Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - Memorializing a war while still fighting - with Matti Friedman
Episode Date: October 10, 2024This past Monday marked the grim one-year anniversary of October 7th. Around the world, Jewish communities gathered to memorialize a war still being fought. How did Israeli society experience this gr...ief, and how did Diaspora communities memorialize? What are Israelis going through that we might not be able to see from a distance? And what are Diaspora communities going through that Israelis may not see? To discuss, 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’s book referenced in the episode: “Pumpkinflowers: A Soldier’s Story of a Forgotten War” — https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/pumpkinflowers-matti-friedman/1122279367?ean=9781616206918
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is not the society that fought the Six-Day War or the Yom Kippur War.
This is a very different place.
And I think that the way this is commemorated in five years or 10 years depends to a large
extent on what happens to our leadership in the next five or 10 years.
So if we can regain a unified leadership, if we can somehow channel the incredible resilience
and kind of grim determination of the majority of Israelis and translate that into a government
that represents the Zionist majority in Israel,
then I think you'll have a unified commemoration in five years.
If this divisive style of government continues
and we see the fissures in Israeli society continue to expand,
then I'm not sure where we're going to be in five years or 10 years,
not just in terms of where the commemoration is,
but in terms of where the commemoration is, but in terms of where the
country is.
It's 9.15 a.m. on Tuesday, October 8th, here in New York City.
It's 4.15 p.m. in Israel as Israelis wind down their day. And I'm pleased to welcome
back to this podcast, Mati Friedman, a bestselling author, longtime journalist, currently a columnist,
writer for the Free Press. Mati, where does this podcast find you? It finds me at home in Jerusalem.
So in full transparency, Mati, I think we should let our listeners know the sausage
making of the Call Me Back podcast.
We had originally recorded a conversation, you and I, two weeks ago while you were in
New York City.
We actually had two talks in New York City.
One was for the podcast, and then we also spoke at an event together.
And we had recorded that conversation for our special video series one year since
October 7th. And it was right after the Pager attack. However, before Nasrallah was killed by
the IDF, that period, the killing of Nasrallah was a turning point in the war in which Israel
was finally delivering what seems to be crippling blows to its enemies. After that conversation, Mati,
you and Ilan and I agreed that the tone didn't fit the mood in Israel, given the string of
successes that the IDF has had in Lebanon since we recorded that conversation. It was post-Pedro
attack, but before the new, let's call it the new momentum. And so we just decided it didn't fit.
We decided to have this conversation instead.
I had wanted to talk to you about the mood in Israel following the one-year memorial events
that took place in Israel on October 7th. So we're effectively scrapping the conversation
that was two days ago, which might as well felt like two years ago. And we're having this
conversation today. So I thank you for your patience in recording a new conversation with us.
It's totally a pleasure. And I hope that we get this episode out within five minutes of this
recording. Otherwise, it might be out of date as well.
Exactly. The Middle East these days, you just don't know. Mati, you are an astute observer
of Israeli society. How did you personally experience this grim one year anniversary? And
what did you observe? Not only what did you observe about yourself, but also what did you personally experience this grim one year anniversary? And what did you observe? Not only
what did you observe about yourself, but also what did you observe about how the Israeli public,
and I'm just saying the Israeli public in general terms, you can take that anywhere you want.
How did they experience the day? I was actually quite surprised at my own mood on October 7th.
I wasn't planning to mark it in any particular way because I feel
that we're still living it. It's not a war that we have to remember. It's not the Yom Kippur War.
It's not something that we have to kind of reach back into the past to commemorate. We're literally
in it. Rockets were hitting Israel on October 7th. Rockets are hitting Israel as we record
this podcast. We're very much in the war that began on October 7th. So I didn't think that a day of commemoration was even really necessary,
given that the events are still going on. And because of that approach, I think I was quite
taken aback by how dark it was and how incredibly upsetting and depressing it was to be flooded with
images from October 7th. So much has happened in the past year that the actual events of the day itself
have receded. And suddenly yesterday, we were flooded with them. They were all over the media.
They were all over social media. You were seeing these terrible images from the kibbutzim, from
still the images that we all remember from October 7th, no matter how hard we've tried to forget.
And we heard voices of people screaming from their safe rooms that terrorists are outside
the house. And we saw images from the Nova Music Festival. And as much as we think those images are
in our consciousness, I think to a great extent, they've been kind of forced aside by the pace of
events since October 7th, 2023. So I was quite surprised at the potency of the commemoration
on October 7th. And I think, I don't want to
project my own sentiments onto the entire Israeli public, but I do think that the national mood was
very dark on October 7th, both because of the commemoration and because it was so clear while
the commemoration was going on that the war isn't over. Literally, rockets were hitting Haifa. My
parents were in their safe room in the northern town of Nahariya. My sister was on a
train coming home from work when the rocket siren went off and everyone had to kind of crouch down
on the train while a Yemeni cruise missile made its way in our direction. So it was a dark day
because we were reminded of what happened and a dark day because we were forced to reckon with
the fact that the events are still going on and no matter what successes we may have had in the
past couple of weeks, we have been unable to successfully end this war on
our own terms. Mati, two of the most moving days for me as someone who doesn't live in Israel,
but has a lot of family and close friends in Israel and spends a lot of time in Israel,
two of the most moving days for me every year in the Israeli calendar are Yom HaShoah and Yom
Hezekiah Run. So Holocaust Remembrance Day and
Israel Memorial Day. And Saul Singer and I wrote about those days and how they are observed in
Israel in our most recent book, The Genius of Israel. And we talk about that siren that goes
off nationwide, the air raid siren, where the whole country stops. I'm reading here,
at exactly 11 a.m., Israel's national air raid siren system would fill the air with a
loud plaintiff note, a blaring high-pitched sound that could be heard everywhere as if it were
coming out of the air itself. For two minutes, the world would stop as in a sci-fi movie. Cars would
stop on the highways, their drivers standing like sentries next to them in restaurants and hotels,
schools and offices, stadiums and homes. Everyone would stand in silence. But it wasn't just that Israelis were doing the same thing. They were tuned to the same channel. Now, that scene or
a version of that scene I just read about from our book, I could imagine becoming a ritual on
October 7th now, every year going
forward, especially that focus on all the people lost. And we had one line here, the channel was
at once collective and personal. Collective is the word that jumped out at me. On those days in
Israel, Yom HaZikaron and Yom HaShoah, there's no sense of division in Israeli society. For those
of us over here, we didn't get a sense, at least on the
anniversary of October 7th, on the division in Israel and how it manifested itself through this
one-year anniversary date. But if you follow the Israeli press, it was definitely there.
