Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - A lot is happening in the Middle East... and nothing at all - with Nadav Eyal

Episode Date: April 22, 2024

Share on Twitter: https://tinyurl.com/3wv3d77z As we try to make sense of the past two weeks, consider this: 1. IDF withdraws from most of the Gaza Strip while it now also appears increasingly likel...y that the IDF will conduct an operation in Rafah. 2. An historic Iranian attack of 300 ballistic missiles, UAVs and cruise missiles, and an historic coalition force that includes Israel, the US, UK, France, Saudi Arabia and Jordan that shot down almost all of the projectiles. 3. A week later, Israel attacks Iran. 4. A widely backed U.N. security council resolution recognizing a Palestinian state, which the US vetoed. So a lot is happening, but is Israel closer to achieving the war's objectives? To help us understand what’s going on, our guest today is NADAV EYAL, who returns to the podcast. He is a columnist for Yediot. Eyal has been covering Middle-Eastern and international politics for the last two decades for Israeli radio, print and television news.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 If the Iranians are not deterred, the regional power that they are, with their development of nuclear weapons, then we won't be able to achieve that vision of Saudi-Israeli normalization, because they're going to interrupt this vision. They're going to do anything in their power in order to make sure it's not going to happen. In order to have this kind of normalization agreements and a new vision for Gaza and a pathway to Palestinian statehood, you need to keep the Iranians in check and you need to deter Tehran. And if you're not willing to do both, a positive vision and a strong deterrence, you're in the wrong region. It is four o'clock on Sunday, April 21st here in New York City. It is 11 p.m. on Sunday,
Starting point is 00:00:55 April 21st in Israel, as we all get ready for the Pesach Passover holiday. We've reached an ambiguous stage in this war where we are seeing major developments occur both in Israel, in Gaza, and in the region. And yet, there seems to be a sense of uncertainty in terms of what these developments actually mean and where things are going. As we'll discuss today with our guest, Nadav Ayal, just look at the last couple of weeks where Israel's withdrawn most of its forces from Gaza, and now it appears there's going to be a possible return to Gaza and even an operation in Rafah. I know a number of people I've just heard from anecdotally in the past few hours who've been called back up into service. They had been in Gaza,
Starting point is 00:01:45 then they were out of Gaza and back home, and now they're being called up again. There was an Iranian attack against Israel just one week ago, and then an Israeli response one week later. And there were developments at the UN Security Council with regard to a Palestinian state. So a lot is happening, but then at times it feels that nothing is happening. The question is, is Israel any closer to achieving its war objectives? And how have Israel and Saudi Arabia and other players in the region perhaps changed the environment that Iran is operating in? Nadav Ayel on a lot is happening and nothing at all. This is Call Me Back.
Starting point is 00:02:31 And I'm pleased to welcome back to this podcast from Tel Aviv, Nadav Ayel. Nadav, it's been one week since we last spoke. It was one week ago today that we were having a conversation about Iran's military operation against Israel. And we thought that was the big news. And here we are one week later with what seems like even much bigger news. So we have a lot to talk about. Thanks for being here. Thanks for having me, Dan. So, Nadav, we've reached a peculiar point in the war where, on the one hand, we are seeing major events, if not historic events, unfold in a matter of weeks. So I just want to
Starting point is 00:03:11 just look at the last couple of weeks we've had. IDF withdraws most of its ground forces from Gaza, an historic Iranian attack of 300 ballistic missiles, UAVs, and cruise missiles, and a historic coalition force that included not only Israel and the United States and the UK and France, but also most notably Saudi Arabia and Jordan, that shot down almost all of those projectiles. Then we had a week later Israel attacking Iran. And lastly, we had in recent days, a widely backed UN Security Council resolution recognizing a Palestinian state, which the U.S. vetoed. So a lot is happening. And at the same time, it does feel like we're in a little bit of a holding
Starting point is 00:03:51 pattern, like nothing's happening. And it's not clear to me, depending on who I speak to, how much closer Israel is to achieving its overall war objectives, defeating Hamas, getting the hostages back, and pushing Hezbollah back to the Latani line, past the Latani River up north. I'm not saying that last one has always been part of the overall set of military objectives, and yet it is obviously increasingly important and on everyone's mind. So what is going on with Iran? And then I want to get a sense for you how you explain the gulf between these dramatic events, and then just this overall sense of stagnation. So let's begin with Iran, because I think it's an interesting story about two miscalculations.
Starting point is 00:04:31 And the first miscalculation was made by Israel. Israel decided to assassinate that general in Damascus, that Iranian general, who was the leader of the Al-Quds force in the region. And the reason it was a miscalculation is because the Israeli intelligence did not foresee the Iranian reaction to that assassination. So when Israeli decision makers, when the war cabinet authorized this hit, they didn't think it's going to lead to anything different than the sort of responses that we've seen from Iran before, which was basically threatening to do something that not doing it or sending their proxies, i.e. Hezbollah
Starting point is 00:05:14 or the Houthis or the militias in Iraq to shoot some drones at Israel, but nothing that would lead you to believe that Iran will go to a full frontal assault against Israel, again, shooting these 300 flying objects of sorts against Israel in one of the widest, you know, aerial assaults in modern history, actually. And the Israeli intelligence was wrong. And as I wrote, it was wrong again. Both on October 7th, they didn't understand the intentions of the other side. And now they didn't understand the intentions of the other side. Now, understanding intentions is really hard. It's very difficult to foresee the future. And nobody says, you know, it's not an applied science. But the fact that they didn't bring this to the decision makers as, you know, an intermediate possibility that the
Starting point is 00:06:05 Iranians will respond themselves, that is really a big mistake of the Israeli intelligence. And if you take this into account, together with the fact that Israel is trying to prevent a regional war, and Yehoshua, the leader of Hamas, wants Iran to be involved in this war. And this was his plan to begin with. If you're assuming this, computing this, this is even a bigger mistake. Because no way, and this I am not saying as an assessment, I'm saying this after speaking with Israeli decision makers, and by the way, also with Israeli officers, if Israel would have known that this hit in Damascus will lead the area
Starting point is 00:06:48 to the brink of a regional war, this hit would have never happened. Now, I'm not saying that some good things didn't come out of it, and I'm not going to talk about these good things, but basically it was a miscalculation by Israel, And it's the Israeli press that dealt with it extensively. And then I saw a story in the New York Times a few days ago. And it's a big issue. But in fairness, Nadav, and I'm hearing versions of the same thing, that it was a miscalculation,
Starting point is 00:07:17 including people who are very involved with decision-making in the government. But it's an understandable miscalculation in that October 7th is not an understandable miscalculation in that October 7th is not an understandable miscalculation, you know, based on some of the folks I'm talking to who are very involved in decision-making, whereas this one they feel like is an understandable miscalculation because there's nothing in Iranian behavior to have pointed to the possibility that they would respond the way they did. There has been a clear pattern to how they've responded,
Starting point is 00:07:46 including how they responded when the U.S., with Israeli help, it sounds like, took out Qasem Soleimani a number of years ago. There's been a pattern to how they've responded. This was outside that pattern. Well, actually, with Qasem Soleimani, they attacked publicly American bases in Iraq. It was done by Iran itself.
