The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Emergency Episode: Israel Strikes Iran — with Dan Senor
Episode Date: June 14, 2025Dan Senor, a leading expert on Israel and the Middle East, joins Scott in an emergency episode to discuss the dramatic escalation between Israel and Iran. They get into the latest attacks, the risk...s of regional war, and what this escalation means for the U.S. and global stability. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to an emergency episode of the Prop G Pod.
So I was struck by, I immediately had this, I woke up this morning and I had an appetite
to understand more about Israel's attack on Iran.
And while we're all distracted understandably with ice raids at Home Depots or this big ugly tax bill,
I had a difficult time getting good information on what had played or unfolded over the last 48 hours.
So I went to my go-to on all things Israel, Dan Sinor, and his fantastic podcast, Call Me Back.
And I thought I would really like to expose some of that information or insight to our listeners.
So I got Dan, a friend, on the phone this morning and agreed to come on.
Anyways, this is our interview with Dan Seenor, a leading expert on Israel in the Middle East.
He's the co-author of The Genius of Israel and Startup Nation and the host of the Call Me Back podcast.
Dan, where does this podcast find you?
New York City.
Very much appreciate you on short notice doing this as we are kind of, I don't want to say
distracted, but focused on ice raids of Home Depots or this tax bill. I actually think the
most important thing that's happened in the world in the
last, at least, you know, 72 hours is the,
I don't know if it's fair to say the Israeli attack in Iran, the preemptive attack,
whatever, whatever the right nomenclature is that threads a needle here and
doesn't give a false impression of what happened here. But I thought,
who could I bring on to summarize and talk about, summarize what happened, talk about the planning,
talk about what it might mean for a reshaping
of what feels to me like a totally reconfiguration
of the power dynamic in the Middle East.
And I thought, immediately thought of you
and you were kind enough to merely jump on.
So let's start there.
And also I just wanna bring some sunshine.
The reason we're on the phone or
doing this is, hey, we're friends when we go back. But Nadav Eyal, an Israeli journalist,
was on your amazing podcast, Call Me Back, this morning. And I was so inspired by it
that I thought, okay, I need Dan to come on and give us the Cliff Notes.
Anyways, let's start with a summary of what's unfolded over the last, call it 48 hours.
Well, on Thursday night, our time, about somewhere between 2 and 4, 1 and 4 a.m. Israel time,
Israel launched a military operation.
To call it a military operation understates it.
A military operation is what Israel did
Against Hezbollah with its pager attack and then systematically taking out the Hezbollah leadership
This was an operation in the context of a larger war So this is this is different than what Israel has dealt with it over the last two years
It launched a war and we can get into what what the significance of this being a war rather than just a military operation
But they launched
What was the say the first phase of a war which basically involved I mean we still don't know all
the details but from what I know so far is the two most important elements I say the three most
important elements were one the Israeli Air Force deployed what sounds like close to the entirety
of the Israeli Air Force when Israel conducted a spectacular operation against Iran back in October of 24, my understanding is that
it was about a third of the Israeli Air Force, this was close to all of the Israeli Air Force,
that didn't actually initially take out Iran's nuclear sites, which is what everybody expected.
Everybody expected if there was going to be an Israeli operation, Israel would go, go You know just start bombing the nuclear sites. It did not do that. What it did initially is it took out key personnel. It took out
Air defenses, which we'll get into but it took out key personnel in the Iranian military apparatus
So it took out the Iranian it killed the Iranian the chief of staff of the Iranian army
It took out the commander of it killed the Iranian, the chief of staff of the Iranian army.
It took out the commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.
It took out a whole bunch of nuclear scientists.
It took out close to about 20, I think, of the most important players in the command
and control structure at the most senior levels of the Iranian military.
Now, why was that so important?
By the way, when many people were observing that that was what Israel was doing is that
the observation was that they must be going
for regime change.
This is not just about taking out the nuclear infrastructure.
This looks like regime change.
It was not regime change.
What it was, was what Israel realized,
which I've now learned,
is that Iran has an extraordinary ballistic missile
offensive capability, right?
We saw that in October of 24.
Iran launched 300 projectiles against Israel,
and while most of them did not get through,
more got through than Israel could get comfortable with.
And Iran observed that.
And the key to a successful ballistic missile
offensive operation that Iran is capable of doing
are two elements.
One, having the equipment and
Two having an efficient
Chain of command that can activate those you know that that military official who's at that particular ballistic missile launcher to hit launch
But in order for that to work seamlessly you need the you need the whole system in place you need the whole hierarchy
This one gets a phone call from that one
This one gets the alert from from this one, this one gets the alert from this commander,
from this officer, do this, do that.
So what Israel did was said,
the first thing we're gonna do
is we're gonna completely disrupt
their command and control.
And so they took out the people who make the decisions
and give the orders.
And that was, I think,
one of the most important developments of Thursday night.
Then they started taking out from the air
a lot of the air defenses, and then they obviously
started to hit the nuclear sites.
But it was first taking out key personnel, and I think, when I said there were three
very important elements, one was the air operation, which was Thursday night, too, which we now
know is the Mossad has been operating inside of Tehran for a long time. And some of that was just operatives
and relationship development.
And so Israel really had a sense for how communications
were occurring between different officials
and how decisions were being made.
But two, we now understand that Mossad
slash Israeli military intelligence had the capacity
to go inside
Iran and build sort of mobile factories, if you will, like a mobile base from which to
launch drones and what they call these quadcopters because why was this important, Scott?
Because one of the challenges Israel has is refueling.
