Lawfare Daily: Digging Deep on the State of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict with Joel Braunold
Published by The Lawfare Institute
in Cooperation With
For today’s episode, Lawfare senior editor Scott R. Anderson sat down with Joel Braunold, Managing Director of the S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace, for a deep dive on the current state of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in these last few weeks before what could be a pivotal U.S. election.
They discussed the state of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s governing coalition, recent developments relating to al-Haram al-Sharif and the West Bank, the state of Israel’s external relations with Iran, the United States, and the broader region — and what it all means for the increasingly stagnant conflict in Gaza.
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Transcript
[Intro]
Joel Braunold:
Israel's really in a, in a security question, which is, how do we, how do we
push back against this ring of fire? And for many internationally, they'll tell
you like, you need more international credit. You don't have it. No one knows
what your plan is for Gaza, still. We are a year in. No one knows. You say no
to everything. No PA, no Qatar, no Turkey, no Hamas. What do you want?
Scott Anderson: It's
the Lawfare Podcast. I'm Scott R. Anderson, Senior Editor at Lawfare
with Joel Braunold, Managing Director of the S. Daniel Abraham Center for
Middle East Peace.
Joel Braunold: You
know, yes, we had a polio vaccine drive that was successful. I think that's
really important to point out. But, you know, we're saying it's great that a
commutable disease that wasn't there before October 7th is now there, that we
managed to do a drive. Oh, and by the way, some of those same kids who get
vaccinated the next day have been killed in airstrikes. And so what are we
doing here?
Scott Anderson: For
today's episode, we sat down to discuss the current state of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict in Gaza and elsewhere.
[Main Podcast]
Joel, we're thrilled to have you back for what I think is the
third of a series of podcasts, doing a deep dive into the state of play around
negotiations around Gaza and around the whole nexus of other issues that are
inevitably closely woven in with the Gaza conflict. That in a lot of ways, the
last few weeks, the last few months, we've seen a lot of motion on those other
topics, even as Gaza has seemed so stuck or at least stuck in slow motion, kind
of more of a, of a war of attrition than it even was earlier in the conflict.
So let's dig into a little bit about what we're seeing
happening in Israel and in the Palestinian territories in other domains,
because that in a lot of ways is the story of, of the way development seemed to
be shifting, even in relation to Gaza, in relation to the broader nexus of
relationships that govern all those things. So let's start a little bit with
the domestic political scene for the Israelis. Prime Minister Netanyahu is
still in office. Still beleaguered, still unpopular increasingly in tension with
a number of members of his cabinet, including Yoav Gallant, his minister of
defense who we know is in convers-, there, there's rumors and reporting that at
some point he may be out of the cabinet soon. Tell us a little bit about what
the domestic political scene is looking like in Israel and what the dynamics
are around the Gaza conflict and this nexus of related issues.
Joel Braunold:
Thanks, Scott. And it's great to be back with you guys. It's sort of like
Groundhog's Day. Israel was, you know, before October 7th with hopelessly
politically divided and that, you know, having Israel's worst ever security
failure happen on the watch of a deeply unpopular prime minister, shockingly
did not increase his popularity. I think the background of the setting is that
everyone in Israel is deeply frustrated with the failures of October 7th and the
expectation is that someone should take responsibility. And by hook or by
crook, the prime minister at no point seems to wish to take this
responsibility. So you have heads of various commanding units, so Unit 8200,
the signals unit, the head of that command just resigned. There's calls for the
head of the Shin Bet, for the Mossad, for the IDF all to resign. But there's
this fear that if they resign and the Prime Minister doesn't, then he just gets
to replace them with people that he prefers. So even though there is this
feeling like everyone needs to go, it was a collective failure and they should
all leave. If they leave now, they're just playing into the Prime Minister's
game of survival. And this goes into the fact that despite the fact that if
there is a commission of inquiry, it could actually help alleviate the legal
threats that Israel is facing from the ICC and Prime Minister Netanyahu is
personally facing. He doesn't want there to be a commission of inquiry until
the war is over, and even then it's unclear whether there would be a full
commission of inquiry or not. And so this lack of accountability is sort of a
backdrop to much of the dispute.
The other thing, before we get into the individual motivation,
is, you know, a founding part of Israel's social contract has always been that
if you are captured, whether it's a lone, whether it's a soldier and of course
a civilian, that we will do everything in our power to bring you home. Even if
that's our strategic disadvantage, because in Jewish tradition freeing hostages
is a, is an extremely high value. And Israel, you know, growing up anyone who
was involved in Zionism or Israel will tell you, they knew the names of all the
captured soldiers and everything else. The lack of priority about hostage
release that is perceived by this government, the fact that two members, Itamar
Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, have threatened to leave should there be a
hostage deal that they think is a surrender deal has shredded the social
contract. And with especially the, the killings and the executions of the six
prominent hostages, including the American Israeli hostage Hersh Goldberg Polin
a few weeks ago the, the divisions in Israel that we spoke about on the last
podcast, where if you were pro-Israel judicial reform, therefore, on the Prime
Minister stuff, you less prioritize the hostages. Whereas if you were anti
judicial reform, you wanted to keep the status quo, you were for a hostage deal.
That schism has only got wider.
And it's into this place where the political machinations are
happening. The Prime Minister feels quite politically stable. His coalition
survived the summer session. The Knesset comes back at the end of October.
Whereas the polls haven't shown his coalition getting a majority for over a
year, and longer than that, he's overcome the Gantz potential challenge. He's
already dropped in the polls. Now, Naftali Bennett, the former prime minister,
is gaining in the polls, but the prime minister believes that if he can hold on
and he can, you know, demonstrate that he's the survivor. And he can push
himself as the person who will prevent a Palestinian state and that that's his
job. Then he can ride the wave and continue to survive.
And I think another piece of this, you mentioned Gallant. You
know, the prime minister tried to fire Gallant before October 7th when he came
out against the judicial reform and he fired him. And then 650,000 Israelis
came to the streets. They shut down the entire the economy basically with a
general strike and the prime minister backed off. So Gallant's been a
politically dead man walking for a long time and Gallant lost a key vote on the
Philadelphi corridor just four days before the hostages were found executed in
a tunnel and many, you know, some people blame the prime minister. And Gallant
actually said that, you know, he has the power to call whatever vote he wants,
as well as the power to, you know, sign the executions of the hostages, which
is a deeply, you know, very strong statement to make that was leaked. And then
of course with the hostages actually being executed a few days later. So,
Bibi's trying, the rumor is that he'll try and bring Gideon Sa’ar, who was a
former Likudnik who left the Likud and was part of Bennett's government, he was
the justice minister, as the defense minister. Or maybe they'd bring him in and
put him or Ze’ev Elkin, another former Likudnik, as foreign minister and then
move someone else into defense minister. The aim is to reshape it so that the
prime minister has a defense minister that would be subservient to him.
