Habits and Hustle - Episode 298: Eylon Levy: Unraveling the Deep Complexity of the Israel Conflict
Episode Date: December 1, 2023The Israel conflict continues to be a complex issue, layered with historical, political, and cultural factors. As we strive to understand this conflict, it is essential to listen to multiple narrative...s, question biases, and strive for a deeper understanding of the complexities involved. Eylon Levy, an Israeli government spokesperson, offers insights into the complexities surrounding the Israel conflict, the aftermath of the October 7th attack, the role of media in reporting the conflict, and the Israeli government's efforts to take down Hamas and prevent future harm to the Israeli people. We also discuss the challenges of negotiating with terrorists, the role of Qatar in the conflict, and the difficulties in obtaining accurate information from Gaza due to Hamas' control. What we discuss: (0:05:56) - Israeli government spokesperson, Elon Levy, shares his experience of being the face of Israel in the media (0:11:19) - The aftermath of the October 7th attack, including the shock and resilience of Israeli society and the alarming level of anti-Semitism and media bias against Israel (0:23:07) - The ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, the thorny issue of negotiating with terrorists, and the harrowing circumstances surrounding hostage releases (0:35:56) - The diverse origins of Israeli citizens, the historical significance of reclaiming their ancestral homeland, and the need for accountability for countries harboring terrorists (0:48:05) - The complexities of humanitarian aid in Gaza and the Palestinian refugee situation, the role of media in reporting the conflict, and the difficulties in obtaining accurate information from Gaza due to Hamas' control (0:59:00) - Elon Levy discusses theories surrounding Hamas' actions and Israel's response (1:03:13) - The recent escalation of violence, the rise of anti-Semitism, the importance of bringing peace and safety to the region, and the role of media in shaping public perception Find more from Jen: Website: https://www.jennifercohen.com/ Instagram: @therealjencohen Books: https://www.jennifercohen.com/books Speaking: https://www.jennifercohen.com/speaking-engagement Learn more from Eylon Levy: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/eylonalevy/ X: https://twitter.com/EylonALevy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I got his Tony Robbins you're listening to Habitson Hussle, Crescent.
Welcome to Habitson Hussle.
We have Elon Levy on the podcast today who is, and is basically you're the Israeli government
spokesperson.
Is that an official title that I can say that you have?
One of a team.
I'm an Israeli government spokesman and I'm joined by a few other veterans who are putting
up a good fight.
Thank you for being here, by the way. I was actually very excited to speak with you.
I know you've done 400 interviews already today, so it's very late. There's 10pm there, so I appreciate you being here.
And talking to me in my audience about the catastrophe that's happening where you are in Israel.
Before we get into all the nitty gritty of all the things
I want to talk to you about, I find it very interesting
that October 6th, you weren't even doing this job.
You weren't a spokesperson, you weren't in media necessarily.
What were you doing before everything happened
on October 7th?
On October 7th, I was a private citizen.
I had a background in media.
I worked as a news anchor in Israeli public television
and I-24 news as well, both anchoring in English. In the past two years, I was also the international media adviser to the president of Israel, Isaac Herzog, a position I finished last spring.
But on the 7th of October, I was a private citizen, couldn't believe that the earthquake and the cataclysm that we experienced
with that massacre would have me a week later on international television and radio making
the case for Israel and trying to fight our corner on the airwaves as we deal with the
aftermath of that horrific massacre on October 7th and push the head with our campaign to
destroy Hamas in response to that massacre so that it can never hurt our people again.
How did you become this face up?
I think that everyone now pretty much recognizes, especially if you're a Jewish person,
recognizes your face as the, maybe you don't say you're the official spokesperson, but
it all intents and purposes, that's what I think if you as and most people would, how did
you become that person? Is it because you were an anchor for, like you said, some of these broadcast stations
in Israel or who kind of put this upon you to be this guy?
Yeah, a very surreal twist in the story, especially considering everything that Israel had been
through over the past year, October 7th, I woke up like everyone else in the country to
the sound of rocket sirens at 7.30 in the morning having to run down three stories underground
with all of our neighbours because suddenly we were under attack and Hamas was firing rockets
from the Gaza Strip. And for the first 2448 hours the whole country was still in shock,
literally in shock trying to digest what had happened and come to terms with the
extent of those atrocities. And then very quickly as Rayleigh society came together and mobilized,
and people started doing whatever they could, donating food and socks and toothpaste for
soldiers, going to deliver food parcels to patients in hospitals, and Rayleigh society is incredibly
resilient. It bounces back very quickly because it's used to dealing with big traumas.
This was a huge trauma and it bounced back in a big way.
And so everyone found themselves contributing in whatever way they could.
And with my own background as a TV news anchor and as a former presidential adviser as
well, I said, right, we have to make the case for Israel.
We have to explain what is happening.
So I set up this little mini studio at home, put out a tweet saying, I'm available for TV interviews. I used to work for the president.
Interview me, I'm for about a week. I found myself giving interviews to news stations around the
world. Mostly in India, they're very interested in our story here. And then about a week later,
Israel is a very small country. Everyone knows everyone. So through connections and offer reaches me, whether I want to get involved officially, whether
prime minister's office making the case for Israel, everything here very much on the
flight, the interview process went, do you speak English? Yes. Do you have a tie? Yes.