Starting point is 00:08:04 Iran took responsibility at the beginning, the Pentagon tried to play down the number of American soldiers hit by that. Some of them sustained, if I remember correctly, brain injuries because of the ballistic missiles. And by the way, it was one of the largest ballistic missiles attack against the American army ever. And that was Qassam Soleimani. And secondly, Dan, you're right. It's very difficult to judge from previous patterns as to the future. It's always the challenge of intelligence, right? But it's the same with Hamas. You know, Hamas has never attacked Israel before in a sort of a frontal massive attack, an invasion of Israel. That's your challenge. And to have this on midday in Damascus, and one of the things that started happening,
Starting point is 00:08:52 and I wrote about that, it's part of my story, is when I talked with my sources, they said that the Mossad authorized the hit. So this hit was organized, initiated by the IDF and by the intelligence branch of the IDF. But the Mossad knew about killing this general. And they said, you know, fine. They didn't foresee that Iran will respond any way different than the intelligence. But they didn't know, or at least they claim not to know, that it would be done in a building just adjacent to the Iranian embassy in Damascus, A, and B, it would be done midday in terms of humiliation
Starting point is 00:09:32 and saving face that doesn't allow a lot of, you know, maneuvering for Tehran. So the fact that sources would even tell me that the Mossad is saying, oh, we knew that there's going to be an assassination and we signed it off. We were fine with it, but we didn't know the location and we didn't know the time in the day. That actually hints to, you know, people accusing each other for responsibility. So this is the first miscalculation. It was made by Israel. I should stress, responsibility lies with the decision makers, with Netanyahu, with Gallant, with the ministers in the Israeli government. The intelligence branch can make a lot of offers and
Starting point is 00:10:17 suggestions, and that's the job of the army. And then the government should be, you know, the responsible people saying, we need to you know the responsible people saying we need to look at the entire region we need to look at diplomacy we need to look at our relations with united states that wasn't updated much before the hit and got furious the white house got furious with this because they understood immediately that this could change things, although they also did not estimate, including after the attack, that the Iranians are going to respond the way that they did. That's also interesting because the intelligence branch in the IDF and the US intelligence, both after the assassination in Damascus, thought that the Iranians are just, again,
Starting point is 00:11:03 making empty threats. So I'm saying this is a major miscalculation, and this is a detour from the aims of the Israeli in this war, which are getting the hostages back, having a regime change in Gaza, hitting Hamas, getting our civilians back to the north, making sure that Hezbollah is not on our borders, and so forth and so forth. And the second miscalculation was actually done by Iran. The Iranians thought that by responding, they'll create a deterrence. They thought that they have some sort of an international understanding to the right of a national set of defense. And I think they estimated that they can hit Israel in a way that would make clear that it cannot hit any Iranian IRGC officials anymore.
Starting point is 00:11:55 Well, I think that what was exposed, that Israel can defend itself in ways that we have never imagined before. A. B, and that's much, much more severe for the Iranian regime, it's the international community that sort of woke up and said, my God, you know, this regime in Tehran, they're really crazy. They just ordered an act of war against Israel for an assassination in Damascus that Israel never took credit for, never acknowledged. It's an assassination. You know, Israel didn't decide to bomb buildings in Tehran. It bombed a building in Damascus in which an Iranian general was sitting and planning how to attack Israel from Lebanon. That was what he was doing when he was there.
Starting point is 00:12:43 That's the reason that Iran is so involved across the region. It's because of military actions against Israel. It's not the reason they're involved, but this is one of their main factions. So for them to break into a full frontal attack the way that they did, that risks the entire region and might lead us to a regional war, that really tells you something about the Iranian government. Now, you, Dan, don't need to be told this, right? And I think most Israelis don't need to, because Hamas is funded partly by Iran. Hezbollah is very much funded by Iran. The Houthis are directed by Iran. So everybody in the region, including my friends in Arab nations
Starting point is 00:13:24 in the region, whether it's Egypt, Jordan, the Emirates, everybody knows, Palestinians, everybody knows what Iran is being doing. But somehow for Paris and London and Berlin and Washington, D.C., this was a wake-up call. And you could actually sense how the tide was shifting and changing because of this attack by Iran. And I think that the U.S. administration might not have managed to pull through the aid to Ukraine, Taiwan, Israel, and by the way, the Palestinian Authority, without this attack by Iran. And to an extent, it even managed to consolidate the regional alliance against the Iranians and to show that even Jordan, that is the weakest link here in that alliance, even then are very much resolute to stop the Iranians. development. I mentioned to you when we spoke last, I had just been with a friend who had just returned from Jordan, who's very close to the leadership in Jordan. And he was describing to me how toxic relations were between King Abdullah and the Israeli government. And that while they
Starting point is 00:14:34 weren't contemplating exiting the peace agreement between Jordan and Israel that was negotiated in the 1990s, the fact that they even talked in those terms showed you how bad things were. And yet here, Jordan played an important, if not the most important role in this defense of Israel. And then obviously the Saudis played a very important role. And there may have been others who played a role that just aren't talking about it. But yes, the Europeans got mobilized. And then these Arab allies, where we had thought that these countries, they were mounting pressure on Israel because of what's happening in Gaza. And in fact, the moment it came to defending Israel
Starting point is 00:15:08 against Iran, they were shoulder to shoulder with Israel. Yeah, and I think that this to an extent is so important for the future and for the vision the Biden administration still has. And I, as an Israeli, hope that will actually come into reality of normalization with Saudi Arabia and an alliance of moderate countries around the region, together with Israel, standing against the Iranian threat. Nadav, there aren't a lot of details about what happened in this military operation. The details I have heard are, one, that Israel was very innovative in terms
Starting point is 00:15:44 of how it conducted the operation with these gliders and other capabilities that eluded Iranian radar and defense capabilities, A. B, that Israel managed the diplomacy of this quite well internationally. The U.S. was not, from what I understand, upset about the way, while it was cautioning Israel against responding, take the win to quote Biden, the way, while it was cautioning Israel against responding, take the wind to quote Biden, the way Israel conducted this operation, it was done in such a way that Israel didn't take credit. Iran didn't acknowledge it. The U.S. claimed it knew nothing about it. So it sent a message, but stayed below the threshold of triggering an escalation, potentially, from Iran, an escalation response. And lastly, it used something like 10%
Starting point is 00:16:27 of the capabilities that Iran used in its operation against Israel over a week ago. In other words, Israel basically said, we're not even using that much of our stuff. And the stuff we have is pretty damn effective and innovative. And we're not taking out your nuclear facilities or trying to, but we're telling you we can get darn close, including taking out the defense capabilities and eluding the defense capabilities around your nuclear capabilities. So it sent a very strong message. I've now told you the sum total of what I've heard.
