The Ezra Klein Show - Can the Israel-Hamas Deal Hold?
Episode Date: October 17, 2025Every Israeli-Palestinian peace deal has failed. Could Trump’s be any different?On Oct. 10, the Israeli cabinet approved a cease-fire deal brokered by the Trump administration, Turkey and Qatar. Sin...ce then, the living Israeli hostages have come home. Nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners in Israel have been freed. Israeli forces have partially withdrawn from the Gaza Strip, and they’re allowing in more desperately needed aid. This is finally, hopefully, the end of this war.But that was just the first part of the deal. The next phase is a lot more ambitious — and ambiguous. And while President Trump said the region would now “live, God willing, in peace for all eternity,” history would suggest otherwise.Robert Malley has worked on Middle East policy under President Barack Obama, President Joe Biden and President Bill Clinton. Hussein Agha negotiated on the Palestinian side, working under both Yasir Arafat, the first president of the Palestinian Authority, and the P.A.’s current president, Mahmoud Abbas. Together they wrote a sweeping new history of attempts at peace, “Tomorrow Is Yesterday: Life, Death, and the Pursuit of Peace in Israel/Palestine.” They join me to examine what could go right — or wrong — as the rest of the deal takes shape.Mentioned:Tomorrow Is Yesterday by Hussein Agha and Robert MalleyBook Recommendations:One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El AkkadSay Nothing by Patrick Radden KeefeDirty Hands by Jean-Paul SartreThe Just Assassins by Albert CamusThe History of the Peloponnesian War by ThucydidesThe Man Without Qualities by Robert MusilHollywood Babylon by Kenneth AngerThoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com.You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast, and you can find Ezra on Twitter @ezraklein. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-klein-show-book-recs.This episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” was produced by Annie Galvin. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris and Jack McCordick. Our senior engineer is Jeff Geld, with additional mixing by Aman Sahota and Isaac Jones. Our executive producer is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Marie Cascione, Annie Galvin, Rollin Hu, Kristin Lin, Emma Kehlbeck, Marina King and Jan Kobal. Original music by Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The director of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. Special thanks to Chris Wood and Ashley Clivery. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I don't know.
You know,
I'm going to be able to
On October 9th, the Israeli government voted to ratify an agreement between Israel and Hamas,
an agreement brokered by the Trump administration, by Qatar, and by Turkey,
that finally, finally brings an end, hopefully, to the war between Israel and Hamas.
This deal has already led to the release of the remaining Israeli hostages, 20 of them.
They came home in an incredibly emotional thing to watch.
there is a release of Palestinian prisoners, which has also happened, a cessation of hostilities,
which has more or less happened. There is the bringing in again of much more help for
Gazans who are starving, who are homeless, who have endured unimaginable suffering and
devastation over the past two years, and an Israeli withdrawal further back from Gaza.
That is phase one, but the deal also has a phase two, a much more ambitious and ambiguous phase
where it is much easier to imagine a lot going wrong and things falling apart.
But it also offers possibilities maybe that have not been on the table for some time.
Rob Malley has been a Middle East negotiator under President Obama, under President Biden, under President Clinton.
He is the former president and CEO of the crisis group in a lecture now.
at Yale, Hussein Agha has been a negotiator on the Palestinian side, working under Arafat,
under Abbas, and in many, many, both public and not so public, negotiations with Israelis
and other stakeholders in the region. The two of them together have written a fantastic new book
called Tomorrow is Yesterday. It is a very up-close and personal history of how these negotiations
played out and why they have failed over and over and over and over again.
These are two people who have devoted their lives to trying to find a solution
and have emerged very realistic about how hard an enduring solution is to find.
As always, my email, Ezra Klein Show at mytimes.com.
Welcome to the show.
Thank you, Injura.
Thank you.
Rob, why don't we begin with you?
Tell me about the ceasefire deal, as you understand it.
So, you know, there's everything to criticize about the way the deal was brought about, the way its components.
I mean, it was a deal that was done without real, you know, consultation with the Palestinians.
It's a deal that seems to ask of the Palestinians to tone for the massacre of October 7th,
but doesn't ask Israel to atone for the war that followed.
It asks for the de-radicalization of Gaza.
It does not ask for the end of Israel's messianic tendencies.
It's going to have every foreign intervention
in how, in the future of Palestinian governance.
And it was authored by a president
who, for months, gave all power to Netanyahu
and to his government to lead the war
the way they wanted to famish Palestinians.
So that's the backdrop.
Plus, it has vagueness.
It is full of contradictions
in terms of, you know, no no timetables, no arbiter, no way to go if there's a violation,
as we've already seen in the last few days.
And yet, having said all that, President Trump achieved what his predecessor was incapable
or unwilling to achieve, which is an end to this awful, horrendous war, and freedom for the Palestinians
and the Israelis who had been held in detention.
So, and hopefully also influx of humanitarian assistance.
So that's the balance sheet.
Hussein, the deal has a stage one, which Rob describes somewhat there, the return, thankfully, of the hostages, release of Palestinian prisoners, an enduring, hopefully ceasefire, Israel pulling back.
Then there is this much vaguer stage two. And I've seen people debating whether or not you should even understand the deal as having anything beyond the stage one, stage one being a ceasefire that in many ways I think could have been achieved far earlier.
Do you understand the deal as having anything beyond a stage one?
And if so, what?
Deals smear in our region, in our part of the world, deals do not matter.
What matters is what can be achieved, how soon it can be achieved, and what it will lead to.
And this deal, if it stops the slaughter permanently in Gaza, the prisoners have been released,
that by itself is a big achievement.
Everything else is padding, everything else are hopes, everything else are trying to be politically correct to satisfy the parties.
It's all verbal.
It never goes beyond that.
Look at all the deals.
