Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 10/21/24: Arab Americans SHOCK MSNBC, Scahill Confronts MSNBC On Gaza, Sinwar Video Released, Israel Preps Iran Strike
Episode Date: October 21, 2024Krystal and Saagar discuss Arab Americans refuse Kamala, Scahill confronts MSNBC on Gaza, Sinwar video released, Israel preps Iran strike. To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/lis...ten to the show AD FREE, uncut and 1 hour early visit: www.breakingpoints.com Merch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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it just means the absolute world to have your support. But enough with that. Let's get to the show. We also want to just take a quick look at how Kamala Harris is bearing with a group
that really could be pivotal, especially in the state of Michigan, which is Arab American
voters.
There was recently a focus group that was convened and wasn't great for Kamala Harris
because every single panelist said they will not vote for Kamala Harris.
And that at this point, given her support
for Joe Biden's policies vis-a-vis Israel's genocide in the Gaza Strip, there is nothing
she could do at this point that would win them back. Let's take a listen to how that went.
Who is voting for Donald Trump in 24? It's possible. It's possible. Yeah. It's definitely
not Biden or Harris. That's for sure. Who's voting for Kamala Harris here?
Absolutely no.
No. No.
Not possible.
There's nothing she can do or say for us to change our mind.
Who's voting third party in 2024?
Good chance.
So Jill Stein.
Mm-hmm.
Slightly.
It's also a possibility that some of us will just abstain from voting altogether.
But we do know that that's not the best political strategy, you know.
Why are you voting for Donald Trump?
Because my main goal is to get someone who is actively funding a genocide out of office.
Is your vote for Donald Trump a vote endorsing Donald Trump,
or is it a vote against Kamala Harris?
Against Kamala Harris.
Donald Trump has said he will reinstate the Muslim ban. He said that last time. He said
that he wants Netanyahu to finish the job. Donald Trump said a lot of things his first time around
that terrified me. The campaign that the Democrats ran was that Donald Trump hates us.
I felt safe, though, in the country when Trump was in office.
I don't feel safe right now with Kamala in office.
So, I mean, that to me speaks more.
Pretty stunning.
And we've seen polling among Arab Americans in Michigan and other swing states that suggest a majority of them may, in fact, vote for Jill Stein. Jill Stein.
That's right. And you've seen the Democrats actually launch their first ever ad campaign specifically
against Jill Stein.
So, you know, it's not surprising necessarily to hear these voters say, yeah, there's nothing
she could do.
Like, it's too much.
It's too long.
She had a chance to separate herself from this policy. And at every
opportunity, she's done the opposite. At every opportunity, she's chosen to signal, no, I will do
exactly what Joe Biden did. So if Democrats lose Michigan because of this voting bloc,
they have no one but themselves to blame. Don't blame Jill Stein. Don't blame third parties.
Don't blame Donald Trump even. You have yourselves to blame for, number one,
backing an absolutely immoral policy. And number two, just completely ignoring what was a massive
movement against this policy, including huge you know, huge numbers of activists
on the ground, including a massive amount of energy, including if you just look at the
polls, like overwhelming majority of people want certainly a ceasefire, but also to withhold
weapons from Israel to, you know, to end this horror that we've all seen in our social media
feeds every day. So I'm glad that they talked to these voters and I'm glad Democrats will have to
look at that on their favorite network and understand that you don't get to lecture these
people about who they're going to vote for. But in reality, what happens? They're just
going to run ads about how Jill Stein is bad. I mean, the Stein campaign, this or the anti-Stein
campaign might be the most vicious that I've ever seen it. There's a New York Times hit piece out this morning. There's the Democratic
ads. They've got Democratic activists now actively like trying to smear her every single day on the
timeline. And this is exactly why. But as you said, it's actually on Kamala. If you look at
the way that she even talks about the issue, here she is being asked in Detroit about Israel,
Palestine, about Gaza, about message to Muslim voters, take a listen.
How risky is it that you could lose the election?
Well, it is undeniable that it is something that everyone is aware of what is happening
there. I speak publicly all the time about the fact that there are so many
tragic stories coming from Gaza. And of course, the first in this phase of everything that
has happened, the first most tragic story is October 7. And what happened that day and
then what has happened since.
And I think what's critically important as we look at this moment is one, acknowledging
the tragedy of what has happened in Gaza in terms of the extraordinary number of innocent
Palestinians who have been killed and taking that seriously and speaking truth about that.
In addition, of course, to what I said about what happened on October 7 in terms of 1,200 innocent Israelis being slaughtered, women being horribly raped.
