August 19, 2024
The latest
chapter of Israel’s occupation of Palestine has raged on for nearly the last
year, marking a significant shift in the decades-long clash that has already
initiated the demystification of the mythology behind Israel.
Truth continues
to be the first casualty of war in this particular struggle, as it has been
massacred, through the killings of journalists in Gaza and the censorship of
dissidents, throughout the conflict along with the Palestinians themselves.
Unfortunately
for Israel, however, the state’s lies and brutality this time are too severe to
escape the eyes of the global stage, and even its own people.
As David Hearst,
co-founder and Editor-in-Chief of Middle East Eye, states in this interview:
“There are huge tensions in Israel about how the war
was prosecuted, particularly the central tension is the obvious fact that
Israel has been killing its own hostages through military action, obviously.
And the narrative from Israel that Israel is pushing Hamas to release hostages
is nonsense.
It is the exact opposite. The main killer of the
hostages has been the bombing campaign. So there is a huge protest about
getting the hostages home. And getting the hostages home means ending the war,
basically.”
Hearst joins
host Chris Hedges on the second episode of The Chris Hedges Report to offer a
clear and direct explanation of the complexities surrounding the conflict,
providing essential context on what to anticipate moving forward.
“What we’ve got
to get really clear about is that our idea of left and right, or our idea of
moderates and extremists, does not translate to Israeli realities. And when it
comes to killing as many Palestinians as they can, everyone is up for it,”
Hearst tells Hedges.
The brazen
violence that journalists like Hearst and others have reported on is pulling
Israel’s mask of nobility down, and revealing its true face as the “ugly,
repressive, hate-filled apartheid regime it always has been.”
Hearst claims
that “there is a blood lust going through Israel.” He proves this point through
stories of the brutality, demonstrating how for Israel “there’s absolutely no
attempt to distinguish between someone carrying a gun or a rocket launcher and
someone carrying a bottle of water.” In other words, all Palestinians are
automatically “terrorists” — guilty of crimes punishable by death — to the
Israelis.
This
indiscriminate tactic of killing has exposed Israel for what it truly is. The
live streamed suffering of the Palestinians, and the violence of the Israelis,
is too great for the apartheid regime to hide once the genocide is over. Israel
will become synonymous with its victims, just as the violent regimes of the
past have.
Credits
Host: Chris
Hedges
Producer: Max
Jones
Intro: Max Jones
and Diego Ramos
Crew: Diego
Ramos, Sofia Menemenlis and Thomas Hedges
Transcript
Chris Hedges: Israel has
been poisoned by the psychosis of permanent war. It has been morally bankrupted
by the sanctification of victimhood, which it uses to justify an occupation
that is even more savage than that of apartheid South Africa. Its “democracy” —
which was always exclusively for Jews — has been hijacked by extremists who are
pushing the country towards fascism.
Human rights
campaigners, intellectuals and journalists — Israeli and Palestinian — are
subject to constant state surveillance, arbitrary arrests and government-run
smear campaigns. Its educational system, starting in primary school, is an
indoctrination machine for the military. And the greed and corruption of its
venal political and economic elite have created vast income disparities, a
mirror of the decay within America’s democracy, along with a culture of
anti-Arab and anti-Black racism.
By the time
Israel achieves its decimation of Gaza — Israel is talking about months of
warfare that will continue at least until the end of this year — it will have
signed its own death sentence. Its facade of civility, its supposed vaunted
respect for the rule of law and democracy, its mythical story of the courageous
Israeli military and miraculous birth of the Jewish nation —which it
successfully sold to its Western audiences — will lie in ash heaps. Israel’s
social capital will be spent. It will be revealed as the ugly, repressive,
hate-filled apartheid regime it always has been, alienating younger generations
of American Jews.
Its patron, the
United States, as new generations come into power, will distance itself from
Israel. Its popular support will come from reactionary Zionists and America’s
Christianized fascists who see Israel’s domination of ancient Biblical land as
a harbinger of the Second Coming and in its subjugation of Arabs a kindred
racism and celebration of white supremacy.
Israel will
become synonymous with its victims the way Turks are synonymous with the
Armenians; Germans are with the Namibians and later the Jews; and Serbs are
with the Bosniaks.
Israel’s
cultural, artistic, journalistic and intellectual life will be exterminated.
Israel will be a stagnant nation where the religious fanatics, bigots and
Jewish extremists who have seized power will dominate public discourse. It will
join the club of the globe’s most despotic regimes.
Joining me to
discuss the future of Israel and the decades long effort by Zionists to
dispossess Palestinians from their land is David Hearst, editor in chief of
Middle East Eye, an independent website based in London covering the Middle
East in English and French.
David Hearst: Well, you’re
dead right, I don’t think there’s any going back to October the sixth, and it
stripped away an awful lot of the fig leaves that at least liberal Zionists,
certainly in Britain, were operating under for far too long and getting away
with it.
I’d like to push
back a little bit on that comment that Israel has been hijacked by extremists,
because historically, I don’t see it that way. I see Zionism as a two-speed
venture.
You can have the
salami-slice tactics of the so-called moderate center ground, which is
basically one settlement at a time. Nothing too much. An awful lot of left and
right. All these ghastly settlers are here, whatever. The sort of language that
Jonathan Freedland, my former colleague, used to talk about again and again,
and it was used very cleverly to stop BDS, to stop sanctions against Israel.
The argument
being that if you sanction the good guys, the right wing will take over. This
idea of left and right in Zionism — I think Gaza stripped all that away.