Okay, you're a government spokesman. Now, good luck.
Oh, yes.
No, I'm exaggerating. No, you're not. good luck. But the following day I already find myself on television with a stripe saying
Israeli government spokesman, which was a surreal twist. But here we are. There was an Israel
before October 7th. There's an Israel after October 7th. And I'm very glad that as a society, given
all the polarization and division that we had over the last year,
people were able to drop everything and say, now we are dealing with a genuinely existential
crisis. This is not the time to argue. It's the time to come together, to close ranks,
and to defeat the evil terrorists who just perpetrated the deadliest massacre of Jews
since the Holocaust, took 240 hostages into Gaza and are telling us they want to do it all over again.
I mean, there's so much to unpack there.
I used to surprise because you've been speaking to so many different outlets.
You said India is one of them that's been very interested in this,
but you have been speaking to everyone around the world.
Have you been surprised about how people have actually responded in respect to October
semis.
I mean, to be honest with you, I actually have been pretty shocked at the...
What shocked you?
Well, I'll tell you what shocked me.
I think the level of anti-Semitism, a lot of the mainstream media, not kind of showing
the reality of what's happening.
They have not been very pro-Israel. It's been shocking to me,
the amount of slants and propaganda. And I would wonder if it was shocking to you,
or you kind of are not as surprised as most of, I guess, me and a lot of the people I know are.
I think one of the most shocking things after the October 7th,
Massacre was the number of people who celebrated it. That's what I'm saying.
Yeah, as an act of resistance and liberation, as if rape could ever be a tool of resistance,
as if burning little babies can ever be an act of liberation and the protest that we saw
around the world was sparked not by Israel's military campaign.
It was sparked by the initial massacre.
It was sparked by the initial massacre, They were sparked by the initial massacre,
which was celebrated by people who have spent so long thoroughly dehumanizing Jews and Israelis.
And I mean dehumanizing because to tear down a poster of a hostage, especially a child,
especially a baby, you have to really dehumanize that person to believe they don't deserve that basic mercy,
to believe that they can't possibly be a victim because they belong to a broader people.
You have consistently demonized and said nasty things about and are now glorifying the violence
against them.
So that was shocking.
And I remember that one of the first signs of the magnitude of the crisis was how many liberal progressives of people who identify as being very much on the left
spent October 7th not only being shocked by what Hamas did, but being shocked by the cynical
lack of sympathy from people they thought were meant to be on their sides. Fellow academics,
fellow people in the human rights industry,
who had just witnessed these horrific crimes
against humanity, the unspeakably barbaric savagery
of Hamas, and people found ways to defend it,
and to justify it.
And that was really horrifying.
And that is something that I think,
even after this current conflict goes away and ends,
and it will end with an Israeli victory
that's the only way that this can happen.
That's going to be an open saw in people are going to remember
the jubilation and celebration there was when Jews were being massacred
on October 7th and the way that people justified that
and fitted into their own twisted warped ideologies.
But even speaking, that's a whole other thing.
I mean, the celebrations that were happening on the streets
and the protesting and all that stuff,
I've been just shook by that.
And so is a lot of other people.
What I'm even referring to is just the overall,
the mass media.
I mean, you've been even asked some crazy questions,
some outrageous questions from major media outlets,
where I'm listening while I'm in the kitchen.
And I've
done a double take many times.
Sometimes the questions are so crazy that I only understand when I rewatch it because
it's so crazy that I don't believe while I'm hearing the question that that's actually
what's being asked.
I was asked, last week, we have CCTV footage of hostages being abducted into the Sheeper hospital on the 7th of October.
Do you have CCTV footage of the medical treatment they may have received in that hospital?
Are you serious? Like, yes, yes.
Yes, just having an interview with Voice of America TV
and they asked me the same question that I was asked on an Irish channel a few days ago
saying that Hamas has been trying to give you back your hostages for the last five weeks. The deal has been on the table. Why has Israel
only just come around to it, which is astonishing. Obviously, if we had a realistic option to
get those children, to get those babies out of Gaza five weeks ago, we would have done it.
It's Hamas that's responding to pressure, to unrelenting military pressure from Israel.
It's not that Israel had to be convinced to bring back these babies from the inhumane conditions
they're being held in, but yes, some truly bonkers questions.
But I have to say, a lot of the media have been very, very good, continuing over a month
and a half after the massacre to shine light on a lot of the stories, on the atrocities.
CNN, for example, has been speaking a lot lately about the use
of rape and sexual violence as tools of war during the October 7th massacre. This is still a
Catholic Lismic moment that is going to continue bringing forth new stories, new testimonies, and it's
important that the media cover them. You know, I worked in news. I understand that people want fresh images. And as images come out of Gaza, the news cycle changes because they want to present
the new images. But personally, I've been shocked sometimes waiting to go on air. Sometimes
I can be sitting in the chair 10 minutes listening to the broadcast with no mention of the October
7th massacre. And when I pointed out to the news anchors, they'll say, oh, we've discussed that.