And then fast forwarding to today with the killing of Senwar, this creates an opening that I believe we must take full advantage of to dedicate ourselves to ending this war and bringing the hostages home.
I don't know if he caught that, everybody else, but what did she say? The first and most tragic
thing that happened was October 7th. If you're a Muslim voter, you're hearing that in Detroit,
like what are you exactly, you're supposed to, if Gaza is your number one issue, like what exactly
are you supposed to take away from that? I mean, we're talking about a significant
number of voters who literally have family members who are-
In Detroit, yeah. that. I mean, we're talking about a significant number of voters who literally have family members who are in Detroit directly impacted, you know, who may have literally lost family members.
And, you know, I maybe I shouldn't harp on this, but it just really displays to me the
outrageous double standard that she has never, to my knowledge, said anything about the proven, documented, systematic use of rape by the IDF against Palestinian detainees, for which there is vastly more evidence than that of systematic rape on October 7th.
And I know these are uncomfortable things to say, but that's just the fact and the reality. And, you know, that narrative has been used over and over again by her and so many
others to justify everything that has come after that I think is important, even as it is
uncomfortable to call it out once again. And, you know, to point out on the other side, actually,
there is multiple, even the Israelis themselves at least attempted to arrest some IDF members for their
rape of a Palestinian detainee. We have multiple independent reports suggesting this is not a
one-off. This was a systematic policy of abuse within this effectively concentration camp that
they have set up. And so I know a lot of, listen, I think the voters who
said there's nothing she could do at this point, like I believe them. And I think that that's
perfectly understandable position to take. And, you know, I can or others can say till we're blue
in the face, like Trump would be worse. And I think that's true. Miriam Adelson is one of his
top donors, roughly $100 million. She wants to just completely annex the West Bank.
Sark, you were pointing out, Israelis are very clear on who they would rather have as president of the United States is like 68% say they would prefer Donald Trump. Bibi Netanyahu, very clear
that he would prefer Donald Trump on the off chance that Kamala Harris actually did something
different than Joe Biden. But I think all of that amounts to not a lot when you're talking to people
who really care about this, you've been watching this, or may even have a direct personal stake in the region.
Yeah, like that woman who she was like, look, I'm just voting against that person and I want to punch them.
So that's what I'm going to do.
I mean, that's a perfectly understandable position.
You know, like you just said, you can say to like, until you're blue in the face, as you said, like, well, if it's different, et cetera, et cetera.
But that's, you know, that's a different way of thinking, especially if you've got personal stakes. So she's got real issues.
We did mention this about Iran. Let's put this up on the screen. This is currently going around.
A funded PAC by Musk is currently micro-targeting Muslim people in Michigan and Jewish people in
Pennsylvania with opposite messaging about Kamala Harris using zip code targeting. One on the left says Kamala
Harris stands with Israel. That's to Muslim voters in Michigan, to Jewish voters in Pennsylvania,
saying two-faced Kamala Harris stands with Palestine, not our ally Israel. That is crossed
out. Wish that one were true. Be a little more two-faced, Kamala. Let's see it. Yeah, I mean,
it's obviously a deeply cynical strategy.
But it also reveals that Elon Musk, at least his PAC, believes this is an effective direction
and an important fissure within the Democratic coalition and are doing what they can to try to exploit it.
Yeah, I don't think it's funny because it's actually probably more resonant on the Muslim part. But all the data that we have right now is that, you know,
American Jews are overwhelmingly Democrats voted for like 60 or so, almost 70 percent for Joe Biden
last time. Yeah, I have not seen a single scrap of like large scale sample data that outside of
like Bill Ackman and like rich Jews in finance, that there's been any sort
of grand realignment? Well, Trump thinks of Jews in the stereotypical way that like Democrats circa
2016 were thinking about Latinos and black voters of like, oh, your brown immigration must be your
number one issue. Or, oh, your black like criminal justice reform must be the only thing that you care about.
He thinks the only thing Jewish voters should care about is Israel.
And that's I mean, it is anti-Semitic to think first of all, to associate every Jew with
this out of control genocidal state is in my opinion anti-Semitic.
And number two, just to collapse any large demographic group down to like a single
issue, like, oh, you're one of those people. This is what you care about is gross and, you know,
and racist, I think, in my opinion. So, you know, which I also said when it came to Democrats
stereotyping the same way. So, yeah, he's he's, of course, wrong. And when you look at the polls,
the majority of American Jews want to cease fire, quite a large number also, you know, hate Bibi Netanyahu, by the way. The greatest supporters
of Bibi Netanyahu by religious group in this country are not American Jews. They are American
evangelicals who support Bibi Netanyahu and whatever he wants to do. They want the end times.