And I see
Zionism as a two speed operation. It either goes in salami slices, it either
goes bit-by-bit, quite cleverly, one street at a time, or it goes like Ben-Gvir
in fifth gear, like a tank. And you literally say, this is “Eretz Israel.” This
is the “Land of Israel,” the biblical Land of Israel, we’re God’s chosen people
and we’re going to shoot everyone that’s around. And the vengeance that we seek
on or wreak on Gaza is biblical vengeance. So I’m not sure Israel has been
hijacked by extremists.
I think the
Zionist colonial project was extremist in the first place. And the more you go
back, there is no such thing as a proper Israel, a clean Israel. There is
always one massacre lurking in the shadows. There is Tantura, there is a whole
bunch of massacres. There’s the poisoning of the wells.
There’s… you
know the history better than I do so I see Zionism as a two- speed operation,
and now it’s in fifth gear, and it is going for broke. And the idea that Israel
isn’t Israel for all its citizens, has long been thrown up, thrown out the
window.
Excuse me. It’s
an Israel for Jews only. And the width of discussion about Gaza is much
narrower than we in the West like to imagine. So I’d just like to recall a
recent event, which is the motion of the Knesset. The Knesset passed a bill
basically saying that they are outlawing a creation of a Palestinian state, and
they had two objections to a Palestinian state. The first one was that if we
create a Palestinian state, Hamas will take it over. It will become Gaza in the
middle of us, and we can’t tolerate that. Okay, all right. You, given what
happened on October the seventh, you could make a case for that just.
However, what
the real intent of the motion was, it says, we cannot have a Palestinian state
inside the Land of Israel, absolutely where we were 3,000 years ago, 2,000
years ago, etc. And that is the Zionist project. So that has to be a real
warning light.
So everyone who
keeps on mouthing in the West, I mean every single party in the West — the
Labour Party in Britain, the French, the Germans, the U.N., the U.S. — all talk
about a two state solution.
Well, who on the
Israeli side is going to take away now, 700,000, more than 700,000 settlers?
Who on the Israeli side is actually going to see… even if you are a … dinosaur
that recognizes Israel who is there on the other side now to talk to?
And I think
we’ve really got to challenge the idea of a two state solution by simply going
to the West Bank, or inviting everyone to go to the West Bank, looking at all
those twinkling lights on the hills and saying, Who’s going to shift that lot?
Who’s going to shift the roads? Who’s going to shift the 17,18 industrial
estates in the West Bank? Try driving between Jerusalem and South Hebron Hills,
and just see how many roadblocks you have to go through. Just do that straight…
Chris Hedges: I was just in
Ramallah. I just went to Ramallah about 10 days ago. And you know to go from
Ramallah to Nablus, which should take 90 minutes, takes seven hours. You’re
exactly right. I want to clarify, because you’re right about Zionism when I
talk about extremism, and let’s not forget that the Nakba and in 1967 these
were liberal Zionists who oversaw the worst atrocities against Palestinians.
But the
difference, I think, and I lived in Israel for a while, is that the liberal
Zionists, and it was all a veneer, I mean, it didn’t make any difference for
the Palestinians, but they fought against the religious Zionists. Meir Kahane,
for instance, in the 1990s his Kach Party was outlawed, and then the
government, Ben Gvir and these figures, are essentially heirs to Kahane, in
some ways, they’re more honest than the liberal Zionist. So you are exactly
right, that the Zionist project and all you have to do is read the private
letters of Ben Gurion, the first prime minister of Israel, the leader, in
essence, the leader of the pre-1948 Zionist Movement. Read his letters. He’s
quite frank.
He sounds like
Jabotinsky, the right wing, I think Mussolini, at one point called him a good
fascist, the heir to the Herut Party, which Bibi Netanyahu, his father was one
of the founders of that came out of the Stern gang and these terrorist groups,
Menachem Begin and others that killed both British officials and Palestinians.
So yes, you’re
exactly right, that Zionism, the engine of Zionism itself, has never altered.
But the face of Zionism, I think these religious Zionists, the liberal
Zionists, and certainly when I lived in Israel, the liberal Zionists in the
nature of Kach, the Kach Party and Kahane. They banish these people. And now we
have seen a triumph of these settler religious fanatics over liberal Zionism. I
guess that was the point I was trying to make.
David Hearst: Yeah, you’re
absolutely right. And there was a lot of pushback in those days of the Jewish
underground. And in fact, there was a plot by the Jewish underground, by all
the same people we’re talking about now, to blow up Al Aqsa, and that was
diffused by security forces. The difference now, of course, is that security
forces are completely overtaken with settlers.
Chris Hedges: And the
military. It used to be that if you were a settler, you could not rise within
the security forces or the military.
David Hearst: Yeah,
absolutely. And now, of course, you’ve got [Bezalel] Smotrich, you’ve got
Ben-Gvir, actually, with official positions in terms of both the finance and
also the border police. So they are not just part of the government, but they
are a very active part of that government.
I think the
point I was trying to make with the Knesset vote was that Benny Gantz voted for
it along with, you know, most of the parties.
So the idea of
there being extremists and moderates when it comes to the Palestinians, when it
comes to judicial reform, okay, there’s a real battle going on for control
between the religious Zionists and Ashkenazi Zionists, if you want to call
them, or, you know, people who style themselves in the center ground, but on
Palestine, on shoot to kill or shoot everyone, it’s not even shoot to kill,
it’s shooting everyone in Gaza, there is no distinction at all.
