Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - Will Trump end the war in Gaza? - With Amit Segal and Nadav Eyal
Episode Date: May 12, 2025Watch Call me Back on YouTube: youtube.com/@CallMeBackPodcastSubscribe to Ark Media’s new podcast ‘What’s Your Number?’: lnk.to/HJI2mXArk Media on Instagram: instagram.com/arkmediaorgTo contac...t us, sign up for updates, and access transcripts, visit: arkmedia.orgDan on X: x.com/dansenorDan on Instagram: instagram.com/dansenorToday’s episode:As we mentioned in our brief update this morning, there is a lot happening in Israel and it’s happening fast. Hamas has released hostage Edan Alexander, a US-Israeli citizen, in what Hamas is calling a “gesture of good will” to US President Donald Trump. All of this while the IDF has been preparing a large-scale offensive in Gaza and as the Gulf Summit is about to start in Saudi Arabia where President Trump will be meeting with Arab leaders to discuss further US investment and the future of the Middle East. To discuss all of this and what it means, we are joined by Call Me Back regulars Nadav Eyal, senior analyst at Yedioth Achronot, and Amit Segal, senior political analyst at Channel 12Amit Segal’s newsletter: https://www.amitsegal.net/newsletter/Amit Segal’s opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal: https://www.wsj.com/opinion/trumps-blunders-put-israel-at-risk-a9c0af65CREDITS:ILAN BENATAR - Producer & EditorMARTIN HUERGO - Sound EditorGABE SILVERSTEIN - ResearchYUVAL SEMO - Music Composer
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You are listening to an Art Media Podcast.
Hamas never does anything for freedom.
The real question is, will igniting the negotiations through the release of Yidan Alexander lead
the Trump administration to pressure Israel not to go to that full operation of the Gaza
Strip. I think what we see in a historical perspective is MAGA taking
over, the isolationist policy taking over. What will prevail? The isolationist
approach by MAGA, Tucker Carlson, or the hawkish old Republican establishment of
Mike Walz, Marco Rubio, etc.
Right now it's closer to MAGA, I think, but it's too early to call.
It's 8 a.m. on Monday, May 12th here in New York City.
It's 3 p.m. on Monday, May 12th here in New York City. It's 3 p.m. on Monday, May 12th in Israel.
Before we get into today's conversation, one quick housekeeping note. Tomorrow,
Tuesday, May 13th, I will be delivering the State of World Jewry address at the 92nd Street Y at
730 p.m. We'll provide a link in the show notes. I think it's sold out, but you can still register
for virtual access and needless to say there will be a
lot to talk about.
With that, today's conversation.
Earlier today we published an update on the dramatic events that took place over the weekend,
so I will refrain from repeating myself, but if you haven't caught up I'd recommend listening
to that 3 minute update.
It will be the last episode before this one in your feed, so you can better understand
the context of this conversation.
With me this morning are call me back regulars, Nadav Ayal and Amit Segal.
Nadav, Amit, thanks for being here.
Always a pleasure to be here. Thanks for having us.
Okay, so before we dive into each of the developments that unfolded these past couple days,
I want to ask you both what you see happening here and if you can help us connect the dots.
Amit, I'll start ask you both what you see happening here and if you can help us connect the dots.
Amit, I'll start with you.
The United States of America is acting alone in many issues, from the Houthis in Yemen
reaching an agreement with this terrorist regime to talking to Hamas, releasing Gideon
Alexander, who's American, but an Israeli soldier as well, first and foremost.
And the fear in Israel is that the United States of America would reach a deal with
Iran regarding its nuclear weapon program, which might endanger Israeli fundamental strategic
national interests.
That's the framework, give or take.
Although I have to say, when it comes to Iran, we've been hearing over the last few days
a few better statements from Washington.
Nadeim, any more color to provide?
I think that Amit summarized well the fears in Israel.
The bottom line is what has happened with Edan Alexander right now.
As we are recording this, we are awaiting the release of Edan Alexander.
His parents are on their way to Israel, his mother is
traveling with Adam Bowler on the airplane, Dan, and maybe you'd want to sound that piece
in which Adam Bowler speaks to the passengers on that flight, saying that the Trump administration
is committed to getting all the hostages back home. And I want you to know that this is the start.
We're going after every single hostage that there exists in all of Israel.
We're coming for them all.
So as we await this, it's very clear that the Israeli government has been completely
sidelined in everything related to the Middle East. If it's the Houthis,
the negotiations with Iran, or now with the kind of deal that Netanyahu and the government
did not want to see, the release of only the American, the live American hostage left.
Hamas knows that Idan Alexander means a lot to the United States. Israel wanted to see a sort of an interim deal according to the vision of Steve Witkoff.
What it's actually getting is the very happy release of one Israeli soldier with American citizenship.
