Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - Decision Time In The North - with Matti Friedman
Episode Date: July 29, 2024*** Share episode on X: https://tinyurl.com/43epx79k *** This past weekend we saw a major and brazen escalation against Israel by Hezbollah. This war front is not new, but it will now come into much ...sharper focus. And with the slaughter of Druze children, we have received a number of questions about Israel’s Druze community in Israel’s North, as well as questions about the options for Israeli decision-makers now. To help us unpack all of this, we are joined by Matti Friedman, who is one of the most thoughtful writers when it comes to all matters related to Israel, the broader Middle East, and also trends in the world of journalism. He is a columnist for The Free Press: https://www.thefp.com/ Matti’s most recent book is called “Who by Fire: Leonard Cohen in the Sinai.” Before that he published "Spies of No Country: Secret Lives at the Birth of Israel," and before that "Pumpkinflowers: A Soldier’s Story of a Forgotten War.” Matti’s army service included tours in Lebanon. His work as a reporter has taken him from Israel to Lebanon, and other hotspots across the Middle East and around the world. He is a former Associated Press correspondent and essayist for the New York Times opinion section. Matti Friedman's published works that are relevant to this episode: -“The Wisdom of Hamas” — The Free Press — https://www.thefp.com/p/matti-friedman-the-wisdom-of-hamas -“What if the Real War in Israel Hasn’t Even Started?” — The Free Press — https://www.thefp.com/p/matti-friedman-israel-hezbollah-war -"There Is No 'Israeli-Palestinian Conflict'" -- The New York Times -- https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/16/opinion/israeli-palestinian-conflict-matti-friedman.htm -"An Insider’s Guide to the Most Important Story on Earth" -- Tablet Magazine -- https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/israel-middle-east/articles/israel-insider-guide -"What The Media Gets Wrong About Israel" -- The Atlantic -- https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2014/11/how-the-media-makes-the-israel-story/383262/ -“Pumpkinflowers: A Soldier’s Story of a Forgotten War” — https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/pumpkinflowers-matti-friedman/1122279367?ean=9781616206918
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The decisions made by Israeli leaders now are going to decide in a very dramatic way the course
of events over the next months and perhaps over the next years. Because if there's an all-out war
between Israel and Hezbollah, that is going to be much worse than the war we've seen so far against
Hamas. And we actually might remember the war against Hamas as the preliminary to the real war.
And it could quite conceivably draw in the Iranians directly, which would mean that this
would become a regional war. And if that happens, then we're talking about an event on a completely
different scale. It's 6pm on Sunday, July 28th here in New York City. It is 1 o'clock a.m. on Monday, July 29th, in Israel.
If you have been following the news over the weekend, you would have learned, according to the BBC,
that, quote, 11 dead in rocket attack on Israeli-occupied Golan.
That was the BBC headline.
11 dead in a rocket attack?
Did the rocket just attack Israel on its own?
Or did some terror organization launch the rocket attack?
Given that that terror organization, Hezbollah, trained, funded, and armored by Iran,
has been fighting a second front against Israel, is the organization that launched the rocket attack,
one would think that that would
be an important detail in the headline. Or that the victims were all children playing soccer on
a football pitch. Also, tragically, an important detail. And Israeli-occupied Golan? According to
whom? The U.S. government recognizes Israeli sovereignty over the Golan
Heights. And sadly, the BBC was not alone. This headline was typical of the reporting across the
media landscape over the weekend. Here's the New York Times headline, quote, fears of escalation
after rocket from Lebanon hits soccer field. Again, a rocket just makes its way on its own to a soccer
field. And of course, no mention of 12 dead children and no mention of Hezbollah. And then
here's NPR, quote, a rocket hit Israeli-controlled Golan Heights after Israel struck a Gaza school, close quote. Is this to suggest that this was a
Hamas rocket fired in defense of an Israeli attack? No mention of Hezbollah, no mention of
12 children murdered. In any event, you get the point. This weekend, we saw a major and brazen
escalation against Israel by Hezbollah. This war front is not new, but is now
going to come into much sharper focus. We had a lot of questions about this growing crisis, which
seems to have entered a new phase this weekend, and its history, how Israel got here. We also had
questions about Israel's Druze community in Israel's north,
which were the victims of this attack. And also, what are the options now for Israeli decision
makers? To help us unpack all of this, we are joined by Mati Friedman, who is one of the most
thoughtful writers when it comes to all matters related to Israel, the broader Middle East,
and also trends in the world of
journalism. He is a columnist for the Free Press. Listeners to this podcast know I'm a big fan of
the Free Press, and Mati has been contributing some important reporting and analysis there since
October 7th. Mati's most recent book is called Who By Fire? Leonard Cohen in the Sinai. Before that, he published Spies of No
Country, Secret Lives at the Birth of Israel. And before that, and most relevant to this conversation,
Pumpkin Flowers, a soldier's story of a forgotten war that deals with Mati's experience in Lebanon.
Mati's army service includes tours in Lebanon. He has served there and written and
reported from there extensively. And his work as a reporter has taken him not only from Israel to
Lebanon, but other hotspots around the Middle East and around the world. Mati is also a former
Associated Press correspondent and essayist for the New York Times opinion section.
Mati Friedman on Decision Time in the North.
This is Call Me Back.
And I'm pleased to welcome back to this podcast
my longtime friend, Mati Friedman of the Free Press,
regular columnist for the Free Press
and author of numerous books,
but most relevant for this conversation is his book, Pumpkin Flowers, which was about his time serving in southern Lebanon.
And now we are here today to talk about a brewing war between Israel over the border between
Lebanon and Israel and developments over these last couple of days. Mati, thanks for being here.
Thanks for having me, Dan.
Mati lives in Jerusalem, but he spends a lot of time in northern Israel,
and he's written extensively over the years about northern Israel,
including not just the book I mentioned,
but also a very important piece a few months ago for the Free Press,
which we'll post in the show notes.
Mati, let me just start about the attack over the weekend in Majdal Shams.
What do we know about this attack as of now? Israel and Hezbollah have been trading fire
over the border since October 8th. Hezbollah opens fire to support the Hamas offensive of
October 7th. And since then, there's been a low grade war on the northern border.
