Piers Morgan Uncensored - "Children Are STARVING!" Piers Morgan vs Israeli Minister + 'The Beast From the Middle East'
Episode Date: July 1, 2025As President Trump pushes for an Israel-Hamas ceasefire as soon as this week, Piers Morgan speaks to British doctor Mohammed Mustafa - known as “The Beast From The Middle East” about his harrowing... first hand experience in Gaza. Piers then speaks with May Golan, the Minister for Social Equality in Netanyahu’s government - pressing her on some of her past controversial comments, such as saying she ‘doesn’t care about Gaza’. Then Piers’ panel assembles to unpack it all - with former commander of the British Army in Afghanistan, Col. Richard Kemp, host of ‘Democracy-ish’, Wajahat Ali and pro-Israel activisit with PragerU, Shabbos Kestenbaum. Piers Morgan Uncensored is proudly independent and supported by: Ridge Wallet: Upgrade your wallet today! Get 10% Off @Ridge with code PIERS at https://www.Ridge.com/PIERS #Ridgepod Tax Network USA: Call 1-800-958-1000 or visit https://TNUSA.com/PIERS to meet with a strategist today for FREE Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I remember when I was in Gaza, and I'd watch some of your debates,
and, you know, you were saying that you were having a moral quandary over what was going on.
It's not a moral quandary for me.
I'm putting headless children, and I'm handing them over to mothers,
and they're hugging them, and they're putting them into body bags.
Smodrich and Ben-Givir in particular have made it clear.
They want to clear out Gaza of all the Palestinians.
She's a war cry. It's ethnic cleansing.
In support of Jewish settlements in Gaza, you said there should be another NACPA.
You also said, I'm personally proud.
of the ruins of Gaza.
You said, I don't care about Gaza.
I literally don't care at all.
You say that Smodrich and Bengavir,
they're the right-wingers.
It's only pretty right-winginger yourself.
I'm a right-winger as well.
I'm a right-winger as well, absolutely.
It was almost like a comedy sketch
if it wasn't so serious.
There you are saying,
don't believe any of the stories
of the Israeli shooting at people here,
and next thing, here is a machine gun going off.
Come on, Colonel Kemp.
Take your blinkers off, man.
All I can say,
is thank God that there was no Pierce Morgan uncensored
during World War II.
President Trump wants a ceasefire on the Israel-Hamas war,
and he wants it to be as soon as this week.
Well, frankly, it can't come soon enough.
Thousands of Palestinians have been killed
since the last ceasefire broke down,
including a series of shocking incidents at aid centers.
More than 50 hostages remain in Hamas captivity.
At least 20 of them believed to be still alive.
This weekend, Israeli settlers
attacked an Israeli military base
in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
The opposition says they're in,
emboldened by expansionist hardliners in Netanyahu's government.
We're coming up, I'll talk to one of the most controversial ministers in Israel's government,
and we'll debate the terms of what happens next.
But first I'm joined by British Dr. Mahabha Mustafa, known to many of his followers as the Beast
from the Middle East, who has first-hand experience in Gaza.
Welcome to you.
Thank you.
You were grimacing when I read your nickname there, The Beast in the Middle East.
But that is your unofficial title, right?
Yeah, yeah, I've been called a few names of my time, but that's one that seems to have stuck around.
Why that? What's that about?
I used to play a lot of sports.
I used to play professional rugby and a couple of the lads came up with that name.
And it's just kind of stuck ever since.
And then it was my Instagram handle for such a long time.
And then I started to go viral.
I thought it was too late to change it then.
So, yeah, I guess I'm the beast from the Middle East.
We're going to get to incredible stuff you've done in Gaza.
But you were telling me off camera.
It's fascinating.
Tom Aspinall, the UFC guys are great, made of yours.
And you've done lots of training with him.
You've actually spar with Tyson Fury too.
Well, in Thailand, I accidentally caught him
and yeah, that was really scary because when I caught him,
he was such a sport about it though
that I accidentally hit him in the face, so fair play to him.
But yeah, I've done a lot of training around the world
with MMA and Jiu-Jitsu,
and obviously I've played professional rugby as well,
so I've done quite a bit of sports.
The relevance, I guess, is it's made you a tough guy
and capable of, you know, dealing with a lot of stuff.
Had anything prepared you for what you encountered in Gaza,
Do you know, Gaza is an extremely difficult place to go into.
I've been there now multiple times since the start of this war.
I remember, you know, the first time going in there, you know, we arrived at about 6 o'clock
and there was an airstrike at a residential house and we walked in to the morgue.
And I remember opening up the body bags because the other extended family were there to identify the bodies.
And, you know, when you just open up body bags and it's organs of children, missing heads, missing limbs, 80% body burns.
and there were family members coming in picking up pieces of an arm
and identifying the body just by the ring
and that was literally the first 30 minutes I was in Gaza
and instantly you know that this is something that's
you'd never be prepared for something like that.
Had you ever come across anything like this?
Not to this scale, not to this scale, the level of destruction.
You know, we would drive from the European Hospital to NASA Hospital
and there would be about four buildings standing
and it was just rubble.
And people were living in and amongst this rubble.
You know, it was really, and, you know, the drones are constantly overhead.
Every day, children are coming in, injured, killed, burnt alive.
And that's constant.
And, you know, there's always the risk that you could be killed as well.
I mean, it sounds extraordinary.
When you say that children are coming in every day, literally all the time.
Yeah.
You know, the second time that I was there, I was there a few days into the sea,
a few days before the ceasefire broke.
And we would actually see children come in with gunshot wounds to the neck and head.
They'd been sniped neck and head.
We saw last year in June, children that had been starved to death,
children that were coming and starving to death in June last year.
So forget about this Gaza humanitarian foundation now and the starvation that you see.
We were seeing that in June last year.
And, you know, to go back nine months later and still see children starving to death,
That's what really hits home, is when you see that how prolonged and sustained this campaign of violence and, you know, violence against children.
It's been, yeah, it's quite difficult.
You are the son of a Gazaan refugee.
Yeah.
Dad was a refugee.
Yeah.
He's now, he's here in the UK.
He's become one of the top fertility doctors in the country.
Yeah.
Which is an amazing story.
Yeah.
For any refugee, but particularly one from Gaza.
Yeah.
What were your memories growing up with your dad?
Did he talk to you much about the conflict, the problems?
You know, my dad's one of my heroes.
You know, he, when he was born in Gaza,
he used to wear the USAID flower bags as his trousers.
Didn't own a pair of shoes until he was about 13 years old.
You know, he lived in absolute poverty.
But he built himself up.
He became a doctor.
And it was through that profession of health care
and watching him every day go to work, working late,
to not just support our family,
but to support family back home in Gaza.
and I really looked up to him.
And, you know, I was reflecting on this a lot the other day.
You know, my father has been responsible for around 20,000 children being born in this country
that wouldn't have been born because of, you know, his level, high-skill level in fertility medicine.
And I just think to myself, like, there's been over 20,000 children that have been killed in Gaza.
How much do he take that?
He's bought life, so much life to this country, and yet he's watching his own country be absolutely destroyed.
What does he feel about that?
you know, my father's health has declined a lot in the last two years.
I really worry about him.
He, you know, me and myself, and I don't talk about this very often,
but, you know, we've had dozens of family members killed during this conflict.
Dozens?
Dozens of family killed during this conflict.
We've also had, you know, dozens of family members killed generationally.
You know, I've had family members killed in 2014.
I've had family members killed 20 years ago.
I've had family members killed 30 years ago.
I've had family members that were killed in hospitals when hospitals,
when hospitals were bombed in the 50s and the 60s in Gaza.