We've reported on that.
But it's the immediate context.
It's the immediate context with which you have to understand why this war is being fought.
That it's not just another round of fighting.
We are fighting this war because Hamas committed the deadliest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust
abducted 240 people and told us it wants to do it again.
And we're fighting because we cannot abandon our hostages in Gaza or leave Hamas free
to reoffend in a media coverage that tries to tell the story of what's happening, even
of the humanitarian situation inside the Gaza Strip, but doesn't frame it in the context
that Hamas launched this war with these barbaric savagery is not presenting the full picture. In fact, it's not even
presenting the picture. It's presenting something so warped and twisted that it doesn't even approximate
the truth and reality. So why is it that they're doing it? There's actual footage, there's actual
video and audio recordings, and yet they're still sugar-coating it and being biased towards a terrorist organization.
That is where I'm extremely perplexed and I think a lot of people are.
I think recently I heard someone ask you the question about like, do Israelis not value
Palestinian life as much because of the three to one hostage negotiation?
Which again, like the amount of composure that you have to have to listen
to this garbage. I mean, my question was really to you, like, I actually can't believe
that we're even giving three terrorists for one innocent hostage. It doesn't even seem
real. Like that we have to, why? Why are we, in your opinion, I know Israelis, we value every life. We've given away a thousand
host terrorists for one life. That was what seven years ago for another situation.
Gail actually back back back in the early 2010s. Exactly. Now why did we, in this, in this hostage
negotiation, was it the pressure we had from the world or
can you talk about that a little bit?
Yeah, that was a surreal question that I got asked on Sky News and has become absolutely
viral.
All the Israeli news channels, news websites sent their own pushings and I can't tell you
how many interviews I've done in Hebrew where they've replayed that moment and the exaggerated eyebrows that I did.
New Sanca spoke this morning to a hostage negotiator and he suggested that the fact that Israel
is willing to release three Palestinian prisoners for every hostage suggests it values Palestinians'
lives less.
Which really was an astonishing accusation because if we could get one for one, obviously we'd
do that.
Obviously we would prefer to get all 240 of our hostages back without releasing a single astonishing accusation because if we could get one for one, obviously we do that. Obviously
we would prefer to get all 240 of our hostages back without releasing a single Palestinian
for zero. For zero, especially if releasing more of them than we're getting hostages makes
them feel under value. That's the last thing that we would want. So, you know, it's so absurd
though. Like how does someone even come to that conclusion? I think people take facts and they fit them in the stories that make sense in their own head.
And if you are starting with a position that says Israel is ultimately always at fault,
Israel is callous about Palestinian lives, it doesn't really care about civilian lives.
Despite everything that we've been saying, going blue in the face,
trying to get civilians to evacuate from populated areas that
are going to be a suffer in this war because Hamas has embedded its infrastructure underneath them,
despite all of our efforts, despite everything we do to explain that. If you're still convinced
that Israel doesn't value Palestinian lives, well then obviously something like that makes sense
in your head. And obviously it sounds bonkers when you understand the truth about the efforts that Israel has been making.
Really unprecedented in the history of warfare to try to get the other side civilians out of harm's way,
despite Hamas' best attempts to keep them in harm's way, and use them as human shields.
You know, maybe it's because Hamas' strategy I'm thinking out loud now.
Maybe it's because Hamas' strategy is so evil and so sick and so twisted to build
its tunnels and its weapons silos, under homes, under schools, under hospitals. But people are
struggling to believe that that is genuinely Hamas is strategy, that Hamas is genuinely willing
to sacrifice. In its words, millions of civilians, that it doesn't give a damn
about them and is happy to see them die because that's propaganda for them and because that
makes Israel look bad.
I mean, that's just so monstrous what I just described that I can understand why people
don't believe it's true and it's easier to believe a story that says that Israel is
being nasty or callous or doesn't care about these people's lives.
And we've just got to continue presenting the truth, telling our story,
explaining the reality on the ground and hoping we can shift the needle.
Do you get information before let's say anybody else?
I want to know what's going to happen to the rest of the hostages.
What happened to that woman, the mother that was supposed to be let go with her child,
and then of course, Hamas reneged on that part of the deal.
No, it's not making stories the such heartbreaking stories. Look, I'm plugged into the all the
various government ministries and advisors to make sure that we always have the best and most
accurate information that our answers are coordinated and approved. But I don't have secret special
knowledge in advance. My job is to go on TV and say things that are already in the public domain and explain
them.
So maybe it wouldn't be wise to tell me any secrets in case I forget what's meant to be
a secret.
I'm allowed to share with Jake Tapper on CNN.
Right.
So then what happens in a situation like that?
I just mentioned about the mom, the mother that was supposed to be released and then wasn't, right?
Like you're dealing with, again, you're negotiating with terrorists.
I always assumed and I always thought that the main rule of law was never to negotiate with terrorists, right?
It just might rule until they have your baby.
Until they have your, exactly.