And the moment that really blew me away was that there were actually dual memorial ceremonies in
Israel. One was organized by the families who lost their loved ones on October 7th, and then it was immediately followed by the quote-unquote official ceremony
produced by the state. So I don't think we'd have ever had something like that on Yom HaZikaron or
Yom HaShoah. So can you talk a little bit about whether or not this day feels like it's going to
become like a Yom HaZikaron or Yom HaShoah date in terms of how it's honored and remembered?
And if so,
juxtapose it with what I'm describing here with these dueling ceremonies.
Right. So just for listeners who might not be familiar with what happened, on October 7th,
there was an unofficial ceremony that was put together by the families of hostages,
particularly by one brother of a hostage who was killed in Gaza, a guy named Yonatan Shimri. He's
a really impressive young Israeli whose brother, Alon, was taken hostage on October 7th and then was one of the three
hostages killed by mistake by the IDF in one of the most awful events of this war.
And the ceremony was held in Tel Aviv. It was supposed to be attended by about 40,000 people.
40,000 people had registered to come and then tickets ran out within a matter of hours. It
could have been much bigger, but because of the rocket threat, they had to hold it with a much smaller crowd of families of hostages and families of Israelis who'd been killed in this war.
And that was followed by an official state ceremony that was put together by the Netanyahu government and pre-recorded, in part because they were worried that if it was filmed live, people would disrupt the
ceremony. So you have these two ceremonies. It's definitely an illustration of a society that does
not agree on what is going on. And that makes it very different, as you mentioned, from our
commemoration of the Holocaust or our general commemoration of fallen soldiers on Yom HaZikaron.
Israeli society is deeply divided. And we have to remember that on October 6, 2023,
this society was divided in a way that it had never been divided before. We have a government in power that does not have the confidence of all the mainstream Israeli society. Many people
do support the government, of course, but many Israelis feel that the government includes people
who should be nowhere near positions of power. I'm thinking chiefly of Itamar Ben-Gvir,
but there are other examples of not just extremism, but of incompetence in this government that make it
really an unprecedented government for Israelis. Of course, the government rests on the votes of
ultra-Orthodox Israelis who do not serve in the armies. You have a government trying to run a war,
demanding incredible sacrifices of the Israelis who do serve, but it rests on the votes of people
who demand a draft exemption. And there are many other reasons to be dissatisfied, I think, with the level of
leadership in Israel. I mean, I think that the lack of faith that many Israelis feel in this
government is quite unprecedented. And the fact that we're navigating what is probably the darkest
moment in the history of the state with what is, I think, certainly the least competent government
in the history of the state, that's a big part of the darkness here. And it's one reason that we can't have a unified ceremony. It's not
that the siren's going to go off and everyone's just going to agree on the interpretation of
what this war is, how it started, and where it's going. So it's definitely, I think, a sad symptom
of where our society is. And we can talk, if you like, about what each ceremony was. But certainly,
this is not the society that
fought the Six-Day War or the Yom Kippur War. This is a very different place. And I think that
the way this is commemorated in five years or 10 years depends to a large extent on what happens
to our leadership in the next five or 10 years. So if we can regain a unified leadership,
and this was actually discussed at the family's ceremony, if we can somehow channel the incredible resilience and
kind of grim determination of the majority of Israelis and translate that into a government
that represents the Zionist majority in Israel, then I think you'll have a unified commemoration
in five years. If this divisive style of government continues and we see the fissures
in Israeli society continue to expand, then I'm not sure where we're going to be in five years or 10 years, not just in terms of where the commemoration is,
but in terms of where the country is. This mood that you're describing seems so far removed from
the mood really just a week ago, following the string of head spinning victories by the IDF
in Lebanon or the string of head spinning successes by the IDF in Lebanon.
No one should feel victorious yet. But one would think that that would strengthen solidarity and
sense of common purpose. How is that factored in that there's this new momentum now in the war
that Israel seems to be on the march finally? I wouldn't want to play that down. And I think
that's October 7th was a dark day here because we were just flooded with everything that's happened in the past year, most of which has been awful.
But the past few weeks have, I think, seen a real change in the direction of the war.
And I think it's very important. And because I've written in the past about the Yom Kippur War,
I feel like the past couple of weeks, which of course play out just as we're recording our last
podcast episode that will never be heard,
which really begins with the explosion of thousands of Hezbollah pagers,
followed by the explosion of walkie-talkies, followed by the elimination of the Red One
force command structure. The elite Hezbollah strike force has their command structure taken
out in an Israeli airstrike. And then Asrallah, who's the leader of Hezbollah, is assassinated
in an airstrike. He's not just a military leader. He's really a symbol of the Iranian alliance system. And he's a symbol
across the Arab world and across the Islamic world. He's assassinated and the direction of
the war really changes. And it feels like we're at the moment of the crossing of the Suez Canal.
That moment of the Yom Kippur War, where Ari Sharon crosses the Suez Canal, it doesn't mean
that the war is won, but it marks the return of the initiative to the Israeli side. And it marks a change in the direction of the wind. And I think
we've experienced that. This is one of the most incredible successes against a terrorist
organization that we've ever seen in the history of the world. And I wouldn't want to play that
down. So you have an Israeli society that's divided, that's in a very dark mood, that lacks
confidence in our leadership, but at the same time has been restored to some extent.
We've had our confidence in our military restored, and we see the direction of the war,
I hope, change. So I think you're right to mention that. And I think that those things
exist somehow together. I think we're in a better place now than we were a month ago.
But I'm interested to hear a bit about how this felt from the United States. What did October 7th feel like from America, from New York, from the diaspora?
I got to say, Matias, I was listening to you describe what's happening in Israel.
This is going to sound really odd, but as I was listening, describing what's happening in Israel, as heavy as it all was, I still would take, as an American Jew, I would still take what you were experiencing in Israel than what I was experiencing here. What I'm experiencing here, what I'm seeing here
is in many respects, much more alarming for Jews than I think what any Jew in Israel is
experiencing. Over the weekend in the lead up to October 7th, a friend of mine at the ADL sent me
some new data that the Anti-Defamation League was reporting out, I guess, timed for the one-year anniversary on the staggering rise in incidents of anti-Semitism
in the United States since October 7th. So they chronicle from October 7th, 2023 through late
September 2024. And during that time period, some 10,000, they've reported 10,000 incidents of antisemitism.
