed Qutteb and Hassan al-Bana, you know, has run its course and we really need to kind of move on. And we've already seen the Gulf monarchies have moved on.
Starting point is 00:44:05 You know, I hope the Egyptians will move on. I think they basically have, although it's not a democratic country under Sisi. But, you know, we could have been, but we didn't, we didn't. Yeah, but that's the problem. This is the hustle. This is the, this is the scam that the Islamists play. They pretend when they're out of power to like democracy, and then once they get power, they hate democracy. We can't have that argument, but I certainly don't think the problem with Egypt before the coup that we implicitly supported, I certainly don't think the problem was that the Muslim Brotherhood leader was showing that he just couldn't live with democratic constraints.
Starting point is 00:44:45 But in any event, let me, so, okay, we're. Okay, I don't want to get it. Yes, he was. He was absolutely. Okay, I'll let you say yes, he was, and that'll be the password. So we've been doing this for close to 50 minutes. Now we're going to go into overtime. This is the, you know, that's available to paid subscribers to the non-zero newsletter.
Starting point is 00:45:07 Before we do that, I want to do a couple of things. Well, three things probably. I want to remind people that your stuff can be found at the free press, which I am not going to call a Barry Weiss propaganda outfit, because that would be totally unlike me. to treat any guest with that kind of discuracy. Okay? So do I get credit for not saying that?
Starting point is 00:45:27 You sort of said it, but okay. Actually, that reminds me. We could talk about her in overtime. Let me write that down. The also end your podcast, breaking history. Yes, where it's not a, we're filling in with some interviews, but when we get back to our regular seasons, we're going to do two seasons. It's a narrative podcast.
Starting point is 00:45:49 So it's a lot of work. very highly produced under its previous name, which I forget. But anyway, it's back. And there's, people can check out your conversation with Andrew Sullivan. It appeared on his podcast. But on his podcast, you're running to a paywall. It's kind of like this podcast, except you're running to it earlier. You, in contrast, pirated the entire thing and put it on your feed. Well, with the blessing of Andrew. Okay. Yes. So then the other thing I wanted to do is, I'm in I'm going to give a few kind of bullet point replies, largely by way of foreshadowing what I want to pursue an overtime, then give you a chance to do your bullet point replies, to my bullet point
Starting point is 00:46:31 replies. I reserve the right to say, okay, that bullet points over in the middle of your bullet points, that they start seeming like paragraph. Fair enough. Okay. So, let me say I was delighted to hear you say, use the phrase chicken and egg. It's kind of a chicken and egg thing. I may have not understood the context, but I think that is true of this whole thing, Israel, Palestine, and so on. It like, it's, if you're trying to say, well, one guy is the bad guy and the other is a good guy, it just depends on where you start the history. Because both sides, whenever you say, you did this horrible thing, they can say, okay, but right before that, you did this horrible thing. And it really is a question of where you start this story. I think the same, much the same,
Starting point is 00:47:17 can be said between Iran and Israel, you, I think, don't. But that's something I will pursue. Quick point on Lebanon, this is a little, maybe a little cheap, but they're, in addition to invading, you've probably read or familiar with the book Rise and Kill by Ronan. Is it Bergen? Yes. You know, again, it's just because you, I say this only because. you know, you make a big deal of all of this horrible stuff. Iran has done. One thing Israel did was they started this campaign, they created this fake group that was supposedly a Lebanese group of some kind. And then Israel, like, they would like plant a bomb that would go off in a park car and kill people and attribute it to this group.
Starting point is 00:48:13 Then this fake group would come out and say, we did this. No, Israel did it. I'm just saying, like, you've got to go back. I'm not familiar with that part of the book. I haven't read it a while, but I'll... No, you should check it out. Well, the issue I want to get to about Hamas ultimately is... Well, the generic issue I want to get to is the meaning of the term proxy. I mean, Trump has talked as if Iran...
Starting point is 00:48:39 I think he thinks... I mean, who knows what's going on in Trump's right? I think he thinks Iran actually did October 7th. Like, it was Iranian troops. I think October 7th, well, let me just say the generic point is that proxies always have an agenda of their own that, you know, proxies always have an agenda of their own that, you know, is what largely motivates them. There is some convergence of interest with their sponsor, and sometimes they do things at the behest of their sponsor, but sometimes they just do things because they want to do them. and their sponsor maybe doesn't try to stop them or whatever. And I think there's a tendency to, on your side of the argument, Eli,
Starting point is 00:49:24 to look at everything Hezbollah or Hamas has ever done and treat it as if it were an Iranian initiative when it's not always. And I think that's an important thing to keep in mind. You mentioned, you said, you know, Iran is their religious fanatics? Well, a lot of people would just say, well, wait, look at it. at the current Israeli cabinet. Come on. This is getting out of hand. You have true, crazy, religious fanatics, Ben Gavir, Schmotrick, and they're doing horrible things. That would at least be the reply. Anything else in my, well, I think there's an issue of kind of essential. I am more
Starting point is 00:50:04 optimistic about the chances of changing the character of any political group over time than you are, but that's a philosophical difference. Okay. Do your bullet points. Quick bullet points. Okay. I know it's the case in Lebanon, but I think it's also the case in Gaza that Israel has found and killed pretty senior Revolutionary Guard Corps officers who were there kind of giving on the ground guidance. And then also the weaponry. Wait, do you mean guiding October 7th?
Starting point is 00:50:38 Well, I'm just talking about you have a pretty, it's not just a just, you know, we write a check every year. No, it's a true, it's a true, yeah. Right, okay, okay. It's a true sponsor, you know. Right. Not a client in the sense that America Israel is sponsor client, kind of, but they do shit. We don't want them to do.
Starting point is 00:50:58 Go ahead. Again, because the non-zero formerly blogging heads is not a television debate show where everybody just kind of, I will concede that what we basically know is that the planning for October 7th was, I think largely kept in house and was a surprise to, I think, even Hamas leadership, who were in Qatar, although that may change as we like learn more, but my understanding is that that is the understanding now. But I'm less inclined to, I see your point that sometimes proxies can do things without the knowledge. I mean, so I can see that, I mean, I don't think Hamine knew that October 7th was in the offing, but they certainly celebrated, but more importantly,
Starting point is 00:51:48 I mean, like Hamas would not have the ability to do that had it not been for years and years and years of nurturing guidance, et cetera, from Iran. Okay, and then Ben Gavir and Smodrick. Okay, yeah, there's a, let me just say, there's very, there's very important difference. I'm not going to defend Ben Gavir and Smotr, who have important positions in the Israeli cabinet. I've said this many times before. I think they are Judeo-fascists in the same sense. But the difference is that, you know, there was a, you know, Israel has elections. The Israel's government can change.
