Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - Will the U.S. Deal Iran its Final Blow? - with Amit Segal
Episode Date: June 16, 2025Watch Call me Back on YouTube: youtube.com/@CallMeBackPodcastCheck out Ark Media’s other podcasts: For Heaven's Sake: https://lnk.to/rfGlrAWhat’s Your Number?: https://lnk.to/rbGlvMFor sponsorshi...p inquiries, please contact: callmeback@arkmedia.orgTo contact us and sign up for updates visit: arkmedia.orgArk Media on Instagram: instagram.com/arkmediaorgDan on X: x.com/dansenorDan on Instagram: instagram.com/dansenorToday’s Episode:In the early hours of Friday, June 13th, the Israeli Air Force began major attacks on Iranian nuclear and military facilities, as well as IRGC leaders and nuclear scientists. The attack prompted an Iranian retaliation which began later that night. Saturday, the second day of war with Iran, became the deadliest night for Israeli civilians since October 7th, after two massive barrages of Iranian rockets killed eleven Israelis and wounded over 200. Seven people were killed in Bat Yam, where a missile struck a residential building, and four were killed in the Arab city of Tamra, east of Haifa. As the Israeli offensive on Iran proceeds, the big question is; will the United States join Israel’s offensive to destroy Iran’s nuclear program?In this episode, Amit Segal, Call me Back Regular and senior political analyst for Channel 12, joins us to discuss Saturday night’s attack on Israel, and the possibility of U.S. military action against Iran.CREDITS:ILAN BENATAR - Producer & EditorMARTIN HUERGO - Sound EditorMARIANGELES BURGOS - Additional EditingMAYA RACKOFF - Operations DirectorGABE SILVERSTEIN - ResearchYUVAL SEMO - Music Composer
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You are listening to an art media podcast.
There might be a version of the famous American land and lease operation from World War II
in which in order to tackle his isolationist part of the party and the administration,
the then president of the United States landed his Western allies the equipment, the military equipment, to fight the fascist regime.
Now here's the thing, maybe Israeli pilots will use B-2 that would be
lent to them from the US Army. This is an option that I wouldn't rule out.
It takes only one bomb to destroy
Fordu. Right. Bear it on mind.
It's 9 a.m. on Sunday, June 15th here in New York City. It is 4 p.m. on Sunday, June 15th in Israel, where Israelis are reeling from
the deadliest night for Israeli civilians since October 7th.
Last night, two massive barrages of missiles from Iran left
13 Israelis dead and over 200 wounded.
Four are still missing.
The first barrage occurred around 9 p.mpm on Saturday night and targeted Israel's north.
One missile hit the Arab town of Tamra, east of Haifa, killing four women, a mother, her two daughters and another relative.
The second barrage targeted central Israel.
One missile struck a residential building in Bat Yam, killing six people, including boys aged 8, 10 and 18. As we record three
people are still missing. The IDF just recovered a body from the rubble and is searching for
people who may be trapped underneath the rubble. Meanwhile, the Israeli Air Force has continued
to land major blows against Iranian nuclear and military facilities. Overnight, the Israeli Air Force struck Shahran,
Tehran's main gas depot,
and one of Iran's biggest oil refineries in the Shahr Reh.
Dan, I have to leave to the, there is a siren going on.
Okay.
It's 10 minutes, okay?
Okay, all right.
I'm reading the introduction here to my episode
with Amit Segal, who I haven't introduced yet,
but was waiting for me to get through the introduction and then the siren ran off and
he had to go seek shelter. So I'm going to continue reading the introduction and then
Amit will be back in a few minutes and we'll start our conversation.
Meanwhile, the Israeli Air Force has continued to land major blows to Iranian nuclear military
facilities overnight. The Israeli Air Force struck Shahrein, Tehran's main gas depot and one
of Iran's biggest oil refineries, igniting massive fires in those areas.
The Israeli Air Force also hit two Iranian energy sites, more nuclear
infrastructure in Iran's Defense Ministry headquarters. We've also received news
that Ali Shamkhani, one of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei's top advisors and
the former National Security Chief in in Iran has died after sustaining severe injuries in an Israeli strike on Friday.
One of the big questions at this moment, if not the only question, is will the U.S. join
Israel's offensive against Iran and put an end, or an end for the time being, to Iran's
nuclear program?
On Saturday, President Trump announced that if Iran attacks the U.S., it will experience
quote the full strength of the U.S. military.