But the incident on Saturday late afternoon, evening is the worst
attack in northern Israel since the war started. Hezbollah rocket, which seems to have been aimed
at a military facility on Mount Hermon, missed and hit a soccer court in a Druze town in the
northern Golan Heights called Mashtel Shams. And there were lots of kids playing soccer on the grass
and 12 of them were killed by the rocket.
And they're being buried as we record this podcast.
So this is the biggest civilian tragedy in the North
since the beginning of the war.
And for the Druze of the Golan,
this is basically an unprecedented occurrence
and people are really shattered by what's happened.
The attack seems to have been targeted, as you said, a military base near the
soccer field. We're not sure whether or not it was intentional to hit that soccer field, right?
My impression is that it was not intentional. I don't think Hezbollah has any interest in killing
Druze civilians. Hezbollah launches a barrage of rockets on Saturday and announces it on one of their
Twitter channels. And they say they're targeting an Israeli military base on Mount Hermon.
And what seems to have happened, and we don't really know, is that they missed and hit a bunch
of kids in the middle of this town, which is not too far away. And it could be an incident that
really changes the direction of events in the North. We'll see. We've been hearing since October 7th about communities in the north being evacuated and
how all these Israelis, Jews and Druze, and we'll get to the Druze in a moment.
But we've been hearing about all these communities in the north that have been moved to other
parts of Israel because of the close range to Hezbollah rocket fire.
Why hadn't these people been evacuated? The Golan Heights was never traditionally a target for Hezbollah rocket fire. Why hadn't these people been evacuated?
The Golan Heights was never traditionally a target for Hezbollah rockets. That's only
evolved in the course of this most recent round of fighting. And I don't think anyone
ever thought that the Druze towns of the Northern Golan would be targeted. There are four Druze
towns that are home to about 25,000 people. The Druze of the Northern Golan are different from
the Druze citizens of
Israel, who are to a large extent integrated in Israeli society and serve in senior positions in
the military and in the intelligence services. The Druze of the Golan come under Israeli control
after the Six-Day War in 1967. And traditionally, they've maintained an allegiance to Syria.
That's changed over the past decade or so since the Syrian civil war, but most of them are
not Israeli citizens. And I just don't think it occurred to anyone that Hezbollah would target
these people. And my assumption is that they were not targeting the civilian residents of these
villages. But if you send, as they have, hundreds or thousands of rockets into Israel over the
course of 10 months, then the chances that one of them is going to miss its target, the chances are pretty good. And that seems to be exactly what happened
in yesterday's tragedy. Okay. I want to talk to you about the Druze, which you just touched on.
Their role in Israeli society is very complicated to the point that Alana and I were talking this
morning. We realized we just have to dedicate a whole episode to who the Druze are, which we'll do separately because there's going to be a lot of questions and a lot
of curiosity now about the Druze. And like I said, they're among the most complicated community to
explain that lives in Israel, perhaps even more complicated than the Jews. The Jews are pretty
complicated to explain, but I think we can't really talk about this event without at least
providing a few minutes of context on it.
So can you do your best here to summarize who are the Druze?
Druze are an offshoot of Islam.
They split off from Islam about a thousand years ago and are persecuted over many centuries by the mainstream of Islam.
And they tend to live in remote locations that allow them to defend themselves.
So largely in mountainous areas.
Today, there are Jews populations in Israel, in Syria, and in Lebanon.
Inside Israel, the Jews have always been very loyal to Israel.
That's part of the Jews' approach to navigating the very treacherous geopolitics of this region,
similar in many ways to the way Jews navigated the treacherous geopolitics of Europe 100 years ago, which is to be unimpeachably
loyal to the power in which you live. So the Druze in Israel are, as I said, members of the military,
including at least one general. So first of all, they're Arabic speaking community.
This particular Druze community that was hit is indigenous to Northern Israel and also areas of
Syria and Lebanon,
right? I mean, that's when you say they have that connection to Syria and before 2012 had
a deep connection even to the government, the Assad regime in Syria. The assumption was always
that the Golan Heights were eventually going to be returned to Syria. And given that that's the
case, they didn't want to be implicated in collaboration with Israel.
That has changed to some extent since the Syrian civil war changed people's attitude toward the Assad regime.
But the Druze are very closely tied to each other.
And the Druze of Syria, Lebanon, and Israel are connected to each other.
But the different groups have a different approach based on which political entity they
live in.
So the Druze of Israel proper are very much Israeli and they're subject to the draft.
The men are.
My sergeant, for example, in a regular infantry unit of the Israeli military was Druze.
Lovely guy named Wissam from a village called or a town called Usifia, which is on Mount Carmel, not far from Haifa.
And that's quite common.
The commander of the Golani Brigade, one of our best infantry brigades until not long ago was Druze. So that's the Israeli Druze.
The Druze of the Golan, about 25,000 people have a different political identity. They have the same
religious identity as all the other Druze, but- Just on the religious identity. So they're not
actually Muslim, but they practice a sort of distinctive Abrahamic faith, right? I mean,
it's not Islam. No, it's not Islam.
No, it's not Islam.
It's an offshoot of Islam.
It's a fascinating religion with a lot of wisdom.
And it's really worth a deep dive if you haven't done one.
It's very complicated to understand,
but it's kind of an anomalous community that defies national boundaries.
And I think as Jews,
we can identify with this kind of predicament.
Of course, you have co-religionists
living in other countries, but you're loyal to the country that you live in. And this really
reminds me of this situation of Jews in the First World War, where you had Jews fighting in the
German army and Jews fighting in the British army. And that's kind of where the Jews are.
So they're in a pickle. But the area in the Northern Golan where the Jews live, where there
are these four villages, these four Syrian Druze villages. It's kind of like a Druze autonomous zone, almost not politically.
But if you drive up there, it's really, it's their country.
And they grow excellent apples and they grow cherries.
And they have this unique culture.
My experience has been that they're lovely, hospitable people.
There's even an alternative rock scene in Masht al-Sham.