And we see leaks on an almost daily basis from the heads of the
security services, at least rumoredly, you know, saying that the prime
minister's changed the rules of the game. And this and that, and that he's at
war with a security establishment. And I think the challenge for many Israelis
is sort of twofold. One, it's not like they trust a security establishment. If
you ask people, do you believe the prime minister who you don't like when he
says that the Philadelphi Corridor is necessary for security, despite the fact
for 15 years it was not a priority, nor at the beginning of the war was it a
priority. Versus the security chiefs who say, we have technological solutions
for this and this are the same security chiefs who were literally asleep at the
switch on October 7th. It's sort of like a, who do you mistrust more? And the
way the prime minister, who is a master of politics and creating a public mood,
it, it, it seems logical to your average Israeli that you need to be on the
border because you weren't on the border on October 7th, at least it
felt like you weren't. And like you've been told this whole time that smuggling
happened and even if you know the security service says it didn't come this way
it came that way, the political mood it's far easier to understand and makes
sense of things. And so the prime minister you know is creating that political
environment. So that's one in terms of that sort of fight backwards and
forwards.
The other thing is there's a reason we have conflict of
interest policies in everything we do in life. Like if you're on a board and
you're conflicted, you need to opt out. If you're a judge, you opt out. And the
reality is that even if the prime minister is correct, he's hopelessly
conflicted. He's conflicted because A, his own personal, you know, seeing that
he's on trial, he has a conflict of interest vis-a-vis his desire to stay in
office. Two, he is conflicted because on a hostage deal, he knows he will lose
his coalition should he go for a hostage deal. So is he making a political
judgment or is he making a security judgment? And this inability to disentangle
this question of conflict of interest is driving the question about, can he
make decisions putting the nation and security first. I think many Israelis
will say that Netanyahu was correct on the threat of Iran. And as we go to the
other arenas, you'll see that for many Israelis, it's really about the Iranian
ring of proxies far more than just what's going on in Gaza. Even if he's right
in his argument, is he still the correct person to make it? You know, can you
disentangle his own, his own situation from that?
And I'll finish with this. The prime minister has been
criticized significantly for not calling hostage families, on people when, when
they haven't got the hostages out. And he, sometimes he's tried and the hostage
families said no. But there was one that he spoke to Rabbi Danino, who was a
Shas you know, I think he votes for Shas and therefore right wing, and they
recorded the call with him. And Rabbi Danino just demolished the prime minister
who was on the call with his wife, Sarah. And at times, Sarah said, you know
how hard it's been for us, you know, that the army lies to us. And Rabbi Danino
just sort of cut them off in their tracks and said, you keep worrying about
your Knesset seats. You know, it was you who was in charge when they built the
tunnels. It was you who was in charge when Qatar gave the money. You know, my
son died because of you. And instead of being contrite, the prime minister was
sort of just being like, you don't know how hard it's been to be me. And that
was portrayed across Israel. And that sort of really set the setting of sort of
the domestic strife that we're constantly seeing. It's sort of the same story
again and again.
Scott Anderson: This
whole question about the stability, the durability of Netanyahu's coalition
really gets to the heart of a lot of the dynamics and expectations around this
conflict, around the approach to negotiations around Gaza, everything else,
because we know Netanyahu has been a pressure point. A big part of U.S. policy,
a big part of a lot of other drivers, is this idea that he's going to be under
political pressure at some point. He's going, we can, kind of get him to make
concessions. And foundationally, that seems like it's been a bad bet so far.
He's just been able to navigate this, maintain his political position. How
durable is this and what's going to break? What are the factors and
contributors that might lead to a bigger debate, whether a breakdown of
coalition, call for new elections, something that might undermine this
foundation he's been able to hold together? We've seen, particularly the last
few weeks, big flashpoints, kind of traditional flashpoints in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict coming back to the fore. One of the leaders, in one being debate over
the Temple Mount, how it's handled, deployment of troops on the Temple Mount,
access to the Temple Mount. How does, is that a flashpoint or are there other
flashpoints we should be looking at to say these are the things that are going
to decide the stability of this coalition moving forward?
Joel Braunold: I'll
get to, to Temple Mount and Haram al Sharif second. But to your first question,
if you're trying to play politics against the prime minister on his own turf.
It's very difficult. Let's start there. He's really good at it. I mean, there's
a reason he's been the prime minister for so long and he understands how to
play the game better than basically anyone else. The, the next potential
flashpoint is actually our election. And like so many things in the Middle
East, everyone's waiting to see what happens in our presidential election. The
Israeli Knesset comes back sort of late October which is the next opportunity
for there to be a no confidence. I think there's a, you know, I don't think
anything will happen that first week. I think there's a big question about what
happens on our November election. And should President Trump win, you know,
does the prime minister feel like I've dealt with Trump and tries to convince
everyone just to surround him, saying, you know, we just need to make it
through the lame duck together and we'll be fine. And if it's Vice President
Harris, does that put pressure on the prime minister and people be like, you
know, it's, it's all going to go to hell so let's go for elections now. Does
the prime minister himself feel the only way that I can get out of a lame duck
punishment session with Biden, without the promise that Trump's coming is that
I call an election now. And so I have 90 days to try and get me through the
lame duck cause we're in elections. And then utilize Vice President's Harris's
commitment to the two-state solution to basically utilize that as a jump point
as my campaigning point and saying, you know, I survived Obama, you know, this
is how we're going to survive. So that, that's sort of, for me, the next big
challenge. But until that point, I don't see.
The, the other traditional one, of course, is the budget. A
government can't survive if it doesn't pass a budget. Israel's economically
reeling. It's been at war for a year. It's Israel's longest war. It's been
downgraded. It's facing, you know, a lot of at least now, just on the West
Bank, settler sanctions and a few other things. And the rating agencies haven't
been positive. And if the ICC, ICJ stuff keeps going, what does that do? And of
course you've got the conscription issue that has not been settled. And I think
yesterday one of the heads of the ultra-Orthodox parties came out and said, if
we weren't at war, we would have collapsed the coalition over this, but we're
at war. You know, Bibi, the, the, the, the fact that this is a solidly right
wing government, despite its massive security failure, also is a, what do you
call it, a forge or a cortex that pulls everything together. I can't think of
the right word, but it, it, it's centrifugal forces is pulling it together,
right? So even in traditional coalitions where multiple times people would have
dropped out, they don't because they realize that by leaving they'll get less
votes and that they're particular interest will be worse off and so Bibi stays
at the top. Other things that could challenge that, yes, the U.S., you know, if
there's a worry there should the conscription really go in a specific way? Or,
should Ben Gvir realize that he could, you know, basically do better if he
leaves and, you know, enjoys not being in charge rather versus the responsibilities?