It cannot deploy all the Air Force assets it needs to deploy to Iran
without having to deal with refueling and one way to
address that Deficiency is to just create assets on the ground in Iran
That you can activate from the ground in Iran against Iranian assets
So that that Mossad penetration of Iran and specifically Tehran was another key piece of this.
And the third, obviously, was the deception that was created between the Israeli and U.S.
governments leading up to this operation that led the Iranians to believe that there was
a possibility of an Israeli strike, but there was no way it was going to happen anytime
soon or at least not
before Sunday.
Because Sunday was supposed to be the sixth round of these talks between the U.S. and
Iran and there were all these messages coming out of Washington that Israel may strike,
may not, but there's no way they should do anything to undermine the talks.
So the Iranians had their own conception of the Israeli threat, and one of them was
that Israel would not take action without blessing from the US, and all the messaging
coming out of Washington was tension and frustration with Israel because Washington did not want
Israel to act before these talks had played out.
And so, I think those are the three key components.
The air operation, obviously taking out Iranian air defenses,
taking out Iranian personnel,
key personnel in the decision-making loop,
and what the intelligence community in Israel
was able to do on the ground in Iran,
and then the third, the deception coordinated
between Washington and Jerusalem.
So a lot there, and I wanna make some comments and have you comment on those
comments. The thing that really struck me is I think it's fairly public knowledge
at this point that Iran's air defense systems have been defenestrated, wiped
out. The thing that struck me or the new piece of information here is that the
ground defenses are now down. What do I mean by that?
That essentially the Mossad has so deeply penetrated, uh, the Iranian
leadership structure that everyone is vulnerable that they can get to anyone.
And your, your comment about that they went in and took out eliminated.
I don't know what the term is, killed.
Maybe it's the right term.
Let's call it killed.
Yeah, killed these key individuals.
Reminds me of Dunkirk,
and that is one of the most fortunate things
to take place such that we could extract
400,000 military personnel from the beaches of Dunkirk
and continue to fight the war.
And had they been killed or taken prisoner,
it might have prisoner, it might
have been a, that might have been game over, was that they didn't want to wake up Hitler
and there was no one to give the order for the Panzer tanks to actually move into the
beaches of Dunkirk and either take them prisoner or kill them. That it was the lack of the
chain of command. The chain of command broke down if you will, that's hierarchical. And
if there's no one there to give the order to fire the surface to air missiles
or to fire ballistic missiles, that that's all the time they need to take them out.
I thought that was really striking.
And would you agree with, were you surprised?
I was shocked.
It appears to me that the Mossad is now on the ground, penetrated,
infiltrated, been absorbed,
whatever it is, they are maybe your neighbor,
but they can get to anybody.
And what was also very interesting to me
was who they didn't kill.
They didn't go after any of the political leaders.
It seems to me that they're saying, be clear.
We know where you live.
We can get to you.
But we're not looking for regime change. We're looking for you to step back quite frankly and
dial down some of this rhetoric your thoughts. Yeah, I I think that's exactly right. If you go back
it's interesting when Israel took out Ismail Haniya who who was one of the two key leaders of Hamas internationally
Over a year ago. He was in heas internationally over a year ago. He was in, he was in, about a year ago, he was in Iran, he was in Tehran for the funeral
of the president and Israel conducted an operation in a, like the equivalent of like the Blair
House, Washington's Blair House, like a VIP residence for visiting dignitaries in the
heart of Tehran at night.
When this, when Haniyeh was with the supreme leader a couple hours before it was with him like face to face and
The message should have been clear like we are everywhere. We can we we it's for us
It's just a matter of you know time of our choosing
But it's not a matter of whether or not if we have this capability and I think that message was doubly triply conveyed
Over the last few days, which I think was very specific,
which was we will take out nuclear assets,
we will take out military assets,
we will take out the brains behind
the nuclear weapons program,
the top scientists, which they've done,
and we will take out the military leadership.
But we are not touching the supreme leader,
we are not touching, as you said, the political leadership,
and we're not touching the Supreme Leader. We're not touching, as you said, the political leadership, and we're not touching the economic
and oil infrastructure.
So now you decide, Iran, and by the way, now, by the time we're recording this, I mean,
Israel's made even more progress.
There is literally, I spoke to someone in the Israeli security system early this morning
who said, we have complete freedom of, I mean, we're not,
we have total range to fly over and do whatever we want.
It doesn't mean that there aren't serious,
that this could not get bumpy, it could,
but just in terms of their ability to operate freely.
So now the message to Iran is your move.
Now, by the way, this is part of the US administration
strategy is, okay, so we're giving you an option
to come back to the table and negotiate.
This is sort of like a good cop, bad cop.
So they are making it clear that their primary goal,
Israel's primary goal is making clear
is not regime change unless Iran really escalates.
Now Iran so far seems to be escalating
at least a little bit, we'll see where that goes.
