Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - CEASEFIRE - with David Horovitz
Episode Date: November 26, 2024On October 8th, 2023, Hezbollah joined the war against Israel. Now, nearly fifteen months later, a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon may be imminent. As of this evening in Israel, the Israeli secu...rity cabinet has officially approved a ceasefire deal with Lebanon. Under the proposal, Israeli forces would withdraw from Lebanon within 60 days, while Hezbollah forces would relocate farther north, effectively establishing a buffer zone. The Lebanese Army would be stationed in southern Lebanon, to ensure that Hezbollah remains north of the Litani River.To analyze the key terms of the agreement, and help us unpack its military, political, and social implications, our guest is David Horowitz. David Horovitz is the founding editor of The Times of Israel. He was previously the editor-in-chief of The Jerusalem Post, and editor and publisher of The Jerusalem Report. David on X: https://x.com/davidhorovitzThe Times of Israel: https://www.timesofisrael.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We've been down this road many times before, including in, I suppose, the most significant
2006.
You know, there was a war in 2006.
There was a resolution, 1701, which was meant to ensure that there would be no Hezbollah
deployment south of the Litani.
That resolution is supposedly back in play now.
Why?
With all due respect for the efforts to bring one front to calm, what compelling reason is
there to believe that things will be different this time?
It's 11 30 a.m. on Tuesday November 26th in New York City. It's 6 30 p.m. on Tuesday, November 26th in Jerusalem, Israel,
where I am today with my guest, David Horowitz. I'm actually a guest in his home, so to speak,
at the Times of Israel.
We are here to discuss developments that flow
from the fact that one year and two months after Hezbollah
joined the war against Israel,
a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon is on the verge of being
finalized. This evening Prime Minister Netanyahu convened the security cabinet in Tel Aviv
to approve the ceasefire with Hezbollah. Under this proposal Israeli forces would
withdraw from Lebanon within 60 days while Hezbollah forces would relocate farther north,
effectively establishing a buffer zone
between Hezbollah and the Israeli border.
The Lebanese Army, the Lebanese National Army,
would be stationed in southern Lebanon,
ensuring, or the hope is that it would ensure
that Hezbollah will remain north of the Latani River.
I'm just gonna go over a few terms of the agreement
that we know so far before I jump into my conversation
with David.
There will be a mutual ceasefire.
Hezbollah or any other armed group
will not act against Israel.
Israel will not act in Lebanon against targets
on its territory.
Israel will be able to remain in Lebanon for up to 60 days
following the declaration of a ceasefire.
The US has agreed to provide Israel with a letter supporting military action
against imminent threats from Lebanon and efforts by Hezbollah to rebuild and
rearm. The Lebanese army will be deployed at all crossings in the country,
gradually replacing the IDF's presence.
The residents of southern Lebanon will be allowed to return to their homes.
Any sale of weapons to Lebanon or production within its territory
will be supervised by the Lebanese government.
The deal includes a US led oversight committee
to monitor implementation and address violations.
The committee will also include the government of France.
And as I mentioned today, I'm with David Horowitz,
who is based here in Jerusalem.
He's the founding editor of the Times of Israel, which he founded in 2012. It is the most important
English language news site covering Israel and the Middle East and the broader diaspora.
Prior to this, when I first got to know David, he was at the Jerusalem Post, where he was
editor in chief from 2004 to 2011.
David, a long overdue welcome to the Call Me Back podcast.
Thanks, Dan, pleasure.
Good to be with you.
So I wanna jump right into this
and then we'll talk about some other issues,
but there are wide ranging implications to this agreement,
politically, militarily, socially,
and I wanna get into all of them,
but there's one aspect that seems paradoxical.
In one document in this agreement, as far as we understand, Israel guarantees that it
will not act in Lebanon against targets on its territory.
In a separate document, which is a letter from the United States, as we understand it,
the US would support military action by Israel in Lebanon against threats.
So how do you reconcile these two documents?
I think maybe even take another step back and recognize that this is an agreement being
signed between Israel and Lebanon that really relates to a terrorist organization, a terrorist
army that is very dominant in Lebanon called Hezbollah. I don't think they're signing
the agreement. So under the terms of this agreement, a Lebanese government that doesn't
really have the capability to bind Hezbollah to its will is ostensibly doing that.
And therefore you have an internal contradiction and the side letter which kind of resolves
it to some extent.
As far as Lebanon is concerned, certain things are being said, but the United States, which
brokered this, recognizes that Israel may well have to tackle Hezbollah and therefore you have
this accompanying letter.
And if all that sounds confusing or bizarre, yeah, that's what it is.
So based on what we know so far, do you think this is a good deal for Israel?
It's too complicated to give a yes no answer, right?
There are a few things that are worth bearing in mind when you try to make that assessment.
