Pod Save America - Will Trump & Netanyahu Let Gaza Starve?

Episode Date: July 29, 2025

Donald Trump splits with Benjamin Netanyahu and acknowledges that Gaza is experiencing "real starvation"—but will he pressure Israel to end the war and allow more aid in? Lovett, Favreau, and Tommy ...react to the latest developments in Gaza, Trump's shifting and typically incoherent comments on the situation, and why it's time for Democrats to change their approach to Israel. Then, they dive into Trump's new story about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein and check in on that "free" plane he received from the Qatari government. Later, Tommy sits down with Israeli journalist Amir Tibon to discuss how the aid shortages in Gaza got so bad, and how Israel's far right influences Netanyahu.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast. Get tickets to CROOKED CON November 6-7 in Washington, D.C at crookedcon.com

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Starting point is 00:01:16 Steve Bannon. We're in this job because of over-promising and under-performing governor Tim Walz. These are bad guys though. These are bad guys,. These are bad guys. But they exist and we could deny they exist. Not only they exist, they persist. Anthony Scaramucci.
Starting point is 00:01:31 When he goes off on you on Truth Social with the nonsense name calling, and then you see him like a week later or a day later in California, he acts like it didn't happen, right? Of course. Scott Galloway. It's not that our government or elected representatives in DC are whores.
Starting point is 00:01:46 It's that they're such cheap whores. Frank Lutz. You've taken more s*** than anyone. Ezra Klein. I would like to see a liberalism that isn't just angry about a bunch of things that I'm just able to do as I am, but is also optimistic about what is possible. Listen to This Is Gavin Newsom on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
Starting point is 00:02:04 or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to Pod Save America, I'm Jon Favreau. I'm Jon Lovett. Tommy Vitor. On today's show, stick around later for a big announcement about a live in-person event we'll be holding this fall. That's the teaser. We're also going to talk about Trump's new alliance with Epstein's convicted co-conspirator as a way to keep her from talking.
Starting point is 00:02:47 The new taxes we'll all be paying on stuff we buy from Europe and the one billion dollars we might end up paying for Trump's new luxury jet. Then you'll hear Tommy's interview with Haaretz columnist Amir T-Bone about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, why a deal to end the war has been so elusive, and Trump and Netanyahu's relationship. There were quite a few developments in Gaza over the weekend. So let's start there. If you've been following the story, you've probably seen that since the Israeli
Starting point is 00:03:13 government broke its ceasefire with Hamas in March and blocked all food or aid from entering the territory, Gaza has become hell on earth. Israel has now destroyed most Palestinian homes, buildings, schools, hospitals, mosques, churches, and farms. They've killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, mostly children, wounded hundreds of thousands more, and have displaced nearly two million Palestinians, almost the entire population.
Starting point is 00:03:38 In late May, Israel started distributing small amounts of food at four locations run by American contractors, but Israeli forces have shot more than a thousand people who've tried to get that food. And now the UN says that every single resident of Gaza is at risk of starvation. The World Food Program says a hundred thousand people are in dire need of treatment for malnutrition, which has claimed the lives of 48 people in July alone, 20 of them children. Israel has blamed the UN and Hamas for the hunger crisis.
Starting point is 00:04:08 Those senior Israeli military officials told the New York Times, there is no proof that Hamas has been systematically stealing UN food and supplies. On Monday, two of Israel's leading human rights organizations said for the first time that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. International pressure from some of Israel's closest allies
Starting point is 00:04:26 like the UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, and France, which chose to officially recognize Palestinian statehood last week, finally led Netanyahu to announce daily pauses in the fighting in three places so that Palestinians can get food, though even that small step doesn't seem to be doing too much.
Starting point is 00:04:43 And none of this has stopped Bibi from denying the reality of the atrocities he's committing. Here he is on Sunday. Israel is presented as though we are applying a campaign of starvation in Gaza. What a bold face lie. There is no policy of starvation in Gaza, and there is no starvation in Gaza.
Starting point is 00:05:09 We enable humanitarian aid throughout the duration of the war to enter Gaza, otherwise there would be no Gazans. And what is interdicted, the supply of humanitarian aid, is one force. Hamas. There is no starvation in Gaza, says Bibi. As for Israel's closest ally and largest source of military aid, us, the United States government, here's a sampling of how Donald Trump answered questions about Gaza during his golf trip to Scotland over the weekend.
Starting point is 00:05:39 Well, you know, we gave $60 million two weeks ago, and nobody even acknowledged it for food. And nobody said, gee, thank you very much. And it would be nice to have at least a thank you. Do have to take care of the humanitarian needs at the, on the, what they used to call the Gaza Strip. You don't hear that line too much anymore. You don't hear the Gaza Strip.
Starting point is 00:06:00 But we're going to be getting some good, strong food. We can save a lot of people. I mean, some of those kids are, that's real starvation stuff. I see it. And you can't fake that. Real starvation, but no thank you notes from any of the starving children. That was just... Who did he want a thank you from? Did some kid there have his number? Did he want Hamas to give him a call? Yeah, he wanted him to fire off a thank you note. Just, um... Maybe thank you for the bombs.
Starting point is 00:06:27 Those are far more expensive than the food. Thank you for the bombs, yeah. Maybe, you know, it's like JD Vans asking. They all want people to thank them. It's very weird. You know, Zelensky's gotta thank them. The kids in Gaza gotta thank them. Let's start with you guys' general reactions
Starting point is 00:06:39 to the developments in Gaza over the last week. And Tommy, maybe you can tell us what you think about the pause in military activity that Bibi announced. Yeah, I mean, I think just generally, I mean, you see these photos of these emaciated, literally starving to death or starved to death children. And it's just impossible.
Starting point is 00:06:57 It's the worst thing I've ever seen. It's impossible as a parent not to imagine that being your child and being incapable of protecting them. Yeah. You know, that's where my brain always goes. parent not to imagine that being your child and being incapable of protecting them. Yeah. You know, that's where my brain always goes. And what is so enraging is that this was not just predictable, it was predicted. Like taking aid distribution away from the UN, giving it to this brand new organization, the Gaza humanitarian foundation that just emerged out of nowhere
Starting point is 00:07:19 recently was destined to fail catastrophically and every expert said as much. One example why you mentioned how the GHF has four aid distribution points, the UN had 400. And so what that does, this new system forces Gazans to make these long, dangerous walks or an active war zone to get food. There are all these instances of the IDF or contractors shooting them or drones going off, you
Starting point is 00:07:41 know, near these distribution points. Hundreds of people have been killed like six, seven hundred, eight hundred Gazans have been killed near these distribution points. Hundreds of people have been killed, like 600, 700, 800. Gazans have been killed near eight distribution points. There was a former GHF contractor who served in the US Special Forces, did an interview with the BBC. He said, quote, he has never witnessed the level of brutality and use of indiscriminate and unnecessary
Starting point is 00:07:57 force against a civilian population, an unarmed, starving population. This was a guard for the GHF. And he said he fought ISIS and the Taliban. ISIS and the Taliban. And it's by the way, no longer anonymous that they can claim, oh, these are faker and honest. This person on the record, on camera describing this,
Starting point is 00:08:12 someone who was there, US sport, yeah, US special forces veteran also describes it as like amateurish, right? Like this is a thing that was just stood up. It just, like the processes are terrible. The individual treatment of people are terrible. So your questions about these, the humanitarian pauses that are happening,
Starting point is 00:08:27 the pauses in military activity, I mean, they're good, but it's like the definition of too little, too late. Because there's no on-off switch for a famine. Jeremy Kahn-Eindijk, the president of Refugees International has been sounding the alarm about this, how difficult it is to control a famine once it reaches a tipping point. And the tipping point is like you sort of see clusters
Starting point is 00:08:45 of deaths, that's how you know this is happening. And it will require a massive surge of aid, food, non-nutrition treatment, clean water, sanitation, healthcare, not just these bullshit PR air drops or a few pauses. And so I'm glad there is this like acute focus on the famine, but we need to also focus just as much on permanently ending the war.
Starting point is 00:09:03 Because as you mentioned, like the death toll before this famine has been catastrophic. Gaza Health Ministry says 55,000 other studies say closer to 80,000, 70% of structures destroyed. And so like the only way the living Israeli hostages are going to survive and get out alive is to permanently end the war. And it's going to take a massive diplomatic push to get there because Netanyahu is extending the war for political purposes. Yeah, look, Netanyahu blames Hamas for aid not reaching people.
Starting point is 00:09:34 And yet under international pressure, he can get more aid into Gaza. This happened repeatedly. The Times published this long and deeply reported story about Netanyahu's conduct before and during the war. And there's a scene that describes Netanyahu facing pressure from the right internally to not allow aid into Gaza and from the Biden administration at the time to allow aid into
Starting point is 00:09:58 Gaza. And he ultimately relented to the pressure from the Biden administration in that instance. He responds to pressure. How can it be that it is Hamas's fault or the UN's fault and not Israel's fault that aid is not getting to people who need it when under pressure that policy changes? It's happened multiple times. Yeah. The, um, the propaganda and the lies in the face of like what the entire rest of the world
Starting point is 00:10:24 is seeing and has been documented, it's just really, it like drove me insane over the weekend. The, you know, like the footage of all the UN trucks and it's like, they're just sitting around. I think APAC tweeted this and Israel's been talking about this. And then as soon as he announces the pause, you see pictures of the UN trucks just coming on in Taghaza. So it's like, is anyone gonna, you just lied to everyone and now you're just gonna
Starting point is 00:10:48 pretend that it was, you're not gonna even correct yourself or anything. They just don't care. The other, the other part of this too is if you only allow in a fraction of the aid that is required, it is not surprising that the people who will get that aid are the people with guns. It is not surprising that you have chaotic and dangerous scenes among people who are starving and desperate. And experts in this, former envoys to the region who work for Democrats and Republicans, people who have delivered aid to the region will say the answer is more aid. If you have enough aid, it can't be commoditized. If you have enough aid, if Palestinians are no longer
Starting point is 00:11:21 terrified that today's truck will be gone tomorrow, right? If people can trust that there will be enough food, then all of a sudden these distribution points by the UN become less chaotic. By the way, this new organization stood up by the Trump administration's allies, right? They are backing the IDF and doing these extremely controlled distribution points where they're shooting at people and they claim they're shooting in the air, but we lots of reports of hundreds, if not a thousand people dying because of it, to maintain control at these four points. When the UN is distributing aid at these hundreds of places, there are times where people are
Starting point is 00:11:58 overrunning. What do they do? They back off and let people take the food, right? They don't shoot people under desperate circumstances. Imagine, let's give a't shoot people under desperate circumstances. Imagine, let's give a crowd of people where it's like, you literally can't move. And the idea of sort of shooting in the air is
Starting point is 00:12:10 a warning shot to try to back people off, but you can't back off. Like there's massive crowds of people and people are desperate. And so like, but the other, the thing I know that people are probably going to be tweeting at us as they listen to this is Hamas could end the war right now.