But will it take an Iranian attack on America for the U.S. to get involved?
Joining us to discuss last night's Iranian attack and the possibility of U.S. military
action against Iran is Call Me Back regular Amit Sego, senior
political analyst for Channel 12.
All right, Amit, I see you now back in your seat, ready to record back from the shelter.
So thank you for returning and most importantly, I'm glad you returned safely.
Safe and sound.
I have to tell you a story by the way, then.
When we bought a house, my wife and myself, in Jerusalem, it
was built in 1989. So it's the last building to be built in Israel with a shelter. Today
there is a different system of safe rooms.
– Meaning not like the traditional shelter, it's, there's safe rooms.
– Exactly, you know, very thick walls, very, very protected. And we thought, what would
we put here? It was September 2023.
So we put all the luggage that we didn't have enough time to unpack. Two weeks passed and
the October 7th came and since then it's the busiest room at home.
Yeah. My mother, who's 87 years old, she's going to kick me virtually because she's in
Jerusalem for saying her age. She just turned 87, but she's doing great. She lives in Jerusalem
in the Baca neighborhood,
actually not far from you,
and the safe room for her building is her kitchen.
So whenever the sirens go off,
everyone from the building has to come into her kitchen.
So this is like either a Jewish mother's nightmare
or a Jewish mother's dream
because she's like baking for everyone
and keeping everyone well-fed.
I see.
Anyways, Amit, I wanna just first get a snapshot of what has happened over the last
couple days.
Can you detail how many Iranian projectiles have penetrated Israel's defense systems?
Where do they land?
What their impact was?
Just give us a sense of what's been happening in Israel.
So Iranians had give or take 2,000 ballistic missiles before the war, Israel destroyed or eliminated some
20%, 25%, so they're left with 15, 1,600, out of which they have filed so far something
like 450.
And if we count, so we have something like 10 ballistic missiles that actually penetrated the Israel's most
sophisticated anti-missile system, which cost the lives of at least 14 Israelis altogether.
Eleven tonight and three on Friday night.
And in terms of the damage, what parts of Israel have been most hard hit?
Central Israel.
I'll give you an example.
There was one ballistic missile that hit Bat Yam,
it's a bit southern to Tel Aviv. This single ballistic missile destroyed 9 to 20 buildings.
Something between 9 to 20 buildings will have to be fully destroyed. You mean fully taken down,
meaning they can't be built back as is, They have to be totally raised and then rebuilt. Exactly. Another 40 buildings will have to be renovated and the total amount of people who
will have to find a new house is 742 only from a single ballistic missile. It's like the Nirov
Kibbutz or Barry. So one ballistic missile actually evacuates or takes the home of almost a thousand Israelis.
Okay.
And in terms of the Iranians and Iran specifically, to what extent have they recovered from Israel's
first wave, from the surprise attack last Thursday or not?
In a sense, they haven't recovered yet. Well, the idea behind Israel's surprise attack was to actually avoid or prevent the Iranian
reaction that was actually pre-written by Ayatollah Khamenei.
The plan was that once Israel attacks Iran, a thousand ballistic missiles would be fired
towards Israel at the order of the senior figures in the Iranian Air Force.
What Israel did was to actually create a fake phone call for 20 members of the Air Force
senior staff, thus calling them to a specific bunker in Tehran and killing them with missiles.
So there was no one to give the order. Additionally, covert agents of Mossad fired drones and missiles from trucks across Iran
and actually destroyed hundreds of ballistic missiles.
So there wasn't enough ballistic missiles to shoot and there was no one to give the
order.
What happened since then is that Khamenei nominated or promoted new
figures they gave the order but what we see is a smaller scale attack and it's crucial
why because there is a limit to the scope of attack that our anti-air a ballistic missile
systems can actually handle simultaneously.
Let's say the number is 50 so the 51st ballistic missile will hit and penetrate the system.
And so does the 52nd, 53rd, and 54th, etc.
So the idea was to have a number of thousands of casualties, just multiply one ballistic
missile with seven victims and 800 homeless people, and multiply by let's say 500. That was supposed to be
the Iranian reaction to the Israeli attack. Amit, you are an astute observer of Israel and Israeli
society. How do you think the Israeli public is responding to this new reality? This is a new
world. If October 7th was a new world, this is a new new world. Right. And I think the level of support for the Israeli operation against Iran is the highest that
they have ever seen in my lifetime.