When I say incidents of antisemitism, they include three categories, violent antisemitism,
vandalism of vandalizing Jewish institutions, Jewish-owned businesses, Jewish homes,
Jewish-owned homes, and verbal expressions and written expressions of antisemitism. 10,000 incidents, just to give
you a sense, that's like a 200%, I think, increase from the same period the previous year, which at
the time was the highest reported number of incidents of antisemitism. So you just see the
data. It's just like, it's shocking. And then you think, okay, well, at least on October 7th,
on the one-year anniversary, people will be restrained. And it was the opposite. I started my day doing right in a Columbus circle in New York City, right in Times Square,
sometimes violent clashes between pro-Hamas, and I even said to say this is on so-so, pro-Hezbollah,
people waving the Hezbollah flag, protesters tormenting Jews. At Columbia University,
there were Jewish students who tried to organize a ceremony, quiet, minding their own business, a quiet ceremony just to honor the Jews that were slaughtered on October 7th. And it was effectively overrun by a counter protest by mask wearing, keffiyeh wearing, Hamas and Hezbollah flag waving protesters who were chanting the language of Hamas from the river to the sea. I mean, they were, you know, bomb Tel Aviv, globalize the Intifada, honoring the resistance. I mean,
the language of Hamas from October 7th, they were using not in isolation, but actually to drown out
the Jews who were taking the day to reflect. They were taking some time to reflect and remember
those lost. And that the versions of what I'm describing were going on
all over the place, certainly all over the city I'm in, all over the country. I did one interview
on CNBC on Squawk Box and they asked a very basic, you know, very fair question, which was,
you know, we have a lot of CEOs who watch the show. They asked me, we have people who are in
business settings. How should people interact with their Jewish colleagues on this day? And on the one hand,
I appreciated the question they were asking because it was sincere. On the other hand,
it was such a window into how broken Jewish life is today relative to the country we live in,
in the United States, that that is even a question. I mean, December 7th, 1942,
on the one-year anniversary of Pearl Harbor, or on September 11th, 2002, on the one-year anniversary of September 11th, you would never imagine having to faith don't know how to navigate this question because they feel like it's so loaded and it's so political and it's so, you know, there's the two sides, there's nuance. And you would never ask those questions or think those things on any of these other historical comparisons I'm pointing to.
But this day for American Jews feels like we still have to explain, that we still have to argue.
We can't just reflect and remember. We have to still argue. And the only space that seemed
protected from this craziness, obviously, were Jewish
communal spaces. So my children go to a Jewish day school, and I think they had family members of
a hostage come speak. They had a ceremony. There's gonna be another ceremony. There's gonna be a
ceremony tonight that I'm participating in. And so when I talked to my son about what was going
on at school, he was totally in the moment of October 7th and was protected
because he was just with other Jews within four walls of a Jewish institution that's protected by
security, literally protected by physical security. And so he was in a bubble. But yet at the same
time, we received a notice from the school telling us that there were going to be protests going on
around the school, near the school. And they were alerting the parents to the measures they were
taking to protect students from what would be going on outside the school.
And to me, that's its own metaphor, that if you're in a Jewish space with other Jews,
you're fine.
But we got to be careful outside of those spaces.
Now, maybe that'll have the effect of reminding Jews that their assimilated lives in America,
and I think it applies to the UK and Canada and
Australia and other parts of the world too, but I'm focused on the US right now because that's
where I am. Maybe their assimilated lives went too far. And October 7th was a wake-up call,
as you and I have discussed, in terms of people who you thought had your back, people who you
thought were your friends, people who thought were trusted colleagues suddenly either stabbed
you in the back or stabbed you in the front, actually,
by turning on you after October 7th. And so maybe that's a wake-up call that will bring Jews back
into these spaces, to these Jewish bubbles, to communal Jewish life, ritualistic Jewish life,
whatever you put a premium on. Maybe that's healthy. But I got to tell you, right now,
it does not feel healthy. Jews feel unsafe in America today. And that was highlighted to me
by the anniversary of October 7th. And the day ended. I went to a beautiful ceremony in Central
Park. A few thousand people attended. The parents of Omar Nutra, who's a hostage American kid from
Long Island, New York, who's been held hostage in Gaza for a year.
His parents spoke, others spoke, other Israelis spoke. It was quite moving. The ceremony was
moving. Again, we were all with Jews. We were in this protected, quote unquote, protected area.
But, you know, blocks away when we were on our way home, we were watching Palestinian flags and
Israeli flags, people going head to head right outside Central Park, right at Columbus Circle, protesters tormenting Jewish Americans. So if you look at the
history of anti-Semitism, wherever it has existed, whenever there's an attack on the Jews, it's
always been followed by vilification of the Jews, by blaming the Jews for their suffering. Everything
I saw today reminded me that we're just in a newer
version of it, but it's the same old story. Yeah, that's an incredibly dark depiction of
this moment in the West. I think we're two halves of the Jewish world are experiencing
different kinds of darkness. You just described one and we have, of course, everything that's
going on here. There's no question that this is not just an earthquake, I think, for Jews here in the Middle East and in North America and the diaspora, but
it seems like a civilizational moment. It's a moment of real change in the West. A lot of people,
and not only Jews, have become aware that many of the formerly liberal institutions of the West
have been taken over by, essentially, by the hard left or by some alliance of the hard left and an Islamist
activist. And that's true of the human rights world. It's true of much of the press, which is
where I used to operate. It's true of much of the academy and the effectiveness have really,
they've been bubbling for years. And I wrote about it 10 years ago, but they've really just
exploded to the surface and they've made themselves apparent. And that is both frightening and potentially helpful. Once you can see the change on the surface,
then you can begin to deal with it. And I think that many people have just been trying to ignore
it and it's become impossible to ignore. So, I think that you're right that one thing that's
happening is that many Jewish people are being driven back into the ghetto.
Into the shtetl.
Yeah, for lack of a better term. And people, on the one hand,
feel threatened in spaces like Ivy League universities.
