The Tucker Carlson Show - MAJOR SHIFT: Will Trump Split From Israel? Israeli Journalist on the Critical Situation in Iran.
Episode Date: June 12, 2026Israeli journalist Gideon Levy says his government is guilty of committing genocide in Gaza and the United States is complicit. He joins us from the West Bank. (00:00) What’s Happening in Gaza an...d Lebanon? (05:47) Will the US Withdraw Its Support From Israel? (15:22) What Is Hamas? Is the War in Gaza Really About Hamas? (22:33) Where Will the Millions of Palestinians Go? (23:48) Is the US Doing Anything to Restrain Israel? (45:07) If Israel Lost the US, Who Would Their Other Partner Be? (48:48) What Is the Goal in Iran? Gideon Levy is an Israeli journalist and author. Levy writes opinion pieces and a weekly column for the newspaper Haaretz that often focus on the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories. He has won prizes for his articles on human rights in the Israeli-occupied territories. Paid partnerships with: Joi + Blokes: Use code TUCKER for 65% off your labs and 20% off all supplements at https://joiandblokes.com/tucker Preborn: To donate please dial #250 and say keyword "BABY" or visit https://preborn.com/TUCKERStopBox USA: Get firearm security redesigned and save 10% off @StopBoxUSA with code TUCKER at https://stopboxusa.com/TUCKER Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Gideon, thank you so much for joining us.
for Americans who are distracted by what's happening in Iran and with the U.S. economy and by so many other things,
can you bring us up to date on what is happening right now in Gaza, the West Bank, Judea, Samaria, and Lebanon?
It's a war with some interruptions. It's a roller coaster. You go to sleep in Tel Aviv with a ceasefire.
you wake up in the morning
with ballistic missiles over your head.
Gaza is leading
and totally forgotten.
I guess we'll have the opportunity
to talk more about Gaza,
which is very dear to my heart.
In Lebanon,
Israel is fighting for nothing
without any purpose.
People are killed.
All villages are being destroyed
systematically, very similar to Gaza.
Israeli soldiers are killed
on a daily basis almost.
And the whole thing seems like an ongoing war without any purpose, without any justification,
and above all, without any endgings, any real goals.
What will stop it except of this desire to fight and to fight and to fight and to fight?
And to kill.
What is the point?
You say there's no point to it, but it clearly is part of a larger strategy, I would assume.
I mean, it's got to be.
What do you think the bigger point of this is?
So first of all, Israel was poor to believe that it is doomed to live on its sort.
That the only language that we can talk in this region as we are the phila in the jungle,
so to say, the only language that we can use here is the language of military power and as brutal as possible.
This was before Netanyahu.
Many things, by the way, were before Netanyahu.
Netanyahu intensified those things.
And today, the only language clearly, that Israeli speaking, is the language of war.
Anything can be solved only by war.
Nothing can be solved by any other way, like diplomacy, compromises, et cetera.
And here we are involved in so many fronts.
You know, Tucker, there are around 6 billion people in the middle.
is who were experts from the homes,
who are uprooted, part of them will never see their homes again.
Two million in Gaza, one million in Lebanon.
For a while, there were also two million in Iran.
Now, not anymore.
But think about this.
All of them because of wars of choice,
all of them because of a very violent policy
of Israel, which might here and there have the justification, like after the 7th of October,
another thing that I think we'll get into.
But the proportion, the scale, and where are we aiming?
Where are we aiming for God's sake?
Is Israel today a better place?
Is it a safer place than 2023?
Is it more popular in the world?
What did we gain out of all those scores?
And unfortunately, Tucker, those questions are hardly being discussed in Israel.
And this in many ways depresses me almost more than the wars itself.
The fact that a whole people, 10 million people, very intelligent, very ideological and with very clear views,
go to all those wars blindly and automatically without asking ourselves,
Why? What for? What do we gain? Put aside the moral side. Let's say morality is for, you know, spoil the Gidon Levis or leftist, the self-hating Jews.
Practically, are we living in a better place? The answer is unfortunately not. You can add to it, obviously, Tucker, all the personal motivations of Benjamin Netanyahu.
which in my view are not exclusive, they are not the only.
There are those among my friends who think that he does everything only for his career,
only in order to stay in power.
I give him more credit because I think he has an ideology, a very dangerous one,
but he has an ideology which motivates him as well.
But no doubt that those last wars serve first for his personal interest.
He has a try and he's doing very badly.
in the polls
and here he comes
with another war
war after war
I want to ask
why did we have
this need
to bomb in Beirut
two days ago
what did we
achieve by this bombardment
Israel
achieved anything
out of it
except of provoking Iran
and then we got
this sleepless night
last night
with
paying dozens of
ballistic missiles
of our heads
no one talks
about it
no one asks it. And it's quite depressive to live in a society in which the main issues are not
discussed. We discuss the wife of the prime minister. We discuss what kind of gossip. We don't touch
the core of the issue. I live in a country very much like that, so I know the feeling well.