What, but what made Israel do like to negotiate I mean negotiate this time was it was their pressure from the world to be doing this because at the end of the day we are giving 150 terrorists probably more attempted suicide people who are tempted murderers back back over there who are who are out there saying
they're going to be doing it again. They can't wait for the time that they can do more
violence. I mean, the world is getting scarier and scarier. You know, only mean by the moment.
So can we just can you just met you to kind of touch upon that a little bit like are we
to get back the rest of the hostages? Are we going to have to give away even more?
I mean, it seems like that's where we're going.
You know, Israel has a history of some truly heroic
hostage rescues.
The most famous example was in Antebi, in Uganda, in 1977.
A plane was hijacked.
It was taken to Uganda, then under Ida means regime.
They kept the Jews and the Israelis, and were demanding
the release of a ridiculous number of Palestinian terrorists.
And Israel shocked the world by flying in the dead of
night to an airport in the middle of Africa.
They dressed up, they took a mock card that looked like Ida
means car.
They swooped into the airport and they managed to rescue the hostages with only one fatality on the Israeli side who was Yoni Netanyahu, the current Prime Minister's brother.
Now, I was asked in another interview, why haven't you got the hostages out yet?
Now, I wish there were an option to swoop in, to send in the special forces, ab sailed down a rope, smashed through a window,
grabbed the hostages and get out.
But that's not an option here,
because Hamas has spent a long time planning
to abduct our children.
And it's holding them, we believe, underground,
in tunnels that are impossible to access
because they are booby trapped.
They're not all being held in the same places.
Families were separated,
not all of them are held by Hamas, some are held by Palestinian Islamic Jihad or other factions
or mafia groups. And in fact, we have Hamas now saying, we can't actually, this is horrific.
We can't find all of your hostages. We can't find all of your women and children. And I don't
know whether that's true, which is horrific or a lie, which is equally horrific.
But if we could have swooped in with a helicopter and picked them up and taken them, we would have.
The fact is Hamas has been planning for a long time to commit this unspeakable crime against humanity of abducting our babies and children and innocent people
and holding them hostage in the Gaza Strip. And that's why from day one, Israel's strategy has been to try to force Hamas to release the hostages and that's what we've done through unrelenting
military pressure. That air offensive, that ground offensive, in addition to advancing the
goal of destroying Hamas' infrastructure so that by the end of this war it doesn't exist
and it can't hurt us again. That ground offensive has also created the conditions for getting our hostages back.
Because we've had Hamas begging for a breather.
We have been clobbering Hamas.
And after it's come under so much pressure, it's at least, and we want a few days to catch
our breaths.
Please, take hostages in exchange for time.
So that's part of the agreement we find ourselves in.
Now, a four-day hostage release pause in exchange for 50 women and children.
We've then lined up enough Palestinian prisoners, all violent criminals, by the way.
And whatever the media is reporting about women and children, half of them are men.
Half of them are males, aged 18 and over.
Okay? We've lined up enough of these prisoners to facilitate another five days of a hostage release pause
If Hamas wants to give us back another 10 hostages a day for each day of the pause
If Hamas wants to spend the next five days giving us back another 50 hostages will have a pause as soon as Hamas
Stopps giving us back hostages. We're going to continue thumping it until it begs us to give us back hostages the next time.
So how did you even choose the 150 murderers
to give them in the first place?
Not you personally.
I know that you're not in there.
I'll take this one and that one.
I can't comment on the sensitive negotiations
that took place behind the scenes.
They were led by the head of Mossad
through the Cateries, through the Americans and the Egyptians. There are many considerations taking place behind the scenes, they were led by the head of Mossad, through the cataries,
through the Americans and the Egyptians.
There are many considerations taking place behind the scenes, but those were secret discussions
and I can't comment.
You can't comment on that.
And so you can, your price, I can't comment it.
I can't tell you, but what I can't tell you is because we have seen some really appalling
attempts to create symmetry as if Israel is releasing women and children and the Palestinians are releasing women and children.
Okay, you're even now.
First of all, no, the people we're releasing, half of them are men.
They are males over the age of 18.
You can go through the database and check it yourself.
The rest of them all in jail on violent offenses, attempted stabbing, attempted shootings.
There's one woman in there who has become the icon of the
prison release because she's disfigured. She's disfigured because she tried to set off a car bomb.
And it exploded early and seriously, Injular Police Officer and blew off her nose, but that's
why she was in jail. And you can't compare the prisoners who are in jail because they are
dangerous violent criminals. To the innocent children who were abducted from their beds
on October 7th by the death squirts
that massacred and tortured and raped their neighbors.
And that is really infuriating,
sometimes to see in the media that attempt
to create a false symmetry.
Oh, these are Israeli parents who are happy to get their kids back.
These are Palestinian parents who are happy to get their kids back. These are Palestinian parents who are happy to get their kids back.
No, nothing, no comparison.
You can't be cannot compare the innocent people who are abducted on October 7th
to the really vile individuals that we're releasing because it's the only way
to get our innocent civilians out of Hamas captivity.
Also, I find it interesting, that woman that you're talking about the poster child
for the 150 terrorists that are being released or have been released.
She had the gall to ask Israel, I heard, for plastic surgery to fix her face.
I'm the dictionary definition of Hutzbeth.