It wanted much more than that.
And behind closed doors, and I guess Amit is hearing quotes that might be more extreme than those that I'm hearing,
Israeli ministers and people associated with the prime minister are very frustrated and worried as to the direction that this is taking. Now, I don't want to overplay this. There is still a large base of support, of cooperation between the administration and
the prime minister's office.
I also would not exactly define this as a crisis because as far as the president is
concerned, Israel should do what the president wants it to do.
And right now, Israel and Prime Minister Netanyahu, I think quite cleverly, have not voiced their
disagreements in public.
But the general trajectory is very clear.
I mean, the Israelis seem to be arguing that, yes, they were aware this was going on, but
obviously they didn't know the details.
Dermer and Netanyahu were finally informed by Steve Witkoff, I guess, yesterday that
the deal was done
But it's no secret that there's some direct channel between the Trump administration and some Hamas or Hamas official or intermediary
But the Israelis are also arguing
Look, we made it clear that we were about to go into Gaza for a major operation
There were dozens of tanks sitting there on the Gaza border ready to go in
Israel had moved
I don't know how many but a lot of military assets and personnel from the north and from the central part of Israel down to Gaza
And that the message was we're going in by the time Trump leaves the Middle East if there is no progress
And by then it's too late because once we turn that on it's very hard to turn off
And so they're arguing yes Trump was negotiating good cop if there is no progress and by then it's too late because once we turn that on it's very hard to turn off.
And so they're arguing yes Trump was negotiating, good cop, but you needed the bad cop.
The bad cop was the threat of military pressure. Do you buy that?
Yeah, so first of all I couldn't agree more. There is a dramatic difference between
Idan Alexander's release and all the other. There hasn't been a single Palestinian prisoner who was released in exchange for
Idan Alexander, unlike hundreds of prisoners in exchange for each female soldier two or
three months ago.
So this is very positive and Hamas could have made gestures for President Trump or President
Biden, but he hasn't done it so far until the Israeli new operation was about to be initiated.
So this is the good part.
The bad part is the American passport that Yidan Alexander holds.
Yidan Alexander, according to the cruel criteria made by Setpaye Hamas, was to be released
last.
He fought alongside Matan Engelst.
Matan would not be released, and Idan is to be released today.
Why?
Because he has a US passport.
And this goes to the broader picture.
I don't know how many people are aware of the fact that the Iranian intelligence is
not really worried about how many tanks the IDF has or how many bombs, because what interests them is the number of foreign passports held by Israelis on an annual rate.
Why? Because in the eyes of the Iranian regime,
the more Israelis go to issue foreign passports,
the less they believe in the existence of the Zionist evil state.
Therefore, if you give incentive to Israelis, even to soldiers, just imagine the mother
that tells her son before he is recruited to the army, please, my son, go to the next
Romanian embassy, to the next Portuguese embassy, to the American embassy, and issue a passport
because your grandmother or grandfather came from there because if
you are to be kidnapped, you'll have a guarantee.
This is a very dangerous moment and therefore I think the Israeli government should have
insisted on releasing another Israeli alongside the Don Alexander, be the cost as high as
it be.
That gives me chills, honestly, because what you're basically expressing, Amit, is that
one could argue this is the ultimate challenge to Zionism, in that Israeli parents who are
about to watch their sons and daughters join the army want them to hedge on citizenship
in the Jewish state, that they need another citizenship if they're going to improve their odds at coming back safely. And you're saying this is
something that Iran measures or they keep track of because they think
that's the ultimate test of whether or not Israelis are bought in to the Zionist project.
Exactly, because what would you think if you would know about a country in which so many people want to issue foreign passports?
Now, I can give the explanation as an Israeli, by the way, a proud Israeli whose mother is American, nothing that can be seen according
with my Israeli accent, but my mother immigrated from the States. I'm entitled to a US passport.
I refuse to issue such a passport, although my wife is very angry at me with this.
You refuse to do it for yourself?
Yeah, because of Zionist reasons. I don't want to issue a foreign passport. But many, many Israelis do it not because they are not eager Zionists or not because
they want to immigrate, but because the Jewish reflex, the Jewish sentiment is always to
have Plan B. If something goes wrong, if the ultimate disaster happens.
Now, if you are Iranian and you believe that the Zionist state is something which is artificially
rooted in the Middle East and it is to be unrooted, you are quite encouraged by the
fact that 10% of the population hold foreign passports.
And I guess, I'm not only guessing, I know it, that Hamas deliberately wanted at the
beginning of the war to actually differentiate between foreign
passport holders and Israelis.
Now here's the thing, it's not the first time in history in the Entebbe, in the hijacking
of Air France plane to Entebbe in 1976, there were dozens of foreign passport holders who
were released, only the Jews were left.