And I'll explain.
On October 7th, the support for Israel for the war in Gaza was, I don't know, 80 percent,
but there was an outrage at the government that failed.
Now when the government is taking, taking, and of course the IDF
have taken the proper measures, and not only they were not surprised, but they surprised
the enemy. So the support is even bigger, even higher than this. And I'll give an example.
My grandmother was born in London and she spent the Blitz in London. She was 12 to 17 years old. Yes, and she always told me the stories
about how Londoners took all the damage at night
and then went to work in the mornings.
And I think what we see today in Israel,
it's not the same scale, of course,
but the atmosphere, the vibes are the same.
It's interesting, a friend of mine who's at a startup
in the Tel Aviv area said to me,
this is before the Iranian attack,
just based on the Houthi missiles.
There was a Houthi attack a couple weeks ago,
and like two million Israelis were up at 3 a.m. that night,
you know, in the middle of the night in their shelters
and their safe rooms and their mamads.
And this guy said to me, he's like, what other country?
Like two million of our citizens are up
in the middle of the night dealing with this attack.
This is again before the attacks from Iran,
the counter attacks from Iran.
And we're all at work the next morning
and we're back at our startups and we're back
like a business, you know, we're all sleep deprived
and we're just doing what we do.
And I think what you're describing
is an even more intense version of that.
I have three children, 10, six and two and a a half and my 2 and a half child woke up this morning and told me I had a strange
dream I dreamt that there was sirens. Now there were three sirens at night. It
became to the level in which they are sleeping in the shelter and just
thinking it was a bad dream. There are tragically some pretty awful losses of life over the
last couple of days. You wrote about them in your newsletter. From your sense and
sense of the people you're talking to in the security establishment and around
the Prime Minister's office, are they surprised by how much has broken through
in Israel? We've, you know, the number of missiles that have actually penetrated
Israeli airspace and landed in civilian areas and caused the kind of damage that we've seen?
Well before the decision was taken the estimation was something between
804,000 casualties, dead Israelis. So I know it's tragic what happened in the Bat Yam and in Tamra and Ramat Gan
altogether, but it's behind, it's under the lowest estimation prior to
the operation.
I'll have to explain.
As long as Iranians keep shooting something between 75 and 150 ballistic missiles a night,
it definitely means that within 7 to 12 days they will run out of ballistic missiles.
And it's dramatic how many ballistic missiles they shoot, because if they shoot only 10
a night, our systems can actually handle it.
So they must shoot this barrage of dozens of ballistic missiles every night.
So the more days are passing, the less ballistic missiles they have, while Israel can still
escalate two, three or four levels
above what we are doing as we speak.
I'll give you a few examples.
To actually attack Bandar Abbas port, which accounts for 85% of the Iranian economy.
To attack the natural gas fields, the oil fields, to eliminate the Khamenei, the Ayatollah, the Iranian Ayatollah,
etc., etc., etc., without targeting civilians, of course, like Iranians do.
Okay.
So I want to ask you, I want to get a sense of what you know about what has been accomplished
at least last night.
Israel dealt devastating strikes from what we understand on Iranian military and strategic facilities,
including energy, economic infrastructure.
And as far as I can tell, the Israeli Air Force has cleared the path to Iran
and is dominating skies at least over Tehran and maybe beyond Tehran and the larger parts of the country.
Can you just summarize the result of what happened last night? Yes. Well, Israel is seven days ahead of schedule of what the IDF had planned before. I'll give
you a few examples. In 2012, for instance, the calculation was that 40 to 50 airplanes
and their staff are to be shut down over Iran. None of this has happened. The idea was that
it would take seven days only to take care of the entire
aircraft systems in Iran. It ended in, I think, 26 hours. So now we are running ahead of the
schedule, which allows the IAEF to do much more and much faster than it had planned to
do in the first place.
Okay. I want to talk about the Iranian nuclear program.
It's discussed on this podcast many times in the past.
Iran's nuclear program is distributed deep and wide
across Iran.
And obviously the big focus is Fordow,
where what is left of the Iranian nuclear program
is deep, deep, deep in mountainous bunker protection, very
hard to penetrate from what we've been told by Israeli capabilities.
To the best of your understanding, if there was a progress bar hovering above this mission,
how much of this program across the board, and then we'll get into Fordow, how much of
the program, the Iranian nuclear program, has been destroyed?