Starting point is 00:52:25 Iran for, you know, they have kind of elections, but they don't really matter because the power resides with the supreme leader. Even their parliament, their majolus is, can be overruled by a council of experts, the Guardian Council. And there is a much longer kind of history that if you read Khomeini's book, Islamic governance, that the structure of the Iranian regime is such that there was no opportunity for somebody who might be more moderate on these issues to gain actual control over their armed forces, revolutionary guard corps, et cetera. So that's where I think that your analogy fails. Okay.
Starting point is 00:53:08 With that, we can head into overdone. I want to discuss this, the question. And the higher level, more abstract version of that, is like, is Iran or is it not a rational actor in a way? I think. Yeah, I saw you wrote something on this. And I, yeah, all right. So, why don't you start off? Okay.
Starting point is 00:53:28 So thanks to everybody who's stuck with this as far. The way you can listen to the rest of this is by becoming a paid subscriber to the non-zero newsletter. And, yeah, now we can continue. where should we begin? It's too bad there's so much to talk about because I'd also like to talk about the current state of play in the war, but because we should say, I mean, we're taping this. Who knows where we're going to be in 36 hours, depending on Trump's commitment to his latest deadline. You know, it seems to me in many ways, Iran has been a very carefully calculating rational actor. Again, it's far from clear to me that a kind of a viewer from Mars would go,
Starting point is 00:54:15 oh yeah, Iran's the country that's out of control. I mean, as you may recall, when we assassinate Soleimani, and the response was, you know, they kind of, they lob missiles over to a base, made sure they, I think, indirectly gave us a heads up, so there wouldn't be any soldiers there and didn't kill anybody. They did much the thing, and I think some in Iran now regret this, but they were similarly moderate in response even to the June thing. Now, of course, in response to the Israeli attack in June, they fired missiles toward Israel, as I think any country would have. But as far as America, even after America joined in the bombing,
Starting point is 00:54:59 and perhaps because America didn't actually kill anybody, I don't know, but they can find their response. So another pretty tepid response, almost designed not to kill anybody or anything, you know, a few missiles toward a military base. And in general, I would say even in the current war, given especially how degraded, you might think their command and control structure is by now, they've, you know, it seems to me there has been a clear logic behind the escalation. It hasn't been, oh, okay, this is it. We're going to blow our top.
Starting point is 00:55:34 It's not like Trump. It's like, you know, the, okay, you're going to hit this kind of target. We're going to hit that kind of day. It's been very graduated. So I don't know where. And I would say, and this is another case where we get into the kind of chicken and egg or where do you want to start. But again, neither of us thinks that October 7th was an Iranian initiative. It was something done by a client or whatever you want to call it of Iran.
Starting point is 00:56:04 And in general, I would say, I think if you look at Hezbollah and Hamas, for the most part, over the last decades, you know, whenever there's been an escalation, each side has had a plausible story about who started it and who escalated too much and so on. It's pretty damn rare, I think, that if you look at it closely, just, oh, out of the blue, missile started coming into Israel. I mean, sometimes it would be a response to what was considered a really unwarranted infringement on, say, Palestinian rights at the dome of the rock or something. But it's pretty rare, you know, that it was truly gratuitous. Again, I mean, October 7th was its own thing. but we don't think that was Iranian sponsored. So I'm kind of hard pressed to see.
Starting point is 00:57:04 I mean, again, you can on both sides, point to these seemingly atrocious things, assassinations, car bombs, killing civilians. But I don't, it's just not clear to me. What is the basis for saying that Iran is this irrational actor? And of course, this is in the context of the question of nuclear arms. I don't welcome them getting a nuclear weapon, but the assumption seems to be that if they had one, the first thing they do is blow up Israel, which I think is crazy. They wouldn't. Well, I think to answer the last question first, but it gets to the point you were trying to make,
Starting point is 00:57:45 which is that Iran had, and you know, you mentioned Qasem Soleimani. I mean, what he'd done is he built up a massive network of these proxy militias whose sole purpose was to, or its prime directive was to try to destroy Israel. I disagree with that, but go ahead. Okay. But what I'm saying is that I don't think that they, that like Hezbollah, the Houthis, the Iraqi, well, the Iraqi militias is a little different. But, you know, because they, they, they, they were, Iran, Iran was. working with the Iraqi militias from the very beginning of the Iraq war, but then they really kind of go in overdrive because of ISIS.
Starting point is 00:58:32 But all of these groups, I mean, I'm just saying if you look at Hezbollah, Hezbollah does not care about Lebanon. They are, their prime directive is attacking and destroying Israel. And in the process, it became more powerful than any other faction within Lebanon. thankfully that's not the case right now. So they had the ability, and they've done it many times, to bring Lebanon into war, even though the rest of Lebanon would not want to provoke a powerful neighbor in Israel. Ditto for October 7th.
Starting point is 00:59:07 Now, again, we are agreeing that it's not like Iran gave the order for October 7th, but that the little demon machine that it built that helped nurture and build in Amaz. and Eswell and everything. That was sort of the purpose of these things. They were like little wind-up toys. So we didn't know when they were going to go off. We didn't know when they were going to do it. But that was what they were doing.
Starting point is 00:59:30 So that's why I look at it as the Iran itself. And by the way, you see this with the democratic movement inside of Iran. One of the slogans that you started seeing, even going back to the mid-2010s, was, you know, for Iran, not for Gaza, not for Lebanon, but for Iran, which is like the idea being that this is a regime that has used its wealth and used its power and endangered and brought misery to its population and endured sanctions because it is pursuing this kind of crazy fantasy goal of an Islamic revolution and destroying Israel. And that is why I don't want them to get a nuclear weapon, among other things.
Starting point is 01:00:13 But that's why I consider Iran to be the aggressor and all of this, because that's the key In fact, Israel does not sponsor, you know, like militias that do cross-border raids into Iran. That's just not a thing. I mean, there is an old relationship with Israel and the Iraqi Kurds, but that's not the same thing. They've been assassinating people in Iran forever, nuclear scientists. I mean, what's the huge difference? Because they don't want Iran to get a nuclear weapon. That's exactly right.
Starting point is 01:00:42 Well, I mean, whoever is, you know, shooting. They all have their motivation. But whatever, that's the point. Is that like, is that you identify with Israel's motivation. You think it is critical to assassinate as Israeli nuclear scientists, just as people in Hamas think it's critical to fire rockets into Israel, whatever you think. I mean, this is, see, this is, the value of international law is it's in this respect impartial. It just says, these things you can't do.