But I wanna make one other point
in terms of the psychological impact if you are a
mid-level or junior level officer in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and they're a talented
group from what from what I speak when I speak to American military experts on on the Iranian military and Israeli and
Sunni Arab military experts about the Iranian military and Israeli and Sunni Arab military
experts about the Iranian military capabilities. The Iranian Revolutionary
Guard Corps is a sophisticated operation. If you are a mid-level or junior-level
officer and you've been indoctrinated, you've been trained to believe over the
last few years that Iran has extraordinary capabilities, it's
developing something on the nuclear front and it was developing something on
the nuclear front that was that was not
only was scary to Israel but was scary to the United States and the West and you
can see what like even President Macron in France has said in supporting what
Israel is doing. I mean there was it was an increasingly alarming situation what
was happening with the nuclear program and you've been indoctrinated to believe That we just understand in Iran and downtown Tehran
There's a clock. There's a countdown to 2040, which is the clock when Israel is going to be destroyed
There's a there's a so there's a sense that it's just a matter of time before
Iran destroys Israel Israel's this like weak
actor that's just going to be wiped off the face of the earth. If you're that mid-level or junior level officer in the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps and you just watched
what Israel did to Iran over the last three days, not to mention what Israel did to
Hezbollah, not to mention what you saw, how quickly you saw the regime in another proxy state of Iran's Syria, the
Assad regime crumble in 13 days after being in power for
53 years your if you're that junior level officer and you're watching all this and you've been told all along
It's just a matter of time before we take out the Zionist the evil Zionist entity and we can just wipe them off the map
And you just saw Israel take apart
most of Iran's offensive and defensive capabilities
You've got to be wondering what have I bought into here?
Like, you know, and it's interesting, Scott,
if you listen to the rhetoric of the regime,
they are trying to make this about more than just Israel.
This is very interesting.
So they're saying, if anyone else in the region
is cooperating with Israel,
if anyone else in the region is helping to defend Israel,
we're gonna take out your bases.
They're making these threats without any context.
There's no signs that... I think there are different countries that are in the know about
it, but it's not clear that there have been... This is an Israeli operation.
Why are they saying that?
Because they can't explain to their own people that Israel could do this.
They've got to believe that it's got to be some grand conspiracy because it completely
eclipses the notion that Iran had the upper hand here if Israel
was able to do this and do it on its own and so I I think there's a
psychological aspect to what you're describing which is the middle and junior
levels of the Iranian military are sitting here thinking possibly thinking
do we really want to keep fighting for this?
What is this? Because this looks pretty vulnerable right now.
We'll be right back after a quick break.
The data analytics company Palantir has been working with the US government
for about 15 years on all sorts
of things. This year, ICE is going to pay Palantir $30 million to improve how it targets
and surveils undocumented immigrants. And your response to this probably depends to
some degree on your politics. But the Trump administration is also expanding Palantir's
reach on something that would affect all Americans. The idea is to link together all the data
that the government has about us.
This is unprecedented.
So anyway, Theo von freaks out.
This sounds crazy, dude.
And confronts JD Vance.
It can tell if your kids are, you know,
if your kids can have a limp or whatever,
if they'll be in the Christmas play.
Veep is like, it's going to be okay,
but FYI, I also just learned about this.
I actually just read about it earlier today or maybe
yesterday.
Coming up on Today Explained, what's Palantir up to?
The other thing that struck me, and we
have a lot of young men who listen to this podcast,
and I always like to try and ground some of this in a learning.
And one of my learnings as I get older is that I bring a set of biases to the world
that make me feel more comfortable.
And one of my biases is that I believe the Trump administration is incompetent and really
bad at what they do.
And so when I saw this morning Secretary Rubio come out and say, we in no way support or
don't support or weren't involved in the attacks on Iran, and then I see Trump, what
feels like a couple hours later, saying, oh, we're supportive of it.
I immediately interpreted it as this is the bad news bears of geopolitics and defense,
not even coordinating their messaging.
And they didn't know what was gonna happen.
And Israel just kind of said,
sorry boss, we'll do what we want.
And then Trump liked the macho in all of it
and decided to try and take some credit from it
and stand in the light of that macho.
And something I learned from your podcast
and I have changed my mind
and I wanna be open to evolving is that you and your
The Israeli journalists on your podcast convinced me
There's just no fucking way that the Americans weren't involved here that the American military
You know Israel is flying American planes and without without cooperation from the US
They wouldn't be able to repair those planes in a matter of weeks.
They just wasn't, of course, the Americans knew about this.
And that to the Trump administration's credit
to pull off what I would argue is probably,
the next Netflix doc that's gonna be out in 12 months
after the Hezbollah pager docs hit the, you know, hit the, hit the streamers.
This was a brilliant, you don't call it a military operation, whatever,
first salvo in a war, whatever we want to call it.
This was brilliant years in the making coordination, stunning that the
U S to their credit engaged in a massive head fake that in fact, and I look back on this Dan, and I think,
Jesus, this was just so obvious.
They tell Americans to get out of there.
And also, and I'll come back to this,
I think Netanyahu, and that it doesn't mean
the operation is any less striking.
I think Netanyahu has political reasons
to maintain a war footing.
Anyways, comment a little bit about the other observation and I'll bring this back to what I hope young men learn to do earlier than
I did, and that is be a critical thinker and be open to evolving your view when you get
new information. And I got new information from your podcast that in fact, this looks
to have been quite coordinated.
Yeah. So two things. One, the only debate, and when I've talked to folks in the administration,
the only debate is whether or not the US supported this Israeli war or allowed it. That's the
debate. Meaning, there's a debate like, do they actively get involved and deeply involved
in the coordination or are they basically, Israel said, we got to do this and this is
how we got to do it.
And the US was, Trump was basically persuaded, okay, do it, you know, and we're going to
like observe and be helpful, you know, to some degree, but we're not going to be heavily
involved.
That's the range of scenario.
It's not like whether or not they were, you know, dug in opposed versus intimately involved. There's a little bit of like great,
you know, like wiggle room flexibility within that space. And I think you're right, Scott,
that President Trump, like most leaders around the world, like success and want to be associated
with success and strength and daring. And I've I've personally heard President
Trump for instance be critical of Israel after October 7th at meet you know soon
after October 7th where he thought Israel looked like a you know like a
paper tiger and they did and at the same time I've heard him marvel at what
Israel accomplished with the pager attack and completely
change his view.