Part Blanche. Yeah. So, you know, this is part of why Donald Trump's coalition is very aligned on the issue
of Israel. They're very pro-Israel, pretty much across the board. There's a very marginal dissent.
And their critique is that Kamala and Joe Biden have not done enough, have not given Bibi enough
of a blank check. That's their position. But yeah, since there is somewhat of a fracture
in the Democratic base, especially between Democratic elites and base voters, Republicans
are trying to exploit that, understandably, as best that they can. And ultimately, again,
it comes down to the actual policy and Kamala's complete unwillingness to break from Joe Biden
on an area.
And again, for people who don't really care about this issue, which is a majority of Americans
who don't, who aren't going to be voting on it, you know, she could have done herself
some favors too, just by actually breaking with Biden on an issue since that's been something
she's really struggled with as well, just creating some space and showing she's her
own person.
So, you know, it's just, it's a moral and political failure on every level is basically all you can say about it at this
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All right, let's go ahead and move on to Israel. So last week, we brought you the news that Israel
had assassinated Yahya Sinwar.
That, of course, an extraordinary development.
He was the leader of Hamas,
especially after the assassination previously of Ismail Haniyeh,
who had been the head of the political branch of Hamas.
He also was the architect in large part of October 7th.
So incredibly significant developments there.
In the wake of that news, MSNBC, shockingly,
one of my old friends, Eamon Moyle-Dean there, brought on our friend, Dropsite co-founder Jeremy
Scahill, to talk about the significance of these events. And he really called out MSNBC on their
own airwaves. Let's take a listen to that. I just want to begin by saying that as we're
speaking tonight, the Israelis are waging an extermination campaign in the north of Gaza. For the past two weeks, they've surrounded
the area and they've intensified it after the killing of Yahya Sinwar. No food or medicine of
any kind has reached most parts of the north. I'm in direct touch. I'm in with medical officials in
the north and with journalistic colleagues. I understand in direct touch. I'm in with medical officials in the North and with
journalistic colleagues. I understand that at least 80 people have been killed tonight
in a horrifying set of attacks on half a dozen residential buildings. I've just gotten done
seeing images from the ground where children are being shredded like meat in a butcher shop.
I don't understand how any of us, whether we're journalists or not,
this isn't about objectivity, how any of us can watch this genocide unfold in real time
and watch the pontificating of the politicians running for president and not just cry out,
this has to stop. I mean, this has to stop. We've looked at this. I mean, I know you've reported on
the ground from Gaza. I mean, we're watching a genocide in real time. And I'm sorry, but on this
network also, there are people who have promoted propaganda from Israel.
There are people cheerleading for those running for office who are lying to the American people
about concern for the Palestinians.
And yes, we should talk about Yahya Sinwar.
But Yahya Sinwar is also in many ways the story of Gaza.
You know, yes, this was a violent man, but his violence was rooted in the fact that he
was born in a refugee camp.
And Israel throughout his entire life waged a war of annihilation against the Palestinians.
I'm not here to defend Yahya Sinwar.
I'm here to say that we can't talk about who Yahya Sinwar was or what Hamas is without
talking about 76 years of colonialism, of apartheid, of mass killing,
of mowing the lawn, of controlling the calories. No lies detected there. Let me just say,
Eamon is such a real one for bringing Jeremy on. He's going to get in trouble for that one.
Yeah. And Jeremy, I'm quite sure that's the last time we're going to see Jeremy on MSNBC's
airwaves for quite a while. He used to be, and if you guys go and listen to the interview that Ryan and
Emily did with Jeremy, he used to be a fixture on MSNBC. Rachel Maddow had him on all the time
back in the era when it was the Bush era. And they were all aligned and going after George W. Bush
and exposing torture and all the abuses of that era. They loved to have him on.
And then the moment that it was the Obama era and Jeremy was still doing his thing and said, hey, he's increased the drone war, pointing out the failures there.
Suddenly, that was it. He was axed and he's never heard from Rachel Maddow since because he did,
I think, something similar of calling out MSNBC on her program. And she expressed to him in real
time, you can't do that. This is a problem. And then that was it for his.
So I don't know if this was his first return
to MSNBC since that era,
which would have been, you know,
quite a while ago.
But I, again, don't expect we'll see him back there
for another maybe two decades.
It's just stupid.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, his story, like he told with,
I mean, Ryan too.
Ryan was an MSNBC contributor.