We are at phase three out of ten, give or take, when it comes to the nuclear program, the Iranian nuclear program, has been destroyed? We are at phase three out of ten, give or take, when it comes to the nuclear program,
but we're in the last phase of the attack, and I'll explain.
The idea was, first of all, to take the anti-aircraft system and then to handle the ballistic missile
program, and then to take down the leadership, the military leadership of Iran.
It has been done already.
Now when we reach the point of attacking their real thing, the hotspots of the Iranian nuclear
program, we are still at the very beginning.
Natanz was attacked and almost destroyed.
Isfahan was heavily damaged.
You are right about Fordu. Fordu is very protected under a huge mountain in an isolated part of Iran.
And there are those scientists that take care of actually putting together the bomb.
Now more than 50% of the engineers, the scientists that have dealt with this thing are already
dead.
This is crucial because this is the knowledge. There was a phrase then that claimed that
it doesn't really matter if you kill or if you destroy the equipment as long as Iranians still have the knowledge. Now, a good deal of the knowledge lies in ruins or in gravestones across the Iran.
So we are still at the very beginning of the end of this campaign.
What's your sense when you say beginning of the end?
So timing wise, I know these things are hard to predict or forecast.
If the US enters the campaign, I would say 48 hours.
As long as it's Israel, it's going to take, give or take two weeks.
And there can be complications.
For instance, if something dramatic happens in Israel, I don't know, a hundred Israelis,
God forbid, would be killed in an Iranian attack.
It would alter the programs.
This is one thing.
What happens if international community intervenes?
This is a second thing.
What happens if five pilots are taking hostages, etc. etc.
But if the US enters this campaign,
it can end in 48 hours with an utter destruction
of the Iranian nuclear program that had disturbed the world
and Israel for the last 25 years.
Okay, so let's talk about that.
There are two names that matter the most
in trying to answer that question, will the US
enter?
Those two names are Donald Trump and Diego Garcia.
The president makes a decision and the US has capabilities at Diego Garcia that could
be deployed that can penetrate Fordo.
So can you first explain what that means?
What does the US have that Israel doesn't and that Israel needs?
To put it short B2
This is exactly what the US has and the IDF doesn't. Diego Garcia actually hosts
the several B2 bombers that can attack Iran way faster and way more
decisively than Israel. One bomb from one B-2 bomber actually takes or destroys Fordu completely and destroys
the rest of Natanz and Isfahan.
So it takes only one, two, three flights of B-2 from Diego Garcia to actually end the
Iranian nuclear program.
Now here's the thing.
I'll take a risk here and I'll say that the United States of America
would attack the Iranian nuclear program.
As far as I know, as far as I understand, this is a derut, the way to Tehran is open
and for Trump this is a success.
I mean all the risks were taken by Israel.
Israel dismantled Hezbollah, Hamas, preventing regional war, then paved the way, cleaned
the skies for the aircrafts, and now he just has to score.
Additionally, and more important than this, in my opinion, there is another option that
when I heard it for the first time, I thought it was April 1st joke, because I heard
it on April 1st.
And this is that there might be a version of the famous American land and lease operation
from World War II, in which in order to tackle his isolationist part of the party and the
administration, the then president of the United States, landed his
Western allies the equipment, the military equipment, to fight the fascist regime.
Now here's the thing, maybe Israeli pilots will use B-2 that would be lent to them from
the US Army.
This is an option that I wouldn't rule out.
It takes only one bomb to destroy Fordu.
Meaning that the US will basically give the Israelis the equipment to do it themselves?
Exactly.
It takes only one bomb to destroy Fordu.
Right.
Bear it in mind.
So, let me just, I basically agree with you, but your take, that Israel has done the most
daring and risky operations already and will continue to do so.
And so this allows the U S to kind of come in at the back end.
While the U S has been more involved than people realize, or people had
realized initially, this allows the U S to come in in the back end and
really seal the success.
That's one take and we can get into why I do agree with you.
And I, I think directionally that's where things are heading.
However, if you wanted to play the contrarian take, which is from President Trump's perspective,
this whole operation has been a good cop, bad cop strategy, and that Trump ultimately
wants to deal with Iran.
And Trump was persuaded by Prime Minister Netanyahu that they're playing you, and we're
down to the 60 days that you had set and they've completely done
a rope-a-dope strategy while they are continuing
to enrich uranium.
