Pod Save the World - Trump the “Peacemaker”
Episode Date: January 22, 2025Tommy and Ben discuss Trump’s inauguration, the tech oligarchy that was on display, foreign leaders in attendance, some of the most damaging and far-reaching executive orders from pulling out of the... Paris Climate agreement to designating Mexican cartels terrorist organizations, and nomination updates on Tulsi Gabbard and Pete Hegseth. They also talk about the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas and the debate over who gets credit for it in Washington DC, the continued agony of uncertainty for Israeli hostage families and civilians in Gaza, the failed TikTok ban, the arrest of South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol, and a story of cancel culture coming after one man’s enhancements in Italy. Then, Ben speaks to Sam Rose, Acting Director of UNRWA Affairs in Gaza, about the conditions on the ground and immediate humanitarian needs as the ceasefire takes effect. 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.
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Welcome back to Podsay of the World.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
I'm Ben Rhodes.
Uh, shit is bleak, Ben.
It's really, like, normally I love doing this show because we get to turn off American politics for a while and use different parts of our brain and talk about new things.
But it's been very hard to focus on kind of anything but yesterday for me today.
I don't know about you.
Yeah, no, my, let's just say my partially dry January did not hold through yesterday.
I'm a little worse for where.
20 days, that's not bad.
Something about the imagery of yesterday led me directly to vodka.
Yeah. Were you California dry, which like, it's like mushrooms, ketamine, a little weed.
I'm very California dry. Yeah, yeah. I'm not dry at all now. Yeah, that was dark yesterday. That was bleak, I have to say.
It was dark. Also, it was endless. Like, we'll get into it. But the dude did his inaugural. He did like seven speeches yesterday. It's like, buddy, you're exhausting us on day one. And I know that's the plan. That's the plan. Yeah, that's the plan. Well, as you can tell, today we're going to cover the inauguration. We're going to cover what it means to put on display the new American oligarchy.
and just show the world all our donors as well as our tech leaders on the dais.
We'll talk about some of the foreign policy elements of Trump's speech.
We'll tackle a few of the flurry of executive orders that Trump signed yesterday and what they mean for climate change, immigration policy, counterterrorism and more.
And then we will briefly check in on some of Trump's nominees for senior positions in national security.
We'll talk about the ceasefire in Gaza, how it came to be, who gets the credit, and what comes next.
this TikTok band disaster, and then the rolling madness in South Korea.
And then, Ben, you did our interview today.
Who did you talk to?
Yeah, I talked to Sam Rose, who's the acting director of UNRWA in Gaza.
So I think we've had a lot, thanks to Alona and Michael, we've had a lot of good clips from people there.
But I think this is the first time I was able to interview someone at length.
So please, I know we always say this, but everybody should listen to this interview to just get a sense of
what it's like in Gaza, what the mood is, what the scale of destruction is, what the humanitarian
effort is focused on now, and the absolute cruel insanity of the fact that Israel has passed
a law that is going to ban UNRWA, ban any Israeli interaction with UNRWA, which would
essentially make it impossible for them to do their work because they obviously work at checkpoints
and international aid workers won't be able to leave and come back under this law. So in dark
times I have to say, if you're sad about Trump, just listen to Sam Rose and think about what it's
like to be in Gaza right now. So people should definitely listen to that interview. Well, that's a hell
of a plug. Yeah. If you want to be emotionally gutted twice. No, it's important. Well, honestly,
like the positive of it is, you know, it didn't get to tell the guy exactly. But I mean,
people like this give you some hope, right? I mean, he said he's been going in and out of Gaza for like
almost 20 years, I think. And there are good people out there trying to help other people.
And that, there's hope in that. Let's just say that. Yeah, there is. Ben, do you know, are, I'm seeing a lot more images of just how flattened Gaza is. You know, there were images of northern Gaza that were coming out yesterday that we basically like every structure is down. There were a lot of images of Rafa where we kept hearing that the Israeli military invasion had been partially stopped, but it sure doesn't look like given the aftermath. By the extraordinary diplomacy of the Biden administration, they really stopped that invasion that just left the place looking like Hiroshima, you know.
But yeah, but do you know, I mean, are foreign journalists getting in yet? Do we know?
I've not seen foreign journalists get in yet. So we'll see. I mean, there are different phases of this ceasefire. I mean, Sam was saying that the, you know, there's still, you're still not able to go from southern Gaza to northern Gaza. So there's still a lot of restrictions on movement at this phase. So we'll see.
Got it. Got it. Well, we will get to that and we'll talk about the phases of the ceasefire in depth. But let's start with Trump's inauguration. So the events themselves were moved inside.
because it is freezing cold in Washington, D.C.
And then as much as I would love to make fun of Trump for being a beta wimp and point out
how cold Obama's inauguration was in 2009, I'm currently in New York and I just walked here
to the studio.
And I can confirm that it's brutally cold outside.
So changing locations, probably a good idea.
But moving the events indoors meant a shrunken stage in dais.
And despite all of that, Trump still surrounded himself with this, you know, coterie of
American tech oligarchs.
I'd say starting with credit where credit is due, Elon Musk, bought his chair on that stage.
He put $250 million into the Trump campaign and now is this sprawling kind of White House portfolio
doing God knows what.
But, oh, by the way, Ben, did you see that Vivek Ramoswamy already got fired from Doge for being
so annoying?
Well, yeah, since his kind of bizarre tweet about or asked about how horrible, about what was it
Steve or.
Save by the bell.
Or stayed by the bell.
Yeah.
Screech.
Yeah.
We got to laugh where we can.
Yeah, we do.
So the vague's fired from Doge.
Elon's still running it.
But like aside from Elon, right, he was like in the club, I mean, on that stage
were met as Mark Zuckerberg, Google Sundar Pichai, Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Open AI, Sam Altman,
TikTok CEO, Shouchu.
So all these guys are just sitting next to the incoming, oh, by the way, the TikTok
CEO sitting next to the incoming director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, which I guess shout
out to her.
Somebody had a sense of humor in the seating chart there.
She had a real hands-on approach to intelligence collection.
But like we'll get into that TikTok stuff later.
But I just, you know, I also spotted Bury Madelson, who's a huge Trump donor, Sheldon
Adelson's wife.
He's passed away.
But she is reportedly wants Trump to annex the West Bank.
That's sort of like the price tag.
Yeah.
For, yeah, what she wants to buy is annexation.
So I just want to get your takeaway, Ben, from seeing this new American oligarchy on
display at the inauguration. I mean, again, a lot of the tech CEOs were there because they
had to bend the need of Trump. And I think he was showing the world like, look, look at all these
supplicants kind of bow down to me. But it did strike me that like the message that sends to the
world is the United States mixing business and donor money in a way that just was completely new.
I mean, our political system is disgusting and full of money and it's terrible. But the optics of having like
donors ahead of the cabinet.
pretty pretty on the nose. Yeah, it kind of felt like a straight line from the Citizens United
decision to that tableau. So the decision by the Supreme Court to allow unlimited money and
dark money in American politics kind of leads to this oligarchy quite directly. So there's
no way of fixing it without fixing money in politics, which isn't happening anytime soon.
I guess my reaction, apart from just being totally disgusted by those people, because they don't,
Look, if you want to be sympathetic, okay, maybe, you know, you feel like you need to play ball a little bit with Trump to stop him from destroying your company.
But you actually don't need to sit up there like that.
No.
I mean, I didn't, you know.
Not at all.
Like, you don't, as he's running down America and giving this kind of dark apocalyptic speech and anointing himself as chosen by God to save America, like you don't need to sit there.
And I think what I, we've talked a bunch about oligarchs on this show, like obviously Russian
oligarchs and Hungarian oligarchs and Indian oligarchs.
It's not a new idea that there are people that are powerful and politically connected
and own media enterprises and have deep reach and life and, you know, of the people in a
country.
I think what's different, though, Tommy, is that we're the United States.
And so our oligarchs are mega-powerful.
globally, you know. So it's not, you know, Victor Orban has a buddy who was one of his childhood
friends. And I think this guy was like a plumber. And now he's like a billionaire. And so, you know,
and then he's fine. That guy doesn't control technology companies that influence life everywhere on
earth. And so I think what makes this kind of extra scary is that, you know, meta is the leading
experience of the internet and communications for hundreds of millions, if not billions of people
around the world. You know, Sam Altman and Google are developing artificial intelligence.
As is meta, yeah. Yeah. That could transform life on earth, you know. And so I think what is so
unsettling about it is, sure, it's kind of conventional oligarchy a la Putin's Russia, but the
stakes are just so much higher because it's the United States and there's so much power in these
companies. And their personal interest are clearly, you know, now entangled with Trump's in ways
that are deeply worrying. And I guess the last thing I'd say by way of introduction is these guys
are really showing who they are because, you know, these are the kind of guys, some of them, at
least, who turn up at like climate change summits, you know, or like talk about sustainability.
This guy pulled out of the fucking Paris agreement yesterday.
Like, as you were bending the knee and slaughtering on them and, you know, grinning goofily in the kind of row of oligarchs, this guy's doing something, you know, my point is that these-
Pardoning the January 6th rioters that you all said were deplorable.