Hutzbeth?
Your nose in an attempted car bombing and then asking the victims to pay for your cosmetic
surgery.
I, it's unbelievable. And I will say that, again, what I find another thing that's interesting
is it's not apples to apples. And when I post even on my, on my social media, like the difference
between an innocent baby hostage and a, and a murderer terrorist who's being swapped out. The amount of venom that I get, like how dare you?
It's a, you know, these are innocent,
these are innocent women and children
that Israel is holding, even with information out there.
I'm not the first one to be posting it.
It's out there in the, in the,
is I guys, right, that these are people
who are attempted car bombers,
people who attempted to stop,
people who stabbed innocent as really women
in front of their children.
And yet with all the people.
The heroes, is it the heroes of many of the people
you're arguing against?
Who think that these acts of violence against civilians,
against police officers are legitimate,
legitimate acts of political violence?
It's, I don't know how you argue with a twisted worldview like that.
I don't think you can.
I think that, I don't know if it's ignorance, if they didn't see them, they don't want
to, like you said earlier, so vicious that your brain doesn't want to believe it, so
that you go to the next thing.
The next thing is, one positive thing about this current, awful situation is that perhaps that movement that is so enamored with
violence against Jews and Israelis and finds all sorts of twisted ideological ways to justify it.
The mask has come off. The mask has come off. I remember for years as a student activist talking
about the link between anti-Semitism and anti anti-zionism, and talking about how this
movement on the radical end of academia was very problematic, and maybe now the evidence is out
there for everyone to see, and they understand what damage these ideological fringes can do.
At least that's my hope, because if that kind of thinking takes over these institutions, then the
free world is really lost. I think the free world is very lost right now.
Look what's happening in the American.
Do you know what's happening in the college campuses
around the US?
I mean, you don't know.
Well, I wonder whether you're thinking what I'm thinking,
but I'm interested to hear from you.
I've been telling the perspective from Israel.
I want to hear the perspective from the US as well.
I mean, the amount of venom and hatred and vitriol towards a lot of Jewish people, Jewish
students don't feel safe. The professors here are saying it was like exhilarating to see
what happened on October 7th. People are dating.
On the most prestigious institutions.
And that's going to say, this is not like like little little bowdunk colleges. These are like the
I the biggest Ivy leagues in the world Harvard and Cornell and you see a let these are like the majors.
Very because the these student activists are tomorrow's law interns and
Law partners are the biggest firms in 10 years and they're running for Congress in 15. That is why yeah
That's what I'm saying.
I do know how it's happening here and how it's happening.
I guess people didn't realize that there was so much money coming out of Qatar funding
these places.
And then that brings back another thing.
Qatar is the mediator between Israel and Hamas, but isn't Qatar also protecting Hamas and funding Hamas?
I'm really, can you explain
what's going on with that?
As far as, you know, the very problematic role,
and when this war began, the Prime Minister was very clear,
Hamas is ISIS.
Hamas is worse than ISIS,
and just as no country in the world would think
to give shelter to ISIS
terrorists, to host them on their own soil, to accept diplomatic delegations from them,
to have diplomatic links with them, no country in the world should harbor Hamas.
And we've also been very clear, every Hamas terrorist wherever they are is a dead man walking.
In response to the October 7th massacre, we're going to come after them,
and we're going to settle a score.
Because we cannot allow that evil to roam the earth
a day longer after the horrifying atrocities we saw
on October 7th, not the first Hamas terror attacks,
of course, coming off on the back of 20 years
of rocket fire from the Gaza Strip,
30 years of suicide bombings and other horrific attacks,
but it was the straw that broke the camel's back.
And we said, that's it, we're going after Hamas.
We simply cannot live next to this evil organization.
And we think that any country that is giving harbor to that organization
should be held to account.
Even though they're the ones who are mediating
and doing the negotiations,
at the moment, there is playing role in facilitating that.
And we hope that it will continue to play a role
and get all of the hostages out.
That is our demand.
We want to get everyone out and we'll go through
the channels that exist in order to do so.
What are some of the, can you give us some of the misconceptions
that are out there that we should know in the, in the West and the, you know, in America and Canada, wherever
that maybe we're not aware of? Are there some or a couple that you can think of that you can?
You know, we're, we're storytelling people. We tell ourselves stories and we understand the world
and crisis taking place halfway around the globe through the stories that we tell ourselves about ourselves.
And so often we see the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians
being described through a lens that has nothing to do with the reality here
and everything to do with the reality of the people telling those stories.
The United States, for example, is deeply concerned quite rightly
about the question of race after the brutal history of racial oppression and segregation
and subjugation in the United States. Race is a sensitive and very important historical
question in the United States. And then people take that question of white and black people
and apply that to a reality in Israel
where it simply makes no sense.
It is bizarre for us as Israelis
to hear ourselves being described as white.
When more than half of the country traces its ancestry
to the Arab world, my grandparents came from Iraq. This is a country
that has absorbed Jewish immigration from Morocco, and Libya, and Algeria, and Tunisia,
and Egypt, and Syria, and Lebanon, and Yemen, and Iraq, and Iran. We are not white. We brought
in, we took in Jews from Ethiopia. Israel is the only country that's ever organized in airlift
in order to take desperate people in Africa
and take them on planes to another country
because we believe this is their homeland.