Starting point is 00:12:23 I was just about to tell you about that. They're going to delete the hostages. And it's what I want to say to you is you can repeat that talking point or you can actually get them home because Hamas is a terrorist organization. They're not good actors. We should not trust them.
Starting point is 00:12:35 We should not expect them to act in this, you know act in a way that we would want them to, right? Like the hostages are their only leverage. They're the only hope of releasing the hostages is through a deal. And that deal has to include ending the war permanently. And that is what Netanyahu refuses to agree to. And that is, you can talk about it like Amir and I go through this, there's all this sequencing
Starting point is 00:12:58 and the phasing of hostage release, and Palestinians and Israeli prisons getting released. The big sticking points are Hamas wants a deal that permanently ends the war and Netanyahu won't do that because it will collapse his government and he will be out of power and he is facing corruption charges and he could go to jail, that's it.
Starting point is 00:13:14 The idea that if only everyone who is criticizing Israel would call on Hamas to release the hostages, suddenly Hamas would release the hostages and all would be well. It is fucking absurd that we're still doing this in July of 2025, as this war has dragged on, talking about what Hamas can or cannot do. You know what?
Starting point is 00:13:33 We're not funding Hamas's military. Hamas isn't accepting diplomatic pressure, international pressure. The whole point, Bibi stated goal when they started the blockade was to put pressure, the blockade of food into Gaza was to put pressure on Hamas. Since that time, they've recovered one hostage, an Israeli-American hostage, and that was like a side deal
Starting point is 00:13:53 with the United States, that Israel was... So it was, by Netanyahu's own, like, his own stated goals, it's been a fucking failure to pressure Hamas to release the hostages. And what it's done instead is just starved a bunch of people and led to like a staggering loss of life. Hamas, Hamas started this war. Hamas has shown incredible disregard for the lives of the people it claims to represent. It is a monstrous organization. We should demand better of Israel and that it, yes, Hamas does not, Hamas could save Palestinian lives right now. So can Israel.
Starting point is 00:14:34 We hold Israel to a higher standard because we, it is an ally of ours who we fund, who we ostensibly believe has a moral and ethical compass that at some point in its history claim to believe in. So the idea that like, oh, well, you know, it's Hamas's fault. Okay, sure. I agree. Hamas is responsible ultimately for the ongoing suffering of the Palestinian people because they hold the hostages because they committed an act of terrorism, that monstrous war crime.
Starting point is 00:15:04 Fine. Okay. So what? So Palestinians have to die? an act of terrorism, that monstrous war crime. Fine. Okay. So what? So Palestinians have to die? That's the answer? Israel can, you mean, Israel can do better? So can we, so can the United States.
Starting point is 00:15:15 We have the capacity to go and do something about this. So does Europe, so does, I mean, it's just- Donald Trump could end this war with one called Netanyahu. Donald Trump has so much political capital in Israel after the Iran strikes, Netanyahu needs him. Netanyahu. Donald Trump has so much political capital in Israel after the Iran strikes. Netanyahu needs him. Netanyahu wants his political backing. He also wants US military and intelligence support.
Starting point is 00:15:31 But instead of doing that, instead of getting the Nobel Peace Prize that he wants, Trump has made things exponentially worse by announcing a few months back a plan to ethnically cleanse the entire Gaza Strip and turn it into a resort town. And what that did in practice was make it so much harder to get a deal done to end the war because the far right in Israel was like, that's on the table. Ethnic cleansing on us on the table, controlling Gaza fully permanently is on the table. We want that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:56 You have that heritage minister over the weekend last week. He said, all Gaza will be Jewish. The government is pushing for Gaza being wiped out. Thank God we are wiping out this evil. And I realized, you know, Netanyahu then later said, Oh, will be Jewish. The government is pushing for Gaza being wiped out. Thank God we are wiping out this evil. And I realized, you know, Netanyahu then later said, oh, he doesn't speak for the government. Well, it's like, well, he's one of your fucking ministers. He's also the same guy that said they should consider
Starting point is 00:16:14 using nuclear weapons in the Gaza Strip and then was what, suspended briefly and then reinstated. And now he's being kind of, it took him hours for Netanyahu to ultimately come around to denouncing it. And then anyway. But Israel Katz, the defense minister, announced a plan to like focus everybody
Starting point is 00:16:34 into one city in Gaza and then push them all out. It's ethnic cleansing. Yeah, and they're like advertising their ethnic cleansing. But to your point about Trump, like what do you make of his shifting and typically incoherent comments just the last few days?
Starting point is 00:16:49 He did the thank you thing, and then it seems like he had a bunch of meetings with European leaders, and then we got, we're recording this Monday, then we got his comments today, which was like, oh yeah, the starvation is bad, and those kids look really hungry, and we gotta do something.
Starting point is 00:17:01 I don't know what to make of it. Like he's just all over the place. He's seeing it on television, and he knows they're bad. And he is a creature of television and he watched- Cable news viewer, Trump again. He knows, he remembers- Nation's biggest television fan. The feed the children ads from the 80s and 90s
Starting point is 00:17:17 that were all over television are seared in his memory. He knows people don't like it. He knows it's wrong. And he does wanna be responsible for it. He also said, we're gonna set up food centers where people can walk in and no boundaries. We're not gonna have fences. They see the food, it's all there,
Starting point is 00:17:31 but nobody's at it because they have fences set up that nobody can get in. It's crazy what's going on over there. It's so crazy. Just like a dispassionate observer. It's somebody who was kind of paying attention to a briefing about the facts that we were, like it's like that is the transmuted version
Starting point is 00:17:46 of the facts we were just describing that he can barely hold onto. So he's getting some information about this and about Israel's culpability for the lack of it. Well, we remember it was either during the campaign or during the transition, but basically Trump's problem was like, I just don't wanna see this on TV.
Starting point is 00:18:03 You know, I want Bibi to just finish up the war because I don't like the images because he doesn't like the mess. It just, I think real like military experts in Israel, like the former defense minister, Yov Galant, said, I think like a year ago, that like the military value of the fighting has been exhausted.
Starting point is 00:18:19 You know, I heard today, I was listening to like a Haaretz podcast or something. I think the IDF has destroyed 25% of Hamas' tunnels. If the goal is 100%, like how long are we going to be there? The organization is decimated. There are something like 30,000 Hamas fighters when the war started, and there's been at least 55,000 casualties since. Yeah, of course.
Starting point is 00:18:42 His top generals told him a year ago that there was no longer a military advantage to continuing the war. There are reports of them taking a hospital, then withdrawing, then literally going in a circle. Just taking the same stuff. Taking the same territory back, this time destroying the hospital. There's just lots of, look, Benjamin Netanyahu, his coalition depends on these right-wing ministers, and they told him if he agrees to a truce or ceasefire, he won't have a
Starting point is 00:19:13 government, and he put his own personal political interests against the interests of the hostages and Israel's long-term interests. And here we are a year later. Israel's a pariah nation. The suffering of the Palestinians has continued. Thousands, hundreds if not thousands have died since that truce was on the table a year ago. He lifted the short-term ceasefire. And by the way, you know, like it is impossible to measure deaths caused by malnutrition and
Starting point is 00:19:44 starvation. You will have specific numbers of people whose deaths are ascribed to that. But hospitals not having supplies, people being weakened to infection, to miscarriage, to all kinds of horrors, the toll is ongoing. It is very difficult to measure just how many people are being hurt if not killed by the fact that food and medicine and aid is so scarce at least largely because Israel has prevented enough aid from reaching people in a sustained way
Starting point is 00:20:11 I got to say too I mean, I you know, it's it's my fault for being on Twitter all weekend but you know, the New York Post ran this story about There's a picture that was in the New York Times about a mother holding her emaciated, starving child, and his stomach was distended, and it's a horrific picture. And the New York Post ran this story, actually the boy is suffering from genetic disorders. And so it wasn't just starvation
Starting point is 00:20:41 and the boy's gonna get medical treatment. And then Israel, the Israeli Twitter account tweeted out the same thing and I saw, it's not just randos in Twitter, like actual pundits, other people being like, well, the New York Times ran this picture and I'm like, what, where, what kind of lack of humanity do you have when you're like, oh, this kid, in addition to being hungry, also had a genetic disorder, so therefore, all the other fucking pictures we've seen of like little babies dying, like we shouldn't take seriously. I just, I don't, it's horrifying
Starting point is 00:21:14 that this is where we are right now. This is where some people are. I'll also say, it's a form of weaponized anti-Semitism, unspoken, because it's that, oh, all of these people that are saying this, all these reports, right, these are people that hate Israel, hate the Jews, are anti-Zionist, and so they're reporting on what the Hamas officials in Gaza are saying uncritically, or they're going with anonymous sources, they will drum up anything to attack Israel, right?
Starting point is 00:21:47 And there is anti-Semitism. There are people that are biased against Israel. There are people that mischaracterize what is happening in the conflict. But it requires viewing all of these organizations as lying. It requires the images we can see with our own eyes to deny them. It just requires such a broad conspiracy to believe that this is all being cooked up
Starting point is 00:22:14 to damage Israel. And they can try it, but I just, first of all, Donald Trump doesn't agree, Marjorie Taylor Greene doesn't agree. A lot of right-wingers are starting to understand First of all, Donald Trump doesn't agree. Marjorie Taylor Greene doesn't agree. A lot of right-wingers are starting to understand that this is wrong. So, you know, they can try,
Starting point is 00:22:31 but I just don't think it's working. It's all, it's just dehumanization. You know, I mean, there's just so much, the rhetoric, it's so dehumanizing. They treat Palestinians and Gazans like they're not human beings. Like everyone's part of Hamas. Like everyone's a target.
Starting point is 00:22:43 Doesn't matter if you're a child or Yeah, we don't feed our enemies. We don't feed our enemies. Yeah, it's just, it's horrific. And look, I'll say it for the thousandth time, I think what Hamas did on October 7th was an evil act of terror. I think it's indefensible. I think that no one can ever justify harming civilians.
Starting point is 00:22:59 But like the rhetoric you always hear, like when you talk about stats coming out of the Gaza Health Ministry, they're like, oh, you have to say that that's a Hamas run organizations like sure Okay, it is but you know the the numbers they've released have generally been viewed as trustworthy and in fact independent outlets think the casualty count is much higher in part because so many people are buried under rubble and This war has been raging for six hundred and sixty two days now. I also just like, yeah, Hamas is monstrous. And you have Palestinians who have no advocate
Starting point is 00:23:29 because you have Benjamin Netanyahu, who's putting his own political interest ahead of the interest of the hostages and of Israel at the great expense of Palestinian lives. And you have Palestinian lives in the hands of a terrorist organization that launched this attack on October 7th, knowing it would lead to untold suffering of Palestinians in Gaza. And so, yeah, it's like Hamas is awful.