One is that the degree to which Hezbollah is so much a part of the fabric of so much of Lebanon, including physically
with its military deployments. You know in the last few weeks especially, the Israeli
army has had a ground operation in southern Lebanon. There have been some fairly staggering
Israeli achievements including blowing up thousands of Hezbollah's pages on their owners
in an operation that was planned for years. But you also know that Hezbollah
has kept up the fire even in the last few days. On Sunday there were something
like 250 rockets that were fired at Israel, including to central Israel.
By the way, that's the day I landed here and I was being told it was the most
rocketed day against Israel since October 7th in a single day.
Maybe, certainly one of the most.
And you know, we're told that Hezbollah has been degraded by something like 70 or 80%.
Well, if that's the case, that still makes it three times stronger than Hamas ever was.
And its military is deployed far, far north in Lebanon.
I mean, the only way that Israel could in some kind of semi hermetic way take out Hezbollah
would be to take over all of Lebanon. Israel doesn't want to do that. The only way that Israel could, in some kind of semi-hermetic way, take out Hezbollah would
be to take over all of Lebanon.
Israel doesn't want to do that.
It does want to stem the threat that Hezbollah poses.
This is unsatisfactory, but deemed necessary in terms of this deal, as far as Netanyahu
is concerned.
On the other hand, you've got 60,000 residents in northern Israel who, if you listen to what's
been going on here in the last day or so are, I mean, the evacuees are wary to put it mildly and the local council
chiefs are furious.
So local council chiefs are basically like the municipal governments of these towns and
villages in the north.
Right, the local leaders of northern, people are responsible at the most direct level for
the citizens who've seen, I mean, you know, 400
plus days of relentless rocket fire, you know, deadly, right?
You know, anti-tank weaponry that is focused on houses that, you know, there are certain
areas where three quarters of houses in communities are uninhabitable anymore.
And Hezbollah is not going to be destroyed, right?
The end of this process, you know, this two months negotiation, if it plays out, Hezbollah will
still exist.
Hezbollah will still have capabilities.
The critics are saying this is a missed opportunity.
There's so much legitimacy.
There's so much support in Israel.
We need to do more.
The army has said from before the ground operation, one way or another, this is going to end with
an agreement.
So wouldn't it have been better if we could have reached an agreement?
Israel, the political level would say, yeah, but we couldn't.
Hezbollah wasn't prepared to do it.
They're only prepared for it because they've suffered so much damage, but they've not been
destroyed.
So by definition, it's an unsatisfactory agreement.
How unsatisfactory?
There's a range of views.
It's certainly not the solution to Hezbollah.
Okay.
I want to come back to the solution to Hezbollah, but let's just, I just want to take these different factions.
So you have the northern Israeli residents, the residents in those villages and towns up north,
most of whom, 60 plus thousand, have not been home in over a year.
Israel, in the last few months, added as a war aim, as one of its objectives, returning the residents home,
which means basically muting the threat from Hezbollah.
So those residents are now going to be told, go home. turning the residents home, which means basically muting the threat from Hezbollah.
So those residents are now gonna be told, go home?
I mean, the full language of that war aim was safely,
securely to their homes.
And that's a big question.
Is this gonna be safe?
What we're hearing is there won't be like tomorrow,
some kind of Israeli government statement that says,
okay folks, safe to go back home now,
rather, they'll have to be some proof.
In fact, as of this moment, the way that Netanyahu and people around him have depicted this is
this is a ceasefire.
This is not by any means a permanent arrangement and we're not sure that it's going to play
out.
We're not sure how it's going to play out.
I don't think there's going to be a call tomorrow or the day after by the Israeli government
to those 60,000 residents of the north saying, yeah, you can go home now.
It's safe to do so.
First of all, they wouldn't go home.
They're going to need some kind of tangible sense that things have changed.
At the very least, the core component of that will be time.
If nothing bad happens in northern Israel for a few weeks or for that couple of months,
then just maybe there'll be more confidence to go back. In the last few days, really, you'd say the opposite has been the case, that there's been
an escalation, as you mentioned, of Hezbollah fire.
By the way, deeper into Israel, it's not only the homes where those 60,000 people live that
are being targeted, it's way deep in Israel.
We know Hezbollah still has thousands of drones and probably tens of thousands of rockets
and precision- precision guided missiles that
can reach anywhere in Israel. So nobody should think that any of this, even the people who
welcome the accord, that this marks a conclusive end to anything.
Another group, I just want to hit a few of these constituencies, Miloim reservists who
are stretched as you have reported repeatedly on times of Israel, I've talked about different guests.
Some of these people have served well over 200 days.
I was with a family member the other night who has a friend, close friend, who's up there
now, who's in and out of Lebanon, goes in for a few days at a time, comes back, goes
in for a few days.
You know, when they go in, their cell phones are taken away.
They have no, you know, family has no idea how long they'll be in for.
They have no communication.