Benny Gantz, I
believe, in one of his election videos, boasted about how many Palestinians
he’d killed when he was in charge. There’s very little pushback. There was a
letter sent to all the congressional leaders, I think it was about 48 hours
ago, from an oppressive array of ex-IDF, ex-Mossad, [inaudible], like quite a
quite a few big names, basically saying that Netanyahu was a criminal and
shouldn’t address Congress, but they didn’t mention the International Criminal
Court or the International Court of Justice.
They didn’t
mention genocide or war crimes. What they were talking about was the submarine
affair. They were talking about bribery and corruption, and they were still
saying that Iran is an existential enemy and that Netanyahu poses an
existential threat to Israel because he’s just mucking things up. They’re not
saying that the whole project is wrong and will lead just to a regional war.
They’re not backing away from that. They’re not backing away from trying to do
the impossible and eradicate, uproot Hamas from Gaza.
So what we’ve
got to get really clear about is that our idea of left and right, or our idea
of moderates and extremists, does not translate to Israeli realities. And when
it comes to killing as many Palestinians as they can, everyone is up for it.
There is a blood lust going through Israel. I use the word biblical vengeance,
but it is sickening what they think they can get away with and what still has
got to come out.
One of the most
horrifying stories came out of the Israeli army, I refuse to call it, by the
way, the Israeli Defense Forces, because I don’t use the word IDF, I say
Israeli army. One of those horrifying tales of Israel came out in an extremely
good website, 972, I’m sure you know, and it was the testimony of six, I think,
soldiers, all anonymous, who had been reservists in Gaza. And let me just read
you some of the things that they said about how it is that so many civilians
have died in Gaza. It’s somewhere up at the moment, near 40,000 but there’s
probably another 10,000 under the rubble. If you read The Lancet in Britain,
there could be three times as many dead, what they call indirect deaths.
So that’s the
scale of it. And you ask yourself, how, why? How’s it happened? Has it all been
in-fighting? Is it crossfire? What is it? Absolutely not.
According to
soldier B, any Palestinian in Gaza can inadvertently find themselves a target:
“it’s forbidden to walk around, and everyone who’s outside is suspicious. If we
see someone in a window looking at us, he’s a suspect. You shoot.”
Soldier A said
that in the operations room, destroying buildings often felt like a computer
game. Anyone caught in one of Israel’s kill zones could be targeted by or who
is targeted by a bored soldier could be counted as a terrorist. So there’s
absolutely no attempt to distinguish between someone carrying a gun or a rocket
launcher and someone carrying a bottle of water. And there’s another soldier
who said that the policy, there was a policy of torching Palestinian homes
after they had been taken over as temporary locations for soldiers. So they
said the principle was, if you move on, you have to burn down the house.
And according to
soldier B, his company burned hundreds of houses.
Soldier A said,
“I can count on one hand the number of cases in which we were told not to
shoot, even with sensitive things like schools, approval feels like a
formality. No one will shed a tear if we flatten a house when there is no need
or we shoot someone we didn’t have to.”
Soldier S said
that the Caterpillar bulldozers cleared the areas of corpses, buried them under
the rubble, flips them aside so the convoys don’t see them. See the images of
people in advanced stages of decay, they don’t come out. This is how the
Russians behaved in Ukraine, and just none of it is getting through.
Now, if peace
does break out, and unfortunately, I don’t think it will, because I think
that’s locked up, we can talk about this in Netanyahu’s very, very sick brain.
But if there is a ceasefire, these stories will multiply, and we will get the
full horror of war crimes.
So the whole
Western push to protect Israel, particularly the American push, [President Joe]
Biden’s push to protect Israel against war crimes, will crumble under a
mountain of evidence that is going to come out about actually what happened.
What were the
deaths? What happened, for instance, in the second time Israel stormed Al Shifa
hospital?
According to my
information, they got 800 people out. Most of them were government workers shot
them dead and then bulldozed the bodies and crushed the bodies and pulverized
them. That is, like, you know, these sort of scenes are scenes reminiscent of
Srebrenica. So it’s only just coming. I think our support for Israel is just
about to tumble under the weight of this truly horrifying evidence, which, you
know, it feels like we’ve been writing solidly now for nine months, but is
underreported.
Chris Hedges: Yeah, I covered
Srebrenica. I was there in Bosnia for Srebrenica. Let’s talk about what’s
happening in Gaza. I’m really interested in your take. It doesn’t seem to me
that Israel really has any clear idea of where it’s going at all. There was an
early effort, obviously, to drive the Palestinians into the Sinai. [U.S.
Secretary of State Anony] Blinken went around and tried to get Iraq and Jordan
to accept a certain number of, quota of Palestinians. This was roundly
rejected.
I was just in
Egypt, and the Egyptian journalists were telling me that the military has been
unequivocal to the Sisi government, that no Palestinian will come over, be
pushed out of Rafah into the Sinai. So how do you read where Israel thinks it’s
going and then how do you see where everything is going?
David Hearst: Well, you’re
absolutely right. I think it was the Egyptian army, not Sisi, but the Egyptian
army that stopped that one. They said, absolutely not. This is an existential
threat for the Egyptian state if you had a Palestinian enclave in the Sinai.
And I think
Egypt is very, very sore about Rafah being bulldozed. Because, one, it was a
source of income, quite a big source of income. But two, as you know, it was
their Palestinian card. It was their foreign policy. Now, Egypt has been made
irrelevant as an actor in Libya. It’s been made completely irrelevant in Sudan,
a country it once ruled, and that’s been made irrelevant in Gaza and Palestine.
And that’s a big, big deal for certainly the Mukhabarat and the GIS and the
general security.
