Democracy Now! Audio - Democracy Now! 2026-04-10 Friday
Episode Date: April 10, 2026Democracy Now! Friday, April 10, 2026...
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Darkness is Democracy Now.
With the announcements of the ceasefire between Iran and the United States,
the ongoing military activity in Lebanon poses a grave risk to the ceasefire
and efforts towards a lasting and comprehensive peace in the region.
As the U.S. and Iran prepare to hold ceasefire talks in Pakistan,
Israel's continuing to bomb Lebanon.
The death toll from its massive attack on Wednesday has time.
300 will go to Beirut for the latest. Then, to Trump's threats to pull the U.S. out of NATO,
after European allies refused to use military force against Iran to keep the strait of Hormuz open.
I just want to tell you, NATO treated us very badly, and you have to remember, because they'll
be treating us badly again if we ever need them, and hopefully we're never going to need them.
I don't think we will need them. I don't think they can do very much.
Then voters in Hungary head to the polls Sunday.
Could it mark the end of Victor Orban's rule?
On Tuesday, Vice President J.D. Vance went to Hungary to campaign with Orban, a far-right
nationalist who has led Hungary for 16 years.
All that and more coming up.
Welcome to Democracy Now, Democracy Now.org, the Warren Peace Report.
I'm Amy Goodman.
Israel's military's continuing attacks on Lebanon threatening to derail a fragile two-week ceasefire agreement ahead of high-stakes talks between the U.S. and Iran and Islamabad this weekend.
The death toll from Israel's massive strikes across Lebanon Wednesday has top 300.
More than 1,150 people have been injured.
The Financial Times described Israel's attack as, quote, one of the deadliest single bombing cancer.
campaigns in the history of a country wrapped by decades of war and destruction, unquote.
Israel and the U.S. have claimed the Iran's ceasefire deal does not include Lebanon, but numerous
other nations disagree. The U.S. is expected to host talks between Israel and Lebanon next
week in Washington. After headlines, we'll go to Beirut to speak with the award-winning
journalist Rania Abu Zaid.
Iranian officials have warned the United States not to allow Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to derail the two-week regional ceasefire by continuing attacks on Lebanon.
On Thursday, Iran's foreign minister, Abbasarachi, wrote on social media, quote,
if the U.S. wishes to crater its economy by letting Netanyahu kill diplomacy, that would ultimately be its choice.
We think that would be dumb, but are prepared for it.
unquote. Araqqi's language mirrors language used by Vice President J.D. Vance, warning Iran not to let
the ceasefire fall apart over Lebanon. Vance is heading to Pakistan today for high-level talks with Iran
and Islam about he'll join U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner,
who previously held negotiations with Iran that were derailed twice when the U.S. and Israel
began bombing Iran.
House Republicans have rejected an effort by Democrats to force a vote on resolution to limit President Trump's ability to wage war in Iran.
On Thursday, with most of Congress still on recess, Maryland Democratic Congress member Glenn Ivy rose to speak during a pro-forma session where he asked to pass in Iran-war powers resolution by unanimous consent.
But Republican Speaker pro-tempoor, Chris Smith, quickly gaveled the session to a close without allowing Ivy to speak.
Pursuant to Clause 13 of Rule 1, the House stay adjourned until 2.30 p.m. on Monday, April 13th, 2026.
Congressmember Ivy and other House Democrats gathered on the Capitol steps after their attempt to force a vote on a war powers resolution was pushed off until at least next week.
This is Pennsylvania Congresswoman Madeline Dean.
Over the weekend, we read and heard the President's Easter morning tweet of profanity, blasphemy,
danger, and the following day, his threat to eliminate an entire civilization.
Pause there.
These are not normal times, America.
When will my Republican colleagues stand up in the House, in the Senate, the vice president,
the cabinet secretaries who surround this madman, when will they grow a spine, when will
they say stop?
Israel's cabinet has secretly approved the establishment of 34 new settlements in the
occupied West Bank, Israel's largest ever recognition of unauthorized outposts in a single
step. The cabinet made the decision on April 1st, but it was classified until Thursday when an Israeli
military censor approved it for publication. This comes amidst a sharp rise in Israeli settler
violence against Palestinians on Wednesday. Twenty-eight-year-old Al-Halad Sabi was shot and killed
as armed Israeli settlers attack the village of Taasir, east of Tubas.
Separately 65-year-old Palestinian farmer Hussam Abdel Atif Wadhan says he narrowly escaped a mob that descended on his farm.
Yesterday they attacked us.
I was on my way to open the water irrigation system, and they attacked me, around 12 settlers.
I escaped, thank God.
They were very close to me, only around 10 meters away.
The UN reports. Over 1,070 Palestinians have been killed in the occupied West Bank in East Jerusalem by Israeli forces or settlers since October 2023.
In the Gaza Strip, health officials say Israeli soldiers shot and killed a nine-year-old girl in front of her third grade class Thursday,
traumatizing students and teachers who were left in psychological shock.
Rattaj Rahan was reportedly struck by a bullet without one.
warning as she was sitting at her desk in a tent serving as a classroom in Beitlachia.
Video and photos show her bloodied body being rushed through the streets toward a hospital on
foot since there was no medical transport available in the area. She was one of four Palestinians
killed by Israeli attacks across Gaza on Thursday. Mourners also gathered for the funeral of
the Al Jazeera journalist, Mohamed Washa, who was killed in an Israeli air strike on his
his car Wednesday. Al Jazeera reports Israel's attack Gaza on 36 out of the past 40 days,
despite a U.S. broker ceasefire that was supposed to have taken effect six months ago.
A federal judge has rebuked the Department of Defense for defying his earlier ruling,
requiring the Pentagon to restore access to credential journalists.
U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman ruled Thursday,
Trump administration officials had committed a blatant attempt to circumvent a lawful order, unquote.
After they failed to comply with his March 20th ruling, voiding large sections of a highly restrictive press policy introduced by Defense Secretary Pete Hegeseth, which violated the First Amendment.
In October, dozens of reporters turned in their government-issued press badges rather than agree to the rules, which state that news outlets cannot obtain any.
information that the Pentagon does not explicitly authorize.
Thursday's ruling reinstates the press credentials of seven New York Times reporters and applies to
other members of the Pentagon Press Association.
A federal judge in Washington, D.C., has postponed the termination of temporary protected status,
TPS, for about 5,000 Ethiopian immigrants living in the U.S.
after determining the Trump administration likely disregarded the rules Congress set up for the TPS program.
Wednesday's ruling comes as the Supreme Court is poised to hear oral arguments later this month on challenges
to the Trump administration's attempts to cancel protected status for over 350,000 Haitians and 6,000 Syrians.
The United Nations Migration Agency warns over 180 people are feared dead or missing in the latest shipwrecks in the Mediterranean.
including more than 80 migrants who went missing when their boat capsized Sunday after departing from Libya.
The International Organization for Migration reports nearly a thousand people have died attempting to cross the Mediterranean into Europe since January,
one of the deadliest starts to a year since record keeping began.
First Lady Melania Trump unexpectedly summoned reporters to the White House Thursday,
where she read from a prepared statement,
denying any relationship with the late serial sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein.
I have never had any knowledge of Epstein abuse of his victims.
I was never involved in any capacity.
I was not a participant, was never on Epstein's plane, and never visited his private island.
Melania Trump also acknowledged she'd exchanged emails with Epstein's accomplice,
Ghislane Maxwell in 2002, but dismissed it as a casual correspondence.
A document from the Justice Department's incomplete release of the Epstein files shows Maxwell
referred to Melania in an email as Sweet Pea, to which Melania replied,
give me a call when you're back in New York.
The letter concluded, love Melania.
Melania Trump infamously appears in a 2000 photo,
alongside her husband and ex-Jepstein and Gislane Maxwell.
Meanwhile, the First Lady's calling on Congress to hold a public hearing specifically centered
around Epstein survivors.
In response, the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, Robert Garcia,
said he agreed, urging Republican Committee chair James Comer to schedule hearings immediately.
The First Lady's comments reportedly caught White House officials off guard, including
President Trump, who told an MS now reporter he had no prior knowledge of what his wife was preparing to say.
The acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has blocked the publication of research showing COVID vaccines were highly effective at preventing hospitalizations for healthy adults last winter.
The Washington Post reports the findings had cleared the CDC's scientific review process and were scheduled for publication March 19th in the agency's flagship scientific journal.
before acting director, Jay Batacharya, personally intervened to withhold the report.
In 2020, Baticharya was a main author of the Great Barrington Declaration,
which argued against COVID lockdowns at a time when no vaccines were available.
Argentina's Congress has approved legislation that rolls back protections for thousands of glaciers,
making it easier for large-scale mining projects to move forward.
The reforms are supported by Argentina's far-right president,
and Javier Millet.
Environmentalists warn the legislation
threatens critical freshwater reserves
that are the source of drinking water
for about 7 million people.
On Thursday, protesters rallied outside
the National Congress building in Buenos Aires.
I would tell the lawmakers
that they were elected
to represent the interests of the people,
not those of the big mining companies
or big capital,
and that they should rise to the occasion
because today they may get the deal that they want,
but this affects all of us.
Tomorrow, they too will suffer the consequences
of not having water.
Hundreds of doctors, nurses, and public health workers have signed an open letter demanding
the removal of Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldon.
They warn Zeldon is, quote, pursuing a deregulatory agenda that will result in a massive
increase in health damaging air pollution, toxic chemicals, and climate heating greenhouse gases,
unquote.
On Wednesday, Zeldon delivered a keynote address to a gathering of the Heartland Institute,
right-wing think tank that promotes climate misinformation. Zeldon celebrated his decision to revoke
the 2009 endangerment finding, which allowed the EPA to regulate greenhouse gases under the
Clean Air Act and praise the Trump administration's rollback of fuel efficiency standards for new
cars and trucks.
Manufacturers should make whatever the American consumer wants, rather than what politicians and
bureaucrats demand this morning and today, all of you gathered here in D.C. is a moment to celebrate.
It is a day to celebrate vindication.
Zeldon's comments came as NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration confirmed last
month was the hottest march on record for the contiguous United States with temperatures
more than nine degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th century average. The finding comes as forecasters
warn a strong El Nino is likely to exacerbate global heating from human activity, which could make
this year surpassed 2024 as the hottest year on record. Sources say Zeldon is being rumored to be
under consideration to replace Pam Bondi as Attorney General. And Chinese President Xi Jinping
has met with the chair of Taiwan's main opposition party in a landmark meeting, the first of its kind in a decade.
Speaking from the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, President Xi declared China will absolutely not tolerate independence for Taiwan and call for the island's reunification with the People's Republic of China.
Cheng Li Wyn, who leads Taiwan's KMT party, replied that the Taiwan Strait should no longer be a flashpoint for a potential conflict and warned against external interference, an apparent reference to U.S.
Japanese support for Taiwan.
Cheng has called her six-day visit to mainland China a journey of peace.
It comes as Taiwan's opposition-controlled parliament has stalled a proposed $40 billion
increase in military spending.
This is Cheng Li Wynne.
What should be flying in the sky are birds, not missiles, and what should be swimming
in the sea are fish, not warships.
Human technology should be used to seek well-being for humanity and for the earth.
Human technology should not be for mutual slaughter or for the destruction of ecosystems.
And those are some of the headlines.
This is Democracy Now, Democracy Now.org, the war and peace report.
I'm Amy Goodman.
As the U.S. and Iran prepare to hold ceasefire talks in Pakistan, Israel's continuing to bomb Lebanon.
The death toll from Israel's massive attack Wednesday has topped 300.
More than 1,150 people were injured.
In a span of 10 minutes Wednesday, Israel struck 100 sites across Beirut, the Beka Valley and southern Lebanon.
The Financial Times described Israel's attack on Lebanon as, quote,
one of the deadliest single bombing campaigns in the history of a country wracked by decades of war and destruction, unquote.
Israel and the U.S. have claimed the Iran's ceasefire deal does not.
include Lebanon, but numerous other nations disagree.
Earlier today, foreign ministers of Pakistan and France condemned what they called serious
ceasefire violations made in Lebanon, unquote.
CBS News reports Trump initially agreed Lebanon was included in the ceasefire, but his position
changed after a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The U.S. is expected to host talks between Israel and Lebanon next week.
As Israel continues to attack Lebanon, Hezbollah has retaliated by firing missiles at Israel.
At the United Nations, the spokesperson for the Secretary General spoke Thursday.
With the announcements of the ceasefire between Iran and the United States,
the ongoing military activity in Lebanon poses a grave risk to the ceasefire
and efforts towards a lasting and comprehensive peace in the region.
Since the war began in late February, Israel's killed more than
1,530 people in Lebanon, including at least 130 children.
In Beirut, grieving families gathered at hospitals to identify bodies after Israel's attacks
on Wednesday.
I had dropped off my sister.
She went up into the house.
I went on a little trip and they hid.
I came back and didn't find the building.
I didn't find my sister and I didn't find my family, any of them.
I found my brother and his son was in the rubble.
We go now to Beirut, where we're joined by Rania Abu Zaid.
She's an award-winning Lebanese Australian journalist, author based in Beirut.
Her books include No Turning Back, Life, Loss, and Hope, and War Time, Syria.
Her latest piece in New York Magazine just out Thursday, headline,
The Iran War Is Not Over, Scenes from a Day of Carnage in Beirut.
Welcome back to Democracy Now, Rania.
Why don't you describe those scenes of the day of carnage in Beirut?
We have a four-second delay, so we will wait.
It was 10 minutes of terror, a day that the Lebanese are calling Black Wednesday.
It was hard to tell what was blowing up where,
because those 100 or so attacks were all happening simultaneously,
and not just in the capital Beirut, but also in other parts of the country.
They targeted very densely populated parts of the capital, neighborhoods in the capital,
that were themselves hosting people who had been displaced from other parts of the country.
In the Bikar, mourners at a funeral in a cemetery were targeted.
In Beirut, workers at a well-known roastery were removed by civil defense personnel as charred corpses.
So it was a very, very ugly day.
And as we speak, I can't say rescue because there's, unfortunately, the people are dead,
but search teams continue to try and locate and find and retrieve the remains of people
who were killed in the rubble of their homes.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister, said Israel will, quote,
continue to strike his Bala wherever required, but later said he's approved direct talks with
Lebanon as soon as possible. Can you talk about what's happening with these negotiations?
You had the Belgian foreign minister who'd come into Beirut to meet with the Lebanese president,
Ayun, and the bombing hit very close to their quarters as he was congratulating the Lebanese president
on saying that he would directly negotiate with Israel.
condemned the attack and said Lebanon had to be included with the ceasefire. Can you take it from
there? What's happening now? Where do you understand these talks will take place? Well, the first thing is
that the talks remove Lebanon from the wider ceasefire talks that are due to take place between
Iran and America tomorrow. That has many Lebanese worried because they wonder what sort of
leverage does Lebanon have. It doesn't exactly have a straight of Hormuz, whereas Iran seems to be
have a stronger negotiating position. Yesterday, Lebanon's Prime Minister, Nawaf Salam, made it quite
clear. He said that Lebanon, the Lebanese government, will negotiate for Lebanon, and that nobody else
will do so. So he's very clearly drawn the line between whatever Iran negotiates and what he
hopes his government will be able to negotiate with the Israelis. Now, the Iranian foreign minister
has made a ceasefire in Lebanon a condition of tomorrow's talks.
So it's unclear whether or not they are going to go ahead.
So in addition to the question of what sort of leverage does Lebanon have,
some Lebanese are also worried because there is a precedent.
There is a 15-month so-called ceasefire where this is the second war in less than two years,
and there was a 15-month ceasefire between the two.
During that period, the Lebanese government was supposed to negotiate indirectly with Israel
through something called a mechanism, which was U.S. and French led,
to ensure that each side fulfilled its requirements
under the terms of that ceasefire.
During those 15 months, Israel continued to occupy five hilltop positions
that it had newly seized in the war.
It was supposed to withdraw from them under the ceasefire.
It was supposed to withdraw its troops back across its border
under the ceasefire.
It didn't.
So the Lebanese government was unable to get Israel to adhere to any of the conditions,
of the ceasefire, so some Lebanese wonder what it will be able to achieve now.
In addition, I have to say that just the mere fact of direct talks
not only breaks a taboo here in Lebanon, it also breaks a very long-standing law.
Since the mid-1950s here, it is considered an act of treason to have any direct interaction
with an Israeli.
But the Lebanese president himself, General Jouzaef O'un, about a month ago,
called for direct talks with Israel, breaking the...
that massive, massive taboo.
He had full conditions for these talks
that were supposed to be followed sequentially.
The first condition was an immediate and complete ceasefire.
Condition number two was that the Lebanese army is strengthened.
Third was that the Lebanese army would continue its efforts to disarm Hezbollah.
And then fourth was the direct negotiation.
So it looks like the Lebanese state has jumped over,
the president's own, you know, three of his conditions to go straight to the fourth one.
So Hezbollah, for its part, has said it does not think that Lebanon should be negotiating
under fire because it puts it in the weaker position.
Some Lebanese fear that this is a ploy by Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to
prolong the war under the pretext of, you know, having these talks under fire.
the proponents of the talks, I have to say, say that it is an issue of Lebanese sovereignty,
that Lebanon will negotiate any sort of deal with the Israelis.
They also say that Lebanon is not a card for the Iranians to wield or to use in any negotiations,
and they point out that, well, you don't exactly talk to your friends to make deals,
you talk to your enemies.
So it's a very, very divisive issue.
the Hezbollah Secretary General is due to give a speech later this afternoon where he will no doubt address the issue of the talks.
And there is supposed to be a protest here in Lebanon just behind me, actually, in front of the Grand Sorai, which is where the prime minister's office is, against the idea of these talks.
Let me turn to the questions you raise in your latest New York magazine piece.
The Iran War is not over, scenes from a day of carnage in Beirut.
First of all, how much of Lebanon is Israel prepared to destroy while claiming to target Hezbollah and its infrastructure?
And will the world just watch as it does so?
And your second question, can Israel even defeat Hezbollah militarily?
Or is it, as many Lebanese suspect, trying to exact so painful a price from fellow Lebanese that they turn on the group plunging
the country into civil strife. Take on into civil strife, those two.
Well, the Israelis have made no secret of what they want to do in Lebanon.
Officials from the defense minister, Smotrich, the finance minister, they have all talked
about Lebanon being part of their greater Israel project. They have talked about
seizing and occupying southern Lebanese territory up to the Latani River, which, at its
deepest is about 30 kilometers away from the Israeli border. Israel Katz, the Israel's defense
minister, said that he wants to turn that area, that lush, verdant, agricultural area into a
wasteland that resembles what the Israelis did in Gaza. He has threatened that the hundreds of
thousands of Lebanese who have been displaced from there will not be allowed to return.
So that's what the Israelis have indicated that they want to do.
In terms of what they're able to do, they have, according to Israeli media reports,
had to scale back some of those ambitions because of the fierce resistance
that they're facing on the ground from Hezbollah fighters.
Let me give you the example of a town in southern Lebanon called Chiam,
where there are Israeli forces in this town,
but they have been fighting for weeks and weeks to try and to.
take control of it and they have been unable to.
So according to the Israeli media reports,
they now say that they want to occupy
about a three to four kilometer strip of territory.
And Hezbollah will no doubt fight
and try and prevent them from doing that too.
So that's what the Israelis want to do.
In terms of Lebanese turning on each other,
Israeli officials called up,
there are a couple of Christian villages down in the south.
There are also Sunni, there are drawers, as well as the Shiite villages down south.
It's a mixed area.
And the Israeli officials called up some of those Christian towns where the people refused to leave their territory and told them, listen, do not shelter your Shiite neighbors, otherwise you will come under attack.
So that's a very clear sort of indication of what the Israelis are sort of hoping to foment in terms of civil strife and, and, and,
turning literally neighbor against neighbor.
Let me play a clip from a Beirut resident, Naeem Shabbo, survived a bombing Wednesday,
said he's now afraid to sleep.
He said he wants the fighting to stop and blamed Hezbollah.
We want peace.
We don't want problems with anyone anymore.
80% of Arab countries have peace with Israel.
Why doesn't Lebanon have peace so that we can end all these problems?
As long as Hezbollah is in Lebanon, Israel will.
will strike Lebanon. That's it. Hezbollah is not defending Lebanon. It's defending Iran's agenda.
That's it. Rania Buzid, how common or typical is this comment of a Lebanese who survived the
bombing on Wednesday, Israel's bombing? The Lebanese are very divided over the issue of Hezbollah
and its weapons, and they always have been, but more so now in this recent war, because it's,
It started on March 2, and Hezbollah lobbed about six rockets into Israel,
claiming that it was in retaliation for the assassination of Iran's supreme leader,
Ali Khamenei, as well as, quote, in defense of Lebanon.
So many Lebanese saw it as a war of choice almost by Hezbollah.
Now, Hezbollah and its supporters say that after those 15 months of a ceasefire,
that wasn't really a ceasefire, because according to the UN,
Israel violated Lebanon's sovereignty about 15,000 times during that period.
There were thousands of attacks resulting in the deaths of more than 350 Lebanese.
So Hezbollah's supporters say they were patient for those 15 months, and now they have chosen to respond.
But certainly there are Lebanese who are very angry with Hezbollah.
They don't want any war.
I mean, no Lebanese wants war, even the hundreds of thousands of displaced, many of whom might be
Hezbollah supporters, everybody wants to go home. You know, war is not the option for anybody,
but it's a question of under what circumstances, for example, will Lebanon negotiate with Israel?
Will it be under the Iranian umbrella in these talks tomorrow, or will it try and forge another
path and which is better? I mean, look, there are some Lebanese who don't care if aliens will
negotiate on behalf of Lebanon as long as it can secure a ceasefire. I wanted to finally ask you about
what's happening on the ground, according to the World Health Organization, some of Lebanon's
hospitals may run out of life-saving medical supplies within days in attempt to treat patients
wounded by the Israeli airstrikes. This is WHO representative, WHO representative in Lebanon,
Dr. Abni Nasir Abu Bakr. There are some shortages, some of those essential chronic medications,
the insulin, but also some of the, you know, dialysis supplies. If the current
situation and the current demand, actually, continue.
And the current escalation continue, probably the country may be facing a very real risk
of critical shortage, including trauma supplies, surgical materials, blood products, chronic
medications, and any other father disruption could seriously hinder the ability of providing
timely adequate care for both emergency and on-coigne health needs.
Rania Abu Zaid, your final comments on what you think is about to happen.
And do you think Iran will insist on including this in the ceasefire,
joined by many countries around the world who are saying Lebanon has to be included?
Or, as you write in your column, many Lebanese are wondering whether Iran will forsake Hezbollah
and allow Lebanon to be pounded.
Very difficult to tell, Amy.
that's the honest truth.
But, you know, Iran also has its considerations.
If it does forsake Hezbollah and goes it alone,
well, then, you know, Hezbollah is part of Iran's access of resistance.
There are other allies in the region who will see this
and wonder if Iran might forsake it too.
So it's a question of its broader network.
There are the Houthis in Yemen.
There are various militia groups in Iraq
who will be watching very carefully to see what Iran does
if it stands by its ally, Hezbollah, or if it doesn't, there are also, it also has domestic
considerations. You know, Iranians have been pounded now for weeks and weeks. They want to reprieve.
They don't want to return to war. So the Iranians will be juggling those, their own sort of
conditions as well in terms of what their ultimate stance is with regard to heading to the
negotiations tomorrow with or without a ceasefire in Lebanon.
Finally, Rania, I mean, you are there in Beirut, Israel.
struck central Barut, southern Barut, gone beyond the Latani River to the Zahrani River.
Some wondering if they'll take over that whole land, about a fifth of Lebanon.
But you yourself, are you afraid to walk in the streets?
It depends on what streets, Amy.
It depends on where, what part of Lebanon.
Because that's the thing about Wednesday's attack, is that it shattered the sense that any place is safe,
because you just don't know.
The neighborhoods that were targeted were very far, for example, from the southern suburbs of Beirut where Hasbullah has some institutions, not that that justifies striking a very densely, you know, populated area, the southern suburbs are home to hundreds of thousands of people.
But it was anybody's guess.
Like, why target a street with a roastery?
Why target during rush hour when children were leaving school and civil servants were heading home?
So that's the thing.
The sense of safety anywhere has been shattered.
Rania Abu Zaid Award-winning Lebanese Australian journalist.
She is based in Beirut.
Her latest piece in New York magazine, just out, we will link to, headlined,
The Iran War is Not Over, scenes from a day of carnage in Beirut.
Go to DemocracyNow.org.
Coming up, we look at President Trump's threats to pull the U.S. out of NATO,
after European allies refused to use military force against Iran to keep the strait of Hormuz open.
Will NATO continue to exist? Stay with us.
Opposite the Moon by Ahmed Ali-Aoslan.
This is Democracy Now, Democracy Now.org, the war in peace report.
I'm Amy Goodman.
We turn now to Europe, where the war in Iran has radically upended transatlantic ties with the United States.
On Wednesday, President Trump met with NATO Secretary General, Markler,
at the White House amidst growing threats to pull the U.S. from the military alliance.
After the meeting, Trump lashed out on social media, saying in all caps, quote, NATO wasn't there
when we needed them, and they won't be there if we need them again.
Remember Greenland, that big, poorly run piece of ice, exclamation point three times.
The Wall Street Journal reports the Trump administration's considering moving U.S. troops
out in NATO member country, Spain and Germany,
as punishment for not supporting the U.S. and its war in Iran.
On Thursday, the NATO Secretary General Margarita suggested NATO could support the U.S. in the Strait of Hormuz,
saying, quote, if NATO can help, obviously NATO is there.
He also downplayed European opposition to the war.
When it came time to provide the logistical and other support,
the United States needed in Iran, some allies,
were a bit slow, to say the least. In fairness, they were also a bit surprised. To maintain the element
of surprise for the initial strikes, President Trump opted not to inform allies ahead of time,
and I understand that. But what I see when I look across Europe today is allies providing a massive
amount of support, basing, logistics and other measures to ensure the powerful U.S. military
succeeds in denying Iran a nuclear weapon and degrading its capacity to export chaos.
They have heard and are responding to President Trump's requests.
For more on the Trump administration's strained relationship with Europe, we go to Madrid, Spain,
to the heart of Europe's opposition to Trump's war in Iran.
We're joined by Natalie Tocchi, professor of practice at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Europe.
her latest column for the Guardian headlined, Iran is a turning point for Europe's liberation from Donald Trump.
Explain, Professor Tocci.
Well, I mean, of course, Amy, we have seen over the course of over a year a number of repeated threats and betrayals, I would say, from Washington towards Europe, be it over Ukraine, over Greenland, over tariffs.
and now, in a sense, weirdly using the excuse of the Iran war, which frankly speaking has very little to do with NATO, to lash out again and again.
So essentially what we're seeing is, I think, on the one hand, Europeans sort of feeling almost increasingly numb to these threats, right?
Not to say that the threats are necessarily empty, but it's almost regardless of what Europeans do, regardless of how much they're,
they kiss or do not kiss the ring, these threats tend to come.
Because if there's one thing that actually one can say about President Trump
is that he's been very consistent in his total disdain for Europe and for NATO.
So I think there's Europeans that are beginning increasingly to smell the coffee.
And I think, you know, coming alongside this, there's this question of trust within NATO
and in the transatlantic alliance, which is being.
if not completely broken, then very, very seriously put into question.
Because, of course, it's not the first time that the United States does things that Europeans
don't particularly agree with. Just think about the war in Iraq back in 2003.
And yet there was an element of trust in the relationship of consultation, of coordination,
that Europeans basically felt that there was a social contract, so to speak, with the United States,
that basically held.
Now that social contract, beginning with the trust in the relationship, seems to be broken.
And of course, once trust is broken, it's extremely difficult to put the genie back in the bottle.
Gotcha, you're in Madrid, Spain.
The Spanish prime minister said on X, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's, quote,
contempt for life and international law is intolerable.
Sanchez has welcomed the Pakistani Burm.
brokeered ceasefire, but said Spain would, quote, not applaud those who set the world on fire
just because they turn up with a bucket in reference to President Trump and the U.S. administration.
Explain.
Yeah, I mean, Spain has basically been very consistent, be it on Gaza, on Lebanon, now on Iran.
And actually, it has also been very firm on Ukraine as well.
despite the fact that obviously it's much further away from the front line with Russia.
So we have basically seen the Spanish Prime Minister take a principal stance
when it comes to these various wars and conflict in triangulation with the United States throughout.
Now, I think what's interesting about the Spanish case is that especially if you compare it to other European countries,
Sanchez, alongside obviously his political color to the center left,
Spain in general has the, you know, both virtue and luck, I guess, of actually not being that
dependent on the United States, be it in terms of defence, be it in terms of trade, be it in terms
of energy. Spain, of course, is the country that has gone fastest and furthest on the energy
transition towards renewable sources. So basically, Sanchez, in a sense, can afford, quote
to be perhaps more principled than other European leaders. But I think what's interesting there
is that the mainstream view of other European leaders is increasingly moving away from, in a sense,
the sort of sycophantic, you know, kissing of the ring that we've seen of the NATO Secretary
General Mark Routte, and in a sense closer to the more principled opposition that we're seeing in Madrid here.
So in response to Spain's opposition, Germany's opposition to U.S. war on Iran,
President Trump is reportedly weighing, taking the troops out of Germany and Spain and putting them in more U.S.-friendly countries like Poland and Romania.
I'm wondering if you can talk about actually what could happen with NATO.
Could it break up?
German Chancellor Frederick Merritt has warned against a split in NATO when it comes to working with Trump on opening the Strait of Hormuz.
from divisions in NATO to it falling apart.
What do you see?
Well, you know, I think what's actually quite ironic about these hints and declarations that President Trump has made is that actually, as far as Europeans are concerned,
it would make a lot more sense to have more U.S. true presence in Eastern Europe and actually less U.S. true presence in southern Europe.
Now, US true presence in southern Europe, the basis that we're talking about, are not actually to protect Spain.
I mean, Spain is not about to be attacked by Morocco or, I don't know, Italy, by Tunisia.
They have actually served U.S. security interests in terms of its own power projection in the Middle East.
So if President Trump wants to move U.S. true presidents away from southern Europe and towards Eastern Europe,
both Southern Europe and Eastern Europe, I think, will be very happy about it.
Why do you need troops in Europe, east or west?
Well, because, of course, you know, looking east, there is the Russian threat.
So obviously there is, in a sense, a threat and a growing threat perception in Europe.
And although obviously Europeans are trying to build their own defenses and reducing dependence on the United States,
this is obviously not something that can be achieved overnight.
Your peace in the Guardian, you're right.
Italy's denied U.S. warplanes permission to use an air base in Sicily.
Now, that's very interesting because, of course, it's a right prime minister, Georgia Maloney, who has supported Trump in the past.
That was my additional comment there.
Back to your piece.
Poland's refused to send Patriot air defense systems to the Middle East, citing the ongoing threat from Russia.
France is rejected over flight rights and opposed a U.S.-sponsored resolution at the UN Security Council that condemned Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz calling for its reopening by military means.
if you could take it from there.
They're also, this is exposing, and I don't know if Trump wanted this,
exactly where U.S. troops are all over Europe and what these connections are
and what the rights of countries are, for example, to deny airspace.
And were you surprised about what Maloney did in Italy?
Well, actually, I wasn't that surprised.
And I wasn't that surprised because what is becoming increasingly clear is that,
closeness to Trump is becoming increasingly politically toxic in Europe.
And so even far-right governments, like my own in Italy, are actually feeling, you know,
regardless of what they feel and where their political heartbeats, they're finding it increasingly
uncomfortable to show support for Donald Trump, given, and here we come back to this breaking of
trust, this constant lashing out against Europe. You know, Miloni may, you know, love Trump,
adhere to his ideology, but she is still the Prime Minister of a European country, right?
And so this constant lashing out is something that is becoming increasingly uncomfortable.
So you see, and this is what, you know, I was trying to get out earlier when saying that,
okay, fine, you know, Spain started off this way, but you see a number of other European countries
from Poland to Germany to Italy to France, gradually, and the United Kingdom,
gradually shifting in a sense towards, in a sense, a more Sanchez-like position,
even if they had started off wanting to embrace Trump.
But Trump is making it increasingly difficult for them to embrace him.
Nadly Tochi, I want to thank you for being with us,
Professor of Practice Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies,
Europe, and a senior fellow at Bokone University's Institute for European Policymaking.
Speaking to us from Madrid, Spain, also a Guardian Europe columnist,
will link to your new piece. Iran's a turning point for Europe's liberation from Donald Trump.
Go to DemocracyNow.org. Coming up, voters in Hungary head to the polls on Sunday.
Well, why was Vice President J.D. Vance there this week before he now heads to Pakistan?
Could the election mark the end of Victor Orban's rule? Stay with us.
The late Malim musician, Card of Arby, Nightingale of the North, performing in our Democracy Now studio.
This is Democracy Now, Democracy Now.org. I'm Amy Goodman.
We turn now to the one country in Europe where the transatlantic relationship has only gotten stronger under the Trump administration, Hungary.
But that relationship is about to be tested because as Hungary goes to the poll Sunday, far-right Prime Minister Victor Orban is facing his biggest challenge in
16 years. Polls show the center-right party led by Peter Madiard with a significant lead over
Orban's party in the days before Hungary's parliamentary election. The latest polls show Orban's
party has a support of 39 percent of decided voters, 52 percent back, his opponent's party.
25 percent of voters said they're undecided. Orban's been Prime Minister of Hungary since 2010,
making him the European Union's longest-serving leader. Earlier to day,
He accused his political opponents of trying to seize power in a video message posted to social media.
Our opponents will stop at nothing to seize power.
They are colluding with foreign secret services, threatening our followers with violence,
and calling out election fraud with fabricated accusations even before the election.
They are organizing demonstrations and chaos even before your votes have been counted.
Let us speak clearly.
is an organized attempt to question the decisions of the Hungarian people through chaos,
pressure, and international discredit.
On Tuesday, U.S., that's U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance, traveled to Budapest, where he appeared
alongside Prime Minister Orban and openly campaigned for his re-election.
Will you stand against the bureaucrats in Brussels?
Will you stand for sovereignty and democracy?
Will you stand for Western civilization?
Will you stand for freedom, for truth, and for the God of our fathers?
Then, my friends, go to the polls and the weekend.
Stand with Victor Orban.
For more, we're joined from New Haven, Connecticut by Kim Lane-Chekley.
She's professor of sociology and international affairs in the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs.
Her research examines the rise and fall of constitutional government with a focus on Hungary.
Professor, welcome back to democracy now.
Why is Hungary so critical?
And what is the U.S. Vice President, J.D. Vance, doing there?
He's now headed off to Pakistan to lead the negotiations with Iran.
Yeah, so, yes, this election is really crucial, not just for Hungary, but for the international sort of right wing.
Victor Orban has controlled Hungary for 16 years.
He's become a dictator, though he doesn't like to call himself that.
It's crucial to have a state in Europe with the resources of a state backing, sort of the undermining of the European Union, backing the kind of policies that Donald Trump has had.
So it's not surprising that the Trump administration has been strongly backing Orban.
J.D. Vance's visit this week was the second visit by a high-level Trump administration official.
Remember that Marco Rubio went to Budapest right after the Munich Security Conference.
So there's been a lot of American signaling that the U.S. would really love to have Victor Orban be reelected.
The problem is the Hungarian people don't seem to agree.
This is Hungarian Prime Minister Orban speaking to reporters during a joint news conference with Vice President J.D. Vance this week.
Vice President, my dear friend, Vice President, it has been 35 years since the Vice President last visited Hungary.
and we have not had such a high-ranking guest from the United States for 20 years.
20 years is a long time between friends.
With the election of President Trump, a golden age has dawned in our relations,
as we have just looked at 2025.
We see it was a year of records in economic cooperation.
So that's Prime Minister Orban, who is standing next to J.D. Vance, at this joint news conference.
Why is Hungary led by Orban so important for Europe right now, particularly the right in Europe?
And what would it mean if he loses?
And why would J.D. Vance care about that?
Yeah. So Victor Orban, first of all, is so far behind in the polls that even his rigged election system will probably not save him this time.
And it's causing some panic in the right wing in Europe because once Orban consolidated power in Hungary,
he then spent a huge amount of Hungarian money,
we think up to 1% of total Hungarian GDP,
on an effort to influence and to build a far-right network across Europe.
So in the last European elections, for example,
Orban's Fidesz political party was the primary advertiser
on behalf of far-right parties across Europe.
And as you know, those European elections tilted quite heavily in favor of the far-right,
Orban came out of those elections,
not only with a substantial victory in Hungary,
but he was actually able to cobble together
the third largest party in the European Parliament,
which has really tilted European policy in favor of the right.
So he's the kingmaker in Europe in terms of building far-right cohesion,
and the Trump administration has been echoing Orban's language.
In fact, if you look at the national security strategy
that the U.S. released back in the fall,
it could almost have been written by Orban. The language is exactly the same. And the code word
further far right now is the Patriots in Europe, because the Patriots is the name of Orban's
European-wide political party. I wanted to ask you about a very interesting figure in the Trump
administration. That's Sebastian Gorka, Trump's deputy assistant to the president's senior director for
counterterrorism. He advised Trump in his first term, but was pushed out after the four
revealed, he once had ties to a Hungarian far-right Nazi-alide group and that he supported
an anti-Semitic and racist paramilitary militia in Hungary while he served as a Hungarian
politician, Gorka's Hungarian. Yeah, so Gorkas actually a complicated figure. He was raised
in Britain by far-right parents, and in fact, the far-right organization that he supported is
actually not neo-Nazi, but Nazi. His father was a member of a Nazi.
aligned group when the Nazis were actually dominating Europe. When Gorka showed up at Trump's first
inauguration, he wore not only the insignia, but also the uniform of the original Nazi
paramilitary organization. After that was discovered, he then got marginalized, he got kicked out
of the White House, but he's been still aligned with Trump forces. So now Gorka has come back as
counterterrorism director in the White House. But, you know, Gorka has this interesting history in
Hungary. After the Berlin Wall came down, he moved from Britain to Hungary. He worked in the
Hungarian defense establishment, and he got to know the Hungarian government very well. He then
briefly founded a rival political party to Orban's political party when Orban was out of power
in the 2000s. And then when there was a kind of discussion between, shall we say, Gorka and Orban,
Gorka agreed to dissolve his party, and the people from Gorka's political party went straight into Orban's party, where they still are now.
Okay, so Gorka has direct personal ties with Orban, so it's not surprised, and Gorka speaks Hungarian, et cetera.
So he's the point person in the White House who has the direct contacts with the Orban team.
Thursday's New York Times had an interesting story, headline U.S. pushes allies to chase a new terrorism,
target, the far left. It's a push to designate far left and anti-fascist groups overseas
as terrorist organizations and pressure those countries to investigate the groups and find
links between left-wing groups abroad and Americans. The leaders of this initiative, and I'm
reading from the Times right now, the leaders of this initiative, according to the piece,
include Sebastian Gorka. Your final comments. Yes. Yeah, so Gorka heads counterterrorism,
so that's the weapon he's going to use. And of course, after 9-11, there's a huge counterterrorism
network and a huge set of counterterrorism resources available for going after enemies of different
kinds. And what Trump is trying to do and what Orban has already done in Hungary is to start
labeling, and I wouldn't even call it the far left, right? It's the entire left. And
as the opposition to these far-right groups.
And so far, they've been using media denigration,
making fun of them, trying to establish and argue
for networks that aren't there.
But this move to start to label any kind of group
that these governments don't like,
that these patriot groups in Europe don't like,
as part of a far-left network,
is, first of all, false that the network doesn't exist.
But second of all, it's a way of trying to weaponize
these resources that governments have
against the left so as to get them out of the way so the right has a better chance of coming to
power in European governments. And yes, the U.S. is entirely behind this. The U.S. is also
talking about setting up, they've destroyed Voice of America and the other kind of global
networks the U.S. used to have, but now they're talking about actually building in Europe a kind of,
you know, Fox News for Europe in order to, again, give the far right a push. So this is all playing out
on the political field. Orban is central to this because right now he controls the state and state
resources. But after Sunday, you know, I think he's actually going to be out of power and then we'll
see. Kim Lane Sheppley, want to thank you so much for being with us, Professor of Sociology and
International Affairs at Princeton University, specializing in the rise and full of constitutional
government with a focus on Hungary. That does it for our show. Happy birthday to David Pruid
and early happy birthday to Anna Osbeck, Diego Ramos, and Maria Inez Tarasena.
I'll be at the IFC Center here in New York City this weekend all through tonight and tomorrow morning at 10.30 as well as through the afternoon and evening and Sunday for the opening, the theatrical release of Steal the Story, please, about the 30 years of Democracy Now. I'll be there with the directors of the film T. Leson and Carl Deal and many others. You can check it all out at Democracy Now.org.
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I'm Amy Goodman.