Here it's even worse, why? Because Edan Alexander is Alexander is not American is not an American tourist who got here. He is an Israeli American
So it gives advantage for being not only Israeli and in that case
It's quite disturbing that when President Trump tweeted or wrote on the truth that
Idan Alexander is to be released. he didn't bother to mention two entities,
Hamas and Israel. It's like, I don't know, rescuing Americans from the North Pole or something like
this. In Edan, was there any effort by the Israeli leadership to get other Israelis out with
Edan Alexander so you wouldn't have the situation that Amid is describing, which again, as he's
describing it, it is quite a nerving.
First of all, we spoke yesterday, Dan, before the announcement went out, and I told you
there is an attempt by Israel to get at least one hostage out because of this precedent
and because of the value of Fidan Alexander.
By the way, I just should say for our listeners, what Nadav is referring to is we spoke on
the phone.
We don't want our listeners to say, what?
You guys released something?
I missed the conversation? So that's what Nadav is referring to. Sorry. on the phone. We don't want our listeners to say, what? You guys released something? I missed the conversation. So that's what Nadav is referring to.
Sorry.
You can't miss the push coming from YouTube.
Yeah.
Okay.
Sorry.
Go ahead.
Yes.
We spoke and I told you that this is extremely worrying for the Israelis.
But the bottom line is that as far as I know, Israel didn't learn about some of these negotiations
from the US administration, but by its own intelligence.
Now look at what the prime minister has done yesterday.
The first place in which this was published was in a closed door discussion of the Knesset
Committee for Security Affairs.
So there's a parliamentary committee that's supposed to be secret, that's supposed to
be confidential.
When you speak with the entire committee, you know for sure it's even almost
official that the commission briefs journalists about what happened in the discussion.
At any rate, it came out at Channel 12. So the first place in the world in which it was told that
Idan Alexander is going to be freed, although we did report about this, I think we spoke about this
on your show, that the president wants to get back from the region with Edan Alexander or with some hostages.
So the first place in which it was actually verified was by the Israeli prime minister.
And I spoke with a source yesterday and he told me the reason that the prime minister
wanted to say this first is basically he used the metaphor of the Sosse metaphor
I should say it's not cheating it's an open relationship talking about the
relationship between Israel and the United States that the Prime Minister
was trying to make the case that it's not that the United States was cheating
on Israel but actually we knew or we were part of it or something like that when in fact it was
direct negotiations again between the United States and Hamas according to both Hamas and
American sources.
Something that Israel definitely doesn't want to encourage or to cultivate.
As to the issue of foreign passports that Amit raised, I totally agree it's a fact
what Amit said, the Iranian regime is looking at this.
It's true.
The Iranian regime also thought that Israel is a spider's web and bought into the narrative of Hassan Ashraf.
For these people, allegiance and loyalty and being part of the world is exactly the opposite of being a patriot and success, right?
And our definition, your definition, I think Amit's definition,
of what is being a patriot and a successful Israeli
is very different to what they're thinking.
But the danger here is indeed that right now,
we just published a poll by the Reichman University,
the Institute for Liberty in the Reichman University.
It says that six out of ten Israelis do not believe or have very limited belief that the
government of Israel will do everything in its power to release them if they are abducted.
Six out of ten.
How many of the Israelis, according to the Reichman University poll, which was extensive,
the entire Israeli society, how many believe that the government of Israel will do everything
in its power?
Seventeen percent of the Israelis.
What happened last night on Channel 12, where Amid broadcasts with the families of the other
hostages then, well, you saw the brother of Matan Angrest,
the soldier that was held captive together
with Edan Alexander.
And he was saying terrible things
about what his family thinks and feels right now,
because Matan Angrest is in a dire humanitarian condition,
as far as Israel knows.
And he's not released.
And he says that the fact that another hostage would be released, and of course he is in
pain right now and we understand where the family is.
He said, for us, this is like erasing the Israeli flag.
Vicky Cohen, the mother of Nimrod Cohen, another soldier, wrote on X, this is my son.
She brought a picture of him, age five, holding the Israeli flag.
He just has an Israeli citizenship.
He's Israeli.
What about him?
He has a right to go back home too.
And this, of course, what adds up to this are remarks made off the record to
hostage families by a representative of the Trump administration
saying that the war is prolonged with no reason, with no actual.
And this was reported by Israeli press.
We saw another report by NBC yesterday quoting the president himself, no longer Steve Whitcoff or Adam Bowler or something like that,
to hostage families, saying the efforts put, I'm paraphrasing, into the war in Gaza is a waste or
something like that. So this gives the hostage families a sense that on the one hand, the US is
making sure that Edan Alexander, its citizen, is going to come back home.
But there is no actual meaning to the prolonged war.