And we're suddenly the white people
in this story against the Palestinians, that's one example.
And the other one is colonialism.
I have no idea how Hamas is project to extend an Islamic caliphate over the whole land of Israel ever became a
totem of the anti-colonial movement because it is Zionism. It is the ideology of
building a national home for the Jewish people in their ancestral homeland
Zionism that is the most successful example of decolonization anywhere in the world,
certainly in the Middle East. Out of the rubble of multiple Muslim empires across the Middle East
from the Atlas Mountains to the Zagreb Mountains, there is only one minority, one non-Arab Muslim
minority, that was able to build a state of its own and claim its own sovereign
dignity and equality and independence.
The Druze couldn't do it, the Kurds couldn't do it.
It's only the Jewish people and where did they do it?
Literally in our ancestral homeland, in the land where we're speaking Hebrew, the language
that was spoken here 2,000 years ago.
That was the creation of Israel was a revolt against empire.
It was a revolt against colonialism.
It was an indigenous people reclaiming their right
to live in their ancestral homeland.
So for us when we hear people taking
an American lens about white settlers
and applying it to a reality of lots of brown people
reclaiming land that is their own ancestral
historical homeland, even though the whole region is Arab Muslim countries. And we're the only
tiny, not, is bizarre. And I think it's important to put that on the table and say that when we
make the case for Israel, this isn't about pointing out little facts because people sort
facts within stories that make sense for them. The problem isn't the facts, the problem is the
stories. The stories that make sense. And I The problem isn't the fact, the problem is the stories,
the stories that make sense.
And I think when people come to Israel
and they travel around Israel on the market,
in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and they look around,
they go, hey, you know, this isn't Brooklyn,
this isn't just Brooklyn with more sunshine.
It's very different and you just cannot take
those foreign lenses to try to understand our conflict
because you do an injustice to us,
but you also do an injustice to yourself because you're not understanding the world
and the way that it works.
Absolutely. That's very well said.
Could we talk a little bit about Hamas and the tactics that they've been using
to really kind of sway the public's opinion and can you debunk them for us?
Because I think people don't understand as clearly as they may,
they should of what they're doing and how they're doing it. bunk them for us because I think people don't understand as clearly as they may, they
should of what they're doing and how they're doing it.
Like how they are doing it.
I think a lot of people who look at the situation in the Gaza Strip now haven't been paying
close attention to what has been happening there over the last 16 years.
Hamas spent 16 years since its violent takeover in 2007 following Israel's withdrawal from the Gaza Strip
18 years ago Hamas has spent those 16 years deliberately embedding itself
underneath civilian areas with one goal in mind to launch attacks against the Israeli people
and then hide behind women and children in order to escape Israel's
response.
As Israeli soldiers have been going through the Gaza Strip, just like the Allies marching
through Nazi Germany in 1945, they have been uncovering evidence of Hamas' war crimes.
We've found a tunnel shaft poking out under a child's bed.
We've found missiles under a girl's mattress.
There's a sign on the door that says baby girl,
you lift the mattress and there are missiles inside.
We found rocket propelled grenades in a baby's crib.
We found mosques that had been converted into weapons factories.
We found schools and classrooms being used to store weapons.
We found booby trap cables that lead into mosques and to clinics.
And most grotesque of all, we have exposed for the whole world the terror command and control center that Hamas built underneath the Shefa hospital.
People have spent a month telling us it's the new Saddam WMDs.
They don't exist.
We evacuated the hospital, we uncovered evidence of those tunnels underneath the hospital.
Now why did Hamas build tunnels under a hospital?
Why did Hamas build rooms?
From which it could leech from the hospital's own electricity into its command center.
So that Hamas terrorists can go outside, fire rockets at Israel, and then
run back underneath the hospital and be safe from retaliation. So we have evidence that
they held hostages that as well to hide them underneath the hospital. Now, the international
community has been complicit with Hamas' strategy of human shields. The World Health Organization
has said nothing about Hamas putting a command center under a hospital. The Red Cross has said nothing.
Here's how absurd it is.
The World Health Organization ran a risk assessment
at the hospital last weekend.
And they didn't think to mention once that at the same time,
there were soldiers outside digging up Hamas tunnels
under the hospital.
It's insane.
And Israel's having to deal with things
when people say, well, the UN says,
well, you know, there are a lot of things
the UN doesn't say. And of things the UN doesn't say.
And the things the UN doesn't say,
because those agencies are covering up for Hamas,
that's also really galling.
So Hamas has spent this time embedding itself
under civilian areas in order to escape Israel's response
when they commit atrocities against our people.
And the damage and destruction that we're seeing in Gaza
is a result of Israel having to target that infrastructure that Hamas built under people's houses.
And to do that, ask people to get out of the way because we don't want them to be heard.
But we still have to get to the infrastructure that they hid under their homes, or they'll
use it to perpetrate another October 7th of the massacre, like they're telling us that
they want to do again and again and again.
But why are they?