Yeah, these people clearly don't care about anything except themselves.
And I know that's an obvious point.
But it's just worth reinforcing never again believe anything any one of those people says.
And even if they give some money way, they have unlimited money.
It's a fucking drop in the ocean to them.
And so they've just shown who they are forever.
We now know who these people are.
And it's our challenge to make it clear that this is the actual establishment in the world.
The establishment isn't podcasters and climate scientists as much as right-wing influences would make me to think.
The elites are the richest people on the planet who are sitting next to the fucking elites.
Right there.
That's the elites.
I did, Ben, you know how it was sometimes when you buy a ticket on like Stubhub at the last minute to Fenway Park or like Shea Stadium?
Yeah.
There are seats with obstructive views.
Like you're behind like a huge concrete pillar.
Yeah, yeah.
That was basically where they put Mike Pence, which I did find kind of funny.
Like Joe Rogan had a better seat than Rotunda, it seemed.
But also, you know, Trump invited lots of heads of state to attend the inauguration.
He invited Chinese president Xi Jinping, Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, Benjamin, Benjamin.
at Yahoo, the prime minister of Israel.
They didn't come, which is normal.
But he did get the kind of conservative
rogues gallery of right-wing populace.
I think we spotted Italian prime minister,
Georgia Maloney, who was there,
Argentinian president Javier Mulei.
For some reason, former British prime minister,
Liz Truss and the Tory former home secretary,
Suella Braterman showed up.
I don't know why Liz Truss comes to all these events.
Like, who wants to see Liz Truss?
It's the least exciting person I could imagine.
Well, and I saw, like, Suella Breverman posting selfies of herself in the freezing cold in D.C., like, what is she there to do?
Like, she doesn't run anything.
Like, this kind of right-wing, you know, lunatic fringe of people that just kind of want to bask in the glow of Trump.
But this is a person with no standing, like, really.
So, yeah, we got treated to all those people.
I'm glad that they had a fun day.
Good for that.
Yeah, I hope they wore a long underwear.
Trump himself, he gave like three different speeches.
There was the official inaugural speech.
There was the MAGA red meat that he did right after to the overflow room at the Capitol,
which was even longer and crazier.
They talked about like Pelosi wanting January 6th to happen.
Then he went to the Capitol One arena for this big rally with supporters who were supposed to go
to the parade that was canceled because it was too cold.
Then he did like a 45 minute executive order signing in the Oval Office that was also part
press conference.
And it was just this classic like Steve Bain.
in flood the zone with shit day. But Ben, I don't know if you saw this. At the Capitol
One rally, Trump invited a bunch of the Israeli hostage families onto the stage. And then he went on
a rant with them just standing there about the J6 hostages, is what he was calling them, the January
6th insurrectionists who were being held to prison until he pardoned them last night. And then he did
all these tributes to his own family, which is just a very weird thing to do in front of these
people who were like desperately trying to get loved ones home. But back to the speeches, Ben,
This is an excerpt from like the actual official inaugural speech for you guys to enjoy.
My proudest legacy will be that of a peacemaker and unifier.
That's what I want to be, a peacemaker and a unifier.
A short time from now, we are going to be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.
And we will restore the name of a great president, William McKinley.
to Mount McKinley where it should be and where it belongs.
President McKinley made our country very rich
through tariffs and through talent.
He was a natural businessman
and gave Teddy Roosevelt the money for many of the great things he did,
including the Panama Canal.
We have been treated very badly from this foolish gift
that should have never been made,
and Panama's promise to us has been broken.
And above all, China is our China is unlawful
operating the Panama Canal, and we didn't give it to China. We gave it to Panama, and we're taking it back.
Okay, so a fun transition from peacemaker to annexing waterways and invading Panama.
Ben, we've sort of talked about the facts and the substance of this Panama Canal process before,
but any big takeaways from the various speeches yesterday or the rhetoric generally?
I think that, first of all, the rhetoric, what scared me about the rhetoric, right, is there's this kind of
normal, dark, apocalyptic stuff, right, up top.
And then he has this point where he talks about getting shot and, you know, the bullet
ripping through his ear.
And then he says, he basically says something like, you know, God saved me, I think, so
that I could make America great again or something.
And with Trump, you're always, you know, we'll go back and forth.
Maybe this is all just like he's a show with right wing politics so that he can like get rich, you know, on his corruption and on his Trump mem coin and things like that.
But then every now and then you hold open the possibility that that he is, you know, what he sounds like, which is a straight up scary right wing.
I mean, if you read that 20 years ago, you'd be like, oh, there's a fascist running the United States, you know.
And so that scared me.
You know, who knows?
Maybe that's just him being Trump and, you know, I don't want to over crank it.
No, I mean, your rights have mentioned it because there's a lot of this convention speech, too.
I mean, this kind of divine intervention, he's a gift from the Lord to save us.
It's a thing that I think kind of emerge from the kind of evangelical nationalist fringe of the party that he is appropriated.
Yeah.
And it's just never good for someone to think that about themselves, whoever they are.
Yeah.
On the other stuff, I mean, first of all, like, you know, it had the state of the union field because, you know, all these members of Congress in a closed space.
Yeah.
The cheers for the Gulf of America, what a bunch of children, you know?
I mean, it's just stupid.
It reminded me there, Tommy, like, do you remember that in meetings, there were always some people in the Pentagon that insisted on calling the Persian Gulf, the Arabian Gulf?
No.
Why?
Because it was like, you know, fuck the Iranians or something.
Oh, my God.
So there's a history of some of this stuff.
But I have to say what jumped out to me about the Panama section is it's a big deal, usually, to put something in an inaugural dress.
I've worked on inaugural dresses.
Like, you expect every word to be scrutinized.
Now, with Trump, you never know if he is what he's signaling.
But, I mean, there was a lot of real estate in that speech for the fucking Panama Canal.
Interestingly, Greenland didn't make an appearance.
I don't know if the deal is got to him or something.
something, but it seemed kind of scary. Because he later in the speech, he talks about
territorial expansion. Like at the end, he was doing a litany of things he's going to do to make
America great. And one was expanding our territory. That's not something we've heard. And this
William McKinley reference, first of all, if there is an afterlife, William McKinley must be
quite confused right now about the comeback. He's having a moment. Yeah, he's having a moment. But
William McKinley was there at the dawn of American imperialism, right? So this is, you know, Spanish-American war stuff, America claiming territories. And they seem to have been reading up on William McKinley. And that's what that's about. I mean, it's not his business acumen. It's this guy enlarged the United States through overseas territories. And so I just think, whether it's Panama or Greenland, I think this is a part of the agenda. I just have no idea, you know, is he going to put terrace on Panama? I could,
Panama is not going to give up the canal. So I just don't quite understand what the policy is,
but I think, again, we should take it seriously. Yeah, and it's funny. They seem to seize on a
president early on in his administration. The first term, remember, was Andrew Jackson. They were
constantly talking about Andrew Jackson. He had a portrait of Andrew Jackson up, and people are kind of like,
hey, man, have you Googled the Trail of Tears and some of the darker parts of his history? But, yeah,
they don't care. It's almost like a troll. It is. Like, I mean, do we think,
think that Donald Trump, like, knew much about William McKinley, like, a few years ago.
Like, someone clearly is like, you know, pitched him on this idea that he's the modern-day
McKinley, I guess, you know?
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So he did all those speeches. He did that press conference. Did all those EOs. And then the New York
Times blog, a reporter named Sean McCreech posted. But doing after all that, he said, quote,
President Trump is now waving a military sword around in the air while dancing to the village people.
still an hour to go.
We got the full experience yesterday.
We got the full ride yesterday.
It was quite a day.
But let's get to the substance.
So Trump signed like 200 EOs yesterday.
We're not going to go through all these executive orders that would take all day.
But here's a few of the most relevant ones for us.
Trump pulled us out of the Paris Climate Accords and the World Health Organization.
Ben, I don't know if you watched this kind of 45-minute Oval Office signing event slash press conference.
But after he got handed the World Health Organization executive order to sign, he goes,
who that's a big one. He was like excited about it. It was very funny. He did a bunch of immigration
executive orders. The impact of those was felt immediately. There's this unbelievably sad Washington Post story
today about a Cuban family that had escaped Cuba. I think they went through Nicaragua to get to Mexico
City. They waited Mexico City for six months where they applied for an asylum meeting through
the CBP1 app, which is the app you could download to try to do the right thing and follow
the rules to get into the U.S. asylum process.
And then their appointment, which was supposed to happen, like the first day of the Trump
administration, just got canceled.
So this woman had had a C-section 45 days ago.
They had a newborn baby.
They have nowhere to go, no or nothing to do, no plan B.
And it was just devastating.
He also, you know, Trump also designated drug cartels as a foreign terrorist organization.
I'm very interested to understand what that means in practice, Ben.