It's a huge deployment up there.
We all think Gaza, Gaza, Gaza,
it's like the concentration of forces are up there.
Tremendous uncertainty, high number of casualties,
especially over the last few weeks.
Is this being welcomed, generally speaking,
by the reservists?
That sort of they get a breather,
or do you think the sentiment will be,
yeah, sure, we get a breather, but let's be realistic.
We're just gonna have to be back.
I'm sure the emotions are mixed.
You're right, people are exhausted.
And 200 days, in many cases,
much more than 200 days of the 400 since October the 7th.
There has been an awful lot of military activity in Gaza,
but you're right to say that the focus for quite some time
now has been much more on Lebanon.
One of the political factors which we didn't even get to yet is, I suspect the ultra-orthodox
parties are somewhat supportive of this in part because of self-interest, the sense they
may feel that this will reduce the pressure on the government to draft more of their young
males.
It takes the pressure off.
I'm not sure how much it really will turn out to do that.
You mean you take the pressure off?
I agree with you. Yeah, I'm not sure because the strain is overwhelming and the sense of inequality and an unfair...
The die's been cast.
There's a sense.
Yeah.
Yeah, so I don't think so.
But a huge range of emotions, certainly exhausted people need a break.
We've been down this road many times before, including in, I suppose, the most significant
2006.
There was a war in 2006. There was a
resolution 1701, which was meant to ensure that there would be no Hezbollah deployment
south of Bilittani. That resolution is supposedly back in play now. Why? With all due respect
for the efforts to bring one front to calm one front, what compelling reason is there
to believe that things will be different this time? The fact there's perhaps more American involvement, American oversight of the implementation?
Maybe. But if ultimately it's the Lebanese army and UNIFIL that are supposed to be policing Hezbollah,
Israel knows that's not going to happen.
And UNIFIL being the peacekeeping force.
Yeah. Yeah. Peace observing is probably a fairer description to even empathize with them a little.
They're not supposed to be intervening militarily to a profound extent.
I suppose the Lebanese army is meant to do that.
Even the way we're talking about this, I think, highlights the necessary skepticism.
You covered the 2006 Lebanon war.
It was 34 days.
At the end of it, UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which
you're just referring to, which Hezbollah was supposed to move to north of the Latani
River, sound familiar, and the Lebanese army was supposed to disarm Hezbollah, and the
Lebanese army and UNIFIL was supposed to prevent Hezbollah from filling this vacuum again right
there on Israel's northern border. Many on the right in Israel, on the political right, so that was 2006, let's call it over
the last 15, 18 years, have been very critical of that resolution and the legacy of it and
how badly it failed.
And they were celebrating Israel finally confronting Hezbollah again.
Are you surprised more on the right have not been openly critical of what appears to be
a resolution that's eerily similar to 1701?
First of all, they are critical.
The relative muted nature of the criticism is a function of loyalty to Netanyahu ultimately
and with whom they feel their political futures are more stable and dependable than with anybody
else.
But there is criticism. So I mentioned wary residents and municipal chiefs who are really furious. The two far-right
ministers who are in the security cabinet, Bacelos Smoczik and Itamar Bengvir, are pretty
critical. And then there are people within Likud, Abhi Dikhter, who's also in that forum
has been critical. There's a recognition that this is a good way short of perfect. And there's also lots of questions which I'm guessing
you'd want to ask about anyway. Netanyahu said, I can't do a deal in Gaza that involves
the army leaving, even to get the hostages out, because we won't have international
legitimacy to go back. And therefore it kind of begs the question, if international legitimacy is sufficient for this Lebanon
deal, why isn't it for Gaza when there
are lives that can be saved?
And how credible is the argument in either of those contexts?
So first of all, why do you think
Netanyahu did this deal?
Among the arguments cited are the notion
that he could not dare defy the Biden administration
because it would have implications for arms supplies and UN resolutions and so on. I'm not necessarily
persuaded by that. I think there is this realization. Again, it comes back to what I said at the
beginning, we should take out the politics of this. This is not the same context. It's
a whole country in which a terrorist army is deployed, a whole vast sovereign country.
That's not the case with Gaza. There's the very, very troubling idea that is around in some circles that maybe
this is some kind of quid pro quo on the far right of his coalition. There's a great desire
to maintain Israel's control of Gaza and even resume settlement in Gaza. And you know, is
the price of allowing that, at least he's reducing the pressure on the Lebanese front. You know, there are lots of arguments. I do think, I mean, in terms of just a fair
one step back position, it's really important to bear in mind that you're not going to be
able to route Hezbollah from Lebanon without taking over all of Lebanon. And in that case,
in that respect, it's not the same as Gaza. There was a realization from the start, I think, that it would end with an agreement.
I think some of the criticism is more nuanced.
Why rushing to do a ceasefire?