Starting point is 01:01:18 do, okay? We don't need to like do all of this grievance assessment. It's just you can't do it. And both of them are doing it. And, you know, but. I don't, I don't really see what international law has to do with it because, again, Iran doesn't care about international law. It does not. You're saying Israel does? Who does? Israel does? No, you're not going to say that. Well, Israel, Israel cares about, you know, Israel, I think, believes that the United Nations is a kind of hopeless institution at this point, as I do. And I think most Americans probably do. Well, leave the institution aside, transport or aggression is a thing. They just did it.
Starting point is 01:02:01 And they do it all the time. Well, but I'm, why did they do it? Why do they do it? They did it because Iran has, has had a single mission. It has supported these militias with a single mission to destroy the same. state and it was pursuing nuclear weapons. And eventually, that's going to, you know, Israel has a choice. It can follow international law and do nothing and hope negotiations work out and trust
Starting point is 01:02:26 the promises of the Ayatollah and that you get to keep, you know, the capability to build an industrial-sized nuclear weapons program, but we accept your promise not to do it. It could do that and then cease to exist or it could decide to deal with the threat. And I think that in that respect, even though, of course, October 7th is a horrible tragedy. And if I could go back in time and prevent it, of course, I would. But October 7th, I think, was the kind of a clarifying event for Israel in the sense that it was like, all right, you know, they, you know, as if we didn't get the message before, they mean it. They want to destroy us. And so in part, now, now, I think there's also a thing here, too.
Starting point is 01:03:07 Iran knows it sponsors a mosque, right, Bob? It could have the way that at least the Khatami president did after 9-11, and we saw a number of Iranians who happened to be very pro-American, after 9-11, expressed remorse for the terrorist attack. It could have said after October 7th, this is not what we have in mind. We're announcing that we're cutting off all funds to Hamas. We don't believe that this kind of thing is acceptable. It could have done that.
Starting point is 01:03:35 I think it's not what they had in mind, but a lot of times allies don't say things. European allies aren't saying the actual truth about how they feel about Trump's launching this war. Happens all the time. But let me say. What I'm saying is that I'm saying you've got to get back to the driving kind of purpose of the Iranian regime. Okay, I question that. Which is not to build a prosperous Iran. It's not to make Iran a great country, which it should be because of its resources, the talent of its people, its rich tradition, etc.
Starting point is 01:04:07 It's to destroy Israel. It's death to America. And that respect, it's like it practices a kind of proxy imperialism. And that's what I'm getting at. So it's like that's what they want to do. So that once you understand that, then you understand why Israel would take such extreme measures to make sure Iran does not have a nuclear weapon. Well, I understand that Israel believes that. And that actually leads to something that I think is important.
Starting point is 01:04:34 And I would like to now step back and spend some time just kind of giving you. Iran's side of the story, so to speak, or the side that would have to be added to what you've been saying to yield what I think would be a more kind of objective perspective about how things are perceived on the other side. So first of all, I assume you will agree that one thing that happens not in frequently in world affairs is that one nation sees things another does, whether in the way of military preparation or even actual attack and attributes entirely offensive motivation to it when from the point of view of that side of that nation, there is at least some degree of defensive motivation.
Starting point is 01:05:18 And I assume one case that you'll agree fits that model is that, I assume you'll say, A, Israel thinks that the war, what it is doing now in. Iran, which looks to me like trying to induce state collapse, it includes bombing civilian infrastructure, several thousand civilians have been killed and so on. I believe, the average Israeli believes that is ultimately defensive. But Eli, surely you can see how many, many people in Iran would refuse to believe that this is a sheerly defensive measure. I don't want to argue about what it is. I just want to say, you acknowledge that, hey, this is a common theme in geopolitics. asymmetry of perception, and the B, the current war is probably a good example of it, right?
Starting point is 01:06:09 Well, let me just say about state collapse. Well, okay, but forget that. I'm not persuaded. I withdraw that. No, no, I want to get you to address the point. I withdraw state collapse. I'm just saying, can you see how a lot of Iranians would look at what's happening and say, you can't tell me this is defensive?
Starting point is 01:06:29 Are you kidding? I think a lot of the Iranian people are delighted that their oppressors are finally getting what's been owed to that. I think the Iranian regime, I think they're propagandists like Professor Morandi probably would say that, you know, I don't know. Israel's a pedophile cult that wants nothing but blood. Let me ask you this. Let me ask you this. So you don't know, you just don't see any kind of plausibility to a perception that is certainly widespread in some parts of the world, this just couldn't be a surely defensive operation on Israel's part. It's just, too, it's an onslaught. It was unprovoked, ostensibly, at least. And, okay, you don't buy that.
Starting point is 01:07:18 Okay, fine. Well, no, no, I concede, because I have eyes to see and ears to listen, that lots of people, including in America, think that America and Israel, are the aggressors in the war, and Iran is a victim of this aggression. I mean, sure. So people do think that. And it happens a lot, right? I mean, in, you know, World War I was a good example. I think both sides saw the preparation, military preparations as offensive in nature.
Starting point is 01:07:50 Both sides saw the preparations they were making as largely defensive. It happens a lot. But what I want to say is, I'm going to give an Iranian side of the story. that I think in my mind helps me understand how they could view a lot of the things that they do that are called offensive as defensive. You know, you said they, you know, death to America, and they, of course, famously, Iran-backed militias in Iraq have killed American soldiers and so on. So let's, you know, I'll just, you know, most of this stuff, and a lot of people do. to kind of put it in one place, so to speak. You know, in 1953, Britain and the U.S.
Starting point is 01:08:37 play some role in supporting a coup that deposes a democratically elected government. I want to finish, but I'm going to check you on that. Okay. Didn't America, you can say America didn't support it? There was something called Operation Ajax. There was a CIA officer by the name of Kermit Roosevelt. Okay.
Starting point is 01:08:57 He did go to Tehran. And he wrote a book the same year as the 1979 revolution that claimed credit for saving the Pahlavi dynasty. But he's an unreliable narrator. Okay. No, no, no, no. I want to, this is a very important point. But the main point is the Iranians believe it. Okay.
Starting point is 01:09:19 No, no, no, no, no. In fact, the people who run Iran right now, because I believe in 1979, Khomeini and his goons stole the revolution, which was much broader than the Islamist who ended up seizing power. But at the time, the reason why Muhammad Mossadah was eventually forced to relinquish the presidency was because the speaker of the Majlis, who was also the Grand Ayatollah in Kham, named Ayatollah Khashani, he turned on Mossade. part of a nationalist alliance. And he withdrew his support.
Starting point is 01:10:02 And why did he withdraw his support? Because as the president of Iran, Mossadegh was dangerously consolidating power to the point where he dissolved the majest itself. He'd fired the Supreme Court. He purged the military of its generals. And this gets into the weeds a little bit. But the Iranian constitution in 1953 had a role for the Shah.