Starting point is 00:16:56 Tell me what we got right, what I got right, what I got wrong. Well, it's about right. It's about right. It was about penetration. It's about showing the Iranians that there is a cost for their attack on Israel. It's showing operational ability to hit the Iranians' nuclear sites. And it's sending a message both to Iran, the international community, and mainly the Middle East. Now, will this deter Iran from acting again against Israel if Israel assassinates an Iranian general involved with terror activities in Damascus? We don't know. But I think that Israel wants to leverage the Iranian attack and also its response in order to say to the international community, look, you either wake up now or you're going to get another North Korea. But Iran is no North Korea.
Starting point is 00:17:50 Iran is much more powerful. It has allies in the region. It has an ideology that is spreading. And because of that, you will not be able to contain it the way that you have, to an extent, contained North Korea. Of course, the international community in the West just don't want to tackle this. And that's true for the Biden administration, as it was to an extent true to the Trump administration, as it's true to London, Paris, Berlin, Madrid, you name it.
Starting point is 00:18:20 Nobody wants to really tackle the Iranians. And Israel, at this this moment cannot do it alone. It might have wanted to do it alone, you know, a few years back. But today, immersed in this war, with the casualties that it has had, with the aims of the war still not fulfilled completely, it's not going to tackle Iran alone. And because of that, the Iranians are becoming more emboldened. They have showed that in this attack, and we should keep our eyes on the board here. Iran would have never initiated this attack a year ago, even in a response to an assassination in Damascus. They have done so because they think that Israel is weaker than it was, because the
Starting point is 00:19:04 Israeli deterrent is weaker and because they think that the international community and first and foremost, the U.S. will not stand by Israel as they did before. That's the reason they did that. And if we don't acknowledge that, we cannot start fixing this incredibly dangerous situation in the Middle East. If the Iranians are not deterred, the regional power that they are, with their development of nuclear facilities and maybe nuclear weapons, then we won't be able to achieve that vision of Saudi-Israeli normalization, because they're going to interrupt this vision. They're going to do anything in their power in order to make sure
Starting point is 00:19:43 it's not going to happen. In order to have this kind of normalization agreements and a new vision for Gaza and a pathway to Palestinian statehood, you need to keep the Iranians in check and you need to deter Tehran. And if you're not willing to do both, a positive vision and a strong deterrence, you're in the wrong region. The Israelis, the way that they responded to the Iranian attack was very much not the kind of pompous, rhetoric, demagogue kind of far right that we, to an extent, have been accustomed to from the Ben-Gurion smutrich in this government. So, you know, the grown-ups took control of the situation and they decided, A, to hit back, although they were pressured not to do anything.
Starting point is 00:20:36 And I should say that, you know, many countries in the world didn't want Israel to do anything. They wanted to have all this pouring of solidarity with Israelis and saying, it's terrible that Iran attacked you, but you began with the assassination in Damascus. Although, again, it's not the same thing. Israel did not attack Iran. And an assassination is not an attack against the country. And if this guy, this general was there, Madavi, planning attacks against Israel, and Israel still maintains, by the way, that it wasn't a diplomatic building. I didn't see any story even analyzing that kind of response or that kind of argument. So these countries were
Starting point is 00:21:16 pressuring Israel not to respond, and Israel decided to respond with a very targeted and limited strike, taking out a radar station not far from Natanz, from the nuclear facilities of Iran, showing the Iranians, and this is me having commentary about that, showing the Iranians, A, that we can, we will hit you if you hit us, and B, we can penetrate. Israel has the ability to penetrate. It has the ability to penetrate the best radar systems in the world that were supplied to the Iranians by the Russians,
Starting point is 00:21:51 and it can do that. Israel has one of the most powerful air forces in the world, and it's been training for years to hit Iranian nuclear installations, according to foreign sources, I should say. So the Iranians then did what Iran usually does. They denied this. They mocked it. They quoted Itamar Ben-Gur, who will forever be the most irresponsible, ignorant minister that Israel has ever had. In Hebrew, we say, it's nothing. Lame is the word that the way the Israeli press translated it. Yeah. If there's a strategy there for Israel, if Israel does something smart, you can always count on the small Twitch and Ben Gviers to come and try to destroy it completely. And he did try, but he didn't really manage to. I had an interview this week in Sky News, and I said Israel wants to
Starting point is 00:22:42 close this story. Israel doesn't want a regional war and the government isn't assuming responsibility for this event they're not talking about this event and then the host did her job and she said yeah but you have a minister that just said you know it's a minor event and by that he actually assumed responsibility and also said that it wasn't important and I said you know that's the far right like the worst of all world know, that's the far right. It's like the worst of all worlds. Yes, exactly. That's the far right for you, right? I'm not going to defend, you know, the Ben-Gurion in this world, or Kahana disciples, for that matter, anywhere, not only Ben-Gurion. Also, not to mention, there's nothing the foreign media loves to do more than find quotes by Ben-Gurion Smoltrich and make every Israeli own those quotes. And when I try
Starting point is 00:23:26 to remind people that Ben-Gvir and Smoltrich are not in the war cabinet, they're not at the decision-making table for these decisions. They are a fringe, an influential fringe, but they are a fringe, but they're not in the decision-making where the decision-making matters. It's like holding Biden accountable for statements by you know, members of the progressive squad in the US. I made that explanation on Sky News, including saying it's like the larger cabinet in the UK, you know, you have ministers that are, it's not exactly the case, I have to say, because Netanyahu did give him the position of, you know, interior defense or interstitial. I get it. I'm just saying when it comes to these decisions, though, it's just, you know, interior defense or interstitial. I get it. I'm just saying when it
Starting point is 00:24:06 comes to these decisions, though, it's just, you know, when it comes to major decisions. It's true that he knew nothing. He didn't know that there's going to be a response. He wasn't involved in discussions. So to sum up this issue, I think that Iran had an opportunity here to use the Israeli miscalculation. And I'm not sure they used it well, but the jury's still out on this, and the reason is as follows. If Israel next time has an Iranian general from the IRGC, Quds Force,
Starting point is 00:24:38 that it really wants to hit, and he's in Damascus, and it's not going to hit him, then Iran achieved deterrence. And if it's going to hit him again, Iran didn't reach deterrence. So we'll know next time. But this entire detour of sorts, maybe at the end, was very positive, not only for Israel, but for the world's security and for the West. Because it convinced politicians in D.C. to do the right thing and to help not only Israel, but also Ukraine and Taiwan to stand against those dictatorships, and in our
Starting point is 00:25:14 case, a genocidal organization also supported by Russia and by Iran, in a mission to defend nothing less than Western civilization. So if this is what the Iranians have done, good job, as far as we are concerned, even though it began with a massive miscalculation and mistake, an embarrassing mistake by the Israeli intelligence. I have said repeatedly on this podcast since October 7th, that if there was a shot at the continued expansion of the Abraham Accords and normalization with Saudi Arabia, which is ultimately where everyone needs to be focused on, it is important that Israel needs to win. Now, when I was focusing on winning, I was focusing
Starting point is 00:25:58 on winning, making it clear that it had decisively defeated Hamas. In retrospect, I should have amended it to say that it also needs to in some way demonstrate its superiority over Iran. I didn't obviously anticipate the string of events that you just laid out. But my sense back pre-October 7th, based on numerous conversations I've had with Saudi leaders over the years, including some of the most senior Saudi leaders, the reason they were betting on Israel, the reason they wanted to normalize with Israel, was not because they saw Israel as a charity case. It's not because they thought they want to take care of Israel. As you said in the last week, which I thought was the best line,
Starting point is 00:26:38 which I then used after I was giving a speech at an event in Detroit at the Farber School, a charity event in the school. I used your line. I quoted you, though, that the Saudis were supporting Israel not out of love of Mordechai, but out of fear of Haman, which is fantastic. It was very good also because I was speaking at an Orthodox Jewish day school, so it was particularly relevant to them. But it was a very important point that they feared Saudis and Israel had shared threats, Sunni Muslim extremism in the form of Muslim Brotherhood in Saudi in the form of Hamas for Israel, and then Iran. And one of the reasons that Saudi was betting on Israel
Starting point is 00:27:15 was because Israel was a source of strength, military strength, intelligence, it was an intelligence juggernaut, so it thought. And then obviously it was a regional, Israel was a regional economic superpower and was a global technology and cyber superpower. And Saudi wanted a part of that strength. Israel had momentum. Israel was viewed as a winning nation, not just startup nation, winning nation. And Saudi wanted to piggyback onto that. I feared one of the great setbacks of October 7th, among others, was suddenly that whole image was shattered. Now, Israeli society wasn't just hit hard,
Starting point is 00:27:49 but that image of Israel as this juggernaut was shattered and that Israel needed to reestablish that perception. And you can only reestablish that perception based on facts. And what we saw in Israel's response a few days ago was that. It was like, we, Israel, have capabilities that people don't even know about us. Watch us. And I think for the Israeli-Saudi relationship, that was extremely important. Yeah, I totally agree.