The Iranians had weapons grade levels
while they are activating their weapons group
to figure out how to weaponize, enrich uranium,
actually create the warhead that could deliver
a nuclear bomb.
All this is happening.
It's not just Israel that's seeing it.
It's the US intelligence community that's seeing it.
And even most surprisingly, it was the IAEA that was seeing this.
And so Netanyahu was telling President Trump,
you're gonna wake up one day
and Iran's gonna have a nuclear bomb
and you're gonna still be talking about, you know,
Steve Witkoff's round 17 of talks
and it's like time will have passed us by.
So the Netanyahu basically said to Trump,
let us do this, let us do this operation.
And even if you wanna get to a deal,
it'll actually give some teeth to the possibility
of your negotiating strategy.
We, Israel, will be bad cop,
and you tell the Iranians,
I've got a ticket out of hell for you,
and my ticket out of hell for you
is come back to the negotiating table,
I'll be in a much weaker position.
That would make the case against the US helping with Fordo.
Right. But first of all, I think it's not a binary thing of either the US would attack or not.
We see an axis that stretches from doing nothing, which is definitely not the case, to actually
sending B2 bombers from Diego Garcia. But there are many things in between. I'll give you an example.
What happens if the United States does nothing militarily, but just sets the new threshold
or the new barrier in which they say that in the new negotiations between Witkoff and
Karachi and Oman, whenever it would take place, if Karachi survives this campaign, the beginning
point is the point where the Israeli campaign
ends.
Thus, meaning that every attempt, every Iranian attempt to recover what had been destroyed
during the Israeli attacks would be interpreted as a reason for the U.S. to engage.
This is one option.
Second, the land and lease that I mentioned, and there are more options.
For instance, what happens if President Trump would adapt what Ambassador Huckabee has been
saying over the last few weeks, that there are 700,000 American citizens in Israel.
So I just want to explain what you mean and what Ambassador Huckabee said.
What Huckabee is saying is, and he's, by the way, this is not the first time
he said this, he said this during the Yemen,
when the US cut the deal with the Houthis.
There are 700,000 Americans living in Israel,
most of which are dual citizens,
meaning they're citizens of the United States and Israel,
but many of them are also just US citizens,
but they're there for whatever reason.
700,000.
My mother included.
Your mother included, okay, there you go. And my mother, by the reason. 700,000. My mother included. Your mother included.
Okay, there you go.
And my mother, by the way.
And your mother.
And my sister's kids and my brother-in-law.
Right, we can go on.
So 700,000 out of a population, about 10 million people,
that's a lot.
Yes, absolutely.
And then at some point, President Trump would say,
I don't know, two American citizens were killed,
12 were injured, we are going to retaliate.
But I have to say then that I find the President Trump response fabulous.
Well, President Trump, when he says, we had nothing to do with this operation, dear Iranians,
and now we offer you to come back to the negotiation table.
He uses the Iranian method, the proxy method that said for years, we have nothing to do
with the Houthis, we have nothing to do with Hamas or Hezbollah, we just want to negotiate.
Now the American proxy, aka Israel, it's not exactly proxy but something similar, attacked
Iran and now with his charmest voice President Trump says, I had nothing to do with it.
Let's negotiate.
Right.
Smart.
In terms of the prime minister, the people around him, how are they interpreting or
following the debate inside the United States specifically?
And I think the debate is overstated, generally overinterpreted about, you know,
those around the president who are advocating the US get more directly involved and those around the
president who are what we call, we put in the restrainer camp, which are those who are
advocating for minimal or no US support for this.
How worried are, is the prime minister's team as this war potentially drags on and
And there's increasing pressure on the u.s. To get involved. So I think
The Israeli way to influence directly the isolationist part of the Republican Party and this administration does not exist
But Israel fully relies and heavily relies on
But Israel fully relies and heavily relies on the pro-Israel very big part, very big portion of the Republican Party in this Trump administration.
So I see the green light given by President Trump to Prime Minister Netanyahu as Netanyahu's
most dramatic diplomatic achievement in his career as Prime Minister. I think what he did here, overcoming the Tucker Carlson fraction, overcoming the risk aversion
method by President Trump, and convincing President Trump against all the odds, against
most of the odds, against all the negative coverage, is something that will be written
in golden letters in the books of history.
And I'll tell you something more than this.