It's like, are we now at war with them? Are we going to try to kill them? Is the U.S. military going to be launching strikes? I mean, this was a big conversation during the campaign. I guess time will tell if it was literal. The one area where Trump did not deliver on his campaign promises was on the tariffs. He promised the, the, the promise 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada. That apparently is going to have to wait until February 1st. And then I think Trump basically told agencies to study further trade issues.
in tariffs. So long story short, no 10 to 20 percent tariffs across the board on day one and no 60
percent tariffs on Chinese goods. Given Ben that our mantra for this next four years is watch of what
he does, not what he says, what do you think were the most important executive actions that came out of
yesterday? I think even though it was obviously expected pulling out of the Paris agreement,
you know, cannot be overstated. I mean, it just is debilitating to,
international coordination to fight climate change.
And you couple that with his, you know, giddy references to liquid gold and drill baby
drill in his inaugural dress.
An expanded drilling, yeah.
The fact, we're living in a city, Tommy, where it's like burning down because of climate change.
And it's 2025.
And we got people pulling out of international climate.
I mean, it's absurd to me that we are here.
And so that will have real effects.
It will diminish America's capacity.
to participate in and you like to be galvanizing climate action, it will totally seed
the space to China as the kind of clean energy superpower and as the country that is still
in this.
And I think what we'll see is, you know, European countries getting closer to China.
So it's an ultimate own goal.
And people can like dunk on me for being a lib who cares about climate change.
But I mean, all those people can be living on this planet too.
So I don't know what they think they're getting out of it.
Pulling out of the World Health Organization, you know, will, God forbid, there's another, you know, pandemic or any kind of epidemic disease.
It will obviously make it harder to coordinate international action in that regard.
We live in a world as we learned during COVID where there's movement of peoples.
And so not being a part of the global health infrastructure is a pretty dumb thing to do.
And, gee, I thought we would have learned something from the people.
pandemic that happened under Trump's watch, but obviously not. I'd just note Tommy that, you know,
after Joe Biden's courageous decision to remove Cuba from the state sponsor of terrorism
list a few days before he left office, Trump obviously put them right back on. It might have been
good to do that a few years ago to give it some space. So that one obviously not surprisingly
suggests that Cuba's back in its kind of.
and its destitution. So that jumped out to me as well. And, and yeah, on the cartels piece,
in addition to the potential for military action, Mexico, you know, enforcing those sanctions,
the cartels, you know, that designation should mean that anybody that does any business with cartels
is government, Mexico, Mexican military, right? Or any, I mean, do you know how many, the cartels are worth
billions of dollars. And so, you know, they control infrastructure in certain Latin American
countries. You know, they have front companies that do other things. And so what I'm curious about,
like you, is the actual enforcement of just even the sanction, by the way, a lot of Americans,
you know, where do you think they buy the guns, guys? You know, they get the guns in the United States.
So if they actually want to enforce that in the same way that the U.S. tries to enforce that with al-Qaeda
and other terrorist organizations,
you'd be sanctioning a lot of people and entities.
So I'm just curious whether that's a messaging tool
or whether they're actually going to do something with it.
Yeah, that one, I mean, it could be so far-reaching
because there's all this news reports
about very senior Mexican government officials
with deals or agreements or ties to cartels,
senior leaders in the Mexican military,
as you noted, all kinds of business leaders.
So, yeah, one to watch in terms of these.
enforcement. A couple of stupid petty things, Ben, I don't know if you saw Trump, they got,
they removed the security clearances from 51 former national security officials who signed that
letter back in 2020 that Hunter Biden's laptop had quote, all the classic earmarks of a Russian
information operation. Obviously that letter was wrong. It was hedged and couched and it said,
you know, it was like their opinion at the time, but it was wrong. But I just wondered, though,
how many of those people have active, by the way, I just want to say, Tommy, and I'm in a mood today
about this. It was wrong because we were lied to by the Biden campaign. I mean, I remember feeling
like an idiot because they said, oh, this is Russian disinformation. So let's just be clear.
Like that, that, that, they should have owned up to Hunter's laptop, but full stop.
Sorry. Yeah, I mean, maybe Hunter just told them what he did with it. But the one thing that
just jumped out of me is I don't know how many of those people still have security clearances.
So it just seemed like kind of stupid and petty. And the other really super petty thing I noticed they did
was the Pentagon removed former chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Mark Millie's portrait from
the Pentagon hallway 10 days after it had been put up.
This is the pettiest shit I've ever heard.
Well, that's what I mean by there's like a childishness to some of this stuff, like the portrait.
I will say it's an indication of you look for these indicators of how things are different this
time around.
And we've talked about the appointments and everything.
Do you remember last time, like something like a year or two into the Trump administration,
he revoked John Brennan's security clearly?
because Brendan was, like, tweeting, like, you stoundrel, you know.
And it was like a big story.
It was like, wow, like they revoked John Brennan's security clearance.
And now we're starting there, right?
So it's, we've got a running start here, you know.
And it's not the thing to be most upset about by any stretch.
But like some of those people, you know, they do jobs that require them to have the security clearance.
Some of them are screwed.
So some of them are actually kind of screwed.
Weird deal.
Anyway, just for folks, just for context,
executive orders allow the president to direct government operations within existing law,
but you need an act of Congress to write a new law, to actually amend a law, to appropriate money.
So a lot of these EOs will end up dealing with court challenges.
Some of them could be struck down.
Some of them are glorified press releases, but we'll see.
Some of them will have pretty serious impacts.
And obviously, Trump has packed the court.
But Ben, just a quick update on the personnel stuff.
So Marco Rubio was unanimously confirmed to be Secretary of State.
Not at all surprised about that.
That's kind of like a free bipartisan vote for everybody.
Pete Hegseth passed out of the Armed Services Committee, I think, along partisan lines,
which suggests he's on track to be confirmed as Secretary of Defense, which is crazy.
The one nominee that is still dealing with some issues is Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's pick to be the Director of National Intelligence.
Adding to her complications or political problems, the Washington Post has a piece out today that is based off of a bunch of
records from her congressional office. I think these records were turned over maybe to the House
Ethics Committee or to the vetting people looking at her nomination. And it's from the period
when her aides were trying to deal with the political blowback from Tulsi's trip to Syria in
meeting with Bashar al-Assad in 2017. Apparently she met with Assad for three hours. Then she met with
Assad's wife and then met with Assad again a day or two later. But when Tulsi's
trip to Syria in Lebanon was approved by the ethics committee. Her itinerary included no meetings
with Syrian officials. So the very clear takeaway from this story and these emails and these back and forth
with her staff and like edits into this Google Doc where they're trying to figure out their spin is that
it sounds like Tulsi lied to her own staff about this Syria trip and specifically tried to
claim that the Assad meeting just kind of popped up once she got to Syria. But then there's an
email exchange about the optics of her meeting with him literally one hour after she got into
the country. So there's just seemingly no possible way this meeting with the fucking, you know,
despot head of state in Syria just kind of happened versus being planned out. It's very fucking shady.
It is very shady. And I want to say something nice about a couple of Biden people first,
because I've been a little hard on obviously Biden himself. Avril Haynes, who's the outgoing DNI,
You know, really extraordinary person who did under the radar very good work, right?
So I just, you know, note that there's a very good person leaving and we got Tulsi coming in.
Bill Burns, obviously, you know, who we talked about did a great job at CIA.
This thing about Tulsi and Assad, what is so alarming about this, Tommy, is that the best case scenario is that she just decided to have a three-hour meeting with Bashar al-Assad, an absolutely murdering.
dictator that there's no reason to meet with. That's one end of the spectrum. And then the spectrum
runs all the way to like someone was like running Tulsi, you know, and like setting up the meeting
and what's a relationship with Russia. And I don't, I'm not, you know, like, there are serious
questions here that I think will be, one of the things I'm struck by Tommy is that, you know,
she's been having meetings with senators. And the, you know, the same senators that are like,
Like, oh yeah, Pete Hackseth, he's great.
You're like, you know, we need him there at the Pentagon.
Seems sober to me.
Yeah, it seems.
Or no, not even that.
Like, haven't you voted drunk in the Senate?
Sober enough.
Some of those same senators seem to be alarmed by Tulsi.
We just pause.
What Ben just said is a literal quote from, I think, Mark Wayne Mullen, a senator defending Pete
Pete Hicketh, who is like, oh, you care that this guy's drunk?
How many of you have voted drunk?
As if, like, voting tipsy for like cloture on a post office naming.
is the same as like getting a call about whether or not to fire a nuke back at Russia at three
in the morning.
That's a thing that happened.
That's a thing that happened.
That's a thing that happened.
That's a thing that actually happened in reality, to be clear.
But yeah, like the intelligence community would know probably something about this meeting
because Bashar al-Assad is obviously somebody that the U.S. intelligence community has been, you know, watching.
And so what we don't know is kind of what is in the backdrop of this story.
And interestingly, again, the U.S. Intelligence Committee and presumably some of the people on the Senate Intelligence Committee probably no.
You know, so it'll be an interesting hearing.
And it just makes, what do you think she's about, Tommy?
Because I don't, like, part of me is like, is she just kind of in that weird convergence of the left and the right where you agree with everything Russia says because you just, you know, you're in that kind of weird, you know, Tucker Carlson kind of space?
or does she just like a kind of attention so she wanted to meet with Assad?
I know.
What is going on, do you think?