You guys were on there.
And then, you know, at a certain point, they made a decision.
They're like, this is the direction we're going.
Obviously, look, it has worked, right?
They are the number two cable news network.
Yes, they have the oldest audience in all of cable news.
72 years old, boomer, white liberals.
These are mostly people who love the network.
But for them, like, this is genuinely shocking to see something like this.
Anybody who watches our show, or frankly, who's even on the internet, you could be a pro-Israel person on the internet,
and you would still not be shocked by something Jeremy has to say. But the thing is, is that on
that network, and him calling them out directly on their face, I do think it has some power,
you know, to hear it stated that way. Because it's so foreign. It's such a foreign-y way of
thinking. That's right. That's why Ta-Nehisi Coates and his book and his interview rounds have been so significant too,
is that, you know, that perspective is just mostly, almost completely absent from elite media airwaves,
whether it's MSNBC, New York Times, CNN, Fox News, et cetera.
So anyway, it was quite striking to see that perspective offered there. I really
suspect Amon will get in trouble for having Jeremy on because he already has been under quite a bit
of fire. Remember after October 7th? Yeah, they demoted him.
Yeah, they took him off the air for a while. Obviously, Mehdi got fired for,
probably for his approach to that conflict and especially the aggressive way that he would
question people about the conflict is probably specifically what got him canned, possibly by the ADL.
People are very influential there, so we'll keep an eye on that.
At the same time, I referenced earlier that Israel, for some reason, decided to actually
put out the video of Yair Esselstyn's final moments.
We can put this up on the screen so we can take a look
at some of this. This was after he had already been part of a battle with a tank. And the IDF
did not find him. You can see him sitting in that chair. And it looks like his arm is potentially
severed. Yeah, the photo did show it's severed. Yeah, it appears to look like it's partially
severed. So he's basically has one arm.
He uses that one arm.
You'll see here in a moment.
This is a drone that's surveilling him.
He uses that one arm to throw a stick at the drone camera.
And so, you know, this video kind of dispelled some of the Israeli mythology about him.
You know, they had portrayed him really as like a rat hiding in tunnels.
They also portrayed themselves as knowing exactly where he was located and saying he was surrounded
by hostages in some underground bunker. And here he is actually fighting to the bitter end,
throwing a stick at the drone that's sent in to assassinate him. And I think that part, Sagar, I'm interested for your reaction here,
part is the Israelis for their domestic audience, just seeing him finished and in this state where
he's surrounded by rubble and all the level of devastation, like for an Israeli domestic audience,
this plays well. And I think that's probably Bibi Netanyahu's primary concern.
Yeah, that's what I thought.
But in terms of the global impression, and even especially among Palestinians,
many of whom, according to polls, had really turned on Sinwar.
Yeah, because they blame him.
Because they blame him in part for, you know, I think they blame Israel too,
but they're like, you brought this upon us. And they bought into this idea that you're,
living this more luxurious life and you're hiding while
war being bombed. This has increased a large amount of sympathy for him within the Palestinian
population and bestowed on him a sort of like valor that Israeli propaganda had effectively
robbed him of previously. Yeah, I'm just struck by the difference between the U.S. and between
Israel here. Let's put this up on the screen. This is from the Wall Street Journal. It says, in death, Hamas leader may have won
wider support than when he was alive. And there's just so many differences if you look at the way
that the U.S. operated against Osama bin Laden. For example, there's a photo allegedly of bin
Laden's face split in half like a pancake or something when he was shot by those Navy SEALs
and still Team 6. and that was never released to
the public. They made great effort to make sure that he could never be seen as a martyr or to give
ISIS, which was big at that time, any propaganda or Al-Qaeda. And they buried his body at sea,
you know, to make sure that there was never any grave that people could flock to. It was just a
very different reaction. And I mean, what I would point out is people celebrated.
I was there at the White House
the night that bin Laden was killed.
It was one of the craziest, honestly, moments of my life,
just remembering what that was like,
you know, for the country and for everything.
It's not like people didn't celebrate
and Obama didn't get the political bump
that he needed, I guess,
you know, if we're gonna talk in crass terms.
But there was also a lot of thought about,
hey, if we're gonna do this and we shouldn't release video, we should make sure that this
doesn't become like a major thing in the Arab world or for people who are radical Islamists
to be able to flock around. And this was like the opposite reaction that Israel decided to pursue.