That sort of brings us to the Temple Man question. So
remarkably, despite the fact that this has been called the al-Aqsa Flood by
Hamas, Jerusalem's been pretty calm. During Ramadan, it was actually
miraculous. And I would argue that Israel, the PA, the people who work behind
the scenes, got nowhere near enough credit for keeping things calm during
Ramadan when people thought the whole thing was going to implode. We've seen a
shift with Itamar Ben Gvir, who is constantly trying to push the envelope on
Temple Mount, and it technically is his respons-. He's in charge of the police,
though the cabinet has removed some responsibilities from him, trying to push
the envelope. Now, Ben Gvir's not actually a religious figure, and the rabbi,
who's his number two, a guy called Amihai Eliyahu, who's the heritage minister,
you know. His father does not approve, who's a prominent rabbi in Israel, of
people going up to Temple Mount for religious reasons.
But Itamar's been pushing the envelope and more and more people
have been going up and he's been pushing the status quo. And he's, he's gone up
there and basically declared, you know, we've changed the status quo. And every
time he does that, the prime minister's forced to say, we haven't changed the
status quo. But we're now seeing like AI images of, of al-Aqsa burning being
spread on social media networks. And it's not just the Ben Gvir crowd, there
seems to be this push from parts of the religious community to, to make in
Jewish terminology, Temple Mount, in Palestinian or Muslim, Haram al-Sharif,
you know, a bigger issue. And so there's a question of what's driving that
after a year that it wasn't.
And one interesting thing that if you look on religious social
media networks and others that we're seeing is that a lot of religious soldiers
have been in Gaza. Everyone's been in Gaza because of the conscripts. And
they've gone into Palestinians homes and these are people who often don't go
into Palestinians homes and have no interaction with Palestinians except for
when they see, you know, in very, are conflicting terms. And they're seeing, if
anyone's been in Palestinians homes you'll see a lot of imagery about Haram al-Sharif.
You'll see paintings of it. You'll see other things. And they are recognizing
that they care a lot about Haram al-Sharif and that this is driving them. And
in response, they're feeling like, well, we need to care about it more. And
they're now pushing it more, saying we need to show dominance there to show
that we're in charge because they want to take it away from us. They want to
deny us. And so you've got this cycle that they're now pushing it. And in
response, Islamic authorities, so like in Al-Azhar theological university in
Egypt, they're now teaching global courses about how al-Aqsa's under threat and
they want to build a synagogue up there.
And so you've got, which distributes to all of the religious
elites in the region. So you've got this escalatory cycle and this is deeply
dangerous because there's nothing that ignites the Palestinian street more than
al-Aqsa. The, the intercommunal violence that happened in May 21 was because of
perceived threats from al-Aqsa. You know, the thing that kicked off the Second Intifada
was Ariel Sharon's visit up there. And it has huge regional implications
including for Israel's new Arab nations in the Abraham Accords who will not participate
or put up with threats on al-Aqsa. So tomorrow, Tuesday, which is the 17th,
there is a, a well reported on security meeting where the prime minister is
having a security meeting with a slightly smaller part of his cabinet where
he's laying down new rules about visits up to al-Aqsa.
It was reported already that you now need permission, if you're
a minister, to go up there through the military secretary. And so if Ben Gvir keeps
pushing this, and wants to demonstrate that he's, he's the guy and he's telling
the prime minister what to do. It's going to force a confrontation in a very
significant way that has gigantic security implications. And I think that the
prime minister's heard from every security aspect that if this is continued to
push, the consequences will be dire and people will die. You know, there's the ‘Boy
Who Cries Wolf’ challenge, you know, it hasn't exploded, so why can't we push
it further? But you're basically cutting the fuse each time, even more and
more, and again, it's playing directly into Sinwar's hands, who has called this
the Al-Adsa Flood, and wants this to be the symbol. And if you make it the
symbol, you enrage the street in a way that will guarantee this spreads even
further into more areas. And so this is a real area that bears significant
watching and we should all be on panic stations.
Scott Anderson: As
scary of a vision as that is, we've also seen Ben Gvir and folks from the
Interior Ministry and other kind of fellow travelers pushing another front as
well or at least according to some reporting, according to some accounts. And
that is in the West Bank where we've seen a kind of range of measures really
that have been ongoing since in some ways before October 7th, certainly
escalated and amplified since October 7th, but the last few weeks seems to be a
new cresting wave of efforts to clamp down on activities in the West Bank. Tell
us a little about these activities, what's driving them and the political
ramifications they might have.
Joel Braunold: I'll
take you no further than one of Bezalel Smotrich’s members of Knesset, who's a
minister for national priorities, Orit Strook, who said that this is a
miraculous time. It's the year after October 7th. It's a miraculous time
because there's an opportunity to, to utilize this to fulfill, what I hate
using extremist right because, you know, where do you put the extreme? What the
settler right and the Ben Gvirs and the Smotriches want, which is to foreclose
the Palestinian Authority. And to, you know, cleanse, let's be honest, like
push as many Palestinians off the land as possible and foreclose any
possibility of a Palestinian state. And they see this opportunity in the West
Bank.
So whereas the focus is for much of the international community
has been in Gaza, this has been the most violent year for many, many years in
the West Bank with the amount of Palestinians who have been killed. And this
desire to push the envelope in the West Bank. At the beginning, there were
significant challenges of extremist violence by Israelis, some settlers, some
not on Palestinians. You saw as a response the, the president creating this new
executive order and the sanctions regime that we spoke about last time that
continues to add more and more people and get, you know, further up the
political echelons and as well as they try and push for enforcement. We've seen
the army and the police basically be at war with each other about who is
responsible, the police reporting to Ben Gurion and the army trying to enforce
discipline. And really to no, to no avail. The, the violence in the West Bank
continues to get worse.
And now we see the Iranians as well as Hamas the Israelis
assassinating not only Haniyeh, but also Arouri earlier on in Lebanon, who was
the head of Hamas in the West Bank. And the new head of Hamas in the West Bank
wants there to be a war in the West Bank. And so he's trying to push it.
Palestinian Islamic Jihad through Iran and others and smuggling from Jordan,
all in terms of weapons. And so we've really seen places where the Palestinian
Authority has already been weak in sort of the refugee camps up in Jenin and
Tubas and others really try and blow up the situation. And the IDF has gone in
pretty hard to try and now take out some of those elements to prevent there
being an October 7th coming from the West Bank. And it's a difficult security
situation, you know, for those who want the PA to eventually return to Gaza,
they firstly need to do their job in the West Bank.