On the other hand, synagogue membership is up.
As we know, synagogue attendance is up.
People are showing up at Jewish organizations
who haven't been in touch with them for years.
And I know this firsthand.
People have been visiting Israel
who haven't been here for years.
People have been rediscovering their communal ties.
And in a dark reality,
that's a silver lining, I think. But I think it's also important not to forget that we have
many friends. And I think that there's kind of an old Jewish instinct that we fall back on,
which is the shtetl instinct, which is that everyone hates us, we're going back into the
community, and we're building a really high wall and waiting for this to blow over. But I think
that if we look above the wall,
we'll see that we have many friends. Israel has many, many friends. Many people have made
their friendship apparent in the past year. And like you said, you've been surprised by people
who've turned out not to be friends. I've also been surprised by people who've done the opposite.
And I think that there are reasons for optimism. And I'm hoping this might be just me trying to
see the glass half full. We are at a moment of clarity. So it's a very frightening moment for Jewish people,
and not only for Jewish people. But on the other hand, I think it's a moment when a lot of people
are realizing something about what's going on. And once you realize what's going on, you can act to
address it. Whether or not that will happen is a good question. But if I'm trying to see the bright
side, then I'll cling to that. So speaking of the bright side, I do want to spend a little
more time on what is actually going on in the war. It seems to be going well. Between the news and
what we're seeing on X and Instagram and Telegram and the likes, the war in Gaza is probably the
most filmed war in history. It's the most documented in real time war in history. But when it comes to the ground invasion in Lebanon by the IDF,
that has been pretty much held under wraps. And you obviously have spent a lot of time in Lebanon,
both as a soldier and as a tourist, as a civilian. You've written extensively about it. I recommend
Pumpkin Flowers, your book about your time in Lebanon. I recommend it all the time. We'll post
it in the show notes to our listeners if you want to read. There are many books to read about Israel's experience in Lebanon, but the one
I recommend the most is Mati's. I want to ask you, what's going on in this ground operation
in Lebanon these days? What do we know? Thanks for the kind words about Pumpkin Flowers. It's
been quite amazing and shocking in many ways to see the IDF back in Lebanon. The book Pumpkin Flowers is about the
last years of the Israeli presence in South Lebanon and what we call the security zone in
South Lebanon, which was meant to keep guerrillas or Hezbollah fighters away from the border. And
we pull out in 2000, in the spring of 2000, in what seems to most Israelis like a very good move,
and we would retreat to the border. And there's another war in 2006. And now Israeli
soldiers are back in South Lebanon. And I'm hearing the same names of places, places like
Maroun Aras or Binti Jbeil or Debel. There are many other names of places that we heard in 2006
and that I remember hearing in the late 90s. And here we are again, it's almost like a tidal
movement of Israeli military back and forth over the Lebanon border. And it's always the same story. I mean, it's the
fact that Lebanon is a state that cannot control its own territory. The territory isn't exploited
by other groups with other plans. In the late 70s and early 80s, it was the PLO. Now it's Hezbollah,
which is an arm of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards. And they've been firing rockets into Israel,
upwards of 9,000 rockets have been fired into Israel by Hezbollah since October 8th,
when Hezbollah opens a second front with Lebanon. And Israel has been trying to contain it over the
past year, evacuated almost 70,000 people from the region of the northern border. And beginning a few
weeks ago with the Pager operation and the assassination of Nasrallah, Israel goes on
the offensive in Lebanon and sends ground forces in.
And on October 7th, one of the things that I was following alongside all of the awful
commemorations of what happened in the south a year ago was the entrance of three new IDF
brigades into Lebanon and more apparently went in today.
My parents live in Naharia, as I said, which is pretty close to the border.
And you can hear the booms from their house.
And one of the kind of unavoidable or one of the points of reality that I think is very difficult for many liberal people to accept, but is increasingly easy to see,
is that the Israeli army is now fighting in three places from which Israel withdrew,
whether it's the cities of the West Bank 30 years ago, or southern Lebanon 24 years ago, or the Gaza Strip
19 years ago. Israel's back at all those places because in every instance, Israel withdrew. The
territory was taken over by terror organizations that built infrastructure under the civilian
landscape and attacked from those territories. So I think one of the key takeaways from looking at South
Lebanon and looking at Gaza and looking at the cities of the West Bank, in some of which there's
real combat going on, including the use of air power, which is new. And we need to keep an eye
on that. And the conclusion is depressing for many of us who hope for a peaceful resolution
to this conflict. But the conclusion is entirely clear, and that is there will be no Israeli withdrawals. And anyone who's imagining an Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank
or two-state solution, that's all gone. And I think that it's a depressing conclusion, but it's
just a reality we're going to have to deal with. And I think not only us in Israel, I think Israelis
have already dealt with it, but I think our friends abroad, I think the American administration,
there are still these slogans that are left over from the 90s about a two-state solution, about, you know, the greed upon borders. But given that
our soldiers are now fighting and dying in three areas that we once controlled and gave back,
the conclusion for us is quite clear. And that's one of the things that I've been thinking about
as I watch the operation unfold in Lebanon, which is, you know, a place where I served in the late
90s, in which I thought we'd never have to go back to again. I have two boys who are in 12th grade, meaning that they're eyeing their
draft date. And it's occurred to me that they might find themselves back at Outpost Pumpkin,
which is the outpost in Lebanon that's at the center of that book that I wrote.
It's not likely, but it's not impossible. And it's not something that would have
occurred to me six months ago or a year ago. Mati, can you talk a little bit about what you may know, or what's
being reported on how the actual fighting is going? I don't know much beyond what's being
reported in the news. There are heavy Israeli airstrikes, not only in South Lebanon, but also
in Hezbollah-controlled parts of Beirut, particularly the southern parts of Beirut, where Hezbollah has its installations,
their command posts, and their weapons storage facilities, of course, hidden among civilians.
It's not only Hezbollah supporters in those areas. So I think it's important to remember
as Israelis that most people in Lebanon are not Hezbollah. Hezbollah represents the Shia
minority in Lebanon. It's the biggest minority in Lebanon, but it's not a majority.
And among the Shia, there are many who don't support Hezbollah.
So Hezbollah is an important part of the Lebanese picture, but it's not the whole picture in
Lebanon.
And I think that Israel has actually done a pretty good job so far of not attacking
the infrastructure of the state of Lebanon.