It's just a fascinating
corner of the country. And I don't think that they expect it to be drawn into this war in the way
that they just were. Yeah. Okay. So now let's talk about where Israel goes from here. And like I said,
for our listeners, we will do a whole episode on the Druze because it's certainly important and
worthy. So Mati, as I said in the introduction, you've written extensively
about Lebanon. You've worked on a documentary series about Lebanon. How did you end up,
you Mati, focusing so much on Lebanon? I moved to Israel in 1995 with a very European story in my
head. So I knew the story of the kibbutz and I knew about David Ben-Gurion. And I arrived in Israel, decided to stay, got drafted
and ended up inside Lebanon in a military outpost called Outpost Pumpkin, which was part of what we
call the security zone, which was a strip of land inside Lebanon that Israel kept from the early
80s until the year 2000 as a way of keeping terrorists away from the border. Initially
PLO fighters and then Hezbollah fighters.
So Israel maintained a buffer zone in Lebanon
that was manned by Israeli soldiers.
And I found myself in this country
that I'd never thought about at all
because when I moved to Israel,
I wasn't thinking a lot about Shia Islam
or Maronite Christians
or any part of the very complicated ethnic makeup of Lebanon.
And I found myself in this country,
which was, first of all, just
beautiful and bewitching and dangerous and confusing. And the landscape was gorgeous. And
behind every rock, there could be a bomb and there were tripwires in the bushes. And we were shelled
quite frequently by people who we couldn't see most of the time. So the whole mix was extremely
compelling, especially for a 19-year-old. And I think since then, I've been trying to figure out what that was.
And I got out of the army, went to study Middle Eastern studies at Hebrew University, took
every Lebanon course that I could find, and eventually went back to Lebanon as a journalist
a few years after the Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon.
So I spent a lot of my time in Israel trying to figure out exactly what happened to me
and to my friends in Lebanon in the late 90s.
In retrospect, what we saw was the first war of the 21st century. At the time, we thought that the
small scale guerrilla war in the security zone in South Lebanon was the last war of the 20th
century because it seemed that the conflict was about to be wrapped up as part of the peace
process. And then ultimately the Israeli withdrawal. And the withdrawal. And that
seemed to be part of it. Right. Under Ehud Barak. Right. Ehud Barak pulls forces out
of Lebanon. Our outpost was blown up by my company, and we interpreted that as being part of the end
of the war. And in retrospect, what we'd really seen was the birth of a new kind of warfare,
which Hezbollah really pioneers. And we're seeing it now, of course, here, but we've also seen it in
Iraq, where a lot of the most potent enemies faced by US troops were Shia militias trained by Hezbollah.
A lot of the same guys, in some cases, were building the IEDs that we had to deal with, showed up in Iraq afterward.
And even Afghanistan, the Taliban were using a lot of tactics that were pioneered by Hezbollah.
And the Palestinians, too, were very much inspired by Hezbollah's success in the security zone in the 90s and then implemented those tactics and are still implementing those tactics against Israel. So I think anyone who is trying to understand the Middle East in the 21st century really has to have a close look at what happened in South Lebanon in the 80s and 90s. And I saw a tiny piece of that as a soldier and I've been preoccupied with figuring it out since then. And it's not just the nature of the attacks and
warfighting and terrorist attacks that Hezbollah orchestrated and implemented that were the model
for a lot of what US forces faced in Iraq. A lot of you said what Israel faced against Hamas and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad, but it's also the way Hezbollah controlled the media narrative
during these conflicts or these spikes in terrorism. Hezbollah is really one of the first groups, maybe the first group of this kind to understand
the propaganda war and to understand that video in many cases can be a more powerful
weapon than an RPG.
So very early on, Hezbollah starts sending a cameraman along with their fighters.
And the first incident where this really works, where they score a huge propaganda victory
using video actually happened at the outpost where I served, although it happened before I arrived there at this outpost called Outpost Pumpkin, which in Hebrew is called Mutzav Glat.
And at the very end of October 1994, the Hezbollah force attacks the outpost, catches the soldiers off guard.
They managed to get up on the embankments of the outpost.
One of the soldiers is killed.
A few of them are wounded. And the Hezbollah guys managed to stick a flag onments of the outpost. One of the soldiers is killed. A few of them are wounded
and the Hezbollah guys managed to stick a flag on top of the outpost. So it's kind of like an
Iwo Jima moment and they film it with a camcorder and then they run away. So the Israeli army
doesn't understand what happened because the outpost wasn't captured. And it seemed that the
soldiers managed to fight off the attack. And then a few hours later, Hezbollah airs the video.
And this is early 90s, mid 90s.
So beginning of satellite TV information is really moving around across borders for the first time freely.
This is pre-internet, but it's very much the beginning of the free information age.
And the footage is so good.
It's so powerful.
It's incredible reality footage that even the Israeli stations play it and they
play it in a kind of loop. And the Israeli public is shocked by this because it's the first time
they've really seen enemy fighters score what seems to be a major victory against Israeli
soldiers. And there hadn't been a victory. It was purely staged for the camera, but it didn't matter.
And Hezbollah understood that you don't have to capture the outpost in order to score a propaganda
victory. You don't have to capture the outpost in order to score a propaganda victory.
You don't have to capture the outpost in order to make a movie that makes it look like you
captured the outpost.
And I think that this is kind of instinctively clear to us now in 2024, in the age of the
smartphone, and we've seen the ISIS videos, and this has been adapted and perfected many
times since the 90s.
But the first group to really understand how this can work and how it could be used as a force equalizer against a more powerful enemy, that's Hezbollah fighting Israel
in the South Lebanon security zone in the 1990s. Okay. So in terms of Israel's response now to what
happened over the weekend, there are obviously two scenarios being discussed. There may be more,
but the two scenarios being discussed is, is this the trigger for the all-out war that many have been speculating would happen? It was just a matter of
time between Israel and Hezbollah. Or is there going to be some sort of measured escalation
or something in between? Or, and I'll give you one more, the war has been going on for some time and
no one has been really paying attention. And so now this is just the latest escalation in a war that has been going on that we all thought
was a sort of Cold War, but actually has been a hot war. Anything that I say about the future
will make me look stupid, probably within a matter of days. But I think that the decisions
made by Israeli leaders now are going to decide in a very dramatic way the course of events over
the next months and
perhaps over the next years. Because if there's an all-out war between Israel and Hezbollah,
that is going to be much worse than the war we've seen so far against Hamas. And we actually might
remember the war against Hamas as the preliminary to the real war. It might end up being remembered
kind of like the Spanish Civil War is remembered as a prelude to the Second World War.