I mean, Oslo, Oslo was a deal, an agreement that was reached discreetly between Israelis and Palestinians, settled bilaterally.
and it was made up of stages
and the only stage that was relevant
was for the past thing is to go back to the West Bank and Gaza
and to have some kind of security cooperation
and everything else did not happen.
It has expired, but people keep on referring to it.
So don't go by text, don't go by deals.
Rob, over the past two long years now
that this war has been ongoing,
the stated objective from Prime Minister Netanyahu has been to completely destroy Hamas.
And as people said that the war should end, there should be a ceasefire, there should be a deal,
he would respond by saying, we have a objective here.
The objective is the destruction of Hamas, and the war cannot end until that objective is achieved.
We are obviously talking about some entity still called Hamas in this deal.
Hamas is talking to Qatar, they are in the deal.
Israel is treating them like an entity.
What is Hamas now?
What is their expected role going forward?
What kind of power do they hold and not hold?
So first, the objective of completely defeating Hamas was never a realistic objective.
It was a recipe for endless war, which is why it was stated as such.
There was never any prospect of completely defeating Hamas,
and I think the Israelis must have known that.
What is Hamas today?
I mean, of course, they have to account for the fact that they are the ones who led to this
I mean, through their action, that it provoked this absolute catastrophe for the Palestinians
and to this barbaric war that Israel waged, but they're still there.
And just look at the pictures in Gaza today.
Who are the ones who are ensuring law and order?
In fact, President Trump himself has said that he's given a green light to Hamas to play this role
because no other party in Gaza can do it.
So however weakened Hamas is, and this was always going to be the case from October 7th onwards,
no matter what was going to happen, at the end of the day, the most powerful party,
it could be weaker than it was before, but relative to others, the most powerful party
was going to be Hamas. And, you know, think of who the other Palestinian actors are.
Where was the Palestinian Authority? Where was Fatah in the negotiations over the deal that
we were just discussing? They were there as bystanders commenting from afar and then coming to the
ceremony at the end to applaud a deal that they had nothing to do with. So, again, Hamas has
real problems because it's going to have to explain to its people, how it planned this to provoke Israel,
but didn't have any plan to deal with the inevitable reaction to that provocation. But in terms of
its presence on the ground, in terms of its influence with regional parties, Qatar and Turkey,
they're still there and they're still standing. Hussein, where has the Palestinian Authority
and Fatah been during this period? I mean, this has been the period probably in my lifetime of the
most attention to Israel, to Palestinians, there's social media, there has been just absolute
endless waves of attention. And the PA has, from what I can tell, had it been quite
quiet compared to what I think would have been possible. Why have they appeared so weak and
reactive in this period? The PA has been weak and reactive for a long time.
In 1982, Sharon decided to destroy the PLO by invading Lebanon.
The PLO was decimated in Lebanon and they left to Tunis.
In no time, they finished up being in Ramallah and Gaza and Jericho.
Since then, they've been torn between continuing to be a liberation movement or a government.
They were not primed to be a government.
They are not interested in governing.
And therefore, they have, on the whole, failed in governing.
There was one aspect only for which Israel kept on the PA going, which is the security
coordination.
Keeping the security in the West Bank and Gaza through Israel became too costly for Israel.
So it needed to branch out and find somebody who's acceptable to the local population to
take care of that matter.
And so the PA played that role.
And the PA was never in a position in the war in Gaza, where it could have done anything else
beside the way it behaved.
As a matter of fact, even in areas it controls, it's not being able to defend its people
against Israeli incursions, against settler incursions, and against all kinds of activities
that threaten it.
They don't have the capacity, the capability, or the mandate,
the rest of the world to do that, because if they do that, then automatically they become
less useful for the world that wants to have a Palestinian address that is docile.
If I could add, just, you know, if you look at it, the PA is one of Israel's most
extraordinary accomplishments. I mean, here you have an entity that is entirely subservent
and dependent on Israel. Israel from one day to the next could bring it to its knees, and yet it's
an entity upon which Israel can count to finance the occupation. The EPA is the one that has
to raise funds to stay alive and to provide services to its people, which it does to some
extent. And an agent that is a subcontractor for the security cooperation, as Hussein just said,
to provide security, it maintains the occupation, it finances the occupation, and it is entirely
dependent on the occupier. That's a setup. I studied national liberation movements. I can't recall
one that looks quite like this, from an Israeli perspective, it worked quite well.
Well, doesn't that go to the, I believe it's smotech, which you said, Hamas is an asset,
and the PA is a liability?
Yeah, I mean, I don't think, I think that Hamas may have been an asset in some respects,
the PA and assets in other respects.
I don't think it's true that the PA has been a liability for Israel.
I think in turn of the occupation, it has allowed Israel to subcontract many of the duties
that under international law, that Israel should normally,
fulfilled, but it had been fulfilled
by Palestinians who had no
independent agency, because again, everything
from whether they could move, whether
they could continue to survive as a
Palestinian entity, was dependent
and support it to Israel's will.
What I understood Smotritch is saying when he said
that, is that if
you had a PA,
that the international community
looked on, and that the world
looked on and saw it as strong, if Palestinians
looked upon it as viable,
that that would be very difficult for Israel.
If there was what gets called in the parlance of this,
a partner for peace, that would put Israel in a harder position.
Whereas Hamas, which was understood as an organization
that Israel cannot make peace with justified much of Israel's approach,
certainly in support to Gaza over the years.
A stronger PA, as I understand it,
has been considered a problem for Israel.
And yet in this framework that has now been agreed to, the idea is that the PA will be reformed, it will be made more technocratically competent, maybe more like what Salam Fayad had made it into some years ago, and then it will eventually be handed over control of Gaza.