Isn't there more that can yet be done to Hezbollah?
Why are there not arrangements in this agreement that would help with international support
to begin to transform Lebanon, where lots of people don't want to be enthralled to
Hezbollah?
What about allocation of even policy, never mind resources?
What's the focus on how do we prevent Lebanon from being vulnerable to Hezbollah and by
extension of course Israel being vulnerable to Hezbollah?
There doesn't seem to have been any focus on that.
Any kind of genuine long-term, this would change the region a little bit.
And remember, it wasn't all that long ago that people looked at Lebanon and thought,
well, just maybe it could be headed in a different direction.
Just maybe it could be one of those moderating countries in the region.
I mean, that's long forgotten, but that was a thought not all that long ago.
Okay, Gaza.
So, a deal like this, it's a little bit of apples and oranges, that said, versions of
a deal like this, as you alluded to, have been proposed, discussed, considered for Gaza.
Why no Gaza and yes here?
Look, I don't have a good enough argument that's acceptable to me.
I mean, there are lots of troubling arguments, one of which I've raised, the notion that
this coalition depends on two far-right and and the liquid itself you know and by the way there's a good proportion of the israeli electorate maybe thirty percent of quintis some poles who want to resettle gaza the idea that netanyahu.
under which in principle he would have agreed to end the war, maybe could have got, I don't want to quote numbers, but we've had a talk of 20 or 30 hostages in the early stages of
a deal with the assumption that it would break down. Why would you not have done that deal?
I don't have a good enough answer for that. That's acceptable to me because it seems to me,
of course, that should have been a priority. And if you're saying that the international community
or the United States has got a side letter here that says Israel can go back and attack, why couldn't that have been achieved
in Gaza? And more than that, the argument, the key argument that Netanyahu raised at the height of
what was deemed to be the moment when a deal was possible, remember Biden had unveiled an Israeli
proposal at the end of May and it was then discussed, was all of a sudden he came up with
this thing about the Philadelphia corridor and Sinwar was going to escape into Egypt with hostages and from then to Iran
or who knows where.
This by the way, interconnects with this evolving scandal about leaked intelligence documents
that served Netanyahu's cause, one of which turned up in Bild and so on.
The arguments don't hang together.
It's not a strong enough argument to say, I couldn't do a deal to get some of these
hostages out because we have to remain on the Philadelphia corridor between Gaza
and Egypt. It's just not a powerful argument. By the way, you know, you're speaking to me.
This isn't something that lots of other people have said, but I've written about it. The
way the Gaza deal, the Hamas-Israel-Hamas deal was being set up, there were really worrying
elements to that deal, including very early, a release of some terrible
people, large numbers of them, to the West Bank. In other words, Hamas was clearly hoping that if
that deal went through, it would be able to stir up all kinds of hell in the West Bank.
So I just want to stay on that for a moment because it's important and it's gotten lost,
I think, in a lot of the debate and heat. But I heard even earlier from a Biden administration
official who was involved with the negotiations that the understanding was some of the most hardened Palestinian terrorists
serving multiple life sentences in Israeli prisons.
Israel was open to releasing some of them at the end, far deeper into these phases in
a potential deal.
And suddenly in these negotiations at some point, I guess it was in the early
summer Hamas said, no, those hardened terrorists we want released right away, right at the
front end. And there was a theory that as the Biden official put it to me that maybe
some of those terrorists would be released in return for male Israeli soldiers, which
were considered to be the most valuable hostages that Hamas had. And Hamas wanted to get really valuable terrorists out of Israeli prisons.
I'm not trying to engage here in any kind of equivalence, but I'm just articulating it the
way the Biden folks interpreted what Hamas was requesting. And by frontloading the release of
those terrorists, A, at the very beginning of the process, those terrorists would have been released.
And to your point, they would have been released into the West Bank, and that was actually Sinwar's part of his scheme, part of his master plan,
was to unleash these monsters into the West Bank to really light up that front.
So, I mean, it was complicated.
Yeah.
I just want to take that one step further.
So first of all, when we saw what we understand to have been the terms of the
deal that was being discussed in May and in June. There it was.
I mean, it's in there in the material that's been published and it's indeed, as you say,
frontloaded lots of really bad people into the West Bank in return for the Israeli women,
including the surveillance soldiers and so on.
If Netanyahu had come out, by the way, Netanyahu who released more than a thousand security
prisoners, actually, including Sinwar, right?
If Netanyahu had come and said, I can't do this, this will open another front, it will be terrible, I think there would have been
more empathy for the argument. Instead, he advanced this Philadelphia corridor argument,
which just doesn't hold together. And that's really troubling in the context now, where
you're doing a deal in Lebanon, where you ostensibly have international support to go
back as needed, and yet you've said, I couldn't do a deal in Gaza to free hostages because we'd never get
international support to go back.
I just can't reconcile that.