Starting point is 00:28:18 But now, after we said that, the question is quite clearly, is Israel going to win this war? And by winning the war, we know what we're talking about, right? We need to get the hostages back. We need to have a different regime in the Gaza Strip and Hamas out of power in the Gaza Strip to an extent. We need to get our Israeli civilians back in the north. We need Hezbollah deterred. And if we can have normalization with Saudi Arabia, it's not only that we won the north. We need Hezbollah deterred. And if we can have normalization with Saudi Arabia, it's not only that we won the war. As I said on this show in a conversation with you, Dan, we might have won the conflict. Now, right now, we're stuck. As you began our conversation today, Israel is stuck and the war is stuck. Most of the Israeli IDF forces have left the Gaza Strip.
Starting point is 00:29:05 We have basically allowed Yirgir Sinwar some of the bargaining chips, for instance, humanitarian assistance. One of the elements that was discussed in negotiations for the hostage release was that Sinwar and Hamas were demanding 500 trucks per day entering the Gaza Strip of humanitarian assistance and food. Now they're getting this for free, so to speak, because Israel had to budge with international pressure, because frankly, there was a risk of famine in the center and northern Gaza Strip. So the Israelis needed to do that.
Starting point is 00:29:47 So something that was a bargaining chip disappeared. Another something of that sort was, of course, the Israeli presence in Hanunis. Israel was in Hanunis. Hanunis is where Yechir Sinwar came from. It's a major city in the Gaza Strip, a major stronghold of Hamas. Israel left Hanunis. The idea of left Chaniunis, this was one of the things that stressed out Ichyos Sinwar, because he was probably hiding somewhere between Chaniunis and Rafah. We know that. And again, this is something that Israel
Starting point is 00:30:17 has basically seceded without getting anything in return, because of operational reasons. Now, we don't have a different regime building up in the Gaza Strip in areas that were already taken care of by the IDF. So the IDF and Israel sacrificed the lives of hundreds of soldiers in order to take places like Gaza City or Bet Hanun or Jabalia, and I can name these places, some of these places I've been in. And it has not imposed any different rule there, either an Israeli rule or getting Fatah and the PA back, because the prime minister will not consider either of these options. And the result, because the overpowering force of regime in the Gaza Strip is Hamas,
Starting point is 00:31:04 and because it's very popular with Palestinians, unfortunately, that means that if the IDF leaves, Hamas just comes back in. And to be clear, Nadav, because I say this to people here in the US all the time, and they're stunned by this. Hamas is still the most popular political force in Gaza and the West Bank too. We're not focused on the West Bank right now, but Hamas is still today, despite all the destruction that they have brought to Gaza and the way they have governed Gaza, Hamas is still the most popular political force in Gaza. Well, it's very difficult to measure a public opinion in Gaza, considering that there's a war there and considering that Hamas is a dictatorship. But if you look at the polls
Starting point is 00:31:45 made by Dr. Shkaki, considered the most reliable pollster Palestinian society, you see that Hamas lost a lot of its power in Gaza. It's now more popular in the West Bank, where the Palestinian authority of the Fatah is in control. But it's still popular enough in Gaza to have them maintain some sort of control there. Now, in terms of releasing the hostages, the deal is dead. And why shouldn't it be dead as far as Sinoir was concerned? When he started negotiating, he saw a very united Israeli society saying, we're going to defeat you. It's not united anymore.
Starting point is 00:32:19 We're having demonstrations basically every night. He saw the U.S. standing by Israel. The U.S. isn't really standing by Israel and by this war. Many things are wrong in the relations between the U.S. and Israel, what he didn't see before, the beginning he saw. He saw that Iran is not joining this fight, and now he just saw Iran trying to join the war to an extent. So he didn't see any aid and assistance going into the Gaza Strip.
Starting point is 00:32:44 He's seeing aid and assistance going through the Gaza Strip. He's seeing aid and assistance going through the Gaza Strip. He saw the IDF in Hanunas. He's not seeing the IDF in Hanunas. I could go on. He's also launching rockets again. So there are areas that the IDF took by force, sacrificing the lives of the best and brightest in this country. Then it seceded these areas
Starting point is 00:33:01 because Israel never wanted to maintain an occupation regime there because Netanyahu didn't want it and also the Americans didn't want it and now they're shooting rockets again from these areas to the southern parts of Israel we had this was the third night last night of sirens in the same places like Sderot and other places that were hit by the, you know, northern Gaza. So we're seeing these things happening again. You know, nobody is saying, look, it's obvious that Hamas doesn't want a deal. These people are agents of Iran to an extent, proxies of Iran to an extent. What they want is this area to sink in a bloodbath that will destroy everyone that is moderate or just want any sort of normal life here. And they're fundamentalists. Nobody's saying these things as, for instance, John Kirby said,
Starting point is 00:33:52 you know, this kind of talk at the beginning of the war. And Israel is basically very much stuck and not doing anything in order to replace Hamas in Gaza, which is the name of the war. And everything is related to Prime Minister Netanyahu not willing to make that leap that is so fundamental when you run a war. You know, von Clausewitz, you know, war is something that you do in order to achieve political aims, right? What are your political aims? And the prime minister will not say, will not utter the words, pathway to a Palestinian statehood, the Saudis want, you know, the U.S. needs. He will not allow Fatah or the Palestinian Authority to return to the Gaza Strip, although there are specific plans made by his own defense apparatus, his own defense minister that he doesn't talk
Starting point is 00:34:46 much with, Yoav Gannat, I published these plans, and he's not willing to move. And, you know, you cannot run a war and you cannot win a war by not doing many, many things at once. So if you look at leaders at war, you read what Roosevelt has been doing and what Churchill was doing and what David Ben-Gurion was doing. They were doing loads of stuff. And, you know, Netanyahu is not like that. Netanyahu is a great speaker, but you need to do so much in terms of diplomacy. There are so much missed opportunities. And I think it's terribly unfortunate that we are at this point. And I
Starting point is 00:35:26 think it's really leading us, you know, that Lieberman in Israel, Avigdor Lieberman, who's a leader of a rightist party that is very much against Netanyahu, has been very much against Netanyahu in the last six years or so. So Lieberman is saying that Netanyahu already decided to side with the American strategic plan in the region, and he's going to go for the Saudi option. And he's going to say Palestinian state. And he's just going to change what he thinks. And he's going to shift. And that means that Smotrich and Ben-Gurion will leave his coalition.