And I think there's a tendency, and I see this a lot in Western capitals, and I see
it a lot even among some very strong supporters of Israel around the world, there's a tendency
to want Israel to be perceived as the David and not the Goliath.
And I understand it by the way, right?
Because you're sitting there and you're thinking,
give me a break.
It's a country of 10 million people surrounded by enemies
that wanna wipe it off the map.
And it's been in a state of war since its founding.
And it's like, of course Israel's,
it's been fighting this since October 7th,
the Seven Front War. Of course Israel's the David. And you almost, and you want to tell all of Israel's critics,
like, who are you kidding here? But the reality is it's the wrong message.
Because in the world of geopolitics, if your goal is to
find friends that provide strategic value, or at least start to cultivate
what could be future friends, say Saudi Arabia if you're Israel, they really aren't interested
in David.
They want to partner with Goliath.
They want to piggyback onto strength.
If I look at before October 7th, Israel was inching closer and closer to a normalization
deal with Saudi Arabia. If you ask yourself why that was happening
Why that was moving so fast if you ask yourself why the Abraham Accords happened?
It was because Israel was was it a technology superpower
Globally an economic superpower in the region and a military and intelligence
Juggernaut that that Saudi wanted to piggyback onto that strength and that strength or the perception of the strength was punctured on October 7th
And I think what you have seen beginning with the pager attack if you want to bookend it
To what Israel has just accomplished over the last few days
It's sent a message that Israel is actually a Goliath and I think
Countries around the world leaders around the world say wait., we wanna be with that. We could never do that.
That's impressive, we want that.
And I think the US government and the president
have a similar approach.
They're like, of course, wait a minute,
that country's our ally, that country's our friend.
We like what they're doing, that's impressive.
And so, and I will say in a world in which the US
is increasingly, in ways that make me uncomfortable to be honest, in a world in which the US is increasingly
In ways that make me uncomfortable to be honest in a world in which the US is increasingly pulling back from
world affairs and And this this is a 20 year trend basically, but but obviously it's what we're watching it right now
too in a world in which the US is pulling back
Imagine from the president's from President Trump's perspective and the leadership of the US they say okay the US is pulling back. Imagine from the president's perspective
and the leadership of the US,
they say, okay, we're pulling back,
but that country Israel, that one's with us.
And look what they just did.
And in a world in which we're pulling back our resources,
it's good to know that they can do what they can do.
And so I think ultimately in the world
of geopolitics and diplomacy,
Israel is much better off doing things like it just did.
And I think to your point,
the president is like softly supporting something
versus watching what plays out
and then supporting it very publicly and energetically
is the difference between a dazzling operation
and one that
stumbles.
Yeah, there's, I think a lot about brands and I think geopolitics is 98% brand and 2%
actual hard power and that is most people never come in contact with an American or
America but they've heard that we spend $800 billion on a military and have a very strong, you
know, our memory is long and our reach is far.
And also that we're generally, I think, until recently perceived as the good guys, which
makes them more likely to want to do business with us and their best and brightest universities
here and more likely to alert the American embassy if they hear about a terrorist cell
trying to infiltrate U.S. interests.
And I think soft power brand, if you will, and I was thinking the Israeli brand was this
peanut butter and chocolate of, it's strange.
The world, and you said this, is comfortable with a dead Jew.
That is, I remember my first exposure to Israel and Judaism was in 72.
We were watching the Olympics, and I remember for the first time registering that my parents looked
really upset and concerned and they were staring at the TV of
this guy in an apartment complex on the balcony with a ski mask on
And asking what was going on and that was you know, the Munich Olympics and the slaughter of the Israeli athletes and then
so it was like okay, they're a victim and
Dad I think really benefited Israel to be seen as,
as you said, as the David constantly,
that anti-Semitism is a light sleeper
and obviously the Holocaust.
And then the second part was, I remember in,
I think I was in the seventh grade,
us spending an entire class talking about the,
the operation in Tebbi and the rescue.
And just how, quite frankly, how bad-ass that was.
And you're a 12 year old boy. You think, wow, Israel, right?
And it strikes me that the brand most recently is more the latter than the former.
And then I think that's a good thing. I think basically Israel has said, look,
if you get comfortable with dead Jews,
you got to start getting comfortable with fighting Jews.
And I actually think that is a more advantageous position,
that we're going to go on the offense,
we are not to be fucked with,
and we are very good at what we do.
And our men and women in uniform
are not only incredibly brave,
they're incredibly well-resourced,
and the people on the ground are very good at what they do.
So my sense is this is, I see this, and I'm curious to get your take,
I see this as the most important Israel's actions
around cutting off the hands of all of these proxies of Iran,
whether it's the Houthis or Hezbollah or Hamas and now Iran,
that similar to what Ukraine has done
fighting back against Russia,
that they have defanged what was seen
as the superpower in the Gulf.
And now I would argue that the superpower in the Gulf,
hands down, is Israel.
The only thing they have that Saudi Arabia has
is they don't have oil,
but it looks as if in an information economy,
you'd rather have an entrepreneurial culture.
And you wrote a book on this called Startup Nation.
But could this potentially be a real unlock, if you will,
around, I mean, I'm trying to look at the glasses half
empty here, that they come to some sort of agreement
with Iran, that Saudi Arabia steps up and says, all right,
it sucks to be a grown-up.
They're the power in the region.
And this might result in something
resembling a sustainable peace.
I think this is what we've just witnessed
over the last few days, and really I think
over the past year, is the biggest transformation
in the Middle East, and the biggest transformation
in terms of Israel's geopolitical position
in the Middle East since the Six-Day War, 1967,
which obviously sent a message to the region and to the world that Israel...
Let's just say, to bring it back to what you were just saying, it was a dramatic brand
enhancement for Israel, the Six-Day War.
And I think Israel's experiencing something like...
There's no precedent for it.
I asked, for a recent speech I gave,
I asked two British historians of military history
and geopolitical history, world affairs.
I asked Andrew Roberts, Lord Andrew Roberts from the UK,
and I asked Neil Ferguson, who I know you've had
on your podcast, I asked them both separately,
is there any precedent for a country
under the kind of threat it was under,
which was existential, which was
existential, from guerrilla commando types like Hamas to
200,000 rockets staring down at the country like it had from Hezbollah,
not to mention over 100,000 fighters, to a country right by its border
that wants to build a nuclear weapon that it's say it's openly pointing at at Israel. So any precedent for a country that has had
these kinds of threats arrayed against them and in a matter of a
year and a half to two years so dramatically transformed its situation
towards each one of them and to the region and they both said you have to go
back like a couple hundred years. I mean you know Robert said like you know
looked at France and I forget like something like a couple hundred years i mean the you know robert said like you looked at france and i forget like to open something like twenty years ago i mean there's not
paper bottom line is these are two guys i trust and they said there's just no precedent for this
and so i don't want to say permanent peace because who the hell knows the world is complicated and
fluid but i think we are on the path to doing two extremely important things. One, I think more Arab countries today
are gonna be interested and open to the idea
of normalizing relations with Israel
than they were a year and a half ago,
a year ago, six months ago.
Okay, so I think that's, so that,
I think we're on a path towards something big happening,
and this was the necessary ingredient
because all of the countries, the Sunni Arab countries in the Middle East are terrified of Iran and
Israel has just demonstrated that they're the only ones that can take them apart.
So I think we're on that path.
But there's another aspect here that I think is even bigger than the region.
Iran was very close.
There are debates between intelligence agencies about how close.
But there's no debate about whether or not Iran was getting close to having a nuclear
weapons capability.
That is, the level at which it was enriching uranium, which was getting itself damn close
to weapons-grade enrichment, which no country needs for a civilian nuclear program, you
only do that for one reason and one reason only.
And then two, as Nadavayel said on my podcast, the weapons group, which is the
group within Iran that's job it is, is to take the ingredients of a nuclear bomb,
like the enriched uranium, and actually create the warhead that delivers it.
And the weapons group had gotten extremely active in recent months and
was acquiring a lot of things.
So the concern about the speed with which
the enrichment was happening and the speed with which
the weapons group was moving and seemed to be active
scared everyone, especially the Israelis,
the IAEA had expressed concerns.
So our hope of diplomatic non-proliferation,
which was this, I think a misguided and naive hope when you're
dealing with a country like Iran that has made it so clear that having a
nuclear weapon was like central to its raison d'etre in world affairs and in
regional affairs. The idea that through diplomatic maneuvers you are going to be
able to persuade them not to stop pursuing that, I think was
unrealistic. There are four countries in the world today that pose a real threat to the United States
and to the West.
China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran.
All four of those countries, for different reasons, pose a serious threat to the United
States and the West.
Three of those countries have a nuclear weapon.
China, Russia, and North
Korea. And North Korea recently, 2006, is when they basically declared that they had
a nuclear weapon. Iran was the only one that didn't. And the idea that the West was going
to be able to stop Iran from getting that nuclear weapon by diplomatic maneuverings,
as I said, was not gonna happen.
And so by Israel using force to prevent that,
it has done a real service to the world and to the West
because had Iran gone nuclear,
it would have, that really would have sparked
a nuclear arms race in the Middle East.
And God knows what that would look like.
So-
Saudi Arabia, the kingdom didn't want,
nobody wanted to have the nuclear weapon.
They also just, as someone who thinks a lot about technology,
what has really struck me is the technology,
we're all talking about AI constantly.
In my opinion, the more meaningful technology,
and maybe AI played a big, you know,
AI is more like electricity now,
it seems to be playing a role in everything.
But both in Ukraine and this latest attack, and what just happened inside of Russia
in terms of taking out a large portion of their strategic bomber fleet,
I'm just shocked at what an incredible role, what an innovation drones are playing.
The asymmetric warfare, and it just, it seems to play so well to Israel's strengths
of being innovative, agile, entrepreneurial,
really good with technology.
But my understanding is they snuck in
kind of portable launch vehicles
to launch these swarms of drones
such that you didn't necessarily need to count on
a $200 million F-15 with...
With the refueling pressure and...
Right.
All that.
And those bombs are expensive
You know those those guidance those those those missiles are you know can cost a couple million bucks or at least a couple hundred thousand
And then you take a $400 drone and you attach some c4 to it
And I know let's send out a thousand of them see on one target and see if one gets through
Just strikes me that the technology of the of the year in terms of geop reshaping the geopolitical narrative is in fact
asymmetric warfare through drones. But what I want to talk to you or get your impression of next is
I'm hopeful that, and of course as you know Dan, I turn everything back to me.
I grew up in Los Angeles and went to UCLA and it's cliche to say it, but some
of my best friends were Iranian. And David Assile, my close friend of the fraternity,
I think LA has the greatest concentration of Iranians outside of Tehran. And it always
struck me, these are kids who like, they almost often their parents come over the revolution,
super into education, super entrepreneurial, love money.
And I say that in a good way, very capitalist, love education.
Ambitious.
Ambitious, just, and I went on to have one of my mentors,
his younger man was Hamid Moghadam,
who's the CEO of Prologis.