Just compare it to what we discussed three weeks ago about President Trump turning cold
shoulder to Israel following his visit with Saudi Arabia and in the Emirates and Qatar.
The perception was that Trump abandons Israel, that Israel is
off the table.
But what we know now is that Israel was under the table wiretapping whatever it takes in
the Middle East.
So I'll tell you, I think there are three big advantages that Israel has as it relates
to how it's viewed in this debate within those
advising the president within the kind of GOP MAGA
community one is as you said the majority of the Republican Party is
still passionately pro-israel and
And you I think you saw this evidence that we've talked to you and I've talked about this on this podcast a few weeks ago
I think you saw this evidence that we've talked to, you and I have talked about this on this podcast
a few weeks ago,
it was more than a few weeks, over a month ago,
when there was still talk out of Witkoff
and some of the people around Witkoff
that he was possibly, you know,
still the administration could cut a deal
that allowed some enriched uranium,
maybe not as much as the Iranians wanted,
but not as little as Israel wanted,
which means none, but somewhere in between.
And there was all this talk that he was sort of okay with it.
And then you had this letter authored by senators,
Lindsey Graham and Tom Cotton.
The fact that those two signed the letter,
authored the letter was not surprising.
They're traditional Republican hawks,
but there are 53 Senate Republican senators in the Senate
and 52 of the 53 signed the letter,
and the letter was to the president saying,
zero enrichment, there can be no enrichment.
And the House, House Republicans put together
their own letter, the proportionate terms was similar.
I can't think of another issue since Donald Trump
has been president, since this presidency,
where you've seen Republicans in Congress,
en masse, publicly say stop. The direction you are heading Republicans in Congress on mass publicly say stop.
Right.
The direction you are heading is in the wrong direction.
I think now we know what happened in real time.
Everything that you described happened around April 15th.
The D-Day was supposed to be April 15th, just two days after Pes overnight, but it was postponed
because on April 3rd, Prime Minister Amtahar was urgently called to Washington to be lectured
by President Trump that he should not attack Iran because President Trump was about to
launch direct negotiations with the Ayatollah regime. Now at the very same moment there was something very disturbing when the special envoy Witkov
said that a certain level of enrichment would be allowed for Iran.
Now this was not a deception.
This was a real daylight between Israel and the US.
But gradually President Trump understood that there is no one to talk to in the Iranian
regime.
And I have to say that I'm quite disappointed by the negotiation skills of the Iranian regime.
We were told for many, many months that the Iranians are expert in negotiations, that
they have 3,000 years of experience in the bazaar in Tehran.
And all of a sudden you see something
that they are dealing with someone they had tried to assassinate prior to the US election,
which means that he has nothing in favor of them, refusing to each and every demand that
he posed when they hear on every night the military preparations in Israel.
And yet they insisted on doing nothing
and compromising zero compromise.
So I would say with regard to the Republican senators
and the House members, they're totally in touch
with their base and that has had the impact
that you just described.
They're totally in touch with their base of the party
and the president, when people say MAGA, not MAGA,
these terms are thrown around.
The reality is the totality of MAGA, it may not be the totality of MAGA, but a big part of MAGA
is the traditional core Republican, largely evangelical Christian base of the party.
And that base of the party has deep ties and members of Congress are tied into it. And the
president, like he's dialed into who these people are.
I mean, if you look at his record,
certainly in his first term, also reflected,
he understood the symbolism of Israel,
of the US moving its embassy to Jerusalem.
His base understood what it means to recognize Jerusalem
as Israel's capital.
And you can go on and on in terms of all the policy
implications.
So I think they overinterpret the volume
of some of these personalities in the restrainer camp
that are online and, you know, and are noisy,
but I don't think they're reflective necessarily of the base.
The second person who I think is very important here,
and this is gonna surprise our listeners, is JD Vance.
Because JD Vance is thought to be in the restrainer camp,
and I, you know, maybe he is, maybe he isn't,
I don't really know, but when you also hear JD Vance
talk about Israel, the vice president is deeply
affectionate of Israel, very much admires Israel.
He may not want the US to be getting involved in war,
but it's different from some of the other critics
of what Israel is doing
that have this deep anti-Israel hostility, I would say borders on anti-Semitism.
That's not JD Vance.
I've talked to Vice President Vance.
He's in awe of Israel.
So I think that's an important point.
If Israel can demonstrate that Israel can do this mostly on its own and not drag the US in in a way that people
like Vice President Vance have spoken about over the years.