And so it certainly seems to me that there's a contradiction at the heart of that, that there's been one Israeli strategy to keep the PA weak and keep Gaza and the West Bank divided.
now you see this piece of paper that at least says we'll make them stronger and then unite
the territories under them. It's part of this that I am quite skeptical of, but I'm curious to hear
how you understand it. That skepticism is totally justified. And your analysis of the relation
between Hamas, PA and the Smotrich and his ilk is the correct one. They want the PA to be
strong enough to play some role in controlling security in the West Bank, but not that strong
for it to be independent. They want Hamas to be able to run the life of the gardens, but not
go beyond that and go back to pricking Israel every now and there militarily. So this is the
ideal setup for Israel, to have both these entities, and it is as well important to have them
separate and to have them at each other's loggerheads to keep on away the myth of a unit
in their mind of a united Palestinian people, because the United Palestinian people is the
only party that can actually negotiate on behalf of the Palestinians for a resolution.
So if the Palestinians are not united amongst themselves,
how do you expect them to be united vis-à-vis Israel?
And that is an ideal situation for not just portraits,
for many Israelis.
How has Mahmoud Abbas, who's now 89 years old,
who has about as low approval ratings as it is possible for a public figure to hold,
and who I think by wide agreement has been ineffective
at securing Palestinian goals,
creating governance that people they're proud of.
How has he held on through all this?
How has there not been succession yet?
The importance of Mahmoud Abbas derives
from the nature of Palestinian society
and its views of its own politics.
Mahmoud Abbas is a historical figure for the Palestinians.
Perhaps the last of a generation,
who have been responsible both for the struggle outside
and getting back to Palestine
and running the show from Palestine.
Abbas represents Palestinians across the board.
The old, the young, the diaspora,
even the Palestinians in Israel,
who look up to him and respect him,
the Palestinians in the West Bank,
and the Palestinians in...
Gaza. He's not powerful. He put all his eggs in trying to reach a diplomatic resolution
with Israel. He failed, but he has a history of struggle against Israel because he's one of the
founders of Fatah. And Fatah is the backbone of the PLO and is the body, the political
Palestinian body responsible for the Palestinian being where they are now, which is everybody,
including most members of Fatah,
will admit that it's miserable,
but they can't go anywhere else
because that is the framework,
the formal entity through which they operate.
Rob, the obvious way this deal's framework
could fall apart is that the deal envisions
the disarmament of Hamas.
And already, just in the past couple days,
we saw a Hamas sniper,
shoot an Israeli soldier,
we saw Israel bomb a building in response.
What happens if Hamas does not disarm?
What is the guarantee of that disarmament?
How do you read that part of the deal,
which is, as I understand it's supposed to be the bridge
between the ceasefire and something sustainable
that involves the international community,
eventually involves other forms of Palestinian governance?
I'd go back to what Hussein said at the beginning.
The details of the deal really are not that important.
And in instance, I wonder whether President Trump is aware of the 20 clauses of the deal.
What he cared about and what he achieved so far, more or less, is the end of the slaughter
and the release of the prisoners.
And that was something that I think at this point, Hamas and Israel were prepared to live with,
each for their own reasons.
They had their reasons why those elements were acceptable to them.
Israel remains in occupation of about half of Gaza.
Hamas remains on his feet and can still police the streets of Gaza.
again, something that President Trump himself said he thought was normal.
The next stage is disarming Hamas, bringing in an international stabilization force,
bringing in a new technocratic government, Palestinian, full Israeli withdrawal, et cetera, et cetera.
That's where there's divergence, not just between the U.S., Hamas and Israel,
but neither Hamas nor Israel has an interest in that.
Hamas doesn't want to disarm.
Not clear to me that Israel really wants to see an international stabilization force
that would stand as a buffer between them and the Palestinians, therefore restrained their
freedom of action, which is a core principle of their security doctrine, and perhaps serve as a
precedent for what would happen in the West Bank.
So I think from the stage one, what we are seeing now, to the next stage, is where Hamas and
Israel have many, many reasons to object.
And I could add to the list of objections.
Neither one truly wants to see the Palestinian Authority or a real Palestinian Authority come
back into Gaza, again, a whole list of things that neither one wants to see. And they're probably
counting on the fact that President Trump's attention span is not going to be that great. He could
chalk this down as another achievement for him. And that's enough. He said, I ended the war,
you know, a 3,000-year war, whatever he calls it. And that's good enough, right? And so he goes to
Israel and he sings Israel's praises and he sings his praises even more. And that may suffice now. The question
is what other countries, what do Turk and Qatar do? As Hussein was saying, do they push for more
because they want to see more changes on the ground? Do other countries, does, you know, President Trump
decide that, you know, maybe he wants to achieve even more than he has so far? But the least common
denominator is what we've seen so far. The end of the fighting, the release of the prisoners,
some humanitarian assistance, and that's it. Well, let's take another moment, Rob,
on President Trump here. The book, the two of you wrote, is,
scathingly critical of the way U.S. presidents have approached, deals, frameworks, negotiations
before now. And one place where you end your analysis by saying there has been an overreliance
on technocratic rationality. You talk about Bill Clinton, you know, dismissively saying,
I think we're really down to just debating wording and formulations here. And you argue that this
conflict to the extent it will ever be resolved, if it will ever be resolved, is not,
the resolution will not be rational, it will not be an equation that balances out land exactly
on the two sides. And in this way, Trump seems to fit the kind of figure you are talking about
better than the people who have come before him. He doesn't care that much about either the
Israelis or the Palestinians. He would like a Nobel Peace Prize of anything. He is not
unwilling to use his power against either side.
He is himself unpredictable.
He is himself somewhat irrational.
He is himself driven by emotion and intuition
and willing to use leverage when he needs it.
Yes, his attention span is certainly an issue here.
But you could, I think, read your book
and then look at that it was Trump who got this deal,
not Joe Biden, and say,
maybe Trump is the kind of figure you need to make progress,
not because he is a moral or historically informed figure on this,
but precisely because the moral and historically informed figures
who could have told you every subclause of their 20-point frameworks
have failed in your view in part because they perched it
as about these 20-point frameworks.