So Israel’s
tactic in Gaza was really quite simple. It was to seal all the land borders and
create a port and push the Palestinians into the sea. And there were ministers
who voiced exactly this. There’s a lot of oral evidence for the South African
genocide case, and there’s a lot of evidence, oral statements, about pushing
the Palestinians into the sea or thinning out the Palestinian population. In
fact, Ron Dermer, who is Benjamin Netanyahu’s point man, was asked in December
by Netanyahu to develop a plan to thin out the Palestinian population.
So ethnic
cleansing and another enactment was absolutely the aim, and still probably is
the aim of the Israeli government.
In terms of the
various options they are trying to do, they’re absolutely at sea. They tried
two main plans. Firstly, they phoned up all of the 32 tribal chiefs in Gaza,
and only one agreed to work with them.
Then came a
statement from the tribal chief saying, we are not going to work for the
Israelis.
Now, there was a
period about a month in after October the seventh, where Hamas were really
quite concerned that they would lose the population, and that was a bad period
for them. However, they should have had absolutely no concerns for that,
because Israel went out of its way to make this a war against all Palestinians
living in Gaza, whether they were Hamas, whether they were Fatah, whether
[inaudible], whoever they were, this was a war of extermination. And the
message got through very, very quickly.
So the level of
public support for the resistance shot up and has maintained. There are reports
of people saying “a plague on both your houses, we can’t bear this anymore”.
And I’m not surprised by that, because every single Gazan family has been hit
by this war. They’ve been moved not once or twice, but nine, 10 times. They
have had all their money taken off them in Israeli roadblocks. This has
happened to our journalists. They’ve been shot, they have been tortured, they
have been raped. There’s a story of about 100 cases of rape that Al-Haq, the
Palestinian human rights organization, has monitored, which Hamas has not
registered for reasons of social conservative and shame, family shame. But the
Israelis have used rape, exactly like the Russians have done, as an instrument
of war, torture, [inaudible], arrest. They’ve stolen.
So this is
absolutely a war against the whole people. And of course, the support for Hamas
shot up and is still incredibly high.
So from Israel’s
point of view, they cannot distinguish between Hamas and the normal population,
which is why they claim that the Hamas losses are so high.
So the first
attempt was to establish local governors, through direct appeals to the tribal
chiefs that failed.
The second
attempt was an attempt to infiltrate between [inaudible] mukhabarat who were
placed there by Majed Faraj, Majed Faraj’s people, and they came there under
the guise of being a protection to Egyptian aid convoys, and they were rumbled
because they were armed. They drew their guns when the aid trucks were rushed
by people and they were all captured. They tried to establish their
headquarters in the headquarters of the Egyptian Red Crescent in Rafah, and
they were all arrested. So that was the second attempt. Hamas dealt with that
very quickly.
Now the
situation is that I think Hamas are confident they have — they don’t say
they’re over the worst, but, militarily, they are confident that — say they’ve
gone through so much they’re not going to go back. Every time they’re asked by
their more nervous colleagues in Doha or Beirut, can you keep on fighting? The
answer is, yeah, no problem. Several months more, we can keep on doing it.
How can they
keep on fighting?
Firstly, the
tunnel network is much, much bigger than the Israelis thought, and much more
advanced and much more sophisticated. It can run cars through it, for instance.
They recently found a tunnel that was three levels deep, going under the Rafah
border, another one running from north to south. So they’ve got literally
thousands of kilometers of tunnels, and that is the main strategic weapon. It’s
still intact. Hamas says about 20 to 30 percent of it has been rendered out of
order, but they keep on digging. That’s the first thing.
The second thing
is they’ve got a limitless supply of high quality explosive from the unexploded
ordnance of Israeli missiles and bombs. They say they’ve got about 3,000 tons,
which they recycle in their factories underground. So they’ve got communication
north and south. They’ve got a limitless supply of explosives, and they’ve got
also a limitless supply of manpower. Because as you can imagine what
Palestinians would do when you’ve seen your families blown up, or you’ve seen
the Israelis set the dogs on a guy with Down Syndrome and just left to bleed to
death, that goes on in front of your eyes all the time. You can imagine what
anyone, any brother or sister watching that would do.
And the third
thing that they’ve demonstrated, more than anything else, is they’re not going
to leave. They’d rather die in Gaza than go. This is a new generation of
fighters. They’ve gone through, they were born after Oslo. They’ve gone through
all the nonsense about, you know, tomorrow and tomorrow, tomorrow, you’ll see a
Palestinian state. They’ve gone through the humiliation. They’ve gone through,
you know, 16, 17 years of siege. They know that Israel is counting the number
of calories and controlling the number of calories they consume, even in peace,
and they say, what the hell we’ve had enough. This is the breakout generation.
So I view
October the seventh, horrendous as it was, as a prison breakout, basically. And
a lot of Palestinians support this. Really do. If you’re in the West Bank,
where horrendous things have been happening, we can talk about that. But
there’s a whole bunch of things have been happening under the cover of war.
Basically, the settlers are trying to push the Palestinians into area A from
area C, which is the part that is controlled by Israel, in fact, Israel
controls everything.
And what the
West Bankers say is, if it works in Gaza, we’ll be next. So you’ve got this
absolutely, you know, if anyone is facing an existential war, we use the word
existential a little bit too much about the Jews and being Jewish myself, I’m
fed up with it. I think the people facing a real existential crisis are the
Palestinians, and they’re standing up to it, and they’re behaving like real
warriors.
Chris Hedges: Where do you
see… I have a hard time figuring out how this is going to end. I mean, it’s
clear what Israel’s intent is. It wants to depopulate Gaza and make Gaza
uninhabitable, but I don’t see it. And it can keep going as long as the United
States keeps funneling weapons. I think I read, 68 percent of munitions that
Israel uses now come from the United States, and I don’t see that ending. So
how do you see this, you know, playing out?