It's so hard to follow because, listen, the very charitable version of it is she served in
the U.S. military.
She was deployed to Iraq.
She saw what a disaster it was and came back very opposed to any wars, including any
U.S. military intervention in Syria.
And I can totally understand that.
Yeah, yeah.
But I think she also kind of got folded into the kind of horseshoe left-right place of the
who were opposed to U.S. government surveillance. And again, no problem with any of that,
but she's already flip-flopped on Section 702 surveillance, which is the authority that allows
the intelligence community to get information from all these American telecom companies, right?
Get into emails, get into whatever, texts, et cetera, right? So she flip-flop on that. So she's
already abandoned her position there. To your point on kind of the best case on this trip,
It seems quite clear that she lied to the ethics committee about why she was going to Syria and then was misleading to her own staff about what she did while she was on the ground in Damascus.
And then when she got back to the United States, she was just, I don't know, maybe she just got dug in.
But she refused, like a month later, I think, Assad used chemical weapons on his own people.
And she went on TV casting doubt on the conclusion.
by the intelligence community that it was Assad who would use poison gas rather than the opposition.
So it's like, what information are you getting? How are you vetting this in your own head?
All these things are very important for the job. She also proposed legislation that would have
prevented the U.S. government from providing funds or weapons to the Syrian opposition.
Again, like a perfectly reasonable, defensible position, but just strange given all this other
context. And she met with all these like Assad advisors and supporters, Ben, including a Syrian cleric
who, according to the Washington Post, had threatened to actually.
activate a network of suicide bombers in the U.S. in Europe if Western countries intervened in Syria.
It doesn't sound like she was meeting with like a parade of peacemakers to try to build bridges.
That's right. To your point, like if she really was earnestly just, you know, we have to talk to everybody because we have to avoid war, why not come out and say that?
You know, why not just say, you know what?
I think we have to talk to our enemy.
I've made the case. We have to talk to our enemies, not just our friends. And so therefore, I'm going to meet with Assad.
And I wouldn't have liked that, but at least it makes sense.
There's something deeply strange about how she's handled this.
The other thing I just want to point out, Tommy, is that, like, you know, I was,
took me, like, a few extra months to get my security clearance just because I was honest
about my past drug use on my SF-86.
We're putting someone in charge of the U.S. intelligence community that any employee
seeking a security clearance would totally get nixed for this, right?
All day, every day.
Lying about, because they ask you in all these interviews, you know,
Have you had a girlfriend or boyfriend from a foreign country?
Like all the places you've traveled, they really, like, you know, go deep on this stuff.
And so literally, what does it say?
I know norms are out the door, you know, but there's this kind of vast enterprise of the U.S. government investigating people to get security clearances and to work in the intelligence community.
But basically the person who's being put in charge, like, would never pass that vet.
It just, it is going to totally upend the kind of, you know, culture.
And look, I think they've been too stringent on things like drug use and, and whatever.
Yeah, there's a lot of dumb questions.
It points to the absurdity.
And I'm not sure it fits with Trump's pledge yesterday and his inaugural dress to run a meritocracy, you know.
No, no, no, no.
Also, Tulsi went to Syria with Dennis Kucinich, and they both brought their spouses.
Why would you bring your spouse to fucking war-torn Syria in the middle of this?
So what are you doing?
This is the vacation.
I forgot Dennis Gucinich was alive.
I know.
Remember he running in so bot?
Wasn't he in 08 primaries?
But he was like on the stage.
Yeah, he was like a gadfly candidate in a bunch of these things.
I don't know.
Very, very serene story.
One to watch.
I think, like the last week, I think I said that most of Trump's nominees looked like
they were out of the woods.
Tulsi might be the only one.
She's the only one that seems, you know.
Meanwhile, Cash Patel is going to skate right through, you know.
Yeah, he's loving this.
Yeah, she's his fullback.
All right, Ben.
So the best news since last week's show is that Israel and Hamas finally agreed to a ceasefire deal.
So far, the deal is holding.
On Sunday, three Israeli women were released by Hamas.
Three Israeli hostages were released by Hamas.
And then shortly after 90 Palestinian prisoners were released by Israel, the AP said that these Palestinian prisoners that Israel released were all women or teenagers who had been detained for offenses ranging from throwing rocks to promoting violence on social media to more serious allegations.
of attempted murder. The agreement itself, the broader agreement has three phases. Phase one is
six weeks long and includes this gradual release of 33 Israeli hostages, mostly women, the elderly,
and the sick in this phase one, in exchange for about a thousand Palestinians being held by Israel.
In this phase, the Israeli military is supposed to withdraw from population centers.
Ghazans are supposed to be able to allow to move more freely through the Gaza Strip and return home,
although they are returning to neighborhoods that are completely flattened, as we discussed a minute ago.
And then aid is being served into the Gaza Strip.
The deal calls for 600 trucks per day of humanitarian assistance to go into Gaza.
Phase two is supposed to be six weeks long.
You'd see the release of the rest of the hostages being held by Hamas, along with the release
of more Palestinian prisoners and the IDF is supposed to fully get out of Gaza.
Phase three is this long reconstruction phase.
But here's the rub.
The details of phase two and three have not been negotiated yet.
That process starts on day 16 of phase one.
So this whole deal is very technical.
And there's a smart piece in Haaretz about Israel's history of making these kind of phased deals and they never get over the finish line. They never get completed. And there's also the political reality that right-wing members of Netanyahu's cabinet have said they will top all the government if the war actually ends, which is why Netanyahu and his top staff have said over and over again that Israel reserves the right to resume fighting whatever they want, basically. So all of that has families of hostages very nervous.
and as people who want to see this war end, very nervous.
Along those lines, we caught up with Maya Roman.
She had one family member held hostage by Hamas, who was released, and another family
member killed by Hamas in the fighting.
Here's a clip from Maya.
Everyone keeps saying it's like finally being able to take a breath because really
it's so long and everyone is so tired.
So the thought that it might be over is amazing.
At the same time, I kept thinking that Carmel should have been here and her family should have also gotten to hug her and Hershey's family.
And, you know, it's hard not to get upset about the fact that we could have been here much earlier.
This deal is the first phase is 42 days when there are three people released every week.
During the first humanitarian deal, there were 10 people released every day.
And even then, it was pure torture.
You know, every day the IDF calls you to tell you if your loved one is on the list or isn't.
And it was gut-wrenching.
I cannot imagine what the families are going through now, having waited so long, and now it's
going to go for a full month and more.
At the same time, we all know that the only way forward is through.
We just have to get everyone back so that everyone can start to heal.
And I'm not just talking about the hostages or the hostages.
families. But, you know, everyone who was near the South when this happened, everyone who was
relocated during this time, all the soldiers, all the women whose husbands went to war for a year
and all the families of those who died, it really feels like our country is still stuck
on October 7th. So I really hope we can get through these next few months and finally be
ready to move on. You know, I think that just sort of perfectly encapsulates just how agonizing
even this process is after a ceasefire deal had been reached. Yeah, I hadn't thought about just that
in this kind of phase withdrawal, that agony of not knowing is my family member going to be
in the next tranche or not. And that's just got to be horrific. I mean, it's, part of what's so
tragic from Maya is that the pretty similar terms to the deal that was reached were on the table,
those terms when one of her family members was killed in Gaza.
And that's got to be incredibly wrenching as well.
So you just hope that all of the hostages that are alive are able to get out through this deal, obviously.
Yeah, absolutely.
Hope this deal gets completed.
But you can also understand why, you know, the families of hostages who might get out in phase two hate this kind of phased approach, right?
A lot of people on the streets wanted to one deal that got everyone out.
out at once. Obviously, that's not what happened here, but you can imagine just how
terrifying it would be. But Ben, I mean, there's also this, you know, far less relevant
conversation in the U.S. of not just how the deal got done, but who deserves credit for it.
So the prime minister of Qatar said that this deal, the outlines of this deal have been on
the table since December of 2023. And he said that the parties wasted 13 months negotiating
details that have, quote, no meaning and aren't worth any single life that we lost in Gaza or any
single life of these hostages, end quote. It is hard to argue with that, though I think, you know,
U.S. and Israeli negotiators would point out to us that the situation on the ground changed
drastically over those 13 months with Hamas getting decimated, Hezbollah getting
decimated, and Iran getting substantially weaker because of the military back and forth with
Israel. But a reporter asked President Biden, who deserves credit for the deal, you or Trump,
And here is his response.
Thank you.
Good.
Credit for this, Mr. President.
You or Trump?
Is that a joke?
Oh.
Thank you.
You could tell you.
He seems like genuinely surprised.
She says no, it's not a joke.
Yeah.
But anyway, look, just to cut through the bullshit on this, like, the Biden people clearly
did months and months of diplomacy and diplomatic spade work to, like, put together this
deal.
It's also clear that this last minute push from Trump and his own boy, Steve Whitkoff,
got it over the finish line.
And I also just want to say, Ben, like, hand up from me.
I owe Steve Wickeff an apology.
We, I hereby apologize on behalf of POTSafe the World and all its listeners because I think
you and I scoffed at his appointment.