What you said is absolutely right and captures what we say in the book.
And in some sense, and we even say it, you know, President Trump,
after years of full outrage from Democratic presidents in particular,
sort of some genuine cynicism was a breath of fresh air,
which is why a lot of Arabs welcomed his coming into office a second time,
knowing, as they well knew, his bias towards Israel
and everything he had done in his first term.
And I think to add to your list of attributes,
if that's the word of President Trump,
he also is immune to the laws of American political gravity.
I mean, we've seen it.
Who's going to criticize him if he puts pressure on Israel?
Or if he talks to Hamas, he sent Steve Whitkoff and Jaron Kushner to talk to them.
He claimed that he spoke to them, which I doubt.
But in any event, he could very well do it because who's going to criticize him?
Not the Republican Party, because they're locked step behind him.
And Democrats criticizing him from that he's being too tough on Israel or too soft on the Palestinians, that wouldn't fly either.
So he really has the ability to do things that others wouldn't.
And as you say, he's not wedded to text.
As I said, I don't think he's read his own 20 points.
He's a politician of intuition.
Now, having said all that, you know,
I wish that all those unconventional, unorthodox attributes
were married to something more than narcissism and ego.
And I think that's where we may run into a much bigger problem
because, you know, with President Trump,
who knows what tomorrow will bring.
But the kind of break he represents from the past
is something that was needed.
I'm not sure that he's the break I would have chosen
if I'd had my druthers.
Hussain, how do you understand the role of the incentives here of some of the other key states in the region?
that could become significant parts of the future.
Towards the end of the book,
you both describe the possibility of much more involvement from Jordan.
Certainly the Biden administration,
imagine the linchpin of a future here,
being a deal with Saudi Arabia,
Egypt and Qatar and Turkey are intimately involved in this moment of it.
Describe the power centers here
and what the different stakeholders or participants might want.
What's common to what they all want is some kind of stability and peace in the region,
because in the past 50 years, the absence of stability and peace has created problems for all the regimes in the region.
So that's the first priority.
Second, there is a special place for the Palestinians and the Palestinian cause in the hearts of most of the people of the region.
the Arab people of the region, the Muslim people of the region.
However, taking that into account does not go as far as them sticking their neck out to try to come out with solutions to this issue.
There's another aspect of it, which is that they all realize that Israel is an entity that is going to be there and it's not going anywhere.
anywhere. And they realize that it has certain capabilities that they might want to make use of.
So in an ideal world, they'd like to be at peace with Israel, to be able to cooperate with Israel,
but they know the limitations to that is the poison, if you want to call it poison, of the
unresolved Palestinian issue. The Arabs spent 50 years on the streets, in the trenches,
is in formal wars, in informal wars, fighting Israel.
For them to end that conclusively, it takes a lot.
There were some bilateral deals that, as we saw, have worked out.
Sadat and Began and the Cam David Accord between Egypt and Israel has survived.
The peace between Jordan and Israel has survived.
The Abraham Accords, which are a completely different paradigm,
that depends on having peace with the Arabs first
and then you move to the Palestinian issue
as opposed to the traditional logic
of the only way to peace with the Arabs
through peace with the Palestinians
has on the whole work as well.
It is under tension now, but it has worked.
So the trick for the Arabs is
maybe they will not articulate it in this way
is if they can combine the Abramico,
with some track that will lead to the resolution of the Palestinian dimension of the regional scene
so that things can stabilize and countries can look after their own particular interest.
So these are the usual kind of trends in the region.
Plus, now for the first time, especially after the so-called Arab Spring,
the Saudis find themselves in a unique position of being able to speak on behalf of old Arabs
as opposed to their recent history where they used to be only the leader of one camp
against another camp. Because all the other Arabs are either weak or have their own problems
or to a large extent are dependent on Saudi generosity for them to survive, the Saudis have a
unique opportunity to play the role of a leader of the whole Arab nation. They're playing it
very well. They have to build a domestic model that is attractive to the rest of the Arabs
the way other contenders in the past, like Nasr, like the Baathis, could not do in their countries.
Nasser could not build a model in Egypt that was attractive to most of the Arabs. The Baathis could
not build a model in Iraq and Syria that is attractive, but the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia
is building a model that balances tradition with modernity in a way that is most Arabs will
understand and most Arabs would like to be part of. It has a unique position which is going to
actually define the nature of the power structure in the region if it continues along these lines
for the long time.
Rob, Hussein just mentioned in glancing the other big way that the balance of power in
the region has changed, which is Iran.
You go back a couple of years, Iran is, you know, understood to be moving towards nuclear
capabilities.
It is a sponsor of Hamas.
It's a sponsor of Hezbollah, which is understood to be quite potent, and Israelis really feared in real ways.
There's Ahutis.
And the other way this period has really reshaped the region is Israel decapitated Hezbollah.
And it led and then was able to pull the U.S. in to strikes on Iran.
I don't think we really understand what those did or did not do to the nuclear program,
but they showed that Israel could pull the U.S. in on its interests there.
and Iran at least looks a lot weaker than it did two years ago or four years ago.
How do you understand either whether or not that's true, and given whether or not it's true,
what it does or does not change about the path forward?
I mean, there's at one level at which it's undeniably true.
Iran had built a security structure that was designed to prevent precisely what happened.
They built up Hezbollah, they built up a proxy network, they built up their own missile
program. They built up their own nuclear program. They built up ties with Russia and China,
which all of which were designed to deter the kind of attack that they succumbed to
not that long ago. So something went wrong in their calculation. Now, I think he would speak
to Iranians. They'd say that's overstated. Hamas is still alive. We just spoke about it.
