What A Day - The War Next Door
Episode Date: October 24, 2023Two more hostages held captive by Hamas were released on Monday, though Israel says more than 200 others are still being held by the militant group. Meanwhile, officials in Gaza say Israeli airstrikes... have now killed over 5,000 people in the territory. Clashes along the Lebanon-Israel border are also stoking fears that the war could spill over. George Bisharat, a Middle East policy expert and professor emeritus at the University of California College of the Law San Francisco, joins us to explain how neighboring countries are watching the conflict unfold.And in headlines: Argentina’s presidential election is heading to a runoff vote next month, the United Auto Workers Union expanded its strike against Detroit’s Big Three automakers, and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson is not happy about how he looks in wax.Show Notes:Barack Obama: Thoughts on Israel and Gaza – https://barackobama.medium.com/my-statement-on-israel-and-gaza-a6c397f09a30What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, October 24th. I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And I'm Trevelle Anderson. And this is What A Day.
On today's show, the autoworker strike has expanded again.
Plus, The Rock is not happy about how he looks in wax.
But first, an update on the war between Israel and Hamas.
Two more hostages were released on Monday by Hamas.
They are Nurit Cooper and Yohevet Lifshitz, two Israeli women in their 80s that the military wing of Hamas said it had released for, quote, compelling humanitarian reasons.
It was facilitated by the International Committee of the Red Cross. Israel has also revised the number of hostages they believe Hamas captured
a couple weeks ago to 222 people, meaning well over 200 people are still being held. Hamas has
said it does not have custody of all the hostages and that some were taken captive by the Palestinian
Islamic Jihad, which is another militant group based in Gaza. We also know that a third convoy of humanitarian aid
has crossed into Gaza for the millions there in need of resources. This comes as Israel has,
according to local reports, stepped up its airstrikes. The Israel Defense Forces struck
some 320 targets belonging to Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad over the past day alone, bringing the killings in Gaza to 5,087 as of yesterday morning.
That's according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.
I also saw that President Obama has publicly weighed in on the conflict.
Can you tell us what he had to say?
Yeah, so he made a post on Medium and social media in which he largely expressed
support for the Biden administration's ongoing allyship of Israel, and he advocated for peace
and stability in the region. He said, quote, in dealing with what is an extraordinarily complex
situation where so many people are in pain and passions are understandably running high,
all of us need to do our best
to put our best values rather than our worst fears on display. That means actively opposing
anti-Semitism in all its forms everywhere. It means rejecting efforts to minimize the terrible
tragedy that the Israeli people have just endured, as well as the morally bankrupt suggestion that
any cause can somehow justify
the deliberate slaughter of innocent peopleplaying Palestinian suffering, whether in Gaza or the West Bank, as irrelevant or illegitimate.
I thought he did a very good job of balancing a lot of the different dynamics here, including like not excusing violence against anybody and also outlining kind of the history of the region in a way that I thought was really powerful. So on that point, let's turn our
attention to how other countries in the region are watching this conflict unfold. We've mentioned
before that there are ongoing concerns that the violence could spill over. And conversely,
the efforts to get humanitarian aid into Gaza have relied on careful diplomatic negotiations
between Arab and Middle Eastern nations and could be at risk. To learn more about how all of this is connected,
we reach out to Middle East policy expert George Boucherat.
He is a professor emeritus at the University of California College of the Law, San Francisco,
formerly known as UC Hastings.
I started by asking him about Qatar's role in brokering the release of two American hostages over the weekend.
Qatar is one of the few Arab states that has relatively friendly ties and relationships with Hamas.
Qatar is, you know, it's a conservative Arab autocratic regime that's Islamist itself in its own orientation and has had a close relationship with Hamas for a long time.
It's harbored a lot of the political leadership of Hamas.
You know, Hamas is a large and complex organization.
There is the military wing, which is called the Al-Qassam Brigades.
That's the one that carried out the attack against Israel on October 7th.
As a consequence of this closeness, you know, in this long-term relationship
between Qatar and Hamas, which is unique. There's no other Arab state that has that kind of
relationship. And of course, Qatar also has friendly relations, relatively speaking, with the
West, with the United States. So that's what positions it to be intermediary in this kind of situation.
Got it. So we're obviously also kind of at a waiting pattern to see about this possibility
of a ground invasion from Israel into Gaza. That seemed kind of imminent for a few days,
and then it seems now less maybe imminent, but certainly likely in the future.
What's your perception of how likely that is, that a ground invasion happens and soon?
And what kind of response are you expecting to see from other countries in the region if that does happen?
An Israeli ground invasion of the Gaza Strip remains more likely than not.
The timing of it is indeterminate. The United States is
reported to be pushing Israel to delay its ground invasion in order to buy time to get more
humanitarian aid and also to negotiate for the release of more hostages, as that latter process
has been having a little bit of success over the last few days.
And we've had four hostages released.
That provides further incentive to keep going and try to get more.
And how long that timeline extends is impossible to predict.
How other countries in the region and other actors in the region react to a ground invasion, there is
substantial possibility of wider conflagration in the region. I mean, certainly it's already
happening on the West Bank. And, you know, the Israelis have killed something like 90 Palestinians
in the last week or so on the West Bank. That could simply pick up. The other likely spot, not even next most likely, but equally
likely spot would be along the Lebanese border with Hezbollah. Hezbollah is a very capable fighting
force, at least it was in 2006 when Israel re-invaded Lebanon and had a very, very tough go with Hezbollah. Hezbollah also has a very large
arsenal of missiles. And it wouldn't at all shock me if there's a ground invasion,
and lots of Palestinians are being killed. And that's like a given that will happen.
If there is a ground invasion, there are going to be thousands of Palestinians killed.
It could cause Hezbollah to just say, screw it, we're going to join the battle. I don't see Iran entering into this directly. I don't see any other real regional actors that would get involved. I
think it'd probably stay at that, but it could get really ugly. You know, these bordering countries of Egypt and Jordan who have been kind of outwardly,
it seems like hesitant at this idea of accepting refugees from Gaza.
What is kind of the logic behind these countries' decision when it comes to accepting refugees
from the Gaza area?
70% of the people who live in the Gaza Strip are people who were expelled in 1948 and after,
right? They are already refugees. They were people who these towns that they invaded
on October 7th were towns where their fathers and grandfathers and mothers and grandmothers lived.
They tilled those fields.
They were pushed out of them in the war.
So Palestinians themselves, they don't want to leave their homeland.
They see this as another major step in the Nakba,
in the forced displacement of Palestinians,
and they would rather die in their homeland
than go elsewhere and be forced out. And of course, the Arab governments, they actually know this.
Sisi in Egypt is a military dictator who took over in a military coup in 2013 from a democratically
elected government that was actually, you know, supportive of the Palestinians.
You know, the King of Jordan, what can you say? He's a king. A repressive, autocratic,
you know, form of government. They don't want a bunch of rabble-rousing Palestinians in their midst. They have their own, you know, their own calculus. In other words, the governments do
quite apart from the sentiments of their people. When you actually put it in terms that Americans can relate to, it seems pretty outrageous.
Yeah.
And I mean, part of this is, you know, the failure to recognize the specificity of Palestinian
identity.
Oh, they're all Arabs.
You know, they can all live together.
You know, what does it matter if you're from Palestine?
Just go live in Jordan, go live in Egypt, you know, go live wherever.
Well, actually, people are attached to where they live and they want to remain in their country, in their homes, in their villages.
You know, they've been living there for hundreds and in some cases thousands of years.
You know, that's where their family roots are.
And that's where their identity is rooted. That was George B. Sherratt,
professor emeritus at the University of California, College of the Law, San Francisco.
That's the latest for now. We will be back after some ads.
Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez pleaded not guilty yesterday to an additional charge in his federal bribery and corruption case.
In a superseding indictment earlier this month, prosecutors accused Menendez of helping the Egyptian government while he was chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Menendez has since stepped down from that role, and it goes without saying that members of Congress are not allowed to act on behalf of foreign governments. Menendez's wife, Nadine, and an Egyptian-American businessman were also charged in the superseding indictment.
They also pleaded not guilty last week. As a reminder, federal prosecutors say Menendez,
his wife, and three other co-defendants accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes
from three New Jersey businessmen in exchange for political favors. All five entered not guilty pleas to those initial
charges. For his part, Menendez has repeatedly denied the allegations and has resisted calls
from his fellow Democrats to resign. A trial is tentatively set for May.
Argentina's presidential election is heading to a runoff vote next month. It will pit the country's economy minister and leftist, Sergio Massa, against far-right populist Javier Mile, a self-described anarcho-capitalist.
Mile was widely expected to win in the first round of voting Sunday, but fell to second place after Massa captured over a third of the vote. Milley is a controversial but very popular figure in Argentina,
which is struggling with its worst economic crisis in decades.
Aside from his admiration of Donald Trump
and bringing actual chainsaws to campaign rallies,
Milley has proposed eliminating the nation's central bank
and replacing the peso with the American dollar.
He's also said that human organs should be bought and
sold like any other commodity and has questioned whether climate change is real, which, wow.
Meanwhile, Sergio Massa has spent more than two decades in politics and has positioned himself
as the candidate who can actually get a handle on Argentina's triple-digit inflation rate.
Voters in Argentina will go back to the ballot box to choose between the two on November 19.
These political beliefs are so chaotic.
It's just like you put everything in a hat.
Listen.
You pulled out five or six and you just, this is what I'm into now.
And just said, why not?
Let's try it on for size.
Chainsaws, human organs, let's go to the dollar.
No climate change, Donald Trump.
I don't know.
It's a lot.
It's a lot to process.
The United Auto Workers Union expanded its strike against Detroit's big three automakers
yesterday, shutting down production at the largest Atlantis factory in the country.
More than 6,800 workers walked off the job at a Ram pickup truck auto plant in Sterling
Heights, Michigan yesterday, bringing the total number of UAW workers on strike to over 40,000 nationwide.
This latest walkout indicates that the union remains far apart from Stellantis,
Ford, and General Motors at the bargaining table as the strike enters its sixth week.
Stellantis released a statement on Monday saying that the company was quote-unquote
outraged that the UAW would expand the strike after the two sides had quote, multiple conversations that appeared to be productive
about a new labor agreement. But according to the union, Stellantis has the weakest offer on
the table despite boasting the highest revenue of the big three. You'll remember that the UAW
is asking for a 40% increase in wages over the next four years. All three automakers have only
offered the union about half that, but Stellantis in particular has reportedly faltered on the union's other demands,
such as temporary worker compensation and cost of living adjustments.
And finally, after a week of jokes and a few perfectly raised eyebrows, a Paris museum says
it will redo a wax figure of Dwayne The Rock Johnson. The statue of the actor and former wrestler was unveiled last week at the Musée Graven,
which is like Madame Tussauds over there.
It's also home to hundreds of wax replicas of celebrities and historical figures,
from Albert Einstein to Michael Jackson to Queen Elizabeth II.
But there was one detail that critics noticed right off the bat.
The figure's
skin tone is a lot lighter than Johnson's. Many were quick to accuse the museum of whitewashing
his likeness, with some comparing it to Mr. Clean or his Fast and Furious co-star Vin Diesel.
Johnson, who is black and Samoan, eventually weighed in Sunday night, saying that he reached
out to the museum to, quote, work at updating my wax figure here with some important details and improvements,
starting with my skin color. He also reposted a video from comedian James Jefferson roasting the
statue. Take a listen. They turned the rock into a pebble. They don't turn the rock into a vinyl
rock or something like that. It looked like the rock ain't never seen the sun today. That's why we're in the damn picture.
You make The Rock look like he's David Beckham.
It looked like The Rock about to be part of the royal family.
The museum said yesterday it has already started the process of making those changes.
And by the way, this is the same museum that unveiled the very cursed wax statue
of supermodel Naomi Campbell over 20 years ago.
So here's hoping they get it right this time.
If you don't know what we're talking about with the Naomi Campbell statue, just Google it real quick.
Google it and you will know immediately which one it is.
I Googled it.
A lot of different wax statues of Naomi Campbell came up
and I was like,
these aren't so bad.
And then I saw it
and I was,
I stumbled.
I screamed.
I was shocked.
I was moved
and not in a good way.
Yeah.
Not great.
Not great.
Not great at all.
I will say,
if you take a look
at this statue.
It looks like I did it.
It looks like I made the statue of Naomi Campbell.
Are you trying to say you're not an artiste?
I'm trying to say I barely passed high school art.
And I could have done more justice, truly.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
Saddle up, everybody.
Because this week's episode of
Strict Scrutiny is coming at you live from the University of Texas. Hosts Melissa Murray,
Kate Shaw, and Leah Littman discuss why the Lone Star State could be a magic eight ball for where
the country is heading on the legal front, from book bans, drag bans, court-mandated religious
liberty training, to the aftermath of Ken Paxton's
impeachment. Catch new episodes of Strict Scrutiny every Monday wherever you get your podcasts.
That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
and tell your friends to listen. Well, today is also a nightly newsletter. Check it out and
subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe. I'm Trevelle Anderson.
And I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
Well, today's a production
of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed
by Bill Lance.
Our show's producers, Itsy King-Denia, Raven Yamamoto, and Natalie Bettendorf are our associate producers.
And our senior producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka. you