David Hearst: Well, Israel’s
got a very big problem, and that is, it’s going back and back and back in the
same areas to destroy Khan Younis again, for the second, third time. It’ll
destroy Rafah again. It’ll go back to Gaza City again. It will not be able to
pacify Gaza. So this will be, even if it is low level, it will carry on.
They’ve got a
real problem trying to work out who’s going to run the place and how it’s going
to get run. There are rival projects at the moment. I don’t think any of them
will take off. Basically, there’s a sort of U.S. sponsored plan with the UAE
and possibly also with Dahlan, Mohammed Dahlan, who is mentioned as a possible
figure that could be acceptable to Hamas, that also has the whole backstory to
it, which we could talk about. But even if you take, for instance, UAE, there’s
a recent suggestion that the Emiratis would put ground troops in, there are
conditions that the Emiratis would set for saying that they would put their
troops on the ground.
One of them, for
instance, Abdul-Khalek Abdullah, who’s a political scientist very close to the
UAE, said that Abu Dhabi would have several conditions for participating in
such an initiative. I’m just reading out. These include an official invitation
of the PA, substantial reforms within the PA appointment of an independent
prime minister.
Abdullah also
emphasized that the Emiratis want assurances the PA would assume control over
Gaza and want Israel to commit to a two state solution. Well, all of that is
just like light years away from where we are right now. So even the Emiratis,
who were probably closest to the Israeli position, have got a mountain of
objections. Then take Dahlan, Dahlan has refused the idea of… Dahlan and Hamas
talk to each other all the time and there is a relationship…
Chris Hedges: You should
explain who he is, for people who don’t know him.
David Hearst: So Muhammad
Dahlan is one of the Fatah strongmen. In 2006, 2007 he was tasked with — he
comes from Gaza, he has family in Gaza — he was tasked, basically with making a
preemptive coup. Hamas chucked his 7,000 fighters out. It was very bloody, and
from then on, the siege started. Dahlan then later fell out with Mohammed
Abbas, the Palestinian president, and he’s now in exile in Abu Dhabi.
Dahlan is the
basic bag carrier for Mohammed bin Zayed, the president of the Emirates, and
he’s basically the man who does all the dirty operations for the Emiratis. He
funneled arms to Libya. He created arms factories in Serbia. He liaised with
the RSF in Sudan just before the coup. He’s the go-to guy.
Now on
Palestine, he is the deadly enemy of Mahmoud Abbas, and Hamas has used this.
He’s wanted on corruption charges. He’s been convicted in absentia.
Dahlan says all
of these are political charges, but the main rivalry in Fatah is between
Dahlan, who continues to pour money into his various camps. Balata camp is
loyal to him, for instance, and he’s also poured money into Gaza. Now, when
Yahya Sinwar comes out of jail, Sinwar and Dahlan go back a long way. They were
both born in Khan Younis. They both went to the same school. They went to the
same university. They were in prison together, partly, and a relationship
developed between the two.
Now, when Sinwar
came out, he was full of praise for Dahlan, accepted money for weddings, and
there were deals being done. And this caused ructions within other elements of
Hamas, particularly in Doha, particularly the political guys, and also in
Beirut as well. And they stopped this. They said, no, Dahlan is not waltzing
back into Gaza, we remember what happened in 2007.
But there was
still this relationship, I asked my sources, what was the story behind Sinwar
and Dahlan? Didn’t they realize I said to them that a leopard never changes his
spots? That he could be working for the Israelis, Americans, God knows who. And
they laughed, and they said that during one episode, I think before the First
Intifada, or maybe even during it, they were both at university, Sinwar and
Dahlan, and a [inaudible] was killed by some of Dahlan’s gunman and Sinwar beat
him up to within a fraction of his life, basically, and left him almost like…
He didn’t kill him, but he sent a message. So I was told, Sinwar loathes
Dahlan, but you never know. They both could have matured, and they both
realized that they need each other. Dahlan, since October the seventh, firstly,
praised the action. He did not condemn it. He then said, this was the
Palestinians’ right. He’s kept very, very close, closely involved with the
whole situation. He has rejected the idea of going into Gaza without the
express invitation of the Palestinian Authority and Hamas. Hamas, meanwhile,
have said that they are prepared to be flexible about who governs Gaza, by
which they mean someone that they are consulted about, who may not necessarily
come from their ranks.
So immediately
in my brain, I thought, oh, was this a reference to Dahlan? So there are things
going on there. I think the difficulty of composing a Gaza government post-war
are multiple.
Firstly, every
single problem that you and I have covered for the last 20 years has not been
solved like PA, the reconciliation, Abbas’ hatred for Dahlan, Abbas’ refusal to
be a partner to Hamas, who he absolutely loathes. Israel dividing and ruling
the siege the whole Western post-Oslo concept that the only people you can
negotiate with are the people who recognize Israel’s right to exist.
All of that
comes together and it’s concentrated on one small area, and you realize that
all the problems still exist. So I don’t think, and if this is going to
materialize, it could be that Hamas does sign, I think Hamas has accepted the
ceasefire, and Israel hasn’t, and that basic ceasefire is on the lines of
Biden’s speech, he made it far too late in the war, but he did actually make
it, to give him his credit. And the U.N. resolution, and that was very clear.