Starting point is 00:35:58 He'll become an enemy for parts of the right, but he'll be supported by the Israeli center. I don't know if it's true. You know, Liberman is a political person and he says all kinds of things. Sometimes they materialize, sometimes they don't. And he has a vested interest in saying that. But I have to say that if Netanyahu indeed plans on doing that, it's a very logical, it's the rational thing to do because he doesn't present to us
Starting point is 00:36:25 any different plan what's his plan? you know we left Bet Hanun it's the northern side of the Gaza Strip we left Gaza City we left these places what is your plan
Starting point is 00:36:37 as the primeness of Israel who has ordered the idea to go and occupy and take effective control and disintegrate those Hamas regiments. What's your plan for these areas? What's your plan for the Palestinians and the Gaza Strip? What are you after?
Starting point is 00:36:51 And how is this war going to stop in a way that Hezbollah stops their own assault on Israel that began on October 8 and is just destroying our northern border? People do not understand this, that 80,000 Israelis from the north, our entire north is abandoned. You can see the Sukkot there from Simchat Torah from the previous holiday in Israel. It's a terrible thing. It has never happened in the history of Zionism that we have left an entire area on our borders, and this has become a security zone. It's like, you know, Israel once had a security zone within Lebanon. Now Hezbollah has a security zone within Israel, and it's shooting rockets and anti-tank missiles and suicide drones. I have a friend that his son
Starting point is 00:37:42 was there in Arabella Ramsha when the drone was shot there, you know, hitting a group of soldiers within Israel. And what's the Israeli government's plan for that? And the answer is you either need to defeat Hezbollah. That means going into war. That's a big thing, right? It's going to be a different war. It's going to be much worse because Hezbollah can hit every city basically in Israel. It has a GPS targeted missiles. You know, that's going to be much worse because Hezbollah can hit every city basically in Israel. It has a
Starting point is 00:38:05 GPS targeted missiles. You know, that's a different story. Or you get some sort of solution in the Gaza Strip or an end to the war. And one of the things that you hear these arguments today in Israel, Dan, people are saying, look, if you're not going to achieve the other goals of the war and you don't have anyone to replace Hamas with, so get the hostages back. Because Hamas wants Israel to stop the war and leave Gaza, and then they're willing, for their own prisoners, their own convicted murderers, to release our hostages. So many people in Israel are saying, you're not winning this war anyway. You don't seem to have, you know, the direct intention to overcome them, to replace them. So you're actually just slowly pacing to stopping the war. And at the end, what will happen, and that's a major fear, is that you'll
Starting point is 00:38:56 stop the war. There's no front today in the Gaza Strip, and you're not going to get the hostages back, too. And that's going to maim the Israeli society for dozens of years, the breakdown of solidarity. So you see the demonstrations of the families. The hostage families are basically saying, get them back now. Do more. Ilana Dayanin-Uvda published last week recordings. These are not arguments, recordings of people within the negotiation team of Israel saying that the prime minister has slowed down the negotiations in purpose, including getting all kinds of Hamas needs to prove how many Israelis are alive before we continue the negotiations. They said, professionally speaking, these are not political people. These are officers that spoke with her, right?
Starting point is 00:39:46 They said, we never had this condition before. And he put that condition in so he can stop the negotiations. Now, look, I place the responsibility with Sinois, okay? I'm not fooling myself. I don't think it's on Netanyahu completely. But I can tell you that the people leading these negotiations are simply not sure that Netanyahu wants a deal. But you've said before on this podcast, there is a world in which some parties within the leadership are trying to convey that they're not desperate to do a deal because it serves the negotiations for Sinoir not to think that Israel is desperate to do a deal. It could be a negotiating tactic.
Starting point is 00:40:22 We just don't know. But I do want to ask you, where do you think the hostage negotiations are right now? Well, first of all, the good news is that the American administration suddenly saw the light and they understand that they need to pressure Hamas and that the bad guys are Hamas. Well, it was really relieving for me as an Israeli to hear from Secretary Blinken actually saying, you know, that Israel wants a deal, they made the offer. But then this doesn't come without a cost. Look, guys, you have pressured Israel to make these concessions. And now these concessions are a benchmark for any future negotiation. And the fact that you pressured Israel the way that
Starting point is 00:41:02 you did pressure Israel to get to a deal and said there is no other option. We talked about that at the time after I interviewed the American ambassador who told me there is no other option. So the fact that you did that, that gave so much leverage to Hamas. So now you understand the way that these people negotiate. What did you think? And I'll tell you what they thought. They believed what the Qataris told them, saying, the deal is going to happen next week. The deal is going to happen now. There's no problem. It's going to be just great. And the Egyptians have been much more realistic.
Starting point is 00:41:35 They know what Hamas is about. And also, they have not been funding money to Hamas, as Qatar has been doing. They've not been supportive of some of the Hamas aims, as Qatar has been doing. So the fact that the Americans understood that they need to apply some pressure to Hamas, that's the good news. But that's the only good news here. Because Hamas has been very resolute after the first deal, that they're not going to agree to any other deal until the war ends and Israel, the IDF, leaves the Gaza Strip. No corridor, no restrictions on population coming back from the south to the
Starting point is 00:42:13 north, nothing unless Israel leaves the Gaza Strip and actually says, we failed the war, and allows Hamas to continue existing at the Gaza Strip. Now, there are two set of ideas here. The first one is saying, yeah, but they changed their mind. And now they're willing to have some sort of a deal. And you need to push through. I'll give you an example. Israel, politically speaking, domestically, the Israeli government has huge problems when releasing those convicted murderers and Palestinian prisoners.