I have great friends, BTAC, my friend Alex Dissi.
I just love Iranians.
And I always thought Iranians are more American than Americans.
And to me, it always struck me that the biggest,
one of the biggest unlocks in the most natural fits
in terms of an alliance waiting to happen
would be an alliance between America and Iran.
That if that culture still resides there,
and I think it does, and it's such an amazing society,
that it will be like hand in glove
should at some point we kiss and make up.
And my understanding is that the IRGC
has less than 30% support of the population.
Is there an opportunity here?
I mean, is the big opportunity and how realistic is it
that at some point America and Iran could be great allies?
So to answer your question, yes.
The obviously the regime would have to the Islamic regime would have to fall.
But that was certainly the case.
Many of those Iranians you you grew up with, Scott, are are people who came from an Iran
and were raised in Iran or their at least their were, that did have close relations with the United States
and had close relations, by the way, with Israel.
Israel, before the late 70s,
had a very close relationship with Iran
and incredible cooperation.
I mean, keep in mind, it's a young population.
It is a very highly educated population.
It's a large population.
So in a world in which this regime is gone,
it's not just an aggressive regime
in terms of its use of violence.
It really is a theocratic messianic regime.
So anyone that has the kind of motivational,
ambitious Jews that you're describing
it assuming there's their secular quasi secular
uh... do not want to live under that kinda
you know uh... that kind of regime and so they either
scatter
which are like the families of the ones you dealt with and got out or they just or
they just hunker down and don't really contribute to society in mind their own
business and
you know pray that this regime will pass.
And if this regime passes, and like I said, we're watching that happen.
We just watched it happen in Syria.
The Assad regime was in power, as I said, for 53 years.
There was a 13 to 14 year civil war being fought.
Hundreds of thousands of Syrians were killed. And then in 13 days, I mean that's the thing, people don't appreciate, you know, how the CIA, you know,
there's always these questions. The CIA missed this revolution, they missed that
revolution, they missed they didn't anticipate the fall of the Berlin Wall,
they didn't. Because these things are very hard. You never know what is actually
gonna, gonna tip it where people within the regime say enough and we're gonna
start taking on the regime. I think you have that where people within the regime say enough and we're gonna start taking on the regime.
I think you have that potential now
for the reasons I was saying earlier,
where we're Iranians even in this system,
in the security system are saying,
what are we fighting for?
What are we doing?
This is Israel just humiliated this regime.
And if the regime falls,
I think the potential for what you're describing
is extraordinary.
And I just wanna also pick up on something else
You said a moment ago. I
Think you're seeing the future of warfare. There are two laboratories in the world today for the future of warfare
it's Ukraine as you said and it's Israel and
I
there's an organization involved with in Israel that that was called Startup Nation Central which was founded sort of off after my book came
out and it they keep track of every Israeli startup
in every sector.
And about a year, a year and a half ago,
there were something like 160, I looked,
160 startups in the defense tech space in Israel.
And that was considered a lot, country of 10 million people.
I recently cited that number
on this other Israeli economic podcast I'm involved with
called What's Your Number?
I mentioned the 160 and the head of Startup Nation Central
called me and said, hey, you're wrong, it's not 160.
I said, what are you talking about?
He says, it's now 330.
And I said, but wait,
I just got the 160 number a few months ago.
He says, yeah, guess what?
All these Israeli engineers and entrepreneurs
who've been called up
to fight in this war since October 7th are now coming back from their reserve
duty and they're like I don't want to go like work on ad tech algorithms at
Google which is where I was working before the war. I want to go I want to
go build a defense tech company of the future. So all these guys and gals are
now starting defense tech companies and so you're seeing this boom pardon
the pun of of the defense tech sector in Israel and so I I think watching Israel watching Ukraine
watching the exact things that you're pointing to in terms of the the technology the innovation
and the know-how I think this sector is going to flourish in Israel
and other spots over the next few years. And I think it's going to actually, I think a lot of
people are going to economically benefit from the flourishing of the sector. And I think society is
going to benefit because it's going to create technologies that enable countries like ours and others to fight in a very targeted and
I dare I say humanitarian way minimizing civilian casualties with a very targeted
military pinprick like surgical military operations that's one of the things
these capabilities give give militaries the capacity to do. We'll be right back.
We're back with more from Dan Cignore.
What struck me, and I want to go broader here, and then I'm going to let you go and get back to your family on your Saturday,
is most of my friends, I grew up,
I somehow ended up in a Jewish fraternity at UCLA, ZBT.
Most of my close friends from college,
still really close, Jews.
I was the atheist Jew.
Never had felt much affinity for Israel.
I'm a rabid atheist.
And then October 7th happened and I become kind of,
I call myself a raging Zionist,
although I'm still an atheist.
And I've always been pretty, you know,
your eye would describe you as a Romney Republican.
I don't know if you like that title.
I'm sort of a Clinton Republican or I don't know,
I'm sorry, moderate Democrat.
And most of my friends voted for Trump
because they're sort of, they came,
kind of became after October 7th, one issue voters.
And their issue is Israel.
And they saw the Trump administration
as being more, much more resolute.
Whereas Biden, who I believe didn't get the credit
he deserved deploying an aircraft carrier, strike force,
you know, didn't want to take credit
and kept being kind of milling, a lot of yeah, strike force, you know, didn't want to take credit and kept being kind of milling,
a lot of yeah, buts, a lot of, I thought,
I thought they could not have handled that worse.