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Starting point is 00:26:16 Are calling on the Trump administration to stop funding the GHF the Gaza humanitarian foundation It's Israeli backed and run by American contractors and put the UN back in charge of aid distribution. I also saw Senator Angus King of Maine today put out a statement. He said, I am through supporting the actions of the current Israeli government and will advocate and vote for an end to any United States support whatsoever until there is a demonstrable change in the direction of Israeli policy. I mean, good for Angus King.
Starting point is 00:26:47 I don't want my taxes funding this. I don't want the people who represent us voting for that funding. I don't want the people who represent us taking money from AIPAC. AIPAC, over the last couple of days, accused Bernie Sanders of blood libel just because Bernie Sanders was criticizing the war and the government. And I don't think Democratic candidates should take money from AIPAC or vote to fund military support for Israel anymore. I really don't. This government, absolutely not. And that especially includes, I think, the next Democratic nominee for president. Yeah. I mean, the seeds are tall orders in the Trump administration. But the things I want to see Democrats at least calling for is cutting off military
Starting point is 00:27:27 assistance to Israel. It's a rich country, by the way. They don't need our three billion a year. And hands up, right? Barack Obama signed a 10-year MOU for 3.3 billion a year. So we're part of the problem here. Let's correct it. I would like to see talk about sanctioning Israeli government officials who use genocidal
Starting point is 00:27:41 rhetoric or talk about ethnic cleansing openly. We should support a ceasefire resolution at the UN. We should demand that international press be allowed into the Gaza Strip to report on what's happening without an IDF minder. It's insane that the press still can't go into Gaza and cover what's happening. And also think like there has to be a total mindset change in the democratic party. When the war ends, we are not going back to the pre October 7 status quo where, because it's not where the party is. It's not where the world is.
Starting point is 00:28:07 We are not going to shovel billions a year in military aid. We're not going to veto every effort to recognize the Palestinian state at the UN. We should not take money from AIPAC. Um, and like, I will hold out hope for better political leadership in the U S and in Israel, but we have to also recognize that the Biden era
Starting point is 00:28:24 hug Bibi Netanyahu's strategy has to be thrown in the trash can for fucking ever. Netanyahu is a bad actor. He's continuing a war for political purposes. He bombs Lebanon when he wants to. He bombs Iran when he wants to. He bombs Syria when he wants to. The idea of they literally bombed the Syrian army
Starting point is 00:28:39 headquarters two weeks ago in Damascus. Like, this is not a partner we can count on. This is not someone who is like leading to calm and stability in the region, which should be a core interest. And like the only good thing is like that, you know, the APAC calling Bernie Sanders blood libel or accusing of blood libel a few years ago,
Starting point is 00:28:56 I feel like would have been a big deal, but that rhetoric has been so overused that I think the effect has worn off and people are not scared anymore. And I think that's good. They're not scared, but it's just, it's incredible to me how many democratic politicians still haven't, I mean, 21 Senate Democrats
Starting point is 00:29:10 wrote that letter, that's great. That's not the whole caucus. Angus King, like, you know, how many other Senate Democrats have called for cutting off funding? Like at this point, cutting off military funding for a government that is starving two million people and like advertising how they're ethnically cleansing the Palestinians seems like the least we can do. Yeah, it just especially if we're going to head into a primary like table stakes is going to be no more military aid for Israel. That's like, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:37 I don't understand how the argument in favor of it. And, and beyond that, I, I do think, you know, France just recognized Palestinian statehood. You know, I went and looked at the APAC memo on why that was so bad. And the point it makes is for 40 years, Democratic and Republican administrations have made clear that recognizing the state of Palestine must only come from negotiations.
Starting point is 00:30:00 Where's that gotten us over 40 years, right? Our being the staunch ally and the lone vote in the security council to prevent Palestine from being recognized. So I do think we need to like, what does it mean for the United States to support Israel's right to exist and defend itself after this war?
Starting point is 00:30:22 And it will have to look very different. And that will start I think by recognizing the profound shift in the power dynamic after Israel has leveled the Gaza Strip and by the way as Netanyahu has promoted and sort of stood by as the West Bank has become even more settled over the last what how many I don't know what percent, the expansion of settlements has been dramatic. Yeah, and the violence. And the violence in the West Bank.
Starting point is 00:30:49 Yeah, against the Palestinians. So there will just, will have to be a shift, and I do think that will mean being, putting far more pressure on Israel, and that's what I think Democrats want. By the way, that's what the country wants, and when you poll Israelis, they say they want a fucking ceasefire.
Starting point is 00:31:04 Like Israelis want the hostages returned through a negotiated settlement. And by the way, that's the way in which the vast majority of hostages who were returned were able to be returned. Yeah. It's funny talking to Amir in the interview today. Israelis talk so much more bluntly about their criticisms of their own government than Americans do. Americans are so scared because of, you know, sort of groups like AIPAC accusing you of blood libel or people like Jonathan Greenblatt at the ADL
Starting point is 00:31:33 who accused me of antisemitism because I said Netanyahu started a war that needed Trump to finish, which is objectively true. I'm talking about Iran, by the way. But, you know, I do think the Democratic Party is way behind where its base is right now and needs to catch up. One. Two, I hope that in this acute moment of interest
Starting point is 00:31:52 in the horrors of this famine and the need to end this war, that we can find a moment to build a broader coalition that goes well beyond the Democratic Party. Because the kind of, the left got very mad at me on Twitter over the weekend for saying this, but I feel strongly that the coalition that has a chance of pressuring Donald Trump in this moment to end the war in Gaza or to force Netanyahu
Starting point is 00:32:13 to end the war in Gaza has to be as broad as possible. It's the furthest left to the furthest right, like the isolationist, Rand Paul, Thomas Mastey types, and then everyone in between. And that includes people who supported the war, and now they don't. That means people who are uncomfortable calling it a genocide because of the legacy of that word in the Holocaust and how it makes them feel. And I'm mostly talking, my tweet said people, I was
Starting point is 00:32:33 talking about average people, but we should also recognize that politicians, we don't agree with unshit, like Marjorie Taylor Greene, could be very influential and important allies in this fight because she has Trump's ear. And so what that means in practice is let's welcome people into the tent for the purposes of making this argument, this push to end this war. We've got to pull the same direction for a bit. That doesn't mean there's no accountability forever. We're buddies forever.
Starting point is 00:32:56 We won't vote out people that supported shoveling money to the IDF through the duration of the fighting, even when it got really bad. But like, just, can we just, I would love to see some sort of organizing effort around pressuring Trump in Netanyahu now. Yeah, you know, it's classic story of politics is, you start from the goal that you wanna achieve
Starting point is 00:33:20 and then you work backwards to figure out how to get to the goal, right? It sounds simple, but it's like people lose that in the social media mess, right? Which is the goal is to end the war and the starvation in Gaza. And as you said, Tommy, Trump has a lot of power to do this. And so then the question is, how do you pressure Trump to do it? That's it. And then you build the coalition to do that.
Starting point is 00:33:39 And just, you know, right now Benjamin Netanyahu has Trump, but Trump won't be there forever. What Democrats are saying now about what they will do when they regain power matters. In the same way, we need to be signaling to corporations that are capitulating to Trump that there will be an after. We need to be signaling to allies and other countries around the world that there will be an after. I think the more that Democrats now are saying that there will be increased
Starting point is 00:34:07 pressure on Israel up to and including recognizing a Palestinian state, right, that cudgel being real, like they were, Benyanyahu responds to pressure in the same way people pretend Trump doesn't, people pretend Bibi doesn't, but he does. It's happening internationally too. I mean you mentioned the French example, but there's also a huge, there's a letter from like 220 or 240 MPs to Keir Starmer calling on him to cut off military support to Israel because David Lammy, the foreign secretary of the UK, who's a good guy, a friend, he's been on Paz de the world a bunch of times, um, had some really harsh words for the Israeli government, but they need to be backed by actions.
Starting point is 00:34:44 That's what we're all, so everybody's calling for action. Speaking of Keir Starmer, he was standing with Trump in Scotland during the press conference when Trump made the Gaza comments. And then he also had to be there for Trump getting a few questions about his late friend and fellow enigma,
Starting point is 00:34:58 Jeffrey Epstein. Here's how Trump answered. I don't do drawings. I'm not a drawing person i don't do drawings sometimes he was there would you do a building and i'll go for lines in the roof i don't do drawings of women that i can tell you now with that being said they say there were many letters
Starting point is 00:35:16 done by many people in many big people you know big successful people because he did something that was inappropriate he hired help. And I said, Don't ever do that again. He stole people that worked for me. I said, Don't ever do that again.
Starting point is 00:35:32 He did it again. And by the way, I never went to the island. And Bill Clinton went there supposedly 28 times. I never had the privilege of going to his island. And I did turn it down, but a lot of people in Palm Beach were invited to his island. In one of my very good moments, I turned it down. I didn't wanna go to his island.
Starting point is 00:35:54 So, you know, we went through the whole landscape there. First, he was talking about the birthday message he doesn't draw, he doesn't draw women. Then we got to the island where he keeps saying that Bill Clinton went 28 times, which is not supported by any facts that we know of. Um, he didn't have the privilege to go there. He was also talking about, uh, why he had the falling out with Jeffrey Epstein, uh, years ago.
Starting point is 00:36:18 And the white house has been saying that, uh, that Trump kicked Jeffrey Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago because he was a quote creep. Uh, but Trump there seems to say that actually he kicked him out because that Trump kicked Jeffrey Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago because he was a quote, creep. But Trump there seems to say that actually he kicked him out because he poached some employees from him at Mar-a-Lago. I don't know guys, what do you think? Yeah, so first of all, there's been these sort of
Starting point is 00:36:38 unsubstantiated and honest reports that actually Trump kicked Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago because he was a creep and he was hitting on people. And Trump doesn't seem to know that that story is meant to be true because he tells this other one. It's like, how dare you accuse me of being friends with this sex trafficker and pedophile. I had a falling out with that sex trafficker
Starting point is 00:36:58 and pedophile over an unrelated HR matter. He stole my butler. It's absurd, absurd. Yeah, like, okay, just the initial denial about the drawing in the Wall Street Journal was I never wrote a picture in my life, remember? And then we learned that Trump donated a doodle to charity every single year
Starting point is 00:37:17 and he wrote about it in his book. So now he's saying he doesn't draw women. So there's another crisis comms masterclass there. Pretty soon it's gonna be, I've never drawn pubes that are also my signature. As you pointed out, the White House has been saying, oh yeah, he kicked up the scene because he's a creep. Now it's like, then there was a report
Starting point is 00:37:33 that it was a fallout over a real estate deal that they were competing over. Now he's just saying, you know, he poached my staff. So it's like, does he just forget the previous spin? You know what I mean? It's, how do you not have a handle on this? Yeah, I feel like the White House probably did not really line up their story with him.