So, you know, this whole thing, and, you know, I don't want to put you on the spot,
but, you know, I remember when I was in Gaza,
and I'd watch some of, you know, your debates,
and, you know, you were saying that you were having a moral quandary
over what was going on.
And I remember just thinking to myself, like,
it's not a moral quandary for me,
and it's not a moral quandary for millions of people around the world.
Like, we're sat here, and I'm putting headless children,
and I'm handing them over to mothers,
and they're hugging them, and they're putting them into body bags.
When we have a mass casualty event,
I'm stepping over children as they're bleeding out to death on the floor
because I know we don't have the medical equipment to treat them.
When I'm trying to use an ultrasound machine to do a scan on someone,
the cords have been cut because Israeli soldiers have cut the cords of ultrasound machines.
I've had family members who have died because the dialysis machines
are filled with bullet holes.
So, you know, just to put it in a context,
the first 24 days of this conflict,
1,900 children were killed in the first 24 days.
that's more than any other conflict anywhere around the world in a whole year
and in this tiny population of Gaza.
And I think anybody like me or any Palestinians
or anyone really that knows the situation,
they knew what was coming
and we knew what was happening.
And when they were calling them human animals and Amalek
and we're going to cut off food, water and electricity
and 1,900 children killed in a dozen or so days,
I think we all knew what was coming.
When you say you knew what was coming,
just to be clear, my moral quandary was really,
that I felt after October the 7th, Israel didn't just have a right to defend itself, but a duty.
A terror attack of that scale, you know, 1,200 people killed, nearly 7,000 more wounded, 250 plus kidnapped, grandmothers, babies, I mean, Holocaust survivors.
It was on such a horrific scale, obviously Israel was going to respond with force.
My quandary was simply, at what point is this a proportionate response?
And I didn't know the answer.
Yeah.
I do now.
Yes.
And I've been saying for a few months now
that what is happening now is beyond, to me, any kind of proportionate response.
And it seems to be never-ending.
And that's why this has to end.
But going back to October the 7th, notwithstanding, obviously you're the son of a Garza refugee.
And of course, that will inform how you view things.
But none of this would be happening in the way it's been happening without what.
Hamas did that day.
So what do you feel about what Hamas inflicted
on its own people
by doing what it did?
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So look, I think the framing of that is a little bit
problematic, like what Hamas did to its own people. What's been going on is it didn't start on October
the 7th. It's been 75 years. And I can detest to that because I was ethnically cleansed out of
cars and so it was my family, you know. So it didn't start on October the 7th. What do I think about
October 7th? Horrific. You know, taking of women and children as hostages, killing innocent
people. As a Palestinian, I know how much that hurts. So all I have is nothing but sympathy for the people
who suffered on October the 7th.
But at the same time, you know,
people started this story on October the 7th.
And for me, growing up in poverty,
growing up without running water in the house,
growing up watching, you know,
us have to give up our savings all the time
to support family back in Gaza and back.
For me, it never started on October the 7th.
For me, it started every day when I was being bullied at school.
It started when I had to move from city to city
because my dad never got a permanent job.
You know, those are the kind of things where, you know, I look at it and I was just, there was a lot of emotions on October the 7th, you know, as a Palestinian.
Did any part of you feel it was justified? I've heard some people categorize what they did as resistance, which is a justification for what happened.
I don't think you can do that. I mean, to me, it was an appalling terrorist attack. And the reason I framed the question the way I did was that when it later turned out that Hamas had this huge tunnel system where they all hid.
but the civilians were left to be under the reigning bombs from Israel,
which were inevitably going to come, given the scale of what Hamas did.
That's what I meant by the way I phrased the question,
which is how much do Palestinian people, when they look back on that,
how much do they blame Hamas for inevitably bringing this on them?
Yeah, I mean, look, before Hamas, it was the PLO.
Right.
You know, and before the PLO it was the Egyptians,
and before then it was somebody else.
Look, at the end of the day, the root causes the problem.
The root causes the occupation.
The root cause is that I don't have the right to return to my home.
That my father doesn't have the right to return.
That my grandfather is buried in Gaza.
My dad's never been able to go see him.
You know, when we talk about the root causes,
when we talk about, you know, what Hamas did on October the 7th,
this is just a cycle.
And the cycle always comes back to, instead of looking at the symptoms,
I don't want to look at the symptoms.
I want to look at the causes.
The causes is an inequality is a lack of justice
And I just want justice for the Palestinian people
And I don't want that justice to be violence
And killing of innocent Israelis
You want the same human rights?
I just want the same human rights.
Do you think it's possible?
I mean, I liken it sometimes
to what happened in Northern Ireland
Where for decades people thought this could never get resolved
People living amongst each other
You know, loyalists and IRA
But eventually they got there
They got to peace
Do you think it's possible
to end up with a two-state solution
where Palestinians live with the same rights as Israelis?
Well, look, I think the Israelis are making it very difficult
to have a two-state solution.
You know, with the expansion of settlements in the West Bank
and moving in...
Which is appalling?
Which is moving in millions of settlers.
It's making a two-state solution impossible.
Really, what's going to happen is eventually
there'll be a one-state solution
with equality for Muslims and Jews
and anybody else living on that land.
And eventually, Palestinians will have the right to return
and they will return back to Palestine.
And I feel like, you know,
It's kind of ironic, really, because they've avoided so much
in giving the Palestinians a state and a home,
and they've tried to destroy this two-state solution
that eventually what will happen is a one-state solution,
and eventually the majority that they've tried to build
by ethnically cleansing, by taking up more and more land,
will go away because eventually the Palestinians will return home.
And eventually, given all the Palestinian refugees all around the world,
eventually the Palestinians will outnumber the Jewish population,
and that's, I think, what's worrying them.
And I think what needs to happen is,
is there either needs to be a conversation
where you need to have a proper two-state solution
or it needs to be a one-state solution,
but questions need to be asked
and governments need to come in and help.
Do Arab countries do enough?
It seems to me they kind of hold back
and say, this is not our problem.
Well, you know, look,
Jordan has taken in millions of refugees,
more than half the population of Palestinian.
Lebanon has had civil wars
with Palestinian resistance fighters in there before.
You know, Syria has its own problems.
Egypt has, you know, my dad was educated in Egypt, Egypt has taken in loads of Palestinian refugees before.
The problem isn't the Arabs.
It is problematic, you know, the lack of help and the lack of support.
But the problem is here is that we have an expansionist regime, which is extremely right-wing in Israel,
that doesn't respect any borders, doesn't respect anyone's sovereignty.
And he's now talking in openly genocidal language.
I mean, Smodrich and Ben-Givir in particular, have you.
made it clear, they want to clear out of Gaza
of all the Palestinians.
Yeah, exactly. Which is a war cry.
It's ethnic cleansing. It is. It is. It is. And, you know,
that's why, and you know, the UN has been
gutted as well. It's been defunded.
It's been gutted. It's been delegitimized.
And what I've been doing, since I've got back from Gaza,
is I've been trying to come up with solutions
for what's going on. And, you know,
I've been traveling around the world trying to get
support for a children's hospital into Gaza.
It's a children's hospital that we're going to
build in Jordan. So the infrastructure is there in place already ready. We're going to build it
in Jordan and drive it into Gaza and have a mobile hospital essentially. It's a hospital on wheels.
It has an intensive care unit, wards, pathology labs, pharmacies, it's solar panel powered. It has
running sewerage, waterworks. And, you know, I've got the proposal here. It's ready to go.