Was there ever any thinking that any deal with Hezbollah in the north would be tied
to some movement in Gaza?
Well, that's a claim.
It's a claim being advanced by people around Netanyahu that by isolating Hamas, you've
taken Hezbollah out of the equation.
Hamas will feel under more pressure. Therefore there'll be a better opportunity to do a hostage deal.
That's an argument.
By taking Hezbollah off the table.
Right, you're isolating Hamas because Hezbollah is out of the equation and therefore there's
a greater opportunity maybe for some kind of hostage deal because Hamas will be under
more pressure.
We shall see.
But until now, Hezbollah was never willing to do any kind of deal or engage in any kind
of ceasefire unless there was some kind of resolution.
That's been a change in the last few days or maybe the last few weeks behind the scenes
that Hezbollah was ready to not to do the deal to, to not prevent Lebanon doing a deal
without a guaranteed end to the war in Gaza.
And one other shift I've been sensing here and I've been talking about in my podcast
is the idea that I don't hate to generalize, but the consensus among Israelis is that the
war they have is with Tehran.
The war they have is with the Islamist regime in Iran.
That the Palestinian issue is just, was already subordinated and it's just becoming more and
more and more subordinated, the recognition over the last few months that they're really
at war with Iran.
I guess, first, do you agree that that's the kind of general mood here in Israel?
There's a real understanding that they've had this very localized sense of the conflict
and there's just a growing reality that it's not really about the Palestinians, it's about
Iran, A. And B, if that's the case, then where does a deal with Hezbollah fit into this focus
on Iran?
So I don't think it's necessarily a contradiction.
In other words, recognizing that ultimately this
is a war against Iran is not to completely marginalize
the fact that you have an ongoing conflict
with the Palestinians.
What we saw on October the 7th was Hamas
with a great deal of support.
Remember, Hamas's relationship with Iran
was not particularly smooth all through the years.
And at some points, they were certainly not
wanting to be seen as part of the same cause as Iran if you like.
They became identified with Iran much more closely.
I think Israelis recognize, I would put it differently, I think Israelis, I mean there's
never been a period in Israel, I don't think, when there would be less willingness to partner
the Palestinians to anything that involves relinquishing security leverage or control over them. Because Hamas
invaded from territory where Israel had no claim, had pulled all the settlements out,
had pulled back to the border. They invaded, right? That wasn't what they wanted. They wanted
to destroy Israel, not to control Gaza. Israel refused to believe that that was the case.
And in the West Bank, did they all rise up in anger at Hamas? How dare you invade? You've
compromised all of our efforts to have Israel withdraw from West Bank territory
because you've told them that leaving territory brings disaster.
Not at all.
In fact, you've had Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah faction, when Sinwar was finally killed by
Israel, lauding him as a great national leader.
And therefore Israelis look.
They look to Gaza.
Hey, we left that territory.
Terrible things happened. They look to the West hey, we left that territory, terrible things happened.
They look to the West Bank, and those people there who are meant to be the relative moderates
were really happy about it.
So they don't think that this has marginalized the Palestinian issue.
They see it, we see it, as ultimately part of this incredible hostility in parts of the
region to Israel, coordinated by an Iran that has now attacked Israel directly, that openly
seeks Israel's demise, and that is arming and inspiring those people on our immediate
borders.
I don't want to go right to the darkness, but I will.
If this deal proves to fail at some point in the near future, what could that look like?
How does it fail?
Give me a scenario where it falls apart.
You speak to me for long enough, we'll always be in the dark side, you know, certainly in
recent months and even years, right? But maybe we should ask the question differently or
look differently. You know, we should ask ourselves, how will we see that it's succeeding?
Because I think there is so much skepticism and wariness for understandable reasons that
we've talked about. You know, if there's genuine calm in the North for a couple of months, that would already be a
sign I still wouldn't get carried away.
If people in the North, or people evacuated from the North, these are people just like
the rest of us with concerns and children and vulnerabilities, they're not going to
go back unless or until they see and feel for themselves.
Not because the government is telling them anything.
The credibility of this government at the basic practical level is very, very low.
It's a very dysfunctional government.
It hasn't really been terribly helpful to the people.
Ministers, you hear again the municipal leaders, when was the last time this or that minister
ever came up north physically for the day?
Very rare, often cancelled, too dangerous, etc.
So the people and their local leaders will need to have a credible sense of safety.
If that doesn't happen, then you're in failure territory as well.
If that does happen, then well, how credible is it to think that this is going to be lasting?
Has anything other than the not strong Lebanese army and the not capable UNIFIL done anything
to make sure that Hezbollah is not re-arming?
I think there are so many obvious barometers of success.
I think we assume the worst and then let's say, oh, actually something different is happening.
I'd be, unfortunately, pretty surprised to see something credible happening.