Starting point is 00:37:52 Yeah, on why he kicked him out. And they probably said, oh, you kicked him out, right? Yeah, and then they were like, oh, let's just say it's because he was a creep. Like I don't really think there's a lot of rigor going into the briefings here. Yeah, the other part of this is the, the letter and now he's saying, I don't draw
Starting point is 00:38:09 ladies, uh, JD Vance went on social media and said that it was, that it was fake news. And Chris Hayes got into it with him cause JD Vance replies to a lot of people, present company included. Uh, and Chris's question was, are you saying the letters, the book is fake, his letter's fake?
Starting point is 00:38:30 Like what exactly is your contention here? And all JD Vans can say is, well, they won't even show us the letter, which is exciting because it does mean at some point, we're gonna see that letter. We're gonna see they're saving it. Because Jeffrey Epstein's estate has the book. So, DOJ reviewed it. Because Jeffrey Epstein's estate has the book. So- G.O.J. reviewed it.
Starting point is 00:38:45 Just waiting for that. And we know Trump is worried about this because he's starting to refer to it as a hoax. Oh yeah. And a witch hunt. Yeah, Democrats, Comey, Obama, Brennan, you name them. Describing it as fake. They all get together to put the fake pages in the book. So now it seems like he knows that whatever we're gonna see,
Starting point is 00:39:06 if we ever see it, would not be good for him. It was Brennan with the Sharpie. With the Sharpie Brennan. On the St. Island. Yeah, Comey was the one who drew the pub signature. The shell. Comey's that's very much, very metricome. And then it was the lovers who squeezed lemon juice on it
Starting point is 00:39:19 and put it in the toaster. Made it look old. But like it's been what, three weeks now? This has not gone away. I think Joe Rogan, there was the quote going around today where he said the Epstein files are a hardcore line in the sand that the administration. Squiggly line? Is trying to gaslight you.
Starting point is 00:39:32 There's like, we talked about how the Congress, the House of Representatives went into recess early to avoid a vote on this Thomas Massey, Ro Khanna legislation that would require the full release of the Epstein files. So that's going to kick back up when they're back in five or six weeks. Thomas Massey, Ro Khanna, legislation that would require the full release of the Epstein files. So that's going to kick back up when they're back in five or six weeks. Ron Wyden is talking about how he's been reviewing all of these Epstein specific bank records that are really shady. Trump's superpower is his relentlessness and ability to repeat a line over and over
Starting point is 00:39:58 and over again until he just bullies you into submission. But it just doesn't seem like there's a process to make this go away. No. Trump said again in that press conference too, that he's quote, allowed to pardon Ghislaine Maxwell. He said this on Friday for the first time. This is all after we learned that Trump's Justice Department gave Maxwell limited immunity to speak freely about the crimes she committed with Epstein during her two-day, nine-hour conversation last week with Todd Blanch. Just, just, Ghislaine Maxwell and Todd Blanch, the president's, uh, former defense lawyer, turned deputy attorney general. That's usually what happens. I don't know if you guys know in
Starting point is 00:40:35 the Justice Department, uh, that you send the, the number two in the Justice Department, the guy who's usually running the Justice Department, to go alone to hang out with a convicted accomplice to a sex predator, sex trafficker. And I don't know, were any of the career officials who prosecuted the case there? No, doesn't sound like it. Well, also, as is normal, then the defense attorney for that, that convicted sex trafficker says how great a job he thought the DOJ did in the conversation. Those prosecutors, by the way, said about Maxwell that she previously lied repeatedly
Starting point is 00:41:16 about her crimes, exhibited an utter failure to accept responsibility and demonstrated repeated disrespect for the law and the court. Blanche says that he's showing great courage and for the first time we're gonna get answers from Ghislaine Maxwell. She is in prison for 20 years. A lot of these questions presumably were asked of her during the period of time in which she was being investigated, charged, put on trial,
Starting point is 00:41:46 and ultimately convicted and sentenced. Yep. We still don't know what Maxwell said during this two-day session, though her attorney told reporters afterwards she was asked, quote, maybe about 100 different people and that she answered every single question.
Starting point is 00:42:00 That reminds me of, just like Joe Biden in the debate. Uh, Max, She answered every question. Maxwell is also asking the Supreme Court, she filed this today, to overturn her conviction on the grounds that she should have been protected from prosecution by the deal Epstein cut with former US Attorney Alex Acosta, also turned Trump Labor Secretary briefly back in 2007. What do you think? Would this whole idea that Trump, like Trump's gonna pardon Maxwell potentially
Starting point is 00:42:28 because she'll absolve him of any wrongdoing or just name other people and not him, do you think that helps or hurts his political problems with his base? So clearly they're trying to seed this idea that she could be a victim and she's like a good guy and all this, right? Like Newsmax is Greg Kelly said on the air, she might be a victim like this seems like a trial balloon.
Starting point is 00:42:49 I just want to be clear for folks who don't totally know Galeen Maxwell's role in Epstein's crimes. I mean so according to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York, Galeen Maxwell recruited and groomed girls as young as 14 for Epstein. She was present for sexual encounters between minor victims in Epstein. And in some instances, Maxwell participated in the sexual abuse of minor victims. She and Epstein would ID vulnerable girls. They would find girls who were poor or from single mother households and prey on them because they were easy to give favors to and then pull into their evil shit.
Starting point is 00:43:23 This happened from 94 to 2004. Um, so this was someone who is evil and very much a part of this. And Republicans have spent what the last decade, I think, calling all of their political enemies groomers. And now they are talking about pardoning a literal groomer. You see, Mike Johnson said on Meet the Press Sunday that he thinks she actually deserves a life sentence and he hopes that Donald Trump doesn't partner. Good.
Starting point is 00:43:43 So that's kind of interesting. But you're like, that's a quote that seems destined to come back and haunt Mike Johnson. Well, right. Well, with Mike Johnson, it's like, he'll say something and then he'll just sort of be sort of smacked back into submission, right? He also says we should have full transparency
Starting point is 00:43:58 on the Epstein matter and then has Congress leave the city to avoid having that vote? Like, stemming back, Galeen Maxwell was charged under the Trump administration. When Blanche says that we're finally gonna get answers, he is saying that those answers were not gotten under the first Trump administration when William Barr was attorney general.
Starting point is 00:44:22 He's saying Bill Barr was in on it. Bill, there's all the connection with Bill Barr's dad and Jeffrey Epstein. Bill Barr's dad apparently hired him to work at this school in New York, right? So that's all part of this conspiracy theory. And so I agree. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:35 I think he's in on it. That's what you're saying. But like, what makes it impossible, I think, for all of us to go away is that this whole story is so right-wing shaped, right? That's what makes it so hard I think, for all of us to go away is that this whole story is so, it's so right wing shaped. That's what makes it so hard for Trump to get, he's never been on the business, he's never been on the losing end
Starting point is 00:44:54 of one of these right wing shaped conspiracy. Or when he has, it is sort of like blown up in his face. Just seems on Friday, he was like, I don't focus on conspiracies, I'm focused on getting deals done for the American people. I was like, yeah, if there's anything we know about Donald Trump is he is not focused on conspiracies. But like, fundamentally, right,
Starting point is 00:45:13 Epstein kills himself, and a lot of evidence and a lot of what would have come out in trial doesn't happen. Because the trial doesn't take place. And they turn this into a global pedophilia ring of Democrats, Hollywood elites, deep state operatives, and the Jews, and it's now sort of coming back to haunt him because it turns out nobody is more implicated in that conspiracy than Donald Trump himself.
Starting point is 00:45:39 And I don't think you get out of it by pardoning a convicted sex trafficker and Jeffrey Epstein's chief accomplice You guys see in the Washington Post over the weekend We got a classic of the genre a Trump fume story Trump fumes over Epstein And it's got like he's he's really angry kind of thing But there was a few tidbits in there that I think are worth mentioning It's just kind of slipped in for weeks after the memo released, Trump and Bondi spoke on the phone nearly every day
Starting point is 00:46:06 as they often do. That's so weird. Is that normal? Just the President of the United States just calling up the Attorney General? Remember when there was a big scandal over Bill Clinton saying hi to Loretta Lynch on the plane? Okay.
Starting point is 00:46:19 Can I make a neo-lib show defense of norms? Yeah. One reason this story doesn't go away is Can I make a, can I make a, can I make a neo-lib shield defense of norms? One reason this is story doesn't go away is because everyone understands that Pam Bondi is Donald Trump's attorney and before she's the country's attorney, she doesn't have the ability to make this story go away from him. In another era, right? It could go to the attorney general say, we're going to investigate this.
Starting point is 00:46:40 We're going to look into this. It'll be completely independent and be accused of being political in all kinds of ways, but it actually would allow the story to progress, right? It would go to a prosecutor, it would go into an investigation, and it would move off of like the Donald Trump plate into the legal plate, but it can't, because there's only one big fucking trough
Starting point is 00:46:57 of Trump control, and it means Pam Bondi can't save Donald Trump from this story, because no one thinks she has credibility or integrity or any kind of separate political interest from him. And in that trough is about a thousand FBI personnel. Over two weeks, the thousand personnel had to scour, this is all the Washington Post story, had to scour more than a hundred thousand pages of Epstein related documents. Workers toiled around the clock and staffed mandatory weekend shifts for weeks to accommodate punishing deadlines from higher-ups
Starting point is 00:47:26 And were told to flag any mentions of Trump and other prominent figures This is a senior bureau official said in a whistleblower report to the Senate Judiciary Committee that was obtained by the Post After concluding that fewer than a tenth of those documents could be considered for release Staffers were asked to go through them at least four times more Again, what is happening at the FBI? It's crazy. And it's like, they're just, we'll never understand the opportunity cost.
Starting point is 00:47:50 Again, a thousand FBI agents working 24 seven to review documents that they then just sit on. Like elves in December 22nd. Just flag, again, with the control F, could we not control F Trump's name? I don't understand why we're not, this is, I look, listen. AI this shit.
Starting point is 00:48:04 Yeah, I'm about to say, look, listen. AI this shit. Yeah, I'm about to say, look, there are many problems with chat GPT, but throw this bad boy up into the fucking cloud and get some names. Well, apparently there's a Microsoft SharePoint online collaborative file that Blanche's office put together of mentions of Mr. Trump from the piece.
Starting point is 00:48:21 So there is an Epstein list, you might call it a list, it's a Microsoft SharePoint. There is a list with Trump's name on it of how many times that someone has. And Dick Durbin is demanding that. Dick Durbin is also demanding the tapes of the Maxwell interviews that Todd Blanch did. Doesn't seem like he's gonna get them, but I don't know.