He was just like a Trump golf buddy, a real estate guy.
But not only did Wickeff reportedly push Bibi to take the deal, NBC News reported that he's
considering visiting Gaza and says he planned to be, quote, a near constant presence in the region
over the coming months to make sure it's implemented.
So a lot of this came from an NBC story that was quoting transition officials, but
But a transition official for the Trump team said, quote, remember there's a lot of people radicals fanatics, not just from the Hamas side, from the right wing of the Israeli side who are absolutely incentivized to blow this whole deal up.
If we don't help the Gazans, if we don't make their life better, if we don't give them a sense of hope, there's going to be a rebellion, end quote.
And Ben, I read that.
I was like, yes.
Yeah, thank you.
Finally, someone says this.
Like, am I like a huge Steve Whitkoff fan now?
I don't know.
I mean, we're going to wait and see.
Yeah, wait and see.
But look, Liz, buy.
response is totally fucking absurd. What planet does he think we're on? Like the ceasefire happened
right before Trump came to office. Like, I think I made clear my feelings about Donald Trump. I don't
like the guy. But like, if you're telling me that this would have happened otherwise, like,
gave me a break. If this was, clearly Trump, because Trump said publicly and privately, we talked
about this. I was in Doha, by the way. I talked to some cutteries. I talked to other people.
everything you heard was that Trump was telling him get this done, wrap this up. And all the
reporting is that Whitkoff was like squeezing Beebe in a way that he had not been squeezed the
entire time that Biden was in an office, right? So he told him to send a high level representative to
Doha who can make decisions in real time. And he was leveraging all the things Trump had done
for him in the first term and being like, look, we did this for you. You fucking owe us this.
Yeah. Now the dirty, you know, what we don't know is whether he was also saying, and here's all the
other things he will do for you down the road.
You know, that's what we have to be worried about.
But still, he got the deal.
Look, the bottom line of this is this, what did the Biden people do?
They negotiated the terms.
But to be clear, Joe Biden stood up in front of the world early last summer and announced
that proposal as a, quote, Israeli proposal.
Israel didn't agree to what was presented by the United States as an Israeli proposal until
literally like a few days ago
and they had to be dragged there by Trump.
So they were gaslighting us
that whole summer when we kept hearing
about how there was an Israeli proposal that Israel had agreed to
and only Hamas is the outlier.
I'm not suggesting Hamas had agreed to it
but sure as shit Israel had not agreed to that proposal.
So what was that about?
Why would we...
I genuinely don't understand the point of
gaslighting us like that, right?
Well, the point is to run interference for Bibi Nanyahu
to say Bibi Nanyahu is agreed to this
ceasefire when he had not. So that's one point. Second point is nobody should get credit for a
situation in which Gaza has been completely obliterated and destroyed. Like a peace deal after the
place has been completely destroyed is not exactly. I mean, it's great. If the hostages get home,
it's great that trucks are getting in and UNRWA confirmed to us, you know, 600 trucks did get in.
That's all good. But like this idea, this isn't like a normal like, hey, we get credit thing.
Because this horrific thing happened.
That's the other thing.
And then the last thing is this is very tenuous.
And Trump yesterday was asked during that kind of rolling press conference if he was confident that the C-Star had hold.
And he said, I'm not confident that it'll hold.
And you got people in the Israeli government who are kind of saying wink, wink, like, you know,
and this is where we have to be careful about Whitgoth.
You know, we can resume our war.
Like what you worry about is they get hostages out and then they're just kind of back in Gaza, right?
So there's a lot to play out here.
But I just think that, man, there's something quite cynical about seeing this as an occasion for competing for credit.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm glad the deal got done, but it's just kind of ghoulish.
I'm glad the deal got done too.
I think, like, the conversation about credit is gross and ghoulish.
I do think it's worth understanding who use leverage when and how so we can learn.
from the mistakes of the past in the future.
I am as worried as you are,
given some of those Trump comments from yesterday,
and he was doing like the Jared Kushner thing,
talking about Gaza like a developer,
talking about like the beachfront property,
which is ominous if you want,
you know, Gazans to live there going forward.
You also have to wonder if part of Wickhoff's message
was like, hey, we'll let you annex the West Bank down the road.
Also, Trump lifted a bunch of sanctions
on right-wing settler groups and individuals,
I think, on his first day in office.
And these are people who,
you know, committed violence against Palestinians in the West Bank. And right as that happened,
the Israelis launched this operation in Janine in the West Bank. And there were a number of assettlers
attacking Palestinian communities. The settlers had even attacked the IDF military members who were sent
to try to break up the violence. So things are real dicey. And to your point about, you know,
just the disaster that is Gaza. And like, yes, the fighting is stopped, but now people have to live there.
And that's nearly impossible with no structures. We got a voice.
note from Shrukela, a journalist from Gaza City who is telling us about what life is like for
Gazans who are returning home now. Here's a clip.
What I'm feeling, it is a mix of complex emotions. I relieve the timbreed by grieve.
I relieve over the stopping of the killing and grieve over the losing of my husband,
the losing of my home, the losing of my sins of.
security and the terror that we have been enduring in the past 15 months.
This is fire has brought a hope, a window of hope for the people here in Gaza in the future,
but still the future is uncertain. Like for example, um, like I've lost the family house,
uh, I lost my siblings homes and my home as well. So the reality is so for jail here,
as we don't have any place to go for.
So the displacement circle seems endless, basically.
We are renting an apartment along with five families.
We are almost 19 persons here in one small apartment,
which is quite like it's too much, basically.
The future is still buggy.
The sea fire is subjected somehow to collapse
because it's just day two of the sea,
the implementation of the ceasefire, and who knows what comes in the future.
It's just an important reminder of how important it'll be to not only keep this ceasefire
together and implement it and keep both sides sort of on track, but also this reconstruction
period because 19 people living in an apartment that is untenable.
Yeah, no, we talk about this in the under interview.
I mean, there's also a lot of unexploited ordinance in that rubble.
So you can't just kind of bolboze it, right?
And bodies, right?
So it's going to be painstaking just to clear the rubble.
So you just hope that the ceasefire holds, the hostages get reunited with their families, and people just can get some normalcy.
Because part of what they also have to do, and you heard this in her voice, they've not had time to digest the loss.
You know, they've just been trying to survive, right?
And so they need to take a breath there, you know.
And so let's hope, I mean, if Steve Whitgoff wants to stay in the region and get normalcy,
great, you know. I do worry, you know, I saw, I just worry about, yeah, what was the, the quid pro quo.
We'll find out, I guess. Yeah, we'll find out. All right. We're going to take a quick break,
but as you can tell from listening to this, the next four years are going to be challenging and
disorienting. Here are crooked, we're going to be here to help you distill what truly matters,
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Okay, Ben, let's talk about TikTok for a minute. As listeners know, TikTok was briefly
bit blocked in the United States over the weekend. Any of the 170 million people in the U.S.
who are trying to use it were denied their TikTok fix when they saw a message that said,
quote, we are fortunate that President Trump has indicated that he will work with us on a solution
to reinstate TikTok once he takes office. That was the TikTok is banned message.
And then a little later, when TikTok decided to restore its own service, they saw a message that said, as a result of President Trump's efforts, TikTok is back in the U.S.
So just to summarize, TikTok turned off his own service and then turned it on and credited President Trump in the interim.
The backstory on this, the quick backstory is in his first term, Trump tried to ban TikTok kind of on the way out the door.
Then, according to a bunch of news reports, he changed his mind after meeting with a billionaire named Jeff Yas, who owns a big chunk of bite dance, which is the parent company of TikTok.
And now Trump is saying he's a fan of the app.
He's portraying himself as a savior of the app.
Trump was asked about this last night during his Oval Office press conference.
Here is what he had to say.
He wanted to block TikTok.
Why did it change your mind?
Because I got to use it.
And remember, TikTok is largely about kids, young kids.
If China's going to get information about young kids out of it.
I think, to be honest, I think we have bigger problems than that.
But, you know, when you take a look at telephones,
that are made in China and all the other things that are made in China, military equipment made in China.
TikTok, I think TikTok is not their biggest problem.
But there's big value in TikTok if it gets approved.
If it doesn't get approved, there's no value.
So if we create that value, why aren't we entitled to like half?
It's like this was banning TikTok was like one of the few bipartisan things that happened in Congress.
79 U.S. senators voted to ban TikTok.
And Trump's like, ah, who gives a fuck?
Yeah, and they've all done like a whiplash on this.
I mean, you know, people that were fervently against TikTok are now fervently for it.
It tells you a lot.
I mean, there is an oligarchy watch thing.
In addition to World War Watch, we have oligarchy watch.
The app kind of thanking Mr. Trump, you know, for saving them.
So on the nose, right?
I guess I'd just say, you know, you guys had a good conversation about this on Pots of America.
You know, the national security perspective here is.
you know, the data one, the massive data collection, message collection. And on that one,
I kind of see Trump's point. Like, China's already hacked. Like, they were listening to Trump's
phone. Like, I think that the horse is out of the barn on China collecting data on American
safety. Yeah, they're in every telecon company. Yeah. It may be more efficient to have their own app.
But, you know, I don't share that concern. I do worry, I mean, because,
let's be clear, the Chinese Communist Party ultimately calls the shots for a company like this.
There's a reason they have not sold the U.S. subsidiary. The CCP hasn't signed off on that.
And it is a bit alarming that like half of Americans, including young people whose minds are being formed, are being fed by an algorithm that is ultimately controlled by the Chinese Communist Party.
Like that, you know, people, TikTokers can like, you know, roll their eyes at the stuffy national security guy.
but that's just true.
And that is alarming.
And you'd just rather a U.S.
Because we don't even know how the algorithm works, right?
Like we, it's not, you know, it's proprietary information in China.
And what selling it to a U.S. company would do is at least, you know, now, there'd be more credibility for the U.S. government if we regulated our own tech platforms that are poisoning our young people.
So it's not like meta is this healthy platform, you know.
So I don't know what happens here.
you know, it seems like there's probably not a reality in which TikTok is going to go away entirely
because Trump has decided this is now politically useful to him and he's got this kind of tech
kitchen cabinet.
But I'm sure what he wants is an oligarch of his own to buy it.
And so if this was hungry, I mean, this is a test.
I'm going to apply a lot to Trump administration.
What they try to do is consolidate all the media underneath the Orban oligarchs.
And so I'm sure the outcome Trump is trying to get is Elon or somebody who's Trumpy owns TikTok.
And then he controls it, you know, and splits the profits of the Chinese Communist Party.
It's perfect.
Yeah.
I think he's trying to force a sale to it to the hands of one of their more favorable allies.
I also did enjoy the sort of interim period where all these American users were downloading another Chinese social media app called Red Note and learning all about.
Red note.
Chinese sense is so on the nose, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's no one cares.
Whatever. Welcome to America. The Chinese just must be laughing at this thing, too, though. Like, it's
humiliating how much they're having a blast, I'm sure. Yeah, how we're scared we are of an app and how
it's a royal U.S. politics. Speaking of which, Ben, let's talk about the rolling nest that is
happening in South Korea for a minute. So listeners will remember that the chaos has reigned in
South Korea since President Yun-Suk Yule declared martial law in early December. After a couple
tries, he was impeached by South Korea's National Assembly. But that is just the beginning of
the saga. Because impeachment is an official.
until it's approved by the constitutional court in South Korea and the president is removed.
So they're in this weird sort of like, you know, purgatory.
Last week, police were finally able to bring Yunsook Yule in for questioning on these separate
criminal insurrection charges that had been challenging initially.
They ended up having to bring, I think, I heard 3,000 police officers to the president's
house to get him to finally turn himself in.
Did he answer any questions when the cops were interviewing him?
No, but I guess showing up his progress.
And then over the weekend, Yun was officially arrested.
He got the mugshot and all.
But even that created problems because his supporters were very pissed off.
And dozens of Yun heads stormed the sole Western District Court, smashing windows and mirrors and just like generally causing chaos.
The Guardian reported that 90 people were arrested and 51 police officers were injured.
So, you and the current president condemned the violence.
But it doesn't mean he's, you know, he's not particularly.
in this investigation. In the criminal case, then Yun says that this body that is investigating him,
the corruption investigation office for high-ranking officials or CIO, doesn't have the authority to even
investigate him or talk to him. So they're at an impasse. South Korea's president does not have immunity
from these insurrection charges. He could face the death penalty or life in prison if he's convicted,
although South Korea has not executed anyone in 30 years. So it's very unlikely that will happen.
on Tuesday, Yun made an appearance at his impeachment trial at the constitutional court.
There, he claimed that he did not order the military to remove legislators from the assembly
after he had declared martial law, and that his order to enact martial law was a formality
that was not meant to be executed.
I don't really know what that means.
Either way, this is a total mess, Ben, this legal saga, you know, there's an impeachment
in a criminal case that's going to be this rolling process for Yun-sook-Eul for a while.
But let's say Yun is impeached and removed.
South Korea holds elections and the opposition Democratic Party is elected. The opposition leader is this guy
named Li Jiameng. He will likely take South Korea's foreign policy in a totally different direction,
especially their willingness to work with the U.S., to work with Japan under this kind of anti-China framework
that both the Biden administration and the Trump administration supports. And it's likely that Seoul will then
be much friendlier with North Korea and Russia. So it's like a bit of a careful what you wish for
situation for the Trump folks because either they get this very damaged political leader in
Yun Suk Yul, although his supporters are surprisingly rallying to him through all this madness.
Yeah, it's got kind of J6 choir vibes, you know?
Totally.
Yeah, it's very Trumpy, actually.
I mean, he might get just end up back in office.
Or they get this guy from the Democratic Party, Li Jiameng, who will just disagree with them
on a lot of policy.
Li Jiameng was a guy who was stabbed in the neck about a year ago, too.
Remember that, Ben?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, South Korea in politics, man.
It's wild.
No question there, just a lot of insanity.
No, I mean, you know, my only take would be, you know, because this is just playing out and it's insanely dramatic.
And clearly is, you know, a massive stress test for South Korea's political system to just come out the other end of this thing.
And I just, this is one where it's going to be interesting what Trump does.
Because, you know, he, South Korea, remember, his only real interest in South Korea was wanting them to like pay us more money to have troops stationed there.
And he canceled joint exercises between the U.S. and South Korea as like a gift to Kim Jong-un.
So he's not particularly South Korea friendly and orientation.
And you could see a world in which he likes this guy, you know, because this guy is being persecuted by his own deep state or something.
thing and could royal South Korean politics that way? Or, you know, what is going to be the Trump
outreach to Kim Jong-un? You know, if the Democratic Party does get in, you know, last time Trump had
somebody who was more favorable towards engagement in North Korea. And that kind of actually
made it easier for Trump to do his diplomacy. So he might not mind that guy. So you just don't know
because Trump's orientation is so weird. I think the thing to watch in general, as with Europe,
Japan, South Korea, Canada, I guess, is the degree to which Trump,
kind of pushes countries into different orientations, you know, these countries that have been
very dependent on the U.S. for security and for, you know, political support, in some cases for
trade, whether they just kind of realign. I think Trump is going to set in motion that. So for South
Korea was going to have a tough time anyway. Like if everything was totally normal in South Korea,
the Trump administration would be a big challenge to them, given his orientation towards North
Korea. Now, they actually have incentive, I think, to go the way the Democratic Party
hey, we might need to get closer to the Chinese, you know, we might need to figure out
to live with Kim Jong-un.
That's what I would probably expect to see coming out on the other end of this.
Yeah, so another one to watch for just the general, you know, uncertainty in the world right now.
Finally, Ben, so it's 20-25.
By now, everyone should probably know that posting the wrong thing on social media can get
you in trouble from time to time.
But I still think it's incumbent on us to call out the kind of cancel culture
scolds when they go too far, which brings us to the story of a Spanish man named Juan
Bernabe.
He lives in Italy where he is the falconer who handles the eagle mascot for the Lazio
soccer team in Italy.
It's a Syria team.
Juan posted photos and videos of his own brand new prosthetic penis on Instagram, and he got
fired for that.
The Associated Press described the prosthetic surgery as, quote, for non-medical reasons.
I wasn't sure how to read between the lines there,
but luckily the Atlantic had us cover.
They quoted Burnabé saying,
quote,
I had the surgery to increase my sexual performance
because I'm very active.
My erection is normal.
But with this device,
I press a button that allows me to be able
to perfectly control both the erection and the duration.
But you know what, Ben?
That got him fired.
This poor man just posts his dong on Instagram.
He basically RFK Jr.
The thing.
And he got fired.
But you know what?
It didn't get him fired, Ben.
The time back in 2021,
when the same gentleman was filmed doing a fascist salute enchanting duke, duke,
in honor of the late fascist Italian leader Benito Mussolini at a soccer game.
So, I don't know, cancer culture giveth and take it the way.
First of all, kind of remarkable that you found that in the August pages of the Atlantic.
The athletic.
Oh, I thought you said the Atlantic.
The athletic, okay, that's better.
I mean, I would have thought...
They might do cock covers.
They're growing a lot.
I was like, you know, is Elliot Cohen branching out and his writing radio free Tom, you know, on the Falconer beat?
Look, I will say, I thought Trump was going to fix this.
I mean, like, he's not delivering, right?
Where's the free speech?
Where's the free fucking speech?
Like, we heard yesterday that free speech is back, cancel culture is over.
you know, obsessions with gender and, you know, so you know what, we're 24 hours in Trump administration
and so long as this guy is canceled, it just feels like Trump did not bring the change he promised,
you know.
Yeah, let this guy, you know, hang some prosthetic something out there for whatever it is for display.
This guy's, this eagle is named Olympia, who they played the stadio, Olympico.
He's also a big fan of the Vox party, the far-right party.
So this guy sounds terrible.
This guy just keeps getting less sympathetic with, with, uh, each other.
piece of information. But I will say that the whole thing has RFK junior vibes, you know,
from the falconing to the, well, is that, is that, I was going to say something about like
new age medicine, but I guess a prosthetic penis that follows your command structure is something
different. I don't really know what category to put that in. This is the first I heard of that being
a thing one can do. Anyway, good luck to our friends in Italy. Okay, we are going to take a quick
break. When you come back, though, you'll hear Ben's interview with Sam Rose, the acting director
of Unra's affairs in Gaza. Please stick around for that. It will be a much more thoughtful,
serious conversation than the one we just had for the last five minutes. Positive of the world is brought
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Okay, so I'm very pleased to be joined by Sam Rose,
who is the acting director of Unruiter
affairs in Gaza. Welcome to Pazzi of the World, Sam. Thanks a lot, Ben. Great to have me on.
Let's just start. Let me just ask you, you've been in Gaza for the last year and worked there
for a long time. But what is the mood there since the announcement of this ceasefire agreement?
How are things on the ground there in terms of the mood of the people?
Yeah, look, I mean, the mood is complex. I mean, I speak to a lot of people. We've got a lot of
staff and I can't speak for everyone but I mean what was really noticeable the first day so what was that
we're Monday today we Monday Tuesday today so on on Sunday when the ceasefire came into effect there was
this immediate sense of relief and release people you know sounds of kind of normal sounds on well normal
sounds on the street the bombs dropped silent the drones dropped silent children were out playing
that was the kind of the most noticeable sound on Sunday.
A sound that you'd not really heard at all.
I mean, you hear it momentarily,
but parents were very, you know, kind of anxious and apprehensive
about having the children out of their sight.
So families stuck together and families stayed indoors
because of the constant threat of bombardment and attacks.
That vanished almost immediately.
So people were quite kind of,
there was release and there was relief people could breathe.
somebody told me they just wanted to go into a room for two days to have some privacy and cry
but you know people were feeling something that they'd not felt for 16 months or let's say
since November 2023 when the first ceasefire came into effect you've the board the crossing
point between north and south guards are still not not open so people you know quite
I don't know a quarter of a million people have fled south they've not been able to go home yet but
What we have had in the past couple of days is people have in the south and in the central parts of Gaza have been able to go back to their home.
So as the kind of initial euphoria has subsided, you know, it's been replaced a bit with, with, I guess, kind of crepidation and just kind of a, I don't know, a, how best to put it, a kind of gaping hole in people's stomach as they realize and they start coming to.
terms with the enormity of what's happened to them. Even when the ceasefire hit, people
had this mix of fear, hope and trepidation. But what we've seen from people the last couple of
days is, you know, people are a bit more downhearted. They've gone home. They've had confirmed
with their own eyes that their home is no longer there. Some people have retrieved bodies
from the rubble of their homes. And it's just starting to dawn on everyone just, you know,
how bad things were. These kind of emotions that people kept bossled.
up inside, compartmentalized in part of their brain because they were just focused on the
day-to-day business of survival and certainly our staff working, blocking out what was inside.
They're now, you know, starting to kind of come to terms with that, and it's going to be a long
and difficult process.
Yeah, I mean, I truly can't imagine.
I mean, speaking of the needs, UNRWA has obviously been, you know, one of the only lifelines
to the Palestinian people in Gaza.
the ceasefire agreement called for 600 trucks of aid to get in a day.
What are you focused on right now as an organization?
Like what, because I can't even get my mind around the scale of the challenges,
what is most needed to get in for the people of Gaza
and what is UNRED doing to help facilitate that?
Yeah, I mean, absolutely.
This, as you'll know from the start of the war,
this one of the main narratives of this conflict has been about trucks
and about supplies,
getting getting in it's not ideal because it dehumanizes the people but it's the fact that it's been
incredibly difficult to get those supplies in so yeah day three is is is is is fair and the numbers that
we're meeting those targets that is a target of trucks entering from israel into the crossing
points inside Gaza whether that be uh in the south or or or in the north uh what we're actually bringing
into Gaza and distributing is something slightly different. But regardless, there's large
volumes of aid that are coming in and that's great because we've not seen that for several
months. But what's coming in right now are essentially supplies that have been outside Gaza
for several months because the crossing points were so choked, they were so constrained by a mixture
of things. There was just a large, large backlog of things outside. And the bulk of that is food,
It's flour to get bakeries running.
It's food parcels that we ordered for populations on the verge of famine.
And it's basic shelter items.
So, you know, in the humanitarian toolkit, we bring in mattresses.
We bring in blankets.
We bring in tarpaulins, plastic sheets, things of that nature.
So this is critical to get this in and get it out in large volumes just to take the edge off thing
because people haven't had food, you know, on the verge of starvation.
People are living in the most squalid and appalling of shelter conditions.
But a lot more needs to be done beyond that initial phase.
And as UNR, we would look initially to rehabilitate and repair our critical infrastructure.
So that alongside provision of basic humanitarian aid, we're also able to resume
some of our basic services.
Now, everything is made more complicated by, well, firstly, by the situation facing unrun,
maybe that's something we'll come to in a bit, but by the kind of prerequisites to
safe delivery of aid right now in Gaza.
And two things come to mind in relation to that.
One is what we do about all the unexploded bombs and the munitions.
I mean, it's been an incredibly intense bombardment for 15, 60 months across most of Gaza.
So people who are returning to their homes, their buildings, there's lots of ordinance there.
And we're not yet in a position to safely take that ordinance away.
It has to be done through the national authorities.
But we do lots of raising awareness, mind risk education, education on explosive remnants of war, things like that.
It's sadly been a part of what we've been teaching.
teaching kids in Gaza since 2008, 2009.
So since then, we've had a cycle of what, five, five conflicts.
So it's something that we have in hand.
We have it in Arabic.
We have the multimedia capability to get the message out.
Unra, we've got over 10,000, 12,000 staff.
So we've got staff on the ground who can disseminate those messages.
So a key thing that we need to do as a prerequisite for aid and safe returns
is that awareness raising.
We also need to keep track of where people are
and where people are moving to
because a lot of the aid operation in Gaza
has been focused in Mawesi on the west,
on the coast.
And that's where the services have been,
you know, structured around,
at least the kind of temporary humanitarian services,
aid trucking, water trucking, things like that.
As people move back,
we have to support them where they're going back
to us,
unru we have you know bore holes in refugee camps that we can restore we have wells in our shelters
that we can also restore i mean restoration of water is critical to get people to to to to return but
people won't be returning in permanently in large numbers right now that requires a massive effort
in terms of rubble removal in terms of like i say the the removal of the the ordinance and the
of initions and things like that. So it is going to be a gradual long-term process.
I mean, yeah, you mentioned a lot there about shelter. I mean, you know, the imagery that we're
seeing, which you're obviously seeing on the ground, but I mean, North Gaza looks like, you know,
Hiroshima. I mean, it, there's just, you know, no structure standing. It's just all rubble.
I mean, where, where are people going to live? You know, how do you even think about the scale
of the short-term housing needs versus the kind of obviously longer-term reconstruction effort,
assuming peace holds.
Just what is the sense of how, I mean, do you have any sense of what percent of homes are left
after this horrific bombardment?
Yeah, I mean, it is, the scale of it is vast.
Northern Gaza has essentially been obliterated.
and the vast majority of homes and buildings have either been destroyed or badly, badly damaged.
Now, we faced wars in Gaza before, but nothing like this where entire neighborhoods have been wiped out.
And it is quite striking. You drive around northern Gaza or Gaza City, and, you know, amongst the rubble, you will find a house that somehow remains standing or within a multi-story building, a room that has washing houses.
hanging outside so people are living living in it but even where these buildings are standing people
can't get them because of all the rubble all the uh there's the stuff on the ground because gaza was so
overcrowded i mean gaza city was quite high rise that even for those buildings that remain standing
for people physically and safely to to kind of get there and come and go and for services to be
restored is is uh is a massive task and look what we're what we're looking at is people being
out of their homes for a long, long time. And there's, there's a number of things that,
that, that, that, that we can do. We can, we can, we can move from the kind of very temporary,
very basic shelter, which comprises tarpaulins, plastic sheets, basic mattresses and,
and, and things like that, to provide people with a bit more stability. So that if they're out for,
for some time, at least they are in somewhere that's a bit more comfortable. The problem that we've had in,
in Gaza, one of the problems we've had over the past 16 months is that there have been these
repeated cycles of displacement. We had people moving, you know, people have been displaced five
or ten times. They've been constantly taking with them these rotten plastic sheets and
reinstalling them where they are. So for the people who are unable to go home, it's about
making that shelter more, you know, more comfortable so that they can live in a bit of
dignity in conditions that are fit for humans to live in, recognizing that they're likely to be
there for quite some time. But what we will also see is people, you know, if people's houses
have been burnt or damaged, there may be one or two rooms that still remain standing. So,
and people here, it's an extended family community. So typically the father of the household will
live on the ground floor. When his children get married, his sons get married. His sons get
married, they would build an extra story on top. So there's kind of multiple generations of the same
family living in the same building quite a lot. And there may be one or two rooms that are
fit for habitation. So what people will do, or what we assume they will do is that they will start
from there, there'll be lots of people living in one or two rooms. And families will just start
to rebuild themselves bit by bits, a room here or a room there, putting windows back in.
etc. I mean, people aren't going to do that right now, given the uncertainty over the ceasefire prospects,
and given the lack of basic materials on the ground, because we're bringing aid in right now.
We're not bringing in large supplies for reconstruction, and we need, you know, equipment.
We need, we need, we need tractors, we need all these things.
And the other bit, I would say, is that right now, there are a couple of hundred thousand people sheltering in unrest schools.
I mean, we have 300 schools in Gaza, we're in about 200 school buildings, and close to 100 of them are functioning as emergency shelters.
And right now, we've got a couple hundred thousand people living in those shelters.
Again, some of those people will be able to move out and move back home, but we can anticipate that there'll be a lot of people that need to remain for a long time because they've not got anywhere else to go.
and the challenge with Gaza is on the one hand
you've got all this rubble that needs to be removed
and some of the estimates run into years
in terms of how long that that's going to take.
But in general, there isn't much space.
It's a very, very overcrowded piece of land.
So the idea that you can decant people out of one structure,
move them somewhere else is not feasible
because the land simply isn't available.
So some of the high-level thinking has gone,
into this but not not all the lower level thinking yet because it requires a complete
urban regeneration it requires working at community level to understand with
families with notables what is going to be acceptable to them and all this can
really only happen when there's a functioning governance structure in place to
kind of oversee that redesign yeah well I mean looming over this is the fact
that Israel has passed a ban on
UNRWA that is supposed to begin in a week or two, I think.
And I mean, you've already alluded to how deeply embedded you are in the society.
I mean, hundreds of schools, sheltering hundreds of thousands of people, getting food to people,
over 10,000 employees.
What happens when this, you know, ban goes into effect?
I mean, how are you, what does that mean for you?
How are you preparing for it?
and what would it mean for the people of Gaza if it went forward?
Yeah, we don't know precisely what it will mean.
The ban covers our activities in the occupied Palestinian territory.
And what it prohibits is UNRWA's activities on the sovereigns territory of Israel,
number one and number two prohibits interaction and engagement between UNRWA and
and Israeli officials. Now, Gaza isn't the sovereign territory of Israel, but we come and go
through Israeli borders. We bring our supplies in through Israeli borders. When there's a
conflict, we coordinate and notify Israel of all our movements, and we engage with them when
there are critical incidents if staff are stuck in certain locations. So if the bills come
in and are implemented to full effect at the end of this month.
It makes it incredibly difficult for UNRWA to keep operating in Gaza.
Our international staff, myself included, wouldn't be able to come and go.
It, you know, interprets it to the letter of the law.
We wouldn't be able to bring supplies in, and others wouldn't be able to do that on our
behalf.
And this would be, you know, catastrophic at any moment in time, given.
how central UNRRA is as a mechanism for delivery of aid and provision of basic services.
But right now, it's catastrophic for the entire population of Gaza.
Now, with the ceasefire, in effect, it isn't about UNRWA.
This is about the humanity and the values that we stand for as a humanitarian community
in terms of meeting the needs of the population.
of Gaza, if you rip out UNRRA, then you rip out the largest single actor with the wherewithal
and the capability to do that. We work with others. There's a very strong, a very vibrant
humanitarian sector here. We work closely. We work in partnership with human agencies, NGOs,
civil society, etc. We're not alone, but we are a singular entity that doesn't exist in other
parts of the world. There's an instrument that the international community has at its disposal
that covers half the response. You know, 13,000 staff we have in Gaza. The rest of the aid community,
we're looking at, you know, a few hundred. Half the food we provide two-thirds of the primary
healthcare. We provide, you know, 85% of children in Gaza have received some kind of psychosocial
support and mental health care from UNRWA. We vaccinated a quarter of a million children
against polio in in in in in 2024 and right now we've got a ceasefire that is already fragile we
accept that given the complexities and given the savagery of what happened on on October the 7th and
and since then it's already fragile but if you take out the largest single actor capable of
of supporting and delivering on the response,
you make it close to impossible.
You send a message to the people of Gaza
that whilst there are humanitarian commitments linked to the ceasefire,
we're abandoning them.
They are being abandoned.
And what signal that will send for the stability of the situation here,
the shock, the trauma, the grief it will cause,
but it also risks having more regional impacts.
So for the sake of the ceasefire, it's absolutely catastrophic that this is happening and that this is happening now.
And we're trying everything within our means to halt it.
But where are you an agency?
We can only work through the member states.
So we're calling on member states to do everything that they can to make sure that we are not ripped out of here at the end of the month
because it's a situation that absolutely no one wants and no one needs.
Yeah, no, it's kind of boundless cruelty.
I don't know how to even get my mind right in it.
I mean, how many, do you have any sense of how many under-employees have been killed in the last, you know, year and a half?
Yeah, I mean, it's 250, 260.
I don't have the exact number today.
I believe it's somewhere over 260 personnel that we've lost now since the 7th of October.
and it's colleagues that we know,
colleagues that we work with,
you know,
just going about their business,
just in the wrong place,
at the wrong time,
you know,
on the road,
in their home,
whatever.
The nature of the conflict is such a built up
overcrowded area in,
you know,
and, you know,
and overcrowded placing guards.
The munitions that are being used,
it's inevitable.
that large numbers of people are going to be killed.
And it's not just staff who've been killed.
It's their family members as well.
I mean, every single person here has suffered immeasurably
in ways that we can only begin to comprehend
when we drive around, when we see the photos,
we see the drone footage, etc.
The depth of the destruction of, you know,
physical structures, but also people and communities,
is really, really hard to get,
your head around and quite shocking.
Yeah, well, the last question I wanted to ask you is, you know, you've been in,
and you've been working in Gaza for a long time in and out.
Obviously, that's part of your vocation as a humanitarian worker, but also presumably
because you care, obviously, about the people there.
And there's so much dehumanizing, you know, rhetoric, whether it's obviously the way in which
people in not just Israel, but in the United States, kind of kind of,
past everybody's a terrorist or everybody's Hamas or even people that are well-meaning,
it's always, as you pointed out earlier, it's numbers, right?
It's X number of people have died or X number of trucks are getting in.
What would you want people to know about the human beings that you clearly know so well
in Gaza and what they've been through?
I know that's kind of an open-ended question, but that's kind of, I wanted to leave it to you.
what is the world not seeing here about the humanity of the people that have just been through something
that, you know, is beyond belief, really?
Yeah, no, it is beyond belief.
And people of Garza have been through a lot before this, but this is on a completely different level.
And, you know, we want to say that they're normal people.
I mean, what they've gone through is completely abnormal.
And what's become normal is completely unacceptable and abnormal.
normal, but the, you know, people here want what we want. Most people here are children,
half the population, let's say, is under 18, you know, quarters of the population under 10.
The colleagues that I know, the people that I work with, they want what everyone else wants.
They want safety for their family. They want to be able to go to sleep at night and not worry
about what's going to happen to them. They want to watch the latest football teams and have a
and they want to be able to look to a future
that isn't measured in,
am I going to get a liter of water today?
Am I going to get a bag of flour today?
But is what everyone else wants.
And they want to understand why this is happening to them.
There's nothing they can do about the situation that they're in.
We've got people here that have just seen the world watching this constantly for the last 16 months and not been able or willing to do anything about it.
But people here want the same that we want.
They want to, I mean, they're very family-oriented here.
It's a close-knit community.
People stay where they are.
A lot of them are refugees, so they have contacts in diaspora around the world.
But people have pretty modest expectations here.
But they want to work, they want to do well, they want to be educated, they want safety, they want freedom.
And quite frankly, they want to go to the beach and they want to have a swim and they want to put on clean clothes and they want to laugh and they want to cry.
And they want to have everything that's normal that all of us expects and they don't want to be treated differently.
And they see right now the fact, why is it that these human rights that we talk about, I talk about as a,
as a humanitarian why is it that they don't apply to them they just want to live a normal life they
want a quiet life they want all of this to go away the worries right now that a lot of people will
just want to leave right they they see that the future here is so difficult in terms of how long
it's going to take to rebuild this place so if you're a parent with children in school
when are your kids going to get back to school if you're an 18 year old that wants to get a
university education. What are the prospects for you getting that university education in Gaza,
given that the entire tertiary education sector has been wiped out? So yeah, people have kind of
modest ambitions. They work hard. They're diligent. They are respectful. They have the same problems
that we all have, but they just want a normal life. Nothing special. Just, you know.
Yeah, well, that should not be asking too much. Well, look, thank you so much for what you do,
for what everybody at UNRWA is doing
and everybody listening who, you know, wants to,
whatever influence you have,
this would be a disaster to lose UNRRA right now.
So people should support its work.
Sam Rose, thank you so much for joining us.
Thanks a lot, Ben. All the best.
Thanks again to Sam Rose for doing the show.
And look forward to seeing you back in the studio next week
where it will be a warmer.
Here we are. Second Trump term.
I'm ready to make some comments.
content with you, Tommy. Giddy up. All right, see you. Stay warm. Thanks, buddy. If you want to get
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Pod Save the World is a Crooked Media production.
Our producer is Alona Mankowski.
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Our executive producers are me, Tommy Vitor, and Ben Rhodes.
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