But just to stay on the point that you made about the practical effects of this, leaving aside
the moral stain, whether it's the right decision ethically or not. But as a practical matter,
you have to wonder how many wars a country as small as Israel, just physically small, with a
population that small, an economy that's small, just a little country. How many can you fight
before you risk, you know, real retaliation, risk your own existence? I mean, how dangerous is this?
Fortunately or unfortunately, Israel is a regional superpower from the military point of view.
And no other country in the Middle East can beat Israel.
They just can't.
If they could, maybe they would.
But Israel has still a very, very strong army with devices, technology, ammunition, and arms
that your country was kind enough or too kind to supply Israel blind.
and almost without conditions or limits.
And Israel has the military answer almost for any challenge.
And this is, on one hand, obviously, very good because we are safer.
On the other hand, it corrupts also a country because it lets Israel to go wild,
to go to all kinds of military adventures, knowing that by the end of the day,
we are not endangering the existence or real assets.
but because we are always stronger and we won all the wars, military.
Politically, we lost them all.
Is there a concern that the United States in the next, I don't know,
five or ten years might begin to withdraw its unconditional support for Israel?
You say five, ten years, and I would say five to ten months.
Yes, I agree with that.
It's happening right now.
I think that we are reaching a stage in which we're,
we will face a major shift in US policy toward Israel.
Biden was the last Zionist, so to say, president.
Donald Trump was the last one who accepted almost all the ideas,
the craziness of Israel, and until now, we still have time to see,
but until now he went along the Israeli cycle.
but the next president, would he be Democrat or a public?
One thing is sure, those relations will be challenged, more or less,
but they will not go anymore automatically and blindly.
Maybe the aid will continue, but at least it will be conditioned.
The problem is that it's, you know what, you want to supply Israel.
You think that Israel is the most, the country that it is at,
It needs more than any other country in the world.
And you want to supply it with everything like any country in the world.
Fair enough.
Put some conditions.
Put some conditions according to the American interest.
Israel is not following neither the international law nor the American advances for many, many years.
The United States is speaking about the two-state solution for decades.
And Israel is just significant doing anything possible to sabotage this.
idea. I think this is over. And it's question of months, not of use, maybe still in Donald Trump's time, maybe the next president, and then Israel will be in a real problem. Because without the United States in its current position, this will be a challenge that Israel never faced before, in my view, much more dangerous and existentially dangerous than the nuclear of Iran.
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I agree with that.
Do others in Israel see that coming?
And what do they think of it?
What is the view of the United States and Donald Trump in Israel?
To Donald Trump, as you know, is more popular in Israel than in the United States.
Yes.
Actually, he's more popular in Israel than any other place in the world.
It can change, obviously, if he will change his attitude.
And the problem is again,
that the Israeli discourse does not touch those questions.
We don't speak about the occupation.
We don't speak about the aparthe.
We don't speak about our relations and our dependence on the United States.
You know, we are now in a state of dependence which we never faced before.
I don't think Israel ever faced such dependence of the United States
because all the rest of the world,
You know how is treating Israel and what do the majority of the people in the world?
What do they think about Israel?
Paul show what a peria state is Israel and in many ways rightly so.
And here comes the United States and if the United States will change its policy,
what will Israel do?
How will it go on, even military, not to speak about politically in the international arena.
Europe is just waiting to get a green light from the United States to change its policy
Saudi Israel.
Europe is paralyzed because of the fear of Donald Trump and the United States.
Once the United States will shift its policy, I'm sure that you will see big major shifts
also in Europe because the public opinion is by far more hostile Saudi Israel than the
governments in Europe.
This will have to be expressed by policies, by real measures, not only by articles in newspaper.
So we are facing a really horrible challenge in the coming months, not in the coming years,
and there is no one to deal with it.
We still think that we can do whatever we want, and this thought, Taker got such a boost after the 7th of October.
Israelis tend to believe that after the sales of October,
we have the right to do whatever we want.
And this is very dangerous.
Yes.
It's interesting.
Everything you said is very clear from here.
It matches my perceptions exactly.
But you say no one is saying this out loud in Israel?
And if he says, nobody would listen, yeah?
No.
Look, major principal issues are not.
discussed in the last few. You cannot express it. We are still victimizing ourselves about the
7th of October. We are still victimizing ourselves as the David against the Goliath, the whole
Arab world wants to exterminate us, to push us to the ocean, and we still believe that we are
the chosen people, yes, if you will scratch under the skin of every Israeli, I believe, secularist and
religious. You will hear again and again, no, no, we are better. We know better. We are better.
Take, for example, the international law. Israel is very much in favor of the international law.
It was brought to the world after the Holocaust, after World War II. Israel is very much in
favor of it. But it is not a Bible about Israel, because we are a special case. And therefore, the
international law cannot be applied to Israel.
And if you dare to apply to Israel,
you'll be labeled as an anti-Semitism.
How dare you?
We are a special case, Tucker.
And this way of thinking must bring Israel
to very dark allies, to very dark onus,
which I don't know how we'll get out of them.
And I'm sorry that I'm so pessimistic,
but the last three years, really, we went too far, too far.
