Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - Could Trump’s Vision for Gaza Be Real? - with Amit Segal & Nadav Eyal
Episode Date: February 10, 2025Watch the conversation on YouTube: https://youtu.be/zy-BEfKyQMY To contact us, sign up for updates, and access transcripts, visit: https://arkmedia.org/ Dan on X: https://x.com/dansenor Dan o...n Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dansenor President Trump’s dramatic and unprecedented press conference on Gaza, suggesting U.S. control and some form of relocation of its residents, has immediately shifted the conversation beyond the default two-state framework. In this episode, we break down how the Israeli public is reacting to Trump’s proposal, what it means for Netanyahu’s political standing, and the implications for the ceasefire and the hostage deal negotiations. Joining us to unpack these developments are Amit Segal and Nadav Eyal, two Call Me Back regulars. Nadav Eyal is a columnist for Yediot Aharonot and one of Israel’s leading journalists. He has been covering Middle Eastern and international politics for over two decades across Israeli radio, print, and television news. Amit Segal is the chief political correspondent and analyst for Channel 12 News and Yediot Aharonot, Israel’s largest-circulation newspaper. CREDITS: ILAN BENATAR - Producer & Editor MARTIN HUERGO - Editor REBECCA STROM - Director of Operations STAV SLAMA - Researcher GABE SILVERSTEIN - Research Intern YUVAL SEMO - Music Composer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The conversation you're about to listen to
with Nadav Ayal and Amit Segal
was recorded on the morning of Friday, February 7th.
It is important that I mention this
because since we recorded that conversation,
we have all been reeling from a combination of joy,
relief and horror as Israelis welcomed home
three more hostages on Saturday or levy
Ohad Ben Ami and Ellie Sharabi
Here were my immediate reactions first. We have heard the terms crime against humanity and
genocide thrown around a lot in the past 16 months in the context of Israel's
a lot in the past 16 months. In the context of Israel's defensive war,
it is fighting on seven fronts,
the war Israel has been responding to.
But these images remind us what an actual crime
against humanity looks like,
and of Hamas's actual genocidal ambitions against the Jews.
The images of emaciated, gaunt, and dehumanized Jews
are all too reminiscent of the images of Jews
from Auschwitz and other concentration camps
after the Holocaust.
If those images from this past weekend
weren't unbearable enough,
the cruelty of watching Elie Sherabi
at his quote unquote sendquote send-off ceremony,
in which Hamas effectively conducted a farewell or exit interview,
in which Elie Sherabi was prodded to talk about how excited he was to be reunited with his wife and daughters.
All while unbeknownst to him and to the Chuckles of Hamas, his wife and children were slaughtered
at their kibbutz on October 7th.
Or Levy was reunited with his son.
His wife was murdered on October 7th near the Nova Festival site.
They were hiding in the same shelter as Hirsch Goldberg-Polin and Honor Shapira, where grenade
after grenade was tossed
into the shelter by Hamas,
and Honor kept throwing the grenades back out.
Honor was ultimately killed as well that day,
but in that video footage we've all seen of Hirsch
being taken into Gaza in a vehicle, a Hamas vehicle,
Orr was with him, Orr was barefoot,
and we now know that he was barefoot for 491 days.
He was only given shoes to walk in
for his sendoff this weekend.
And we now know he was only allowed to shower
every few months.
Ohad Ben Ami was the only one of the three hostages
to be reunited with his family intact.
As one hostage family member told me,
we now know that every hostage is filthy, bloody,
or skeletal, or all of the above.
And we now know that Israeli officials
have known this for some time.
And we now learn that the conditions of the hostages
still being held are even worse.
For example, just today we learned
from the mother of hostage, Alon O'Hell,
that he has been starved and held in chains
for the entirety of his captivity.
Alon O'Hell was another one of the hostages in the shelter
with honor Shapira and Hirsch Goldberg-Polen.
I've spoken to a number of Israeli family and friends
over the past 24 hours as they have reacted to these images
and tried to get a sense from them how it informs
where Israel goes from here.
I've heard a mix of reactions
and what they say they hope for next. Here's one reaction from Tal Becker,
who has been a frequent guest on our podcast
and has been a long time official through many governments
in Israel's foreign ministry.
In response to these images from yesterday,
Tal wrote to me,
for me, it was mainly heartache and pain,
not just to see them so malnourished
in ways that couldn't help but remind me of the Holocaust survivor images, For me, it was mainly heartache and pain, not just to see them so malnourished
in ways that couldn't help but remind me
of the Holocaust survivor images,
but especially that Eli Sharabi didn't know
that his wife and children had been murdered.
I couldn't get that out of my head all night.
Fundamentally, this release intensifies
the impossible contradictions of this deal.
Those who, seeing how these hostages were treated
feel the absolute urgency of getting everybody out
regardless of the cost.
And those who seeing how the hostages were treated
feel the absolute necessity of ensuring Hamas
does not remain in power.
It seems most of the Israeli public is in the former camp
but the politics and complexities of the situation
are pushing towards the latter.
Hard to see how to reconcile those two.
Again, that was Tal Becker.
And now onto my conversation with Nadav Ayal
and Amit Segal. It's seven o'clock a.m. on Friday, February 7th here in New York City.
It is two o'clock p.m. on Friday, February 7th in Israel as Israelis prepare for Shabbat and wait in anticipation of the release of three
additional hostages as part of phase one of the hostage deal. Whether people took
President Trump's bombshell announcement about the US assuming some kind of
control of Gaza and relocating in some way some or all of the
Gazan Palestinian population, whether they took that announcement literally,
seriously or neither.
One thing I think that most Israelis can agree on is that the conversation has
definitely changed.
For close to a century, the default objective of almost all international
actors working on some kind of resolution to the
Israeli Arab conflict has always been some kind of two-state solution for
Israelis and Palestinians. Is that over now? And what to make of
characterizations of President Trump's proposal as some form of
population relocation, whether permanent or temporary, whether forced or
voluntary with incentives.
Well, one way or the other, according to a recent poll in Israel, 70% of Israelis support
President Trump's plan.