In 2006, Israel attacked the airport, gas storage facilities, and we haven't seen that
this time.
The army has been trying to focus its strikes on Hezbollah.
And the effects have been quite significant.
From what we know, I mean, several echelons of the Hezbollah leadership have been taken out by the Israeli Air Force.
And every time they replace their leadership, that person is taken out. So clearly Israel has excellent intelligence inside the organization and the ability to accurately strike the organization while causing not no civilian casualties, but much fewer than I think we would have expected had we looked at this a year ago. war in South Lebanon ends with a UN resolution called 1701, according to which UN peacekeepers
in South Lebanon are supposed to disarm Hezbollah south of the Litani River, which means adjacent
to the Israeli border, and that resolution is never enforced. There are UN peacekeepers in
South Lebanon who've been absolutely useless and have allowed Hezbollah to rearm and attack Israel
under their noses, and that's really forced Israel into this ground operation. Israel has said that this is not the beginning of a long-term occupation, that this is a short-term
military operation that's designed to clear the border area and allow our 70,000 displaced
civilians to return to their homes. However, Lebanon has a way of sucking you in. And as we
saw in 1982, when Israel went into Lebanon, also saying that this was a limited operation, Israel extricated itself from Lebanon 18 years later. And as America saw in Iraq and Afghanistan, you can get involved in something that seems like it's short term and limited and make sure that we have a way of getting out before
we sink into some situation in Lebanon that will be too complicated and too dangerous for us to
successfully control. You said earlier that Israel had withdrawn from three areas that it's now
fighting it again and dying again, southern Lebanon, cities within the West Bank, and then
the entirety of Gaza. You said something to me that there's a sense among Israelis that they've
tried every formula. They've tried every model to try to get some version of peace. And right now,
when asked, what's your day after plan? What's your plan? What are you gonna do? There's just
a general sense of, we're out of ideas. We'll listen to ideas, but we're out of ideas. So can
you talk a little bit about that?
I think that's true. And I think that's part of the darkness of this moment in Israeli society for many years. We had a big part of the populace here that believed that peace was really a
possibility and that the way to get there would be territorial concessions. It would be diplomacy.
And that really explodes in 2000. In 2000, we have the most left-wing government we've ever
elected. And that government is on the receiving end of the worst wave of terrorism that we've ever experienced.
And since then, more or less, the Israeli left has been politically defunct. There's always been
the idea that we could, if threatened, carry out a military operation that would be so overwhelming
that it would achieve peace and quiet. That also turns out not to be true. And we also see that
the allies who we depend on are often confused and weak and have
priorities that contradict an Israeli victory over our enemies. And I think that all of that
contributes to the very dark sentiment here in Israel. Israelis, I think, are really at a moment
of despair. And part of it is just the nature of the region. The nature of the region was really
made apparent to us on October 7th. There's just no way to ignore it. The kibbutzim along the Gaza border, as a kind
of metaphor, kibbutzim that are full of people who are from the left fringe even of Israeli society,
people who believe in peace, people who are in some cases driving Palestinian kids from Gaza
to Israeli hospitals, and those people are slaughtered by their neighbors in Gaza. So
there's really not much left in that
old dream that lasted up until 2000 of a peaceful resolution. At the same time, I think we're seeing
the limits of military power. We've been in Gaza for a year. We've been hitting Hamas for a year.
And yesterday, they fired rockets from Gaza. So there's also a sense that the limits of military
power have been reached. And one of the most, I think,
striking moments at the family's ceremony on October 7th was when Yonatan Shomriz, who's this
young man who I mentioned, the brother of a hostage who was killed in Gaza, when he spoke,
and he's speaking from the heart and the crowd, which included Israelis across the political
spectrum, as far as I could see, it was really kind of a cross-section of everyone who's been
hurt by the war. He said, we have no leadership and we have no vision. And that's 100% true. I mean,
I think you can discuss whether or not the Netanyahu government has done a good job of
running the war, but there's no question that Netanyahu is a leader who is unable to provide
a hopeful vision for the people who live here. He's a very dark character. He sees
threats and claims to be the best person to deal with the threats, but he has no hope to offer a country whose national anthem is literally called the hope. Hatikva means the hope. Zionism is based on the hope of a better future for the Jewish people, and we have a very dark leadership that isn't doing one of the most basic things that you're supposed to do in a war, as Winston Churchill would tell you, which is provide your people with a vision of a better future.
Tell them why they're fighting. Tell them that things are bad now, but they'll be better in the
future. And say that in a way that people believe in it now has been unable to do that. And I think
that's part of the darkness in Israeli society. But at the same time, in that ceremony, which I
encourage listeners to find, you can find it online. You see this young guy who's speaking and he ends his speech, which is
a critique of the leadership, a statement that we have no vision, a call for a commission of inquiry
into what happened on October 7th, which still has not happened. Most of the people who were in
charge of the country on October 7th and in charge of the army are still in charge.
And Israelis have not been given good answers about how that could have happened.
And the people responsible have, for the most part, not paid the price for what happened.
So, you know, he's giving this very dark comment on the state of our society a year into this war. And he ends by saying what we're seeing now is the birth of the new Israeli generation.
That is not just resilient, but is incredibly powerful. And it's the generation that we're seeing now fighting
in Gaza and in Lebanon, an incredible young generation. And he ended his speech by saying,
get up, Am Yisrael Chai, the people of Israel live. So it's a dark statement about our leadership,
but it's a statement of pure Zionism. So I think that you can see kind of a despair about the
government, but an incredible energy that's bubbling in Israeli society at this moment of crisis.
And our hope is that that energy can somehow be channeled into political change and a better leadership that can take us out of this moment of crisis and into the future.
It's believed, Mati, that Israel is days away on the eve of a significant Israeli counterattack on Iran in response to the roughly 200 ballistic
missiles fired at Israel last week. How does that factor in? Because when I talk to my family
members in Israel, so much of the conversation is anticipating the counterattack, what the
counterattack would look like. Is Israel headed for, I guess this was already in a regional war,
but added to a new stage in the regional war. My sister, who you know, and Saul lived near you in Jerusalem. They were in their
mamad, in their safe room a few nights ago when the Iranian attack happened. Normally,
Jerusalem is not on the receiving end of these siren alerts, these warnings to get into your
mamad. And yet here, even Jerusalem was being hit with this. And there's just a sense that
flights are being canceled and everyone's bracing
for the next stage of the war.