Both were very, very clear. It was very much like the first ceasefire deal that
was signed with William Burns, the C.I.A. chief in Cairo and then in Doha. And
the people who rejected, of course, was Netanyahu. So then Biden made this and
that, the specific parameters of that was that at the end of the first stage
there would be negotiations and the ceasefire would be permanent, and the
negotiations would continue, but it would not allow Israel to go back to war,
and that has been the sticking point all along.
Now Biden
changed policy on that but too late in his speech in which he said, this was an
Israeli offer, of course, it wasn’t an Israeli offer. It was Burns coming out
again, it was the C.I.A.
And Hamas signed
up to it, and Turkey would also have been a guarantor under those
circumstances. It is Netanyahu who cannot sign that deal because, not because
Gantz has left his war cabinet, but because Ben-Gvir could walk out of the
coalition, and then what you’ve got in Israel is Ben-Gvir, a future prime
minister, seizing the mantle of the right wing coalition between Likud and the
religious Zionists, and that is the part, that’s the seat at the moment that
Netanyahu occupies, and he’s terrified that Ben-Gvir could outflank him on
that.
So I just don’t
see Netanyahu, except I could be completely wrong. Tomorrow it could happen, in
which case Hamas would say, fine, alright, we’ve come out of the war, we won.
So the principal
problem of what happens next in Gaza is the accretion of all of these problems
that we’ve been talking about, the fact that Israel hasn’t eradicated Hamas.
And if Israel hasn’t eradicated Hamas, Hamas is still there as the de facto
government, and if you try and impose something on them, it won’t work. So the
next government has to have the resistance groups’ blessing, not just Hamas,
but Islamic Jihad and the resistance. And that would be a very, very different
government to the one that would be, I mean, if that happens, I think Abbas has
got to worry about keeping charge of Ramallah as well, because the same thing
could happen there.
So all of these
things require so much movement that I think my gut instinct is the war will go
on. It will become a military occupation. I think the West Bank will become a
military occupation as well. And the PA will be there purely as the eyes and
the ears of the Shabak, of Shin Bet and you will have, I think at the moment
the last count was something like 650 roadblocks in the West Bank. Everyone
shut up in their own villages, and you’ll have Israel fighting a soft war, if
you like, on five fronts, though we haven’t talked about Lebanon, but that will
be the next major offensive.
At the moment, I
think Israel, the Israeli army is too exhausted, it doesn’t have enough tanks
to invade Lebanon, and Hezbollah has been doing an extremely good job of
knocking out military targets that Israel needs to establish its eyes and ears
in northern Lebanon. So I think Israel faces a future of open conflict on five
fronts.
Chris Hedges: Do you think
Israel is intent upon making an incursion into Lebanon? I mean, that’s a big
question.
David Hearst: Well, the motor
for that is internally displaced people from the border. I mean, if you’re a
Palestinian, and if you are journalists like us, you laugh at the notion that
Israel can’t stand internally displaced people. What has it done to the
Palestinians? But it has, I think there’s something like 60,000 still living in
hotels after 10 months. And there is pressure to start that. There’s also
continual back and forth. They can’t stop trying to eliminate Hezbollah
commanders and so it’s got its own momentum.
There are other
indications that an invasion of Lebanon is a matter of when, rather than if. I
understand that it’s actually not a story I’ve actually yet written, but I
understand that the Qatari diplomat has flown to Beirut to talk to Hezbollah
and offer Qatar’s services as a mediator, should war break out, and that’s been
accepted. So that’s one indication of sort of long term planning for the war,
and the other indications are the direct talks that the U.S. officials have had
with Iranian officials in Oman about setting the parameters of Iran’s pushback
if and when Israel invades Lebanon.
So I think it’s
stalled for the moment because of technical means, tanks, basically hardening
the Israeli airfields in the north of Israel, trying to work out how to cope
with drones that seem to fly under the Iron Dome and other missiles as well
that fly surface to surface, trying to counter the the latest Hezbollah
missile.
But at the
moment they say exactly the same thing applies to those northern communities
apply to southern Israel and we’re going to have to deal with the threat. I
think, however, we’re in a new era where they can’t just simply pick off
militias and targets one after the other. You remember the phrase, Chris, that
they used, you know, grass cutting exercises.
Chris Hedges: Mowing the
lawn.
David Hearst: Mowing the
lawn, those sort of deeply odious, you know, suburban sort of understatement. I
think that era is gone. I think several things have changed about this new era,
I don’t think they can dictate now who’s going to be the next leader of the
Palestinian Authority. Certainly, they can put a new quisling in. They could
put Majed Faraj in, or they could put in Hussein al-Sheikh, but they’ve got no
legitimacy on the ground. If Abbas goes, those two go. It’s very, very
interesting talking to Hani al-Masri, the veteran commentator who once used to
be close to Abbas, on basically how weak Fatah is at the moment, and how many
people are looking in different directions.
And so I think
that era is over. And I think certainly mowing the lawn is over, because the
guys whose cuttings you are, whatever the horrible metaphor goes, the grass you
are cutting is fighting back. And it’s fighting back with missiles that are
asymmetric and that can do you real damage. And if you look at the West Bank,
there have been two incidents now where Israeli troops have walked into Iraq
style bombs. So roadside bombs, they’ve blown up a tank, blown up heavily
armored vehicles and killed people inside them, one soldier in particular, or
they walked into buildings and then they got blown up. The level of resistance
in the West Bank is increasing, technically, all the time and Israel, to avoid
using soldiers, it’s using F-16 aircraft.
And that reminds
me, and I think I’m sure it must remind you, of the Second Intifada, where they
were bombing targets with aircraft, the camps with aircraft, and they’re doing
the same now with drones. So this isn’t a question of pouring troops on the ground.