I think we're going to be concerned fairly quickly that there's an agreement and there's
a temporary halt.
Is Israel going to be more active than it was?
I mean, there's a lot of you probably heard people talking about the tent that Hezbollah
put up in the border area.
Israel didn't even dare because it didn't want to spark something wider.
Take down a provocative in your face, hey, hey, we're right on the fence.
This was a tent that was put up right over the border.
At the border area, it was up until not terribly long ago and it wasn't targeted.
His bottle was deployed right up to the border, right up to the border.
We haven't yet heard the full story of why they didn't pile in.
Obviously, on October the 8th, they started firing rockets, but they didn't mount the
ground invasion for which they had been preparing.
So again, how credible is it?
Has Isbal actually come back to the villages of southern Lebanon?
Is it armed there?
Did Israel find everything already there?
Almost certainly not.
An awful lot, yes.
But there are so many areas of this reality where it will be all too easy to see failure
and where credible success will be, you know,
I think almost a welcome surprise.
Okay.
I want to read here from a post by Rich Goldberg,
who was an official in the Trump administration,
the first Trump administration,
who worked on Iran counter proliferation issues
for the National Security Council
and the first Trump White
House.
And he's quite critical of the deal as the details were emerging.
And I won't read the entirety of what he wrote, but he wrote, when you're analyzing a ceasefire
deal that you know will be violated by Hezbollah and will not be enforced by either the Lebanese
army or Lebanese military or UN, the only details that matter are whether there are
built in future political constraints
on Israeli freedom of action to confront the reality of an unverified and unenforced deal.
The monitoring committee, he writes, Rich Goldberg writes, strikes me as something someone
thinks is a good idea today but may not be down the road.
The US should not seek to be the arbiter of what Israel assesses is necessary for its
self-defense.
I'm not sure why Israel would trust far less friendly countries with that power either,
meaning like France or any of these other countries that are involved.
Members of any quote unquote monitoring committee should run far away from any perception that membership or chairmanship comes with a power influence.
Otherwise, there will be an obvious pressure to constrain Israeli actions in the future.
And then finally, he says,
the only credible monitoring committee
that exists in Southern Lebanon is Israeli intelligence.
The only credible enforcement committee
that exists in Southern Lebanon is the IDF.
So everything we've been taught
about Jewish national sovereignty,
the modern Jewish state and the IDF,
is that Israel is in control of its own security.
And the idea that there's some committee that's telling Israel what it can and can't do.
I mean, what he's arguing here is the only committee that should be monitoring is Israeli intelligence.
The only one is forcing is the IDF.
Is that a shock?
I know we hit this before because it has echoes of 1701, but just when you take a step back, this idea that Israel has to depend on these other bodies to help it decide when it acts
is, you know, here we are a little over a year after October 7th, it's hard to believe
that it's getting itself locked into something like that.
You know, I think it's worse than that.
Okay, and I think it's worse than that because his assumption is that if Israel had complete
freedom of action, its intelligence and its army and its political echelons would do the right
thing.
You're in an Israel that doesn't have that confidence now, certainly not as a consensual
public view.
Israeli intelligence failed utterly before October the 7th in Gaza.
I mean utterly.
You, me or anybody we know would have done a better job because we would have seen like Hamas is drilling at the fence and we've got their plans to invade. We need to have more
troops on that border, right? So intelligence has failed, the army failed to protect people.
And in the Lebanon context, we've had years of public complaint, including from the people who
live on the Northern border and some way back from the Northern border. His Bola is looking down on
us. They're laughing at us.
They're getting ready to attack.
They've got all these capabilities.
You didn't even take down their positions at the border, much less prevent them from
arming and so on.
So there are concerns that Israel is now tying itself to some kind of international enforcement
committee, albeit with certain side letter potential indulgence of responding.
But I'm just adding into that, even if there
was no ostensible constraint, the public here
is not confident that the political echelon
and the military leadership and the intelligence leadership
are sufficiently on the ball and capable and ready to act
and so on.
It's worse even than that concern would suggest. All right. I want to switch gears here briefly and talk to you about the Times of Israel.
So founded in 2012, I want to talk about what you've been dealing with the Times of Israel
over this past year. But just briefly, the founding impulse of the Times of Israel was
what? Because I do feel that this publication has always been indispensable,
but it's been especially so this past year,
but you didn't know that this year was coming
when you founded it.
Yeah, I'd have liked this year not to have come.
Right.
And you know, our traffic goes up and all those things,
the more complicated and difficult and dire,
in some cases, the reality is in Israel,
I'd much rather that we had lower traffic,
less resonance, and things were basically better here, right? Safer here, normal, exactly. No, I said it
out because I thought it was important that there should be a journalistic outlet that
is not linked to any partisan view in Israel. I called it the times of Israel because that
on the one hand suggests a certain gravitas, but also underlies. This is, as the Iranians
would say, a Zionist enterprise. This is a website that wants Israel to thrive as a majority Jewish democratic state. We want to be able to tell
people what's going on. We certainly have analysis and a very vibrant blogs platform and so on, but
our reporting is as fair as we can make it so that people can make their own minds up. I get castigated
from left and right, which is I think a necessary but not sufficient
healthy side.
Right.
It's good.
If I wasn't, that would be terrible.
Anyway, so I thought it was important and we have a fantastic team here and it's been
the last year has been as terrible for our Israeli citizen journalists, citizens who
are journalists, I should say.
As for any other Israelis, we've had people in, you know, on our team, we've been in the
army, we've got people with kids in the army, we've got people who have very close relationships with people
who've lost loved ones, hostages and so on. We're part of the fabric and we're trying
to do our job at the same time as that.
Part of what you do is explaining Israel to the diaspora and to the broader world. It's
not the only thing you do. You obviously make editorial choices every day where you are
covering Israel, you're covering the Israeli government, you're sometimes fiercely critical of the
Israeli government. In terms of the world's response to October 7th and to Israel's response,
the world's coverage and response to Israel's response to October 7th. What in this past
year when you try to interpret what's happening here for the broader world, what has surprised you the most? What has shocked you the most? I'm sure you have a long list,
but in the interest of, and I know it's late and I know you got a late night, but...
I mean, there's two things I suppose that are high on the list. It's not everything. One is,
as a journalist, I'm pretty dismayed by the not very good journalism done by incredibly
well-resourced outlets. I mean, it's very hard to cover a war when you don't have reporters in the war zone. The IDF takes our journalists
in occasionally, sometimes it takes foreign journalists in, but there's no independent
journalism permanently in Gaza. There's on the whole local hires and it's dangerous
to write and say things that are problematic for Hamas, shall we say. And yet, after more
than a year of Hamas lying about endless things that are going on in
Gaza, I don't understand why journalistic outlets that take themselves very seriously
and the people take very seriously give credibility to Hamas claims and don't even always say
that they are Hamas.
I mean, talk about the Gaza Health Ministry as though that's some kind of Western independent
trustworthy source.
It happens all the time. You should
look at the material that comes out of Gaza. Some of it might be true. Most of it or much
of it is unverifiable. It's really hard to cover a war, but at least be more skeptical
and try. So I find that very troubling. And the other thing, I mean, I could talk a lot
more about that, but I'll spare us all. The anti-Semitism thing, Dan, that you were shocked
by. I mean, you know, we grew up in a generation where we thought after World War II, people had realized the
terrible things that people can do to each other and maybe had reached for their better
selves and marginalized hatreds, including the oldest hatred.
As an ex-Brit, it's pretty shocking for me to see From the River to the Sea projected
onto Big Ben.
As somebody with lots of my white Americans, relatives in New York, having people march down Broadway
with Hamas banners and so on. And there's the sort of cliche about they don't even know
what river and what sea it is that they're seeking Palestinian control over. I find that
apart from, I don't think it's laughable. I think it's insulting.
Why would you campaign for a cause without even bothering to find out what it is you're
campaigning for?
That's just such a terrible reflection, I don't know, on the people who are out there
campaigning.
Now some of them know exactly what they're campaigning for, but there are so many useful
idiots.
Campus leaders of the world's most prestigious universities appearing in and testifying on
Capitol Hill as though they're, you know, lawyered up white collar criminals who don't
dare say something that is obvious about the problems of inciting genocide. So it's pretty
horrific that rise of anti-Semitism and not something I expected to see. When the obsession
is with Israel and when the effort is to deny Israel the tools, practically diplomatic and
military tools to defend itself, that's anti-Semitism. And that's, you know, pretty horrifying to
me.
It's someone who is trying to explain, not in a propagandistic way, but just explaining
the news of Israel to the world. There's often this criticism, I hear it all the time, why
doesn't Israel tell its story better? Israel's communications, its strategic communications,
whatever, it's the way it explains its case and tells its story is horrendous. And I think there's some truth
to that on the one hand. And the other hand, I sometimes think, really? Is that really
the issue? Because is there a story Israel could tell that would just completely drench
all this hatred and like extinguish all the energy, the negative energy that's being toxic
negative energy that's being toxic, negative
energy that's being unleashed against Israel. Is that really what it's about? If Israel
just kind of did a little bit better in TikTok messaging than its critics?
I don't think it would move the needle from one side to the other, but it would move it.
It would nudge it. And I want you to understand how pathetic public diplomacy is in Israel
to the point
where if you're the Ties of Israel's, Hamas is making a claim, what does Israel say?
We need some words because Israel doesn't say anything.
October the 17th last year, Hamas claims that Israel has bombed Al-Akhli hospital, hundreds
of people dead, the Israeli army whose spokesperson tries not to lie, which is a good thing and
was not always the case in years past, right? Or mislead. We're checking into it. But at the civilian level, where
was the official coming out and saying, of course Israel does not deliberately target
hospitals. We are looking into this, but we'll assume that this is not an Israeli strike.
There were no words to write, right? Not being very good at public diplomacy. There is no,
essentially there is no Israeli public diplomacy. And I do think it would make a difference.
I'll give you another example.
There's a Human Rights Watch report, an NGO that's I think fairly hostile to Israel.
I think it's safe to say that.
They issued a report.
I assume Israel knew the report was coming.
There was no Israeli comment on that report for hours, for hours and hours and hours.
This was when, which report?
Last week it related.
And there was no Israeli response to the allegations in that report for many, many hours.
Now I'm not saying, I mean, you can say, well, the whole world hates us and the international
media would never, it's not true.
International media would give an Israeli response if there was an Israeli response.
Give people who want to be fair minded at least some of the basic tools to enable Israel's
account of what is happening at the most real time as well as the deeper narrative.
Make that available.
So, I don't think, like I said, I don't think you're going to win over the haters and I
don't think you're going to persuade people who set out to demonize and ultimately setting
out to destroy Israel.
But I think you would win over a goodly proportion of the, I didn't know and I don't know and
well, what are the Israelis saying?
You know, at least give them some material to understand how you
see that things are playing out.
Final question.
Is there anything out of this past year that makes you hopeful?
I know we can get pretty dark here and we do go dark.
And I do try to end a lot of these conversations, not being, you know, too
rosy eyed and not being, you know, I'm not trying to sugarcoat at all, really.
But I'm just curious when I talk to Israelis, because they have been moments or there have
been developments, certainly over the last few weeks actually, where they start to see
maybe there's a way out of this mess, the transformation of the region, changes that
this past year will force on Israeli society.
I mean, you can go local, you can go global.
Look, the first thing is,
and I wouldn't do justice to my view of Israel
if I don't go darker a little bit first
before I try to reach some light.
I asked for some likeness, you go,
no, no, no, I gotta give you some more darkness.
I promise you I'll try to get her.
But I'm speaking honestly,
I'm very concerned about the damage being done within Israel
by this coalition, by this prime minister.
He's very divisive. This coalition has incredibly extreme elements. I'm very concerned about the damage being done within Israel by this coalition, by this prime minister.
He's very divisive.
This coalition has incredibly extreme elements.
I'm worried about the well-being of Israeli democracy.
It just wouldn't be right for me to not mention that.
We don't need to go any deeper, but it's trouble.
There's a region in which there is a great deal of hostility and then there's a weakening
of Israel from within.
That's very troubling.
To the light, look, this is an incredibly resilient country.
This is a country with a people's army.
We talked about reservists.
It's the people of Israel.
It's everybody's sons and cousins and fathers.
People doing reserve duty in their 30s and 40s and even in their 50s and so on, recognizing
to a very large extent this is a necessary
war.
Israel was attacked on one front, then on another and behind the scenes.
And overtly now Iran is trying to coordinate the goal of destroying Israel.
People recognize that.
In terms of resilience, Dan, think about it.
We've had times where they've told you, hey, Iran has fired some drones.
They'll be here in 12 hours.
We'll keep you posted. I'll actually send some cruise some drones. They'll be here in 12 hours. We'll keep you posted.
I'll actually send some cruise missiles now.
That'll be a little quicker.
I'll actually ballistic missiles on the way.
You got 12 minutes, right?
And we had that.
This is insane.
We're very isolated.
At the most practical level, which
are the airlines that are flying into Israel at the moment?
By the way, airlines from the Emirates as well as El Al
and not much else, right?
So you're isolated. You see a world that is hostile to you. And by the way, where your
reality is, is you feel misrepresented, which a great deal of Israelis feel and yet so incredible
resilience and a sense that we better hang in there together because this country is
under threat. I don't think we can take it for granted. I don't think we can take that
there is sufficient unity to defend ourselves, but that has been the case. And in terms of resilience, the
terms of resilience in this country is astonishing. I mean, the second Intifada, you got up every
day knowing people were going to try and kill you and people did not leave en masse. You
know, it's an incredible thing, but I don't think we should take it for granted. It has
proved remarkable in terms of commitment to the country, hanging tough.
It's astonishing, but I wanna leave on the up,
but we shouldn't take that for granted either.
All right, David Horvitz, we will leave it there.
Thank you.
Thank you for having me here.
The Belly of the Beast, the Nerve Center,
and I know you are going to have a late night,
so I will let you go.
Thanks for being here.
["The Belly of the Beast"] Call Me Back is produced and edited by Alain Benatar, our media manager is
Rebecca Strom. Additional editing by Martin Huérgo. Research by Gabe
Silverstein. Until next time, I'm your host, Dan Sinor.