And there's debates within the PA about, you know, at this
time, should we be the ones killing other Palestinians? And some say, look, if
we're a state that needs to be one person, one gun, they need to follow
commands. And other people say, no, let's let the Israelis do it. We don't need
to do it. And that ongoing debate completely debilitates this question about if
the PA could ever be strong enough to go back into Gaza, if they can't control
their own territory in the West Bank. I will say that despite attempts to kick
off Hebron, it hasn't kicked off. And in many ways, if you want to look at what
could truly collapse the West Bank into an intifada, like as a traditional
sense of intifada, many people will say we're already in one. It’s really what
happens in Hebron, which is the commercial capital of the West Bank. It's the
largest city. And so far the clans who don't hold much love for the PA have,
have really held it together saying, we don't want to see what happened in Gaza
happen here. We also saw in Nablus some calming down of things as the business
community has got involved. And that, that's still keeping the peace in some
ways and stopping massive reprisals.
But the level of activity that the IDF is using in these places
because of the IEDs and others, they're ripping up the roads. And so then
there's nothing really for people to come back to in terms of the
infrastructure is broken. The PA is bankrupt. I mean, it's, it's, it's hanging
on. The EU has just given it some assistance to, to keep it going, but it's a
very challenging situation. But there is a political agenda by some members of
the cabinet who want to collapse the PA. And yet the cabinet decision still
remains that the goal of the government of Israel is not to collapse the
Palestinian Authority. They passed that before October 7th. Now, today,
tomorrow, the UN is going to be debating a Palestinian sponsored motion by lots
of countries around taking the latest ICJ decision about occupation and moving
that up the agenda.
And then Israel will, in response, take moves against the
Palestinian Authority and punitive steps. And so how does this play into that
is also a big question. And for those on the right, this is what they want.
They want to utilize the multilateral moves that the Palestinians are appealing
to international law in order to create bilateral environments to collapse the
PA so that they can foreclose a Palestinian state. And they see this as a
historic opportunity, as everyone's focused on Gaza, to finish it off. And make
sure that, you know, that no candidate can stand on the debate stage in America
and promise a two-state solution. You know, Yisrael Katz the Israeli foreign
minister, you know, accused Borrell, the EU head of foreign policy of being an
antisemite for talking about a two state solution now. So, yes, two states is
not popular in Israel, but to claim that you're antisemitic for pushing it is,
is quite the stretch. And so the, the West Bank is sort of on edge and it has
been all year. And it's, it's another arena that the IDF has to concentrate on.
And we haven't even spoken about the north. And what's going on
with Hezbollah and the fact that 60,000 Israelis have been evacuated from the
north. Or the fact that the Houthis shot a missile, a ballistic missile at Tel
Aviv. Or that we're waiting on an Iranian response. And so, you know, this, this,
the, the reality has been that whereas for much of the international community,
and the hostage families, the focus is Gaza. I think for many in Israel, the
focus has now been about the Iranian ring of fire of Hezbollah in the North,
the Houthis shooting ballistic missiles whenever they seem to want, direct
confrontation between Iran and Israel and what would, could that look like.
Iranian backed militias in Iraq, what Iran's doing in the West Bank. The
potential for foul play in Jerusalem. And these are additional arenas that are
now being put up. Whereas they feel like they might have pacified Hamas
militarily. There's also a reality that Israel said to its own high court just
a few days ago, because they don't want to take responsibility for humanitarian
distribution that they're not in control, but Hamas is still in control. And
the government's saying that to their own high court. And so Hamas could just
pop back up.
So, you know, to what extent we're in whack a mole in Gaza. And
the fact that the security situation in Israel is dire still, and the West
Bank's on the verge of imploding, and Temple Mount might implode, and there's
no solution so far in the north, and Amos Hochstein is there today on the 16th
to try and prevent a war in the north. You know, it's a, it's a pretty complex
situation with an, with an army that's based on conscripts that's been serving
for over a year. That are still dealing with the emotional trauma and what that
means for commanders in the field and their ability to follow orders. For
example, yesterday, there were leaflets dropped in South Lebanon calling for
evacuations in South Lebanon that the IDF was coming. And it was reported that
this was an individual field commander who did that without the permission of
his higher ups. I mean, that's insane. And we're seeing this again and again
where individual field commanders are taking decisions. And this is a result of
everyone feeling like they need to do the thing to make sure that they win. And
them feeling like there is no strategy and no one's really sure what's going on.
And the, the lack of discipline that that involves is deeply troubling in any
army, and especially in a conscriptial army where people also then go home and
try and go back to their work afterwards.
Scott Anderson: So
you've already previewed the security environment, which was the next direction
I want to take this because those do seem to be the stories that are both
dominating kind of Israeli discussions to a strong, strong extent, at least
kind of like the front page or the lead editorial pages and a lot of Israeli
publications that I follow. As well as in the United States media. I mean,
that's where we see this pop up. Gaza conflict rarely rises to the front page
these days, but we do see Houthi missiles landing in Israel just this past
week. We know we had several week period where we were waiting on an Iranian
response that ultimately proved fairly limited in response to the assassination
of Haniyeh. We know that we saw, you know, an exchange of hostilities with
Hezbollah in the North of Israel that was serious but not of a scale that
people feared it might have been or that the next one might be.
How do these things knit together beyond, you know, what you
just noted? Because an interesting feature of this is that while it seems like
you are under extreme security duress to some extent, by Israel. They are
clearly at a difficult position and one with a lot of flashpoints domestically
and internationally, that has not stopped them from acting quite provocatively.
Like we've seen them pursue an aggressive series of assassinations, including
one of at the, of a, you know, one of their main negotiations interlocutors in
Ismail Haniyeh during the you know, while he was in Iran attending the
inauguration of the new Iranian president. It's hard to imagine a more
provocative maneuver. How do we account for that? And, and, and this level of
brinksmanship, how does that fit in into the Israeli security view? Or, or is
that mischaracterizing? Is there something different happening here?
Joel Braunold: It's a
complicated question, Scott, but let's start here. I mean, what you just laid
out shows the, the, the two-sided nature of Israeli capacity. On one hand,
October 7th is like, Hamas did not use that much technology in order
to basically commit the darkest day in Israel's history. It just, and it
destroyed this image of Israel as this incredible security giant and everything
else. And destroyed deterrence. And on the flip side, they can kill Ismail
Haniyeh in the IRGC guesthouse on the inauguration of the new Iranian
president. They can, just last week it was reported by Axios, go into Syria and
get rid of an underground weapons facility that I'm sure the Iranians have put
tens of millions of dollars into. It's like this, you know, there's a phrase in
Hebrew, shimshon ha nabeach, like Israel’s strong but cries about it. And
it feels like the security services at one hand like, James Bond, Fowler, like
craziness. And the other hand, you know, the, the standard we didn't listen to
the watchers and then we all got killed. And this duality is something that's
also really difficult for many years. There's this huge sense of pride that we
managed to get them and humiliate them and this huge sense of, of insecurity
that are we safe? And, and, you know, to be fair to Israel's political leadership,
that's really complicated to navigate.