Starting point is 00:48:39 I think it's smart to make that part of the conversation. For sure, for sure. I wouldn't have thought that there might be tapes or might be a transcript or a record of it. I mean, I was thinking about the Loretta Lynch, Bill Clinton conversation on the tarmac, however, in 2015, 2016, because Republicans never stopped talking about it.
Starting point is 00:48:54 We need to get these meetings sort of viewed in that way. And I wondered if Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie could include these documents that Durbin's going after as part of their release of the Epstein Files legislation. It feels like it would fall under that bucket. Yeah. And then you see all these kind of ways around releasing the Epstein.
Starting point is 00:49:13 It would be all credible information. And I do like, to Tommy's point too, like these were serious and disgusting crimes. And I, like part of what can't be released is a lot of graphic evidence, victims, right? Like a lot of people were hurt. And like to me that just goes to like they turned like sort of despicable crimes that were allowed to go on for years into this political cudgel and they never cared about the victims.
Starting point is 00:49:45 It was never even that real to them. It was, it became a kind of like, um, I don't know, abstraction about it. They thought Bill Clinton was going to go down. They thought they were going to get some way to like prosecute Bill Clinton. They didn't care about the victims and this whole conversation about, uh, releasing Galen Maxwell or
Starting point is 00:50:00 giving her a pardon. I mean, Epstein victim, Virginia Jufre said of, of Maxwell, she is a monster. She's worse than Epstein. She was vicious. She was evil. I mean, Epstein victim Virginia Jufre said of Maxwell, she is a monster, she's worse than Epstein, she was vicious, she was evil, I know that woman. I mean, this is one of the Epstein's victims. It reminds me too, like, you know, they spend all this time saying they're going to, you know, they're going after criminal aliens and then they, in order to get the innocent people out of El Salvador, they release a murderer, a triple murderer
Starting point is 00:50:27 onto the streets of the US. They spent all these years claiming there was a cabal of people protecting pedophiles and their accomplices, and then they're sending the deputy attorney general down to kind of start the process of a sweetheart deal with one of the like, like basically a serial predator. Really don't like them. I love Helix mattresses. Super comfortable.
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Starting point is 00:52:23 so they know we sent you. Helixsleep.com slash crooked. Well, you know Trump and the White House are celebrating a big development in the president's global trade war. A new permanent 15% tax on most of the stuff we buy from Europe. The quote-unquote deal Trump announced with the European Union is lower than the 30% tax he initially threatened And in exchange the EU said it would spend 750 billion dollars on American energy and invest another 600 billion dollars in the US Whatever the hell that means as a reminder US tariffs are at their highest since the 1930s and about six times higher than when Trump Took office which is probably why the BBC went with the headline winner Donald Trump loser US consumers
Starting point is 00:53:04 Here's what Trump said about the deal on Monday which is probably why the BBC went with the headline, Winner Donald Trump, Loser US Consumers. Here's what Trump said about the deal on Monday. But we're gonna be setting a tariff for essentially the rest of the world, and that's what they're gonna pay if they wanna do business in the United States, because you can't sit down and make 200 deals. I would say it'll be somewhere in the 15 to 20% range.
Starting point is 00:53:23 So maybe 15 or 20 or? No, I said, you know, I sort of know, but I just want to be nice. Deals, first we're gonna have deals, all the 90 deals in 90 days. Now there's no deals that takes too much time, so I'm just setting a tax. What's the tax based on?
Starting point is 00:53:38 What's the tariff rate based on? We don't know. Big victory because now other countries aren't paying tariffs, but we're paying tariffs here in the US. What's going on? What is the point of all this? These are not really deals.
Starting point is 00:53:51 They're framework agreements. The details are just not ironed out. And then, and like, you know this because the Japanese are signaling, if not outright saying that Trump's team is just making shit up. Like Scott Besson went on Fox, I think Laura Ingraham, and he was like, oh yeah, they're going to buy all this stuff, we're going to have an implementation process where we review it every three months.
Starting point is 00:54:08 And the Japanese trade negotiator responded, in my eight trips to the United States during which I held talks with the president and the ministers, I have no recollection of discussing how we ensure the implementation of the latest agreement between Japan and the United States. In other words, bullshit. And the White House is saying that, oh, this is a
Starting point is 00:54:23 $550 billion investment in the US, and the US is gonna keep like 90% of the profits. The trade minister from Japan said, no, one to 2% of the 550 billion is actual investment. The rest is loans and loan guarantees. So it's like, it just, it's bullshit. Like the EU part of it is a little weird. I'm surprised they didn't put up a little more of a fight
Starting point is 00:54:43 given that they have some real heft in terms of economic leverage, but it's probably harder to get a big block like that to negotiate as a group. And maybe they were just nervous, or maybe it's all bullshit too. And we're going to see more details of the EU deal and realize that.
Starting point is 00:54:57 I do think like big picture, all these countries benefit from knowing that Trump cares about the day one headline, not the implementation, right? Remember six months ago, when Trump had that press event with Sam Altman, all these countries benefit from knowing that Trump cares about the day one headline, not the implementation. Right. Remember six months ago when Trump had that press event with Sam Altman and the head of soft bank
Starting point is 00:55:11 and Larry Ellison, and they announced a 500, a half a trillion dollar thing called star gate. Remember this? So the company said, uh, we're going to invest half a trillion dollar on like data centers and infrastructure for AI in the U S including a hundred billion right now. Well, the wall street journal the other day reported that they haven't
Starting point is 00:55:27 completed a single data center deal yet. It's like all scaling back the ambitions completely. And the first Trump term Trump made this deal with China where the Chinese promised to buy 200 billion in additional us goods and services above the level they purchased in 2017 and then China ultimately bought none of that additional $200 billion. So I just, I don't trust that none of that additional $200 billion. So I just, I don't trust that any of this is going to happen. Or that any of it is not investments that were already on the table.
Starting point is 00:55:50 I mean, that was like Mexico and Canada. That was their move, right? Like just, let's just label shit we were already doing. It's like, oh yeah, Trump, you got us. And so like, you know, we have our EU and the United States, Japan, the United States, our economies are incredibly intertwined. There's billions upon billions of dollars moving between our countries. You can ascribe, oh yeah, we're going to buy a bunch of American energy.
Starting point is 00:56:12 Oh yeah, we're going to invest in a bunch of factories. They are every day. That's why this is so fucking stupid. Markets seem happy these days with the trade war. I think that's maybe because the period of uncertainty is coming to a close here. And, you know, I guess Trump didn't go with the full Liberation Day tariffs. But, you know, Morgan Stanley says, they don't think we'll have a recession, but we still believe the most likely outcome is slow growth and firm inflation.
Starting point is 00:56:39 So it's like, great, we're going to have inflation now and slow growth. And, you know, again, we've said this before, but a lot of these companies have so far either been eating the tariffs themselves or still have goods imported from before they went into effect. So the price increases really haven't set, they're about to set in,
Starting point is 00:56:58 but they really haven't even set in yet. And I still remember that quote from our friend, Jason Furman, who he's to work with on, uh, on Derek Thompson's podcast. He was like, look, if you asked everyone in the country to come together and set fire to a thousand dollars, it would seem like a phenomenally stupid idea. And we'd all remember forever who came up with it, but it wouldn't crash the economy. It was just be a bunch of people letting a thousand dollars on fire. He's like, that's about what's going to happen. Like there's like a half a point of growth that we're gonna lose that we would have had otherwise
Starting point is 00:57:26 without the tariffs. Right, yes, like the United States economy is strong enough and robust enough to survive a stupid policy from Donald Trump. And by the way, you know, even as a lot of people will end up paying more for things that they need, right? For a while, for, you know, at first it'll be washing machines, right?
Starting point is 00:57:43 We've seen that before. The price of washing machines just goes up. They pass the price on to consumers, right? And then you'll For, you know, at first it'll be washing machines, right? We've seen that before. The price of washing machines just goes up. They pass the price on to consumers, right? And then you'll see a bunch of wealthy people be like, hey, they said this trade war was gonna bankrupt the economy. I'm not feeling it at all. Well, of course you're not.
Starting point is 00:57:53 Of course you're not. You're not impacted by the daily cost of necessities. That's not what you do. That doesn't hit you in the same way it hits a person who will actually be impacted by this. Speaking of light and money on fire, you know what it's time for guys? A corrupt date.
Starting point is 00:58:07 Nice. Ba dum bum bum bum bum bum bum. Oh. Corrupt date. God, that sucks. Just sucks. Terrible. You guys remember the Qatari jet episode
Starting point is 00:58:19 where everyone freaked out for a few days over Trump accepting a free gift from a royal family that funds Hamas. Turns out that Qatar may have built the plane, but guess who's going to pay for it? We are. The New York Times reports that the cost of taxpayers of renovating the plane for Trump's use might be around $1 billion.
Starting point is 00:58:39 And the reason we know this is because the Times discovered that the Pentagon made a secret transfer for that amount from the program intended to upgrade our nuclear missiles to an anonymous project that's believed to be refurbishing the Qatari jet. But wait, there's more. The Washington Post is reporting that in the original draft of the agreement that transfers ownership of the plane, Qatar included language that stipulated the plane would belong specifically to the Air Force, but the US pushed back and removed that language so that Trump could take the plane with him when he leaves.
Starting point is 00:59:12 As a keepsake, of course, from us, as a $1 billion thank you to Mr. Trump for making America great again with his Middle Eastern sugar daddy plane. Tommy, why isn't this a bigger story right now? This is incredible. This is incredible. We're paying for our president's plane that he gets to keep. He gets a little doggie bag with a plane in it from the Qataris when he leaves the white house
Starting point is 00:59:32 and it costs a billion dollars and it comes out of the nuclear missile fund. I mean, if we take back the house, this list is getting longer, but this has got to be like top three items on the oversight, relentless focus list, right? Because remember, the Republicans figured out that Hillary Clinton had a private server
Starting point is 00:59:50 and a private email because they did 700 Benghazi hearings. That's got to be the focus here, just relentlessly to ban documents, investigate this stuff, all kinds of oversight over corruption, the crypto, the Qatari plane, all the real estate dealings, all of it as we kind of sell a message about what MAGA has become. Yeah, it's not even just we were talking about this when we on earlier that that it's even being framed like, oh, right, the US is getting a weird gift from the Qataris. No, there's a plane that Donald Trump is receiving
Starting point is 01:00:26 as a gift that the US government is fixing up for him for free. He is stealing a billion dollars from the US government to fix up a present he's getting from the Qataris. It's making a brief stopover in DC, but its final destination is Trump's quote, presidential library, but it will be his to fly around the world.
Starting point is 01:00:45 It may be never done in time for him to use as president. And by the way, just- I mean, hopefully it's done in time for him to leave the White House. Otherwise he's gonna mess out on that gift. Well, you know, all of you, right. Well, right on that, I think they won't just get, what happens if he leaves before it's done?