And I'm in the final stages of negotiations with the Minduru Foundation to get funding for this
hospital. We have a similar concept of this, a maternity in neonatal hospital, which is ready to go
into Gaza as well. The reason why I'm saying that why I've come with solutions and not just
here just to talk and just rhetoric and people being unhappy and victim and this, this and this,
I want a solution to this. Women and children are dying. Women and children are being funneled into
cages and gunned down, hungry women and children. You can't have an army that's on trial for
genocide to be also the one that controls access to food. Do you believe the IDF are deliberately
killing civilians? Because they always say,
were deliberately killing Hamas
and civilians are dying in the process
of us going after Hamas.
What do you say to that?
Well, I'd say they killed their own hostages
with them who were waving white flags.
They have bombed hospitals
with people inside them.
They left babies in incubators
to rot to death.
When they executed those 15 paramedics,
I was in Gaza then.
When they executed 15 paramedics
and buried them alive.
And lied about it.
And lied about it.
I was there,
when I would have children coming in with explosive injuries
and they would have bread in their hand, they were eating,
and they targeted them when they were eating.
I would pick up children as young as two years old
that had been shot in their head by snipers multiple times.
So, you know, when they talk about saying that they're only going after Hamas,
I mean, you said it yourself.
They've openly talked about ethnically cleansing the whole of Garza.
They're actively expanding settlements in the West Bank.
They say Hamas are in all the hospitals.
Is that true?
Look, I've worked in all the hospitals.
It'd be a very stupid thing to have a military base in the hospital.
One, it's open access policy.
Everyone can walk in and out of the hospital.
Also, the hospital is full of injured women and children.
The hospital's full of media.
And also, the hospital is a base where all the international aid workers are.
And, you know, my concern when I go to Gaza is the children in Gaza.
That's my concern.
I don't want to be, I don't want, you know, there be any military operations out of there
because it puts children in danger.
But, you know, I've not heard of a doctor that's come out and said that they've actively seen fighting
or rockets being fired out of a hospital.
It's not to say that something might have happened before,
but again, you still can't throw the baby away with the dirty baby water.
It's a hospital.
And if you're going to bomb and destroy hospitals, which they've bombed 36 hospitals,
then let me bring in my hospital.
Let me bring in this.
And what I'm trying to do with this hospital is I'm trying to make this government-led initiative.
I want the British government on board.
I've got the Irish government on board.
We met with President Michael Higgins.
We've got the Australian government talking about this.
We went to France yesterday to try and get the French government on board.
Instead of having the Israelis running the aid,
I want our governments to take a more active role.
I don't want them to pay for this.
I want them just to give us the access, to get this hospital in
and to allow British doctors, Australian doctors, Irish doctors,
Canadian doctors in to have our hospital.
This is our aid distribution centre.
You know, just last week or a couple of weeks ago,
the first children of Gaza arrived here in the UK.
Two of them arrived.
That's the first time since this war started
that two children have arrived.
And, you know, they're not bringing any more in.
And I understand why the government
don't want to bring more children in.
One, you know, you saw the race riots
that happened in August, in my town in Middlesbrough.
People were pulled out of their cars if they were Muslim.
Mosques were vandalized.
Asylum seekers' hotels were burnt down.
I know for the government, it's a touchy subject
to bring in black and brown children into the UK.
Well, this is a way we avoid that.
Instead of bringing them here to be treated,
let's bring a hospital here.
It's not just the hospital that I've got.
I've also got a plan here to feed the children of Gaza with instant aid.
This is a comprehensive two-year plan that not just looks after feeds the children.
It feeds them twice a day, nutrient-rich meals.
This has been designed by executives that have worked for the World Food Program and USA Aid.
This is a Pious Projects Hospital as well.
I've got the answers here.
I've been speaking to government figures.
I just need them to listen to me.
I'm about to interview one of the Israeli government.
what would be your message for her?
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I mean, she's the equality minister, isn't she?
Look.
Why are you laughing when you say that?
Because it's kind of like a black mirror episode, you know?
Sometimes it's parody, you know, it's a parody.
I think like everyone is watching what's, you know, in Glastonbury,
just then what's happened in Glastonbury, you know, the chance, right?
Death, death to the IDF, right?
What did you think of that?
Well, you know, what I thought of that is just like, you know,
they are more concerned and more outraged by a chant
than the actual crimes of the...
Can't you be outraged by both?
Because I was.
Look, you can be outraged by both.
Watching thousands of people at an English music festival
chanting death to the IDF,
I found that very unsettling.
And I'm not Jewish.
If I was a British Jew watching that,
I would feel very, very unnerved
to a British audience like that.
And the irony that, of course,
Hamas had obliterated young people
at a music festival on October the 7th.
I didn't like that.
And I think it's perfectly,
possible to think that is outrageous.
Yeah, but it's also perfectly possible to criticize Israeli government for what they're doing in Gaza.
I mean, look, you're asking the wrong person about that because I've had family members killed for
generations by the IDF. I've had my home destroyed, my village burnt down by the IDF.
I've held children who were riddled in bullets by the IDF.
I've had to have children in a corner while their mother bled out to them on the floor and covered
their own children in her blood as she died.
of IDF bullets and IDF bombs.
So, you know, when you ask these questions,
like, why are you asking a Palestinian
who's been... Well, I'll tell you why, because for example,
when the Iraq war happened,
my brother was a serving officer, for example.
My issue was not with him.
My issue, I campaigned against it
as it as it was a Daily Mirror. My issue is
with Tony Blair and the Labour government
that ordered him and his colleagues
into battle. So I think blaming
soldiers in war
is chicken and the egg.
They're being ordered into battle.
to do what they do by their governments.
Look, I hear you, I hear you, I hear your concerns.
And look, I...
But I hear you too.
Because if I'd lost a lot of family members to IDF bullets and bombs,
I would probably feel the same way you do.
What I say is this, look at you.
I don't agree with any form of the violence and death chance.
I'm a doctor.
I try and bring life to this world writer's day in life.
I don't want anyone to die.
But when you're an IDF soldier who is wearing,
putting on dead women's lingerie in Palestine,
tying children's teddy bears onto tanks,
when you're leaving babies to rot in incubators,
when you are laughing as you're blowing up schools and hospitals,
there is going to be backlash,
and what happens at these music festivals
is they're reflective of how society feels,
whether that's right or wrong.
I'm not here to comment on that,
but I'm just saying that, like,
if the government was more proactive,
people wouldn't feel this rage.
And I don't want people to feel rage.
I don't want death, right?
Because I've had a lot of death in my family.
I've had a lot of issues in my life because of this issue.
I want there to be peace.
I want both sides to come together.
I don't want to see Jewish people suffering and dying,
but I don't want to see Palestinians either suffering and dying.
And all I want is I want to bring in my hospital
and I want to feed the children.
I've got, you know, I've got the solutions here.
I've got them here.
Well, I hope people are watching, miss, and listen to you.
I just need someone to listen.
Will you be going back to Gaza while the war's still on?
My forms are submitted.
I should be going back into Gaza,
whether I'm allowed back in or not.
considering all the noise that I've made about the...
Well, you were on the Greta Thunberg Flotilla,
which I was very critical of her,
because I'm not a big fan of hers.
I thought it was all a bit of a virtue-seedling
load of a twaddle, if I'm honest.
But I didn't know you, obviously.
I found you a very impressive person to interview.
But did that really achieve anything,
or was it not just another of Greta's stunts,
which really is about her, but doesn't really achieve anything?
So look, what I'll tell you to that, right, yeah,
is, you know, I was invited to come down to, you know,
see the guys at the floaters.
and have my voice there as a doctor that had been to Gaza.
Like you, you know, I'd watch Greta over the years.
I wasn't sure either, you know.
But when I was there and I saw them get onto the boat,
Greta was crying, her mother was there,
her family was there.
There was real concern that she could be killed here.
And there was concerned by the other Fluttele members.