Starting point is 01:10:25 And the Shah was technically supposed to appoint the prime minister and had the power to fire the prime minister. What effectively Roosevelt did was two things, the CIA part of the MI6. What they did is they had a pressure campaign on a very reluctant Shah that was almost exiled himself and asked him to exercise his constitutional prerogative and fire Mosada.
Starting point is 01:10:46 Because many of his supporters were terrified that they had kind of created this monster. And I have a great respect for Mosad, I should say, as for most of his career as a reformer, in Iranian politics. But when he gets power and he ends up nationalizing the oil, which I think was a good thing for him to do,
Starting point is 01:11:05 but after that, he is faced with a kind of British boycott and takes a series of incredibly undemocratic actions, which alienate his own natural coalition. So the idea that it was outside power that Oude him... I'm just going to stipulate that I commit myself to go learn more about this.
Starting point is 01:11:26 All right. May I recommend a book by Ray Tau? K, call him. Sure. I know I've read the other side of it, the Kurtzer book, and there are a lot of people who've written up, but I'm just saying that I did a deep dive on this. Let's skip it and pick up the narrative later, which is the U.S. So the Shah is ushered in via this coup.
Starting point is 01:11:43 The U.S. is a big supporter of the Shah. The Shah, you will agree, was brutally oppressive, right? His secret police, the Savak, tortured people, and so on, blah, blah, blah. All right, you're yada yada and over a couple things that I just want to make. I can't, okay, but let me finish. No, no, I'm not going to spend a lot of time on it, but I just want to say. No, don't spend any, okay? Just tell me at the end what I got wrong.
Starting point is 01:12:03 Okay, fair enough. Because the Savak, I talked to Iranians at the time who were terrified of the Savok in the late 70s. I'm not going to disagree. The Savak was a brutal organization. And the Shah, and the Shah, the Shah, were the Shah's people. The Shah was supported by America. That definitely became part of the Iranian narrative. After the revolution, you know, they, of course, took some people hostage in the embassy,
Starting point is 01:12:25 some students or quote students. I don't know what, which it happened. It wasn't totally gratuitous. They had their demands. I mean, we had given safe harbor to the Shah, and for one thing, they wanted the Shaw back. I don't support hostage-taking to get people returned to your country, although I'd actually, just as a thought experiment, which, again, I want to put in parentheses, don't want to you get to respond to now.
Starting point is 01:12:48 I wonder if, you know, if the coup had magically ensued a few weeks ago. and the Iranian people had deposed Khomeini, and he took refuge in Russia, and some Iranians took hostages in the Russian embassy and demanded that he'd be returned. I wonder how many Americans, possibly including you, Eli, would really object to that in a big way. But in any event, that was, so it wasn't a totally gratuitous thing. Let's just take some, and I would just say death to America didn't come out of nowhere. Moreover, as you know, the Iraq, war starts, Iraq invades Iran shortly after the revolution, America supports Iraq. And Iran later.
Starting point is 01:13:37 Well, kind of, but on balance, the tow missiles were given to Iran specifically because they couldn't have, they needed anti-tank and anti-aircraft weaponry. I mean, that's absolutely true. Again, the... Okay. No, fair, I'm not denying it. Yes. Saddam was supported. I want to say. Supporting Iraq. In any event, the Iranian narrative is what matters as much as anything. So they go. And meanwhile, yeah, Iran is doing stuff now that America is the enemy. We all know about the barracks bombing in Lebanon, blah, blah, blah. But you get up to the Bush administration. And after 9-11, the Iranians are actually helping us. with our invasion of Afghanistan, of course, it's out of common interest.
Starting point is 01:14:26 They don't like the Taliban or whatever. But clearly we saw the potential. And yet, within a couple, you know, for alliance out of common interest or cooperation, within a couple of months of that, I'm sure much to their surprise, in fact, reportedly much of their surprise, Bush declares Iran part of the axis of evil right before invading and occupying Iraq. Now, if you're Iran and there's this history, and right before the war, Bush says, you know, Iran is like, there's two countries in the Middle East that are part of the acts of evil,
Starting point is 01:15:02 Iran and Iraq, and they invade and occupy Iraq, which is your next door neighbor, yeah, if you're Iran and you're a rational actor, you do whatever the fuck you can do to get America out of Iraq, and if it includes sponsoring Shia militias who blow up American soldiers, that's what I would say pretty much any rational actor could do. So it's like, you know, that these seemingly, these things you associate with religious fanaticism like Death to America, it's true that. You've got an Islamist regime. You've got a religious regime. They're going to be put in religious terms, but they didn't come out of nowhere.
Starting point is 01:15:38 They didn't come out of the Quran or something. And, you know, I mean, Death to America couldn't come out of the karate. It was written in the, in the eighth century. Of course it didn't come out of the crime. Okay. Then we agree. But my point is, my point is, I'm still waiting to see a reason that Iran shouldn't be considered a kind of fundamentally rational actor, which is the premise of this war kind of. It's like not only, not only can they not be allowed to have nuclear weapons, but they can't be allowed to have a ballistic missile arsenal. I mean, as you know, Eli, this is the reason. A big part of the reason that Bush got out of the deal, he wanted something longer and stronger,
Starting point is 01:16:25 stronger meaning we don't just limit nuclear weapons. We limit ballistic missiles because these guys are crazy. Actually, there's no evidence that they use their ballistic missiles in a crazy way or a suicidal way or anything else. So, and, you know, they're firing ballistic missiles at hotels and, I mean, any number of energy facilities and so forth. Well, how much civilian infrastructure, how many residences has Israel destroyed in Gaza, in Iran? I mean, come on.
Starting point is 01:16:59 Okay. Let's take that in a couple of ways. I would argue that you still had in Iran, they played a double game, which is to say that the families of bin Laden and Zawahiri did escape to Iran, and they allowed, they harbored Saifil Adel, who was able to kind of orchestrate some of the activities for al-Qaeda in Iraq. They had a kind of on-off relationship at times, and they were interested in, I think, if you look at the other things that those Shia militias did,
Starting point is 01:17:40 in addition to going after the United States, they also fomented, you know, a kind of sectarian civil war. And a lot of what the worst of the... Which we did in Syria? I mean, you know, okay. No, that's, no. What I'm saying is that you had an opportunity in Iraq, had Iran not played the kind of role that did, to come to some sort of, you know, accommodation under a new... And there was a bit of quiet after the success of the counterinsurgency in the late 2000s.
Starting point is 01:18:16 But the point is that I think Iran was much more interested in, you know, kind of taking, using the opportunity of the Iraq war, not for their own defensive purposes because they were afraid of the access of evil speech and the evil Americans. They were interested in becoming the regional hegemon. And that is. As Israel is, right? You would agree Israel wants to become regional he. Let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's table that for just a second. So that is, Kassam Soleimani said this himself. This was his entire strategy in this period.