That may be all Israel needs to do,
because for Vance, there's not this animus
that you hear from others, quite the opposite.
It's quite, it's actually, he's quite admiring of Israel.
And then the third group I would mention
are the Sunni Arab countries.
They're putting out these statements that are critical of what Israel's doing.
But from my understanding, and you may have heard the same, behind the scenes,
they are not disappointed with these developments.
To say the least. You know, it's very successful to have success.
Right.
Once Israel succeeds, it paves the way to yet another success, this time with Americans
flying on the Israeli miles.
Okay, I want to ask you about Iran's options now.
What are Iran's options?
If you're climbing into Iran's decision-making matrix,
and I'm asking this partly based on the fact
that Israeli decision-makers are thinking this through.
What are the regime's options?
They are in deep troubles.
But I want to begin with a short introduction, one minute introduction.
Day after October 7th, which surprised the Iranians as well, they started accelerating
their nuclear efforts.
Why?
Because their idea was Sinwar didn't bother to actually
inform us and we were quite pissed, angry at him, but Israel is now in big troubles
in Gaza. We have enough time to actually take care of our nuclear program and to advance
to a bump. That was the case. It was like a light morning run in the park. Ten months later, when Israel actually eliminated Hezbollah and Iran was left without proxies,
without this shield, the Hezbollah and Hamas shield, this light morning run in the park
turned to be a panic run to the nuclear bomb because they said, this is the last thing
that we have in order to protect the
survival of the regime. So this is the general picture. And now I want to touch the most
important date when it comes to the Israeli-Iranian conflict. And it's April 14, 2024, the night in
which Iran attacked Israel directly for the first time in Iran's history.
This was following the assassination of Mahdavi, a senior officer from Iran in Syria.
And the decision made by Ayatollah Khamenei to attack Israel directly actually paid a
very important service to Israel and Prime Minister Netanyahu.
It broke the fear barrier.
It shattered it.
Because for the first time Israel handled, Israel tackled a full-scale attack from Iran
and saw that it can actually stand it, that it can handle with this thing.
Till then, the fear in Israel was from a devastating damage.
And when Israel saw that it has both no chance or no other way but to fight Iran directly,
and that it's not as bad as Israelis thought, it paved the way for the attack.
This is the reason why in November 2024, two days after the election in the US, seven days
before Hezbollah give or take surrender to Israel, Netanyahu signed the paper that actually
initiated this operation.
So would you say it was two days after the US election?
I guess I have two questions.
There's a piece out in Jewish Insider right now
quoting several Biden officials and Harris officials
who are saying, this is terrible what Israel's doing.
So I guess what you're saying is there was a recognition
that there was no way Israel could do this
with the Harris administration,
that the turning point was Trump being elected.
Yes, but I have to tell you something that I guess you already know.
And this is that the Biden administration in the twilight zone in December and the beginning
of January 2025 following the election when President Biden is a lame duck three weeks
prior to his resignation, considered very seriously to attack Iran directly by the US Army.
So it's more complicated than this.
So you might say that what Biden would have done, President Harris would never have done,
but I don't know, to be honest, I don't know.
But there is no doubt that it was way easier with President Trump than with President Harris.
And wasn't this war plan though, even though it was, it began after Trump was elected or
the, the, the, the prime minister launched this, you know, the, the operation, if you
will, at least from a planning phase, the actual war plan that was developed was, was
long in the making.
I'll, I'll give you an example.
Okay.
There was many things that were very, very old and many things which are relatively new.
For instance, the trucks, the hidden trucks with the hidden missiles that actually destroyed
a big part of the anti-aircraft system in Iran, was smuggled to Iran in 2006 and 2007.
So those trucks are very old.
For 17 or 18 years, there was this array of trucks in Iran.
This was when Olmert was still prime minister.
On the other hand, following the decision of Netanyahu to actually go full engines ahead,
there was a very important segment of the intelligence, especially AI
intelligence, that began to be shaped and began to be made only in the beginning of
2025.
So it's like an archaeological site in which you see this specific attack consists of 10
to 15 layers of preparations of over 20 years.
Do you think Israel takes out the supreme leader of Iran, Khamenei?
I think it's definitely on the table.
Say more, like what would be the reason to do it or not to do it?
Ayatollah Khamenei actually ordered directly targeting Israeli civilians.