Can you talk about how that fits into everything you're talking about?
It's funny.
I mean, I'm not sure funny is the right word, but we met twice in New York and I flew back
and was on the plane.
I didn't have internet.
I was completely unaware of what was going on.
And I turned on my phone as we hit the tarmac at Ben Gurion next to Tel Aviv.
And I found that people were kind of panicking that there was this imminent Iranian attack. And in fact, I landed on one of the last flights that landed before all the flights
were shut down because Israel's airspace was closed. I got home, opened the door, basically,
and the siren went off and we had to get into our safe room, wait out the barrage from Iran.
And it's amazing that that
was a week ago because it seems like five or six years ago, the pace of events here is so
incredible that you really can't keep track of it. And every day feels like a decade.
And one thing that I wrote about several years ago, I've been writing about it for a while,
but I published an op-ed in the New York Times making the point that this is not
an Israeli-Palestinian conflict. And to this day, this is something that many Western observers find hard to understand because this is the way
that it's covered. It's covered as if there are two actors in the conflict, and one is Israeli
and one is Palestinian, when in fact, the Palestinians are one component of a regional
war in which the main actor opposing Israel is Iran. And that is now obvious. And a lot is riding
on how Israel chooses to respond in the next week or two weeks or whenever they decide to do it. And I think depends to a large extent on the American administration. And the American administration has been not just wary of directly taking on the Iranians, they've been kind of solicitous of the Iranian regime in recent years, maybe in the past decade. And that has
encouraged the Iranians to expand their influence across the region. And we're shedding blood as a
result of that change. So if the American administration decides that it's time for that
to end, I think that we could see the Iranians pay a real price for their aggression. And that
will lead the Middle East in a better direction. Once you either remove the Iranian regime or clip
its wings to such an extent that they're limited to acting inside Iran, then you've freed up the
rest of the region to move in a more positive direction. And there are many American allies
here who would like to take the region in a more stable direction. There are a lot of positive
forces here that are being kept in check by the rise of the Iranians, and the Iranians are rising in the vacuum left by American influence and power.
Israel can counteract it to some extent, and that's what we're doing.
Israel's punching way above its weight in the Middle East.
At the moment, Israel's a country of 10 million people.
It's a very small place.
Israel, as a percentage of the landmass of the Arab world, is one-fifth of 1%.
And Israel is bearing the brunt of this regional war alone.
So a lot depends on how far Israel is willing to go it alone, to what extent the American
administration is willing to finally use its power to counteract a regime whose slogan is
death to America. And one thing that's been quite bewildering for someone like me, who's someone
who has a positive take on America, someone of liberal sentiments to see over the past decade and a half that the Americans have really ceded much of the region to a power like the Iranians.
And we're really, we're dealing with the consequences right now.
The consequences can be reversed.
And I hope that they will be. mati before we wrap i do want to bring up one other topic because i have you in this conversation
and you've written about this topic that i'm going to raise and actually when we last spoke in the
in the lost tape this topic wasn't front and center tanahasi coates has written a new book
called the message which deals with three geographies three societies but one of them
is israel and israel's treatment of the palestinians he deals with three geographies, three societies, but one of them is Israel and
Israel's treatment of the Palestinians. He deals with it quite extensively. And he basically
compares Israel's administration over Palestinian life to the Jim Crow laws. I don't know whose idea
it was to release this book days before the one-year anniversary of October 7th, but either
it was just an absence of judgment or it was
diabolical. I don't know which it was. I try to give people the benefit of the doubt, but that
may be my own naivete. Basically what Coates does is he projects a big part of the debates in the
U.S. about civil rights or what he thinks are the lack of civil rights or what he describes as institutional racism and a
quasi-apartheid system, he projects that onto Israel. And I'm just going to play a brief clip
here of an interview he did last week on CBS Mornings, a prominent morning show here in which
he had somewhat of a contentious back and forth with the interviewer. So let's just play a clip
from that. Tanasi Coates, good morning. How are you doing? Thanks for having me. Good morning, guys.
Tanahashi, I want to dive into the Israel-Palestine section of the book. It's the largest section of
the book. And I have to say, when I read the book, I imagine if I took your name out of it,
took away the awards and the acclaim, took the cover off the book, the publishing house goes
away, the content of that section would not be out of place in the backpack of an extremist.
And so then I found myself wondering, why does Ta-Nehisi Coates, who I've known for a long time,
read his work for a long time, very talented, smart guy, leave out so much? Why leave out that
Israel is surrounded by countries that want to eliminate it? Why leave out that Israel deals
with terror groups that want to eliminate it? Why not detail anything of the first
and the second Intifada, the cafe bombings,
the bus bombings, the little kids blown to bits?
And is it because you just don't believe that Israel
in any condition has a right to exist?
Mm-mm-mm.
Well, I would say the perspective
that you just outlined,
there is no shortage of that perspective in American media.
That's the first thing I would say.
I am most concerned always with those who don't have a voice, with those who don't have the ability to talk.
I've been a reporter for 20 years.
The reporters of those who believe more sympathetically about Israel and its right to exist don't have a problem getting their voice out. But what I saw
in Palestine, what I saw on the West Bank, what I saw in Haifa in Israel, what I saw in the South
Hebron Hills, those were the stories that I have not heard. And those were the stories that I was
most occupied with. I wrote a 260 page book. It is not a treatise on the entirety of the conflict
between the Palestinians and the Israelis.
But if you were to read this book, you would be left wondering, why does any of Israel exist? What a horrific place, committing horrific acts on a daily basis. So I think the question is central
and key. If Israel has a right to exist, and if your answer is no, then I guess the question
becomes, why do the Palestinians have a right to exist? Why do 20 different Muslim countries have a right to exist?
My answer is that no country in this world establishes its ability to exist through rights.
Countries establish their ability to exist through force, as America did.
And so I think this question of right to Israel does exist. It's a fact.
The question of its right is not a question that I would be faced with with any other country.
But you write a book that delegitimizes the pillars of Israel.
It seems like an effort to topple the whole building of it.
So I come back to the question, and it's what I struggle with throughout this book.
What is it that so particularly offends you about the existence of a Jewish state that is a Jewish safe place and not any of the other states out there?