On the ground, they were actually very supportive
in my view, but yet kept saying all this what about-ism
and I just thought they couldn't have handled it any worse
and turned off a lot of my friends
who wanted the more resolute Trump
who said we full-throated
support of Israel.
And by the way, Biden in the early days did talk like that in the early days after October
7th.
He flew to Israel.
He deployed two carrier strike forces for 24 hours to tell everyone to tell Iran to
sit the fuck down, right?
Anyways, so I was, and I'm curious to get your reaction.
I was really disappointed and quite frankly, rubbing it a little bit in my
friend's face when Trump decided to go to the Middle East, to the Gulf and of
the five largest economies, skip the two that were democracies or near
democracies, specifically Israel or Turkey.
Cause in my view, they're not, they can't nor will they give him a building or a
golf course and accepts a $400 million plane
from what I see as the political mouthpiece and the financial sponsors of Hamas and
My my view to my friends was I just don't think this guy gives a fuck about Jews or Israel
And I was really disappointed to see
the Trump administration take that plane and cozy up to Qatar
because nothing's for free.
And I said, this is telling about
where the current administration's heart really lies
as it relates to defense of the Jewish people.
I wanna get your thoughts and your reaction to that.
So I say a couple of things.
One, look, obviously I don't know what's in Donald Trump's
head at any moment or heart in terms of, you know,
what is his real personal connection to the Jewish people?
I just don't.
I get asked this question all the time.
I know he has Jewish grandchildren.
I know he, but I don't really know.
I think I try to take a step back
when I get questions like this and say,
what do we know about the Republican base?
About the conservative base in American politics and it is deeply deeply deeply connected to Israel and feels a very strong connection
To Jews now, I don't want to get into the you know
We could spend a whole episode talking about why in the history of that but it is a reality
And I think President Trump is very aware of that
And very dialed into that and certainly members of congress republican members of congress are so i'll give you an example
About a month ago. There was a letter organized by senators cotton and graham lindsey graham to president trump
Telling trump no way. Can you tolerate?
Enrichment of uranium in ir Iran in the context of any Iran
deal.
No way.
And this is at a time when Steve Wittkopf and the administration appeared to be heading
in a direction where they were going to be for allowing some kind of enrichment.
And that was a red line for Israel.
And here are a couple of Republican hawks, traditional kind of Republican internationalist
hawks telling Trump Trump no way.
That didn't surprise me that Graham and Cotton wrote that letter.
What surprised me was that 52 of the 53 Republican senators in the Senate Republican Conference
signed the letter.
The only one that didn't was Rand Paul, and that's for other reasons.
So 52 senators.
Now, when's the last time you saw 52 Republican senators
and an equally proportionately like high number among House members sent their
own letter. When's the last time you saw Republican members en masse sign a
letter to the President of the United States pushing him publicly against what appeared
to be a policy track he was on? I can't think of one. We saw some of it
recently with the you know some of the tax issues in the big
beautiful bill, but other than that, we've not seen it. And that tells me that these
members of Congress and these senators are very aware of where their voters are, where
their constituents are on this issue, and I think the president, I think Trump is dialed
into that. So that's one thing. The second thing I would say is,
I was a little unnerved by some of the visuals
you're describing from the president's trip to the Gulf.
Now, in a sense I understood,
and I talked to some officials in the administration,
why he did not go to Israel on that trip.
One, there's no leader, no single leader
the president has spent more time with since he was sworn in than Netanyahu.
Netanyahu has been to the US several times to meet with the president.
I mean, they're just in constant, his top aides are constantly coming in.
They meet with the president directly.
As we now know, literally now know over the last few days, there's been a lot going on.
So there wasn't a behind the scenes operational relationship issue.
Now the question is, was there a symbolism issue?
Was there a symbolism, as you said, of him showing up in Doha and Dubai, or Abu Dhabi and Riyadh and not Israel?
And what they were wrestling with at the time, and I don't want to get into the merits of it,
but what they were wrestling with at the time is that Gaza was still a mess it was not Claire if Edan Alexander the last American
hostage being held in Gaza was gonna get out and that the idea the president
showing up in Israel with no real endgame in Gaza with an American citizen
still being held in Gaza it's like it just it would make the president look
weak maybe maybe not we can debate that but that was their argument
What worried me though more was what you're describing which is is this the future of American diplomacy?
Is this Czech book diplomacy where you start showing up to these countries and it's like this country says well
We're gonna put a trillion dollars. We're gonna put five trillion dollars into the American
I mean it and and in a world in which that happens
Israel can't compete and I think what you saw over the last few days, Israel has its own way of competing.
Because what Israel is demonstrating is, yeah, we're not going to be the country that personally
has sheikhs and emirs who can write checks for billions and trillions of dollars into
the American economy,
but we are the most capable ally in the world,
and you, the United States, are gonna get more
out of this relationship than you give.
And I think Israel could talk about it conceptually.
I think what you saw over the last few ways
is Israel's own version of, you know,
it's an alternative model to checkbook diplomacy.
Yeah, and I've said for a while,
I think the best ROI, I think of things in terms of,
through the lens of shareholder value,
is investments in our university around R&D,
around healthcare and weapons, quite frankly.
I think USAID showed us a tremendous return
in terms of soft power, But maybe even above both those things
is our recent investments in support in Ukraine and Israel.
And I always like to remind people
that Israel took out more terrorists
from our most wanted list in six weeks
than we had taken out in 20 years.
It just feels like the ROI on military
or financial support of Israel has been exponential, I would argue,
for the United States and the West.
Dan, you, I lied, I said that was my last question.
This will be my last question.
You're closer to this than anyone I know,
and one of the things I respect about you is,
I know, I think I do know your politics,
because I've gotten to know you a little bit better,
but you're very measured such that you
don't immediately prompt people's screens to not listen to you.
I think you're more, you have figured out something, despite the fact you're much younger
than me, that I still struggle with, and that is you understand the difference between being
right and being effective, and you want to be effective.
Based on everything you see, all the people you talk to, your assessment of the situation, what do you, are you comfortable speculating
about both internally in Israel with respect to Netanyahu's future, the power shift in
the region?
What if any moons do you see lining up across the geopolitical relationship, relationships
in the Gulf, in the Middle East,
in Israel, the US, what do you see forming?
Recognizing no one has a crystal ball,
but if you had to guess what the world,
as it relates to Israel,
looks like in the next 12, 24 months,
what would you postulate?
I think that Israel is gonna have to go to elections, and that's, yeah, it was to have to go to elections by no later than October of 2026.
But he can choose when he does that between now and then.
But according to Israeli law, he can call an election no later than October of 2026.
And I think after events of the last few days,
I would think he would be calling elections sooner rather than later. I mean, I don't mean
immediately, but I mean, it's not, I don't think he's going to wind the clock down to, you know,
summer of, you know, spring of 2026 before he calls an election. And I think whether or not, look, what Israel did over the last few days, politics in Israel
is extremely divisive and extremely polarized right now.
Like it makes our politics seem like, you know, like copacetic, everything's fine.
I mean, it's really, things are really, I don't want to understate how tense things
are domestically and politically
inside Israel.
And it's a lot about the tension between the ultra-Orthodox religious Jews and the
non-Haridim as they're called, the non-Ultra-Orthodox Jews, because the ultra-Orthodox aren't serving
in the army.
It's the wear and tear on the military, the sense of frustration that there's no, what is the real end plan in Gaza, like where is this going?
So there's a lot of tension inside Israel.
And I would say, Scott, on this issue of confronting in Iran, there's no disagreement.
There's total consensus.
And I mean, I speak to political leaders on my podcast elsewhere who are on the hard hard left in Israel
Who who loathed Netanyahu?
For for a whole range of reasons and will stand totally shoulder to shoulder with him on this issue
So I I think Israel Israeli society even though it's gonna be bumpy. I think over the next few days
I think you know
We know of at least two Israelis who've been killed
You know in Iran's response, I think you know least two Israelis who've been killed, you know, in Iran's response,
I think, you know, and dozens more who've been injured.
I think we're going to see more of that over the next few days, unfortunately.
So I'm not saying it's all, you know, it's all smooth sailing.
But even with that, Israeli leadership completely stands with Netanyahu and actually believes
he, I don't want to say he's singularly talented to have pulled all this off, but his talents were put to work in a way that pulled all this off.
And so does that mean he gets reelected?
I don't know.
But I think no matter who gets reelected or who gets elected as the next Prime Minister
of Israel, I think the environment we're in right now, which is for the first time, a
country that was on its way to a nuclear weapon that posed a threat to
Israel the Arab countries the Middle East Europe and the United States
That that that has their nuclear program is basically being thwarted by is we've talked about extraordinary
extraordinary military force extraordinary intelligence
I think that condition creates the perfect environment for
whoever is the leader in Israel, whether it's whether it's Netanyahu or Yair
Lapid or Benny Gantz or Naftali Bennett or maybe someone who's not even on our
radar, to capitalize on this moment and start to do things like we've been
talking about here, which is start to accelerate normalization with Saudi
Arabia and maybe some other countries too that are not on anyone's radar.
So I think we will look back at this period, Scott, and say this right now was the beginning
of what will have been obvious to us a couple years from now of just the real normalization
of relations in the region. It won't be, like I said, it won't all be kind of seamless,
but it'll, we're gonna see a level of functionality
between countries in the Middle East
that were probably unimaginable just a few years ago. He's the coauthor of the genius of Israel and startup nation. He's also the host of the call me back podcast.
Uh, Dan, this morning I got up and I'm like, I need to understand what's going
on here and I went to CNN very measured.
Like I, I was just too fucking measured for me.
It's like all this self hate.
And then I go to Fox and they're like, go Israel with like literally the nuance of
an elephant on, you know, on, on Adderall or on hopped up on something.
And I thought, where can I go? And I immediately pulled up your podcast, called me back and you
had this, this 60 minute tour de force of what is going on here. You are, I just love that you're,
I think you're doing a real service to people who want to call balls and strikes around all things Israel.
Also, I should point out that I met Dan, my sister betrayed my trust.
I took her to DC as a big brother thinking I was doing a nice thing when she was in
college and she betrayed me and went to work as an intern for some far right
fucking crazy congressperson, much to my horror.
And I'm like, that's not why I took you to DC.
And I show up and she's living with eight people,
including this nice young kid named Dan Senor.
And we connected like 25 years later.
And I'm really, I really enjoy our kind of
rekindled friendship here.
Anyways.
Can I rock your world?
Given this story you just told,
I don't wanna say which son and I don't son, and I don't wanna say for whom,
but one of my sons this summer
is going to intern in Washington.
And I'm like, wow.
You know, you write a lot about it.
AOC?
I hope it's AOC.
If there's karma in the world, it's AOC.
Or Ilan Oma.
I would love it.
I'm not commenting on for whom,
but I will just buy. Have him call me.
Have him call me. I'm gonna freak you and camera out.
I'm absolutely gonna tell him this kiss.
I'm gonna turn him back to the to the to the light. I see light in him. Anyways, my brother
Thank you for your time. I really appreciate it. And have a great rest of the weekend. Take care.