You know, it was a very somber moment when they left
because family members were hugging, there was tears.
And there was, because I was there before,
they got onto the boat. And there was all the precautionary stuff of people writing their last letters,
their last messages. I mean, this is real. You know, the flotilla before then, three weeks ago,
had been bombed by drones. Fifteen years ago, ten people on the flotilla were killed, right?
You're talking about sailing in a ship, an unarmed ship carrying baby formula to go into the heart
of a genocide with an army that doesn't respect international law. I mean, to be fair,
to Greta Greta right yet, as much criticism you can have,
she's really brave for what she did.
And I know people
might have this in there, but it's real.
They really wanted to break the siege. And they've made the whole world
talk about this illegal siege because the siege
has been going on for 18 years in Gaza.
And that has been locked by sea.
I just don't think anybody knew
was thinking about it. It wasn't already. It was my point.
Yeah, yeah. And I can respect that.
And I also just think, look, people have
different ways of expressing their views. My ways
of expressing it is to try and get something done.
Other people is to perform protests like that, that gain media attention.
Whatever it is, I just want the killing to stop.
And I think everybody has a role to play.
Even Greta has a role to play.
And this is why I'm here.
Even you do as well, Piers.
I know when I was a kid, because I used to watch, you know, you on TV.
And I know that you were the editor of the Daily Mirror at the time.
You led the anti-war movement or one of the main figures that led the anti-war movement.
You came under a lot of stick.
You were attacked a lot.
And I remember as a kid looking up at you, looking up to you.
And, you know, as a Muslim, watching this white man, you know, say that this is wrong.
And you were challenging a media narrative.
We didn't have social media back then.
You didn't have the public support that you have now for the Palestine cause.
And you were under a lot of attack.
And your voice is so important because you were such a powerful voice in 2003 to stop the crime of the Iraq war.
And that's why we need you on our side to save these children.
I need no persuading about Gaza.
I think this has gone on way too long.
The death toll is way too high.
the number of innocent people being killed on a daily basis
is completely unacceptable.
And I will be saying all this to the Israeli government minister
in a moment. But, Mohammed, I'm going to leave you there.
Thank you very much indeed.
It's been a real pleasure to meet you.
Yeah, real pleasure.
Thank you, Peter. Thank you so much.
It's great.
I like the fact you've come with plans to try and help.
Thank you. I appreciate it, Pierce. Thank you so much.
Good to see.
Well, join me now is Mike Goland,
the Minister for Social Equality in Benjamin Netanyar, whose government.
Welcome to you, Ms. Godin.
You were listening to that, but you were grimacing and pulling faces.
What was your issue with what you heard?
Now, first of all, thank you for having me, Mr. Morgan.
I was hearing parts because I was talking with my staff here.
But for some of the things I heard, some were just absolute lies.
The IDF is happy when he's bombing hospitals or schools, really.
A country and a nation who suffered the Holocaust and lost six million people is,
is happy about hunger and is trying to use that as a method. And also, I was trying, really trying
so hard to listen to one word of him saying about the captives that we have, about the hostages
that we have, the 50 hostages that weren't released. I didn't hear anything, not even a word.
And I can understand the suffering. Of course I can. Trust me. Mr. Morgan, no one wants to see
children died, children hurt. No one wants that, let alone the Israeli people who suffered what they
did. But for them to say that we are doing it in order to hurt specifically innocent civilians
is an absolute lie. I can tell you. But I hear this with respect, Minister, I hear this from a lot of
Israeli government members, ambassadors, lawyers and so on. And my point is always the same,
is that even if we accept that nobody in the IDF has ever deliberately targeted a child,
which is contradicted by a lot of witnesses.
But even if you accept that premise,
you have to also agree that 20,000 children may be many more.
That's just the ones that we believe is the number,
have been killed as you've gone after Hamas.
And it's a staggering number of children, innocent kids who've been killed here.
And just on a human level, surely you must accept
that this has now gone on long enough.
First of all, on a human level, I can tell you not 100%, 1 million percent,
that we take no pleasure whatsoever, not in seeing anyone innocent in Gaza who died,
let alone our holy and hero soldiers and are innocent people.
But let's put some things in perspective,
and I would like to answer that as much as I can, that would satisfy you
because hearing the interview before, it seems like you're coming from one side,
and I can understand.
I don't take sides.
I'm not on any one side.
I'm not on any one side.
As you probably, as you probably know, at the start of all this,
for many months, I was the one being attacked by the pro-Palestinian guest who came on
because they didn't like the fact that I was supporting Israel's right to defend itself
and in fact said it had a moral duty to defend itself.
So just because I'm now criticizing the Israeli government, let's not pretend that somehow I'm changing side.
I was never on anybody's side.
No. I try and be an objection.
When I heard that recorded just now, that interview,
you said to him specifically, no one needs to persuade me about Gaza.
So I think that when you see, okay, Mr. Morgan, let me answer.
When you see videos and when you see pictures, which I'm sure you get a mass of them, okay?
You have to remember those videos and pictures don't come from the moon, right?
They are coming from people who take videos there.
Everyone has mobile phones, smartphones.
So obviously, some of those videos could be reflected to one side.
I suggest, I really do suggest, you see some of the videos of the horrors that happened on October 7th.
I saw them. I saw them.
I saw them.
I saw them.
I saw them.
I saw them.
You saw the 40-minute video?
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Well, if you saw that, if you did saw that, and let me just tell you that, that is just a part.
It's just a part of what we could have shown because the majority was horrible.
If you saw that, you can't stay calm in yourself and relax
about what Israel and the Jewish nation have to endure
for the last 75 years.
We have women that are being slaughtered and raped in the most brutal way.
I'm as the Minister for Social Equality and the advancement of women
with I just heard the person that you interviewed mocking about it
and laughing about it.
Can tell you that the testimony he was laughing and mocking.
You asked him, you asked him why do you laugh about that.
You must have mischaracterize it.
The point he was making, and he's an extremely courageous doctor
who risked his own life several times now to go and work in hospitals in Gaza as the bombs are dropping.
So I won't have you attacking him on a personal level.
I wish you would have told you that Israel has suggested more than 100 incubators to the Shifa hospitals
and to the authorities of Hamas and they refused it.
I wish he would have told you that many hospitals, Mr. Morgan, one second.
I wish he would have told you that many hospitals underground have facilities of 10.
I wish you would have told you that schools and places of humanitarian aid, which, by the way, we, the country that have
massacred in her holiday, has been given over 70,000 aid trucks. Do you hear that?
You know what? I'm sorry. He's talking about a hospital. Let me respond. What country does that?
A country that has a woman being chopped off into pieces and babies being chopped off into pieces,
men beheaded, elderly people are being kidnapped. Do you know what we had to watch?
He's talking about what the Guardsons are being through,
but what about the Jewish nation that has been,
that buses have been blowing up for the last 70 years?
Yes, okay, let me respond.
As I said to you, for a long time in this war,
I defended Israel's right to defend itself.
But that right to self-defense has now been consumed
by senior members of your government, your colleagues,
Smodrich, Ben-Givir and others,
extreme right-wing members of that government
who are now talking in a very brazen and very open way
about what they really want to happen,
which is in their words, cleansing Gaza of all Palestinians.
That is ethnic cleansing.
That is a war crime.
So you may not say that, or maybe you will,
but your colleagues are saying that,
and they want to cleanse Gaza, as they put it, of all Palestinians.
That is not self-defense.
That is ethnic cleansing.
So you can play the moral argument against me
about October the 7th, but it's pointless.
I don't need to play the moral argument.
Well, let me explain.
Let me explain.
I have said repeatedly, but if I may finish
my sentence, I have for 20 months.
I hear you in delay.
Can I finish my sentence?
I hear you on delay.
Okay.
But don't get angry.
I hear you on delay.
You're the one getting angry.
I'm trying to get a word in.
I'm not.
Let me finish my sentence, if I may.
For 20 months, as anyone who's watched my show
will tell you.
And I suspect you haven't watched it much
or you wouldn't be questioned.
what I feel about October the 7th.
To me, it was one of the most heinous terror attacks
of modern times, an absolutely despicable assault
on predominantly innocent women, children,
grandmothers, grandfathers,
in the most repulsive, horrific, atrocious manner.
And Hamas, to me, are a disgusting terrorist organization
who lost any right to govern for another second in Gaza
the moment they perpetrated that act of pure evil.
However, and it's an important, however, what the Israeli government has been doing in the last few months in Gaza has now to even its closest allies become something they cannot defend.
And you know this. When you do a three-month blockade of food, you boast, you all boast about how much age you're giving them.
You blocked most aid and food for three months to an already starving, impoverished people who have been rained with bombs.
And I need to remember to comment about all of them.
That is actually not a right thing to do.
That's a lie.
It's a lie.
It's a lie.
It's a lie.
It's a lie.
And if you let me comment, you say so much accusations.
You have to let me comment about some of them.
So there was no blockade.
First of all, let's start with the Smotridge.
Okay.
Wait, you said a lot of things.
I want to comment about all of them.
If you let me, I would be more than happy.
Okay.
First of all, let's start about Smotlitz and Benvi, what you said.
Now, Mr. Morgan, I don't need to explain to you who I have been watching his show.
and for many, many, and been watching your professional career for many years, by the way.
And do have evaluation for everything that you say and for what you believe in, which I think,
I really think you are being misled.
That is why I came here on this show, not because I think anything else.
Now, I would be really happy if you let me finish some of the points I want to tell you.
First of all, regarding Smotich and Bankville, you have to know with all of your profession
that there is two kinds of politicians.
One, like you interviewed, for instance,
Nafthali Bennett, an interview I did watch,
who by accident forgot to mention
that he launched a party just a month ago
and forgot to tell you that he signed so many declarations
before he became a prime minister
and didn't held up to any of them.
And he forgot to tell you a lot of things,
but in actual fact, deceived his own people.
And just like the rest of them that you interviewed,
Olmer and Barack and all those prime ministers,
The one thing in common that they all have
is the fact that the public doesn't vote for them anymore,
so they're very bitter.
Now, regarding Smotrich and Banville, you have to remember,
when you say in Smotrich and Bankville, you're talking about,
and I don't know what they said,
but I'm referring to what you said.
I'm, you know, trusting your words.
You're talking, obviously, about the Trump's plan.
Now, this is not Smortridge or Banville's plan.
No, I'm not talking about Trump's plan.
The most...
Okay, so I don't know.
I don't know anything regarding to them wanting.
They want to kill Palestinians in Gaza?
Their words, cleanse Gaza of all the Palestinians.
So when you say cleanse, I can tell you that they refer to the Trump's plan.
And when we're talking about Trump's plan, I have to tell you that, first of all, Donald J. Trump, which is what I consider,
the best thing that God could have given us for a new middle age.
His collaboration with Prime Minister Netanyahu is really what we could all wish for in order to make a new Middle East.
But I can tell you that we are not taking anything off the table in order to protect our civilians and our children of Israel.
And if we have to look at Trump's plan, which for me, as I think, is thinking outside of the box.
And if we have to consider other things, like we have to consider other things, like we have to.
have examined over the decades, we will. But I don't see it as ethnic cleansing, let alone.
So would you like, let me ask you then, would you? Let me ask you, would you like to cleanse Gaza
of all the Palestinians? Listen, I don't use the terminology of you and your colleagues. That is not
my terminology. Well, there's a terminology of your colleague. It's not my terminology, just like the
settlements that you mentioned with the person in interview before me. To be clear, to be clear,
It's the terminology of your own cabinet colleague.
It's Smodrich, your finance minister.
It's your colleague.
Not mine or my colleagues.
It's the language used by your finance minister
only two weeks ago.
I can tell you, for the first time ever,
we have a very right-wing government, as you can see.
Our views are very transparent
and everything that is held in the cabinet
and not in the cabinet, but in the government,
is being sheared outside.
No one is hiding anything.
Now, Smotlitz and Banvir are not a part of my party,
but they are a part of this government.
And I'm telling you, although I'm not representing them,
that they are talking about the Trump's plan,
and we are considering it,
just like we consider any other plan
in order to protect our civilians.
Now, I want to say another thing about that.
Listen, I don't know, I heard your interviews,
and I know you talk about Smotlich
and his things that he said,
but I want to say something about Betzal Smolthewtich,
although I have not.
nothing to do with his party. He's a part of my government, not from my party. I don't know
of that, but Smottlidge went to more funerals this year than you went in your entire life,
okay? He's his entire family. How do you know that? And his entire, and his, wait one second,
wait one second. He's no idea how many funerals I'd been to. And his entire friends,
because I tell you, he went to hundreds and hundreds of funerals from his own community.
His heart was broken. We are wounded. Our ministers are wounded from the sights we saw. I wanted
to tell you before and you stopped me.
As the Minister for Social Equality and the advancement
of women, what I saw that women
have endured, your eyes and your
mind could never comprehend.
The fact is that we have children in Gaza
today that the interview before was talking
about, that are being raised on mind
conf. They are being raised of killing Jews
from the second they are born.
This is what they say. And you know what? If you don't
believe me, you can talk with the
hostages that came back from captivity.
And what are you telling?
What would you do with them?
The Palestinians?
With who?
The Palestinians.
What would you do with them?
Well, first of all, this is not an issue now with the Palestinians.
This is not an issue with the terror regime of Hamas.
In my idea, in my idea, in my idea, in my idea, Hamas is all...
What would you do with it?
I don't know.
Would you like to accept them or we eliminate the terror of Hamas?
Would England accept them?
Well, let me read you.
Let me remind you of some of the things that you've said yourself, all right?
During an October 24-24 rally in support of...
Jewish settlements in Gaza. You said there should be another Nakhba, referring to the 1948
Palestinian displacement of hundreds of thousands of people. You also said, I'm personally proud
of the ruins of Gaza and that every baby, even 80 years from now, will tell their grandchildren
what the Jews did. That was in February, you said this. You want explicit violence against
Hamas and Palestinians. In February 2024...
Because Hamas, absolutely.
Absolutely.
We want to eliminate every terrorist of Hamas.
Let me tell you that.
Hang, I'm finished yet.
I haven't finished.
Sorry, I haven't finished.
I haven't finished.
In December 2020,
23, you said, I don't care about Gaza.
I literally don't care at all.
I mean, and I could go on reading you stuff you've had.
So my point is, you say that Smodrich and Bengavir,
they're the right wingers.
It's sounding pretty right wing yourself.
I'm a right winger as well.
I'm a right winger as well.
Right.
Absolutely.
Would you say you're an extremist?
That doesn't mean I take any pleasure, any pleasure of an innocent Arab man or woman or child in Gaza suffering.
But the fact is that you, for some reason, refuse to acknowledge is that Hamas is using them as human shields all the time.
I've never denied that.
You tell me, I want to ask you, Mr. Morgan, you think.
I know what Hamas do.
I wanted to ask you something.
You care very much about the Gazans, right?
I want to ask you something, you know.
I care about Israelis too.
the horrifying Holocaust.
Okay, thank you.
I appreciate that.
When we had the horrifying Holocaust,
do you know that we had such a thing
called the righteous among the nations?
Those were Christian people
who risked their own lives
in order to save Jews.
Now, I'm asking you, Mr. Morgan,
I'm still waiting for one dozen person,
one out of two million,
to come out and say,
this is where the hostages are,
this is where they hide,
or one of them to come and say,
this is where the terrorism are.
This is where they hide all of their weapons and their rockets and all of the horrible tunnels where their abuse are hostages.
Not even one.
Now, even though, even though I said that, I can tell you that right now, the IDF, which I tell you, you cannot agree, that's okay.
But I tell you, IDF is the most moral army in the world.
I repeat, it's the most moral army in the world.
He's not shooting.
One second.
One more sentence, Mr. Morgan, please.
Is not shooting a population.
is not shooting an innocent population.
But you tell me, what do we need to do
when Hamas terrorists are hiding behind human people,
are hiding behind schools, underground of hospitals?
What do we need to do?
You know the first thing you could do?
You could lift the ban
that the Israeli government has put on international journalists
going into Gaza so that all the claims that you make,
which always blame Hamas for absolutely everything,
could be verified by independent Germans.
Why don't you do that? Why for 20 months have you banned international media from going into Gaza?
An unprecedented ban for any modern warfare. Why have you done this?
Well, I want to tell you that, first of all, you have to understand something.
The IDF army is not trained to shoot in bursts. They are trained to shoot through sites in a single shot mode.
That means they are not shooting like in the movies like you think,
It's like going to do with the media being banned.
We can, I will tell you, I will tell you right now.
So if you'll just let me finish.
So you would agree with me that if the IDF would have shot in birth,
Gaza would have been a parking lot within 12 hours.
And that would have been much more dangerous to the, to the, no, it's not.
You've destroyed 70% of Gaza already.
There are humanitarian carders for the gas.
Gaza is a parking lot.
With all due respect, Minister, you have reduced.
Two-thirds of Gaza to a parking lot.
Why are you pretending otherwise?
Mr. Morgan.
No, I'm not pretending.
I don't need to pretend.
I'm saying the reality like it is.
You think that's funny?
Of course, it's funny.
It's funny when you think that I'm pretending.
I'm sitting here in front of you.
I don't have to, right?
I can live my life and don't conduct with you.
But I am sitting here because I know I'm telling the truth.
I have no reason to lie.
Now, regarding to the journalist,
the IDF has declared the Gaza Strip
as a very dangerous combat zone.
And there is a risk not just for the journalists to be harmed by the terrorists or by the IDF trying to eliminate the terrorists that are hiding behind civilians, but also there is a risk for journalists to be kidnapped.
But I have to ask, Mr. Morgan, you are so worried about journalists that will eventually go into Gaza.
Don't worry about that.
But what about worrying a little bit that maybe the Red Cross would go in to visit our hostages, that are drinking sewage water, that are sitting in cages of water, that are sitting in cages of war?
one meter that are being abused,
beaten up, that haven't been eaten.
If I may get a wording.
No one knows what is going on with them.
If I may get a wording.
Not like the Red Cross that is coming into our prisons.
If I may respond.
And visiting murderers.
Okay.
Arab murderers.
If I may, if I may respond, I agree the hostages should be released.
It is disgusting.
They were taken in the first place.
It remains disgusting.
It is horrific that Hamas holds the families of these hostages
through this unbelievably unbearable 20 months of hell.
I hope that clarifies my position of hostages.
But you talk about the IDF being the most moral army in the world.
On Friday, the Israeli publication, Harats,
published a story claiming the IDF are deliberately firing at Palestinians
at aid distribution centres.
Soldiers from the IDF told the publication
that commanders ordered troops to shoot at crowds
to drive them away or disperse them,
even though it was clear they posed no threat.
More than 400, maybe 500 people have been killed apparently in this manner.
Benjamin Netanyahu, of course, immediately said all of this was malicious faltered, designed to defame the military.
And the Israeli military has launched an investigation into possible war crimes following the report.
But you see, this is the problem.
And this is why the fact there's no media there is so important.
It's not down to the IDF to decide whether journalists are at risk.
It's down to the journalists and their organizations.
And if the journalists were there, they could verify exactly who is shooting who in the food lines.
Because you just say, as you always do, everything is being done.
Every bad act in Gaza is being done by Hamas.
And everybody else says, no, actually, the IDF are doing a lot of bad things too.
But the only way to really get to the bottom of this is let the journalist see.
With everybody else?
Pretty much everybody else.
Pretty much everybody else.
The only journalist allowed to operate.
of whom you've killed nearly 200, the Palestinian journalists.
They, of course, are the only journalists that can actually get any reports out
because they're the anyone's allowed in because they're already there.
You have the United Nations, you have allies like the UK, like France,
you've got America now who wants to bring this to an end.
Pretty much everybody around you.
And here's the irony for this.
When Israel attacked Iran, I thought that was a justified thing to do
to neutralize Iran's nuclear capability.
I was glad that Israel finally did that action.
I was glad that Donald Trump joined in
and specifically targeted the nuclear capacity
that Iran has.
I think it would have been a disaster for the world
if they were allowed to develop nuclear weapons.
But the way you went about taking on Iran,
the way you went about taking on Hezbollah,
there's no relation to what you've done in Gaza.
You're just obliterating Gaza,
and you don't really care how many civilians
are dying in the process.
You say you do, but you don't really.
You can stop saying that.
Just the fact that you...
Listen, Mr. Morgan,
because if you repeat something again and again and again,
it won't make it true.
That we don't want to kill innocent civilians in Gaza, period.
But I'm telling you again and again
that once they hide under human population
and we have to eliminate terrorists,
we have to do what we have to do.
And I don't remember you asking the allies
that you were talking about in World War II
if they were hiding,
about how many
Nazi, how many children
died when we eliminated
the Nazis? I don't remember that.
You know what? I don't remember in any
mid-war where you count numbers,
but you obviously emphasize on that
on what's going on in Gaza.
Now, the difference, one second, the difference
between Gaza, and Iran and
Hezbollah, wait, you asked such a long question.
You can't let me answer in one minute.
How many Hamas have been killed? The difference,
I will answer, let me finish.
The difference between Iran
and Hezbollah is the fact
is that Gaza is the most crowded population
that we need to deal with.
And 2 million people in the Gaza Strip
that are so crowded.
And the terrorists are hiding in between.
You know, I can tell you, Mr. Morgan,
I don't think we'll eliminate.
I don't think we'll eliminate every Hamas person.
Because we didn't eliminate every Nazi person, right?
How many Hamas have you killed?
I'm not going to go into specifics with you.
Do you know?
I'm going to tell you as a government member.
I'm not going to. We'll end this war.
We'll end this war. And you'll know everything.
You'll be able to go in. You'll be able to heal all the numbers.
If you don't know how many you've killed, how many are you killed?
Because I can, first of all, I know, and I'm choosing as a government member to not tell you that.
Because I know that once you get some knowledge, you turn it.
Of course I do.
I'm a government member.
But I can tell you, what do you mean?
How many terrorists do we kill?
Yes.
I can tell you that we have more.
We have many more.
And this is what, and this is what, the reason, I will not tell you, I will not tell you.
You know, but you won't tell me.
But the reason.
Yes, exactly.
How many civilians have you killed?
The reason, the reason, the reason.
How many civilians are you killed?
Trying to eliminate us that.
You can ask it again.
I will not answer.
How many civilians have you killed?
By the way.
Do you know how many civilians are killed?
I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know.
So you do know how many terrorists you killed.
You've no idea how many civilians you killed.
Yes, because we have, the differences, the differences that we have.
that we have a list of terrorists that we want to eliminate.
We don't aim to kill innocent people in order.
We don't have a list of them.
But I can tell you, I can assure you that the IDF is trying to avoid as much as many innocent casualties as possible.
And therefore, and therefore, one second, let me finish.
That is so rude of you.
That is rude of you to not let me finish, Mr. Morgan.
Let me finish one sentence.
I can tell you that the IDF, every time it needs to eliminate a terrorist,
it tells the population to go to this humanitarian corridor
or to this humanitarian corridor.
They alert them in advance, unlike the terrorists
who shoot at us and innocent population,
murder children and women and elderly and men
and everything in their power they can.
By the way, they eliminate many, many foreigners,
dozens of foreign nationalities on October 7.
What on earth did they did to them?
So eventually, I just want to tell you
that the IDF has no, no,
willing whatsoever to shoot at an innocent population
when they want, in actual fact,
to save the gossens from the real occupations
of the Hamas terrorism, who abuses them?
And I wonder if you see those videos
that the Hamas people are,
that I'm sorry, that the gauzens are freeing
in the WhatsApp and in the social medias,
when they're saying Hamas won't let us out.
Hamas won't let us take the humanitarian aid.
Hamas is killing us if we're just daring to talk.
And if you think that Hamas is a legitimate ruling, then I don't know what to say.
But if you don't, and I think you don't, I think you don't,
then you should be thanking us like the rest of the world for freeing the Gazans from the Hamas ruling,
which is a Nazi terror of our days.
I started this interview by saying Hamas should not obviously be in charge anymore.
But I also think the IDF should stop what they're doing in Gaza now,
because too many innocent people are being killed.
And I'm afraid I don't believe what the IDF or the Israeli government is now saying
about what's happening in Gaza.
because you won't let the media in to verify it.
And in my experience, there's a long history of being a journalist
when people stop journalists going into an area like Gaza during a war
because they don't want people to see what they're doing there.
They've got something to hide.
Anyway, I've got to leave it there.
My Goland, thank you very much indeed for joining me.
I appreciate it.
Well, let me turn to my panel now.
We've been waiting very patiently throughout all this.
Connor Richard Kemp, former commander of the British Army in Afghanistan,
trustee of the UK Friends of Association for the Wellbeing of Israel's soldiers,
with Jahat Ali, the host of the Democracy-ish podcast.
and the pro-Israeli activist with Prejiu, Shabos Kestanbaum.
Well, welcome to all of you.
Sorry for keeping you waiting there.
Let me start with you with Jahat.
I mean, you were listening there to that interview
with the Israeli government minister.
Your thoughts?
I don't have to say anything after you did a masterful job
of interviewing her and the world listening to her unhinged alunacy
and genocidal comments.
I mean, I rest my case, Pierce.
That is the Minister of Social Equality in Israel.
with ministers of social equality, who needs ministers of genocide?
I mean, that woman was completely racist and unhinged.
And speaking about, you know, the quotes of her colleagues, the Israeli leaders right now,
I brought some receipts for you, Pierce.
This is what Smotrich has actually said, the finance minister of Israel, quote,
we are conquering, cleansing, and remaining in Gaza until Hamas is destroyed, end quote.
Another quote by Smotrich.
We are finally going to occupy the Gaza Strip.
We will stop being afraid of the word occupation.
Another quote from Smotrich.
Within a few months, Gaza will be totally destroyed.
The Gaza and citizens will be concentrated in the South.
They will be totally despairing, understanding that there's no hope and nothing to look for in Gaza.
This is what the president of Israel said.
There are no innocent civilians in Gaza.
This is what the deputy speaker of Israel's parliament said.
Israel has, quote, one common goal, erasing the Gaza strip from the face of the earth.
For the past year and a half, Pierce, I've been on your show.
And then the past year and a half, you have asked me, do I'm not?
I condemn the violence in my Hamas.
What did I say, Pierce?
Yes, I do, because I'm against violent extremism,
whether it's a terrorist group or whether it's state-sanctioned terrorism.
But what we've seen in the past year and a half,
especially that report three days ago,
is the IDF has been commanded to shoot at unarmed civilians,
Palestinians who are at a food distribution site.
Pierce, any person with any morality, any decency,
who believes in God like I do,
how can they support the IDF shooting
Palestinian civilians who are trying to get humanitarian aid.
You know how many Palestinians have been killed in the quote-killed,
killing field? That's an idea of soldiers, or not mine?
570 Palestinians unarmed trying to get food.
Why is that food there through humanitarian aid?
Because Israel, like you mentioned, has done a blockade
because Israel occupies Gaza.
The occupation is immoral.
The settlements are immoral.
We haven't even talked about the West Bank peers.
I know you've been there.
I've been there, the terrorism that has been.
unleashed against... I think the expansion of settlements on the West Bank is absolutely appalling.
It's disgusting. It's illegal. It's illegal and it shouldn't be happening.
Colonel Kemp, let me bring you in here. You've just been over there.
You know, you're very supportive of Israel's government and the IDF on what they're doing.
But surely with all your military experience,
even you must be looking at what's happening now in Gaza and thinking this has got to come to an end.
I think everyone's thinking it's got to come to an end.
Certainly the Israelis are thinking it's got to come to.
to an end. They've been fighting a vicious, brutal terrorist organization for 20 months that is
embedded completely in the civilian population. They've been doing their very best, and I've witnessed
it myself inside Gaza with the IDF. They've been doing their very best to minimize the deaths
of innocent civilians. And I think they've succeeded to a large extent in that. I don't know what
the latest figure is from Hamas, but it's something around 50, 60,000 or thereabouts. That
That's their estimate. And of course, we can't rely on that in any way, but we've got nothing else to go on.
The IDF don't issue estimates of their civilians that they think they might have killed,
but they have issued estimates of the number of Hamas terrorists that they think they've killed,
obviously not exact. And it's something around about 25 to 30,000.
Why don't they count the civilians?
How do you do that?
How do they count the terrorists?
Because they're targeting the terrorists.
They know who they're targeting, and they know when they believe they believe they've killed them.
You can't count every single person that's coming under attack.
And the reality is that if those figures are correct, and let's assume for a moment they are,
particularly I don't trust the Hamas figures, but let's assume they're correct.
That means that it's approximately one civilian killed for every competent killed inside Gaza in the last 20 months,
which is terrible. It's a really terrible statistic.
But if you compare it to Afghanistan, the Americans in their allies estimate they killed about five civilians for every competent in Afghanistan and three in Iraq.
And the United Nations estimate that in combat, in urban combat since the Second World War, about nine civilians have died for every competent.
So, you know, this is not easy. Hamas is doing their level best to make Israel kill as many of their own civilians as possible to achieve exactly what they have achieved, which is a vilification.
So my argument would be back to you, Colonel Kevin.
Israel is not achieving its goals.
It's not got rid of Hamas, that's clear.
It's not got the hostages released.
In fact, they've only been released during diplomatic phases of this 20-month war.
They're now talking openly through people like Smoddrich,
the finance minister of ethnically cleansing,
the entire Gaza Strip of all Palestinians,
which is a war crime if they try and do that.
They try and kick them all out.
So none of the goals, which they set out,
to achieve have been achieved
and don't look like anything near being
achieved. And at the same time, he got 70%
of Gaza has been destroyed.
You've got this moving population
being moved around and wherever they
moved to, they then get bombed
again. You've got thousands of them
queuing up desperately for food, despite
Israelis claiming
no one there's hungry. Well, what are they
stampeding each other for to get
fragments of food if that's not the case?
And then he got this Harat's report, which of course
Netanyahu is emphatically
denied, and the Harat's report, coming from IDF soldiers they source, saying that a lot of the
people dying in the shooting incidents, in the food lines, are being shot dead by Israelis.
So you're pulling people, this is true, and it's an Israeli publication, if this is true,
you can laugh, Ken, but why would you laugh?
I laugh because it's fiction.
It's a killing film. That was a quote.
It's a killing point.
The Herat's report, as far as I can see, deliberately distorted what they were told.
In the Hebrew version, the soldiers apparently said we were told to shoot in the direction of Hamas, of civilians who were rioting.
No, that's not true.
No, I've read that.
It's simply not true.
That's a conspiracy theory, honestly.
It is a conspiracy theory because they talked about the killing fields.
They talked about lots of people.
dying. 570 people dying. I read the article
and I don't believe it's true. I've been, as I said before, I've been inside
Gaza with the IDF before. I've seen the extraordinary measures they take to
minimize the... Even the report you gave, Colonel Kemp, even the report you did
had gunfire in the background at the end. Let's take a look.
Many of the people behind me here have told me it's the first time
they've ever received free aid. So don't believe the propaganda that's been
churned out by Hamas and amplified by too much of an international and national media.
It was almost like a comedy sketch if it wasn't so serious.
There you are saying, don't believe any of the stories of the Israeli shooting at people here,
and next year is a machine gun going off.
Yeah, you may find machine guns funny, but those of us who have...
I don't find it funny, but it flew in the face of what you literally was saying on camera.
You said it was a comedy sketch.
That machine gun fire...
I said it would be funny if it had been a comedy sketch,
but it was actually serious.
I was in that base, in that aid distribution site,
for around about two to three hours.
In that time, I heard a huge number of explosions,
gunfire, etc., etc., etc.,
because this is in a war zone.
And you get machine gunfire,
and you get explosions in the war zone.
That machine gun fire,
if you looked at that video clip carefully,
you would see that not one single garson flinched
when that fire was heard
because it was no one.
near the aid distribution site. It was distant fire, constantly going on. But you can, you know,
you can try and turn that into the idea that it's the IDF. As many people have on social media,
tried to say this is the IDF shooting civilians. Why would the IDF want to shoot at civilians
at a humanitarian aid site that they support, that they help to set up and that they want to work?
They wouldn't. It would make no sense whatsoever. The people that are doing the shooting are Hamas.
I spoke to many Garland's civilians, at least 50 in that.
Why don't the journalists get in then?
Let the journalists in and that can be verified.
They have told me, why don't I let the journalists?
It's got nothing to do with it.
No, why doesn't Israel let the journalists in then?
It's shameful.
You'll have to ask Israel that.
We all know why they're not letting them in, Colonel, Kemp.
It's because they don't want the world to see what's happening.
Let me bring in Shabos.
Let me bring in Shabos.
The first reason, you've asked me a question, let me answer it.
The first reason is because there's a very big danger
if journalists went in on their own of getting kidnapped.
That, okay, you say...
That's the risk that they should be prepared to take themselves.
And Israel has killed journalists.
You say that, but then Western journalists kidnapped inside guards
and become another problem.
So that's why you have a 20-month media ban.
Come on.
And the second reason, I don't know this for sure.
I'm surmising.
But the second reason, if I was in that position,
I would be very hesitant to let journalists in
because I've seen how many journalists distort what they see from the West,
from Britain, from the United States.
Of course.
Well, how convenient.
How convenient.
They could be guaranteed.
Don't let the journalists in.
Only let the IDF tell the story.
How very convenient.
Let me bring in Shabos.
You'd be ready very patiently.
We haven't got as long as we would normally have because we ran over with the minister.
But Shabos, I mean, your response to this.
I would start by saying this.
Pierce, you know how many Jews are living in Gaza?
It's zero.
You know how many Jews are living in Ramallah?
It's zero.
You know how many Jews are living in Nablus?
It's zero.
how many Jews are living in Janine, it's zero. After Egypt and half a dozen other Arab Muslim countries
attacked Israel in 1967, Israel was able to conquer an area called the Sinai Peninsula that is
two times as large as Israel. And in 1979, they gave it back to Egypt unilaterally and
unconditionally. In 2005, Israel withdrew from the Gaza's trip. They expelled every last living and
dead Jew from Gaza all in the name of peace. The argument that Israel is experiencing or is trying
to have an expansionist greater state of Israel
is not corroborated by the facts or reality.
And all I can say is thank God
that there was no Pierce Morgan uncensored
during World War II
because what you would do
during the bombing of Dresden,
during the Battle of Berlin,
is you would have German commentators
talking about the civilian death toll
and how terrible it is that the...
Why was the Geneva Convention set up?
The Geneva Convention was set up specifically
in order to derive the world
of having Nazism and fascism in the future.
Actually, it was designed specifically...
specifically to avoid some of the things that we saw in World War II.
That was why it was set up.
Correct.
And the Geneva Convention made it clear that, unfortunately, war in the 20th and 21st century is a necessary evil.
It is terrible to have civilians being killed.
It is terrible when you have a civilian death toll.
But unfortunately, that is a consequence of every war ever fought in modern warfare.
I mean, do you know how many German civilians were killed during World War II?
It was two to three million.
You know how many Austro-Hungarians were killed during World War I?
It was anywhere from 500,000 to 1 million.
But if we judge the virtue of this war...
We're not in a world war.
We're in a war between the most powerful military in the Middle East
and a 2 million strong,
with half of those being under 18 population of the Gaza Strip,
which has been under occupation now for decades.
That's what we're talking about.
It's not a world war.
We're not talking about a world war.
We're talking about the most sophisticated military in the Middle East,
relentlessly bombarding for 20 months,
a small area of...
of land, the Gaza Strip, with a million people under 18.
That's what we're talking about.
Now, I agree Hamas had to be got rid of, but it hasn't happened.
And at some point, there has to be an acknowledgement that this mission has failed.
And all what's happened is Gaza has been flattened, more and more innocent people are being
killed, none of the mission goals are being achieved.
And now we've got members of the government openly saying, actually what we want to do
is kick all the Palestinians out, openly saying it.
So this mission has changed from self-defense to actually ethnic cleansing.
That's my problem with it.
These are democratic politicians who are not controlling the war.
Have you heard the Prime Minister?
Have you heard members of the war cabinet?
Have you heard them talking about ethnic cleansing in the garden population?
People like Fonautry and Ben-Vos-Gabir are not involved in the decision.
He's the equivalent of the chance of the executive.
for goodness sake.
He's not involved. Come on, Colonel Kemp.
Take your blinkers off, man.
You don't think Smodrich is involved in anything that's happening.
What a ludicrous statement.
I'm sorry.
I'm great respect to you and your military career,
but what a ridiculous statement, seriously.
And the other point that you made is that
Israel is not achieving subjective.
It is achieving subjective.
It's taken a very long time.
It's been terrible.
It's taken a long time.
It's a very complex war.
It's very difficult. They've destroyed huge elements of Hamas, I said before, maybe around 25 to 30,000 of them, which is not far off the number they started with. And also, they are having hostage release. You said they've been released only through diplomatic means. How did those diplomatic means come about? Through military pressure. That's how it happens.
And they need to continue. Final word. Final quote. What we're doing in Gaza now is a war of devastation, indiscriminate, limitless, cruel, and criminal killing of civilians.
We're not doing this due the loss of control in any specific sector,
not due to some disproportionate outbursts by some soldiers in one unit.
Rather, it's the result of government policy, knowingly, evilly, maliciously,
irresponsibly dictated.
Yes, Israel is committing war crimes.
And that's a quote from former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.
And I agree.
It is true.
And I interviewed him, and he said he wrote to me.
All right, I've got to leave it.
I'm sorry we didn't have more time for the debate.
We ran late with the minister who was running late herself,
but I appreciate you for your patience
and for the debate that we were able to have.
Thank you very much.
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