There's nothing that offends me about a Jewish state that is a Jewish safe place and not any of the other states out there?
There's nothing that offends me about a Jewish state. I am offended by the idea of states built
on ethnocracy, no matter where they are. Muslim included. I would not want a state where any group
of people laid down their citizenship rights based on ethnicity. The country of Israel is a state in
which half the population exists on one tier of citizenship and everybody
else that's ruled by Israelis exists on another tier, including Palestinian Israeli citizens.
The only people that exist on that first tier are Israeli Jews. Why do we support that? Why is that
okay? I'm the child of Jim Crow. I'm the child of people that were born into a country where that
was exactly the case of American apartheid. I walk over there and I walk through the occupied territories and I walk down a street
in Hebron and a guy says to me, I can't walk down the street unless I profess my religion.
I'm with another path. No, no, no, no, no. I want to, this is very, very important.
Extremely important. I'm working with the person that is guiding me is a Palestinian
whose father, whose grandfather and grandmother was born in this town.
And I have more freedom to walk than he does.
He can't ride on certain roads.
He can't get water in the same way that Israeli citizens who live less than a mile away from him can.
Why is that?
Why is that?
Why is there no agency in this book for the Palestinians?
They exist in your narrative merely as victims of the Israelis,
as though they were not offered peace at any juncture,
as though they don't have a stake in this as well.
What is their role in the lack of a Palestinian?
I have a very, very, very, very moral compass about this.
And again, perhaps it's because of my ancestry.
Either apartheid is right or it's wrong.
It's really, really simple.
Either what I saw was right or it's wrong. It's really, really simple. Either what I saw was right or it's wrong.
I am, for instance, against the death penalty.
What the person did to get the death penalty,
it really doesn't matter to me.
I don't care if they were selling a nickel bag of marijuana
or if they were a serial killer.
I am against the death penalty.
I am against a state that discriminates against people
on the basis of ethnicity.
I'm against that.
There is nothing the Palestinians could do that would make that okay for me. My book is not based on the hyper
morality of the Palestinian people. What's the last message you want in lessons? Because many
people feel it's complicated. You say it's not complicated. Less than 20 seconds. What's your
message? Less than 20 seconds. I want people to read the book. And I don't make the assumption
that somebody would just read the book and have written and have read nothing else about it.
Okay. You're still invited to High Holidays. I'll see you at the show.
So lots unpacked there. The person asking most of the questions was Tony DiCapolo, who's an
anchor on CBS Mornings. And I think Ta-Nehisi Coates was taken a little bit back by the
questions. There's since been a lot of press coverage in the US about blowback within CBS,
because that was viewed as a hostile set of questions. Struck me as basic journalism that DiCapolo was practicing there. But you've written a lot about this before that interview. And so I
thought of you when I saw that interview. What's your reaction?
I mean, I haven't read Coates' book, but I've been dealing with this question of projection
for many years. I was a correspondent
for the AP, which is the American News Agency between 2006 and the very end of 2011. And as
you know, I've written a lot about it. And what you see if you consume a lot of Western media,
particularly American media in this case, is that people don't know very much about foreign countries.
And that's true of Israel too. What they do is they project their own preoccupations and issues
onto foreign countries. So I saw this happen all the time where reporters would come in here, they don't know anything about
the history of this place, they don't speak any relevant language, but they come with a lot of
baggage from a home and they start projecting it as a way of making the story relevant.
So in the case of Americans, often they'll see race as if Israeli Jews are white people
and Palestinian Muslims are black people and that there are Americans who really believe that a country 8,000 miles away,
which has a completely different history, completely unrelated to race in America,
somehow maps onto America's racial preoccupations.
And of course, it doesn't.
And for many Europeans, it will be colonialism.
That's what they say, because that's the skeleton in their closet.
That's what they're processing in their own societies.
And there's a history of projecting whatever ills you see in the world onto Jewish people and then condemning them as kind of the
avatars of the ills that you see. So, I'm not particularly surprised by it, to be honest.
This is not a guy who spent any time here, according to what I've seen. He was here for
a week and a half or something, which for the basis of a book is ludicrous.
A lot of people come here, they do an NGO tour,
they see a highly selective list of sites and draw conclusions
that are essentially conclusions they came with already.
So a good reporter looks at a place or goes into an interview
or approaches a story with a willingness to understand the story on its own terms.
And a bad reporter comes to a story and
sees a mirror. They basically see any story as a reflection of themselves. And I think that's what
you're seeing there. I mean, the idea that this country is somehow a reflection of the experience
of African Americans is, of course, completely divorced from reality, which isn't to say that
this place is necessarily better or worse. It's just completely different. And if you want to understand this place,
you have to live here. You have to speak relevant languages. The history here is
incredibly complicated. And the closer you get to it, the more it defies simplification.
It's very easy to simplify. If you're the kind of lazy journalist who would come here
for a brief visit, get shown around by political activists,
and then write a book about it. I mean, this isn't just a comment on the state of Israel
analysis. I think it's a comment on the state of American journalism. I mean, it's completely
unserious, of course. The attempt to kind of map America onto other parts of the world has led
Americans into grave errors
of judgment. And the one that comes to mind most readily is the invasion of Iraq. I mean, America
saw Iraq as an America in waiting. And then if they could only remove the regime, then Iraq would
be free to become, you know, America, Iraqi freedom. It was going to be a democracy. And of
course, that was, as we know, a hallucination based on a projection of America
onto a completely different society. And the results were disastrous. And there are many
other examples. Vietnam is probably one of them. And there are probably many others. So Americans
get into a lot of trouble because, this is going to sound terrible, but because America is such a
big place and many Americans don't necessarily travel that much and often don't speak foreign languages,
there is a real tendency to assume that everywhere is America. And if you do that,
you're going to misunderstand foreign societies in a way that can be disastrous. I mean, in this
case, it's just a bad book that will be forgotten in a few weeks. But wars have been started based
on projections of American concerns on other
countries. So it's very important when observing foreign societies to make sure that you are
living in reality, that you're grasping the complexities of each society. I actually wrote
an article about this a few years ago for The Atlantic, which was called Israel's Problems
Are Not America's, or possibly America's Problems Are Not Israel's. I can't remember what the
headline was, but it was about precisely this, which is a problem that I encountered in my time in the American press
corner. It's one of the reasons that I kind of despaired of international press coverage,
because what many of the press organizations are doing is what this author is doing,
which is just coming at the story with no knowledge and no respect for its difference
and just projecting their own baggage onto it. I mean, it's an ultimately narcissistic approach to journalism.