I think that one of the things that the Israelis like to talk
about the breaking of the conception of October 7th. Of course, they
won't talk about the, some of the political parts of what that could look like
vis-a-vis, you know, debilitating the PA and Fatah and strengthen Hamas, but
that's, we can get to that in another question. But one of them is like, we're
not waiting anymore. We're not just going to allow Iran to build up its proxies
and dictate terms to us. And so we're going to take the fight to them, because
if we sit back and wait, they will dictate the arrangements. Like if you just
look at Israel's strategic framework over the past year, for political reasons,
for security reasons, whichever one you want to say, they haven't managed to
get a ceasefire in Gaza. And so we've already foreclosed, well, if we get a
ceasefire, we'll get normalization with Saudi, to you need to do a ceasefire so
that you can focus on the north. So already you've taken away a gift and it's
just more fighting that's promised. Or we got to get a ceasefire so that we
don't blow up stuff with the Iranians. Like, so already the gifts that you can
get are already lessened comparatively to what the gains are.
When it comes to the north with Hezbollah, Benny Gantz has been
saying this and was far more hawkish than Bibi and Galant apparently. He's been
wanting there to be a focus on the north since he joined the security cabinet. One
thing is that he lives in the north, in Be'erotayim, in Rosh Haayin, sorry, not
Be'erotayim and today you've got 60,000 people in Israel who have been
evacuated from the north. And they can't have Hezbollah just basically have a
buffer zone that they pushed them back. And, and so what do you do? Now, if
you're Amos Hochstein, who's been the negotiator for the Americans on this,
he's like, look, you could have a massive war, but in the end, what you will
get is basically the same as what you will get now, which is pushing Hezbollah
back to behind the Litani. You're not going to destroy them all. And that's
what you're going to have to live with. And the Israelis are like, no, we can
destroy a lot of their capacity. And you know, maybe that's what we need to do.
Maybe deterrence needs to be recreated and Lebanon needs to be in ashes. And
that's how we're going to create deterrence again.
The Lebanese don't want Hezbollah to do this. They've already
done that. So to what extent will you push the population onto Hezbollah's
side? To what extent will you not? And so much of this is you need your allies
in order to help push back. So on one side, you've got the West and people
saying to Israel, look what happened when Iran tried to hit you in all in
April. And then again, when people decided to try and stand up, there is a
regional missile defense alliance that you can rely on that will help you
insulate against Iran and that that is your future. It is dependent on allies
and allies want things and won't have you just basically do whatever you want
on the Palestinian file. You're going to need to give a little in there in
order to gain a lot on your security file. And this Israeli coalition is like
no, they'll be there anyway, because they hate the Iranians and we know better.
We'll deal with the Palestinians on our own terms and that's none of your
concern. And we're gonna knock Hezbollah out, like we're gonna we're not gonna
have them sit there and threaten our throats. And yes, the Houthis shooting
stuff in Tel Aviv is really annoying, and we will bomb Yemen and do what the
Saudis have done and try to change that dynamics. But we're not living like
this. We're not going to have these proxies strangle holding us and also
changing dynamics.
And when we look at the, what we, a lot of analysts call the
escalatory ladder, right? What's an acceptable step and what's an unacceptable
step? I mean, the Iranians have now done
direct hits in Israel on Israeli targets. That is a gigantic escalatory step.
Iran and Israel are now functionally in a shooting war. We might be in between
the shooting wars, but how you put that back is very unclear. In addition the
Israelis thought they knew the rules of the game. You know, you don't, you
know, and to be fair to them, when they did the targeting in Tehran, they
didn't kill any Iranians from reports. They killed two Palestinians. And
they're like, okay, you know, if we killed Iranians, that's an escalation. We
didn't kill any Iranians. We humiliated you by killing one of your honored
guests and one of your people, but. And then there's another thing in Israel
that there's deep frustration saying, the only time we can go off the Hamas
target is when they leave Western allies, we're not allowed to target them in Turkey.
We're not allowed to target them in Qatar. Cause if we do the diplomatic
consequences will be very dire because they're allies of the U S and everything
else. But when they're on Iranian turf, well, it's fair game. Probably also
Algerian, one would argue. So, there's this weird thing where when they're in
places where you could add to the escalatory cycle, that's when they're
available for targeting, and when they're not.
So, I think that many people in Israel, despite the fact that
it will be a deep cost, feel like we need to, the people in the north need to
go back. And they're only going to feel safe to go back if they're not seeing
Hezbollah sort of do what they're doing. Hezbollah's basically said, we don't
want to do this, but we will and we'll do a ceasefire when you've got a
ceasefire in Gaza. And the Israelis are basically refusing that conditionality,
saying what you do on our northern border has nothing to do with what we're
doing in Gaza. You started shooting at us on October 7th. You
decided to get involved, okay? We had nothing, we didn't do anything in
Lebanon, and you decided because you wanted to back Hamas. We want to break
that. Hamas, of course, wants to bring Hezbollah in, and have been disappointed
that really only the Houthis have really been doing stuff. And Hezbollah's been
doing stuff that's annoying, but haven't really unleashed their full arsenal.
And it's, Sinwar is desperate to get other regional actors involved on
attacking Israel, because for him, that's the plan. That's the al-Aqsa Flood, everything
happens. And so Israel's really in a, in a security question, which is how do
we, how do we push back against this ring of fire?
And for many internationally, they'll tell you like, you need
more international credit. You don't have it. Right? No one knows what your
plan is for Gaza. Still, we are a year in. No one knows. You say no to
everything. No PA, no Qatar, no Turkey, no Hamas. What do you want? You said
yes to the UAE and the UAE has already just told you, AbZ came out yesterday
and said we will not do anything on the day after until, you know, without the
PA, basically. You know, Palestinian state, whether it's before or after. We're
not doing it without the PA. The PAs invite is the gateway into doing something
in Gaza, or it's all on you. And the Israelis at the moment have not taken
charge of distribution of humanitarian aid. They do not want that
responsibility. But should they take it, then they'll be the governors of Gaza
with all the responsibilities. And they will bore the cost of that financially,
as well as security alone. And can their economy take it and can it not? So
their desire to break apart the Palestinian angle from the region and the Palestinian
desire to reattach it on the PA side diplomatically on Hamas's side militarily
is really the push and pull what's going on right now.
And again, how Israel can rebuild its international credit
because there's a lot of support I would argue internationally even with the
frustrations with Netanyahu and everything else for pushing back against
Iranian influence. And that's true also in the region. They don't want to see
Iran triumphant. On the other hand, the, the Palestinians, and especially going
back to Temple Mount and Haram al-Sharif is something that is a lodestone on
Israel's argument about how it can move forward. And so these are some of the
pushes and pulls that the security establishment is trying to work out. They
need the weapons that they need. They need the army to be refreshed and do what
they need in order to take out the enemies that they need to, to push on. And
yet their international credit card runs thin and the thinness, many in the
security will point to the intransigence on the political level for having any
plan to do with the Palestinians.
And that's why many of the security establishments, when they
retire, all turn into two-staters. Because they're like, look just do, I know
that parts of your coalition don't want there to be a Palestinian state. Cool
man. The bigger issue is Iran and Hezbollah and the Houthis and a nuclear
weapon and all of this stuff. And your theological visions of, of winning is
going to cost us on our strategic security in a way that you can't imagine. But
the right pushes back and says, look, it's all about them trying to collapse us
as a population and as people who deserve to be in the region. And we need to
demonstrate once again who is the master of the house. And that has been Ben
Gvir's argument from day one: Who is the master of this house? And you know
what? I'm gonna, I'm gonna clown you on Temple Mount and I'm gonna show you
that I'm in charge and you can rage as much as you want but until you accept
it, that's going to be the plan. And the reality is, as uncomfortable as this
is for a lot of people, a lot of Israelis agree with him on that. They do.
They're like, we need to show who's in charge.
And all of this Western, you know, you're trying to fight to a
stalemate. You're not trying to fight to win. And like, when I was in Israel
last, I was having a meeting and a conscript came up to the person I was
meeting with, who was a minister, and interrupted our meeting. And basically
said, I served two terms in Gaza and I'm not going again. And they said, why?
And he said, because you're not allowing us to win. And he started shouting and
basically being like, you have no vision of victory. There is no vision of
victory. I was not in a, you know, and it was interesting to hear in this and
this was not a staged interaction. There was this feeling like the, the, the,
the having the two handedness and Gallant pulling back and Bibi pushing forward
and no one believing anyone and that Bibi was in charge for 15 years. There's
this feeling like there's no strategy about how this ends and what is it, if
we're going to put all this cost in, what are we doing?
And we haven't even talked about the Palestinian side of this.
Right? This is all the Israeli dominant narrative because they're the ones with
more asymmetric power vis-a-vis the Palestinians and at least equivalent vis a
vis the region. The Palestinians are like, this is what we've always told you
they wanted. It wasn't about killing Hamas. It's about wiping us out in Gaza,
ensuring that we can't return. You know, Gaza has been flattened, like, there
is, there is little, if anything, left in most of it and the infrastructure is
basically gone. And now they want to do it in the West Bank. And listen to them
when they tell you, when someone tells you who they are, listen to them. And as
much as they say, oh, it's one minister and this and that, these are ministers
in the government who have made statements that the ICJ have pointed out are
genocidal. And that even if it was at the beginning of the war, there's been no
pushback. Today, Prime Minister Netanyahu has still not assured President Sisi
that the aim is not to push Gazans into Egypt. He has not said it. They have
not had one phone conversation. The Egyptian-Israeli relationship is completely
in tatters. Also because Israel is accusing Egypt of not having done its job
and allowing massive smuggling through the tunnels, some in the security
establishment, push back.
But again, you've got this complete divide between the security
establishment and the political establishment. So if this all seems very
chaotic, it's because it is, and that's how people feel. And it feels like
who's in control and where are we going on this? And for the Palestinians, no
one cares. We are, we are the butt of everyone in the region. You know, the PA
can't seem to get anything under control. Like, the UN might feel good, but it
doesn't change anything for us on the ground. You know, yes, we had a polio
vaccine drive that was successful. I think that's really important to point
out. There was an ability. And it's interesting to delve into why that was
successful, whereas other things weren't. But, you know, we're, we're saying
it's great that commutable disease that wasn't there before October 7th is now
there, that we managed to do a drive. Oh, and by the way, some of those same
kids who get vaccinated, the next day have been killed in airstrikes. And so
what are we doing here? And, and again, the international community, as you
said, has lost Gaza from its front pages that we've all moved on. And that
we're still getting killed every day.
And okay, we're not pro-Hamas. Now what, what, what's our
future? What do you offer up? You know, we talk about how Israel can get over
the trauma of October 7th, and that's a very important thing. How the
Palestinian society even begins to deal with the trauma of what the war has
been like for them. And you can blame whoever you want for voting for whoever
you want or whatever else. They lived under an oppressive terrorist regime,
according to the U.S. of Hamas. And now they've been bombed to smithereens. They've
been penned in because by leaving Gaza, they basically abandoned their claim
because they're worried the Israelis won't let them back in. And staying in
Gaza has been almost a death sentence. And so, what is it that they can do? And,
and how as policymakers we can even begin to start piecing this together is a
gargantuan challenge. And this is why you hear UN statements and others talking
about the utter disaster that is Gaza and the total exasperation that there is
no political movement.
Scott Anderson: So
that's an incredible scope of all these issues pulling together. But it strikes
me like there's one, particularly as we talk about this international aspect,
there is a keystone about Israel's relationship with the rest of the world,
which it does bear in, perhaps arguably should bear in more to how they're
beginning to think about some of that. And that is the United States. And we
have seen this trajectory in the U.S. -Israeli relationship, particularly under
the Biden administration from the bear hug after October 7th. And frankly,
before that as well, the Biden administration very consciously going and
saying, we're not gonna repeat the mistakes of the Obama administration and
openly, you know, contesting Netanyahu, building antagonistic relationship. We
will embrace the Israeli government, but try and exercise influence behind the
scenes more effectively, something that they thought was successful in kind of
prior models and prior Gaza conflicts. And we've seen the administration more or
less abandon that, I think it's fair to say, or at least move harsher away from
it. More open criticism in Netanyahu, more open pressure for some sort of
ceasefire arrangement, which they have really, the Biden administration more,
particularly Biden now, more than Harris, but to some extent both of them, are
bought in on ceasefire being a big political aspect of their platform. It's how
they square the circle with their party and disconcert within their party over
the approach to Israeli policy generally and the treatment of the Palestinians
and their emphasis on a ceasefire was a big part of that.