You know, I would say, too, even with that, I believe the Baghdadi video was never released,
you know, by Trump. So it's not like Trump, I mean, obviously a very different person than Obama in the way that he thought about things,
but even he never did that, you know, whenever Baghdadi was killed. So that's just the major
difference in the way that our countries look at these things. And I think probably because
we have more experience with a 20-year GWAC, you know, blowback campaign of what happened when we
did try to have all these celebratory actions
during the Iraq war. And we found out hard in 2005 and 2006 what that looks like.
I think there's also just such a gulf, massive gulf between how the Israeli domestic audience
consumes these things versus how the global audience consumes these things. You know,
when you look at the polling and you have, you know, the preponderance of opinion saying we weren't tough enough in Gaza and we haven't, you know,
been brutal enough in Gaza. That's why we from the beginning had this question of like, why are
they, why aren't they taking the phones of the IDF soldiers so they can stop recording their war
crimes, you know? And the answer is because they actually, from a domestic political standpoint,
they liked the recording of the death, destruction, extermination, war crimes. They liked it. Those soldiers that were posting
these things became like, you know, heroes who were feted at these various, hey, let's resettle
Gaza conferences. So the victory that's on offer to the Israeli people is one of utter annihilation.
And so the more that those images of annihilation are shown to
the Israeli domestic audience, the better Bibi does in the polls and the more he's able to hold
on to power because that is the real victory that he is promising them. So I think that's part of
why. I saw some people theorizing that maybe the IDF hates Bibi, and so they leaked this to undermine what he'd been saying, but I don't buy that. I think this is to feed the Israeli domestic
audience who loves to see him there in the rubble in his final moments.
And the Wall Street Journal, again, to cite a very mainstream publication here and their analysis,
they interviewed a number of
individuals. One Gazan said that once they saw the footage, it changed his mind about Sinwar.
He said it showed he was fighting until the very end. Another analyst said it makes a difference
to people in the Arab world that he was above ground, that he didn't escape, that he was
fighting. How and where he died also refutes the Israeli narrative of Sinwar abandoning the people
of Gaza. Many people feel Israel can't pretend this is a big achievement because his killing
wasn't planned or done through using intelligence. So, you know, pretty, I think it's pretty
revelatory, their decision to release this video and what it says about Bibi's mindset and Israeli
societies. At the same time, you know, there was, let's put this up on the screen, apparently Bibi's
own house came under attack. Israel's government said that a drone, a Hezbollah drone, targeted
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's house on Saturday. There were no casualties, but, you know,
an attempted assassination here on Bibi Netanyahu. Certainly, Israel's military said dozens of
projectiles were launched from Lebanon. Day after Hezbollah announced a new phase in fighting, Netanyahu's office said the drone
targeted his house in the Mediterranean coastal town of, I don't know how to say this, Caesarea,
maybe? Let's go with that. Yeah, neither he nor his wife was there. It wasn't clear if the house
was hit. And of course, we know from the military sensors, they will not allow you to report whether
the house was hit or not. That's something they're very sensitive about, showing any damage from attacks from Iran
or from Hezbollah.
We can also put this up on the screen, Israel taking a significant hit in terms of one of
their top IDF commanders.
This is Colonel Ahsan Doxa.
It says Lieutenant Colonel, but it was actually a full Colonel Ahsan Doxa, commander of Israel's 401st Brigade, killed today in what this individual describes as a precise
ambush by Palestinian fighters in Jabalia. This Colonel, very significant saga because he was
really in charge of that assault on Jabalia refugee camp. So that's why it's quite noteworthy
that he was killed by Hamas or other aligned fighters there.
Well, also a little bit of a preview.
What does it look like?
You've got the army.
They come in, refugee camp.
He was killed by an IED.
So they're learning exactly the same problems that the U.S. forces learned in Iraq.
Some of the initial reporting said that some of the IED was actually assembled with unexploded ordnance that Israel had dropped on Gaza, which again, same thing that people learn
in Afghanistan.
That is a classic play out of Afghanistan and Iraq.
You can ask anybody who served over there.
Like these things are very deadly.
And the more that they operate there and in Lebanon against Hezbollah, much more competent,
you know, enemy, which has already proven the ability to strike at them, effectively even hit Bibi's house.
I mean, already they have accomplished more, like, better tactics against the IDF and their ability to penetrate Israeli defenses than anybody in Hamas ever could have dreamed of, you know, in the war.
I'm just talking about, you know, post-October 7th.
So clearly they've got a big problem ahead of them.
And the Israelis are really getting a taste of what this looks like.
Yeah, and finally, we don't want to lose sight of the continued assault on Gaza.
This is one of the deadliest strikes that we've had in quite a while.
Let's put this up on the screen.