Starting point is 01:18:53 So it wasn't, and then we saw that they went well beyond Iraq. They went to Yemen. They went to, you know, of course they continued and doubled down in Lebanon. They then become the sort of, along with Russia, they prop up Bashar al-Assad after, you know, he's, you know, in a war that slaughtered hundreds of thousands of civilians. where, you know, Assad uses chemical weapons. I mean, you've got a pretty awful actor that is, I think, motivated by far more than just simply, you know, they're concerned that they might be next on the axis of evil list or something.
Starting point is 01:19:33 Add to that, another factor, which is that I want to get to what your point about rationality. I think that Iran is rational within the context of its revolution. agenda. It makes rational decisions. It has very, I mean, Soleimani was a widely respected by America's best generals as a really brilliant military thinker and planner. So there's a rationality to it, but it's a rationality to what end. You know, Vladimir Lenin was a rational person, and so was Joseph Stalin, but they were rational to, again, what end? And so that's to me the important distinction, which is that it's not that Iran.
Starting point is 01:20:16 just wants to be left alone, that Iran just doesn't want to be invaded. Iran doesn't, you know, it's that Iran wants to spread this Islamic revolution because it is committed to this ideology. So that would be my response there. And if I could just make a brief point on the Shah, because I think it's lost. I would agree with you that the Savak, for a lot of its history, was brutal. And I don't want, so I'm not denying any of that. And let's add to among his other many sins is that there was a vast chasm. between the elites and the rest of the country. So there was a huge wealth gap.
Starting point is 01:20:51 And, you know, the Muhammad Rajas Shah was, you know, notorious for living a luxurious and good life. But he also was responsible for a lot of reforms that basically ended, you know, the peasantry, sort of the, you know, the arrangement for a lot of the rural farmers. I mean, he enabled for the first time in Iran, history, really, for people to own their own land and get out of kind of subsistence poverty. He introduced women's rights.
Starting point is 01:21:25 He introduced literacy programs. That's not an excuse and not making an excuse. I think that you've got to take the good and take the bad. But Khomeini himself, as a figure in Iranian politics, you know, for the entire reign of the polamis, you know, for most of the time, he's agitating against women's suffering. He's agitating against the land reform. He's what was known as the white revolution. And that's ultimately what got him exile was, you know, his aditation.
Starting point is 01:21:56 I'm not making a brief either against the Shah on behalf of Khomemania. I'm talking about the role, how America came to play this role in the Iranian regimes narrative. I will say that in 1979, the Shah was hated and he was seen as an American client. So I think initially you're correct. What's interesting to me is that today, if you look at some of these protests in Iran that have been in the last few years, you find people sounding Javid Shah, Javid Shah, because the situation in Iran is so bad they want to go back to whatever was before it. That's not a scientific poll. There was one that was conducted in 2024, which showed that one of the most popular of all the people who were asked in this survey by a fairly serious. serious group, although, you know, you can trust Poles in Iran, but it's, it's interesting that
Starting point is 01:22:47 Rezapal, be the son of the deposed Shah, got, I think, 17% or 20% whereas no other figure was, every other figure was at the single digits. That was interesting. But again, that to me is not data that he should lead. And I wrote a very long piece for the pre-press kind of a profile of him that sort of questioned whether he could do it. But my point, going back to it, is that the situation now is it such that we're not in 1979 when there, I think, was widespread popular support for getting rid of the Shah. We're in 2026, where I believe that the vast majority of the country, I'd say there's a 20% kind of group that still supports the regime, everybody else sees that it's led to ruin. And that is the story. Another part of the story of the Obama diplomacy was that they were promised this infusion of cash.
Starting point is 01:23:41 and they were hoping they were going to get prosperity. And, you know, that's the moment that Iran decides to enter the Syrian civil war on the side of Assad. That's the moment that. And we entered this. We funneled arms into that and turned it. But, okay, so let me just say a couple of things. Okay. In response to that, I mean, as for the deal per se, of course, even the deal didn't provide full sanctions relief.
Starting point is 01:24:09 In any event, I think we got to slow walk some of the deal. of the beliefs it was supposed to happen. And in any event, of course, Trump got out of it pretty soon. So we'll never know. And I will say this is one of, I think, many times we have undermined Iranian moderates. I think you'll agree. The moderates supported that deal. And we undermine them, I think, maybe you want to agree with this part by seeing to it that the deal just didn't work out. Can I respond to that? Because I think... Yeah, quickly, please. Because I want to get to the rest of your... Very quickly. I've been to Iran once. It was the end of 2002 on the eve of the Iraq war.
Starting point is 01:24:44 This was Doreen Khatami, who was the only reformer president they've ever had. And I witnessed, well, I should say I watched on Iranian television, but I was there with a lot of the student opposition at the time. And I saw the show trials that were broadcast throughout the country of Khatami's closest advisors. So I would argue that the reformers, the people who might have been moderating, were per seigneur. long before we had Obama and his deal. And Javad Zarif and Hassan Rahani, I would never call them moderate, what I would call them are pragmatists, and they just had a different theory
Starting point is 01:25:20 as to how to advance Iran's regional and Islamist ambitions. Yeah, I'm the underlying this is kind of a differing views on how possible it is for the character of any regime or any group of people to slowly change over time. And I think we just- Remember, in 2009, the protests were because they'd stolen the election for Ahmadinejad, who at the time was a hardliner. Oddly, has now emerged as one of the fiercest kind of critics of the regime, to give you a sense of how bad things have turned.
Starting point is 01:25:53 But the times in which the Iranian people wanted to kind of inject reform-minded, more moderate people into the system, at every time they were kind of turned away and purged out of it. So I think it's a very important point to make about the character of the regime. I just think I can point to a lot of times, well, in the history of Israel's interaction with various actors and Americas where we could have supported moderates. I certainly think the Iranian nuclear deal was an opportunity. We'll never know for sure what would happen if we had stuck with the commitment. I just will point out that executions peaked under Rahani's presidency, not the other way we're right. So they killed more people, they hung more people from cranes under Rahani than they did under.