So even according to the international law, he is a target.
It does not consist of war crime, even under the distorted Hague International Criminal
Court. Why not? Because it's unprecedented. By the way, even the decision to take the supreme leadership of the Iranian army, there is no precedent
in history for such things.
Nothing at this scale has ever happened in the field of modern war.
So maybe it would be a step too far.
I don't know.
And there is an idea that Khamenei made so many, that it would be a mistake to actually take him down.
It would just make the Iranian people angry
because he's still a symbol,
without having something, you know,
an advantage that has to be earned.
All right, I have two more questions for you,
and then I'm gonna let you go.
One, from Prime Minister Netanyahu's perspective,
and you and I have talked about this in a previous episode that at
the time I thought he was still deciding what to do and considering it it sounds
like he had already long decided to do this but you know and obviously the
Prime Minister's team are watching the debate inside the United States that
referred to earlier the people around the president weighing in on this issue.
Prime Minister Netanyahu, the point I made is
if he was put on this earth for one thing,
his fans could probably agree
and his critics could probably agree.
The one thing was to stop Iran from getting a nuclear bomb,
meaning it's an issue he's been obsessed with for decades.
He's been screaming from the hilltops about this issue
for as long as I can remember.
And the idea that if Iran built a nuclear weapon
successfully on his watch, you know,
it would all be for naught.
All his warnings, all his organizing about it
will have been meaningless
because they will have been successful
and he didn't stop it.
To what extent did that weight of history,
again, this is, and I'm asking people
to listen to this conversation regardless of what extent did that weight of history, again, this is, and I'm asking people to listen
to this conversation regardless of what they think
of judicial reform or how they think he's handled
certain issues during the last 18 to 20 months
or how divided Israeli society has become
or how much they're disgusted, and I'm disgusted too
by some of the people in his government.
I'm just asking people to kind of put that aside just for the purposes of this,
not this entire conversation, but this question.
Because I think it's an important question when leaders, however flawed,
meet a moment in history. Can you talk about that?
I see the history of the Middle East in the last 30 years as a showdown between two people,
Prime Minister Netanyahu and Ayatollah Khamenei.
Prime Minister Netanyahu tried to eliminate Iran's nuclear program and Ayatollah Khamenei
tried to eliminate Israel.
On October 7th, 2023, it looked like Ayatollah Khamenei is on his way to succeed. What we see is that 620 days later, it looks for the first time as if Prime Minister Netanyahu
is about to succeed in his mission of life, which is to take care of the most severe threat
to the existence of the Jewish people since the Holocaust and maybe including the Holocaust.
Because what we know following October 7th is that when fundamentalist Muslims have a
weapon, it is a weapon to be used against the Jews and against the Jewish state.
On October 7th, it was Toyota vehicles, Kalachnikov rifles, knives.
It was supposed to be in a few weeks a nuclear bomb.
And this is why, and I'm quite sure, this is the reason why Netanyahu actually approved
the plans to attack Iran's nuclear program.
And he did it after 30 years of political career and after four failing attempts to
convince the Israeli military
establishment to do it.
So Netanyahu that devastatedly failed on October 7th was the only one to survive and to use
or to actually convince the new figures in the military establishment to actually fulfill
his life vision.
Wow.
Okay. to actually fulfill his life vision. Wow, okay.
Last question for you, Amit.
We've entered the Israel-Iran war,
which is it's unlike any other war Israel has fought.
The distances are vast, the weaponry is sophisticated,
the targets are fortified, the home front is vulnerable.
You've talked about what you think
the timeframe is for this war,
but what surprises do you think each side could have in store for the other?
What should we be paying attention to that we're not paying attention to?
Save US intervention and the gas industry.
The gas industry on both sides?
No, on the Iranian side.
I think we should pay attention to the way Iran's proxies abandon it.
You see Hezbollah issuing an email in which they announced they will not intervene in
the conflict.
Now, the Iranian taxpayer had funded Hezbollah in billions of dollars over the last 30 years
only to get a humiliating email from Nasrallah's successor, successor yet another, that they will not take part in it.
Same applies for some militias in Iraq. What we see now is the face-off, the naked face-off,
between Israel and Iran, with no one in between, and in two weeks from now we will have known how
it ended. All right, Amit, thank you.
We made it through an entire episode without another siren going off.
So that is a small measure of success.
Yes.
Stay safe, my friend.
Thank you so much.
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