Yes. Well, you see this with individuals and not just countries. It's called hubris in English. And it usually doesn't end until there's a lot of suffering and people wake up from their delusions about, I mean, I think it happens to every man. That's happened to me. But it happens at the scale of a nation, too. It's sad. So let me ask you about Gaza. What is the point of Gaza? In the U.S., our media says the point is to dismantle Hamas, which is a terror organization.
effectively legal in the United States to say nice things about Hamas.
What is Hamas from your perspective and is the war in Gaza or the military bombardment of
Gaza designed to end Hamas? Is that true?
No, Takar. And this is a conclusion that I came to just recently. It's very clear for me that
the war in Gaza is a war to crash the Palestinian society in Gaza.
and finally also to make them leave.
Now, how do I know it?
The matter of fact is that Israel is opposing any kind of deal about Gaza.
It's not that they don't want Hamas,
but they don't want also the PA,
they don't want an international force, they don't know nothing.
They want the people of Gaza over 2 million people,
both of them living now in tents.
I have some friend and old age friends
who are living now two and a half years
in a tent without electricity.
Close friends.
One of them is after a stroke,
lying on the ground, on the sand
for two and a half years now
without his medicines.
I mean, I can't describe you
his agony, his suffering.
Israel wants to crash the society.
No, to make them, you know,
a bunch of handicapped,
wounded, traumatized,
society without leadership, without any functional society, any functional institutions.
Why are we opposing that Hamas will run the civil life in Gaza?
They are the only one who can do it right now.
There is no one else.
Why can't they be the teachers?
Why can they be the lawyers, the judges, the street cleaners, the policemen?
No, we say no, because we don't want all this to exist.
We want anarchy there, and then will come the real wet dream of some Israel,
is not all of them, to get to the real, I don't want to use the word final solution,
but to get to a real solution which will last, namely to push them to the south,
and then from the south to try to find them another place of earth, which they will never find.
But you cannot explain otherwise the attitude of Israel
towards solving the problem of Gaza.
If Israel would have really liked to get a solution,
she would have had to come up with an idea of how to make Gaza
a livable, viable, viable place and society.
Israel is doing all the opposite that it can,
crushing the society.
And I'm afraid that the next stage will be the West Bank,
crashing the Palestinian people
and not only militarily,
making it a non-society.
Because many Israelis truly believe
that it's either us or them.
And I believe it is us and then.
But I am very lonely in Israel now.
If the government of Israel were to succeed
in expelling almost two million Palestinians
from Gaza and then took it over,
does anyone believe that is itself a solution?
I mean, it's obviously a crime,
but the long-term repercussions from that
will destroy Israel, it would seem to me.
That just seems unwa-take the moral calculation out of it
as a practical matter that seems insane.
Why, Tucker, it worked very well in 1948.
The first Nagba, the first Nagba was a hell of a success.
We expelled over 600,000 Palestinians.
We destroyed all the villages.
We didn't live anything except of some mosque and some graves.
All the rest totally destroyed.
Covered it up with trees and nice parks.
And it worked.
And me as a child, growing up in this place, born here, going up here,
you know, the first time I heard the word Nakuba was when I was,
20, 25.
I never asked myself, what are those ruins around me here and there in Tel Aviv, in other places?
Never thought that maybe someone owns it?
Maybe someone is living now in a refugee camp instead of his home.
Those things were totally oppressed and were not legitimate.
Until now, they're not legitimate.
So the first NACBA was ahead of success.
Why not to continue?
I mean, for those people, I don't say the majority of Israel.
Israelis want this to happen.
The majority of Israelis have another disease,
namely being apathetic and indifferent.
But the right wingers, for sure,
they wanted to happen,
and they are the only decisive part of the society.
The settlers, the right wingers, the fascists,
they are the most powerful and most active.
They have at least a plan.
What plan do the leftist in Israel
have the Zionist left. What do they suggest? The alternative now, the opposition, what is their
idea? What is their plan for both state? They are opposing power two-state solution. The aisle
appeal, the other say, they say the head of the opposition, yes, say that not in the coming
10 years, another 10 years, which it's not coming. And meanwhile, I believe that the two-state
solution died a long time ago. We missed this train. But in any case, what do you suggest? What are we
suggesting to seven and a half million Palestinians who live between the river and the sea,
together with 7.5 million Jews who are living between the river and the sea. What are we offering
them? Apartheid forever. They're right bringing us at least seven. Yeah, we'll expel them. One day.
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Where do they imagine millions of Palestinians will go if they're expelled?
That's the weak part of their fantasy, because they don't believe they will find a place.
They were looking for, as you know, even in recent months.
They look in Somalia and Eritrea and God knows where, Africa, all kinds of places.
We give the money and we'll send the prices.
It didn't work.
And it will never work.
I mean, no country in the world will accept.
millions of Palestinians, no way.
Egypt doesn't want to get them, obviously, and likely so.
Jordan had enough with the refugees of 48.
Lebanon had enough on the refugees of 48.
They have no place to know.
But the fact that this idea is motivating the present is by itself very dangerous.
Maybe finally it will end up, like the Native Americans, you know, totally forgotten,
be in all kinds of reserves.
living without any heritage, without anything in Kormonia, a bunch of people who lost their
identity. Maybe this will be there also the Palestinian people, if it will go on like this.
Is the United States government doing anything to restrain Israel in these plans that you can tell?
I think the United States is a full partner.
Look, we cannot think that what Israel is doing, knowing the dependence of Israel on the United States,
we can't say that the United States is opposing it.
You know, all the big liberal presidents, above all Barack Obama, with his wonderful, wonderful speeches and ideas,
I had tears in my eyes when he was elected.
What did he do?
Did he stop Israel?
his military aid was bigger than any other president.
Unconditioned.
So the United States is a partner for everything.
If we talk about genocide in Gaza, the United States is a partner.
If you like it or not.
It's not the main partner.
Our accountability above all.
But you know, they supply, they support,
and they could do differently.
It's not like you say, you know, some country in Africa,
who wants to stop a genocide, but he can't do anything.
United States has the skills, has the leverages to stop,
and he never, never did not the settlements.
When did the Americans stop the settlements,
which is much more innocent than a genocide?
What did they really do to stop the settlement project?
They could in one form could put an end to it,
one form called which they would say,
I'm oversimplifying it, obviously,
one phone call saying,
listen, if you build one more
terrorists in the occupied territories,
there is no aid to Israel,
period. And in this
day, the settlement movement would have
died. But there was no
president to do so.
So the United States,
if you speak about the settlement,
the United says he's a partner.
If you speak about the war in Gaza,
you may agree with me that it was a genocide
or not, it doesn't matter.
The United States is a partner.
many chaper with more irresponsibility yes everything you're saying is true and provably true
these are not opinions these are facts what what is up for debate is why why has a succession
every u.s president since harry truman in 1948 gone along with this why has there been no
meaningful condition attached to any of this aid military and economic
Like, what is this?
I think it's up to you to answer, Tucker.
For me, it's a big mystery.
Really, there were years in which I really felt
that we don't know who is the superpower between the two.
Yes.
There were those years that Israel really put the United States
in its small pocket as we say in people.
Totally ignoring, you know, totally ignoring
and vices, condemnation, threats,
totally ignoring it, doing whatever,
without any restraint.
And I asked myself,
how come with all this money and political aid,
United States is paying a hell of the price.
I don't have to tell him for the support to Israel.
And again, please continue to support,
but put some conditions to this.
I have no answer.
It's a mystery.
You know, to say that it is the Jewish lobby
will be oversimplification because it cannot be
that one minority is so powerful.
Not only it smells anti-semitic, but I don't think it can be the full answer.
Yes, the Jewish lobby was very powerful for many years, not enough.
United States does not share the guilt feelings of Europe.
There, the guilt feelings about the Holocaust are very influential
and stay in the back mind of any politician in Europe.
In the United States, you don't share any guilt feelings throughout Israel.
I don't know.
You should answer this.
for me it's in this third i don't have an answer myself um and i i agree with you apac is very powerful
apac is disgusting from my perspective but they're not powerful enough to do what we're seeing now
so i i agree um i only have theories no real answers but it is a question that we should be
thinking about i think um what is the board of peace do you think in gaza yes
The president has announced this international board that's going to run Gaza to redevelop it as a real estate project and put in casinos and make this beautiful new world.
He has said, but I think most Americans are confused as to what this actually is.
Do you have any idea?
No, and there is no idea.
There were very nice ceremonies, as the president liked.
Did they renovate one house in Gaza?
We are now almost three years.
One house was renovated, one institution.
One person in Gaza can say that he lives human life now.
One.
In the entire Gaza Street, I don't know what they do, but I know one thing,
that as long as we will not see facts on the ground, it's meaningless.
There were so many so-called peace councils before,
with all the, after each attack of Israel,
major attack on Gaza,
there was always a huge conference
somewhere in Europe or the United States
with a lot of surprise,
I say a lot of promises
to rehabilitate Gaza,
to bring a lot of investors to Gaza,
to rebuild Gaza.
I need personally, I was once,
I will never forget this day,
invited to a launching of a new hotel in Gaza
which was supposed to,
being like a resort place for Israelis.
Two weeks later started another war
and the place was totally destroyed.
So all the talking about rebuilding Gaza
are not very, even if the money is there
and the money is also not coming there.
Because there is no political plan for Gaza.
It's very nice, your good intention to build casinos there.
First of all, who is going to run gas?
where Gaza will be a free place.
This is the first question, not the last question.
First of all, guarantee the freedom of Gaza.
It is impossible that 2.5 million people will not even have citizenship.
Tell me, Tucker, which people in the world live without citizenship of any country?
The most oppressed people live with citizenship.
Those people in Gaza have no citizenship, no passport of any country.
Is it sustainable?
acceptable we are in
26 that this
phenomena will continue again
it's not only that they don't have
there is no plan for the future
no vision
nothing
so I cannot take it seriously
by the way like also this
horrible aid
organization that the American had
before as you know
I saw your unbelievable
conversation with Dr.
Maynard the British
surgeon from
Oxford, which you talked
with in my
view and
really shaking conversation.
I was so shaken by this conversation
of you. And listen to
hear what he has to say about this
organization who was supposed to bring
food to Gaza. How many
people lost their life on the lines
to this food. Again, America
came initiative.
So this will not be the solution.
You first of all have to
make Gaza a free place.
And then you have to find a way to let Gaza be run by itself.
There are human beings like any other human being.
Let them build their own institutions.
They deserve it.
By the way, I agree so much with Dr. Maynard
because he described in your conversation
how much he loves the people of Gaza.
If there is one place in which I would love to be one more,
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Is there a sense within Israel of what's happening in Gaza?
How many people have died in Gaza?
No sense and no interest.
It's very interesting because Israel, as you know, has a free media, a free press.
Most of it private owned, private owned, and we are free to write whatever we want.
I'm the best example.
I have total freedom of speech.
The problem is that because of commercial considerations, they want to be.
please the viewers, their readers, and not to bother them.
This goes on for many years.
The occupation is not covered at all in Israel.
And then came the 7th of October.
Again, I'm getting back to this crucial day which changed Israel.
It changed for many years, I'm afraid.
And after the 7th of October, it was very clear to every Israel that we have no interest
in Gaza.
Why would we bother about Gaza?
they are all terrorists, they are all Hamas.
And the media cowardly stopped covering Gaza.
I can ensure you, Tucker, that any TV viewer in Omaha, Nebraska,
so much more of Gaza than a Tel Avivian who lives next to me.
I can assure you.
And they don't want to see it.
It's not that they want to see it and the media doesn't show it.
No, we don't want to hear.
We don't want to see it.
Look, can I give you an example?
Please.
I'm coming, Monday is my travel day to the West Bank.
I traveled today to the hospital in Hebron.
I wish it was Gaza.
Hospital in Hebron, in which I met the family of the baby of seven months
who was killed by Israeli soldier last Friday.
Israeli soldier shooting a baby of seven months
in the car of his family.
Daytime, I mean, there was daylight, seven no clock in the evening was daylight,
the whole family, grandmother, father, mother, and two children in a car, the car stops.
The soldier after the car stopped.
Brought two shots, killed the baby in his head.
Horrible story.
Do you really think that Israel was troubled by this story?
Except of my newspaper, I always think that anyone bothered to be.
bring the story, they mentioned it, yeah.
But the framing of it was, you know, some kind of incident, not really serious.
Imagine yourself, a Jewish baby is being killed like this with a rifle from 10 meters.
Nothing.
He saw them and he shot.
I don't know why.
He claims he felt danger.
No, it is so dangerous to meet a family with two children and grandmother who is 80.
It is so dangerous to the soldiers.
And he shot him.
Now, the fact that this is happening has to do also with the fact that it doesn't bother any Israelis,
almost no Israelis, not many.
True, there are those who are very devoted.
But most of the Israelis don't want to hear about it.
And if they hear about it, you know, I told it today to some friend of mine,
and she told me, yeah, but he didn't intend to kill him.
For God's sake, how do you know that he didn't intend to kill him?
kill him. Two months ago, they killed another family in the car.
Which home is this automatic justification to the army and to everything they do?
So getting back to your question, when you don't want to know, when you live in denial,
look, you cannot maintain such a brutal occupation for so many years, 59 years now,
without denying it. Because otherwise you would be out of your mind, the Israel is
are not monsters.
They have the emotions.
They, the part of them are liberals.
They couldn't live with it.
The only way to live with it is by denying and live with this denial and keep the denial
so that no one will break the denial because we really don't want to know.
You know and your viewers know.
The West Bank is half an hour away from our home.
It's not overseas some colony.
In half an hour, in one hour, I'm.
in Hebrew. In one hour, I am in Gaza by car. It's here our backyard, but we don't want to know
what's going on here. And the Israeli media, unfortunately, most of it is the biggest collaborator
with the occupation by supplying their consumers the service of pleasing them and not bothering
them and not telling the Israelis the truth about what we are doing on a daily basis.
And again, Tucker, this is not only Netanyahu and Bamblir and Smotridge.
It started much before.
They did it worse, much worse.
They legitimized many things.
They did.
But don't blame them and don't hope that after they will be gone, things will be different.
They will not be different on those issues.
Other issues, yes.
The occupation will be as barbaric as it is.
Gaza will continue to suffer as it suffers if it will be small,
what's his name, Lapid or Eisencote or whoever.
Same thing.
You anticipated my next question, which was,
will this change when the current leadership changes?
And that's a depressing answer that you just gave.
I wonder how much do Israelis pay attention
to their supporters in the United States?
We have a number of high-profile supporters of Israel in the United States
who have the same positions as Smotrich and Ben-Gavir and Netanyahu
who are Israelis aware of that?
Does it matter to them?
For many years, it matters to the Israelis.
When the United States had Haggit Israel,
when Israel was the darling of the West,
and it was the darling of the West.
Yes, face Israel could do things
that no other country in the world could do.
But when the public opinion in the United States,
like elsewhere, started to shift,
it was immediately labeled as anti-semitic, as you know personally.
Yes.
Exactly as you know personally.
And immediately they labeled everyone is anti-Semitic.
And then the only way to cope is by blaming the Atlantic, it's not us.
It's you.
You are an anti-Semitism.
It's not us criminal of war.
It's you, the anti-Semitic.
That's the point.
So Israelis are aware that they are the evangelists.
who still support Israel.
There are still some members of the Jewish communities,
obviously who support blimely Israel.
But Israel gave up on the world, I think.
Israelis convinced themselves that whatever we do,
the world is against us, so why would we bother?
And you see, practically, we know we are not beloved,
but it doesn't bother us enough.
That's the point.
We don't ask, why don't they love us?
We are not courageous enough to look at the truth and ask us and say,
why did they love us after Oslo?
Why after Oslo, Israel was so popular and why now Israel is a parasitic?
We put immediately the blame on the world, not on ourselves.
We never check ourselves.
We did something wrong.
Maybe we're exaggerated in Gaza.
Maybe bombarding Beirut is not the right thing to do.
No, no.
It's the world who hates us.
Well, in a world of the globalized economy, that has real consequences potentially.
So if the United States begins to withdraw its support for Israel, Israel would need a new partner
in order to continue living as it has been living.
Who would that partner be, do you think?
First of all, the right wingers, the settlers, the radical right wingers, they at least seem not to care.
So we will, as they say, we will fight with our hands.
Yeah, we will fight Iran with our hands.
Good luck.
Others, because Israeli discourse does not include any thoughts about the future, any sorts.
We don't think what will be tomorrow, where are we aiming, I mean, how will Israel look in 10 years?
It's all our agenda.
We are living the day.
And therefore we ignore those questions.
And people say, you know, we trust ourselves.
Israelis have this sense that we will always be able to improvise
a new partner or maybe mislead another president and promise him the sky
and continue to get until now it was working very well for Israel.
You must admit.
Yes.
Life in Israel is economically.
We agree better than any, many other countries.
in the world, even in times that we are parnostic.
And now is there with the ambics, who will stop?
What is the goal of the war with Iran?
What's the point of this?
So, look, that's the life project of Netanyahu,
and we have to give him a credit for this.
Yes.
He speaks about it for decades.
And I believe that he believes
that it is a real existential danger.
And I believe that he believes
that this can be challenged only by war.
And his wet dream was for years
to attack Iran, military.
He didn't believe in any kind of agreements and deals
like he doesn't agree,
believe in any agreement with the Palestinians
or any kind of compromise or diplomacy.
And he tried, as you know, with few American presidents to persuade them to go for war together,
because Israel cannot go to war with Iran without the United States.
It's practically not sustainable.
And then he found Donald Trump, and in a way he succeeded to persuade him.
Again, I think the accountability is Trump's.
I don't buy it that the Tanyao can push.
Trump into a war. You know Trump much better than I, and you know that he's not so easily
pushed into a war somewhere far away. If Donald Trump decided to go for war with Iran,
it's his responsibility, no less than Netanyahu's. But in any way...
Yes, I agree with you. If this is the craze, and then Israel found, I mean,
Netanyahu, it's all Netanyahu now. About Iran, it's all Netanyahu. He found the, the
opportunity of his life to try once and for all a military campaign against Iran.
And maybe he believed that he can achieve the goals, namely regime change,
dismantling the nuclear capability, dismantling the ballistic missiles,
and also he had a dream to disconnect between Iran and the proxies.
What he didn't take into account that all of the military measures,
that all those goals are unachievable, even in a war.
And now he stands before deadlock,
exactly like Donald Trump stands before a deadlock.
They tried war quite messing.
He didn't bring any achievements.
Don't buy all those talkings about how many boats were hit
and how many canards.
You know, Iran is still strong.
a life and kicking, the regime is maybe stronger than it was,
and now there is no goal because the goals which were on the agenda
were found as unachievable.
Now, the idea is to realize that there are things which are unachievable
or for sure are unachievable by force.
Not everything can be achieved by force,
but people like Netanyahu don't accept it.
What is not achievable by force will be achievable by more force.
That's the way they think.
And therefore, we are again and again in Lebanon, third time now,
with the same strategy which twice totally failed and will fail now.
Same in Gaza, same in Iran.
It will lead us to nowhere.
But, you know, when a people do not, does not learn from its own experience,
we face a problem.
Why would Netanyahu continue to push Trump to keep the war going when no goals have been achieved and it doesn't seem possible that any of them will be achieved?
Iran is not going to fall apart.
It's not going to disintegrate into civil war because of the U.S. Israeli bombing campaign.
Why would Netanyahu want to keep it going?
Because otherwise he has to admit that his life project failed.
Otherwise, he has to admit that he was wrong along the way.
He has to admit that pushing Barack Obama to pull out of the agreement was an historical major mistake.
He has to admit all this.
And besides, he maybe still believes that maybe more aggression will bring more results.
I don't know.
The fact is that even the bombarding of Lebanon is in a way also a tool to sabotage any agreement with Iran between the United States and Iran.
And we see the linkage now.
And he will do anything possible to prevent an agreement still because either he doesn't believe in anything else or he is not courageous enough to stand faith in front of the mirror and say,
my life project famed.
I didn't get it
and I couldn't get it
because it's unachievable by force.
Yes.
But I don't think he's courageous enough for this.
What do Israelis think of the war with Iran?
First of all, you saw the first days,
93% of Israelis supported the war with Iran.
Now, Tucker, 93% is a figure
that you get only in North Korea
in all.
Or in a good day, maybe also there's nothing like 93.
If you go now to a poll asking Israelis if today is Monday, you will not get 93%.
You will not get 70%.
No, that's so true.
Yeah, and some will say I have no opinion and others who say, I don't know.
You will not get 90s.
And here you go 93%.
First of all, you get support to envoy Israel.
in its beginning, for sure, automatically and blindly.
There was not one word at Israel lunch,
and we know today how many of the words were unnecessary,
if not worse than this.
You get immediately a support.
The whole people unites along the lines of the army,
our military force, our pride,
we have to do something.
It's an opportunity.
That-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-tit.
Blah, blah.
Then are coming the question mark.
With Iran, it was even more so because I don't remember 93% of support.
Now it's smaller, but it's still the majority.
You want to understand that in Israel mindset, launching a war will always be more popular than a peace agreement.
Try to get now to any kind of agreement with Lebanon.
You will not get not 93% and maybe not 39% of support.
That's the mindset.
The mindset is of living on the sword
and only living on a sword
and not believing in anything else,
not believing that the Arabs are human beings like us,
not believing in any agreements with them.
You can't trust them.
And the most funny notion is that the Arabs
understands only the language of power.
Yes.
And violence.
While the matter of fact is that Israel is understanding
of language.
So, yeah, something very basic is calling for a reset in Israeli society, and there is no one to do this reset.
And therefore, I'm so pessimistic.
How are you treated?
I mean, you've spoken so plainly and directly about what's happening in Israel.
And as you just said, 93% of the population disagrees with you.
So what is it like for you to live there right now as a lifelong Israeli?
But first of all, I thank you for the compliment, but there are no 7% of Israelis who agree with me.
So you exaggerate.
I really appreciate it, but I wish I had 7%.
No, there are no.
And look, I'm old enough to look backwards.
And I was always lonely to some 14,000.
bodyguards. Now I feel very safe, I must say. My freedom of speech is totally kept in my
newspaper. On the other hand, there is this phenomena that, for example, in Israeli TV, for three years
now, I used to be often on Israeli TV. For the last three years, they didn't invite me. I mean,
they invited me twice in three years while I was at least once twice a week on Israeli TV.
The Israeli media except for Harris, which is my home and my safe place, except of
Harare, there's no room for views like mine.
It's not personal.
There's no room for it.
There's no room in all those endless panels on Israeli TV for any kind of alternative view.
You must say only what everyone else says.
Otherwise, you would not invite.
Now, personally, on one hand, I am very great.
grateful to the fact that I esteem my freedom. I can talk to you and say, whatever I,
maybe people will curse me. There's this woman who every morning when I'm jogging in the park
is screaming and made, 5.30 in the morning, oh, like a crazy woman. But she's really an exception.
I'm not the issue. Really not. I'm very grateful to live in a place where at least if you are a Jew,
you have your rights at least until now.
I have my home.
I express my views.
I cannot complain about anything,
but I feel more lonely than ever.
After the 7th of October,
some of my best friends, as we say,
shifted.
Some of my best friends changed the views.
I was never so lonely.
Never.
Are you going to stay?
From my last, until my last breeze,
sure I stay. I was born here.
My wife is Swedish.
I could easily live.
But sure I stay.
That's my place. I mean,
I'm attached to this place.
I'm not, you know,
observe from the outside.
I'm very attached to this place.
And this makes the whole thing much more
painful. Because I'm
attached so much to Israel. Yes.
Because I feel that
all those things are being that
mildly have. Because
I feel that I was cheated as a child telling me all kinds of stories about the beginning
of the state, which were not the full truth.
So I feel cheated.
I feel ashamed in many cases.
I feel guilty, deep guilt over the Palestinian people from the beginning, not from what's
going on now, through 40s.
But, but, you know, for the bad and for the good, it is my place.
I will never leave as long as I can stay here.
No, that's my language.
My parents came here in 39.
My father was in an illegal boat for half a year in the sea.
600 people on a boat.
I can't even imagine how it was.
Where from did they get supply?
Any ports in the Middle East in the Mediterranean wouldn't let them get down
until they were detained in Beirut, Lebanon.
Finally, he got here.
He had no clue.
Judaism, Zeramism, never knew the difference between
Purim and Yom Kippurim.
Between one Jewish holiday to the other, I always asked me,
when do they fast, when do they eat?
But so, no clue.
But this was his only rescue.
He couldn't go elsewhere.
He left his fiancé and parents and never saw them again.
My mother came here in a project of children,
saving children.
She was 16 when she came here, Turkey Boots.
They were not Zionists, or not,
anti-Zaris, they were not political.
They had very nice life in Europe.
And all of a sudden something uprooted them from Europe.
And Israel, Palestine was their only rescue.
I cannot forget it.
And therefore, I'm very, very attached to all my memories.
Can you be attached from Maine, from United States?