Starting point is 00:42:46 And right now we're standing on about a thousand Palestinian prisoners, out of which hundreds have blood on their hands. That means that they're convicted murderers. But let's say Israelis would have suggested that they release 4,000 and not 1,000. Could this push through a deal? Or is this going to become another benchmark that you can never withdraw from in dealing with this? So is it because the Israelis have not been imaginative, pushy, they're not serious enough? Or is it because Hamas is just playing with Qatar
Starting point is 00:43:18 and Egypt and the United States, giving them the impression that they might agree to a deal, although they're not willing to agree to a deal at all. They just want Israel to surrender, and they're not going to release any hostages anyhow, because why should they? To begin with, they know that the Israeli society, as we go along, that's what happened with Gilad Shalit, the hostage soldier that they held before for years. As time goes by, the Israelis will be able to be willing to pay more for their hostages than now. And without the hostages, what does prevent Israel and the IDF from destroying Hamas, occupying the Gaza Strip, and finishing this?
Starting point is 00:44:01 So some would say it would be simply impossible for Hamas to agree, and all they've been doing is playing for time. And this goes into the aims of the war. Israel said, release the hostages and overcome and defeat Hamas. Could you do both at the same time? So some would say, yeah, so Israel would have needed to release the hostages, pay a huge price for that, then defeat Hamas. But it didn't do so, right? It wanted to do both things at once. And it's very difficult. We are at a very difficult place, strategically speaking, in trying to run this.
Starting point is 00:44:39 But mainly, to quote one cabinet member that you know, and you know to be a very reliable person and very mainstream. The main problem of the Israelis right now is that they're not making decisions. It's not the U.S. decisions, it's not the White House, it's not Saudi Arabia or Hamas. In a war, you need to make defining decisions. I'll give you an example of a defining decision. The last defining decision that Israel made was to keep the corridor in the center of the Gaza Strip, a corridor of Israeli control that will prevent the population from returning back, and the terrorists, many of the terrorists, returning back to Gaza and the north. Another defining decision was to stop the war for a few weeks and get about 100
Starting point is 00:45:27 hostages back. That was a defining moment in the war. And then that minister asks me, look, what's the last defining decision that we made? We're not taking decisions. And if you're not making these decisions, someone else or reality is making the decisions for you. Now, we have here a vision of the United States. I don't know if it's reliable. And actually, I'll be happy to hear what you think about that. Of a new Middle East with the Saudis, with the pathway to Palestinian statehood, with the PA taking control of the Gaza Strip. You know, if we don't have anything else, we should accept that. That's what many people are saying. I think that's what Benny Gantz is thinking, what Eisenhower is thinking. Many people in Israel are thinking
Starting point is 00:46:08 right now. But I'm asking you, Dan, do you think it's a reliable vision? Do you think that the Biden administration can actually supply the goods? Can it get a Saudi deal beyond Congress and Senate? Can it really happen? So the answer is yes. I think there is a deal to be done between Israel and Saudi, the normalization deal. It'll be a a deal to be done between Israel and Saudi, the normalization deal. It'll be a three-way deal between Saudi, the U.S., and Israel, because there's a lot that Saudi wants from the U.S. in the context of the deal that Israel can't provide, not the least of which is a formal defense pact with the United States, and a lot which that may entail in terms of various security guarantees, arms sales, potentially some kind of nuclear capability, although that remains highly speculative. But to have a formal defense pact between Israel and
Starting point is 00:46:53 Saudi would require Senate ratification. And Senate ratification requires two-thirds of the vote in the United States Senate, which you cannot get without a bipartisan vote. And there are many Democrats who would not want to vote for a deal that provides all sorts of new capabilities and weapons, not to mention defense pact to Saudi Arabia, because many Senate Democrats still loathe Mohammed bin Salman. And so they do not want to give what they would perceive as a gift to Saudi. And oh, by the way, many of these Senate Democrats are in the business right now of making the case for conditional arms assistance to Israel. So the last thing they want to do is do some big deal that rewards Israel and rewards this Israeli government. Unless it's President Biden who's asking for it.
Starting point is 00:47:41 President Biden in an election year, just 200 days, a little under 200 days from election day, and the clock keeps ticking. Unless President Biden says, I need this, I need a foreign policy win. And I'm looking at you Senate Democrats, and I need you to have my back. And if you get enough of them to vote yes, and assume you get most Republicans. Now, there are some Republicans who may be uncomfortable with it, too. I think we tend to focus on the Democrats and not the Republicans. I think most Senate Republicans will be for it. You listen to Lindsey Graham,
Starting point is 00:48:10 who I've talked extensively about this, who's one of the architects of this, who's working in the Senate on it. And he's working closely hand in hand with the Biden administration. On the one hand, he's a fierce critic of the Biden administration. On the other hand, I've been with him
Starting point is 00:48:22 where he's taking calls from Jake Sullivan at the National Security Advisor while Lindsey's traveling to the Middle East. administration. On the other hand, I've been with him where he's taking calls from Jake Sullivan at the National Security Advisor while Lindsey's traveling to the Middle East. I had breakfast with Lindsey, Senator Graham, last spring when he had been traveling from Saudi to Israel after he just spent a lot of time with MBS. So he's in the middle of all of this. It is true that there are some Senate Republicans who will be uncomfortable with it because they think, well, why should we do this deal now? Why should we give President Biden this win? Shouldn't we wait till there's a Trump administration? Couldn't we even get a better deal with the Trump administration? And then there are other Senate Republicans who are in the
Starting point is 00:48:56 more isolationist camp, and they're looking to just generally withdraw their commitments from the Middle East, not to increase their commitments to the Middle East. So they're like, whoa, why are we doing anything that involves the U.S. stepping up its presence in the Middle East with Israel or Saudi? Don't we want to be taking a step back, you know, directionally? All that said, I think most Senate Republicans will be on board with it. And I think if President Biden and Lindsey Graham are pushing this together, with President Biden being the key figure in this regard, you'll get enough Senate Democrats, which is why there's a sense that now is the time.
Starting point is 00:49:30 Okay, if Prime Minister Netanyahu goes for it, and right now it seems like, you know, if he needed to chart a way in which it would leave him no other place to go, he did chart this, politically speaking. He's simply not having any other option there. If he wants this, that's a big way to go for him. And he's probably going to change his situation in the polls. And if I need to guess, this can, to an extent, save his political career,
Starting point is 00:50:00 if he goes for this. I just don't know if he has the guts and the political will to declare again a few months after October 7th, anything that has anything to do with path to Palestinian statehood. I would just say, Nadev, I think on the Saudi front, my sense is talking to people who are closely with the Saudis and then even talking to some people in Saudi. Obviously, the Palestinian path to self-determination needs to be part of some kind of deal here, but I'm not sure how concrete the path needs to be for the Saudis. In other words, this is not an actual core issue for the Saudis. They're much more interested in Israeli normalization
Starting point is 00:50:40 than they are in Palestinian self-determination. A, it's just a lower priority for the Saudis. And B, they recognize the Palestinians are just always complicating and complicating issues for other countries in the region. So, you know, strengthening the Palestinian cause is not exactly what they think is the antidote to the region's problems. That said, they want to do something in the context of an overall normalization deal because they know they need to do something. But that doesn't mean it's a core issue, which makes me think the details of a path do not need to be crystal clear in terms of where they're actually going. state minus, obviously, Palestinian security forces, minus Palestinian control of airspace over whatever a future quasi-state would be, minus an airport, you know, minus responsibility
Starting point is 00:51:33 for security on their respective borders. I mean, there could be a very watered-down version of statehood in terms of how we think of statehood conventionally. I want to just stay on this one point on the hostage negotiations. On the one hand, you're saying the U.S. is saying to Hamas, look, look at all the pressure we've put on Israel in the lead up to a deal. We've effectively gotten Israel out of Gaza before a deal is even done. And Israel is saying, okay, so we've done these things.
Starting point is 00:52:00 Even though they're not going as far as the administration is asking, you could argue at a practical level, they have gone pretty far. And Israel can say we've left most of the strip, most of the Gaza Strip. There's no military pressure. We used to have military pressure. There's no military pressure. And we're still getting intransigent from Hamas. The reality is Israel got more progress on hostage negotiations when pressure was high. Now Israel is acceding to
Starting point is 00:52:25 the American demands, pulling back. I'm not saying that it's actually in response to American demands, but let's just say how it's perceived. It's cause and effect. Americans were asking for withdrawal from Gaza. Israel has certainly scaled back its presence in Gaza. And Israel says to the U.S., so what do you have to show for that in the hostage negotiations? Nothing. Yeah, I think this was part of the deal between Israel and the U.S., that Israel will advance and compromise and secede some of its demands in the negotiation table, but also in Gaza, and then we'll see what happens. And I think the Americans got the Israelis very scared. That's the truth. I think that conversation between President Biden and between the prime minister after the world central kitchen lethal IDF attack, I think that changed things in Israel. I think Israel was threatened and it succumbed to that pressure to an extent.
Starting point is 00:53:23 But I have to tell you, Dan, that's not the reason we're not in Hanunis. The reason that the IDF is not in Hanunis is because as far as the IDF is concerned and the defense ministry is concerned, they did what they can. The IDF basically said to the government, and they've been saying this since November, look, we know how to overcome a Hamas regiment. We can do that. We have showed you that the IDF can take Gaza. And we have taken Gaza.
Starting point is 00:53:50 And now what? It's also true that we have a tendency in the U.S. to think that unless we are, the U.S. military is in a geography where a theater where the U.S. is operating, unless we're present in the theater, we're not there. And we have no ability to be there within a short period of time because these theaters tend to be far away from the United States, right? It's not like the United States can pull out of Afghanistan and say, but don't worry, we can be back there in a flash. In Israel, Israel can actually withdraw from
Starting point is 00:54:18 places and be back in a flash, right? Because you're talking, you're talking about these places that are like mere kilometers from the border with Israel so it's Israel withdrawing it's not the same as it's not as significant I'm not understating it but I just want to be clear that it's absolutely I think it's such an important remark that you're making because this is exactly what the idea of his saying saying we're not going to be sitting ducks in Hanunas we're not going to have you know small bases there we didn't come to occupy it's small bases there. We didn't come to occupy. It's not Operation Iraqi Freedom. We didn't come to free the Palestinians, by the way. We came to defeat Hamas here. Hamas doesn't exist as an organization, as a military force in Hanunis
Starting point is 00:54:57 right now. It might return. Then we will return. And Israel is continuing to conduct raids within the Gaza Strip to attack aerially every day. So military pressure is not over by any means. You know, if you ask the Palestinians at the Gaza Strip, if you ask the Gaza and Hamas health ministry, they'll tell you, you know, many Palestinians get killed each day. Israel would say most of them are terrorists. Hamas would say, no, most of them are civilians. And it's happening daily. The IDF is saying, why should we be inside these places just waiting for an anti-tank missile to hit our forces when we can basically be above ground, use our air force to see everything that happens, and then come in and come out as we please? And this is something that the IDF achieved for the Israeli
Starting point is 00:55:45 government. They told the Israeli government, you know, in order to get to the Gaza Strip, we will need to do all kinds of things to make sure that we have an access there that will be relatively secure. Now, tell us where you want us to go, and in less than 12 hours, we'll be there and we'll be effective, and we won't be as hit as we could have been hit when you had a Hamas regiment there. To any extent, if you took these areas and you took effective control and you control them and these Hamas regiments are disintegrated and you don't have anything to replace them with, you know, what did you do? What's your strategy and what's your plan? It's not even a strategy. It's very
Starting point is 00:56:25 tactical. What are you going to do right now? And to that matter, I have to say something about the Saudi deal that is going to save everything. It's not going to change Gaza immediately. Even if the Saudis, as part of the deal, are going to say, oh, we're going to just channel, I don't know, $200 billion, which there ain't going to do, to Gaza in order to change the way of society there and rebuild. That's not going to change anything right now. Someone has to take control of Gaza. And that means people with guns and rifles that can take care of Hamas and have a monopoly on violence. And if you don't do that, then you lost the war. And it's very important to acknowledge that even if you have a Saudi deal, this doesn't necessarily solve
Starting point is 00:57:11 the Gaza problem. It's, to an extent, a regional solution. It's a major historical breakthrough. But what does it change momentarily for the people Israelis leaving in the South or for Gazans? I'll tell you what I think. I think you're right. It's not a sufficient, comprehensive solution, but it is a necessary step. And it is a necessary step because Saudi Arabia is the most important country in the Arab Muslim world. It is the most powerful economy. It is the most powerful military.
Starting point is 00:57:42 It has the most geopolitical and diplomatic heft in the world. And it has religious authority, as my experts in the Arab Muslim world point to me, because of Mecca Medina, it has the sort of, I'm really going to butcher this, but indulge me, the sort of stamp of approval. If Saudi says, we Saudi Arabia, we the monarchy recognize Israel's right to exist. We recognize Israel as the Jewish state, a very important point. We recognize Israel as the Jewish state. If Saudi Arabia, given its authority in the Muslim world and in the Arab Muslim world, recognizes Israel's right to exist, recognizes Israel as the Jewish state, It, of course, does not solve the Palestinian problem, but it sends a message to Palestinians
Starting point is 00:58:29 that the tide is turning, that the world is turning, and specifically the most powerful players in their own region are turning. They're gonna send a message that the tide is turning towards normalization with Israel, and the Palestinian cause will no longer have a veto on the path towards normalization with Israel in the Arab Muslim world. It was one thing when it was the Emiratis and the Moroccans and the Bahrainis.
Starting point is 00:58:56 It's a whole other thing when it's Saudi Arabia. And it's a whole other thing when everyone in the region knows that Saudi Arabia is cooperating with Israel and working closely with Israel on security matters, including preventing attacks against Israel one week ago. But it's an entirely new level and a new world we'd be in if it's Saudi Arabia saying publicly a version of Sadat's trip to Israel, to Jerusalem in 1977, Anwar Sadat, when he said, I recognize Israel's right to exist. That was a watershed moment when Anwar Sadat did it. And if I recognize Israel's right to exist. That was a watershed moment when Anwar Sadat did it. And if Saudi Arabia does it, it's an even bigger deal.