Now, after I said that, I should add that Israel is now sending its delegation to Cairo
to negotiate a broader deal.
Steve Witkoff is going to meet, as we are airing this right now, is going to meet the
Prime Minister Netanyahu today. It is the intent of the United States and the administration going to meet, as we are airing this right now, is going to meet the Prime Minister Netanyahu today.
It is the intent of the United States and the administration to stay committed, as far
as I know, to the release of all the hostages.
And as far as I know, the Israelis right now are still dead set not on occupying the entire
Gaza Strip, regardless, but on trying to pressure Hamas for another deal.
This is really the aim of what the IDF is doing right now in Gaza.
Israel did not begin its full-scale operation to occupy the entire Gaza Strip because it's
trying to pressure Hamas into a deal.
Now whether or not this release would be the first sign towards such a development, I don't
know. Amit, we spoke to the Laha of Harkov late last week and she made the point that it wasn't just
Israel that was cut out of the deal with the Houthis. It was the UK. The UK defense minister
was furious that the UK was cut out of any negotiations with the Houthis because in the
case of the UK, they were actually conducting the air operations
against the Houthis with the US.
They were like, wait a minute,
our pilots are involved in risking their lives
and conducting these operations
and we learn about this deal in the press.
So I think we tend to, we, the three of us
in the audience we represent,
tend to think everything,
think about everything in the context of
what does this mean for Israel?
What does this mean for the Jewish community,
the diaspora, whatever it is?
But all of US allies to some degree these days
may be treated this way.
And so, while it's important to remember
that it's not just, it may not be a deliberate decision
to shut Israel out, that said, there does seem,
as Nadav just said, does seem,
at least with these direct talks,
there seems to have been a new dynamic, shall we say, between Trump and Netanyahu.
Is that what you're hearing?
I know you're very close to, you have a lot of sources in and around the Prime Minister's
office.
Is there a sense that the relationship is changing?
Following Trump's various decisions that were interpreted in Israel as anti-Israel, ignoring
Israel, Pumers had it that the relationship
between Netanyahu and Trump, the administration and Minister Dermer, have deteriorated significantly.
As far as I know, it's false.
The relationship is basically good.
Yes, there has been tensions between President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu, but it's
a first-term story. I think what we see in a historical perspective is MAGA taking over, the isolationist policy
taking over.
Isolationism in the 21st century doesn't necessarily mean that you live in the States having nothing
to do with different countries like the 18th, the 19th century United States. No, it means that the US takes decisions that are good for the US.
And I interpret Trump's policy a bit different than my colleagues.
I think that what Trump does, and if you hear the US ambassador Mike Huckabee, I think there
is a hint there.
The US says, you do whatever you need guys, and we will do whatever we need.
Which means that we are not going to interrupt you to do what you need in Gaza, in Judean
Samaria, in Syria, in Lebanon.
This is the story, if you take a look.
The United States did not push Israel to withdraw from Lebanon.
President Trump told Netanyahu,
if you need to take Syria, take one third, give Erdogan two thirds, everything is okay with me.
Same goes for Gaza. But the other side of the coin is that we will do whatever we need if we
reach an agreement with the Houthis, and we're the first in the Houthi history to cause them to
surrender and stop attacking ships, thus lowering the
inflation by 0.2, 0.3 points?
That's fine with us.
Now, here is the question which comes for Iran.
Because the Iranian question is not something that Israel can do alone.
So here we see the contradiction.
On one hand, Israel can do whatever it needs in order to dismantle this nuclear threat.
On the other hand, if we want to do it, we need the assistance of the United States,
both in defense and maybe during the attack.
What will prevail?
The isolationist approach by MAGA, Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump Jr., or the hawkish
old Republican establishment of Mike Walz,
Marco Rubio, et cetera, right now it's closer to MAGA,
I think, but it's too early to call.
Yeah, and I think it's important to just remember,
Trump's rhetoric on Iran has only gotten stronger
in recent weeks.
So on the one hand, there's all this noise and atmospherics,
and I'm not saying that isn't important, but there's
a lot of narrative, shall we say, about tension between the US and Israel or tension between
Netanyahu and Trump.
At the same time, where Trump and Witkoff, early on the concern was when it relates to
Iran, they were talking about, well, they could possibly have a, you know, they can
enrich if it's for civilian purposes.
And the more hawkish figures both inside and outside the administration and in the Senate
like Lindsey Graham and Tom Cotton were saying no way Iran cannot be left to
enrich or you're basically doing the Obama 2.0 deal and now Trump's rhetoric
including if you just see what he said in recent days it's just getting
stronger and stronger that Iran's enrichment capabilities either gonna go
what did he say it's either gonna go quietly or it's gonna go with a boom but
it's going and so that's I think this sort of what did he say? It's either going to go quietly or it's going to go with a boom, but it's going.