Hezbollah is a much more powerful organization than Hamas.
They have a lot more rockets.
They have an estimated 140,000 or 150,000 rockets.
They can strike anywhere in Israel.
A war against Hezbollah will be devastating for Israel in a way that we haven't experienced yet.
And it will be much more devastating for Lebanon.
And it could quite conceivably draw in the Iranians directly, which would mean that this would become a regional war.
And if that happens, then we're talking about an event on a completely different scale.
And I know that people, certainly people here, are watching this with great concern.
My parents live very close to the Lebanon border in a town called Naharia.
So I'm, of course, watching this with some very direct personal
investment, but I'm also watching this as someone who cares deeply about Lebanon. And it's strange
to say, maybe as someone who was there initially as an infantry soldier, but I have very warm
feelings for Lebanon. It's just a beautiful, complicated, fascinating country that is a lot
like Israel in many ways. They have beaches and they have ski slopes and they have
business and they have amazing food and they have a bit of Europe and they have a bit of the Middle
East. And if they had better luck and better government, Lebanon would be an absolutely
fabulous place. And the fact that it's a basket case is really a tragedy. It might end up being
a tragedy for Israel as well if we get dragged into a war, but it's primarily a tragedy for
the Lebanese who could have had a different kind of country. And I'd like to point that out because we talk about
Lebanon in very military terms. And of course, Hezbollah is a real military threat. Hezbollah
is de facto the army of Lebanon. There isn't really a state of Lebanon. Other people pretend
that there is, but I think we can't lose sight of the fact that there is a country there that
isn't Hezbollah. And most people in Lebanon aren't Hezbollah. And there are large populations of people in Lebanon who are watching these events with extreme concern, if not terror,
because whatever the effects are on Israel of an all out war for them, the effects will be worse.
Now, I want to drill down on this, why this war could make the Israeli defensive war against Hamas
seem like, you know, as you said, the Spanish civil
wars, that's a powerful analogy precursor to World War II. Because I think there's a tendency
in the popular press coverage to just say, yeah, Israel's got a tense border on the south
with Gaza and Hamas, and it's got a tense border in the north with Hezbollah and southern Lebanon.
And there are two terrorist organizations, one on each border, and Israel's,
it's one of Israel's many fronts. But no, Hezbollah and its threat to Israel and its capacity,
the scale of a war with Hezbollah in terms of its impact on Israel is at a whole other level
from anything Hamas could do, even with the horrors of October 7th, you know, fresh in our
rearview mirror. So can you just explain why Hezbollah
and the threat from southern Lebanon and the possibility of a full on war there is something
that would completely eclipse the scale and the potential damage to Israel than what Israel has
been dealing with on its southern border? Hezbollah is a better trained organization.
It's an organization with closer relations to the Iranians and the Revolutionary Guard. They're trained by them at a higher level and tech, but they were very smart and caught us
off guard in many ways, I think, because Israel was more minded toward a threat from the north
than a threat from the south. But there's no question that a war with Hezbollah will be much
worse. I mean, when I spoke to people who follow this stuff from inside the system, they use the
term 10X, meaning that a war with Hezbollah will be 10 times as worse as the war with Hamas. And
because of the closer ties between Hezbollah and the Iranians, I mean, effectively, Hezbollah is a unit of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards. It's not
as distant as Hamas. Hamas is part of the proxy alliance in a general sense, but Hezbollah really
is equipped and trained and takes orders from the Iranians. So the chances of drawing the Iranians
directly into the conflict is much higher. We saw that night that the Iranians fired 300 cruise missiles
and suicide drones at Israel a few months ago, we saw what direct Iranian involvement would look
like. The awareness of the nature of the Hezbollah threat is very much present at the highest levels
of Israel's leadership. And it's quite clear that in the first days after October 7th,
there were figures in the government who thought the move should be against Hezbollah,
because Hezbollah is the prime Iranian proxy on our borders. Not just figures, Galad, the defense minister.
Yeah. Primarily the defense minister thought that we should take out Hezbollah because Hezbollah is
the prime Iranian proxy. And if you can deal with them first, then you've removed the main Iranian
power on our borders. Hamas is a secondary power. And for many reasons,
I think it was decided not to do that. One of the reasons was, I think, American pressure.
The Americans were trying to limit the war and were, in quite a misguided way, pressuring Israel
and micromanaging Israel's response in a way that might have led or helped Israel make decisions
that ultimately weren't the right ones. I mean, we're dealing with an Iranian proxy alliance.
We're dealing with an Iranian force on our northern border, attacking us from Lebanon in Gaza,
attacking us in the form of Hamas and Islamic Jihad. We have Iranian forces on our northeastern
border with Syria. We have Iranian proxies in Iraq, which fire at us on occasion. And of course,
we have the Iranian proxy in Yemen, which is the Houthis firing at Eilat and interfering with
shipping in the Red Sea. So the idea that Israel needs to fight on Iranian terms by kind of getting drawn into the mud with
their proxies is one that I think we need to think about if the war is being run by the Iranians out
of Tehran, then there's probably not going to be any kind of conclusive solution as long as the
Iranians themselves don't pay a price. And just to put this in context, in the Syrian
quote unquote civil war, I always find that term civil war an odd term. I mean, it's the government
of Bashar Assad has slaughtered hundreds of thousands of Syrians. It's not exactly like
there are two sides duking it out. One side is unleashing a massacre on one community basically
for over a decade. But be that as it may, Hezbollah was deployed in that war. So just to give our
listeners a sense, Hezbollah fighters were fighting in Syria to protect and prop up Bashar
Assad's regime. So this is a real light infantry army, Hezbollah, that is, as you say, a unit of
the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, so much so that when Iran was trying to protect Assad,
they deployed different units
to Syria, Iranian units and Hezbollah, because Hezbollah was viewed as just one of the Iranian
units that had at its disposal. So that's how close Iran feels to Hezbollah. And that's how
well trained the Hezbollah fighters are. They've had real experience in the last number of years
fighting a real war. This is
much different than Hamas in terms of its capabilities. It's one of the many facts that
should lead us to understand that what's going on here is not an Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
And I think that if there's one way that press coverage of this conflict has been fictionalized,
it's that if you present this as an Israeli-Palestinian conflict, then you can incredibly present the Israelis as being more powerful, more militarized, more prosperous, more Western, and the Palestinians as kind of third world innocents who are one corner of the region called Israelis. And the Arab world is about 300 million people.