Why is the UN the Red Cross?
Why are they covering up for Hamas, which is a terrorist organization?
This is the part that is a disconnect from my brain.
I can't wrap my head around this.
Why are these major world organizations covering up for a terrorist organization as opposed to basically siding
with people like Israel who really do have the best interest who are constantly just
defending themselves.
Not once in a people look back in history, Israel doesn't ever start a war.
They just defend themselves and then they have to defend themselves for defending themselves. Yeah, yeah. There's a world of difference between doing things that feel good and doing things
that do good. And it's much easier to do things that feel good. Doing things that feel good is
saying we must send more humanitarian aid into Gaza. We should support the poor refugees who are living
there. Doing good is asking, wait, why are there still people who are classified as
refugees in the Gaza Strip? They were never displaced from anywhere. Their parents
were never displaced from anywhere. Their grandparents were probably never displaced
anywhere. Only the Palestinians get to hand down the title of refugee down the
generations because they have a different definition of refugee
from everyone else in the world. They have their own refugee agency called Onra. An Onra is
effectively a branch of Hamas. It's a branch of the Palestinian National Movement. Onra, the UN
Refugee Agency for Palestinians, you can check this afterwards, has not tweeted about Hamas
Palestinians, you can check this afterwards. Has not tweeted about Hamas once ever,
which is shocking.
They've never mentioned Hamas
because it is entirely complicit.
And so Hamas can take its casualty figures,
pass them on to Onra, which is a Palestinian
man almost entirely by Palestinians.
And then that gets paraded by the media
as the United Nations said.
No, it was said by a refugee agency
that is completely common-dead
by the Palestinian National Movement
to advance their war against Israel.
Now, trying to dismantle that,
trying to tell the Palestinians
you need to accept that Israel is real
and it exists and you need to build houses in Gaza
and live there and live next to Israel.
That's difficult. That's difficult to do. It would do good, but it's difficult to do.
Trying to pass on the bark and saying, oh, we'll donate more money to refugees because they're poor people
while keeping in place. This architecture of jihad and of extremism, that's something that feels good
and it's easier to do something that feels good. And so I think even if you are not talking about agencies that are openly complicit
with Hamas for openly taking its side, and as we're seeing on campuses around the world,
there are people who openly take Hamas's side. Genuinely trying to solve this conflict,
genuinely trying to address the root cause, which is the Palestinian refusal to accept a Jewish state
anywhere within the borders of the land of Israel. That's something that's very, very difficult to do.
And sending more money to refugees and blaming Israel every time something goes wrong,
that's easy to do, and people do what it's easy to do.
I mean, it's remarkable. Like the fact that the Shippah of hospital like that was not reported on it like are doesn't this make
Asa's biggest open secret it was such an open secret that it had been reported on in
2014 the Washington Post published a story saying the alchiefer hospital has long been known to serve as the de facto headquarters of Hamas in Gaza
This was known. But too many
people who want to deny Israel its rights to defend itself, because they align with the
Palestinian ideology, had a vested interest to deny that Hamas was committing this crime
against humanity, of using a hospital to shield its own military infrastructure,
and then when the World Health Organization and the Red Cross are willing to go along with it,
is it any wonder that good people think that maybe Israel is making it up?
Because the organizations that have UN on their business card haven't said anything.
But that's why we are continuing not only to fight Hamas,
but also to expose the evidence of its crimes against humanity,
to expose the truth,
so that we can shift the needle and make people understand.
The extent of Hamas' evil strategy of using human shields and the complicity,
the complicity of the international agencies that turned a blind eye to it and played long with it.
How about the complicity of a while ago, maybe now, a couple weeks back, two, three weeks back, we saw all
these images of photojournalists, like from CNN, Rooters, AP, who were there on October
7, who were like videotaping it and like there, like either waiting for Hamas to come or like
with them alongside.
How come those people are not considered a complicit with war crimes?
Like how are they getting away with this?
You have a background in media and working for this.
Like how is this possible?
And was that confirmed to be accurate?
These were really shocking allegations that some of the stringers may have known in advance
that the massacre was happening and if they did some of them thinkers may have known in advance that the massacre was happening,
and if they did some of them find themselves
inside Israeli territory.
But I think the story is bigger than that.
The media needs stories, it needs information,
and sometimes in order to get stories and information,
there are sacrifices you're willing to make.
And in order to get information out of Gaza,
you have to pretend that Hamas does not control
the flow of information out of Gaza.
There is no free press in Gaza. There is no such thing as a freelance journalist in Gaza.
Hamas is an authoritarian regime that decides what comes out. That's why you've never seen an
image of a dead Palestinian terrorist being pulled out of the rubble because Hamas doesn't want you to see it and because none of the journalists who are working for
the journalists who are working for international media outlets are going to film something that
Hamas doesn't want the world to see.
They are either on Hamas's side or they just know that they're not free to tell the whole
story. And I don't know the extent to which the news bureaus in the West know that the information
that is coming out is not the full truth, that so much of it is being self-sensored.
Whether they're not aware of that or they know that and say that's just the price in
order to get images out of Gaza because those images bring ratings even though we have serious
questions about the veracity or at least the possibility to put things in proper context.