And so that's, I think, this sort of what's paradoxical is there's this narrative out
there about tension and we're actually seeing it like what we've seen over the last couple
days on this hostage negotiation.
At the same time on Iran, the issue it seems that the Israelis care most about or should
care most about, the administration's rhetoric has gotten stronger.
Nadav, what's your reaction to that? First of all, I don't know. And let me tell you, Dan, the Israelis don't know either. It's very encouraged by the remarks made by Steve Witkoff
as to the actual dismantlement and stopping enrichment on Iranian soil.
Having said that, I would look at the statements made by the Iranians in the last 24 hours.
They definitely didn't sound like they were told to stop enriching, which is, as far as
they are concerned, a non-starter, which is on the record.
I'm not analyzing right now.
I'm just saying, for Iran, they basically walk up and leave the room as far as they are concerned,
if they are told that they need to dismantle their enrichment facilities.
This is their position of the Islamic Republic. As far as I know, it did not change.
Now, if the Trump administration managed to change that, this is huge.
This is huge for the region. It's huge for the world.
And I'm going to definitely congratulate
them and ourselves for this huge achievement. But the fact that the Iranians will sound positive,
48 hours after Steve Witkoff said these things, I'll just give the quote by the Iranian foreign
minister, who's also the expert on the subject, Abbas Aragakchi.
He said, I can state that compared to previous three rounds, the negotiations were much more
serious and straightforward.
This doesn't sound good in terms of unless the Islamic Republic's changed positions
completely.
So there's a sea difference here. You know, one day Israel is hearing
that it's about dismantlement of the nuclear facilities and the other day
they're hearing a different thing. Israel's positions are clear as to that.
They believe that the Iranians will cheat, that they should not receive any
agreement that allows them any enrichment, which is a position held by
some people that the Trump administration and President Trump has committed himself to an extent to that
position.
But everything can be negotiated.
And I think that this is something frankly that many people within the Israeli government
do not understand about the administration.
And Dan, I think you can shed more light about this. Let's see what's
happening with China right now, with the tariffs and the rest. Everything is about negotiations
and getting the best possible result. I think it's extremely realist. It might lead us
to the stop of the war with Russia and Ukraine. It could lead us maybe to a super deal in the Middle East.
By the way, unlike the arguments against the president, this has been his line for years on years as to foreign wars. So this is what this administration is about. And what I'm hearing
is that, maybe unlike what Amit is hearing, is that they are becoming frustrated with the way that Netanyahu
is conducting himself. Now again, I already said I'm not declaring it a full-blown crisis, but they
are frustrated because they want to get things done. They want to see a new Middle East. They're
saying this, you know, to hostage families, we want to see a different Middle East. And you're either going to play with the administration or you're going to stand in its way.
And everybody who knows anything about this administration tells Israel, tells its government,
don't stand in their way, try to get as much as you can for Israeli national security interests.
But Dan, I'd really love to hear what you think about that.
I think there is a misunderstanding in some parts of Jerusalem,
specifically the far right, as to what the Trump administration is
and what it wants in the Middle East.
But your take is...
Look, I think the administration would love nothing more
than to be able to have some kind of grand bargain,
some mega deal that reshapes the Middle East
and do something that no previous president was able to accomplish.
And they're very aware that the Biden administration
wanted this, the Saudi normalization.
They wanted some big deal and weren't able to do it.
And I think this administration wants it for that reason
and a variety of others.
But at the same time, I do agree
that they really don't wanna spend time
sweating the details or consuming themselves
with the details of what they believe Israel's doing in its quote unquote backyard.
And that's why they're like, you know, if the war in Gaza in their minds is the obstacle
to some grand bargain, some grand solution, some massive transformation of the Middle
East deal, then that could become an issue.
And that I think is what's worrying a lot of people
about what Trump is gonna hear these next few days
when he's in the golf,
is that he's gonna hear from these golf leaders
that he's meeting with,
look at all the wonderful things that could happen
if only Israel could wrap things up in Gaza,
how that will change the president's approach.
But short of that, and depending on how persuasive that is,
and depending on whether or not Israel gets to bookend
what Trump hears, meaning they sent Dermot
to meet with Trump late last week, precisely for this reason,
and others, including Iran, I'm sure they'll figure out
a way to engage with the administration
right after the trip, so their voice will be in the mix.
But short of the Gulf basically saying,
look at the new world, Mr. President,
that you can claim credit for,
if only Israel wraps up in Gaza.
Short of that, I do not think the administration
really cares about what Israel is doing in Gaza.
I think people overstate what the isolationist tendencies
of this administration are.
It's not so much isolationist,
it's just different countries have their own interests
around the world.
They're gonna take care of their business. In some cases, we're around the world. They're gonna take care of their business.
In some cases, we're gonna provide them with the resources
to take care of their business.
And as long as it doesn't cause problems for us,
they can have a free hand.
And that I think has been the operating assumption
of this government in Israel up to now
in terms of how to deal with the Trump administration.
The administration lifted all conditions on arms supplies,
the administration, they basically gave them free reign.
So now the real question is whether or not that will change.
So I want to talk about this golf summit that I'm referring to,
where the president's going to be meeting with leaders of the golf.
I just want to add something that came out as we were speaking.
Yeah.
Edan Alexander's family, according to press reports in Israel,
confirm that after he's released,
Edan Alexander is due to travel to Qatar,
where he will meet President Trump.
Wow.
And according to this Channel 12 report,
maybe Amit can add more,
he will meet also with the emir of Qatar.
Wow.
Which means that he'll have an opportunity to meet in person
the guy who actually financed his kidnappers. Wow. Which means that he'll have an opportunity to meet in person the guy who actually financed his kidnappers.
Wow.
Amit, yesterday it was reported that President Trump
would be meeting with leaders during this golf summit,
leaders from Lebanon, from Syria, and included in that
would be Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.
And also during this swirl through the golf, Riyadh will try to get Trump on board a deal
that includes ending the war in Gaza and formalizing a demilitarized Palestinian state.
Now, I want a few caveats here.
One, it's not clear that the meeting with the military leaders is happening.
Two, it's not even clear that if it does happen or anything like it happens, that Abbas will
be there.
No one has confirmed that. And three, the idea of Trump acknowledging or tipping his hat to the need for a Palestinian
state in the context of Saudi normalization in the context of this meeting was reported,
I think, by one of the Arab newspapers.
It doesn't seem terribly well-sourced.
I'm not saying none of this is going to happen.
I just, I like to add my skepticism to report it when I think it's warranted all that being said Amit
What is your sense of this particular topic? I'm not sure President Trump would be the envisioner of the state of Palestine
it's not his claim to fame or not nor is a raison d'etre and
Nothing will get from his meeting with a president Abbas as long as it happens
But here's the thing for many many months will get from his meeting with President Abbas as long as it happens.
But here's the thing.
For many, many months Israel refused for the terms set by the Saudis in return for normalization.
What Saudis demanded following October 7th was steps in the ground, feasible steps regarding
the establishing of a Palestinian statehood.
And Israel is, the sentiment of Netanyahu and Dermer was, Saudis need this normalization
no less than we want it.
So why would we bargain for it?
And the idea is not because of demands from Netanyahu's coalition partners, not only, but mainly because if you give the
Palestinians things regarding Palestinian statehood following October 7th, things that
were not on the table prior to October 7th, you give incentives for people to massacre
you because they'll get policy changes thanks to this massacre.
That's why Israel refuses to give concessions when it comes to the Palestinian statehood.
Now here's the thing.
I think Netanyahu and Dermer were under the impression that if there is no normalization,
there are no American steps or no American gifts to the Saudis.
And therefore, I guess they are very, very surprised and worried to hear the reports
that for instance, the Trump administration is willing to give them solutions when it
comes to civil and nuclear program in Saudi Arabia.
I'm not sure if this report in Reuters is accurate, but if it is, this is a conception, conceptia, by the Israeli administration that
was proved wrong.
But no matter what, it's not that Israel is about to give concessions when it comes to
the Palestinian issue.
Nadeim, the IDF, as I mentioned earlier, dozens of tanks sitting there on the Gaza border,
IDF about to launch this operation or is prepared to launch this
operation which if it goes forward could last many months and involve a full
ground invasion and possibly some kind of new occupation of the Gaza Strip.
Given the recent developments we've been talking about the developments over the
last couple days how does it impact this operation? Well first of all there is a
direct contact between Hamas
and between the Trump administration.
And there was a report, I think, also in Reuters or AP
that said that Hamas is stating that they were promised
by the administration, by the president, a bigger gift
if they release this gift of Idan Alexander as a show of goodwill.
At any rate, Hamas never does anything for freedom. And also, it is positioned right now in
the Gaza Strip, surrounded under siege, in war with Israel. They're looking to a very simple
solution, ending the war with them having some control in the Gaza
ship, even behind, let's say, a bureaucrat government or an expert
government of some sort, what we call the Hezbollah model.
This has been the aim of Hamas since the beginning of the war, and they are
willing to pay, at least this is what they're saying, with the release of all
the hostages.
By the way, again, many polls in Israel, even now, I just saw a poll in which you tell people
that that would mean that Hamas would stay in power in the near future.