Starting point is 00:59:30 And I think it's a bigger deal in terms of sending a message to the Palestinians. I think you're absolutely right, but it still doesn't solve... I get it. There's concrete things to work out. I'm not suggesting. I'm just saying, but it's it. No, but they have no... Saudi Arabia has absolutely no real leverage on the Palestinian society in the Gaza Strip. It's a major blow to fundamentalism across the region. But then you have to materialize that. And we already have a massive blow against fundamentalism in the region. Israel basically occupied most of the Gaza Strip. And the reason that you and I don't feel that the war has been won is because there is absolutely no other force there. Now, this force can be a United Emirates force.
Starting point is 01:00:13 It can be an Egyptian force, or it can be a Palestinian Authority or Fatah force. But someone has to take care of Gaza in order for this war to be over. Now, I, for one, you know, as an Israeli, I would want to see this happening. But no big declaration or peace agreements can move us forward with these tactical problems until we make the decisions ourselves. And to an extent, I think Netanyahu is not making these decisions because he exactly, as you just sort of hinted, he has not made his mind as to the Saudi deal. And also there are questions to be asked here about to the extent I agree what you said, that really the Saudis are not very much interested in Palestinian rights for nationhood. That's not their thing. Right. But they are insistent right now that there will be some sort of recognition. And I sort of wonder, as an Israeli, and these are things that are mentioned within the Israeli arena,
Starting point is 01:01:15 can Israel be sure that it's not only being used by Saudi Arabia to get their nuclear program going, to get that pact with the United States without the Saudis really supplying normalization? Because Saudi Arabia is a very closed society. And it's true that MBS is changing that. And will they really support Israel? Or will they, you know, basically get the candy from the United States, then drop Israel in the near future and not give Israel that push that you're talking about. Now, I don't know. I would go with the Saudi deal anyway, okay? And it's better than where we are at right now. But we have here, you know, very serious, acute problems that need to be solved. We have those dozens of Israelis held by Hamas,
Starting point is 01:02:05 tortured. We have their families blocking roads. We have those dozens of Israelis held by Hamas, tortured. We have their families blocking roads. We have mothers blocking roads of young soldiers, female soldiers that are held by Hamas. This society, the way that it looks right now, is less resilient than it looked on October 10th. And that's not a good message to the region or for the Saudis. And this needs
Starting point is 01:02:26 tackling in way of leadership. I want to ask one final question that relates to what we're talking about, which is earlier in the week, last week, the UN Security Council voted in favor of a resolution to recognize a Palestinian state. I mentioned this at the beginning of the conversation. It was vetoed by the US, thankfully, but it was the first time that a majority of the 15 U.N. Security Council members, meaning above the two-thirds threshold, voted in favor of a Palestinian state. Twelve voted yes, two abstained, and as I mentioned, the U.S. was the one that vetoed. What exactly was this vote for in terms of borders, right of return of Palestinian refugees? Like, what was the significance of this vote? I mean, obviously, it was insignificant in the end because it was vetoed.
Starting point is 01:03:10 But in terms of the substance of the vote, because it's not clear that the Palestinians, if they were able to participate in this vote for a Palestinian state, so long as it existed alongside a Jewish state, it's not clear the majority of Palestinians right now want a two state solution, be that as it may. What was this a vote for? You know, this is a push by the Palestinian Authority, basically, to get a recognition as a state while they would not themselves decide to declare a statehood.
Starting point is 01:03:39 And that's something that is often escaped by the international community. The way that Israel was formed, it was established. You know, it was a sunny day and David Ben-Gurion and the members of the founding fathers of Israel decided that although they didn't know what would be the borders of Israel, that they're going to issue a declaration of independence
Starting point is 01:04:00 and see what happens. And Ben-Gurion, unlike many others, understood it's going to be war. And he prepared himself to war. Others didn't think that. Palestinians never really declared independence. You know, they did declare in Tunis. You know, Yasser Arafat did a declarative thing. But the Palestinian Authority never said, hey, you know, we're a state. You know how states are really formed. They get a recognition, like Israel got a de facto recognition from the United States. Then it got a de jure recognition from the United States.
Starting point is 01:04:34 And I think that if the Palestinians would today convene a town hall meeting in Ramallah and say, we, the Palestinian people, have decided to form a state, I think there will be many states in the world that will start, you know, just addressing them as a nation state, a normal nation state. And this is how actually countries join the family of nations. It's by the recognitions of their peers. And the fact that the Palestinians have not done that, but they keep on pushing through international bodies for recognition, is because of the same reason that negotiations with the Palestinians have
Starting point is 01:05:09 always collapsed. They collapsed because the Palestinians would never agree to have compromises on essential issues for them, like the right of return, like Jerusalem, and other issues. And because of that, they would never say, oh, we're going to have a state now, and then we're going to deal with the other issues. One of the ideas that was floating around during the beginning of the 2000s was to have a Palestinian state in temporary borders. And the idea is, yeah, you have a state now, then we negotiate for a final recognition. It's like a border dispute between Israel and the newly formed Palestinian state. Palestinians never went with that.
Starting point is 01:05:51 So what was this vote about? Dan, you know what it was about. It was about Israel bashing and virtue signaling by all these countries supportive of that decision. It could not have improved the Palestinian condition in the Gaza ship, you know, in Judea and Samaria. It was a way in which the Palestinian authority and Fatah are trying to say to the Palestinian population, look, there are two ways to go, right? Hamas is saying only through armed struggle, and Fatah and the Palestinian authority are saying through the international community. So for them, it was very important to push this through in order to say, look, this is the venue that you Palestinians should march through. That is through diplomacy, through the international community, and not through this disastrous armed struggle by Hamas. In that sense, I really prefer them pushing for international
Starting point is 01:06:41 decisions, even though as an Israeli, I might object to some, other than the fundamentalist, murderous, genocidal vision, offshot of the Muslim Brotherhood called Hamas. So if I need to choose between the two, I definitely would go with them pushing through international decisions of sorts, including some that are preposterous to begin with. Nadav, we will leave it there. Thank you, as always, for your time and your insights. And I want to wish you, I hate to say a happy Passover, but, you know, it's obviously a loaded time. So it's hard to, I was talking to my sister this morning who lives in Jerusalem, who we're doing our Seder with, and she was saying that she was advised by some rabbi that we have to take this moment into the Seder that we're in,
Starting point is 01:07:32 but the Seder cannot be only about this moment. It has to be present, but we also have to have the Seder, and we're going to try and do that. We're going to leave an empty chair in our Seder to remember the hostages. This is something that's being promoted by the hostage families here in Israel. And I think it's very important for us to remember that, you know, this Chag is about liberty, right? It's about freedom. And these people are there. And I think it's going to be on everybody's mind in Israel and probably around the world.
Starting point is 01:08:04 Yeah. Yeah, it's everywhere. I'll probably around the world. Yeah. Yeah. It's everywhere. I'll talk to you soon. Okay. Thank you, Nadav. Thank you so much, Dan. That's our show for today.
Starting point is 01:08:16 To keep up with Nadav Eyal, you can find him on X at Nadav underscore Eyal. You can also find him at Ynet or at Yediot Akhranot. Call Me Back is produced and edited by Ilan Benatar. Our media manager is Rebecca Strom. Additional editing by Martin Huergo. Until next time, I'm your host, Dan Senor.

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