At least 80 people killed in Israeli missile strikes on a school compound in Gaza City.
6,000 displaced people were sheltering
there. It was hit as they prepared for the morning prayers, reportedly once again caused a fire.
Video from the scene, according to The Guardian, showed horrific loss of life with body parts,
rubble, and destroyed furniture scattered across blood-soaked mattresses. So, you know, here we are, obviously, more than a year
after October 7th. And yes, Hamas is able to, you know, to kill this colonel who was quite
significant. So they have not been defeated. I don't think they're probably anywhere close. I
don't have always thought that it's probably not really possible to thoroughly defeat Hamas.
But Israel right back in Gaza City, northern Gaza, and, you know, continuing this campaign of devastation, annihilation.
Also telling people once again to relocate, but in some instances shooting them as they try to flee.
Floating this idea of starving the population.
There was a PR ploy effectively last week where the U.S.
seemed to pressure Israel to let some aid into northern Gaza. None had come in since the beginning
of October. There was a photo op with 50 aid trucks, but all of the reports on the ground
suggested that none of that actually went to northern Gaza. So that's where we are.
Yep. All right, we got Ken Klippstein standing by. Let's get to it.
Camp Shane, one of America's longest-running weight-loss camps for kids,
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Campers who began the summer in heavy bodies were often unrecognizable when they left.
In a society obsessed with being thin, it seemed like a miracle solution.
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You can listen to all episodes of Camp Shame one week early and totally ad-free
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Have you ever thought about going voiceover? I'm Hope Woodard,
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To most people, I'm the girl behind voiceover, the movement that exploded in 2024. Voiceover
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Singleness is not a waiting room.
You are actually at the party right now.
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Listen to VoiceOver on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Medal of Honor is the highest military decoration in the United States.
Recipients have done the improbable, showing immense bravery and sacrifice in the name of something much bigger than themselves.
This medal is for the men who went down that day. It's for the families of those who didn't make it.
I'm J.R. Martinez. I'm a U.S. Army veteran myself, and I'm honored to tell you the stories of these heroes on the new season of Medal of Honor Stories of Courage from Pushkin Industries and iHeart Podcast.
From Robert Blake, the first black sailor to be awarded the medal, to Daniel Daly, one of only 19 people to have received the Medal of Honor twice.
These are stories about people who have distinguished themselves by acts of valor,
going above and beyond the call of duty.
You'll hear about what they did,
what it meant,
and what their stories tell us
about the nature of courage and sacrifice.
Listen to Medal of Honor on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Very happy to be joined this morning by journalist Ken Klippenstein,
who may have just gotten himself in trouble with the FBI yet again. Ken, welcome to the show.
Good to see you, man. Hey, guys. Good to be back.
So effectively, Ken, you decided to publish some leaked U.S. intelligence documents,
which were assessing Israel's likely response to Iran,
which we're still waiting to see what they have in store. And there's been a big public debate
about that. First, talk to us. Here's the piece that you posted on Substack, Israel preps for
strike on Iran. Top secret leak reveals, read the U.S. intelligence reports, the media won't
publish. So there's a lot about this that is quite significant, including what is actually
in the documents themselves. But just talk to us a little bit about your decision to go ahead and
publish these documents, which is a move that other mainstream outlets have not taken.
Yeah, so I got a copy of this from my friend early on Thursday, and I thought to myself,
oh, well, this is already circulating on social media. This will be up in a matter of time.
And by Friday morning, I realized not only have the documents not been published to any major media outlet,
the media had even talked about it then.
And it wasn't until that afternoon, this was like more than 24 hours after it had been circulating,
that Axios had the first story on it.
Barack Ravid, a reporter who's very close to the White House.
And what's interesting is in his report,
they just describe, they're just,
I call it, you know, trust us journalism.
Like, here's what it says.
You don't have to see it.
They didn't publish the underlying intelligence reports.
Subsequent to that, virtually every major media outlet has now reported on it.
It became impossible to ignore after the Axios story.
And I published a few
minutes after Axios. None of the other outlets, not one, has published the underlying intelligence
report. And the reason that matters is because you're forced to sort of rely on the media's
paraphrase, not just the accuracy of it, but even assuming that, you know, they have the best of
intentions and they're not too close to the White House, like I think Ravid, Barack Ravid is.
But just that they would understand
what the general public is interested in.
And, you know, just by pure accident, maybe they don't.
And I think the reporting on this shows that they don't know
because they're getting key facts about it wrong.
So for example, the intelligence reports come
from what's called the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency,
which deals with satellite imagery and analysis.