Hezbollah is not disarmed, and it's not about to disarm. Iran is still standing. The regime
is still strong. It's as far as I can tell there's no prospect of it falling in the foreseeable
future, and they could say that they withstood America and Israel, and they're the only
country that actually of the region that directly attacked Israel. So that would be their
narrative. And they'd also say on the nuclear front, the uncertainty about what their program
is as an asset, and they're about as far today if they wanted to, to building a bomb as they
were on the eve of the 12-day war. So that would be their narrative. Clearly, as I said, I think
there's going to have to be some self-reflection on their part, because this is not the
come they want it. So on almost every score, they're worse off. They're still standing. I think
their approach right now is going to be to hunker down, you know, not give in more, wait for better
days. Now you ask how that changes the picture. The one thing that it does change pretty fundamentally
is that if you speak now to countries in the Gulf who not long ago were saying their big fear was
of Iranian hegemony, you speak to them now and they say, yeah, we're against Iranian hegemony,
not because we were against Iran, but because we were against hegemony.
And the fear of a regional hegemon now is no longer running. It's Israeli.
So whatever sort of alliance Israel thought that it could build with these countries against Iran,
which is still, you know, we still hear reports that there's still a security cooperation
between Israel and Gulf countries.
The Gulf countries are also fearful of what an unbridled, unchecked Israel can do.
You saw the attacks in Doha, but that was just one of a series of steps that Israel has taken
that leads officials in Riyadh or in Abu Dhabi or in Doha to say, wait a minute,
our goal was not to substitute an Israeli hegemon for an Iranian threat.
Well, that raises a question, Rob, of what Israel has learned or believes it is learned about itself in the last two years.
You go from two and a half years ago before October 7th, Israel has a lot of internal political division.
There are protests in the streets over the judicial reforms, and the country is,
thinking very little, if at all, about Palestinians. It is worried about Iran. It's worried about
Hezbollah, but it's not thinking much about Gaza. After October 7th, the country is
traumatized. It's frightened. It can't believe this happened. It can't believe it. Let this happen.
On my reporting chips and reporting there, the level of fear and insecurity was profound.
Benjamin Netanyahu is considered completely finished, the most failed prime minister in
Israeli history. And over the past year, it seems to me it's gone through an internal
revolution again of Israel believing that, if anything, it had underestimated its own strength.
Yes, it had become inattentive in defending the border with Gaza. But look what it did
to Ebola. Look what it was able to withstand in terms of U.S. pressure. Look at what it did
and it strikes against Iran. Look at what it has done in absolutely flattening Gaza. Look at the
Massad operations, it has been able to pull off. And at least until now, its ability to
pull the U.S. along with it is beyond, I think, what most of us would have thought. So how do you
understand how this has changed in Israeli politics and Israel's understanding of how it should
manage its own geopolitical position and might? So, I mean, the reason we titled the book
tomorrow's yesterday has in part to do with what you're saying. Not only, there's a big picture,
but Israel is back to where it has been in the past, which is this notion that the only thing
it could rely on to protect itself is force and power. And the projection of power, if it's not
enough, you need a projection of more power. And if mowing the lawn isn't enough, their own
philosophy where you mow the lawn every time a threat appears, now you're going to mow everything,
including dirt and earth. You're not going to let anything grow at all. And that's a philosophy,
you know, it's easy to say, oh, it's Netanyahu, it's Ben Gavir, it's Smotrich.
Again, as we try to illustrate in the book, this is Israel through and through.
It has been in the past, and it's resurfaced now, sort of wall-to-all that belief in the security doctrine.
At what point will Israelis also, because there's another part of their mind, I suspect, that is thinking, well, what are we going to do about the Palestinian question?
Because the Palestinians aren't going anywhere.
And I think, you know, you mentioned the trauma of October 7th?
Absolutely right.
But right now, what seems to predominate is exactly what you said.
A brush with disaster, which then leads to a resurgence of Israeli force
and a return to that belief.
And just as we see the Palestinians back to where they were, the Israelis are back to where they were as well.
Hussein, there has been wide reporting that part of Hamas' calculations in launching this attack
was the belief that the Palestinian question was being.
removed, the Palestinians are becoming invisible, that Israel was going to make a deal with the Saudis,
you know, with America as an intermediary, and nothing significant would be done.
Hamas launched a murderous attack that provoked the absolute devastation of Gaza, the deaths
of around 70,000 people, the destruction of that society functionally.
what they got in return is the wrecking of Israel's image in much of the world.
Many, many people believe that what Israel's done in Gaza is a genocide, including a not small
proportion of young American Jews.
You've seen a number of European countries, in particular, recognized Palestinian statehood.
Is any of that meaningful?
Does that change the situation for Palestinians?
is Israel vulnerable to external pressure
or its image in the world being worse
or is that not significant
given the interests of the players here?
It's more than meaningful.
It's probably the most powerful meaning
of the whole affair.
Don't forget, with October 7 and the war on Gaza,
the whole traditional historical
Israeli security doctrine has collapsed.
The security doctrine was based on three elements.
First, you do not allow the war to take place on your own territory.
October 7 showed that that's not the case.
Second, the war has to be short and finished very quickly.
It did not happen.
Third, the victory has to be decisive.
Again, it did not happen.
And Israel, as you know, relies very much on the
thought processes that justify and explain and promote its military actions, these have gone.
As a result, you find this tension between the political echelone and the military security
echelons. This is one. Second thing is that through all these military victories that are
technical military victories, it has not been able to cash them anywhere. Iran is still there.
and it might come back faster than we think.
Hezbollah is not disarmed.
There are no prospects of its disarming.
Hamas is back in Gaza.
And thirdly, and as importantly,
as some Israelis are increasingly talking about,
the dependence of the United States has become so vast
that it's not very clear to what extent Israel is still a sovereign, independent country.