It’s battlefields conditions, where they reduce Nur Shams camp, for instance,
to, or areas of it, to rubble, or Jenin, where I was in fairly recently. So the
war in the West Bank is growing as well. And when you were in Jordan, you must
have noticed how angry people were in Jordan and the East Bankers as well, not
just the Palestinians.
Chris Hedges: Yes, and they
and they threw [inaudible], the investigative journalist, in prison for her
coverage of Jordan’s collaboration in shooting down the Iranian missiles that
were headed for Israel, for a year, along with her exposure of the companies to
break the Yemeni blockade or transporting goods from the UAE and Saudi Arabia
and Jordan to sustain the Israeli economy.
David Hearst: There was
another very small story in Jordan that I think happened while you were there,
and that was an ex-soldier from Amman which, as you know, is in the south of
the country. And according to Jordanian law, soldiers, after 20 years of
service can apply for a housing loan from the army. It’s a lot of money, and
the family uses this to build houses, and it’s a bit of a perk.
He died, and on
his death, the family were told by the lawyer that he donated all the money
from that loan to Gaza. And that’s quite an interesting sort of vignette about
what people feel about Palestinians. I don’t know whether he’s Palestinian or
not, but he certainly didn’t come from a Palestinian town in Jordan, and the
level of anger is enormous. So when we’re talking about a new era, yes, you
could have Donald Trump and his great friend, Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia,
Mohammed bin Salman, signing a piece of paper for lots of money, I assume, to
both the Trump families and to him normalizing relations with Israel, but it
would mean so much less, and I actually don’t think he would do it. I think
he’s too shrewd for that now, because Saudi Arabia owns the Arab Peace
Initiative. It was signed in Riyadh, it’s very proud of it, and it still thinks
it’s the basis for peace.
So, the whole
idea, as you know, of the Abraham Accords, was to leapfrog the Palestinian
veto. So I don’t think we can go back to those days. And I think Blinken and
Biden’s foreign policy is in shreds, literally in shreds. And it basically has
to be rebuilt from the bottom up. We have to have Western governments that say
the Palestinians should be able to support their own leadership and to vote
their own leader in, right? And we shouldn’t have a veto on that. And then they
come and talk to us, and they say, right, let’s talk about a solution, but to
say, to fight against all national unity governments, to say the next
Palestinians should be someone that we’ve chosen to keep the whole entity weak,
all of this is a total disaster for the West. I’m not talking about for Israel,
for the West. A two state, a Palestinian state is never, ever going to be
accepted.
And then they
should ask themselves this question, which Israeli leader is actually going to
evict hundreds of, now, hundreds of thousands, of settlers? Where is it going
to happen? And if you cannot answer that question, you then say, “Why are you
talking about a two state solution?”
You’ve got to
ask yourself those questions. And no one is asking that. They’re all just
saying, oh, well, it’ll all be decided by negotiating. Where did you see
Trump’s map for a Palestinian state? It was some sort of a rubbish dump in East
Jerusalem, and it was an enclave in the… Did you see that map? It was amazing.
That’s peace, is it? I mean, so it’s not going to happen. Is Western policy
actually going to do the seat change that we’re both thinking about and knowing
about and doing it? I don’t know, but it’s collapsing under the weight of its
own contradictions at the moment.
Chris Hedges: And this brings
me to the cost of Israel. I mean, Ilan Pappé is talking about the imminent
demise of the Zionist state. There are clear signs of stress. First of all,
economically, Israel is suffering terribly from this prolonged conflict. It has
now revoked the prohibition on conscripting religious youth who were exempt,
orthodox youth into the army. It is expanded the amount of time by which
soldiers must serve, and there are reports of thousands of very severe Israeli
casualties, and the distances are very small, so somebody with a very serious
wound can be airlifted quickly out of Gaza and kept alive, but is probably
invalided for the rest of their life. So let’s just close by talking about, you
know, when Pappé, certainly somebody who knows more than I do, I mean, he’s
talking about the disintegration of the Zionist state.
David Hearst: A lot of people
do. I think there’s a lot to what Ilan Pappé says. He always was an
anti-Zionist so the number of people who, or Israelis who, who think like him,
can be counted on the fingers of one hand, basically.
There is an
overwhelming consensus for carrying on this war in Israel amongst all sections
of the Israeli public. But there are huge tensions in Israel about how the war
was prosecuted, particularly the central tension is the obvious fact that
Israel has been killing its own hostages through military action, obviously.
And the
narrative from Israel that Israel is pushing Hamas to release hostages is
nonsense. It is the exact opposite. The main killer of the hostages has been
the bombing campaign. So there is a huge protest about getting the hostages
home. And getting the hostages home means ending the war, basically. That’s one
set of tensions.
The other set of
tensions, I think you mentioned, is the number of severe injuries, we don’t
actually know. I think there’s a figure of 4,200, 4,300 but I think it’s many
more. It’s more like 10,000 and that has had a big effect, particularly amongst
reservists, who are also, you know, students, small businessmen, who are very,
very much, the engine of the Israeli citizen military state.
It was the
reservists who could keep the economy going. There’s another factor that we
haven’t mentioned is that the number of Israelis who are now taking European or
foreign passports and are shifting their money abroad, particularly to Cyprus,
Portugal, France, Greece, Britain, that’s another indication of the fact that
the Ashkenazi Jew, the European Jew, the second, third generation of of the
Holocaust generation don’t have as much faith as they did that they’ll be able
to live in Israel.