It's been reported in both CNN and Reuters.
I'm not making this up.
You can go look it up.
They mentioned this coming from the NSA, which is factually untrue.
It shows you the problem with not giving people the underlying records.
Media ends up repeating each other, and it becomes an echo chamber,
and they're not able to check the underlying facts because nobody has the source material. Get to the source material then, Ken. What can we learn from it exactly? I just saw
the write-up around what the potential sites and all that could look like. Can you lay that out
for the audience? Yeah, what this shows is that despite all the happy talk about our ironclad
relationship with Israel and how we have total trust, so on and so forth. We are spying on each other aggressively. And it's not just the satellite intelligence. It is human intelligence,
you know, spies. It is cyber intelligence. It's all sorts of different things to paint a mosaic
picture of what Israel is up to because we can't take them at their word. We don't take any nation
state at its word. But in the context of the conflict that you guys were just describing in the previous segment, the stakes are really high.
And so it becomes important to look at not just what are the officials saying and what are they
saying to us in private, but to look at their military exercises. They were doing mid-air
refuel exercises, which is what you would need to do if you were going to strike Iran, because the distance from Tel Aviv or from Israel is far enough that they couldn't make it with one fuel tanker.
And so you're looking at a bunch of different characteristics, military readiness, special
operations. This stuff is really complicated. And so it shows that we, the U.S. intelligence
community, the Pentagon, is looking at every one of these domains that might be indicative of an Israeli move. And I
think what this should show you is this stuff is complex, and it's not as straightforward
as perhaps Biden suggested when they asked him. They said, do you know about what Israel is going
to do? He goes, yes and yes. There are all kinds of different factors you have to look at to try
to make that judgment. And that puts us in a dangerous position because it's not a straightforward question about if we know what they're going to do or not.
The news outlets, all of them, who chose not to publish these documents, have they given any rationale for that decision?
And what do you think that their rationale would be? Do you think part of it is just like, when I look at these documents,
they require some understanding of underlying lingo,
et cetera, to really make sense of them.
So you have to be somewhat of an expert
to really glean much from them.
Do you think that maybe they just have the sense like,
oh, the general public isn't really gonna understand
these documents anyway, so we need to encapsulate for them
what it is and what it means?
Yeah, well, I don't have a problem with them explaining what the significance is, because as you say, these are very technical documents.
They have all kinds of notations and markings on them that are not something that, you know, the naked eye is going to, that an ordinary person is going to know what it means.
But the problem is they're getting it wrong.
I mean, I just looked at the Times write up.
You could see a number of factual errors in it. And as with science, you know, the best thing for discourse
is to have it openly so that we can check each other's errors. Nobody's perfect. Everybody makes
mistakes. I make mistakes. But when you don't put that underlying record out there, then that
conversation becomes difficult to have because people are going off of something that not
everyone can see. So to answer your question, what was their rationale? In two cases, there were admirably
frank mentions in, I think it was CNN's article and ABC News' article, where they say, we are not
publishing the underlying documents. And in both cases, they want to step further. They said, we
are not even going to quote directly from them. What that says to me is that they're saying, oh,
look how responsible we are. And that's an unhealthy place for the media to be,
to see itself as an adjunct of the national security state.
I don't think it means I don't care about the country
that I'm publishing these things.
My own view is it's already out there, guys.
I mean, anyone can see it on Twitter.
It's like we're engaged in this theater of acting like,
oh, by withholding this, somehow we're helping the task
of the U.S. military, which is just absurd.
So I think that all of this is an outgrowth of what I talked about last time I was on the show,
about the J.D. Vance dossier and the media's perception that it is deputized
into some kind of national security responsibility on the part of the federal government,
which I think is really unhealthy for the media to see itself as.
Yeah, I remember, you know, so when we had the discord leaks, that was another thing. We're getting to it very much
what you talked about. We settled on quoting from them because I think, like you said,
that's very important. At that time, there was still like some consternation around whether
that would have actually like endangered troops because it wasn't as public as the one you're
talking about. But as you said, if it's actually 100% out there,
it's out there and it's not just media outlets that have it,
then you're not doing anybody any favors
by just toeing the line for the national security state.
That's what I think is really important.
Yeah, I completely agree.
And you can tell the media,
they just don't want to talk about this stuff.
I mean, it was more than 24 hours
after this thing was already circulating
that we know of before they even had the first report just vaguely mentioning it.
You know, my editor and I were able to verify the authenticity of it based on the source in
the intelligence community within about several hours. And, you know, I hope I don't have better
sources than the New York Times and the Washington Post because we're in real trouble if those guys
just don't have anybody. So I'm guessing they could have done this all more quickly,
but it seems like there was only any motion after my story and Axios' story came out,
and it sort of became untenable to pretend it wasn't happening anymore.
But this view that the media is separate from the rest of the public
and seeing this stuff unfold on social media is just indicative of this, you know,
very unhealthy self-image that I think that the press has.
Yeah. Let's talk about
a little bit about where these documents came from. We can put F2 up on the screen. The U.S.
apparently investigating the leak of these documents. And, you know, I also think that
this reveals a little bit, too, because it's obviously not that The New York Times and
Washington Post never publish leaks out of the national security state. It's just usually
those leaks are authorized leaks of things that those groups want out to the public.
But because you have this as an unauthorized leak, something that these agencies find to be
embarrassing to put out there because it reveals what we think of these planes. It also reveals,
as you said, that even with this close ally, we're still having to spy on them to figure out what the heck that they're up to.
Just speak a little bit to that in the response here where they're launching this investigation
and try to figure out who leaked these documents.
And if you have any insight into how high level the individual would have to be to have
gained access to these documents.
My understanding is that, I don't think this has been reported yet,
is that the sense of the investigators is that this must have been a relatively low-level individual, similar to Jack Turchiera, the U.S. airman that was responsible for the
discord leaks. That's kind of the preliminary assessment right now. But certainly the view
that this was an insider within the U.S. intelligence community. I've seen a lot of
speculation about where this might have come from.
I mentioned before some of the errors in reporting.
I've seen again and again,
it asserted that the possibility
that this was from an Iranian hack,
which is absurd because these are top secret documents
which live on a server called,
on a system called JWICs,
the U.S. military intelligence system,
which is air-gapped.
So by definition, it couldn't have been hacked.
It's not connected to
the internet. And that's something you can tell at a glance. Anyone who understands how the top
secret system works knows that these things are put in SCIFs, secure compartmented information
facilities that are not in any way connected to the internet, that you have to physically go into
a vault to look at that's cordoned off from the rest of the world.
So the fact that the media is getting these very basic facts wrong
is both embarrassing and a reminder of how important it is
to be vetting the records that their claims are based on.
Because this is elementary stuff.
I'm not trying to just ding them on the errors that invariably occur when you're reporting on
something in real time. That's unavoidable. But to say this is an Iranian hack just
misunderstands the very basis of how the U.S. intelligence system even works.
Well said. Ken, thank you so much for sharing with us your reporting. Tell people how they can follow you and support your work.
We run a sub stack, and that's at kenklippenstein.substack.com.
Excellent.
Always great to see you, my friend.
Good to see you, man.
Good luck with that next visit from the FBI.
You and that guy are going to be buddies.
It's fine.
Yep, I'll put out some coffee for him.
You've got to record it.
You've got to record it.
Yeah, exactly.
I've got to get a ring camera this time.
Just memorize lawyer.
I have nothing to say.
Listen, I just have to say,
you have some balls, my friend,
and I really respect the hell out of you for it.
All right, take care, Ken.
We'll see you soon.
Bye, y'all.
Thank you guys so much for watching.
We appreciate you.
Become a premium subscriber if you can.
Otherwise, we're going to see you tomorrow.
Camp Shane, one of America's longest-running weight loss camps for kids,
promised extraordinary results.
But there were some dark truths behind Camp Shane's facade of happy, transformed children.
Nothing about that camp was right.
It was really actually like a horror movie.
Enter Camp Shame, an eight-part series examining the rise and fall of Camp Shane and the culture that fueled its decades-long success.
You can listen to all episodes of Camp Shame one week early and totally ad-free
on iHeart True Crime Plus.
So don't wait. Head to Apple Podcasts and subscribe today. validation. I'm also the girl behind voiceover, the movement that exploded in 2024. You might
hear that term and think it's about celibacy, but to me, voiceover is about understanding yourself
outside of sex and relationships. It's flexible, it's customizable, and it's a personal process.
Singleness is not a waiting room. You are actually at the party right now. Let me hear it.
Listen to VoiceOver on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A lot of times, big economic forces show up in our lives in small ways. Four days a week,
I would buy two cups of banana pudding, but the price has gone up. So now I only buy one.
Small but important ways.
From tech billionaires to the bond market to, yeah, banana pudding.
If it's happening in business, our new podcast is on it.
I'm Max Chastain.
And I'm Stacey Vanek-Smith.
So listen to Everybody's Business on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an iHeart Podcast.