If after one week of fighting some irregular elements in Gaza, you need to have such a huge
influx of American military aid, it makes you wonder, you know, to what extent you are free
to do what you want to do. Without the United States, they will be in a very, very tenuous
position, and they don't have a solution for that. Added to all this over the past 2030
they began to make inroads into the non-Palestinian Arab world.
And as a result of their military victories and the achievements
and the war in Gaza and 7th October,
all these achievements are not really as clear as they were
and are threatened.
So they have to deal with that as well.
So, you know, you can tell me that militarily the Israelis
hurt Iran, Hezbollah and Hamas,
but strategically, they are much more vulnerable than they ever been in the whole existence.
And if you talk to Israelis, you feel that vulnerability.
They have to find a new way.
And that new way has not been defined yet.
I think it will come because the Israelis are a very dynamic, intelligent people and society,
and they will think eventually to how to get out of this.
But it's not there now.
And that's a major, major blow to the Israeli psyche.
I mean, it makes me think, if you put all of our conversation together,
there's sort of three paradoxes or discrepancies.
Israel at some level has never been more powerful regionally.
I mean, you just described it.
And yet, as Hussein says, both the vulnerability and the prior status,
I mean, they've never been more ostracized and more condemned by the world.
The Palestinians have never enjoyed,
and few liberation movements have ever enjoyed,
such universal acclaim, such universal support, you know, the streets of Rome, of London, not to mention
the global south, campuses on the United States. And yet their leadership, their movement has
rarely been more drift and more at a loss without any sense of direction. And then on the American
side, you've rarely had an American president who has had so much power to get things done, as we've
seen, so much independence from the laws of political gravity in the U.S., and yet without a vision of
where he wants to bring things. So on all three sides, you have a discrepancy between huge assets
and then huge liabilities and no bank in which to transfer the assets to make up for the
liabilities. And that just means a lot of things could still change, a lot of things could still move,
because there's so much influx and so much uncertainty.
May I add one more thing. The rise of genuine anti-Semitism in the world is frightening.
and it is there in ways that it has not been there for a long, long, long time.
You do not know the number of people who have nothing to do with the Middle East,
who have nothing to do with politics, who are flirting with anti-Semitism.
This is a major, major thing that has to be dealt with.
Let me continue with the financial metaphor, Rob, which is one thing I have wondered is to agree to which Israel is borrowing strength from the future and putting it into the present without really a plan for how to build it back.
And what I mean by that is Hussein mentioned the intense reliance on America.
And America is really, in a way, now Israel's last friend.
There are other transactional relationships, some of them with Gulf states, etc.
But America is the key ally of Israel.
And Israel has certainly among young Americans decimated its political legitimacy.
Not among everyone.
and I know many young Jews who become more Zionist in this period, right? I don't want to erase complexity. But the amount of moral legitimacy it held when I was growing up and what holds now are very different. And Rob, you've served in a number of Democratic administrations. And I think what Democrats see when they look at the relationship between Biden and Yahoo and Israel over the past couple of years is that he absolutely screwed them.
Netanyahu screwed Obama before Biden, and then he screwed Biden, and you have a Democratic Party
where the base has become much more pro-Palestinian, much more skeptical of Israel,
and you imagine that four or eight or 12 years into the future during some other crisis or flashpoint
with a different constellation of Palestinian leadership, and where America is in that might be very different.
and so there seems to me to be a tension between how much capital Israel spent in the present
in terms of its relationship with America and in terms of how Americans and the world see it
and then what support it will be able to rely on in the future. I think the hope is that they
have just of material capacity that they don't have to face that. But if I was thinking
about risks to Israel, in addition to the anti-Semitism, which affects both Israeli Jews and
non-Israeli Jews, that feels very alive to me in the long run.
So just first a comment when you say American presidents that I served have been screwed by
Israel. Some would say they've been willingly screwed, but that's a different topic.
Yeah, I think you're absolutely right. But I think, you know, people would understand it's sort of a
human trait to say, we're going to do what we can, to have as powerful a position as we need
today, and we'll think about the future when it comes. I mean, we'll live to fight another day.
And so I think other things will change tomorrow.
Maybe there'll be a different leadership in the U.S.
Maybe the Palestinians will do us a favor of some other horrendous attack.
Who knows what will happen?
So I think you're absolutely right.
And if I were an Israeli official or just in Israeli,
I'd be very worried about this trend, particularly in the United States,
because I think it is a real demographic shift and a generational shift.
We'll see.
But that's every indication I get from teaching on campuses.
And so, yeah, I think that they are sacrificing to some extent the future
for the sake of the present.
But as I said, I don't think that's specific to Israel.
I think that's sort of a human way of reacting to events.
I do wonder about the reaction that you think will happen
among Democratic administrations,
or for that matter, among Republican administrations.
This is something I'm more in touch with
than I am, you know, public opinion in the Arab world
or even in Israel.
And my sense is that you're seeing something happening here
not just on campuses.
So younger Republicans, younger Republicans in power, younger staff Republicans, are understood to be much less pro-Israel than older Republicans.
You see Tucker Carlson, I think in many ways almost flirting with anti-Semitism.
You see Charlie Kirk before he was murdered being much more skeptical of the American relationship with Israel.
There was a real change happening among the younger MAGA-aligned Republican cohort.
So this is not just a Democratic thing.
And then among younger Democrats, you are seeing a sea change.
I mean, an easy representative of it is Zoran Mamdani, who many young Democrats believe to be the most exciting young Democrat in America, who is very likely to be New York City's next mayor, and conceded recently that he would let Zionists serve in his administration, right?
The idea of somebody saying something like that in American politics would have been unthinkable just a couple of years ago.
And meanwhile, huge numbers of young Jews I know in New York are enthusiastically supporting him.
So in terms of the people staffing these administrations, in terms of the people who will be, you know, writing the briefs and eventually moving up into positions of being a congressman, a senator, etc., it feels very different on both sides to me, more so, again, than in any time I can remember.
100%. I feel exactly the same way. I think the question is how much sustained this is and how much staying power it has. So to take the Democratic side, I think you're seeing on the part of former Biden officials a rethinking or among some of them about, you know, did they make mistakes during the Gaza war? And people who at the time were never prepared to envisage withholding military aid are now saying it. Is that because they are genuinely convinced of it or because they could read the policy?
Who knows? And I think the test for that part of the Democratic Party is going to be if and when, you know, the war ends, you have a different Israeli government, which is not quite as, you know, right wing as this one. So maybe Benghavir and Smotrich are gone. Do they then say, okay, we've seen the back of the worst of Israel, but now we're going to go back to our old ways and turn a blind eye to what Israel does in the West Bank and even what it's doing in Gaza, so long as it's not flirting with genocide. So that would be a test in terms of the establishment. And I think that's going to depend on whether
the young people, the voters,
turned this into a wedge issue,
an issue on which, you know, sort of like Iraq,
this is how we're going to test officials.
And I don't know, because I don't know how important it's going to be to voters.
Is this going to be the litmus test,
or is it going to be what position you took on the shutdown
or health care or something else?
On the Republican side,
and I've just only recently started to meet with some of the MAGA folks
who feel this way, it's not as strong, it's not as widespread,
but in some ways it's more intrinsic to the identity,
entity because it doesn't come from sort of a humanitarian impulse about Palestinians. It's about
America first, which is really what part of the MAGA movement is about. So I completely agree
with you. Some of them, it's obnoxious anti-Semitism that is there. But for others, it's a very
simple question. Why should the United States subcontract its policy provide $3.8 billion a year and
even more, if you count what we've done since October 7th to Israel and be dragged into wars by
Israel, when all of our effort and all of our attention should be on what's happening at home.
So I think on both sides, for very different reasons, it's sort of transpartisan, but like you,
I can't but observe that there's, you know, compared to when I was on the same campus,
I'm teaching on now things that are being said, things that are being thought would have been
completely out of the question 30, 40 years ago or 10 years ago.
Hussain, we can largely understand the way that American political leadership will change in
the coming years, for at least we hope we can. We can understand how Israeli elections will be
held, and the set of players within that, you know, will it be Napali Bennett, will Benjamin Netanyahu
hold on? Right now, the question of how does Palestinian leadership emerge, reformulate itself,
is it still even under the structures we have come to see it under, that feels very opaque.
I mean, as we mentioned, Abbas is 89, just physically he cannot hold on.
forever. It's not at all clear what happens in terms of Gaza leadership. I've seen many pieces
and statements from people in Gaza who want to be able to build leadership out of an organic
process. Obviously, Israel and the U.S. have not currently been supportive of that. How do you imagine
the next structure of Palestinian leadership, either looking or even just emerging and forming?
tomorrow is yesterday what is happening in Palestine and the Palestinians is that they're going back
being a drift not being unified not having a clear kind of process of leadership
not having a program not having objectives trying to find their way back into some kind
of structure that they have lost and they have not been able to replace with anything
They're not happy with the kind of activities or policies that Hamas represents.
They're not happy with the policies of Fatah, but they do not have alternative policies.
There is a kind of civil society that talks the language of the West, of transparency, accountability, democracy, liberalism.
But they have no resonance amongst the majority of the people.
So we are back where we started.
It reminds me very much of the period between 48 and 65.
Between 48 and 65, the Palestinians were completely lost.
And the lost Palestinians, through some magical process, they produced the PLO,
and from there on, the PLO set the pace and the nature of their political path.
Right now, they are back.
being lost, we do not know what is this new body that will emerge, if it's a body,
what kind of leaders will emerge, if they are actual leaders? Will they be from the diaspora,
where the majority of the Palestinians live? Will they be from the West Bank? Will they be from
Gaza? Or will they be, which has a good chance Israeli Arabs or Israeli Palestinians who seem
to be much more dynamic politically than the rest of the societies. So we are in a period of
flux, the outcome of which is totally not only unpredictable. Even the options are not there.
Rob, when I look at this framework and I listen to you describe it, it seems very possible to me
that after all of this, we will end up in what will be for Gazans,
a post-apocalyptic version of what reigned before,
in which Hamas is functioning control.
When Hamas is seen to pose some threat to Israel,
Israel attacks mows of the grass in the way the Israelis speak of it,
that there is nothing on the other side of this,
after all this death, after all this destruction,
that looks all of that different.
It's the same players engaged in some way
in the same dance.
Listen, I think that's extremely possible,
maybe even probable.
Hussein and I described it recently
as going from the absolute hell
that was the war to the mere nightmare
of where we are today
and where we've been in the past,
and Greg Gausens have been in the past.
So a vast refugee camp,
the people who've been refugees once, twice,
sometimes three times over, without being kept alive through international humanitarian assistance
and the Palestinian issue in Gaza being reduced to a security problem that Israel tries to deal with
and a humanitarian problem that the world deals with, but not a political problem that needs to be
resolved. And at this point, all things being equal, I think that's the most likely outcome.
It's going to be now a matter of whether the countries that have an influence on President Trump
and President Trump himself to decide whether that's a status that they could live with or whether
it needs to be something better.
Then, as we come to a close here,
the book, the two of you were together,
it is really a history of failure.
It is a history of deals and processes
you've both been often involved in
that have had high hopes around them
and come to not.
We are clearly entering a period
in which another series of political leaders,
Tony Blair, Jared Kushner,
Donald Trump, etc.,
are going to at least make some attempt
at another process.
if they came to you for advice,
if they said, just tell me what not to do this time.
What would both of you tell them, starting with you, Rob?
Hmm.
I mean, that's a tough one because at this point,
I think there is really no clear blueprint.
I mean, the best advice, I guess, is what you're referring to,
which is what not to do and not to replicate the ways of the past,
which I think they're unlikely to do in any event,
but not to simply decide, as we see some people doing,
jumping to the next shiny object,
which is, let's try to revive the two-state solution,
let's try to revive negotiations between the two sides.
It hasn't worked, and it hasn't worked for 30 years
on the much, much more auspicious circumstances
that we see today.
And so we have to discard all of the formulas,
all of the plans that people may come up with,
however tempting they may be,
and however, well, meaning some of their authors are,
some are less so.
you know, in the case of the two-state solution and the pursuit of peace, it's not a couple of
mishaps. It's a decade after decade, after decade, not just of mishap, but of failures that
have led to the catastrophe, the horrors of October 7th, and of what followed, because
it's not as if October 7th and then the war that Israel waged on Gaza afterwards are disconnected
from what came before. They're the logical consequence of those failures of the pursuit of an
illusion and of the quieting of any alternative in the name of that illusion, which is we're going to
get hard partition on the basis of two states, which neither Israelis nor Palestinians continue to
believe in after some time. So that's, I mean, I don't think they need to hear it from me,
but I think that kind of the reflex to go down to plans, whether it's 20, 30, 40 points,
and let's just apply to the two sides. I think at this stage, it really is a matter of the
deep emotions of the two sides, which have been exacerbated by what the last two years,
coming to terms with those, breaking convention, talking to all sides, again, not.
just the sides that we're comfortable with, the ones who parrot our words and who dress
that we dress, and I speak about Americans, but there's going to be Islamists, and there's
going to be refugees, and there's going to be settlers, and there's going to be religious
Zionists. It's not going to be a quick solution. It's probably not even going to be a solution
at this point. It's going to be some form of coexistence between the two sides until they themselves
could work out a better future. But, you know, Tabula Raza of the past and try to think
of a way forward, breaking convention,
being prepared to put pressure on both sides
and being prepared to talk to all,
I think they could do worse than to follow that advice.
Hussein?
The first thing you have to do is
you have to completely forget
about reason and rationality
when you deal with this region.
The Western ways of doing things do not hold
and they have no resonance
amongst the inhabitants
of this part of the world.
It's messy and you have to be ready for this messiness by not trying to stray jacket it into neat kind of resolutions because the resolutions are neat in your mind.
Because in the nature of the reality of this region, you have to look for clarity in the confusion and not deny the confusion and not be.
believe that there are simple kind of quick fixes to the problem you are facing.
It's not a matter of lines on maps.
It's not a matter of convincing people of what's good for them or what's not good for them.
So if I were you, forget it.
Forget it for some time.
And I think the person who successfully has done that at this state, for how long I don't know, is President Trump.
because he's not resorting to pure reason.
He's willing to change his view at the drop of a hat or a coin
or whatever you want to drop.
He's willing to adjust to realities.
He's willing to talk to people who for decades
were deemed to be terrorists and completely non-coacher.
And these are the kind of ways that work in the region.
Unfortunately, the cadre in the West that deals with these matters, with the exception of Trump,
unfortunately, again, the people around Trump, I do not know how much they're interested in the region.
They're interested in the security of Israel, maybe, but beyond that, I do not think they know
very much about the societal elements in the region.
The one side who knows how to deal with all this, I think, in the future, will probably be the Russians and the Chinese.
I'm not very optimistic.
And then always our final question.
What are three books you'd recommend to the audience, Rob?
Three books? Well, actually four, if I can,
but one book that has everything to do with what we've been discussing
and I think its title alone deserves a prize
is one day everyone will always have been against us by Omar Al-Aqad.
A second book that doesn't appear to have much to do with our discussion,
but actually really does.
It's about Northern Ireland, the dilemmas of struggle and justice
and what one kills and dies for,
and that's Say Nothing by Patrick Rat and Keefe.
And then, if I may, a pair of books that not only appear to have nothing to do with what we've been discussing,
but they're also fictional, they're two plays, in kind of conversation with each other,
and yet they too have everything to do with the subtext we've been talking about
and the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, the price of loyalty of conviction and justice,
dirty hands by Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus, the just assassins,
which are two plays
that, as I say, are in conversation to one another
and are wonderful reads.
Hussein?
I don't read much contemporary stuff.
Even better.
I rely mostly on classics.
So therefore, I'm going to suggest
a re-reading of Thucididates
the Peloponnesian Wars
that explain to you
really, very accurately,
very much of the processes
that are taking place now.
They will explain to you the nature of democracy,
the nature of power, the nature of leadership
in ways that no contemporary book does.
The other book that I will recommend
is The Man Without Qualities by Robert Musil.
The beauty of that book is,
it's a satire that crystallizes all the themes
and the issues of today
in ways that other books that are more analytical do not.
The third book for comic,
relief, it's a book that I enjoy reading every now. And then, even though it's debunked and
everybody says it's nonsense, is Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon. I find that very kind of,
how should I say, amusing. It's a very funny book. And I think Kenneth Anger is very
underrated. That is definitely the first recommendation of Hollywood Babylon on the show. I will say
that for it. Rob Malley, Hussain Aga, thank you very much.
Thank you, Ezra.
Thank you.
This episode of Issaqu has produced by Annie Galvin,
fact-checking by Michelle Harris and Jack McCordick.
Our senior audio engineer is Jeff Gelb,
with additional mixing by Isaac Jones.
Our executive producer is Claire Gordon.
The show's production team also includes Marie Cassione, Roland Hu, Marina King, Kristen Lynn, Emmett Kelbeck, and Jan Kobel.
Original music by Marian Lizano, Dan Powell, and Pat McCusker.
Audience Strategy by Christina Similuski and Shannon Busta.
The director of New York Times-pending audio is Annie Rose Strasser.
Special thanks to Chris Wood and Ashley Clivery.