Starting point is 01:26:45 Okay, I don't know the history well enough. I do know, I do know that the relative extremists point to what they call the failure of the deal rhetorically to at the expense of the people that you're saying weren't very moderate, but are considered the relative moderates. Now, on the, you know, when I, when I said, you know, you said, Iran wants to be a regional hegemon. I said Israel wants to be a regional hegemon. You kind of bride, let me just say something about that. I think that's a perfect example of what I said, what I meant when I said that, you know, one person's defense is, from the point of view of their adversary or enemy, offense. Now, I think, yeah, they both would like to. exert their influence in the region indefinitely. Nations tend to want to do that if it seems possible,
Starting point is 01:27:39 but I would say that in both cases, there are particular reasons you would expect them to view that as part of a defensive strategy. In the case of Iran, again, to get back to Iran-Iraq War, it's worth remembering they had basically zero allies except for Syria. Syria was the one ally. No Arab nation supported them. America was opposed to them. So they had in the wake of that, which I think you'll agree, was a pretty traumatic experience. Hundreds of thousands of Iranians were killed. And they didn't start the war. So they emerged from that. Yeah, they would like to maximize the regional influence. And if Syria was the only country that gave them any support, they're not going to get too picky about Syria's human rights record. And let's face it, America doesn't get picky. Israel doesn't get picky. We are all. It's a human rights record. What are you talking about, Bob? Come on.
Starting point is 01:28:36 That was a horrible, disgusting example of like massacre after massacre. He's dropping chlorine bombs on villages. You know it and I know it. It's not a matter of like he was a bad guy. So was Iraq, which we supported in the Iraq-Iran war. So was Iraq. I think it was, by the way, I'm not like defending our relationship with Iraq. No, I'm not asking you to.
Starting point is 01:28:54 I'm just saying. By the way, the proper way to say it is that after the Iran-Contras scandal, America was actually arming both sides of the war because of the hostage deal with the Iranians. You know, in any event, in my view, Israel, the U.S. Iran have all been mercenary. I mean, look, Egypt, you know, military coup installs Sisi. He right away to make a point, takes peaceful, purely peaceful demonstrators, guns down a thousand, a thousand. And the U.S. is like, you know, life is hard. Is this, is this, was this a coup? No, we're not going to deem this a coup. No, come on. We're just all, we're all, you know,
Starting point is 01:29:42 all these powerful nations are completely corrupt. Of course it was. But we didn't say it. The U.S. government refused to say it was. Right. Because there are legal reasons they can. I understand. I'm just saying, don't act like Iran as you. Come on. Six hundred thousand. Six hundred thousand perished in the Syrian Civil War. And that did not start contrary to some In the Civil War, half of them were killed with weapons we fucking provided. Oh, please. That's not true. But more importantly, the reason that that civil war began was because during the Arab Spring,
Starting point is 01:30:12 Syrians got the crazy idea that maybe they should have democracy. And Bashar al-Assad, how did he respond? Okay, now, and he kept doubling down. Let's not litigate the civil war in Syria. I mean, you know. What is there litigate? He was a brutal dictator. His father was a brutal dictator.
Starting point is 01:30:29 All this is true. I'm just explaining how if Iran had coming out of the Iran-a-walk war said, you know, Syria is the only country that gave us any support in this existential event that was almost the end of us. But still, we're not going to latch onto them as a safety line because they're really bad guys. Almost no country would have done that. That's what I'm saying. If you want to disagree, hold off on the disagreement. Because my main point is that like what you call.
Starting point is 01:31:00 a quest for hegemony, regional hegemony, which, yeah, can fairly be called that. I would say, Israel, by almost anyone's reckoning, is currently seeking regional hegemony. I mean, they've just displaced a million Lebanese. We know what happened in, well, leave that aside, in the case of Syria, after a regime took power, the current regime that was, you know, clearly going to be, pretty friendly to Israel was willing to be by historical standards, Israel nonetheless took the opportunity to bomb the shit out of Syria just to wipe out any military hardware because you never know. Flagrant violation of international law. This is why people look at Israel and say, also there was Israel intervened to save a massacre of the Drew's population. That was a different matter.
Starting point is 01:31:52 That was a different matter. They bombed military hardware all over the country. The, the, But my larger point is this is why any, you know, everyone looks at Israel and says, well, apparently the current strategy is regional hegemony. Yes, it is. But Eli, I don't doubt that they view it as a defensive strategy. Seems crazy, but they do. And I'm just saying, I mean, it seems crazy to a lot of people, but they do. And when I say they, who knows, I mean, I think most Israeli people view all of this stuff as fundamentally defensive. How cynical is Beebe? To what extent is it like a way to keep them in power? Who knows? I don't know. But I think it's fair to say that a lot of Israelis at the grassroots and elite level
Starting point is 01:32:39 consider what seems from a distance to be relentless offense is in fact defensive. And I'm willing to concede that. And I'm just saying that's the thing you seem not willing to concede on the part of Iran. that all these things, and I'd like to move if you have time to the specific death to Israel, they want to destroy Israel line that is related to all this. But this is a big part of my point, is that what looks to you like irrationally offensive intent is from the point of view of a lot of Iranians what is necessary for national security. and I can see that Israel looks at things the same way, crazy as it seems, you know, when you look at what happened in Gaza, I literally find it almost hard to believe that these
Starting point is 01:33:29 people think of that as defense, but I know they do. The Israelis do. So that's what I'm asking of you is like symmetry of perspective. How am I doing? No, I'll just reject. I know, I mean, we just have a fundamental disagreement here. I just think that the state of Israel is organized around the idea that there should be a Jewish homeland and a safe haven for the Jews. That is its animating kind of, that's its mission statement, if you will. And ever since the first Zionist settlers came to what was then known as Palestine, they have been, you know, not ever since, I would say, really it starts with Hajamina al-Husani in 1920, 1920 in the Abu, the, oh, God, I'm going to forget the name, but there was a series of riots that
Starting point is 01:34:23 kind of invoked. But I mean, listen, the thing with Israel is that from its very inception, from its very founding in 1948, its neighbors have tried to kill it. Now, it is an interesting position at this point where its traditional Arab foes have largely accepted its existence. But sort of taking up that mantle of, you know, trying to destroy the Jewish state has been largely Iran, and it's tried to accomplish this through a series of proxies to the detriment of its own population. And the only other thing I would correct is, you say a lot of Iranians. I don't think most Iranians who have to live under that regime share the enmity towards Israel that its masters do. and that is the point is that it is an revolutionary ideological project, whereas I would say that Israel basically just wants to have a secure homeland and the world's only Jewish state.
Starting point is 01:35:21 Those are two different kinds of things, and that is, and from there, that's how you kind of explain it. Now, is Israel perfect? Does Israel kill civilians in difficult wars? Of course they do. Are they ethnically cleansing the West Bank right now? Okay, on the ethnic cleansing, because I don't like the idea of, I don't want to dodge that. And I recently saw somebody sort of make this point about, oh, you know, people who defend Israel never want to talk about the West Bank. I think what we're seeing in terms of settler violence for the most part is absolutely despicable. And I don't defend it. And I would like to get back to.