And we hear the discussions of that contrast with the
discussions by former President Trump where you look at the party platforms,
you look at debate, conversations, debate exchanges. You have a lot of
engagement with the idea of a two state solution in particular, doubling down
on the Democratic side. And that conversation really has fallen out of the
Trump side. I don't know if they say they're opposed to it, but it's just not
on the agenda. It's not something they're talking about. Really their agenda just
boiled down to backing Israel and opposing Hamas, at least in terms of party
platform. And I think Trump's statements more or less back that up. So how does
the U.S. relationship figure into that? Well, how does that political divide
figure into it? And what does it mean both for, for Gaza and frankly, this
broader relationship and all these issues that are not going to go away, even
if Gaza is miraculously solved in the next couple of weeks.
Joel Braunold: All
right, let's do it this way. Let's go to the presidential debate that just
happened. Let's listen to both of the candidates responses. Now, for foreign
policy watchers of presidential debates, it's always disappointing, right? So
we're not going to get anything big, but it was interesting what was said. So
let's firstly go with Vice President Harris. She started off by saying this
started on October 7th, so she started the story there. Which again, you know,
for Trump, who then accuses her of hating Israel, that doesn't seem to track.
But what was interesting is that she included Iran in the same thought and
statement. It wasn't like a paragraph break, it wasn't like a different
sentence, into this entire thing. And so at least for her, it seems like she
understands and she sees Iran as part of this bigger picture with the Israelis
and Palestinians, which is something that I don't remember a Democrat pre, you
know, since Obama, at least, connecting these things in a very specific way, especially
on like a quick debate stage. And that actually from an Israeli perspective, is
something they would want to see. Of course, she then says, two-state solution,
points out the horrible loss of life in Gaza. And, you know, the Israelis seem
to be on this death match to try and humiliate Kamala Harris. I don't seem to
understand. I mean, I would make the argument that even if you are upset with
her, you hold your tongue for six weeks just in case. But what do I know now?
Now let's contrast that to President Trump. President Trump
said, I want people to remember, he said that if she's elected in two years
there's no Israel exists. Now, that's a huge statement, a huge statement coming
from a former president who's running again. That speaks directly to what the
Iranians want, saying it's not going to exist in two years. So he's basically
saying that the Iranians can destroy Israel in two years. If you're Israeli,
that is a terrifying statement from someone. Now, you can say, oh, it's Trump,
and you can dismiss it, flip the roles. If Kamala Harris said that in two
years, Israel won't exist. The discourse will be completely different. You
know, he also said that there'll be a lot of dead Arabs and a lot of dead
Israelis. I mean, I, if Israel doesn't exist, I'm sure there will be a lot of
dead people in the region. And I'm not one who just criticizes Trump. Just, I
think that, you know, Trump's strong madness plays very well in the Middle
East. It really does. And I think many in the region, when I travel, very much
understand how to deal with the President Trump. They understand him. And the,
the inability to pin him down is a bonus in the Middle East because you can't
predict what his next move is going to be. He hasn't closed off two-states, as
much as many on the Israeli right like to believe he has. At no point has he
ever said there wasn't.
And more than that, after his first assassination attempt, the
fact that there's been more than one is just the chaos of our country today. After
his first assassination attempt, President Abbas sent him a letter that he then
tweeted saying thanks so much, Mahmoud, everything will be well. This isn't
someone who's attacking the head of the Palestinian Authority. This is someone
who recognizes thanks and moves on. I think President Trump feels like he can
help push the parties. He's been very clear that he wants the war in Gaza to
end and to end quickly. That's his whole point. Finish it and finish it
quickly. I don't, and I think that the Israelis in, you know, quietly worry
about what President Trump would insist of them. You know, you know, he's not
gonna withhold arms or anything that they've seen from the Democrats. But would
he make a regional deal that he'd impose on Israel? He's before said he wanted
Iran to join the Abraham Accords. That none of this would happen because of the
respect they would have for him. And for Israel who wants to knock Iran out or
at least knock the regime out what does that mean if he's deal driven?
And Trump speaks to an isolationist wing of the Republican
party that goes against what Israel somewhat wants about U.S. deterrence in the
region, whereas Harris will need to craft the Middle East policy. You know, in
the last podcast we spoke about when president, I think we just did it after President
Biden had made a speech and then moved at the United Nations for the ceasefire.
And we asked, was that a Hail Mary? And I said, no, it's like, you know, the
last, minute of the game and you know, they throw the ball and then there might
be another option. I think right now they threw the Hail Mary and it fell
short. And the game's over and sort of the coaches are looking at, are looking
at each other and that, that's kind of how it feels. I don't think anyone
believes, sadly, that, you know, and I hope I'm wrong. There is no one who
hopes they're wrong more than me. But I don't see anything happening before a
presidential election. I just don't. I don't, I don't see it.
You know, there was a big conference last week in D.C. called
the MEADs Conference, and coming out of that, a lot of people said that the
administration was very clear that they're putting the onus on Hamas. That, you
know, Sinwar upped the amount of hostages that needed to be evacuated, the
amount of prisoners that would need to be released. And, you know, coming off
the executing six hostages, like it's Hamas fault and they're putting pressure
on Qatar and Egypt, but the Egyptians are furious with the Israelis. And to the
extent that now that the, Haniyeh is dead, Hamas's leadership now fully moved
to Gaza. So the Egyptians have a far better connection than Qatar does. So,
like, the amount of pressure the Qataris can put on has now changed after you
assassinate Haniyeh because Mashal wasn't, wasn't appointed the leader. So
they're not the leader, so it's no longer relevant. Like, you can speak to
someone who's the deputy. Great, man. The guy, you know, the Egyptians have a,
have some line of contact with Sinwar, and he's in charge. You could argue he
was in charge all along, but now, formally, he's in charge. He's the head of
Hamas now.
So, so, so, the administration is trying, at the moment, Amos
is out there trying to prevent the North kicking off. And again, when we talk
about conflicts of interest, there's a question, is the administration just
trying to get through November and then there's the lame duck or are they not?
I don't think that's a fair accusation, given that President Biden has made his
entire presidency about rescuing American hostages. So now that he's a lame
duck, I genuinely don't think he cares about the political calendar when it
comes to this. Whether people in Harris's campaign feel differently, I wouldn't
care to comment. I don't think that's, again, a fair critique. But in Israel
and in the region, that's the feeling. Like, you know, in, in, you know, it's
interesting when you listen to Israelis, and the region, they point to many of
Biden's moves, you know, in the context of the real two state solution is
Pennsylvania and Michigan. And you know that all the moves were for those.