And the Islamic world is one and a half billion, maybe 2 billion, depending on who you ask.
And the war is clearly not limited to Israelis and Palestinians.
In fact, that night a few months ago when the Iranians fired directly at Israel,
you could really see the Iranian alliance in action.
And you could really see the nature of what the war is.
We had rockets from Iran, rockets from Iraq, rockets from Lebanon, rockets from Yemen. It's not a war that's
limited to Israelis and Palestinians. So the Western press has really fallen in love with
this narrative about Israelis and Palestinians and usually will show Israelis as being powerful.
Usually the Israelis appear in the form of a tank or an F-16 and the Palestinians appear in the form
of a child who's been caught in the crossfire. This is one part of a much more complicated regional conflict
in which the prime mover is not Israel or the Palestinians. The prime mover is Iran.
And I think it's crucial that we understand that because otherwise Israel's decisions are
impossible to understand. So if you don't understand what's going on in the northern border,
it's very hard to understand what's going on in Gaza. Much of what Israel is doing in Gaza
is done with an eye toward the north, toward Hezbollah, toward demonstrating
to Hezbollah what will happen if they pursue a certain course of action. And I think that it's,
you know, it's necessary for people to zoom out and understand the regional contours of this
conflict and abandon this very popular, but mostly fictional story about an Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. That term really obscures much more than it reveals. We're talking about Hezbollah's capabilities. I just think it's important for
people to understand those capabilities. Also, its rockets, the reach of its rockets, the
sophistication of its rockets, again, a whole other level from Hamas in terms of A, its reach, B,
the precision-guided sophistication of some of their capabilities, which means they can hit big
parts of Israel that are largely untouched by Hamas and the Israeli population and critical infrastructure.
Right. The war against Hezbollah will not be a war in the north. I think that's important to
understand. Hezbollah has rockets that can reach across the country. Some of the rockets are very
accurate. We've seen their success with suicide drones, which kind of changed the equation in
many ways because they seem to be
able to get under Israel's rocket warning systems with some success. So we're talking about a war
that will affect all of Israel. It won't be like previous rounds with Hezbollah, which have largely
affected northern Israel. The north might be affected more than other parts of the country,
but we're going to see rockets hitting more or less everywhere. And I do think if it happens,
God forbid, if it happens,
it will be a war of a different order. It'll be the kind of thing that we haven't yet experienced. I think Israel will ultimately persevere, but it won't be easy and every
civilian in Israel will be affected by it. So I think that's why we've seen Israel's government
go to such extreme lengths to avoid it. So Israel has been talking, of course,
with a lot of confidence about what it can and will do to Lebanon if necessary. But at the same time, you've seen Israeli leadership
do everything possible to avoid escalating the war with Hezbollah. And part of it is the
understanding of what that war will look like. And part of it is, I think, the knowledge that
we can't really handle a war on two fronts simultaneously, or if we're forced to handle
a war on two fronts simultaneously, it's going to stretch the army to the breaking point. And Israel's military is, of course, still heavily
engaged in Gaza. So the ideal scenario is to finish in Gaza in some way, even if it's not
completely conclusive, and then turn the focus north. The ideal solution in the north would be
a diplomatic solution that forces Hezbollah to move away from the border fence because Israeli
civilians will not return to their homes on the fence if Hezbollah fighters are on the fence.
And I had the experience a couple of years ago of being up on the fence with Israeli soldiers
and a few yards away from me, I guess it was about four or five yards from me on the Israeli
side of the fence, a guy popped out of the bushes on the Lebanese side and he was dressed in civilian
clothes, but he was clearly a military man and he had a camera and he pulled
out his camera and started taking pictures. And it was clearly a Hezbollah scout who was in the
bushes a few yards away from me on the Lebanese side. So if I'm an Israeli who lives at Kibbutz
Manara or Kibbutz Hanita or Kibbutz Matzubah, the Kibbutzim that are really on the fence,
I can't go back in those circumstances because October 7th could happen to me, you know,
the next day after I returned to my home on the Lebanese border. So Hezbollah has to be pushed
back in some way. Ideally, that will be done with diplomacy. The war in 2006 against Hezbollah ends
with an agreement that Hezbollah will operate only north of the Litani River, which means miles from
the Israeli border. And in the buffer zone between Israel and Hezbollah,
the United Nations inserted a military force called UNIFIL, which was supposed to keep the peace. And the force has been completely ineffective. In fact, the only thing it's
achieved is making Israel's life harder because it's harder to operate against Hezbollah when
you have a lot of Irish or Fijian troops in South Lebanon. Other than that, it has been
completely ineffective. So it's going
to be hard to convince Israelis that a diplomatic solution engineered by the United Nations with
international peacekeepers is going to keep us safe. And I think the most likely scenario,
even though it is a terrible scenario, will be Israeli military action in Lebanon at some point
in the near future. By the way, parenthetically, it's that experience with UNIFIL from UN Resolution
1701 that many in Israel think the idea of having a third party security force in Gaza is completely
unworkable, too, because they've just seen what a disaster it's been in the north. But I want to,
if Israel winds up in a full on war with Hezbollah, what does victory look like? Is victory
just getting Hezbollah back to north of the Latani River?
Or is victory something similar along the lines of how Israel is declaring what victory
would look like against Hamas, which is in Gaza, it's removing, basically wiping out
Hamas, wiping out Hamas's capabilities, wiping out Hamas's leadership, crushing its military
structure and preventing it from being able to operate on Gazan territory.