Starting point is 01:35:55 Well, the state defends it. The state in effect, defends it. Slow down. Slow down. Slow down. Slow down. you know, violent settlers would be tried and punished. And if the fact that they are not being punished right now,
Starting point is 01:36:15 I think is a real problem for Israel. So I'm not going to defend the settler violence at this point. But I also think that the activities of the settler violence, and they have patrons in the government with Ben-Gavir and Smodrick, and I think it's a real moral failing. So in that respect, but I don't really compare that to Gaza. I mean, there are certainly people on the extremes of Israeli politics who think we should that Israel should resettle Gaza, but I don't think that is going to happen.
Starting point is 01:36:46 And certainly that's not what Netanyahu's position is. And I don't think who eventually replaces Daniahu. Do you think they're going to let the Gazans back into the 51% or whatever that Israel currently occupies? I think that's entirely contingent on the dismantlement and disarming of Hamas. I think the problem is that you cannot have, it's like if Hezbollah didn't exist, Israel would not be sending ground forces into Lebanon. The reason that they're there is because of the hundreds of rockets that are being fired every day since the Iran war started. That's why it's happening. We can get back to how these tit-for-tat's turn into this.
Starting point is 01:37:27 I would say that I think it's basically a policy of Israel's to engage in disproportionate response. and that makes, you know, conventional structures of deterrence hard. And but that's another, that's another reason. Let me get back to that. Isn't that, isn't that is what deterrence is that you respond disproportionately and so it doesn't happen again? When deterrence works, it often rests on a calibrated incremental escalation on both sides. And Israel's philosophy is kind of they do any, they step over the line, you fucking beat them to death, and eventually they'll just surrender.
Starting point is 01:38:09 I don't think Israel does engage in incremental escalation. No, I don't. I think their policy is disproportionate response. We've covered a lot of ground. So I have a question for you. You wrote a piece a few weeks ago that you basically made the argument that you hope Iran wins this conflict. I didn't put it quite. I mean, what I said was, can I actually, I encourage people to go look at that. Why Americans should root for Iran. Exactly. Because the short answer, I want to get back, the short answer is I think Iran actually wants after this war, who have a stable Middle East more than Israel does. That's what I think. But we can argue about that. And I think that would be better for the world. But I want to quickly just make. Because at the bottom of all of this is your... Let me note my objection to that. I don't think Iran wants to... Okay, I don't think Iran wants a stable Middle East,
Starting point is 01:39:03 and I think that if Iran got a nuclear weapon, it would further destabilize the Middle East. Well, again, look, them getting a nuclear weapon isn't the issue. If Trump wanted to keep them for having nuclear weapon, he could have done that diplomatically even after he got out of the deal. Okay, all right. But he didn't. He didn't, because he wanted to follow the Israeli
Starting point is 01:39:20 longer and stronger or whatever. So, but, But on this underlying point of Iran wanting the destruction of Israel, now, I'm really not an expert on all of the, everything's been said. I know a couple of things. You know, first of all, I do think there's a tendency in American media to, in general, give heavier play to the incendiary things that Iranian leaders say, then to the moderating things. So, you know, a kind of example of this, well, this is a different kind of a bias. You know, you're familiar with the famous claim that President Ahmadinejad of Iran in echoing Humaney said, Israel must be wiped off the map. I'm sure you know that turned out not to be a
Starting point is 01:40:16 strictly accurate translation. And I'm not saying the accurate translation is one I would welcome, you know, is a statement I would welcome if I were Israel. I'm not saying it's not threatening Israel, but it is different. And what the actual translation was is the regime, I don't know, first of all, it wasn't Israel the country, it was either
Starting point is 01:40:36 the Zionist regime or the regime that occupies Jerusalem or whatever, must pass from the pages of time or something like that. And the main thing I want to say there is like, why don't, why didn't the actual translation in American media ever catch
Starting point is 01:40:52 up. Like, I just asked perplexity today as an experiment. What is Iran said about the continued existence of it? And it coughs up this false translation. Israel must be wiped off the map. That's just embedded in the national memory. I would also say, let me, let me, let me splitting hairs. Why does it matter? Let me finish. I also know that Iranian leaders, when they've been pressing, like, what do you mean when you say things like this, like the regime must blah, blah, blah, blah, They say, well, we just mean the regime. And they've even, I think Khomeini said, we're not against a one-state solution in which Jews live in peace with Palestinians and so on. That's what they said.
Starting point is 01:41:36 Now, you may doubt the legitimacy of it. But, you know, so the point I want to make is twofold. First of all, these kinds of qualifying things never catch up. with, you know, why are you clinging to this? First of all, race in the pages of time versus right off the map is like, what are we talking about? Because if what they are saying is, we do not want a Zionist regime, we want regime change. I object to that if they mean it violently, but I would say Israel has said the same thing about them. We do not want this Islamist regime.
Starting point is 01:42:17 And the difference is Israel's actually do a ton of something about it. They assassinated the leader. They attacked the country massively. So you tell me, if you accept what they actually say at face value, which is we want the regime gone, we're opposed to a Zionist regime, I don't endorse that. I don't endorse what Israel just did. But I want you to explain the difference to me between Israel saying,
Starting point is 01:42:42 we do not want an Islamist regime, and we're going to kill everybody in it, and then actually doing it. And Iran saying something that seems. seems to me kind of comparable. I'm like, I don't even know where to begin with this. I mean, Iran has openly stated his desire to end Israel since Romania took power. And what do they mean by end Israel when you ask them? I kill all the Jews and wipe them out.
Starting point is 01:43:15 I don't think that's what they say. Well, okay. Well, okay, listen, listen. That's my point. There is a famous clock that was put up by Khamene, a few years back, about, you know, the end of Israel, the countdown or whatever. It's a huge part of their state ideology, Robert. As you know, they don't even use the word Israel. And assuming it was mistranslated, and I don't even really understand the difference between pages of time versus off, wiped off the map.
Starting point is 01:43:43 But, okay. Well, a lot of the differences between saying regime and saying Israel. But there is a difference. There's a difference. The regime must change over time, must be replaced by a new regime, which Israel is trying to do in Iran. And saying, look, come on, wiped off the map means we bomb the fuck out of them and kill them. You know that.
Starting point is 01:44:04 And it's not what was said. First of all, okay, that is what they want. Well, you can say that, but it's not what they said. So if you're asking, why am I making a big deal? They like killing Jews, the way the Hamas does. That's what they do. I mean, that's a big part of their ideology. Israel seems to like killing Iranians and Palestinians.
Starting point is 01:44:23 Oh, please. Listen, this didn't come out of nowhere, as you acknowledge. I'm glad that you, I understand that. But the reason why Khamene was killed in the opening strikes of this particular, of this latest war was because of the entire prehistory leading up to it. that Iran has devoted so many resources to supporting groups that would attack Israel, and then having the ultimate deterrent so that Israel couldn't do anything about it. So I kind of agree, like, I don't know that it was certain that Iran would use a nuclear weapon as soon as they obtained one against Israel, but they would use a nuclear umbrella to protect all of these proxy groups, which that's what they do.
Starting point is 01:45:12 They attack Israel. I mean, listen, we know from their state behavior. I'm sure you remember many years ago, the Karine A that was sent for the Palestinians, it was an armed shipment that was just in the beginning of the Intifada when there was still an effort to try to maybe bring back peace negotiations. That's been their policy. They wanted to support the organizations whose job it is to try to destroy Israel. I'm not endorsing, well, that's what you're putting.
Starting point is 01:45:41 And that's why, by the way, and that's ultimately why. Israel after developing a huge thing as to saying we cannot allow this regime to get a nuclear weapon. And I mean, I think everybody can kind of understand why. And that's ultimately why it led to this. So that's where we are. And I hope, I mean, my hope is that it ultimately will succeed in a color revolution. I mean, we were running out of time now.
Starting point is 01:46:04 But I do think that, you know, I should say, I wrote a column today that said, Mr. President, do not attack civilian infrastructure because I believe that there is an opportunity to the end of all of this replace this regime that, again, stole the 79 revolution and has lost its democratic legitimacy internally and is just a menace to the region.
Starting point is 01:46:33 I think once you get Iran knocked out, I don't think you're going to see Israel laying claims to Kuwait or wherever. It's not going to be supporting, like, Jewish terrorist groups that are, you know, going to try to hollow out Syria or something. That's not in the cards. That leads back to my article, which you cited. I mean, I did want to say quickly, like, you know, back to the, yeah, they send arms to these proxy groups. Part of my point about coming out of the Iran-Iraq War with only one nation having supported them is it makes it seem plausible to me that, yes, they would look around and go, well, look,
Starting point is 01:47:12 you know, there's this Palestinian cause and none of these Arab states are really supporting it. This is a real opportunity for us to gain influence by supporting these groups. That would be a great deterrent. Doesn't seem crazy to me. But in any event, the
Starting point is 01:47:26 on my article, yeah, it's like I do, you know, well, part of it is this. I assume you agree that Israel would consider this war a win if it just leads to the collapse of the Iranian state, chaos, civil war, whatever, to Israel, that is
Starting point is 01:47:50 better than a coherent state that has the capacity to become a strong state unless there is regime change. In other words, I mean, that's what all the evidence points to that. And I'm saying that I don't think Iran really sees its security as entailing its, it's, it's, sending, collapsing whole state. And in any event, I don't think it, it thinks it has
Starting point is 01:48:18 the realistic aspiration of doing that. I think they would love to collapse the Israeli state. They don't consider it. And I just don't think they were out Fox.
Starting point is 01:48:29 I think, as I said, I think it was a duel for many years. And I think Israel is coming out on top. And I just don't see what the problem is. I think Israel is
Starting point is 01:48:37 fighting for its survival, basically. Yeah. And I, And I think, by the way, that Iran is going to be better off, hopefully, when the regime falls. Now, I will acknowledge the following. I don't know that Donald Trump or I'm not, I mean, I think that if you believe Netanyahu's rhetoric and Trump's rhetoric, there are times when they say you have an opportunity to get their country back and that's the part I like.
Starting point is 01:49:03 But when he, you know, Trump says many things. He also says he'd like to cut a deal with, you know, a Delci Rodriguez. figure in Iran, which would, you know, I think that could be an interim phase, but I'm worried that, you know, I worry that I don't want the regime to survive. But it would be better if the person in charge of Iran was not, was at least corrupt and not a true believer in their ideology. Well, I think I'm far from alone in looking at Israel now and see it, you know, taking big swaths of Lebanese territory. But do you think, hold on.
Starting point is 01:49:46 Doing what he did to Syria, doing what he did to Iran and saying, wait a second, this looks an awful lot like a rogue state. And I don't think it's good for the region or for the world for it to lack a counterbalance. Do you think that Israel wants to, wants to like indefinitely occupy southern Lebanon? I don't. I think we know exactly why they have done this. They're trying to clear the areas so they can go in house to house and get all these missiles that are hidden in with among the civilians, which by the way is also a war crime to launch
Starting point is 01:50:15 missiles and hide missiles among where civilians live, which is a constant problem. If you want to know why Gaza looks like a moonscape, which is a terrible tragedy, it's because Hamas, you know, again, decided to conduct a horrific raid and a massacre and then hide under a tunnel system and it had built for 20 years almost that was interspersed with all of the rest of Gaza. And we know that that wasn't for the civilians because they wouldn't let the civilians in. So it's like, you know, this is what this is. So Israel had to kill the civilians. Well, I, Israel, I think, in first, especially, well, the number is around 60 to 70,000.
Starting point is 01:50:55 There have recently been pretty good studies of how many of those were actual fighters. And the, you get to this. There are a lot of civilians that were killed. It's a terrible tragedy again. But Hamas started the war. They wouldn't let civilians leave when Israel was warning them. There's a reason as to why Israel did it. It wasn't just to conquer Gaza.
Starting point is 01:51:17 You know that. You know that Israel didn't do the war to conquer Gaza. Hamas started the war. Israel was trying to wipe Hamas out. And Hamas because of its nature. You mean Hamas was trying to wipe Israel out? Israel was trying to wipe Hamas out after- In response.
Starting point is 01:51:35 In response, yes. I mean, I think that that's right. And, you know, I mean, ideally, if we could go back in time, ideally, maybe there would have been a better strategy to empower, you know, local Gossens and give them small arms and hope that they would take their, to take out, I mean, I'm not just, I'm just saying, I don't know. And we might come up with, I would say that it's possible that you could sort of say when the war is analyzed, you could say, well, there were other options that could have gotten that. But anyway, I just, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I'm just saying that, I, I, I, I, I'm going to give you sort of leave it there. Any, but I'm just saying that you, it's, it's, it's, it's not like they were, that's, it's not, it's not, it's, it was a constructive conversation. It was, you know, let's do it again. In these troubled times, we are a paragon of civil discourse, Eli? No, and I really, I say this every time we do it, you know, but it's very important to me,
Starting point is 01:52:44 especially in the ghettoization of our discourse that we have this space, because it's rare and rare these days. I hope to come back soon, Bob. Maybe we can have another topic where there would be more agreement, and we can maybe talk about that offline, but, you know. Yeah, I'm sure we can find something. Yeah. We'll come up with something.
Starting point is 01:53:06 We'll come up with something we agree on. We agree on some aspects of Trump, I believe. Anyway, thank you so much. Thank you, bye. And we'll see you next time.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.