And then of course, there are questions of the impact of the Trump proposal on the ongoing
implementation of the hostage deal and the negotiations over phase two of the Trump proposal on the ongoing implementation of the hostage deal and the negotiations over
phase two of the ceasefire.
Again, all against the backdrop of the release this weekend from Hamas captivity, three hostages.
Those Israelis are Or Levy, Ohad Ben Ami and Eli Sharabi.
To better understand how Israelis are processing the Trump plan to make Gaza great again
and what its impact could be on phase two
of the ceasefire agreement, we welcome back to the podcast
Amit Segal and Nadav Ayal.
Amit Nadav, good morning from New York.
Good morning, good afternoon.
Good afternoon, and Israel, how are you?
Great, and Nathal Bad?
Go ahead.
All right, I want to start with you, Amit.
How would you, just at a high level, and I know this is this is gonna be sort of generalizing but let's just start with this
How would you describe the way?
Israelis Israeli society has been processing Trump's very unexpected
I think unexpected for everyone including the Israeli delegation led by the Prime Minister in Washington this past week
Dramatic announcement.
I think it was the moment in which Overton window shifts, in which topics that were illegitimate
even to discuss become not only legitimate, but consensus in a few seconds.
A week ago, it was perceived that offering transfer or immigration from Gaza seemed illogical,
immoral, and all of a sudden
the president of the United States offers it.
I think President Trump threw a stone on Overton window.
He just smashed it.
He smashed everything that was perceived as inconsistency, legitimate, and all of a sudden
mass immigration from Gaza is on the table. And before we go to Nadav, the conversation in Israel in response to that press conference?
Former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin once said that had he could, he would have thrown Gaza
to the sea.
But unfortunately, as he said, Gaza will not just move to the Mediterranean, so we have
to negotiate with the Palestinians. So what President Trump basically offers is to throw Gaza to the sea or empty it from
the Palestinians.
So of course the vast majority of Israelis are for it.
The main debate is about the feasibility of the thing.
I don't think there is a single Zionist party leader who deliberately opposed President
Trump's plan. Gantz supported, Yair Golan and Yair Lapid tried to change the subject, and the only
politician in Israel to actually come out against it was Mansour Abbas, the head of
the Muslim Arab party.
So I just want to stand this for a moment because it's interesting.
So Yair Lapid, the formal head of the opposition, Benny Gantz, obviously not in the government, so not a leader of the opposition, but is effectively part of the opposition, and Yair Lapid, the formal head of the opposition, Benny Gantz, obviously not in the government,
so not a leader of the opposition, but is effectively part of the opposition, and Yair
Golan, who's leader of the far left, what was formerly the Labor Party or a merger of
the Labor and Merits Party, what they call the Democrats, obviously only a handful of
connected seats he has, but you just collectively there summarized the center left to, let's
say call it what we would normally call historically
the hard left in Israel.
And we just take for granted,
by the way, when I was reading their statements in response,
they weren't as euphoric as Israelis on the right were,
but they were cautiously open to it.
And certainly as you said, not shutting it down
and coming back to your Overton window point,
I mean, to me that was the biggest sign sure
could you imagine the Israeli left of Shimon Peres or Yossi Beilin or I mean
their reaction to something like this would have been to call it Kahaneism
I'll give you two examples Rehavan Ze'evi a former general in the Israeli army was
the only Knesset member who supported mass emigrations of Palestinians
from Gaza and in his case, Judean Samaria as well.
He was branded and tagged as fascist, racist, etc.
Nowadays the vast majority of Israelis support it, but it's not the first time extreme
ideas actually emerge from the far right or from the far left.
At the end of the 60s, the beginning of the 70s, there was only one Knesset member from the left,
Uri Avnery, who supported the two-state solution.
25 years passed, and all the presidents
and all the prime ministers supported the same plan.
So ideas who actually planted by the far right
and far left in Israel become more popular as time passes.
Nadav, what is your response, either to what Amit said or just generally to my question about
how do you think Israelis are processing all of this?
Well I think that most Israelis feel like Prime Minister Netanyahu has felt and you
could see this in the Oval Office like they won the lottery.
Here you have a president that has a fix for everything.
You don't need to actually handle Hamas.
You can just empty the strip from its residents and you can do it voluntarily.
This is really important that at no point at Trump's plan did he talk about mass expulsion
of forced expulsion of the Palestinians, but actually offering them to go to this happy
place.
I think he used the term happy and nice and where they will have better housing and then
to have an American ownership.
Who doesn't want America as its neighbor in the Middle East. Not only will we not have the Palestinians responsible
for the mass murder of October 7,
but we will also have American troops.
The president wasn't ruling it out.
Of course, 24 hours later, everything was different, Dan.
Well, not everything, but certain aspects,
certainly the American troops part.
I think that everything was different
because the White House was walking back on this.
And I'm not just talking about American troops.
I'm also talking about American US tax dollars.
So the president was talking about developing the Gaza Strip, about having a different future
there.
And I think it was the Witkoff with Republican senators that made clear that the US has absolutely no intention
to invest in the Gaza Strip.
I don't know what is the fine details of this plan.
And as time went by, it was also clear, and this is the reason I'm talking about walking
back, that for the US, everything can happen after you win and basically the Israelis take care of Hamas.
So Israel has been trying to win against Hamas in the last year.
Hamas is not going to allow voluntarily immigration from the Gaza Strip.
Hamas has been preventing this kind of immigration before the war.
It's something I think that people back home in America don't know.
Hamas has been very vigilant about the number of people it allows to leave the Gaza Strip.
It's actually something that Palestinians could do,
unlike the massive sort of deception and propaganda machine
of presenting Gaza as the biggest open prison in the world.
The truth is that Palestinians could and did leave the Gaza Strip, but Hamas had a lot
of ways to limit even them just going for a quick phase in Turkey, which many Palestinians
did.
So you have polls showing that 30% of the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip with pollsters, Palestinian pollsters
are saying if we could immigrate, we would.
But they don't want to immigrate to Somaliland, but life expectancy in Somaliland is 50 something.
Life expectancy in Gaza before October 7 was much over 70.
It was actually higher than it is, unfortunately, in Alabama or Mississippi.