Is that what victory looks like if Israel winds up in a war against Hezbollah?
No, and that kind of victory would not be feasible in Lebanon
because it would require the occupation of all of Lebanon.
And Israel has had, of course, as listeners will know,
several misadventures in Lebanon when trying to intervene in different ways in Lebanese politics,
most notably in 1982 when the Israeli army invades Lebanon in order to exp in different ways in Lebanese politics, most notably in 1982,
when the Israeli army invades Lebanon in order to expel the PLO, does expel the PLO. Yasser Arafat
gets on a ship and is sent away to Tunis. And then Israel stays in Lebanon and tries to engineer
the election of a pro-Israeli government in Lebanon. And it's an absolute disaster that leads
to the massacres at Sabran Jatila by Christian militiamen
allied with the Israelis.
And Israel sinks into the Lebanese mud.
That's how people say it here in Hebrew, Habot Salivanani, the Lebanese mud.
People have this memory of just being embroiled in this swamp of ethnic warfare inside Lebanon.
Israel only manages to extricate itself 18 years after the invasion.
So I don't think you're going to see Israel trying anything along the same lines,
which would probably mean that a victory against Hezbollah
would be moving them far enough back from the border
that normal life in northern Israel could resume,
deterring them to such an extent
that they would not dare to attack us for a period of time.
Forever might be a bit too much to ask,
but ultimately I think none of these problems
are likely to be solved as long as the regime in Tehran is actively trying to surround Israel with proxies.
And ultimately that is going to have to be addressed because Hezbollah is a symptom of the problem and Hamas is a symptom of the problem and the Houthis are a symptom of the problem.
And we're not addressing the actual problem.
So the Iranians have established a kind of great situation for them where they can attack Israel through proxies and
Israel does not attack them. And that equation will have to change if we're to see a real change
in Israel's position in the Middle East. And you said earlier that the story of Lebanon is a real
tragedy, that it really is this beautiful country with all this potential, and it's in a pathetic state. I mean, the country itself already feels like a failed state or a
failing state or on the verge of collapse. So if Israel were to attack, the implications for
Lebanon could be much broader and deeper than just, you know, Hezbollah getting crushed.
Absolutely. I was in Lebanon as a tourist or as a journalist in 2002. And I was in Beirut and I was really struck by how similar it is to Tel Aviv. There were people with fashionable sunglasses and mini skirts and cell phones and people were at the beach. And then you'd cross the street and it would be pictures of bearded clerics on the wall and women just all in black. And if you live in Israel, it was all very familiar. And since then, I've really seen Lebanon as kind of an alternate future for Israel, two countries that start out in similar circumstances
with their backs to the Mediterranean, one leg in Europe, one leg in the Islamic world.
And when I look north, I don't just see an enemy state or a threat. I see an alternate future for
Israel, a failed state that does not get its act together, a state that parcels out government power among competing ethnic groups, a state that surrenders to
corruption. And that's really happened in Lebanon. And we've seen it play out over the past
couple of years where garbage has piled up in Lebanon because there's no one to collect it.
Electricity works for a few hours a day. Gas has run out. And there's been a lot of emigration of
the people who are Lebanon's future. And they've
been leaving and they've been going to places like Canada, where I'm from, and I hope that
they can build better lives there. But it's a tragedy for Lebanon. So we're looking at a state
that is on the brink of becoming a failed state. And an Israeli war in Lebanon, if Hezbollah
triggers one, it won't just hit Hezbollah. It could push Lebanon over the brink in a way that
I think could have very unpredictable consequences. Israel might not have a choice. I don't think we can live with a kind of an Iranian proxy army dictating our lives on the northern border. And I think it's Lebanon's weakness that's been its undoing. They haven't managed to establish state sovereignty. They don't control their own territory. It's just a very loose alliance between different groups. And one of those groups is Hezbollah, and they have their own plan that has nothing to do with building a
better future for the Lebanese. So one of the many tragedies that I hope we can avoid in the next
couple of months is a tragedy that could really push Lebanon into the abyss.
What would it take to, I know you're not a military strategist, but you write a lot about
military strategy and military strategists. What would it take to remove the threat, the Hezbollah threat from Israel's north? I mean, really removed.
Saying I'm not a military strategist is a bit of an understatement. I'm a very low ranking
infantry soldier who loses interest basically over the company level. So as soon as it gets
to the battalion level or the brigade level, it's for me so theoretical that I can barely
understand what's going on. But you're not going to see the eradication of Hezbollah in Lebanon in any circumstance,
because Israel cannot occupy all of Lebanon. So if Israel goes into South Lebanon, as we did
in the 80s, we held a strip of land in South Lebanon, but Hezbollah didn't operate from the
strip of land that we controlled. They simply went north and they operated north of the Israeli
occupation zone. And that's what they'll do if Israel goes into Lebanon, reaches the Litani River,
Hezbollah will move north of the Litani River and operate from there.
So you're not going to see a situation where Israel is going house to house in Beirut looking for Hezbollah fighters.
All that can be done is to push them back from the border and establish an equation that makes any attack on Israel not worthwhile.
Unfortunately, because as we know, Hezbollah is not an independent actor.
It serves the interests of the Islamic Republic in Iran.
Without addressing that problem, you're not going to see a fundamental solution to the Hezbollah problem. And I think that many of us have realized over the past 10 months that we're fighting the war that Iran wants us to fight.
We're behaving as they want us to behave.
They're sending their proxies at us and we're fighting with the proxies.