Starting point is 01:01:00 That's what I'm saying. Well, if it's not done, who cares? He doesn't need all the like special comms equipment stuff. Oh, then he just takes it. He's just like, yeah. Well, I can't say get half finished. So none of this makes sense, right? Like, obviously, this is all stupid. They're going to have to finish up the other Air Force Ones
Starting point is 01:01:13 that they're already building anyway, so this is just an add-on cost. But by the way, like this... Yeah, did anyone keep the receipt for the other two? But, like, everyone's like, oh, my God, it's a billion dollars. They don't know how much it's gonna cost to fix up this. No one in human history has ever taken a 747-8 from a Middle Eastern government, stripped it down to the studs,
Starting point is 01:01:34 and then rebuilt it at Air Force One. It's all like, how much did this cost the last time we did that? It's never been done before. They have no idea what it's gonna cost. And we need the gold plating too. Everything needs to be gold. How much is that gonna cost?
Starting point is 01:01:44 You guys know the Pentagon. They usually come in on time, under budget, and these sorts of things. Famously so, famously so. Well, now that they've been doged, you know? Yeah, exactly. Yeah, so that's great. And President Charlie Kirk is gonna be getting this
Starting point is 01:01:55 at the end of his term. Jesus Christ. If he's lucky. All right, when we come back from the break, you'll hear Tommy's conversation with Amir T-Bone. But before we get to that, here's the news that I teased earlier. Big announcement.
Starting point is 01:02:08 What do we got? Dan's in the Epstein files. So gotta get ahead of that. No, that's not it. We're here to announce something. It's called Crooked Con. In November, it will have been a year since Donald Trump won again.
Starting point is 01:02:23 And everyone has had some time to sit and think about what we've all done and what we haven't done And we wanted to get everyone together who doesn't want Donald Trump or someone like Donald Trump to be president again To talk about the path forward Republicans have their CPAC. Oh, yeah, this is d pack. Oh, yeah This is DPAC. Oh, yeah Truthfully Republicans have been really smart about this and they gather everyone together and sure at the beginning It seemed like a bunch of fringe crazies But guess who's now running the government those fringe crazies have started CPAC So we need to get together talk about what's going on get smarter get better Maybe trying to figure out how we screwed up so bad in the past, move forward.
Starting point is 01:03:05 If you have seen the intra-party debate among in the Democratic Party play out on the internet and in the media, you've probably noticed that it's maybe not the most constructive thing to do. Not always. So a real constructive thing we thought would be to get people together in person and have a bunch of conversations with organizers, strategists, politicians, the cool ones. If you work in politics at any level, from Capitol Hill to in your community,
Starting point is 01:03:32 this is the place to go to learn what's happening in this country, to learn from some of the smartest people out there and meet the people who are on the front lines trying to beat MAGA. Plus we're gonna figure out a way to stop those text messages. Truly, like, if there's one thing that can come out of this event,
Starting point is 01:03:46 it is stopping the text messages, Dan. I don't think we should put that on ourselves. The measure of success can't be, attend this event, never get an annoying text from a Democratic politician again. It's a high bar. And it's gonna be in DC. We're gonna gather at the ellipse.
Starting point is 01:04:00 It's gonna be wild. It's gonna be wild. It will be wild. It will be wild. No, It's gonna be wild. It will be wild. It will be wild. No, it's gonna be at the, at the, Wharf. Wharf.
Starting point is 01:04:11 It's gonna be at the Wharf. We call it the Wharf. Is that, we call it the Wharf, right? It's the Wharf. It's gonna be a place that's so new that when we lived there, we didn't even. It was just a dock. It was just a dock.
Starting point is 01:04:20 It was just a dock. Now it's a whole wharf. And in case you guys think it's gonna be just us, Neil Obama shills, we're gonna be just us, Neil, Obama, Shills, we're gonna have people from across the political spectrum if that political spectrum is from the left to the center right. It'll run from the left to Tim Miller.
Starting point is 01:04:35 Basically, that's the, and Sarah, that's really the bounce. We're gonna get everyone together and we're gonna have some fun. We're also gonna do a Pod Save America show the first night just to kick things off. And then the next day we're gonna all get together and We're also gonna do a Pod Save America show the first night just to kick things off. And then the next day we're gonna all get together
Starting point is 01:04:48 and get down to business, you know? Yeah, get down to business and fun. There'll be alcohol. Yeah, Dan's gonna do shots. Dan's gonna do shots. If we can solve the text message problem, I'll definitely do shots. Yeah, what happens at the wharf stays at the wharf.
Starting point is 01:05:01 Is it even called the wharf? We don't even know if it's called the wharf. What if it's not called the wharf. Is it even called the wharf? We don't even know if it's called the wharf. What if it's not called the wharf? Anyway, get your tickets. CrookedCon.com Is it CrookedCon.com? Hey, great job getting CrookedCon.com CrookedCon.com Stay tuned for more information, but we're going to be announcing our lineup soon.
Starting point is 01:05:18 November 6th and 7th, Washington, D.C. Be there. Grab tickets. Go online. Crooked.com online. Crooked.com.com. I'm sorry. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com.
Starting point is 01:05:31 Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com.
Starting point is 01:05:38 Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com. Crooked.com.
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Starting point is 01:06:55 That's B-O-M-B-A-S.com. Code CRIKIT at checkout. Bombas.com and use code CRIKIT. I'm excited to welcome to the show my friend Amir Ton. He is a reporter for Haaretz. He's the author of the book Gates of Gaza, a story of betrayal, survival and hope in Israel's borderlands. Amir, great to see you. Hey, thanks for having me. As usual, terrible circumstances, but great to see you. I wanted to talk with you about this horrific humanitarian situation in Gaza, why a deal to end the war has been so elusive. Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu's legal
Starting point is 01:07:31 and political challenges and his relationship with Trump, among other things. But first, I did want to help listeners understand kind of who you are and your perspective on these issues. You have been a harsh critic of Netanyahu. You've been a critic of the war. But you also spent eight hours, I believe,
Starting point is 01:07:47 correct me if I'm wrong, hiding from Hamas. A little more, yeah, but yeah. Yeah, in a safe room on a kibbutz on October 7th. So this is very, very personal for you. I mean, can you just tell the listeners a little bit about your experience? Well, first of all, it's important for me to say that October 7th for me is very personal.
Starting point is 01:08:07 October 7 is the day that started this nightmare, started this terrible war, this disaster, catastrophe that we've been dealing with for 662 days now. And because my family and I, we live in a community, small kibbutz, right on the border with Gaza, on the Israeli side of the border, within the internationally recognized borders of Israel. Our community was attacked by Hamas on October 7. Sixteen, one-six, sixteen of my neighbors, personal friends of mine, people I would see every day, were murdered and killed on that day. Another seven were kidnapped into Gaza and one close friend of mine, Omri Miran, father
Starting point is 01:08:53 of two young girls, is still held hostage by Hamas terrorists in Gaza. Today as we speak, separated from his wife and two young daughters, like I said, for 662 days. So this is the background. And I come to this issue from what I describe as a liberal Zionist perspective. I'm a proud Israeli, proud Zionist, and I can tell you that in the early weeks and months of this terrible war, I thought it was terrible but necessary. Today I think it's much more terrible and also that we have to end it and that we really should have ended it many many months ago and that the fact that it is still continuing it has brought so much suffering and despair and
Starting point is 01:09:49 and despair and you know, I look at it with great frustration because the wars continuation, this is what's keeping the hostages over there in the tunnels of Gaza, including my friend Omri. This is what is causing all the suffering in Gaza and in Israel. It's time to end it. And this is the reason I'm talking to you, my friend, honestly. I mean, I love seeing you, Tommy, but this is the message I want to send through to people. We really need to put an end to this. I think it's a very important message.
Starting point is 01:10:13 So, you know, the images that have been coming out of Gaza are horrifying, especially quite recently. I mean, there's these images of starving children. There are these massive crowds of desperate people just trying to get food. There's all these reports of starving children. There are these massive crowds of desperate people just trying to get food. There's all these reports of mass casualty incidents after the IDF or security contractors fired on the crowds of people who were just trying to get food.
Starting point is 01:10:35 Can you help us just explain or understand how the aid distribution process got so bad, especially what the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is and what it is supposed to be doing? This is going to be a bit of a long answer, but trust me, it's important for understanding and putting all the pieces together. So in mid-January 2025, half a year ago, right around the time that the transition from President Biden to President Trump was taking place, a ceasefire agreement was reached in Gaza after 15 terrible months of war.
Starting point is 01:11:12 And that ceasefire agreement had several components. One of them was the release of Israeli hostages in return for Palestinian prisoners. Another was a partial evacuation of Israeli forces from some areas of Gaza, and another one was pushing up the amount of aid that goes into Gaza, and at the time the mechanism was that the aid would come through different UN agencies and humanitarian organizations. And that ceasefire was supposed to have two phases. Phase one, 60 days, a release of 33 Israeli hostages, like I said, partial withdrawal, Palestinian prisoners, and then there was supposed to be phase two, which was supposed to include the release of all the remaining Israeli hostages
Starting point is 01:11:57 in return for a complete withdrawal from Gaza of the Israeli military and a formal end of war agreement. And in March 2025, Prime Minister Netanyahu decided that he doesn't want this deal anymore, even though he signed it. And he decided to renew the war in Gaza, break the terms of the deal. He tried to offer a new kind of agreement, which is a weird thing to do, right? You sign an agreement, putting up, you know, and I'm not here to advocate in any way for Hamas. These are monstrous terrorists.
Starting point is 01:12:32 I told you about my own background with them, but we signed a deal. And to try and impose new terms in the middle of that deal being implemented is not something you would usually do. Hamas didn't accept the new terms that were supposed to be basically a prolonging of the temporary ceasefire instead of ending the war. And then what Netanyahu did, apart from renewing the war, he said we are going to put a blockade on Gaza. We're going to stop all aid from coming into the Gaza Strip. This was in March. He set it on the record in Hebrew at the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem. He said, we're
Starting point is 01:13:11 going to stop all the aid from coming in. Now, at the time, this happened right after the two-month ceasefire. So there wasn't any shortage of food or aid in Gaza because during those two months that there was no war, you had hundreds of trucks coming in every day from Israel, from Egypt. But once this blockade started, you had a clock that was beginning to tick-tock, the humanitarian clock. For how long will the supplies that came into Gaza during the ceasefire actually last for a territory with two million people and a territory that most of the agriculture and the food production and the fishing and everything
Starting point is 01:13:51 else that used to exist there in order to feed people a lot of it doesn't exist anymore because of the devastation of the war and around May the clock was you know ticking very fast and there was a real concern that you would have severe food shortages and hunger. And that's when this new player arrived on the scene, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an organization that was set up from the best of my understanding in Switzerland and now there is an investigation going on over there about the origins of this. And it involves a lot of people from the United States
Starting point is 01:14:26 It is led by someone who's a prominent evangelical leader with strong ties to some political figures in Israel And this organization says we are going to take over the aid distribution in Gaza We're gonna take it from the UN and we're gonna run this and they set up four aid distribution centers in different parts of Gaza. Now think about it, a territory of two million people getting all their food from four locations. How is that even supposed to work? Yeah, I heard the UN had like 400 some odd age institutions. Yes, yes. And I'm not saying the UN system was great or perfect and there is something that
Starting point is 01:15:06 we all here in Israel have been saying and watching and hearing that Hamas would steal the supplies that came in through the UN and then sell it on the black market in Gaza, and this was a huge problem. But the idea that you would replace the UN system with all its flaws and all its problems with these four distribution sites. To me, from the beginning, it sounded impossible. And these distribution sites became the sites of horrendous scenes, you know, of crowds packing and pushing and shoving to get to whatever food was being distributed. And those firing incidents and shelling and you know these
Starting point is 01:15:47 contrasting claims that Israel says Hamas was killing these people to keep them away from the GHF distribution centers and other eyewitnesses including Israeli soldiers saying well we were given orders to open fire in the vicinity of the distribution centers, it just became a total disaster and people didn't want to go there because they were afraid for their lives after hundreds of people got killed. And the humanitarian situation, instead of improving via the presence of this humanitarian foundation, it only got worse and worse and worse until in the last few weeks even officials in the Israeli military and government began to warn that we are facing the prospect of hunger, of starvation
Starting point is 01:16:33 in Gaza. And this became an international issue and a lot of pressure was being placed on Israel from the US, from European allies. Now remember the whole point of this policy of blocking all the aid from coming in and then bringing in this American foundation to run the aid distribution supposedly in a way that wouldn't reach Hamas's hands, right?
Starting point is 01:16:57 This was the selling point of GHF as presented by Israeli and American officials. The whole point behind this was to pressure Hamas to compromise in the hostage negotiations, accept Netanyahu's terms for a partial agreement because what Hamas wants, they keep insisting to go back to the January ceasefire terms, which is all the hostages for end of war. And what Netanyahu says, no, I'm willing to do a partial agreement, temporary ceasefire, some hostages come back and then I renew the war. So the whole point of this effort to block the aid and then to impose the aid distribution through these four apocalyptic
Starting point is 01:17:39 distribution centers was to get Hamas to compromise. Well guess what Tommy, we are now at the end of July. Okay, it's four, it's going to be five months soon. Hamas hasn't compromised. We haven't had any hostage deal, any breakthrough, only one living hostage came back during this entire period, Idan Alexander, the American-Israeli dual citizen. He was released as part of a separate side deal between the Trump administration and Hamas. So this entire thing, not only is it creating terrible consequences on the ground and people are dying, it didn't serve any strategic or national security goals for Israel. The opposite.
Starting point is 01:18:22 What Hamas started doing is that they saw where this was going and they used it in order to turn the world against Israel. And now Israel is being accused of starvation and keeping food away from hungry children. And this caused Hamas to harden its positions in the negotiations. They feel emboldened. And over the weekend, after so many people warned and so many people raised red flags, the Israeli government began to change course, again, in kind of a panic mode, usual behavior for Netanyahu.
Starting point is 01:18:55 And now they're trying to bring more and more aid into Gaza, which is good. I mean, this is the right thing to do. But you ask yourself, what was it for this entire thing? What purpose did it serve? And look, I agree with you. There are these sort of temporary cease, not ceasefires in place. There's pauses in place in the fighting and now they begin to do it like 10 hours a day.
Starting point is 01:19:15 And again, you know, think about it from an Israeli perspective, Tommy, for 10 hours a day, we're stopping the fire in large parts of Gaza and it's not part of a hostage release deal. This is like from the Israeli perspective, the ultimate failure, right? The whole argument was we'll renew the war so we get back the hostages and of course it was a lie. The way to get back the hostages was to continue the ceasefire from January. But look what's happening now. And just to point out like, look, there also the, the Israelis are allowing some air dropping of supplies, which is just completely insufficient, not going to work. It's a show.
Starting point is 01:19:49 During the Biden administration. It's a show. This doesn't solve anything. You need trucks. Truck. You need tons of trucks. 10 airplanes is like one truck, just to give people a perspective in terms of the amount of aid.
Starting point is 01:19:58 Right. It's totally insufficient. And also, you know, the, the time to prevent starvation is weeks ago. People are now at a state of such severe malnutrition that it can be irreversible. And what it is going to require is an exponential surge of aid because the deaths we are starting to see are the weakest,
Starting point is 01:20:16 the most frail people, right? People who are sick or young or elderly, and they're very likely to be a wave of deaths next if there isn't a massive surge of AIDS. This is true, but I don't want this to discourage anybody with influence from pushing aid, because if you push enough aid, you can still save a lot of people. And by the way, also from the Israeli perspective,
Starting point is 01:20:40 flooding Gaza with food and supplies is better than the rationing that was created under GHF because what Hamas is doing when they steal some of the food and some of the aid they're selling it for a lot of money on the black market in Gaza and food is being sold for ridiculous prices in Gaza and then they use that money to pay their fighters, their terrorists. If you flooded Gaza with such amounts of food that the prices would grow down, right, if you bring down the price of wheat, the price of bread, the price of fresh fruit and vegetables, meat, cigarettes, whatever, you bring it down by flooding the area, so Hamas, whatever they
Starting point is 01:21:24 get their hands on, they wouldn't be able to sell it for so much money. So again, this is, you know, just, it's a stupid policy and it created horrendous consequences on the ground and we have to reverse it. We have to reverse it and the time to do it, like you said, was weeks ago, but now at least it's being done.
Starting point is 01:21:43 Yeah, I think both of us fully support flooding aid in, but longer term, and look, you mentioned there have been these two ceasefires, one ended in March after Israel resumed military operations. You and I could get into all the details of sequencing of hostage releases versus prisoner releases and aid distribution and where both sides want the IDF to pull back to in the process. The I really feel like, yeah, but I really just feel like it boils down to one massive difference that can feel unbridgeable,
Starting point is 01:22:10 which is Hamas wants to negotiate a permanent end to the conflict and Bibi Netanyahu does not because he worries it would collapse his government, but also because I think a lot of Israelis, I think understandably, would view that as a quote unquote, win for Hamas. Is that accurate? And if so, like what is the pathway to bridging that gap? I think in this war, you're not going to have, at least in the Gaza theater,
Starting point is 01:22:37 you're not going to have a real winner because Israel lost so much on October 7th and the people of Gaza lost so much since October 7, and the people of Gaza lost so much since October 7, and both sides continue to lose so much every day, that this is just a disaster for everybody. Yeah, I totally agree. You can argue that Israel won the war with Hezbollah in the north, you can argue that Israel won the war with Iran, and I think those are correct interpretations of what happened in both theaters.
Starting point is 01:23:09 I think there is a tendency to exaggerate the magnitude of the victory. And I am always on the side of caution and not being arrogant and not underestimating the enemy and underestimating the desire for revenge that comes after humiliation. But I do think overall you can say Israel won the Lebanon and Iran fronts. I think the Gaza front, the promise of victory over there is a fantasy. And we are losing every day because we're losing soldiers there, you know, an entire generation of young Israelis that, you know, these are people who were kids like 18 on the verge of enlistment when
Starting point is 01:23:50 October 7 happened. They're losing their friends and so much over there and we have the hostages still not coming back. Our reputation as a country is just destroyed. It's a result of the events of the last few months. It's tearing our society apart. And the moral consequences and the questions that rise from it, this is something that we will have to contend with perhaps for years. At the same time, to say that Hamas won anything,
Starting point is 01:24:21 I mean, look what they brought upon Gaza. Look what entire cities have been erased because of what they did on October 7. So I don't think this is a question of victory or loss. I think there's a lot of politics involved here, but at the end of the day, you need to make a deal. You get all the hostages out, end the war, start rebuilding the IDF because our military took a serious hit on October 7. We lost a lot of soldiers since October 7 to death and injury and PTSD. We have some burning internal problems inside Israel that have to be fixed.
Starting point is 01:24:57 One of them is the question of who serves in the army, who is exempt from military service. This has been a big political question here in Israel because certain segments of Israeli society that have a lot of influence in the Netanyahu government are exempted from service and it's extremely unfair towards those who do serve. So we need to focus on these issues instead of chasing the last Hamas fighter and the last AK-47 and the last rocket launcher in Gaza amid the rubble and the destruction there and as we are destroying our own society and our global reputation. And this is what's at hand here and I think most Israelis understand it.
Starting point is 01:25:37 I think a lot of Israelis who supported the war in the early months of it, and I include myself in that group, today they are convinced that we need to make a comprehensive deal to finish it. But the challenge remains, right, that Netanyahu maybe does not want that deal, largely because he has this coalition of far-right ministers and they could collapse his government, right? I think it's important, Tommy,
Starting point is 01:26:03 to explain in just a minute or even 45 seconds. Israeli politics are very different than American politics. In the US, the president is directly elected. SR the senator, the members of Congress, you choose a person for a job and they have a term. In Israel, we have parliamentary politics, which means you vote for a party.
Starting point is 01:26:22 And then from those parties that make it into the parliament, you need to build a ruling coalition because you never have a scenario where one party actually has an outright majority. You need different parties to cooperate. Netanyahu's governing coalition relies on far-right messianic fanatic elements that oppose ending the war, oppose the hostage deal, they almost resigned because of the previous hostage deal, even though it was a temporary partial ceasefire, and they are threatening to pull the plug and bring down his government if he actually makes a comprehensive deal.
Starting point is 01:26:59 And this is a frustrating situation because most Israelis in return for all the hostages will support ending the war. But this minority government, they're literally a minority government now because they don't even have a majority anymore in the parliament, they lost it because of other political issues that got in the way, they are dictating the continuation of this war and these, you know, the daily grind and death of soldiers and suffering of the hostages and the catastrophe in Gaza and by the way It's also impacting the border communities like my kibbutz a lot of families are not coming back
Starting point is 01:27:35 Not going back to live in the kibbutz until the war ends people don't want to bring their children back into a war zone So this is creating so much frustration, and it is driven mostly by political interests of one man who wants to remain in power. Yeah. And so look, there's a question, I think, in the US of how to bring about political pressure on Netanyahu to force him to change.
Starting point is 01:28:00 Because when Biden was in charge, there was this mantra from the White House you hear all the time that you need to hug Bibi to get him to do what you want. And that meant never disagreeing with Netanyahu publicly, giving Netanyahu political cover at the UN, funneling weapons to the Israeli government. And look, that full disclosure, like that kind
Starting point is 01:28:18 of hug Bibi shit drove me crazy. I thought it was a terrible approach then. I think it's a terrible approach now. Now, Trump is in charge of the relationship. Uh, I would argue that Gaza had a huge impact on the 2024 election. Now, Trump, interestingly, has been more willing to break with Netanyahu on certain issues,
Starting point is 01:28:34 like, you know, the Houthi rebels. Like, we don't have to get to all the details. Syria, yeah. He's sort of been willing to, yeah. Yeah, he's been willing to kind of give Netanyahu the heisman on certain issues. Gaza has not really been one of them, with the exception of that first ceasefire.
Starting point is 01:28:48 But let's say that like the Trump or the next president or the US Congress, they really wanted to pressure Netanyahu. What steps could the US government take that would actually matter? I want to say something specifically about Trump. President Trump is very popular in Israel because of the attacks in Iran that he conducted, which were viewed by most Israelis as something that significantly improves the national security of Israel, because of some things he did in his first term as president when he moved the embassy to Jerusalem and recognized the Golan Heights as part of Israel
Starting point is 01:29:25 and things like that, Abraham Accords. And also because of that first ceasefire deal in January, because President Biden tried for many, many months to reach that ceasefire and bring back those hostages. And I want to give credit to President Biden for the first ceasefire and hostage release deal, which happened in November, 2023, that deal brought us back 100 living hostages from Gaza. Cause remember on October 7th, Hamas kidnapped 250 people, including women and children and agricultural workers
Starting point is 01:29:57 from Thailand who are not even Israeli. And so Biden's deal brought us back 100. But then the January deal, I gave a lot of credit to President Trump for reaching it. Because after that first agreement, Biden failed to get another deal for 14 months until Trump came in and boom, it happened. And that also gave him a lot of popularity.
Starting point is 01:30:18 President Trump could easily use that popularity among the Israeli public to go out and say, it's time to end the war in Gaza. It's time to make a comprehensive ceasefire deal. Enough with this, excuse my French, but bullshit of temporary deals, partial deals, five hostages today, five hostages two weeks from now, two hostages 50 days from now. Right. You know, we'll discuss the end of the war during the negotiations.
Starting point is 01:30:50 No, why does it have to be so complicated? Because that's what Netanyahu and Ron Dermer want. If Trump came out and said, it's time for a comprehensive agreement and the war in Gaza, release all the hostages in one, you know, put them all on one bus, okay? Twenty of them, including my friend Omri Miran, are alive. Put them all on one bus. Thirty are assumed to be dead. Put all their caskets on another bus and bring them to Israel and finish this nightmare.
Starting point is 01:31:19 And have a plan for the day after in Gaza, Hamas will have to give up the governing powers, there will have to be a different Palestinian government there, you have an Egyptian, Saudi, Emirati plan just on this issue, that with some tweaks and corrections can be accepted by Israel and can be a good solution and can create better security. Trump can get it done just by the fact that he's so popular in Israel that it would be difficult for Netanyahu to face up and confront him over this. But he refuses to do it.
Starting point is 01:31:55 And instead what he's doing, he's adopting Netanyahu and Dermer's temporary partial ceasefire plan, you know, this idea of a 60-day ceasefire. Several hostages will be released in the beginning, another few hostages will be released after 50 days. The rest of the hostages will wait for the 60-day mark and you will have negotiations in between. And Netanyahu is even insisting in the negotiations that the aid into Gaza will keep running through GHF, this organization. And you know, I ask a simple question, Tommy. Are we getting everything mixed up? I thought, based on what Netanyahu said, that the purpose of GHF was to pressure Hamas to
Starting point is 01:32:39 compromise in the hostage negotiations because they will not have access to the aid or whatever. Why are we instead pushing off the hostage deal in order to keep in place GHF? That's just twisted logic. Trump could cut that entire kind of Gordian knot in a second. He just needs to decide that he wants to do it. And he will get a lot of credit for it internationally. And I believe also in the United States, I think most Americans, as far as they follow this war, they just want it to end
Starting point is 01:33:13 because they think it's tragic and heartbreaking. And he will also get a lot of credit for it in Israel. But he needs to decide that he wants to do it. As long as he keeps allowing Netanyahu and Dermer to set the terms of the negotiations everything is gonna remain stuck Well, and also I would say you tell me if I'm wrong He didn't really help matters by promoting this plan for the full ethnic cleansing of Gaza and turning it into a resort town Which is ludicrous on its face and in a war crime and you know crime against humanity But it's also normalized
Starting point is 01:33:45 that position in the government. Yeah, that plan is not going to be helpful because now you have the far right in Israel say, well, why should we make a hostage deal if we can get this plan from Trump? And the military in Israel says, this plan is a fantasy that is never going to be executed. And then the ministers in government tell the generals, no, you, you just lack
Starting point is 01:34:07 imagination and it's become a sticking point that is getting everything again, stuck in place and, and Trump again, you know, he has the leverage. To put an end to this nightmare. He really does, but he needs to decide that he wants to do it. Yeah. And one other challenge here, which is that, you know, Prime Minister Netanyahu is on trial for all kinds of corruption, accepting gifts, giving favors to, you know, powerful people for media coverage. Bribery, fraud, breach of trust.
Starting point is 01:34:37 That's basically the allegations. And the gist is for folks listening, he needs to stay in power, he thinks, to keep himself out of prison. And so that keeps his lock on the government even more, you know, white knuckled. It's helpful as a defendant to have the schedule of a prime minister and he's been using it to avoid the trial almost on a weekly basis. I have to go to Washington, I have an urgent phone call, I have to go to Washington. I have an urgent phone call. I have urgent business related to the war.
Starting point is 01:35:06 And he skips testimony after testimony. And that's a big part of it. So as you mentioned, Amir, the world is, global opinion has shifted enormously against Israel, just given the scenes we're seeing and the stories and just the horrific death toll in Gaza. And one recent example is, you know, French President Emmanuel Macron recently announced his plan to recognize Palestine as a state. France is the first G7 country to recognize
Starting point is 01:35:36 Palestine. Now, in practice, this doesn't magically create a Palestinian state, but it could lead to more countries following France's lead. It puts diplomatic pressure on Israel. What is the reaction to this move by the French bin in Israel? Of course, the government is against it and also most of the opposition because once another country takes a diplomatic initiative against your country, and that's how it's perceived by most Israelis, everybody comes out against it. But also at the same time, this is more of a symbolic move.
Starting point is 01:36:09 I think the real problem for Israel is the shift in public opinion that legitimizes a move like this. There's a reason why France decided to do it now and why Britain is considering to do it. And, you know, there's been talk about Canada, Australia, other countries. There is a shift against us in global public opinion. Everybody knows it, everybody feels it here in Israel.
Starting point is 01:36:34 And this is the big problem. The step that Macron took is a reflection of the problem, more than, or you can say a phenomenon of the problem for Israel, more than, you know, significantly in itself changing so much in reality. And this is another reason. I wouldn't make it the first or even the second or the third reason, but it's another reason to strive to end the war because we are losing very bad.
Starting point is 01:36:58 We're bleeding in terms of the country's reputation every day that this continues. And that plays into the hands of Hamas and all of our other enemies. And we have enemies. Okay, Israel is not, it's not Switzerland, okay? It's surrounded by people who don't like our country. And right now we're playing into their hands because we are every day losing more and more support.
Starting point is 01:37:22 And this is one example of it. Yeah, and I fear that this war is just a driver of global antisemitism, which is obviously a centuries old problem. It's not just the Holocaust. It dates back farther. Yeah, antisemitism, you know, never needs reasons, but I do think that on a generational level this war is going to cause problems for Israel and for Israelis. And tragically, also for Israelis who are not supportive of this government, who are not supportive of its actions, but for someone who's stupid and hateful, you know, will become immediately affiliated, just like, right,
Starting point is 01:38:00 not every American necessarily supports everything that the Trump administration is doing But yeah, but this is something this is gonna be a problem for a long time We had this again another reason to put an end to it Yeah, and I unfortunately think potentially a problem for America and Americans because we are rightly seen as Israel's You know make a partner make sense in this war So look finally a mirror anyone listening to to us, like it is easy to feel hopeless about, you know, not just what's happening in Gaza, you know. I think as a parent, it's hard not to see those images
Starting point is 01:38:33 and just imagine what it would be like to be a mom or dad and not be able to protect your kids, right? It like, it breaks you in a way. And it's also, it's hard not to feel hopeless about the hope for a Palestinian state or the broader, you know, that Israelis and Palestinians could live in side by side in peace. Your government is run by terrible people. My government is run by terrible people. Is there anything you are seeing as someone on the ground in Israel who is coming at this from
Starting point is 01:39:01 far left in Israel? Humanistic perspective. Yeah, well, the piece, one of the horrible, irony is the wrong word, I don't know, one of the horrific things that happened on October 7th was- So many peace activists were murdered. Yes, people most committed to peace were many of the ones targeted on complexes. Again, another reason to feel hopeless.
Starting point is 01:39:20 Is there anything you are seeing that gives you some sort of hope? I think, right now, I agree with you, man. It's really hard to find hope. And the situation is really, you know, just kind of despairing. But I'm very close to some of the families of the hostages, including the family of my friend Omri, but also other families that I know from different circumstances.
Starting point is 01:39:47 Their struggle, including, for example, the struggle of John and Rachel Goldberg-Polin, who lost their son, Hirsch. He was kidnapped by Hamas on October 7, and he was murdered last summer when Israeli troops got close to the tunnel where Hamas was holding him together with five other hostages and they were executed so that the soldiers wouldn't get them. The struggle of those families that they've been leading for now 662 days to end the war, save their loved ones and stop all the killing, to me it's a source of inspiration. I don't know how they find the strength to get out of bed and continue fighting, whether it's families that still have a loved one held by Hamas or people like John and Rachel who lost their son but they continue to fight for others. But when I see them doing it every day, I tell myself, okay, I can't quit.
Starting point is 01:40:39 I have to keep speaking up and writing and saying and talking to anybody who would give me a platform, including yourself, to advocate for this. Because if they have the strength to do it, who am I to sit on the sidelines? Yeah, well said. Well, Amir, thank you for doing the show. Everyone should read Haaretz.
Starting point is 01:40:57 I told I always say it wrong, but I'm doing my best. You got it right this time. And also buy The Gates of Gaza, A Story of Betrayal, Survival, and Hope in Israel's borderlands. Just a truly unbelievable story about... Everyone just buy it, read the book. And thank you for doing the show. Thank you, Tommy, and let's hope for good news.
Starting point is 01:41:18 That's our show for today. Thanks to Amir T-Bone for coming on. Dan and I will be back with a new show on Friday. Talk to everybody then. Thanks to Amir T-Bone for coming on. Dan and I will be back with a new show on Friday. Talk to everybody then. If you want to listen to Pod Save America ad free or get access to our subscriber Discord and exclusive podcasts,
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