Again, as a
journalist, you want to know how many people, how many passports, you don’t
want to keep on this sort of anecdotal plane. You actually want figures and
facts, and of course, we’re not getting them. So that is anecdotal rather than…
but it is certainly a factor of the number of people actually leaving Israel,
Israeli Jews, I’m talking about.
Chris Hedges: I’ve heard the
numbers as high as 400,000-500,000 I don’t know if you’ve heard…
David Hearst: Those figures
have been bandied up, but there’s been nothing officially admitted yet. So,
that’s another indication, I think Israel, I mean, how do wars end? Wars end
through mutual exhaustion. Wars end through both sides realizing they cannot
gain their objectives through military means alone.
I think Israel
is a long, long, long way away from that. I think it’s on that journey, but it
is many years away from realizing that they can’t solve the Palestinian problem
through arms alone.
As soon as they
come to that conclusion, we’re into a different world where they sit down
honestly and say, how can we share this land together? And I don’t care whether
it’s a one state or two state or no state, but it has to have that “how can we
live together” type approach, which did happen in Ireland. I was a
correspondent in Ireland in 1985 during the Anglo-Irish agreement. And at that
time, you could not have got a Republican that said, I will participate in
Stormont, which he would have called the partitionist assembly. It would have
been unbelievable to have Ian Paisley and the head of the IRA sit down together
and laugh, they became known as the chuckle brothers. Inconceivable that. But
that was only a decade away or 15 years away from the Easter Accords, the Good
Friday Accords, when exactly that happened, but if you read it, but if the
dynamics of Ireland are a mirror of what might happen in a conflict as bitter
as the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, it would be settlers sitting down with
Hamas. It would not be the moderates of each side talking to each other who’d
already put down their guns. Because the real talking wasn’t done between the
SDLP and the OUP, the official unionists and the SDLP, the Catholics. It was
done between Sinn Fein and the DUP, and it was done between the IRA and the
Protestant paramilitaries, and they were the force for peace. It was the
paramilitaries on both sides which were the force of peace.
So I think we’re
a long, long way away from this. And I think Israel still feels it can
basically wipe Palestine off the map. And if it has Ben-Gvir as a prime
minister, he will absolutely do that.
But what’s
changing, I think, and this is a big, big difference, is that Israel has lost
world opinion. It really has lost the Jewish youth, American youth, and I think
it’s also lost its grip over the political support. And I think it’s very, very
interesting how, in a transition between Biden and Harris, it was said again
and again, Biden had to support Israel instinctively on October 7, because he’s
a generation that remembers the Holocaust, but it’s almost like he was
generationally Zionist, and Harris doesn’t have that. I think that’s being a
bit too optimistic.
I think Harris
will be still in the grip of all of those arguments produced by the pro-Israeli
lobby, which is like, I mean, a complete grip on the thinking of certainly the
Republicans, but also Washington in general. But they must have realized that,
you know Biden’s strategy of the classic bear hug. You know, the closer that
you hug Israel, the more you impede it to do its worst, then eventually it
goes. That’s gone as well. That era has gone. That was typical Tony Blair
rubbish, that the closer you stay to Israel, the more you restrain it.
We’re now
talking about no longer wars that last 45 days or 50 days. We’re talking about
permanent war. And that theory doesn’t work anymore, and someone’s got to feed
those bombs. And so the pressure we concede already we could. We can see it in
Michigan, that Michigan’s refusal to vote for Biden was an element. I’m not
saying a key element, it was one element in Biden thinking that he couldn’t win
the next election as Michigan’s one of the key states. Similar, very
interesting, similar things are happening to the Labour Party as well. There
was a Muslim boycott of Starmer and he lost five…
Chris Hedges: He got less
votes than Jeremy Corbyn.
David Hearst: He did. 300,000
less than Corbyn did in 2019, the disastrous election then, when you had Labour
fighting Labour, but 3 million votes less than 2017 which was the height of
Corbyn’s [inaudible] and so you know some very, very interesting Labour… Labour
now say, oh, they’re intimidated, and so they’re investigating electoral
intimidation. This is absolute rubbish. No one was intimidated.
People voted
against them because of their record on Gaza, quite rightly. And you had high
flyers like Wes Streeting as a health secretary who got in by only 500 votes.
That was in Ilford North. And now, lo and behold, you have David Lammy saying,
yes, we’re restoring money to UNRWA. And they’re going to restrict, we reported
this today as an exclusive, but there are rumors or reports that he’s going to
restrict arms sales to U.K., not cut them off, but restrict, restrict U.K. arms
sales to Israel. That’s a big change, and that they are withdrawing their
objection to the International Court of Justice, the genocide case, and that
objection is one that America is going ahead with, which is to challenge the
ICJ’s jurisdiction over Palestine based on the fact that there was a treaty
that called on the Oslo Accords, the Camp David Accords, which said that the
Palestinian Authority couldn’t arrest Israeli soldiers in the West Bank, and
that’s the basis for saying that the ICJ doesn’t have the right to send arrest warrants
for Netanyahu and for the defense minister Yoav Gallant and also the Hamas
leader as well.
So they’re
withdrawing that objection. All of those are small steps, but it’s a response
not to their conscience, because they were absolutely for the Gaza campaign for
so many of the last 10 months. It’s due to electoral pressure. So I think in
the long run, Israel has done itself immense damage by basically trying to
extinguish the Palestinian problem militarily, once and for all, which is
undoubtedly what the IDF has been trying to do.
Chris Hedges: Great. Thanks.
That was David Hearst, editor in chief of the Middle East Eye. I want to thank
the production team, Diego [Ramos], Sofia [Menemenlis], Thomas [Hedges] and Max
[Jones]. You can find me at chrishedges.substack.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment