The President's Daily Brief - PDB Situation Report | September 13th, 2025: Making Sense Of Charlie Kirk’s Assassination & Israel Expands the War to Qatar
Episode Date: September 13, 2025In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: The latest developments in the shocking assassination of Charlie Kirk—with the suspected shooter now in custody. Retired FBI Agent James Gagliano ...joins us for his insight. Later, Israel carries out a strike in Doha, the capital of Qatar. It’s a dramatic escalation that’s drawn sharp reaction across the region. Clifford May, founder and president of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracy, joins us for more on that. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting PDBPremium.com. Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief. YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief True Classic: Upgrade your wardrobe and save on @trueclassic at https://trueclassic.com/PDB #trueclassicpod CBDistillery: Visit https://CBDistillery.com and use promo code PDB for 25% off your entire order! BRUNT Workwear: Get $10 Off at BRUNT with code PDB at https://www.bruntworkwear.com/PDB #Bruntpod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the PDP Situation Report. I'm Mike Baker, your eyes and ears on the world stage.
All right. Let's get briefed. We'll start today with the latest developments in the shocking assassination of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk. New details are emerging on the investigation and the shooter.
We'll be joined by retired FBI agent James Gagliano for his insight. Later in the show, Israel carries out a strike in Doha, the capital of Qatar.
It's a dramatic escalation that's drawn sharp reaction across the region. We'll be joined by
Clifford May. He's the founder and president of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.
But first, today's situation reports spotlight. Popular conservative commentator Charlie Kirk
was assassinated earlier this week while speaking at a college event in Utah. The assassination sparked
a nationwide manhunt for the killer. Now, early on Friday morning during a television appearance,
President Trump announced that a suspect was in custody. In the president's words,
authorities had a, quote, high degree of certainty that the shooter was in the hands of law
enforcement. Surely there were after, officials, including the head of the FBI, held a press
conference to confirm that, yes, the suspect was now in custody. Twenty-two-year-old Tyler Robinson
from southern Utah was reportedly charred in by his father and pastor. But the investigation is far
from over. Motive remains unclear, how much planning went into the attack, and were others involved.
For more on that, let me bring in retired FBI supervisory special agent Jim Gagliano. Jim served in the
Bureau for 25 years in various roles and is now an assistant professor and doctoral candidate
in Homeland Security at St. John's University. Jim, thanks very much, man, for being here on the
Situation Report. Mike, thanks for that rundown. You need to talk to some of my professors at the
Military Academy, they would tell you a different story about my academic proficiencies.
One day we'll sit down over beers and compare our GPAs. I think I'm going to lose.
I don't know about that. Sounds good. Well, listen, let's talk about obviously what's been top of mind
for everybody. And of course, that's the assassination of Charlie Kirk. The suspect is now in
custody. And shortly after President Trump made that announcement, then they had the official
press conference that took place with everyone from the governor to Cash Patel, to Dan Bongino,
to sheriffs, to local law enforcement. It was, it ran for a while. But tell me what your top line
takeaway is from that initial press conference after the suspect was captured?
Sure. Well, certainly, we're all breathing a heavy sigh of relief from. I was confident they were
going to capture this guy. Mike, from the beginning, looking at the cascading, mounting hill of
evidence that seemed to be piling up. I was pretty confident that he was going to be captured.
There exist no perfect crimes today.
This isn't the era of Jack the Ripper where, you know, somebody can, you know, pull something
heinous off and disappear and never to be found again.
I was confident in that.
Look, we could certainly get into, I thought on the messaging end from law enforcement.
There were certainly some mistakes and missteps.
And I'll chalk that up to a brand new FBI director and also a Utah governor that, you know,
It was confusing to me because, you know, you and I both served in these type of roles before,
but as an incident commander, that's not a politician role. I say that as a recovering politician
having just served two terms as the mayor of the village of Cornwall and Hudson in upstate New York.
That's not the role for a politician. But obviously, again, I guess, you know, good news is going to
make everything okay. I just trust that nothing was released. We didn't get too far ahead of this thing
that's going to screw up a prosecution.
Remember, having a suspect in custody is one thing.
We've got to prove he was guilty of doing this
and send him away for the rest of his life
or in the case of Utah, potentially seek the death penalty.
Yeah, now, it appears, and I'll let you as the expert,
focus on this, but I'm curious about a number of areas
related to this investigation.
It appears that once they released a variety of images,
and essentially it appeared to be asking for the public's help obviously in identifying the individual
that the individual, the young man's father and pastor essentially turned him in or convinced him
to turn himself in. Is it your understanding that they now are in possession of a full confession
or is that something that's still in the works? I would have loved for a reporter to have asked that
very salient question at this press conference. And look, maybe law enforcement would or would not have
confirmed that or denied that. But yes, did this individual end up confessing to the crimes?
That's going to be important. But look, Mike, there is mounting evidence, mounting evidence.
And remember the legal system, you don't have to find the gun and we have the gun, the rifle,
in this instance. You don't have to have that. The murder weapon is not. You can convict on
circumstantial evidence, and I imagine the treasure trove, and I talked to some of my FBI
buddies still on the job, the veritable treasure trove of evidence from DNA evidence to latent
fingerprints. And look, in today's day and age, everything is blanketed by digital exhaust.
And at that event, 3,000 people, many of them filming it on their cell phone cameras,
you had campus security photos, there's just a plethora of evidence, I think, that is
going to tie this guy to it. And I'll just wrap with this. You and I are old enough to remember
the case of the Unabomber and how difficult that was for a family member, a brother to come forward
and say, hey, I just read this manifesto that was printed in the newspaper. And my God, that
sounds like my brother, who's a recluse, you know, and lives in Montana and has basically got
off the grid, and that certainly had to have been going through the mind of that father. He did
the right thing. He made a hard moral choice that, hey, my son is accused and in all likelihood
committed this heinous crime, and he's got to face justice. But my God, Mike, as a father,
who would ever want to be put in that situation have to make that horrible decision?
Yeah, and then you have to have empathy for the parents in this situation, right? And I hope
people do because it's just, as you pointed out, it's just awful if you think about that.
I can't even imagine what that must be like for a parent in that situation.
But you're right about the difficulty of getting someone close to an individual who's done
something like this to come forward, right?
I mean, that's oftentimes in lone wolf terror attacks.
That's what you're left hoping for, is that somebody saw.
something and they're actually going to come forward and talk about it. I saw my cousin do this.
I'm worried about my friend or my brother who did this. But oftentimes, you know, it's a very
difficult decision, of course, on their part. The role of, it's going to sound odd, but the role
of speculation, right? I love your term, by the way, digital exhaust. And I'm going to shamelessly
adopt that. I probably won't even give you credit for it.
But I'm definitely using that.
But in this day and age, you're right.
Everybody expects immediate answers because of instant gratification.
And that's not the way investigations play out.
It's a painstaking labor-intensive process.
But immediately after this, right, I always do this.
And I go to social media to see how bizarre it's getting.
And it got really bizarre very quickly after.
the shooting. Everything from this was the government doing it to people who were convinced,
oh, this is a professional hit. And that speculation, I assume, for law enforcement, from an
investigative perspective, they just let that go. They just, they push that aside. I assume.
Yeah, it's, you know, first of all, Mike, what you're, what you're touching on is how spoiled we are
as a nation and with 21st century technology in the police sciences realm, that we consider every
crime to be solvable in a law and order television program, 60-minute show with five commercial
breaks, and we have the answer, and we have the conviction. Doesn't work that way. It didn't
work that way. In the Boston bomber case, it certainly didn't work that way. In the Luigi
Mangione case, who killed the businessman, the health care executive in New York.
City, it takes time. But I'm confident in today's day and age with the types of technology
that we have and the availability. And, you know, look at Manhattan, a place that you and I
are very familiar with. There's not a square inch of that island that's not covered by some
type of surveillance, whether it's government installed or whether it's private security camera
footage. So going back to what you said and suggested about reading the stuff online,
Yes, it's infuriating.
However, having said that crowdsourcing is a thing.
And the ability to push this stuff out and to release information or to put out a
BOLO or be on the lookout message is hugely, hugely helpful in law enforcement circles.
And lastly, to round out your final query there, yeah, I took some mild criticism for the fact
that I pushed back early on.
Now, you and I are in the business sometimes where we have to make hot take.
And it's difficult, right?
Something happens.
They throw you in front of a camera as a talking head and they say, give us your reaction.
We don't have all the facts.
They're looking for you to use your informed decision-making processes and your experience
to give them something to help make sense of what might be nonsensical.
Well, people were talking about the tinfoil hat legions were talking about the fact that this
was an FBI, CIA, or NSA hit, which you just ignore those.
get that kind of crackpot stuff. But it was the folks that got out there and talked about the
skill set and the expertise and the fact that this was a trained assassin and a hitman and
had to be a, you know, a marksman of, you know, of great skill. And I had to knock it down.
And I said, look, you know, I went to the United States Marine Corps sniper school as a FBI
hostage rescue team member. I'm an FBI SWAT train sniper and I had to qualify in the Marine
core range, which is out to a thousand yards. Look, those kind of shots where you're shooting 500,
600 meters, 800, 900, that takes skilled marksmanship. You're worried about windage and elevation
and the bullet drop due to gravity and how the wind impacts things and how the lack of the
loss of velocity impacts around. This was a, and I don't want to sound, I don't want to sound like
I'm being glib or make light of this when I say, this was a.
a cake shot that an amateur could have made. And that's clearly was the case here. Was this kid
familiar with guns? Yes, he lived in Utah. You've seen pictures of him with a hunting rifle.
He was probably, you went out with his father and went moose hunting or went deer hunting or
something like that. But from less than 200 yards away with a 10 by scope on it from what it
appears from what I saw, this is a shot. People are like, look, Jimmy, he had a kill shot in the
neck. Look, President Trump blessedly and miraculously survived an amateur who missed him by
millimeters from killing him to to nicking his ear. In this instance, it worked the other way.
This kid probably, Mike, aimed center mass. And just because of the bullet type and because of
the climate and the environmental conditions ended up with a kill shot in a neck. I've seen guys bleed
out from a Nick, you knew that this was going to be serious. But the whole professional assassin thing,
you see the video last night that's released, he's stumbling around in neighborhood, he doesn't just
get in a vehicle, get on to I-15 and drive 100 miles away before anybody noticed he was gone.
He clearly had no backup plan, no egress plan. This was not a trained assassin. Yeah, no,
I don't. But people don't want to think about, you know, Charlie died from a lucky,
shot, which is essentially, I don't want to sound ghoulish and I don't mean it that way, but that's
what it was. It was just incredibly bad fortune for Charlie and his family and for everybody who,
you know, admired what he was doing and trying to do in terms of open debate and just trying to
get ideas out there. It was just, as you said, you know, look, you could give somebody 20 minutes
of instruction, you know, on a bolt action rifle. And, you know, they, they, it's just not,
it's not that tough, but people don't want to think that, right? They don't want to think that
something this tragic is the result of misfortune, of bad luck or whatever you want to call it.
So, you know, I, but I'm always fascinated by the impact of social media and this, this desire
for instant answers. And I think you're right. Everybody's conditioned for it because they watch
TV, they read beach books, whatever, and they're used to having answers in no time at all. And
it frustrates them and that just creates this environment where people can get out there and speculate.
And I've taken some heat over the years for being on a national TV news show and just saying,
I don't know, I'd be speculating and leaving at that. And then the anchor is staring at me like,
well, that's not, you're not supposed to just sit there and do that. So I don't, you know,
the speculation never, never serves a worthwhile purpose for the most part, unless it's coming,
from, you know, law enforcement.
Let's just coming from an informed individual who can, who can, you know, then clearly say,
here are the scenarios that may exist, right?
But we don't have evidence at this stage of the investigation to back that up.
So, but, you know, I'll get off my soapbox now.
Jim, if you could hang around just for a little bit longer, we've got to take a quick break.
And then we'll be back with Jim Gagliano from former FBI and friend of the show, great guy.
I think that's enough. That's enough good things about it. But we'll be right back here on the
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Welcome back to the BDB Situation Report.
Joining me once again is retired FBI supervisory special agent Jim Gugliano.
Jim, thanks for sticking around.
If you could, for the benefit of our viewers,
take us back to the immediate aftermath
of the shooting.
From the Bureau's perspective, what is that process like?
What happens?
What starts happening as soon as that incident occurs?
Sure.
So, Mike, first let me preface this by saying, let's set the scene here.
So you characterize Charlie Kirk the same way that I would.
A wonderfully gifted young man that argued that we should have
debates in the public square, we should roll up our sleeves and do it that way, not via
fisticuffs or violence, and then met a tragic end while espousing those exact same beliefs.
So there had been threats on Charlie's life before because there's some people that preach
tolerance and inclusion and just don't follow their own preaching method.
So I know some guys that had served on Charlie's details before.
He had private security details.
They were made up of former HRT colleagues of mine.
He had a detail with him that day out on the Utah campus where he was set up to go.
And we know that there were six local police officers that were also assigned there,
whether they were campus police or local police officers.
Now, look, I'm not going to Monday morning quarterback, hey, Jimmy, do you think that the local
cops did the wrong thing?
They didn't have enough people.
I don't know the resources available there.
Utah is not a place that you would expect something like this to happen, even though you're supposed
to expect the unexpected. But you had 3,000 people in attendance, Mike. And whether or not they had
a heads up that there was going to be that big of a crowd, should there have been more of a law
enforcement presence? Absolutely. Now, having said that, the FBI investigates political assassinations,
right? Well, you know, does this fall into what a political assassination is the way we understand
We think about JFK or Lincoln or Martin Luther King or Robert Kennedy or Malcolm X.
We think about those kind of political assassinations.
But this was somebody who wasn't an elected official.
He was just an – I mean, I hate to use the term activist.
It has negative connotations, but he was an influencer and somebody that was engaging
with the community and this is what he did.
Okay.
So what could have been done prior?
Well, he didn't have a Secret Service detail.
There were no drone support to take a look at the rooftops and make sure that some young kid armed with a hunting rifle couldn't get up there and take a less than 200-yard shot.
There was no magnetometer.
There was no screening people for concealed weapons.
It just wasn't going to happen in something like this.
Now, let's talk about, you know, to right of boom or what happened after that fateful shot.
Okay, so the FBI gets called in immediately.
Now, you're probably wondering, well, Jimmy, the FBI doesn't investigate murder.
cases, and you're right, that's not typically the purview, but murder is a predicate that can be
used in many different federal statutes and violations to include RICO and things like that,
or a political assassination. So in this instance, they were asked to help with this case.
Well, as soon as something happens in that immediate aftermath, that's the most critical
portion because you don't want the subject or the suspect to escape that type perimeter.
Mike, what I was concerned about, and I said on many appearances on TV and radio, was where that
building was, right behind it was a parking lot where we've now seen video of this young man
stumbling around in after he jumped off the building. Behind that parking lot was I-15.
I-15 is a major arterial thoroughfare that he could have been on within minutes and been hundreds
of miles away. Provo Municipal Airport, 45 minutes or.
away. The fact that he stayed so close showed he didn't have a plan. It wasn't a professional
hit. And look, you know, what would the FBI be doing in the immediate aftermath? Well,
securing the crime scene. That's number one. And obviously, they recovered shell casings.
They didn't recover the rifle at the scene, but they recovered a palm print. And, you know,
you could see where his body had been lying supine and where his knees and legs were. They
they then curated and collated all the different security cam footage that was available on campus.
And then Mike, it's a difficult thing.
It's wonderful because it helps in these instances, but the amount of legwork and resource
behind trying to collect all that video cell phone data and go through it to find out who did
this and then track his tracks in and track his tracks out.
It's amazing that he stayed so close and that we do have a person in custody.
This could have gone horribly differently if this guy had been able to get to a vehicle
and gotten a long distance away.
Hard work is still ahead of us.
I mean, the case has still got to be put together to make sure this guy never sees the light of day again.
But that's what the FBI would be working on.
Yeah, yeah.
No, you're absolutely right.
I mean, you know, if he had a plane ticket, right?
and had just headed straight over to Salt Lake City Airport and, you know, jumped on knowing what the
timing was of the event and just mapped that out.
This could have been infinitely more difficult if, you know, but again, I think helped with the
fact that they had this surveillance footage.
And obviously then, you know, that that alerted his family and his father and pastor.
So that made all the difference.
People sometimes I've had these conversations with.
privacy advocates who rail against the idea of a surveillance society. I'm always mystified by that,
right? It's the same type of mindset that says the government's watching me. And I always try
to tell people, look, unless you're engaged in significant criminal activity or you're a terrorist,
the government doesn't have time for you. They don't care, right? But people like to imagine that
somehow they're after me because I don't know why. You know, people don't understand that outside
of your home, you have no reasonable expectation of privacy. Look, I can't come in your home and look
at you without a warrant. I can't go into your cell phone without a warrant. You have a reasonable
expectation of privacy in Fourth Amendment protections. But if you're out on a college campus or on
a public roadway, you have no reasonable expectation of privacy. So this whole surveillance
state thing, that just doesn't apply here. Yeah, no, I agree. Now, again, I take your point,
armchair quarterbacking, but, you know, after an event like this, but, you know, they have to do
a hot wash, right? They're going to have to look at this and go, what do we need to do from a
variety of levels? And, you know, I would argue from a security perspective, if you've got a subject,
if you've got a protectee, you've got an individual, a principle that has been receiving
death threats. And he's talked about that, right? And it's not just him, it's others in that,
particularly in that conservative commentator world, then you know, there's there's things that can be done, right,
that you could have an indoor event where you could have magnetometers, where you could have more screening.
There's, I think we have enough, unfortunately, we have enough recent case studies, Butler being one of them,
that says any outdoor event poses, even with a Secret Service,
detail poses significant challenges in today's world. And so I would just, I guess what I'm saying
is anybody who's in that situation, whether you're on the security side or whether you're,
you know, somebody who's out there speaking and commentating and it has a potential to
upset people who are on a fringe level, you need to be thinking about these things.
Yeah. The only, you know, the only, the only rub against that. Everything that you just said is on point.
The only rub against that is, you know, when you have threats against a private citizen, not an elected official, but a private citizen, the responsibility, unfortunately, you know, is on that person to make those decisions for their own security because people would, can you imagine people are screaming right now over the fact that his casket, which bore his body back to his home, was traveling on Air Force 2, on the vice president's plane.
And can you imagine if, you know, whether you're a conservative or a liberal commentator and you
received death threats and the government was providing security.
But I agree with your point about outdoor events like this, which make it so much more
difficult.
But those are decisions and calculations that have to be made by the principle in this.
And in this instance, Charlie wanted to be close and connected to people and he wanted to be
able to engage.
And my God, if you can't do that in this country, in the greatest.
country in the history of the world. My God, Mike, where can you do it? Yeah. Well, I think it's,
look, there's the world we'd like to live in. I mean, you know, and then then unfortunately this
is what we've got. But I agree 100% with you. What I'm saying is this was not a law enforcement
issue. This was, it's down to the individuals, it's down to the principle, the person who's
going out there, putting themselves out there. And, you know, not everybody has to wherewithal,
right to have a security team but if you're on that security team you've got you know that i would just
encourage people to push their their principal or whomever to think long and hard about the
events that they're going out to and how those events are structured and how you can secure the
perimeter and and make sure that you've got what you can do to minimize you're not going to lock it
down completely but there's things that they can be done in the going forward in the future it's not
going to help Charlie. But once again, you know, I read some of this where people are blasting
law enforcement and talking about. And I think, no, look, you know, I don't know. It's very, it's like
reading the ghoulish comments from people on the fringe of the left who are delighting in Charlie's,
you know, assassination. You think, what's happened to your humanity? You know, where normal people
don't behave like that. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. But, you know, it goes back to the rhetoric. And again,
I'm a firm believer that words are not violence. They're not. Violence is violence. And, you know,
we both served to protect and ensure that we protected the First Amendment and the rights to be able to speak
your mind. And we didn't do it for the speech that we both appreciated and agreed with.
we did it for the speech that we abhorred, the speech that we didn't agree with. But we've come to
this point in time now where, you know, gosh, a private citizen who's just out there mixing it up
verbally, verbal jousting is what he's guilty of, you know, trying to convince you that his ideas
were better than your ideas. And in this instance, Mike, here's the crux of this, whether it's a
mass shooter, whether it's a terrorist, or whether it's somebody like this, you know, these
are all grievance collectors. What they do is they become upset about something, they'll let that
metastasize and consume them, and they let that hate then turn into action. And in this instance,
where you have so many people in the political arena, throwing around the term fascist, throwing around the
term dictator, authoritarian, and Hitler, my God, Mike, think about this. If you were young and you were
susceptible and impressionable and susceptible to this. And somebody says, my God, Mike, you've got a
chance to stop Hitler. Remember what Hitler did to six million Jews? You've got a chance to stop him.
This guy's got to be stopped. You're going to go out there and potentially think, oh my God,
I've got to save the world to do this. It's an awful thing. But we have unstable people.
We have mental defectives. We have mental illness. And we have people that are just evil.
and that's what happened here.
Does it mean that we can't speak,
we can't say things?
No,
but it does mean when smart people,
like elected officials,
who can't be blamed for being dumb,
smart people,
use that kind of rhetoric
and then sit back and go,
blood's not on my hands.
Yeah.
No,
and they do,
you know,
it's always the same.
It's,
in the immediate aftermath of anything like this,
it's,
you know,
people on all sides are,
oh,
we're going to dial down the temperature,
we've got to stop,
the inflammatory rhetoric. And that never happens, right? And then you've got, you know, people who
unfortunately get lost down in the sewers of social media and, you know, they become, you know,
heavily politicized or influenced, you know, and it's a, it's a bizarre world, obviously, that
we're living in. And people have forgotten, I think, this level of civility, an ability to
kind of share ideas and you don't have to like somebody you don't have to like their opinions
but good God I mean the the idea that you would be celebrating the killing of somebody because
you don't like their ideas right and then you stand there and they don't make that connection
right they don't make the connection of how how abnormal that is they feel self-righteous
almost right and so but it's not the behavior of a good person or a normal
person. So, well, listen, Jim, we could sit here and bang on like this. It's two old philosophers
for forever, probably not solve any of the world's problems. I just want to say thank you, man,
for taking the time. I hope you'll come back again, and I hope it'll be on a happier occasion
when we could talk about other things going on in the world. Mike, I look forward to it, man.
I'll catch you down the way, and, yeah, unfortunately, you and I have to talk about these tough
topics, but I appreciate you having me on and give me a platform to kind of demystify a little bit
about what's going on behind the scenes in this investigation.
Jim Gagliano, former FBI supervisory special agent and a great guy.
All right.
Listen, coming up after the break, Dohaq cutter is the latest flashpoint in the Israeli-Ghamas war.
We'll be joined by Clifford May.
He's the founder president of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracy to break down Israel's
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Israel's war against Hamas has taken an extraordinary turn this week, right into the heart of Qatar.
Israeli warplanes struck a residential compound widely believed to house senior Hamas leaders.
The strike shattered windows across the capital, rattling a nation that's played host to
Hamas' political office for years and served as a key mediator in ceasefire negotiations.
The strike marks a dramatic expansion of the conflict, one that could reshape both the battlefield
and the diplomatic environment.
Joining me now is Clifford May,
founder and president of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.
Cliff, thanks very much for joining us here on the Situation Report.
We've got a lot to cover here.
But let's start if we could at the 30,000 foot level.
Talk to me about your understanding of just how successful or not
the Israeli strike was inside Qatar.
Not as successful as the Israelis obviously hope.
from what we know, and everything is not entirely clear, none of the top Hamas leaders were
killed, some lower level Hamas leaders were probably killed, but none of the top ones.
And I think they wanted to do that. I think they believed that those top Hamas leaders who
are billionaires living off stolen aid money or maybe off Qatari largesse were blocking any
possibility of a ceasefire, including not least the proposals or
last proposal from President Trump, which the Israelis had accepted.
These guys are living high in the hog and five-star hotels, and they thought, get rid of them,
and maybe we can get something done.
Similar to what happened after Hassan Nasrallah, the head of Hezbollah, was killed in Beirut.
After that, the lower-level guys who came up were more flexible about what kind of arrangements they could make.
Now, in a way, a message has still been sent to those guys, which is you may think that because you wear suits and because you live well in Doha, that you have impunity.
But we consider you to be terrorists. You are terrorists. You're responsible for the attacks of October 7, 2023.
You're responsible every day for the holding and torturing of hostages that were abducted from Israel.
We hold you're responsible. And you're not, just because you live.
in Doha, doesn't mean we can't get you and won't get you now or later. If you want to deal
where we say we won't kill you as terrorists, well, we can make that kind of deal. We can give
you free passage. But first of all, you got to say what we get in exchange, which is our
hostages back. Anyhow, that's where I'll start. Yeah. Why now do you think? Why? I mean, because
it's not like these cats, you know, just suddenly showed up in Doha, right? They've been there for
quite some time. So, absolutely. Why do you think Israel decided to do this strike now?
I think they got to the point where they said, okay, these guys in Doha have decided they're not,
they are going to win at the negotiating table what Hamas was unable to win on the battlefield.
They've made up their mind that they'll sacrifice as many Palestinians as they have to,
knowing very well that in Gaza, Palestinian civilians are being used as human shields.
You know, Gaza, and Gaza Hamas is trying to prevent civilians from leaving Gaza City,
which is, you know, under Gaza City in the subterranean fortress is where we believe
that the remaining terrorist leaders in Gaza are right now, and the Israelis want to ferret them
out of there. I think the Israelis thought, okay, these guys are going no further.
we've got to show them that, A, they're not immune, and B, that there's no point pretending
they are diplomats and negotiators.
That's not what they are.
And even, you know, I just kind of say this, Mike, this whole idea of negotiation, if somebody, you know,
steals your children from your house and then calls you on the phone and says, you know,
let's have a negotiation about what you can give us in terms of ransom for that.
It's not like, oh, yeah, that sounds like a good thing to do.
Let's see if we can work something out that's mutually accessible.
acceptable. No, you've committed a crime against us, and we're going to do what we can. Again,
the Israelis gave a time. I think they had given up. I think President Trump had given up on
Hamas in Doha, in Qatar, being reasonable and saying, okay, here's a deal of the Israelis can
accept, here's the deal. Because they were saying, here's what's got to happen. Maybe we'll
give some hostages back, not too many. We want to keep a few. The Israelis have to get out entirely,
no buffer zone.
It's got to be clear that Hamas will be back in control of Gaza afterwards.
In other words, they were asking for surrender from the Israelis.
Yeah, no, I know this requires a little bit of speculation, I suppose.
But do you think that the timing in part had something to do with, in terms of the strike,
had something to do with the most recent attack in Jerusalem at the bus stop that killed six civilians?
You're right, it's speculation, but yes, I think it's enforced speculation.
Because if you look at the Hamas statement about the terrorist attack in Jerusalem,
I would say, and Reuters has reported it this way, actually, that it's tantam out to saying,
this is us.
We're hitting you in Israel, in Jerusalem too.
Someone would say, no, they just praised the attack.
They didn't actually say they took responsibility for it, but it's almost for sure Hamas.
Now, you know, could it be Palestine and Islamic Jihad, which is an allied organization also very tied to the Islamic Republic of Iran?
It could have been, but it's pretty much Amos.
And yes, I think it's right to speculate that Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of Israel said, okay, we're sitting around talking here.
You're given in nothing.
You're still ordering and praising attacks in Israel proper terrorist sects.
We're going to show you that we can do something about that.
that and and they have sent that message because just because they didn't get him today doesn't
mean they can't get them to get them tomorrow it's it's you know or the next day or next year remember
things like the munich olympics you know way back when the israeli said we're getting every
everybody who is responsible eventually we're we're going to get yeah yeah do you think or do you
expect any significance actions or blowback from the katari government or the uh
in terms of that relationship, either between the Qataris in the U.S. or the Qataris and the Israelis,
or is this the sort of thing that you suspect, you know, they'll make noise, they're offended,
but it just blows over at some point.
You know, there's a lot we could discuss about the Qataris and who they are.
And I am one of those who believes that the Qataris are false friends and have been for a very long time.
They are supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood.
They are supporters of Hamas.
It is true that the Israelis and the Americans for a while, and I've talked to Qatari
diplomats about this, they say, look, we were doing things that the Americans and the
Israelis wanted us to do, such as spending, you know, millions and millions of dollars
in Gaza.
And I think it was plausible.
I think I believe this at one point.
Okay, they're spending all this money to build.
They don't want the buildings they put up in Gaza rubble, do they?
but I think in the end of the day, they didn't, they don't mind that they don't care.
They have more money than they know what to do with and they're using that to buy influence.
They've used that to buy influence on American college campuses to a huge extent.
They've used that to buy off a lot of people, ex-congresmen and others.
The Biden administration made them a major non-NATO ally.
I think that was more a bribe than a tip.
I think the idea was if we make you that, then you.
maybe you'll be that and you'll be a serious mediator.
But they haven't been serious mediators since this war began after October 7th.
They've been really Hamas representatives.
So I think our relationship with Qataris deserves to be revisited and looked at with very carefully.
And I think there are those in the administration who have begun to do that.
Do you think that, I mean, I understand what you're saying.
I understand what you're saying.
And I think it frustrates a lot of people that, you know, that relationship that Katari's
appear on most occasions to be talking out of both sides of their mouth or playing both sides
of the equation.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But you could argue the same with other important allies that we have, right?
Or I don't even know if I throw them in the ally category necessarily because it's more
of a pragmatic relationship.
So the Pakistanis, even the Saudis at times.
and others. And so I'm wondering, you know, where, what do you think that redefined or repurposed
relationship between the Qataris and U.S. could look like, given the real politics, given, you know,
that they do serve a purpose from a national security, you know, concern for the U.S.? Well, I think
if we if we were to look at it seriously, we'd ask whether they really do. I mean, we have a huge
military base in Qatar, of course.
But, and that's one of the ways I think they've played us because they've said, not they can
necessarily enforce this. They said, this base can't be used to attack anybody in the Middle East.
Well, what's the point of a U.S. base there? Unless it's either to protect the Qataris.
I don't think that's in our national interest. We should be able to project force out of that
base, for example, to Iran if we wanted to. And that's the whole purpose of having it there.
You may remember a few years back, there was the Saudis and the UAE, the Emirates, both of which I think are our friends, they're not happy with the Qataris because they know the Qataris are Muslim Brotherhood.
And both the UAE, the Emirates and the Saudis have banned the Muslim Brotherhood because they know what it represents.
It's the gateway drug, not just Hamaspa, but to ISIS and to al-Qaeda and all the rest of it.
So it's a troubled relationship.
Al Jazeera spreads Muslim Brotherhood propaganda around the Arab world and well beyond, and that's controlled also by them.
There's only less than 350,000 actual Qataris.
Everybody else who lives there, about 3 million people, they're essentially servants to this ruling class in Qatar.
are. But they have so much money, and they have that money thanks to the West, right?
You know, 200 years ago, they were diving for pearls. Then because the West found oil there,
because the West knew how to refine oil there, because the West came up with things like the
internal combustion engine, and because the West is not terribly imperialistic and doesn't say,
we're going to take this away from you because we have the power to do so, we say, well,
buy it from you. These are among the richest people in the world, and what are they doing
with their riches, they're buying influence and spreading Muslim Brotherhood ideology, Islamism,
and jihadism. And we have to see that as more problematic than that I think we have in the past.
And the Saudis know that. Now, just getting back, you know, Pakistan's different. Only in this
sense, we understood that they were giving safe harbor to Osama bin Laden. And so we killed him
in Pakistan, kind of what the Israelis did. And the Iraqis are our friends because we liberated them,
President Trump killed Qasem Soleimani, the leading terrorists of the Islamic Republic of Iran,
in Iraq because he could.
We do that sometimes.
The Saudis, I do think, are different than they were 20 years or so, 24 years ago when I formed
this organization in the wake of 9-11, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, because I think
I've talked to Saudis about this.
They recognize they helped create a Frankenstein's monster, and they regret it, and because
that monster came after them as well.
So I have a better set.
I mean, it's not perfect, but I do think the crown prince, he's not a, he's not a democratizer,
but he's a reformer.
And he has a vision of the Saudi Arabia that is not inconsistent with American national interest.
Yeah.
And I think people need to separate out, you know, the hope for world that, you know, we'd all like to live in.
And the real world and how you have to sometimes, you know, set aside, you know, your whatever,
maybe your sense of righteousness or whatever because you've got to exist in the world.
And so you have to do things that are in your own country's national interests.
Cliff, if you could stay right there.
I apologize, but we have to take a quick break.
And we'll be right back with more from Clifford May Foundation for the Defense of Democracies
right here on the PDB Situation Report.
Stick around.
Hey, Mike Baker here.
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Welcome back to the BDB Situation Report.
Joining me once again is Clifford May, founder and president of the Foundation for the Defense
of Democracies.
Cliff, thanks very much for sticking around.
Really appreciate that.
My pleasure.
Let's talk a little bit about where the IDF is, where the Israeli military is, with their potential
or planned or now, you know, operational activities inside the city?
Yeah, no, it's operational.
I think they've taken about 40% of the city.
They're evacuating people.
They want the civilians out.
That's hard to do because Hamas says to the civilians, you need to stay and be our human shields.
You can't come down into the tunnels.
We're down there.
You need to walk above.
That's pretty hard.
Part of doing that, though, I think Netanyahu is saying, look, we can, we can
stop. And here's how we stop. We stop when Al-Amas, and they didn't think the leaders in Doha
are going to do it, but maybe they're still alive they could. Or others say, okay, how about this?
We give up the hostages. We lay down our arms. You give a safe passage to a third country,
and this is over. And I think it could end tomorrow. It could have ended any day between now
and for now back to October 8th of 2033. At any point,
point. I think what Netanyai was saying is, we can end this, but you got to give us back
those hostages, the 20 or so who are living and the bodies of the dead. Now, if not, we are
going to evacuate the city. We're going to do very much what the U.S. forces did in Massul and
Fallujah and other places. If you read people like John Spencer, you're familiar with, they talk
about how this has been done in past. We're going to evacuate the civilians. We're going to
come in, we're going to destroy the tunnels, and we're going to destroy what's left of Hamas
in Gaza City, and we think that's pretty much all. And then, yes, there's a lot to do to figure out
what comes next after that, but I think then, yeah, now, I'm not going to tell you there's no
conflict, no dispute, no disagreements in Israel over this plan. I think we know that that's the
case. The chief of staff, Yal Zamir, would prefer not to do this, but he's gone, but he's a good
soldier and he's going to do this. It's hard work. They're tired. The reserves have to be called up
again in order to make this work. But I think it's going to happen unless Hamas says, okay,
we will give back those we have abducted and we're going to lay down our arms. They don't even
have to say it's a full surrender. And that's kind of what President Trump has called for if you think
about his last proposal. Look, Hamas, particularly their political bureau and, you know,
the communications group, they're not unsophisticated.
So do you think that part of this is bad, because they've been stringing this law?
There's always some reason why they decide against a proposal or, you know, a negotiation.
And it's part of it that they believe they can outlast Netanyahu, meaning, you know,
the internal pressure that he gets, the divisions within his cabinet, the pressure from the population.
Do you think that, you know, Hamas' calculation here is, you know, if we,
We just sit down here in the tunnels long enough and don't give up the hostages, you know, Netanyahu might just go away.
Yeah, Netanyahu might fall.
The Israelis might collapse among themselves and fight among themselves.
That's not hard to see.
The so-called international community is behind us, which kind of is the case.
The UN, to an extent I didn't understand, I must say, in the past, has it been not just complicit with Hamas, but has been interwoven with Hamas?
extraordinary extent. The propaganda that's come out, the lies about genocide, about famine,
about all that stuff despite that, they thought, you know, the idea that people like Macron in
France is going to, during the current UN General Assembly session, is going to say, what we need
here is a Palestinian state and we're going to recognize one. Now they're saying Hamas won't
be part of it, but Hamas figures, hey, if there's a Palestinian state and we're alive,
we'll be part of it. We know how to do that. Remind your listeners,
2005, the Israelis leave Gaza entirely, and by 2007, Hamas has pushed out the Palestinian Authority and its rival Fatah.
And they haven't been back.
Mahmoud Abbas, who's the head of the Palestinian Authority, he's not gotten a tan on a Gaza beach over all these 20 years.
He hasn't dared to visit.
So it's a wrecking, what Hamas is going to say, and with justice, the international community is rewarding us for what we did.
They're going to do it at the UN in this General Assembly.
So, yeah, we can still win.
We didn't win militarily.
We don't have, but we can still win diplomatically.
We can still win in other ways.
Have you heard any plausible scenarios for a post-conflict governing plan in Gaza?
Because I've always been confused by this notion that somehow the Palestinian Authority would be playing a role given they're not, saying they're not popular is.
is a diplomatic thing to say.
But, you know, I haven't seen, and it seems like, you know,
it's almost like we're rushing to say, well, any deal, just let's get a deal, right?
And you think, well, what do you want to do?
You want to put a lipstick out of pig?
And then just let, you know, the violence continue, let the conflict continue because
you're going to have Hamas still operational and control.
But have you seen any plausible scenarios for governance in Gaza?
Yeah, I mean, I think the Israelis figure correctly that if we really defeat Hamas decisively,
there's a better chance, much better chance, that the Saudis, the Emirates and others,
they won't come in if Hamas still has the guns and is in control.
If they're not, then they may be willing to come in with their own troops and begin to help
get things in some kind of order.
There are and have been families in Gaza that are prominent that could take a lot of responsibility.
Again, they have tried to do so.
They have done so in some places.
They will be and have been.
You can see, go online right now on Twitter.
You're on X.
You'll see it where Hamas is beaten up those who are trying to take responsibility for their own parts of the country,
who are trying to, who won't give up food, all that sort of stuff.
It's not easy. These Israelis don't want to run the place. They'd pull back to buffer zones, and that would be fine.
So, you know, I hate to say this, but you remember that at the, you know, look, the Ottoman Empire ruled this area for hundreds of years.
Then the British Empire ruled it. And then when the British pulled out, the Israelis declared independence.
But when the British ruled it was under a mandate from the League of Nations, mandatory Palestine,
what was that mandate? The mandate was try to create a country or two countries or whatever in this place.
Maybe you kind of need another mandate for this area with the Saudis perhaps and the Emirates and some others taking some responsibility for it.