I don't know.
I cannot, to be uprooted from there, I mean, all my memories are here, all my friends.
It's not even an issue.
It's not even a different.
I would stay here as long as I can.
Maybe one day I'll be forced to leave.
With those smotrichs, we'll continue.
Who knows?
But no, no. I'll stay here.
I'm old enough also.
I feel the same way about my country.
Looking back on your long life in Israel,
and you said that the roots of what we're seeing now
began long before Smotrish and Ben-Givir took power.
what was the moment you would point to
where the country changed?
I'm not true it's the moment that the country
checked. I'm not true the country changed.
I see my attitude changed.
Yes. Because if I look now backwards,
you see that it was all there
in the beginning of Zammuz.
It's not the country basically
are using today the same methods
like in the Nakpa of 48.
namely, uprooting the Palestinians, trying to push them away,
trying to tyrannize them in order to push them out,
trying to take over their economy, their life, their heritage, everything.
This started long before the state was old.
This started with the beginning of Zionism and never stopped.
If it was acceptable then, you know, 48, Holocaust, people like my parents,
you need to build their estate,
you cannot be too moral, so to say.
But we never stopped this.
In this very moment, we spoke about Gaza before.
What's the difference?
Go and see the West Bank.
What they do now in the West Bank,
I'm every week in the West Bank.
What they do now in the West Bank
is exactly what the first scientist did in 48.
The thing is that then there was a day.
And now we have this
regional superpower
and still we want more
and still for more real estate
and more land.
So, you know,
those things are very
hard to change. So I don't think
that Israel changed so much.
Yes, Smotrich,
Ben Gvier, and the Babel, Netanyahu
who legitimized them
did a big shift,
mainly by legitimizing.
You know, we had this
Rabbi Emmanuel Kahana
who, you, America,
You Americans were kind enough to export him to us, and we are very grateful for this.
I would really, if you should have any guilt feelings, it's for exporting Merrikanah to Israel.
Yes, from Brooklyn to Israel. I remember it.
Exactly. Thank you. Thank you, America.
Sorry.
But Melkahan, when he was speaking in the parliament, the Lekud members would step out.
He was not legitimized because he was a racist.
They go next, nobody was accepting him.
And finally, he was declared illegal
until he was murdered in the United States.
Today, what is small ritual?
Bankvery is a declared pupil of Kahana,
but much worse in his saddism.
I'm not sure that Kahana was such a sadist.
Bankver is a real sadist.
Look how he treats the Palestinian prisoners.
You see the saddism.
the happiness of watching their suffer.
There's really something sick in this man.
But this was there.
This government just legitimized it.
So this is a big shift, the legitimization.
But I see that above all, I changed, not Israel changed.
And I changed due to only one thing.
It's not like one day I was walking in the dark forest
and all of a sudden God revealed to me,
told me you have to think about the Palestinian people.
In a very incidental way, back in the late 80s,
I started to travel as a journalist to the West Bank and to Gaza.
Very innocent.
I was a good boy Tel Aviv.
I was working with Shimon Perz for four years.
I was serving the Israeli army in the army radio station.
So I was not brought up as a day.
this is there. And I started to travel to the West Bank in Gaza. And very soon I realized that
the big drama of Israel is there. This what defines Israel, the occupation. There is no one
to tell it, or almost no one to tell it, and that I know nothing about it. Me personally, I was
in the darkness. And then I started gradually to cover the occupation until I made it the mission
of my life.
And then gradually my views
became more and more radical.
The more I saw,
the more radical I became.
I believe that almost every Israeli
who would witness
or would unwitness in the last 40 years
that I'm working for hours,
I believe that it's part of the Israelis
would share the same views like me.
So the shift was in me,
not in the country.
The country is doing the same,
is running the same principles
from 48 until today.
And this is so worryingly, because it's not that we all of a sudden change.
For the Zionist leftist, it's very convenient to say, oh, this Netanyahu, he brought this curse on our heads.
We were so beautiful before, so honest, so innocent, and then came this evil Netanyahu and made us into a parasitic.
No, my dear friends, we did it before Netanyahu, and we'll continue to do it after.
to Netanyahu and Netanyahu did very bad things,
but don't put everything on him.
In Shimon Peres and Tzhakrabi, who got the Nobel Peace Prize,
are responsible to more settlements than Netanyahu.
They started the project of settlements, together with other people in the Labour Party.
So let's realize that something much deeper is sick
and not only Netanyahu and his government,
which I'd be very happy to see them stepping down, obviously.
But it will not solve the basic problems, unfortunately.
We have to find something optimistic, Tucker.
We cannot just move on all the time.
I agree.
I just, I can't argue with anything that you've said,
and I hope that every American watches the last hour of your explanation
of what's happening in Israel,
because I think it's essential for Americans to understand that.
And I also keep thinking, 30 years ago, I knew, I felt like I knew many Israelis who would say
what you just said.
And now you're almost alone.
So thank you.
Thank you for everything you've said and for what you're doing.
And Godspeed, good luck.
Thank you, Tucker, for this opportunity.
I really appreciate it.
I do.
Thank you.
Thank you, for the best.