Iran doesn't mind sacrificing tens of thousands of Palestinians and they won't mind sacrificing
tens of thousands of Lebanese. And until the Iranians pay a price for their strategy,
they don't have any interest in desisting. And I think that's where this is going. Unfortunately,
it's going there 10 months into the Gaza war with Israel's international position
very much eroded with American leadership nowhere to be seen,
with America flying into an election that has very unpredictable results. So all this is happening at
a very bad time. So the Iranians have a coherent strategy, they're very disciplined, they're
pursuing a coherent goal. And the Western alliance system, such as it is, is kind of headless and
running around in a way that's not
likely to solve the deep problems of the region. We often hear about some connection between what
Hezbollah is doing and the ceasefire negotiations, the hostage negotiations with Hamas. That is to
say that, and I've referenced this on this podcast in previous episodes, the idea that some folks in
the administration who are working on de-escalating the situation between Israel and Hezbollah
are arguing that if there is some kind of temporary ceasefire deal reached between Israel
and Hamas, it could allow Hezbollah to climb down from the tree because a lot of its senior
officials and commanders have been knocked out by Israel over the last few weeks.
We shouldn't ignore that.
So they may have their own interest in de-escalating, but they can't appear to be
de-escalating from a position of weakness. So their de-escalation from a quote unquote position
of strength optically will be, well, they're doing it in solidarity with Hamas, which reached a deal.
And because there's less pressure on Hamas in a post deal situation, even just for a few weeks,
it allows Hezbollah to claim a small
victory and say, we're climbing down from the tree as well. I think that is what the US
administration is hoping. And I think that policy will ultimately prove to be misguided because
there are wars that need to be won. And the West has this idea that the goal is a ceasefire. The
goal is de-escalation, but that just kicks the ball down the road. And we
had de-escalation and ceasefires, numerous ceasefires in Gaza, and the price that we paid
for it was unbearable on October 7th. So certain problems have to be dealt with. And it's possible
that Israel might see some virtue in quiet along the northern border for a few months while we
reorganize and prepare for the next round. But I don't think that Israel, knowing what we know, knowing what we learned on October
7th, can allow itself to go to sleep again in the way that we did until October 7th.
Hezbollah is an organization that's dedicated to the destruction of Israel.
They're very open about it, by the way.
One thing that I like about these organizations is that they're quite honest about their goals.
They're dedicated to the destruction of Israel.
They're dedicated to the assertion of Islamic power across the Middle East and beyond. They're dedicated to fighting American power in the Middle East. If they're given breathing room to pursue those goals, they will attack at a time that's convenient for them'll need to pause in order to pivot to the north. But I don't think that Israel's goals are served by the illusion of de-escalation that will pay
for quite dearly four months, six months, 12 months down the road. I think it would be very
unwise of us to forget what we learned about the Iranian proxy alliance on October 7th.
We have to deal with this problem and not tell ourselves all kinds of stories
about how we're outsmarting it
or why we'll just build a fence
and let it fester on the other side.
Those solutions failed on October 7th
and we need a strategic rethinking
of how we deal with our enemies on all of our borders.
This operation over the weekend,
even if it didn't slaughter a group of children
playing soccer, if Hezbollah was successful in what we understand to be its original goal, which was hitting an Israeli military base, what on earth did they think the response to that would be?
I mean, if they had successfully hit an Israeli military base and slaughtered a bunch of Israeli soldiers, I mean, do they not think at some point there is going to be a response from Israel that is a full-on war?
Is that what they want? It's hard for me to say exactly what they want in part because I think
we've all been chastened by the experience of October 7th, where we were very confidently
explaining what Hamas did and did not want. So I'm very cautious about doing that. I don't think
Hezbollah wants a full-on war that could push Lebanon over the brink. Hezbollah, unlike Hamas,
has to operate as part of the Lebanese political system. They're not a majority in Lebanon. They can't cause the collapse of the
state in which they operate because they need the state and they need the support of people in the
state who are not Hezbollah fighters. So I don't think Hezbollah wants the kind of war that would
end Lebanon as a country, which is quite possibly the outcome of an all-out war should it happen.
So I think they're playing a very dangerous game. They've been given the impression that they can
take things to the brink. And they've been given that impression by Israel, which has tried to
contain their actions on the northern border. And it's been given that impression by the West
and by the Americans who've said, let's de-escalate, let's have a ceasefire. But
they've clearly been tying Israel's hands and setting limitations to Israel's
actions. And everyone knows it. Everyone knows that Israel is playing by a certain set of rules.
And if you don't break those rules, then you'll probably be okay. So you might lose a lot of your
field commanders. I think Hezbollah has lost 360 or so. That's a lot, but it's not going to cripple
the organization. They can deal with it. And they're playing this very dangerous game where
they're firing hundreds or thousands of rockets into Israel. The problem with that is that
ultimately you're going to hit the wrong thing. And of course, that's true of Israel too. And
we might remember that convoy of the food aid workers were hit by mistake by Israeli aircraft.
It's going to happen in a war. And it just happened to Hezbollah. They thought they could
control exactly the level of violence, but you can't.
You'll never be able to control the level of violence because something will go wrong.
And something just did on Saturday when they killed 12 Jewish children.
And the way this plays out is extremely unpredictable.
It could be the fatal error.
It could push everything over the brink.
It could be contained in a way that allows us to continue the current situation for a few more weeks or months. It's hard to say, but the idea that you can control
100% this kind of game, whether you're Israeli or whether you're Hezbollah is fanciful. It doesn't
work that way. Let's move on to the situation for Israelis in the north. If I were to go to
northern Israel today, what would my experience look like? I've been there many times,
but I have not been there since October 7th. I've stayed up there. I've traveled extensively up
there. But again, I have not been up there since the 7th. So if I were to go up there today,
what would my experience be like? So if you've been there, you know that it might be the best
part of the country. The landscape is beautiful. Relations between Jews and Arabs in the north are
very different from what they are in Jerusalem. They're less tense. There's a kind of coexistence up there that I love. And there's a very complicated ethnic mosaic in the north. The Jews, a lot of Israelis of Russian extraction, of course, Muslims, you have Christian villages. And it's just kind of a fascinating and wonderful part of the country. If you go now, and I go quite frequently to visit my parents who live, as I mentioned, in a town called Nahariya, which is the northernmost town on the coast that hasn't been
evacuated. So it's a town of about 70,000 people. It's a beach town, kind of looks maybe a bit,
Miami might be pushing it. It's a lot smaller, but it's a town on the Mediterranean coast with
palm trees and restaurants on the beach. And then what happens today, if you keep driving north,
so you pass through my parents' apartment,
you keep going north through Nahariya,
you get to a famous beach called Ahzi,
which is a beautiful beach just north of Nahariya,
and there's a military checkpoint.