So if you want to actually implement the president's plan, according to the White House, this is
not me sort of giving my commentary, you need to take control of the entire Gaza Strip.
You need to win against Hamas.
And then you need to voluntarily persuade the Palestinians who have a strong
national and historical affinity to Gaza and a resolve that this is their homeland,
that they need to emigrate en masse. This seems, 24 hours later after the plan, or 48 hours later
after the plan was presented as quite a big mission.
This is not to say that Israelis are not going to be, you know, supportive theoretically
of it, but I'm not hearing any details from DC right now about how this is going to happen.
What I am hearing is the White House slowly walking back from commitment.
Having said that, I know that if President Trump is resolved about something, and I see you smiling, Dan.
I'm just smiling, yeah, because you are describing
a very predictable pattern of how Trump operates,
which is he puts out a provocative idea, his staff.
Well, it's not exactly how he says it,
and then he follows up by correcting his staff
Exactly you're describing the walk back and I'm I can quote now for you his walk back of their walk back
Of course, so in other words, he's saying to his staff not so quick guys
So he put out a post on his truth social on Thursday morning. I'll just read from it
He said the Gaza Strip would be turned over to the United States by Israel
Meaning at the end of the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas.
And he says, the Palestinians would have already been resettled in far safer and more beautiful
communities with new and modern homes in the region.
They would actually have a chance to be happy, safe and free.
The U.S., working with great development teams from all over the world, would slowly and
carefully begin the reconstruction of what would become one of the greatest and most
spectacular developments of its kind on earth. would slowly and carefully begin the reconstruction of what would become one of the greatest and most spectacular
developments of its kind on earth. No soldiers by the US would be needed. That's the point. This post is
walking back. He's saying it's Israel that's going to take care of it.
The Israelis are going to take care of it and when we get the strip, we're not going to get it with Palestinians. It's not on us. And secondly, there are not going to be US troops there. But Nadav, the big idea, what's the big idea here?
The big idea is changing the concept in the Middle East, thinking outside the box. And I think that
to that extent, I credit the president and I have in this show so many times for the ultimatum he
gave Hamas that initiated this deal. I credit the president, of course, for the Abraham Accords and for opening the door for annexation in the West Bank
that was used as leverage in order to get agreements with the UAE.
I think that the fact that the president is able to rethink everything and sort of break conventions
is a great energy of this administration and could
lead to good places. Having said that, I think Israelis are not aware that 72
hours before he made these statements, the entire American media and world
economy was very much focused on 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico, something
that disappeared with a promise for thousands of
troops on the border with Mexico and Canada. And 24 hours before that, there was the Panama Canal.
And I think three days before that was this bickering with Denmark as to Greenland. And again,
I don't know, maybe the US will initiate a new agreement in Panama. Oh, and a week before that, he reacted to Colombia not taking these migrants with an imposition of
tariffs and within 24 hours, Colombia completely reversed its policy.
And he might take the Panama Canal and the US might own
Greenland. All I'm saying is that in essence and as to Gaza, the problem here, and I want to refocus this not on Trump,
the problem is really simple.
For this to happen, according to the president, and it's not my analysis, it's what he says,
Israel needs to take full control of the Gaza Strip, which basically means occupying it,
clear it house to house, then convince the Palestinians without expelling them by
force that they can immigrate to Albania that doesn't want to hear about this or Somaliland.
I'm saying, you know, the obvious, this sounds incredibly hard to me.
Right now in Israel, if you ask the Israelis this question, do you want Israel to have
a military rule over the Gaza ship and clear the Gaza
ship house to house and take full military occupation of the Gaza ship in order to implement
the Trump plan?
I'm not sure that the answer is more than 50%.
Yes, I don't know.
You're right.
A few days ago, we were all talking about new tariffs on Canada and Mexico and then
poof,
like it's gone or at least delayed.
But the reality is that most of these leaders
around the world are taking Trump seriously,
meaning they know he could do it.
So in that sense, back to Amit's Overton window shift,
in that sense, this is what he's changed the conversation.
So we could say, oh, he talked about tariffs,
and they're gone.
But the point is, a previous administration, non-Trump administration would never even
believe that the US with the flip of a switch would be imposing these massive terrorists,
but it's where the whole discussion has shifted.
And I think what he's doing is shifting the conversation in another part of the world,
which is the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
My sense, both watching from afar and talking to some of the people who've been involved in the president's orbit,
is they're just on this issue. They're just looking at the trajectory to the White House.
They're looking where things are going and they're like, wait a minute.
So we're in the ceasefire deal, which they like, because they think it's going to quiet things down
and it's going to get the Israeli hostages back. So the US is for the ceasefire deal.
But they're also saying, but at the end of it,
on the trajectory we're on,
Israel's gonna be out of Gaza,
Hamas is basically gonna still be there,
and kind of in charge,
and then the international community in Europe
and the Arab world are all gonna come in
and fund reconstruction of Gaza
with no real displacement of Hamas
as either an official objective or a practical reality.
The only idea being really thrown around
is the Palestinian Authority having some role
who's been chased out of Gaza by Hamas in the past
and who seems incredibly weak
and actually is quietly, not so quietly,
blessed what happened on October 7th.
So the administration is,
people around Trump are looking at this and saying,
we're headed for the same old, same old again.
And so what he's trying to do, I think,
is just shake things up and tell all these stakeholders,
guys, we're not doing this again.
So I've got some ideas, you don't like my ideas?
You come up with your ideas, but I want new ideas.
But this is you, Dan, already talking, you're analyzing Trump.
Not just analyzing, but yes.
I think that he's to an extent serious.
I agree with you completely that this can lead to any several consequences.
One of them could be that Trump goes to Saudi Arabia and Saudi Arabia, again, like the UAE,
credit itself for saving the Palestinians from mass
Displacement right just for our listeners
No, I want them to understand the context you're referring to is important in the lead-up to the Abraham Accords
there was talk about some kind of annexation of the West Bank and
The UAE had not fully committed to the Abraham Accords and the UAE
Made as a condition for them signing the Abraham Accords that Israel would pull back from annexation of the West Bank, which Israel did. Abraham Accords signed
UAE claim credit that they prevented Israel from annexing the West Bank. And
so I think what you're referring to here is this is a version of that where the
US can go to the Saudis and say if you normalize with Israel you get to say the
win is you headed off the Trump plan. I want to say I think the president was
serious when he said that but I think the president was serious when he said that.
But I think he was also serious when he said the 25% tariffs.
I really think that people walked into his office and told him
what's going to happen in terms of prices in the US,
and he was asked questions about this.
And the president never goes against his base, as far as I remember.
And then he, you know, managed to get the deal,
which is what the
president is really very much about. So I absolutely agree this shakes things up. I
want to say something that is realistic. What is realistic, because of what you said about
the second phase of the deal, is for Israel to have another war phase in Gaza, possibly
thinking about taking the entire Gaza Strip. But even if it does taking the entire Gaza Strip.
But even if it does take the entire Gaza Strip, going house to house, which I have to say,
I don't know, maybe Amit could chip in if this is politically viable in Israel today,
I'm not sure.
But even if it does that, I don't think that we will see this massive immigration unless
people will be somehow forced.
And I don't think that the country is going to cooperate with massive forced expulsion
of Palestinians.
This goes against any Zionist narrative, including Zev Jebutinsky, that made the commitment at
the beginning of the Wall of Iron that neither me nor my descendants will ever drive the
Palestinians out of these, he said the Arabs of this country.
A sort of massive forced expulsion is something very much off the table as far as I want to argue or want to know.
I mean, yeah, so first of all, there is something general that we have to understand about political leaders, both presidents and prime ministers.
And this is the shake the coconut tree policy.
You want to change something.
Okay, Canada refuses to bring soldiers to the border.
China refuses to stop bringing drugs into the United States.
Gazans insist on fighting Israel and having hostages.
So you shake the coconut tree, you just throw an idea and something will happen because
they are worried you might really take this coconut tree down.
So this is one thing. And here we have three things, three implementations.
One is the hostages. Under President Biden, the Gaza question gradually focused into the single hostages question.
That is to say that the most important thing was the asset that Hamas possesses,
which is the hostages. The entire world danced to the sounds of Hamas. First, Lichia Sinwar
and then his brother, Muhammad Sinwar. And Trump says, no, the question is no longer
merely about the hostages. The question is way wider than this. Is the very existence
of Gaza as an entity? So this is one thing. Second, there is no longer a guarantee for
Israel's enemies that they can try to destroy Israel and get away with it. There was a guarantee
over the last 50 years since the Yom Kippur War, when Israel occupied more territories than it lost, that Israel couldn't keep those
territories, both in Syria and in Egypt, because the international community said, yes, we know
you didn't provoke the war and we know you paid a high price, a huge price, for not attacking first,
but you will not be able to take territories. So that aggressor knows that he can get away with it.
He can try again and again and again.
So President Trump says, no, if you invade Israel, if you massacre, if you rape, if you
burn, if you kill, if you kid the babies, you will pay a price, a territorial price,
and your population will have to live.
And the third is that when Israel is back in war, and I fully agree with Madaf,
that we will see yet another round of war. Palestinians will not be able to say they
kill innocents because now the international community will tell them, yes, you can live.
You can live and prevent all this suffering.
The international community, I mean, it is not going to tell them anything like that. President Trump might tell them, but that's it. I'm in the part on the Capitol Hill or
Pennsylvania Avenue 1600 that would say that. That's very possible and that the president would
say that. Having said that, I think, and I already said and wrote this, that unfortunately we have
another phase in this war in Gaza. But having said that, I don't understand what
the phase will be. I see that the Prime Minister needs it because the right wing in Israel
is incredibly angry at him because of this deal. But if this is not taking the Gaza Strip
again house to house and installing a military occupation, I don't see what would be the
purpose now. I listened to what the Prime Minister is saying. First of all, during the
press conference, of course, the Prime Minister did not commit to the President's plan
at all. I don't know if it was because he was surprised by the level of commitment made by
the President. I know that the Prime Minister knew that the President is going to talk about
immigration of Palestinians from the Gaza Strip. He knew, But I don't think that he understood the issue of ownership,
and he didn't see this as a compelling commitment
by the United States.
So the only thing that the prime minister himself spoke about,
and then he corrected 24 hours later
in sort of supporting the plan,
was about getting the hostages back
and mainly not having a Hamas rule in the Gaza Strip.
Now, the only way you're not going to have a Hamas rule in the Gaza Strip is factually
speaking is by getting the PA or the Fatah in, which the right wing in Israel considers
as Hamas without the rifles or something like that.
I don't agree.
But in the DAV, there are some in the Trump team who are very skeptical of the PA too.
The skepticism is not just among the Israeli right.
I'm skeptical about the PA. You know, it's a corrupt, very unpopular, illegitimate to
an extent.
And weak.
Yeah. But the other possibility in the Gaza Strip is Hamas. And there's another possibility,
and this was just put out by the president. It's an Israeli military rule, which is exactly
what the chief of staff told the cabinet like a few months ago.
Yes. But something has to change in the way Israel handles the war.
And I'll explain.
Israel is the only country on earth that actually fighting the enemy
and at the very same time funding it.
I don't know how many people know, as we spoke about the price that Israel pays
and the revenues by Hamas.
Hamas got over a billion shekels, $300 million over the last month only from this humanitarian
aid.
Hamas is no longer a government, it's a terrorist organization with a supermarket providing
cigarettes, toilet paper and food of course.
Now I think that the moment this war continues, I don't think, I'm sure, I know that it would
stop the humanitarian aid at least for
a few months.
By the way, there is enough supply in Gaza now, only from those 600 trucks a day during
the ceasefire, for Gazans for yet another three, four months.
But the situation in which we actually provide Hamas with the means to recruit new terrorists and to pay salaries
that prevent mass protests would stop.
And there are many, many other options.
For instance, you can decide that in the city of Gaza, for instance, after you clean it
up, you provide the food and there is no weapon there.
You can decide that an American company might do it.
You can decide that you open the Rafah crossing
in order to let people live.
But I fully agree with you that the war that we actually
have had over the last 15 months cannot prevail,
cannot defeat Hamas.
Okay, I wanna ask you, Amit, about the impact
all of this has on this current government, its longevity, parties
on the hard right, Ben Gver leaves the government then because of the hostage
deal and then says well maybe now I'm more open to coming back in after he
watched the Trump press conference, walk us through how this all impacts the
geometry of Israeli politics. So Israeli, Israeli the coalition consisted of 68 Knesset members
when you have only when you have 60 you fall. So if you only have 60 the government falls.
Exactly. Right 60 or less right. Ben Gevr left with his five Knesset members following the signing
of the hostage deal so and Netanyahu's coalition is 63, which is a very narrow coalition.
So is one party far from falling, be it Smoltrich, if a second hostage deal is signed next month?
And Smoltrich, just again for our listeners, he's the finance minister, Bezal Smoltrich,
who like Ben Gver, he leads one of these hard-right national religious parties.
So one of the two parties, Amita is saying, has already left.
Smoltrich has agreed to stay under the condition that Israel does not proceed to the second right national religious parties. So one of the two parties, Amita is saying, has already left.
Exactly.
Small Church has agreed to stay under the condition that Israel does not proceed to
the second phase of the deal. And now those second phase negotiations have commenced.
And the second phase is due in March. In March, the aides of March are very complicated for
Netanyahu because this is exactly the month in which he must pass the budget.
If the budget doesn't pass by the end of March, the government automatically falls and we're
going to the polls.
Right.
So, and this is how governments have fallen in the past where the Knesset cannot agree
on it.
90% of the time.
90% of the time governments fall in Israel not because the government dissolves the Knesset
to go to elections but because the government can't pass a budget and if they can't pass
a budget then the government automatically falls and they go to elections and that's the
danger zone for Netanyahu. And why the budget won't be proved? Because the ultra-orthodox parties
want yet another bill that will exempt their millennials from going to the army. So he has
two ticking bombs, Netanyahu, and I think Trump's declaration neutralized at
the very same time those two ticking bombs.
One because the right wing no longer has to fear about Israel stopping the war because
he has...
I have to explain.
President Trump articulated something more hawkish than Ben-Gavir.
Ben-Gavir never spoke about emigration of all Gazans.
He spoke about a few hundreds of thousands, not more than that.
And the ultra-orthodox would not dare to leave the government when they see that Netanyahu is strong.
So I think he actually, Trump helped Netanyahu to set the date of the election by the end of 2026,
give or take the formal date for the election.
Nadeav, what do you think all of this has on the implementation of the rest of the
phase one of the hostage deal and going into the negotiations for the second
phase? First of all, the fact that Hamas is right now continuing as we speak, I
don't know if this is going to change. I really hope that we're going to see the first part of the deal finalized.
But the fact that Hamas continues with it is a testimony that they don't
think that Trump is serious, which might be a big mistake.
And they did miscalculate massively on October 7th by attacking Israel.
And they do not understand, I think, the American mindset or the Israeli
mindset, but they don't think he's serious
because if they would have...
And by the way, Nadav, I think you're right.
And I think they also, I remember hearing this
from someone in the US intelligence community,
based on the intelligence they were getting
in like the spring of 24,
that the intelligence they were getting
was showing that Sinwar was following Arab media coverage
and international media coverage of the protests on US college campuses.
And Sinwar was thinking, wow, like the West is with me, America is with me, why should
I negotiate?
The pressure is mounting on Israel.
And they were like, he completely does not understand the US and American politics and
American public opinion.
I know this from Israeli intelligence too, that Sinhala was very much, and I think we
spoke about this, was very much encouraged by what was happening on American campuses
and I don't know what they were really thinking if they would have understood American politics.
Well, on the other hand, I have to say there was a major party in this country that didn't
understand American politics.
That's true.
That's true.
There was a major party in the United States that didn't understand
that 77 million Americans were going to vote.
Yeah. No, but basically that it might be a good idea to actually distance yourself
and alienate yourself from radicals and not try to somehow mitigate through this entire thing.
And it's a point I made before the elections, by the way, on this show.
We have the receipts. We know you are, you were there, Nadav.
You're articulating it before it was cool.
So at any rate, Mohamed Zinoar this time doesn't think that the Americans are serious.
For them, they're going, yeah, this is Trump saying what Trump is saying.
But look at what also Steve Witkoff is saying.
Look at what the president is saying about being committed to return all the hostages,
including the young men, which are at the phase two of the deal.
Now, in terms of politics, I'm going to be very cynical right now, okay?
And I don't know how Amit is going to handle this, because him being so, you know, not cynical.
Most importantly, the Call Me Back audience can handle a little bit of cynicism. So let
it rip.
But I'm going to say something just with a pure political calculus, and it isn't funny.
For Netanyahu, the best thing to do after the first phase of the deal is to resume the
war one way or another. Before he went to the deal, I thought that Netanyahu has an
interest in the first phase of the deal from several reasons, and then he resumed the war.
And when resuming the war, this is a huge opportunity for him to go to an election,
right?
Because he will have the law of exemption either passed or not passed with the ultra-orthodox.
If the law isn't passed, he doesn't have the votes, then sure thing, he needs to go
to an election.
And he doesn't want to go to an election when the Israeli hard right goes, hey, actually,
it's Hamas that controls the Gaza Strip.
And this is the condition right now, Dan.
Let's make clear this situation that we have right now.
In these 42 days, Hamas is the ruler of the Gaza Strip after more than a year and after so much sacrifice and
so many people who have died sacrificing their lives for the war aims, one of which was getting
the hostages back, sure, but one of which was to make sure that Hamas doesn't control the Strip.
Netanyahu has been warned by President Biden. He has been warned by his former defense minister interviewed by Amit and by myself
this weekend, again and again and again, that if Israel doesn't have a day after plan, and
by a day after plan, no, they didn't think about massive immigration of Palestinians
from the Gaza Strip, then Hamas will continue to rule the Gaza Strip.
Now whether or not this is going to happen, the Trump plan is going to happen, right now one thing is for sure, first phase is Hamas not controlling the Gaza Strip. Now whether or not this is going to happen, the Trump plan is going to happen, right now
one thing is for sure, first phase is Hamas not controlling the Gaza Strip.
So we're back to square one.
I don't think Netanyahu wants a new election.
He has nothing to earn from a new election.
At the best case scenario, it would be at the same very situation again, with yet the
inability to pass a new military exemption bill, etc.
Well, my point is that if he needs to go to an election, Amit, if it is, yes, he must
go to an election while fighting in Gaza or at least with no having no Hamas rule, just
peacefully in Gaza during a deal.
That's my point.
So we're on the same page as for this thing.
It's not about politics.
It's about the promise the pledge Netanyahu has made to his public following October 7th, a total victory. It's
not because of Smotrich and Ben-Gever, it's because if Netanyahu ends the war without Hamas
being defeated, not a war like Catch-22, an ongoing war, a never-ending war, no, a war with
a certain purpose, to defeat Hamas. By the way, what
Trump really did is offering a new path to defeat Hamas without a single shot fired.
So it's not that people are addicted to the smell of the gunpowder first thing in the
morning. No. Or the napalm on the morning, first thing in the morning. They are committed
to the idea of preventing a terrorist pro-Nazi regime to be one mile
from the borders of Israel.
And if it's the Trump's path, so be it.
If it's Netanyahu's path, so be it, etc.
Okay.
I want to ask you both about what you're seeing and interpreting in the Palestinian and kind of Arab world media about Arab satellite channels,
Arab press, about coverage of how Palestinians have been processing Trump's announcement.
Nadev said that Hamas doesn't take the Trump announcement seriously.
But do you have any insights just based on what you're reading and seeing in terms of how Palestinians are responding
to the extent that we can gain some understanding of that with any clarity?
According to the polls, even prior to October 7th, when Gaza looked way better than now,
one-third of Gaza's population wanted to emigrate.
One-third.
By the way, it makes sense because many of the Gazans define themselves as refugees.
Refugees from old Palestine to today's Israel.
So if you are a refugee, so Gaza is not necessarily your home.
Now after the war, I don't think polls make any sense in Gaza, but one half would be,
I think your guess is as good as mine, but I think 50% would emigrate if they have an
opportunity.
Adav?
Yeah, I spoke with two sources and my impression is that this to an extent, at least on the
first level, breathes new air to the Palestinian cause.
And I want to say something there that is very much Ze'ev Jabotinsky's ideology.
It was the labor movement historically that ployed with the idea of massive population
transfer more than the revisionist and the right-wing side or traditionally the right-wing
side.
And this was the point made by Gandhi, by Havavam Ze'evi, that Israeli far-right politician
at the time, he was quoting Yitzhak Rabin from 1973, talking about the possibility of
moving Gazans to Jordan.
And Rabin did say these things, but it wasn't only Rabin.
And it was actually the Jabotinsky folks and ideology that said, no, we respect the Arabs and we
see that it's not about economics.
If you actually read what he's saying, it's not about economics.
It's about their national self-determination.
And forever we will have two people in this land.
Now, of course, the right wing today is not like Zev Jabotinsky and quoting
Jabotinsky to the right wing today is seen to them as an abomination.
And they will immediately answer, where were you?
You know, when Jabotinsky was hunted down and you know, this is just,
you're just using words here.
But I need to say this knowing what I know and speaking with Palestinians.
But I need to say this, knowing what I know and speaking with Palestinians. I think that this plan for them really enhances a notion called tzumud, which is, it's also
in the Hebrew, hitzamdut, which means sticking to the ground, staying in the ground with
all the hardships.
And it breathes this into the national narrative. Having said that, Dan, there was a way for mass immigration of Palestinians from Gaza.
And here's the way.
And I actually thought that it's a good idea at the beginning of the war, if all the countries
that are so critical of Israel would have said, you know what, we understand there is
a war in Gaza, countries like, I don't know, Sweden and Holland and Canada, and we're willing to accept for a temporary time, and only if
the Israeli government commits to their return hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians so that they will not be hurt with the fighting in the Gaza
Strip and will vet them to make sure that they're not Hamas people or only women and children.
And I actually aired that idea and I thought this could be, and I'm serious about this
idea.
I'm not using this as kind of, oh no, and then we Israelis shouldn't allow them to
return.
No, I'm serious that Israel would have committed with guarantees that they will return.
And I didn't see this, you know, the international sphere.
I didn't see people saying, oh, yeah, let's get no.
And I think that many Palestinians in Gaza, from my conversation, from what I'm reading
from a journalist like Shlomi El-Dar, who's not suspected to be a far-rightist, right?
Shlomi El-Dar is a very respected, much better connections with the Palestinian society than
I do.
And specifically with Gaza.
He's saying everyone I spoke with would have emigrated because of the future of his kids,
but he needs to immigrate to a country that has a future in it.
For instance, like Western Europe or countries that are good places to live in.
And that's the truth.
By the way, that was also the truth about the Jewish people when they needed to leave Eastern and Central Europe because they were, and I'm not comparing, because they were persecuted there and I'm not comparing.
But people want to live in, you know, places in which their children can have a future, not in, I don't know, some places in Africa that nobody even recognizes as a state.
And I think that would have been much more plausible
if there would be an agreement. Of course, I don't think that any Western country would have
accepted a large number of Palestinians even for a temporary measure because immigration.
Canada has been, the Trudeau government has been accepting 5,000 families. I'm not sure
Prime Minister Trudeau is fully aware how big an average
Gazan family is.
It's not the 1.7 children per family and a dog.
So he might have a surprise in the months to come.
I think I agree with Nadav and I'll add to this that those who stay, those who are more
extreme so will stick, will-
Or Amit, love their land more, right?
You know, I'll go for it.
I'll attach more to their land.
Yes. Okay. Potato, potato.
But at the end of the day, I think it sends a message.
In 1948, there was what the Arabs called the Nakba.
The first, I'm not sure we forced or not, there is a dispute.
The immigration of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from the state of Israel.
Now, I just read prior to this podcast the numbers.
Only 50% left.
50% state, they are citizens in Israel today, but the traumatic experience of 50% of a population
living their homeland shaped the Middle East
for 50, 60, 70 years.
It prevented many, many enemies of Israel from attacking it because they knew there
is a price tag that comes with trying to eliminate Israel.
So even if only 200,000 Palestinians would live, I think it's going to make the difference.
Okay.
We're just going to wrap up here in a minute.
Before we do, what do you guys think,
I'll ask each of you quickly, the next phase of this story?
Like if the three of us are getting together,
well we will be physically together in a few days,
but if we're getting together on a podcast
in a couple weeks, what do you think we'll be talking about?
Where is this going?
There is a difference from the sovereignty plan,
the annexation plan by President Trump
in 2020.
Then it was Trump's last year and two months later the COVID crisis broke out.
Now Trump has four years.
And even if this immigration scheme...
I just want for listeners to understand that the whole debate about annexation of the West
Bank was late 2020 when Trump was running for reelection and you're saying now Israel
is having or Trump is having this conversation
About another controversial plan only second week in office second week in office, right?
Yeah, so so now he has four years. So, okay
So even if this immigration doesn't work
So we know that ideas out of the box emerge on a weekly basis when it comes to the Middle East
And I'll tell you something that has nothing to do with what we spoke, but might be connected.
I'm surprised if the tactics of President Trump that you both described is to carry
a huge stick and threaten and then get an incremental achievement.
I just doubt, I don't have the answer, why when it comes to Iran, President Trump doesn't use this tactic.
Why doesn't he threaten Iran?
Listen, in two weeks from now, we are going to bomb you.
Right? Interesting.
Maybe he's worried he might have to actually make it happen.
Yeah, this is what we talked about with Rich Goldberg
in our last episode was how,
when Trump issued that executive order on Iran,
maximum pressure, he kept caveating it with,
I hope I don't have to use this,
I hate that I have to sign this.
So it was on the one hand,
he was putting the screws on Iran,
and yet not talking, not speaking as aggressively
as he does, or he has been on Hamas
and the Palestinians in Gaza.
I mean, the tools he's employing are pretty aggressive,
but the rhetoric is different.
I just wanna say something about this, which I think is important.
Look, I'm all for shaking the coconut tree specifically in the Middle East, and we got
the Abraham Accords as a result of that, and we got this deal as a result of that, and
it's to the credit of the president's team and the president himself.
And after saying that, I want to say something important.
We're dealing with really serious things.
If there is a change, that's one thing.
If Israel goes the wrong path, people, Israeli soldiers,
families, and hostages will die.
And this is a crucial moment.
And I'm getting these signals from the US, from DC.
I'm also getting a signal that the president wants to maybe
pull out the American forces from Syria.
That's a bad omen. And that's really bad for the region, and that's really bad for Israel.
I'm also seeing that the president is downplaying the possibility of a strike against Iran,
referring to what Amit said.
If you want to have a robust agreement with Iran, you need to keep the pressure on and
give them an impression that deterrence is real and that all options
are on the table.
It's really important.
So as an Israeli, I would really, really not want us to get a plan that will only manifest
itself after we beat Hamas on the one hand and on the other hand, so to get blown off
with the issues at hand.
Now, I'm not sure that
when the president speaks like this on Iran, this isn't a ploy to an extent that he's not trying to,
while the administration is already considering maybe striking or allowing Israel to strike
or assisting Israel. So the jury is still out on this, but it's really important. Strategically speaking, Iran is the threat.
The opportunity to act is in this year.
There would be no other opportunity, most probably.
And these are really crucial moments, and that's a real threat to Israel's existence.
And we need to keep our eyes on the ball.
And by the way, the argument I'm just making is the prime minister's argument towards his
D.C. trip and the argument that
he's making with Smotrich and Ben-Gurrior.
Think about Iran.
Note that they're too interested, by the way.
Before we wrap, Nadav, I want to briefly touch on an unrelated story that you tweeted about
yesterday and I'm referring to the story about a top Hamas official, Khalil al-Khaya, who, according to you, met
with a senior Iranian official or military officer before October 7th.
And I mean, I don't want to speak for your reporting, so you speak to your own reporting.
What can you tell us about the story?
So this is part of the Gallant interview and Gallant refused to...
This is former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant that Nadav just had a long interview with that's
been published in the Israeli press.
And Amit and Yonit Levy interviewed on Channel 12 News, which is also getting a lot of attention in.
Yeah, so Gallant wouldn't say anything on the record or the record as to this issue,
but here's the story.
It turns out that there was a middleman, there was an Iranian middleman who was responsible
for coordinating the so-called Axis of Resistance or Axis of Terror.
This man was part of the Al-Quds force of the Revolutionary Guard.
And by the way, he's still alive.
Israel didn't manage to kill him yet.
And this man was carrying messages across the axis of resistance
And one thing is for sure it is absolutely the fact that a plan to destroy Israel
To destroy Israel to annihilate its existence physically
okay, not only lead to its collapse was presented to Hassan Nasrallah and
That Hassan Nasrallah said yeah
I believe this is plausible and we can go for it.
And this didn't happen like years ago, it happened in negotiations
that were held since 2021 through 2022.
It's also the fact, and on this, Galan says on the record that this is the fact,
that in the morning of October 7, Yahya Sinwar presented
three scenarios to Hamas officials.
The first scenario is that they will occupy parts of the Western Negev in Israel, the
southern parts of Israel, parts of the southern parts of Israel, and they will hold onto them.
So Hamas believed that they'll be able to hold to these areas and negotiate with Israel
for some arrangements in Jerusalem, for instance.
Second scenario, he said, was that Hezbollah will join in and will invade Israel from the
north and will occupy parts of the Western Galilee and will hold to them too, which will
give us even more leverage.
Third option, and this is a quote by Gallant, okay, this is not an assessment now, is that
Iran will join in to us and to Hezbollah and then we'll meet in the middle, meaning in
the middle of Israel, meaning a total annihilation of Israel.
This is what Hamas had in mind on the morning of October 7. My story is that it turns out that Hamas is sending an official to Beirut to tell Hassan
Nasrallah, we are going to attack Israel with the big project comes the holidays, the high
holidays in Israel, Rosh Hashanah and the rest, meaning September, September, October. Now the reason Halil al-Hayya, who's a close associate of Senua went there, was because
there was an idea floated at the time during negotiations with Israel as to release of
the hostages held by Hamas.
I remind our listeners that there are two Israeli civilians that entered the Gaza Strip,
at least one of them with a mental illness, that entered the Gaza Strip, and there are two Israeli civilians that entered the Gaza Strip, at least one of them
with a mental illness, that entered the Gaza Strip, and there are also bodies that Hamas
was holding, for instance, the Goldin family, Oron Shaul and others.
So there were negotiations right up to October 7 with Hamas, and Hamas was using this to
deceive the Israelis as to their intentions.
And then one of the countries involved said, hey, we have a suggestion from Hamas.
Hamas is willing to go for this deal with these and these conditions.
And one of these conditions is that you allow Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas, to leave
the Gaza Strip and go abroad for some meetings.
And this goes to the table of Yoav Galant, who's the defense minister.
And I'm not talking a year before, I'm talking really a couple of months before October 7.
And Yoav Galant is faced with the decision whether or not to allow Sinwar.
And these are the days that, you days that we're talking about understanding.
There are daily workers coming from Gaza.
The assessment of the Israeli intelligence division
is that Hamas wants longstanding stability in Gaza.
They're saying, just allow him to go abroad.
He's going to meet Hassan Nasrallah and others,
the leader of Hezbollah, but then he's
going to go back to Gaza.
You need to, of course, assure him that he'll be able to return.
But Gallant says, hell no, I'm not going to allow this, you know, it's off the table.
It wasn't recommended by the Israeli Shabak or the branch intelligence division.
It was a demand made. And now we know that instead of Sinwar,
Hamas sent Halil al-Hayya to Nasrallah in Beirut
to tell him that they are going to attack Israel.
But Nasrallah refused to see Halil al-Hayya.
He was not a senior, and he simply ignored that visit.
The only person to meet him was that Iranian attache.
And Nasrallah never heard from a Hamas official that it's actually going to happen at these dates.
Hamas sent that message, but as far as we know, now I'm speculating, Hezbollah never got the message.
And just imagine, Dan, what would have happened to Israel and to history if Yahya Sinwah would
have been allowed to leave the Gaza Strip and would have met Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut.
Now there are two options.
First option is that Israel would have
been surprised attack that morning from north and south and I don't know where
it would have ended. I asked Galant about this in the interview, do you think that
Israel's existence was at stake? And he said absolutely not. Well I don't know.
That's my answer as a journalist. I don't know because I saw what happened in
October 7. I don't know what would have happened. I know that as an Israeli citizen, we definitely felt
in the first hours, not knowing if Hezbollah is going to attack us, we felt an existential
threat in the center of Israel. At least I felt an existential threat in the center of
Israel because I didn't know if Hezbollah is going to join in, if Iran is going to join
in. But the defense minister is saying it's out of the question. But there is another possibility, which is much more realistic.
It's possible knowing what we know about the infiltration of the Israeli intelligence into
Hezbollah that if Sinwar would have told Hassan Astrala this is going to happen, Israel would
have known about this.
Because knowing what we know today about the level of infiltration.
Meaning the level of Israeli infiltration into Hezbollah into Hezbollah, right?
It was Hezbollah that was leaking as far as the Israeli intelligence was leaking it had leakage. Yeah
Yeah, Israel had penetrated the Hezbollah network. It's a incredible story of a what-if. Yeah. Yeah Wow
Before we go guys, I just want to we talked a lot about the controversy around President Trump's proposal and the impact it's having in the US and the impact it's having in Israel and Gaza.
There was one set of comments he made that got much less attention and I just want to play it.
Over the past 16 months,
Israel has endured a sustained, aggressive, and murderous assault
on every front, but they fought back bravely.
You see that and you know that.
What we have witnessed is an all-out attack on the very existence of a Jewish state in
the Jewish homeland.
The Israelis have stood strong and united in the face of an enemy that has kidnapped, tortured,
raped and slaughtered innocent men, women, children, and even little babies.
I want to salute the Israeli people for meeting this trial with courage and determination
and unflinching resolve.
They have been strong.
President Trump praises the young men and women of the IDF.
He says, you know, for the last 15, 16 months,
we've been hearing the only time people talk about the IDF
and the people who serve in it
as like they're basically, you know, Nazis, you know?
And to hear a president, even President Biden, you know,
who obviously at various points of the last 15, 16 months has been rhetorically
very supportive of Israel.
And I do believe President Biden is a Zionist,
but even he, I don't think ever really talked about
the heroism of Israel's soldiers.
And as someone who has family members in and out of the IDF and know a lot of young people
who are serving or who have served,
I know you guys have deep connections,
I do think that having an American president say that,
and I wish more American politicians would say it,
you know, we do have people like Senator John Fetterman
and Richie Torres who say these things too,
so it's not just President Trump,
but it was an important reminder.
I'm curious if that got any attention
or was noticed in Israel.
Not enough.
President Trump gave very powerful statement
about the idea of soldiers
and about what it means to be Israel.
But since it was not controversial, it wasn't covered.
In the Israeli media, you know, for people, no news is good news. In the Israeli media,
good news is no news. Gentlemen, I will see you soon. And until then, thank you for doing this,
as always. Thank you so much. Shabbat shalom. Thanks very much. Shabbat shalom. Shabbat shalom.
Thanks so much. Shabbat shalom.
Thanks very much.
Shabbat shalom.
Shabbat shalom.
That's our show for today.
You can head to our website, arkmedia.org.
That's A-R-K, arkmedia.org, to sign up for updates, get in touch with us, access our
transcripts, all of which have been hyperlinked to resources that we hope will enrich your understanding of the topics covered in the episodes on this podcast.
Call Me Back is produced and edited by Alain Benatar, additional editing by Martin Juergo.
Rebecca Strom is our Operations Director, researched by Stav Slama and Gabe Silverstein, and our
music was composed by Yuval Semo.
Until next time, I'm your host Dan
Sinor.