You see that majority is saying, get the hostages back in the first place. So for Hamas, the real question is, will igniting the negotiations through the
release of Idan Alexander lead the Trump administration to pressure Israel not
to go to that full operation of the Gaza Strip?
I'm not sure about that.
I'm not sure.
I read carefully what President Trump wrote.
First of all, he did write that he sees this as a first step to ending the conflict, and he wrote that twice in that
true social post. So he twice underlined that he intends to lead towards the end of this brutal conflict,
but he didn't mention Hamas.
And I can definitely see two very specific scenarios.
The first one, which we already know is true, is that the US is pressuring the sides to
use this as leverage to get at least the Witkoff vision of getting an interim deal and getting
released another 10 hostages.
There's definitely pressure now by the US, by Israel too. Israel is sending
its delegation to Cairo, trying to leverage the release of Fidan Alexander, the blessed release
of Fidan Alexander, in order to get a bigger deal. The second scenario is that it's a much more limited event than we speculated.
President Trump comes to the region, he collects his wins.
What are his wins?
First and foremost, the deals with Saudi Arabia, the two trillion, one trillion dollar deals,
I don't know, I didn't read the newspaper today or True Social, I don't know what's
the number there right now.
So he takes that, the way that he's being accepted across the Middle East.
He basically returns with Edan Alexander, another major win, goes back to the US.
And then a few days later, Israel sees that Hamas is not willing to go with
the Steve Witkoff vision of at least an interim deal.
And it starts the big operation in the Gaza Strip.
And it was all about the visit then.
Now, as we know, high premium on short term.
This is very much the world in which we live right now, right?
High premium, high value on short term.
So I definitely see the condition in which this leads nowhere beyond an
operation in the Gaza Strip.
This leads nowhere beyond an operation in the Gaza Strip. The pressure by the US, as far as I know, is to try to think about what Israel wants
as to the end of the war and what kind of an agreement, together with the Arab moderate
Arab countries, together with the US, could actually answer Israel's security concerns.
I think that this is very much a question
that is being raised by this current American administration.
By the way, to be fair, it also was raised
by the previous administration.
I mean, you just wrote a piece in the Wall Street Journal,
which we'll post on the show notes,
as well as your newsletter that I read daily.
We will post a link to the newsletter in the show notes as well as your newsletter that I read daily. We will post the link to the newsletter
in the show notes as well for our listeners to sign up for.
But in the Wall Street Journal piece, you wrote,
and I quote, if this were President Biden, right now,
if this were President Biden, the Israeli right
led by Netanyahu would be accusing the American leader
of throwing Israel under the bus.
The Prime Minister would fly to Washington
to address Congress and rally senators
to petition against the president.
But who is Netanyahu going to persuade now? AOC? And then you kind of lay out this scenario.
So, so I guess where do all these developments that we're discussing put Netanyahu, politically speaking, in Israel, but also in the US?
Well, Netanyahu used to work mostly with or against
democratic administrations.
He was relatively good tackling the Clinton administration, Obama administration, Biden
administration.
So, Netanyahu was usually handling democratic administrations.
And then Netanyahu's method is very, very simple.
Netanyahu sees Washington as a city with two centers, the White House and the Capitol Hill.
Now when there is a Democratic president in the White House, usually there is at least
a very big minority or a small majority of Republicans on the Hill.
But it's not the case when it comes to a very, very friendly Republican president.
Then it's way more difficult because you don't have a way to maneuver, especially when it
comes to a president that is flirting with the isolationist movement.
And therefore the situation is more complicated.
But I would still offer not to write the obituaries for Netanyahu and Dermer's policies.
I think the relationship with this administration is better than described.
And certainly better than it was with the Biden administration.
Exactly.
And Amit, how does this play inside Israel?
Inside Israel, it makes things more complicated.
The main reason for Netanyahu to prolong his coalition life, even artificially, is because
he's waiting for many freebies, that's how you call it, many gifts from the Trump administration.
During the first time it was the Abraham Accords, the annexation of Golan Heights, the embassy
in Jerusalem, and so forth.
Those are things that can change the course of Likud and Netanyahu himself.
It can give Netanyahu the seats that he desperately needs and doesn't have, as we speak, in order
to survive for seventh term.
But if Trump is about to be more hostile than Netanyahu thought in the first place, maybe
it gives incentive for Netanyahu either to resign or
to call up an early election, thus avoiding this extremely unpopular issue of recruiting
or exempting the unorthodox from going to the army.
I don't personally think that Netanyahu is about to resign or call up an early election,
but I just want you to actually have it in mind that this is at least an option. Nadev?
I think that if Netanyahu is left without the at least asset or expressed support of the Trump administration,
if he faces real pressure by the Trump administration,
and if he's going to get an agreement with Iran that isn't going to answer what the defense apparatus is seeing as minimal,
it's going to be a huge political crisis for him internally. And Amit just raised
the issue of the possibility of Netanyahu even resigning in that case.
And I'm hearing, you know, this kind of an idea that he will be left with no
options. Now I still think, as Amit said, I agree, that we're far from it.
We're not there yet.
But look at what the Trump administration did with the Ukraine-Russia war then.
Look at what they did.
You know, one day Trump is having this tweet about Zelensky, then the other he has a
tweet about Putin.
Then he sends people to negotiations, then he uses
the leverage of the United States, I think, quite efficiently on both sides.
And he's really the closest that we have been to a ceasefire there.
I still don't know if we'll see a ceasefire, but if this starts happening with Israel and
ending the war, this is going to be a big crisis for Netanyahu internally, because then the question
is, so what is he bringing to the arena?
This is his main raison d'etat, the fact that he internationally is so well connected, and
specifically with Republicans.
And we see this streak within the MAGA movement that doesn't like some of what Netanyahu is
being doing.
You just need to read, for instance, the Bannon and others to see this kind of criticism.
Now again, let's not overplay this.
Let's overblow this at this point.
I think it's very important.
At the end of the day, relations there remain good.
The base of President Trump is highly supportive of Israel, which the President Trump is very aware of.
He's very tuned into that.
The first thing I tell people in Israel about trying to understand
the president is always look at his base.
The president is such a great listener to the base of the people who support him.
And if you want to see what's going to happen in the future with tariffs, with the rest,
you need to listen to people in Pennsylvania and, you know, in some parts of Michigan.
You need to really listen to what they're saying.
You probably know what the president wants to get achieved at the end of the day. And because of that, I think that it's more likely for us not to see a full
blown kind of open crisis.
If this would happen, it's like a new day in Israeli politics, a new day in
Israeli politics, a new day in the Middle East, and much is dependent on the Iran
deal, because there Bibi won't be able to bluff. You were
either going to get a great deal, you know, dismantling some parts of the nuclear program,
supplying more security to the region and to Israel and to the United States, or going
to get something else, or going to get a strike. And Netanyahu will need to explain how we
got there, because this is the most important card he had in the last 30 years speaking publicly.
So that's going to be a lackmas test.
I will say one, I think you're exactly right.
I think observers underestimate how tuned in President Trump is not only to his base,
but to where his base is most, the greatest acid test of where his base is reflected,
which is the members of Congress, the Republican members of Congress.
And as you're watching, just on a different subject,
this reconciliation bill, this tax and spending bill
that's going through Congress right now,
or may or may not be going through Congress,
suddenly you have different factions of House Republicans
signing letters, telling the president,
we disagree with this,
telling the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee,
we disagree with that, like completely going at odds
with what the president is asking for.
And they're doing it in a very public way.
By the way, on a range of, a number of issues,
not just, this is not just one or two issues,
and they're going very public with it to the point
that where there are odds with what the president
is demanding the House Republicans do,
the president put out a truth social the other day saying,
look, I think that they should do this,
they're saying they should do that.
You know, they're worried about their re-election.
I can pull the quote out, but he basically says,
they should do what they need to do.
I understand where they're coming from.
Like, he's not willing to get into a real confrontation
with them because what they are talking about
is central to their re-election.
These House members, President Trump wants the Republicans
to hang on to the House majority.
He does not want the Democrats to have the majority. And these House Republicans are saying on
this particular tax and spend package, we are going to lose the majority and the president's
backing off. And I think Israel falls into the same category for the reasons you're saying
it, Lidov. The idea that the president's going to get into an open crisis with the base of
his party, where the representatives in Congress, Republicans, are gonna bear the heat of that confrontation,
I just think he has a sensitivity to these issues
that people underappreciate.
So that's why I, look, there could be tensions.
The role that Israel plays in America,
in American society, in American politics,
it's a cultural issue in the United States,
in a way that the Russia-Ukraine war
is not a cultural issue in the United States. a way that the Russia-Ukraine war is not a cultural issue in the United States
And like I said, or like you said, I think the president is very dialed into that in any event
We will leave it there the dove Amid
I'm sure we will be in touch with you soon because there is a lot going on
But let's say the most important thing then just before we leave today
God-willing, Edan Alexander is coming home. His parents are in Israel. After all the analysis
and everything else, it's a happy day. It brings us closer to the release of the hostages.
And you know, for me, I think we need, in that sense, we need to keep our eyes on the
ball after all the analysis we just made. It's one hostage closer. It's one hostage
closer. And it's so meaningful. It just needs to be over and done.
I agree and I'm glad you said that.
We get caught up in all the geopolitics and the implications and the reality is it's like
one more life and one more world transformed.
We all know the family and the parents and it's intense.
All right, gentlemen, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
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