So you're not close to the Lebanon border,
but there's a military checkpoint,
and effectively the country ends.
So what Hezbollah has succeeded in doing
is moving the Israeli border south five, seven,
in some cases more, kilometers. So you have a security zone inside Israel. So if once I served
as an infantryman in a security zone inside Lebanon, which was a buffer zone meant to keep
hostile fighters away from our border, today we have a security zone in Israeli territory.
So if you keep driving north from Nariya and you pass through the military checkpoint, and I did
this a few months ago, the towns are deserted. So you can go to a town called
Shlomi, which is usually a very bustling place and there's no one there. It's a ghost town. It's
very eerie. The only cars on the road are military vehicles. And if you keep going farther and you
actually reach the border, which is quite dangerous and you need an army escort to get
there, you'll see that the border settlements, which are in some cases really on the fence, they touch the fence. A lot
of those communities have been badly damaged. If you see pictures from there, you'll see that
parts of them look like Stalingrad. A place like Metula has been really hit very hard. Many houses
have been damaged. Kiryat Shmona, which is a small city in the north, which has been evacuated.
Parts of Kiryat Shmona are rubble. And the residents of Kiryat Shmona are people who I see a lot in Jerusalem because many of them have been
evacuated here and are being put up in hotels not far from where I'm speaking right now. But 70,000
people have been evacuated from the north. So you find yourself in a region that is deserted and
pockmarked by rockets. And the houses are, some of them are burnt out shells and some of the
kindergartens have been turned into military posts. And it's extremely disturbing. It's a
success for Hezbollah. I mean, I don't think there's any other way to portray it. They've
managed to depopulate a large swath of Israel. And I understand why Israel did it. They wanted
to move civilians out of harm's way in order to concentrate on the South, but we've established
a precedent that we might regret. And by moving our civilians out of this wealth of land in the North, we've basically given Hezbollah
license to fire thousands of rockets at it and claim to only be seeking military targets. And
we'll see where all of this is going, but that's what you would see if you went North right now.
It's not the beautiful kind of tourist heaven that it was last year.
It's a war zone. How many people have left their homes in northern Israel? How many Israelis?
About 70,000 people. Okay. They have now missed, including the children of those families,
they've now missed an entire school year, right? Since the evacuations began in the days after
October 7th.
Defense Minister Gallant had talked about the goal being to get those kids back to school so they were back to the north so they don't miss a second school year.
That now seems entirely unrealistic, right?
That's very unlikely to happen.
Right.
So we are heading into a world in which these families may now be dealing with a second year of not living in their homes and
these ghost towns still existing as ghost towns and no end in sight. Right. And it's potentially
even worse because at least some of those families will not go back after you live for a year in
Jerusalem or Tel Aviv and your life begins to take on a different shape and you won't necessarily go
back to the place you were living before. You might see that there are advantages to living in a big city. You might
prefer not to live too close to Hezbollah, given what we know now. So I don't think that all 70,000
of the evacuees will necessarily rush back north as soon as that becomes possible. They might go
eventually if we see that peace is restored to the north. But this is a major event. It's not
a blip. It's not that people left home for a couple of weeks and everything will go back to normal, which is really the way it was in the 2006 war,
which I covered at the time for the AP. And my parents stayed in their town in Nahariya,
but most people left Nahariya and the town was a ghost town and the traffic lights, I remember,
just blinked yellow. It was very eerie, the whole thing. But as soon as the war was over,
everyone came back and life went on as if nothing had
happened.
That's not going to happen this time.
We're in a real change for Israel.
The idea of abandoning communities is anathema to Zionism.
We always had the idea that you farm to the last furrow.
You literally plow along the border fence.
And if there's a Hezbollah guy on the other side of the border, you plow anyway.
And that's always been the way Zionism did it.
And that's why those kibbutzim were built on the border. Hanita is a, you know, kind of a symbol of Zionist pioneering built on the Lebanon border by very brave young people who
lived there until October 7th and have now been away for 10 months and their kibbutz has largely
been destroyed. So we're looking at the undermining of a major precept of Zionism and the idea that
we live on the fence, that we plow to the last furrow, that idea is not going to return the day
of the ceasefire. I think we're going to see a change in that regard, and it's going to take
real rehabilitation. It's going to take a different kind of Israeli leadership to
kind of restart the country after this very traumatic experience of the past 10 months, however long it ends up
lasting. All right, Mati, we will leave it there. And for our listeners, Mati has committed
offline with me to a fully dedicated educational episode about the backstory.
Dan, the word educational sounds terrible. Who wants an educational episode?
Our listeners, actually. Mati, no, no, no, no. This has been one of the great discoveries
of the Call Me Back podcast
is that our highest performing episodes
are the ones that you and I would think
are the most boring, dense, wonky,
and dare I say educational.
And those episodes are like off the charts
in terms of downloads.
And they have this incredibly long tail.
So you were wrong.
People want education. I've been shocked by this. We were doing these episodes because we like
doing these episodes. And we said, you know, the downloads and the rankings be damned. But actually,
there is a extraordinary appetite. For instance, Betty Morris, a two-part episode of Betty Morris
on the origins of the war on independence and the history leading up to the war of independence has
been one of our, among our best performing episodes. I was excited to do that two-part episode. I just didn't think
it would find much of an audience to my surprise. It will only rival the Mati Friedman episode on
the history of the Lebanon chapter in Israel's history. So. The very non-educational episode
about the Lebanon chapter in Israel's history. All right. Okay. All right,
Mati,
we will leave it there.
Stay safe.
And thank you for this.
And we will look forward to being with you soon.
Thank you so much for having me.
That's our show for today.
To keep up with Mati Friedman,
you can find him on X at Mati Friedman.
You can also find his work on the
Free Press website at the FP. And you can order his books from wherever you order books. We will
put links in the show notes to them. Call Me Back is produced and edited by Ilan Benatar.
Our media manager is Rebecca Strom. Additional editing by Martin Huérgo.
Until next time, I'm your host, Dan Senor.