Again like, having worked up close with the administration and others, I just
disagree. I don't think that President Biden created a sanctions regime in the
West Bank because of Michigan. And if he did, he got no credit for it. So that
was a terrible political move if it was. I don't think he created, you know, I
think that President Biden has been frustrated and furious with the lack of
enforcement in a security regime and is making that known.
So, you know, lots of people are waiting for the Americans and
I think there's a, there's an entire game in Middle Eastern politics of, well,
it's America, you know, if the Americans want it too much, it's their fault. If
they don't want it enough, it's their fault. It's always our fault. So, you
know, take a lot of the critiques with a, with a, with a bucket of salt. And
the Americans dominate the international arena. Everyone's waiting for the
Americans. You know, we'll wait on the American ceasefire deal. We'll wait on
this. And it really does just feel like we're spinning our wheels. You know,
right now it's Hamas's fault, when it was Philadelphi was it the Israelis
fault? You know, Blinken goes and says he's got the commitments and it flips
and, and Bill Burns is out there and the hostage family. It's just, it just
feels rudderless. Like, we're floating without exit and it's just, we're so
dangerously close to the rocks and we're smashing into them and coming out. And
just to add complexity, the next two weeks at the UNGA are going to be
nightmarish because there will be moves on internationalization. There will be
bilateral consequences for the Palestinians from the Israelis. There will be questions
about when the administration will veto, will they do something at the Security
Council when it comes to the lame duck. And again, whenever it moves to the
international arena. It can feel very satisfying for those pushing human rights
and accountability. And I take nothing away from that.
If you feel like there is, that's the only way to move the
Israelis. Now, I don't think that that pressure thesis will change them, but if
you think that it will create long term differences and changes, that's your,
that's what you're pushing. This is a very important couple of weeks for you.
But in the short term, what will happen is that the Israelis will punish the PA
because of it. The Americans will try and almost human shield themselves in
front of the PA to prevent as much of that as possible. And we will further
exacerbate the tensions and we will further get two parts of the right wing
coalition pushing. None of that is to say that the PA is wrong to try and put
pressure on the Israelis internationally. They feel like it's the only way we
can get a reaction. It's the only way we can get them to take us seriously.
It's the only thing they care about. Because everything else we try, they just
ignore us and they humiliate us. All right, we're going to do this instead.
And, you know, you saw this week in Spain, there was a meeting with Spain and
Norway, and the Saudis, all trying to push Palestinian statehood, and all
trying to work out how to pressurize Israel internationally.
You know, the irony is that the PA is going to be punished,
whereas it's all these other countries who are pushing it, including Saudi, who
the Israelis want to go after, you know, including European allies. The biggest
conflict Israel has diplomatically right now, I'd argue, is with Norway. They
are so mad that the Norwegians recognize the Palestinians and also chair the Ad
Hoc Liaison Committee, which is like a donor committee, that the Israelis are
boycotting the Ad Hoc Liaison Committee as long as the Norwegians are in
charge. Like, this is the level of like, just burn all the bridges. You know,
the Israelis will approve a new settlement for every country that that
recognizes the state of Palestine. They're at war with the UN, they're at war
with UNRWA, they're at war with, there's a constant like, we will take down all
of these entities. We will push them out, and we will say it's unfair. And it's
like fighting a thousand fires. And again, going back to what we just said like
10 minutes ago, Scott. Israel needs international credit on their credit card
in order to have the legitimacy to prosecute the war against Iranian proxies
that much of the West wants them and understands that they need to prosecute. Yeah,
they don't want to wreck Lebanon, but they don't want to see Iran ascendant.
It's not in their business. No, the Iranians and the Russians are now speaking
and have the Russians given them nuclear technology in return for ballistic
missiles that are going into Ukraine. This bleeds into so many other things. So
I think many Western policy makers are pulling their hair out being like, what
are you doing?
I'll give you an example of the British. So the Brits famously,
on the same day that six hostages were executed, revoked arms licenses, I think
50 of them from, and they tried to downplay it, but the symbolism was huge. And
when asked what they could do, one of the steps that they had to fulfill is
that you need to allow the Red Cross and human rights monitors to into detainee
camps. Israel had this huge issue that in Sde Teiman, which was a detainee camp
in the Sinai, there were human rights abuses. There were people who, you know,
reportedly were sodomized by soldiers. And you know, you had a mini January 6th
where ministers from the government along with protestors break into a military
base. The police don't stop them. The army have to get it under control and
then they break into the military court where the soldiers are being
prosecuted. There's, and so that leads to a diplomatic consequence, which leads
to a lessening of this, which leads to this. The, the domino effects of all of
this stuff are happening. And the Israelis will constantly say, you know, we
bring in military experts from the West and they say, no one's dealt with a
bigger complex situation than what we're dealing with in Gaza, you know, and
everything else. And they, they think deeply unfair that they're accused of
starving Gaza when they are taking politically uncomfortable moves to ensure
that humanitarian aid does get in, at least according to their, what they're
doing. You know, it would be very easy for them to shut it all off, just make
it a siege, and many in the country, and many in the government want that to
happen, but that hasn't happened. And they feel they get no credit for that.
And on the flip side, you've got what you’re seeing in Sde
Teiman, you see what's going on in the West Bank, you see this, the attacks on
the PA, you see, you know, the attacks on Norway, the attacks on Spain, that we
will not let any slight go without a punishment. That takes its toll. And
that's sort of, again, like, it is, it seems rudderless. It seems like we are
lashing out and we are doing this stuff and no one is in charge. And I think
that the theme of, of, of where we are right now, we are, we are 18, 19, we're
probably like, we're just under a month from a year anniversary of, of this
kicking off. And it doesn't seem like anyone's got a way out and that when you
look at the strategic environment and what opportunities still exist, it's very
easy for political leadership to say, we're going to wait for the Americans to
sort out their presidential and then we'll reassess. But that for me feels like
a giant cop out, but it seems that's where we all are. We're all just waiting
and then we're going to have to wait till transition. And then it's going to
take three months. And before you know it, basically, Bibi has five months,
seven months left before it's his actual election date, and he's made it
through, you know, if that's the sort of thinking that people are going for. And
so, on one side and on the other side, you've got, what, an 89, 90 year old
President Abbas, who's not in good health, or he could be in good health, but
he smokes a lot, and that's like a potential collapse, and you've got
everything else. So this is why it feels so fragile, because even as you try
and put pieces back into the puzzle, the puzzle's collapsing under you as
you're doing it.
Scott Anderson: Well,
I think on that note, we are out of time today but I have no doubt we are going
to have much more to talk about both before and after the election in the weeks
to come. Joel Braunold, thank you again for joining us here on the Lawfare Podcast.
Joel Braunold: Thanks
so much for having me, Scott.
Scott Anderson: The Lawfare
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