You just go anywhere and say, oh, this is just like home.
And that's not journalism.
You've written a lot about the Mizrahi communities in Israel.
You were writing about this long before October 7th,
that if you are concerned about how people of, quote unquote,
people of color are treated, most Israelis, including those thriving,
are people of color.
Yeah, I'm not even sure if any of the society maps onto this discussion of color are treated, most Israelis, including those thriving, are people of color. Yeah, I'm not even sure if any of the society maps onto this discussion of color and not color
in America, but certainly more than half of the Jewish citizens of Israel come from the Islamic
world and are as native to the Islamic world as anyone else in the Islamic world. And not to
understand that part of Israel's story is a recipe for not understanding anything about Israel.
Literally nothing in the society can be understood if you don't understand that. And of course, you can look at the Ethiopian
Jewish community. And I'm not saying that everything is great here. And I'm not saying
that there isn't steep and entrenched inequality in the West Bank. I think Israel's made grave
moral errors in the way it's handled the West Bank. And I think you can explain why those
errors have happened. And I think they have a lot to do with Palestinian behavior and the behavior
of actors like Iran. But even if you look at Israeli society,
in no way does it correspond to what Coates seems to be saying here. And again, this is a very
American style of journalism. I'm going to come for a few days. Surprisingly, what I find in this
completely foreign society is exactly what I expected to find based on my own experiences in a completely different country. Again, it's just a symptom of essentially the collapse of mainstream journalism
into different strains of ideological advocacy. And this particular one maps onto this moment
in America. I mean, it's not coincidence that the book comes out, right? There's an attempt to
use Israel as the embodiment of injustice on earth. And you can really see that in the examples that you were giving, Dan,
about college campuses and just the general climate of hostility toward Israel and toward
anyone who's associated with Israel. And of course, for America, the evil is racism. The
demon that stalks America is the demon of racial injustice. And that's real. I mean, I understand
why that's the demon that stalks America. So there's an attempt to kind of harness antagonism toward Israel and Jews
to different American causes. I mean, you can see it in queers for Palestine and there are many other
examples. There's a very energized social movement that has discovered that you can
use Jews effectively for mobilization. It's very hard to mobilize against China.
Everyone has a Chinese made cell phone. Everyone has a car full of Saudi petroleum. It's really hard even to mobilize against Russia. Russia doesn't, you know, generate the kind of
street level antagonism that you need to get a protest together. But in an interesting way,
Israel does and Jews do. And this book is part of that. So I think it needs to be seen in the
context of what's been going on in the past year, which, as I think you pointed out, is quite scary.
And the manipulations work in both directions. You've pointed out to me in another conversation
that Yehia Sinwar used the George Floyd killing to great effect to manipulate American media.
Absolutely. There's a confluence of forces here that increasingly understand each other. And I
think that when Hamas embarked on its war on October 7th, they understood that there are
forces in the West that will join
them. Can you just describe that Sinwar interview and then we'll... Sure. It was an interview for
Vice, I think it was 2021, where Sinwar, who's this, you can call him a psychopath. I mean,
he's religious fundamentalist. He's the military head of Hamas and the man who's responsible more
than anyone else for what happened on October 7th. And subsequently, in the middle of the interview
with Vice, he says, I want to take this moment to commemorate the killing of George Floyd. Because the kind of
injustice that he faced is the injustice that we face. And it's an amazing statement, right?
There are 300 million Arab Muslims and just under 7 million Jews in Israel. There are 2 billion
Muslims on earth. And the Jewish population of the world is about 13 million, which is
a lot smaller than the population of Cairo. So the suggestion that this is somehow equivalent
to the experience of African Americans in the United States is, of course, obscene,
but it's also remarkably effective. And what Agavex Sinwar understands and what the Qataris
understand and what the kind of alliance, a strange alliance that we're seeing of anti-Western
forces, whether they call themselves Marxist or call themselves left-wing or call themselves
Islamist, they understand that you can mobilize against this particular enemy. There's a reason
that a guy like Coates, you know, sets out into the world. There are a lot of countries in the
world. Israel is one one-hundredth of one percent of the surface of the world. There's a lot in the world that we never hear about.
This is the most heavily covered country on earth, and I can quantify that with numbers,
and I think I have in previous podcasts. But there's a reason that people use this place
as a symbol. It elevates you. If you attack the Russians, not many people will care. If you
stake your career on an attack against the Chinese regime, it's not going to help
your career.
But if you go after Israel and the Jews, you're going to find yourself lifted up on a strange
tide.
And I think a lot of people are playing that game.
I was hoping to end on an upbeat note.
I guess in the spirit of this one-year anniversary, we will leave it on that downbeat note.
But Mati?
I think you can say if you want to end on a positive note that I think what a lot of people
in the Jewish community are discovering is the incredible strength and inspiration that we have
in our texts, in our traditions, in the community. There's a lot that we've forgotten. And in an
interesting and kind of sad way, it's the external hostility that has led people to rediscover it.
We've been here before. This isn't the worst we've seen. In many ways, Jewish people are better off
now than we have been at any time in our history. And I don't think we want to forget that amid all
of the darkness and the depression. And I also want to point out the luxury that I have as an
Israeli, that I'm not buffeted by voices like the one that you just played. I mean, I think you have
to live in a society that's affected by them. But we have a state where you have to deal with a lot of other problems, but you don't have to
deal with those. And I think that we shouldn't lose sight of the incredible accomplishments of
the Jewish people in the last century and the incredible wisdom that exists in what is, after
all, one of the oldest and wisest civilizations in the world. It's all there. It's at our fingertips.
And if we're rediscovering it
because of external hostility,
then that's a silver lining in a very dark moment.
There you go.
You managed to wrap it up in a positive way.
That I would say is the genius of Israel.
So I actually agree.
I agree with everything you're saying.
Mati, thanks for this.
It's a pleasure.
Thank you for having me, Dan.
Call Me Back is produced and edited by Ilan Benatar.
Our media manager is Rebecca Strom.
Additional editing by Martin Huergo.
Research by Gabe Silverstein. Until next time, I'm your host, Dan Senor. CNOR.