And I think they'll do so if it's reasonably safe, but it's only reasonably safe if Hamas is decisively defeated.
it. Yeah, I would
I agree with the
concept. I would argue this.
None of the regional players have
ever shown any willingness to do.
Look, okay, fair enough. There's a very
large, you know, Palestinian refugee
community that exists in Jordan.
Jordan doesn't want to take any more.
You know, Egypt built a large wall.
It's apparently walls can work sometimes
in keeping people out. So
some of the players haven't shown much
willingness to engage.
But I take your point, you would be
make a very good point by Egypt, because people forget, the Israelis took Gaza, not from a Palestinian
entity, but from Egypt to what had administered it since 1948 after the first in war of
independence of the Israelis fought. This was Egyptian territory. It could be again. The
Egyptians, as you say, don't want it. They don't want Palestinians even as refugees on their
territory. They've blocked them from getting out. That's contrary to international law. People are in
distress. You're supposed to take them in. The Sinai is very large. Egypt should take some responsibility
for it. They consider themselves one of the leaders of the Arab and Muslim world. Why not? But you're
also right that it's going to be difficult to get any of them to take any responsibility.
Yeah, I think ultimately, I mean, the problem's going to be, I think, internal issues within Israel as
opposed to, look, I mean, that that urban combat that's taking place and will take place in Gaza
City, you know, you referenced Fallujah. Yeah, incredibly ugly, right? Incredibly complex and
difficult from a, from a military perspective, particularly, you know, with it with an outfit like
Hamas. Have you seen any credible numbers, two parts to this, if I could, two parts to
this at the time that we've got left, credible numbers for the current strength of Hamas,
in terms of fighters.
And then the other part is any credible numbers for the degree of support from the
population of Gaza for Hamas still.
I don't think we have credible numbers.
I'm sure the IDF has some concept of how many people can.
can fit in those tunnels, although they didn't understand how extensive those tunnels were
before this war started. That was a clear intelligence failure. In terms of, you know, it's
very hard in a place like Gaza City to do proper polling and people are not going to say what they
actually think. My guess is that I'll, and I think there's, if not that are good anecdotes for this,
that it's not that
Gazans who are not pro Hamas
or Gazans in general
think, oh, we should love the Israelis
and have, you know,
Kumbaya with them. But they may think,
look at the damage that's been done to our lives
by Hamas's decision to invade Israel
and stage a pogrom. It's going to take years
to get back from this. Do we want to continue like this?
Or would we like to have homes to go back to
rather than tense food to eat, basic social services, hospitals.
Things weren't so bad in Gaza.
They were better than most people understood before this war began because the Gossans were
recipients per capita of huge amounts of aid and the UN was providing all the social services.
I mean, you know, so that Gaza City, even now, if you take a look at Gaza City, it's going to be
worse over the days ahead.
It doesn't look worse than, you know, Amman.
And people should also remember, you know, what Jordan is.
Jordan is three quarters of historic Palestine.
That's what it is.
It has a mostly Palestinian population because it's Eastern Palestine.
The king, I have respect for the king, but he was deported from Arabia because the Saudis
didn't want another royal family there.
And so the British installed him in what became to be called Jordan.
There's no historic country called Jordan.
There's a river called Jordan.
So this is a pal, you know, could there be some kind of confederation between Jordan and Gaza and maybe the West Bank?
Theoretically, there could.
Israel could even be part of that confederation as long as Gaza and the West Bank were demilitarized entirely.
So there are ideas, but first you have to have, you get to a point where there is a cessation of hostilities.
I'm not talking about peace, talking about a cessation of hostilities and Palestinian leaders who
at least say, getting back to your question, not that we love the Israelis, but it's not in our
interest to be in constant conflict with the Israelis any longer. Let's find a way to rebuild
our lives. Yeah, you would think that from, you know, I guess this is sort of that Western mindset
and you always have to be careful to mirror your own ideas and logic and values on other cultures,
but you would think that the citizens of Gaza would look around and go, you know what?
Hamas has been here ruling since 2007.
Did they improve our lives?
Did they do anything really at the end of the day for us other than just use us as human shields,
steal the aid that was meant for us, and now get us into this incredibly difficult and sad and tragic situation
as a result of their actions again on 7 October?
But I don't know what else you would expect, right?
They're a creature of the Iranian regime.
The Iranian regime is on record constantly as saying their objective is to destroy Israel.
Therefore, Hamas is the objective, of course, is to destroy Israel.
So, you know, that was their purpose.
Their purpose wasn't to improve the lives of the Ghazan civilians, you know, ever since they've been in charge since 2007.
But, you know, Cliff, I'm going to get off my soapbox now.
And what I'm going to do is say, thank you very much.
Clifford, May, founder, president, Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, very much appreciate your insight, your experience, and I hope you'll come back and sit with us again here in the not too distant future.
And my honor, my pleasure to be with you, Mike, anytime.
Thank you very much, Cliff. Talk to you soon, man.
Well, yeah, the complexity of that situation is astounding.
And that's all the time we have for this week's PDB situation report.
If you have any questions or comments, maybe you've got a humorous anecdote or two.
Well, send them along, right?
You can reach out to me at PDB at thefirsttb.com.
You know what we do with your cards and your letters and your faxes and your telegrams?
Every month, we sit down.
Carl, the old man drops off another mailbag.
We go through it.
And the entire PDB team sits and, you know, has some beers, looks at the questions,
takes some of them, and mushes them into what we call and Ask Me Anything episode.
We put those out every month.
So keep the cards and letters coming, is what I'm saying.
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I'm Mike Baker.
And until next time, you know the drill.
Stay informed.
Stay safe.
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