Because if those journalists quote unquote journalists, we're also sending back footage of rockets
being fired from inside civilian areas. Suddenly Israel's argument about Hamas using human
shield sounds a lot stronger. And if those journalists quote unquote were sending back images of Hamas terrorists being
pulled out of the rubble, Israel's claim that it's targeting terrorists and trying to
get civilians out of harm's way would also seem much stronger.
And those cases are being undermined because Hamas controls the flow of information out
of the gas strip.
And because that authoritarian regime and that control
of information is not put in proper context.
And you just end up reinforcing those narratives that it must be Israel's fault, strong, violent,
aggressive Israel against the poor innocent Palestinians.
Repeat, repeat, repeat.
Yeah.
So were they working for CNN, AP, and rude, were they working for these organizations or
they not working for them?
That's what I'm still confused like from your answer.
There were several camera people who were free lunch.
I don't know whether they were retained on a contract or whether they were paying her
job basis, but had been contractually connected to the major news outlets.
I'm not sure the specific allegations who was alleged to have been inside Israeli territory
who only took pictures as they abducted Israelis and took them inside on that awful day
on October 7th, but I think that was really a wake-up call about the information we get
out of the Gaza Strip and the need to be skeptical about it because you know that an authoritarian
regime is not allowing journalists or anyone to to tell the full story, even if they're not actively co-opted into Hamas's struggle and
into Hamas's narrative.
But if they knew prior, if anybody knew prior, shouldn't they be like, it shouldn't
the FBI or shouldn't they be in jail?
Where are they?
Where are these people now?
Does anyone know?
In you, in advance, I don't personally know,
but if these people knew in advance
that Hamas was planning to perpetrate these atrocities,
then they definitely need to be held accountable.
Now, the news agencies to their credits say,
we had absolutely no prior knowledge.
We were blindsided like everyone else,
but I think they do need to ask serious questions of all of the people they are hiring
inside the Gaza Strip to check their affiliations and possible connections to terrorist organizations
and asked tough questions about how do we know that their camera is being pointed at what the real story is
and it's not that Hamas is standing behind the camera saying, we want you to point the camera at this
because this is the image we want the world to see because this is what's
going to make Israel look bad.
I mean, yeah, I mean, that's me is just that when that story came out, I was like, well,
how are these people getting away with it?
It doesn't make, there's so much what's going on, I guess, just as an outsider, of course,
looking in that's just so perplexing, right, that people are getting away with certain
things and the way the world has really flipped upside down in my opinion in a lot of ways.
And your job is quite difficult, I would imagine. But have you been asked this question,
because I know that this is one of the things again, is Ike's, how this even happened to
the level it did, because Israel is so known for its security and its high level
intelligence and the fact that like nobody was even available for seven, eight, nine
hours to even go and help the civilians that were being raped and pillaged.
What happened?
What was the disconnect in that whole thing?
Where was everybody?
This was such a horrific fiasco on every single level and when this war is over, we're committed
to investigating that and working out, was it because of specific intelligence failures,
was there a problem with the whole security architecture? How did this happen? And that's a question we're still asking in shock. How did this happen?
One theory that's been raised is that, you know, for many years, Israel wanted to believe, perhaps,
that Hamas could be contained. That yes, Hamas keeps saying it wants to murder the Jews, and yes,
it would do that if it had an
opportunity, but we've built a very strong ring of defenses around the Gaza Strip. Hamas is
interested in remaining in power. If it attacks us, it knows that we would have to retaliate. And so
Hamas is deterred. Hamas is deterred. Maybe it would in its own world of streams, but now it
wouldn't there. And Hamas seems to have taken steps
to convince Israelis of that,
and mislead them into thinking that it was deterred.
All the while it was planning this horrific,
horrific, horrific tragedy.
And when this war is over,
we as a country are going to be opening up
some very painful wounds and painful questions,
as we ask, how did this happen? How, how, you know,
we're still aghast and asking, how, how, how, how is it possible that thousands of terrorists
could spill over the border and abduct and burn and torture and mutilate and rape for hours and
hours on end? How did that happen? How is it possible it took so long to put a lid on it?
And that will happen after the war.
We'll interrogate how that happened.
And for now, we're focusing on winning that war
and making sure that Hamas is removed from power
so that it can never ever hurt our people again.
I also heard that there were people,
some Palestinians that were within Israel
who were helping Hamas by drawing maps for them
and showing them places where they
can cut off communication.
So then people in the idea for in the higher intelligence areas had no access to even know
this was happening.
The atrocities were even happening.
This is the sad thing for a while, Israel had actually been letting intends of thousands
of gossips every day into Israel to work in the hope that if they could go home and give
their families an honest pay and bring up their families in dignity, that would help to
stabilize the situation and they wouldn't want to attack us.
And it's been widely reported that Hamas may have been operating based on information passed on from people inside who had prior knowledge of where everything was inside this Kiputsim
and on October 7th there were also civilians, Palestinian civilians who followed into Israel
and participated in those acts of violence and looting Jewish insight around a horrific story about people who are hiding in their
rocket shelter as they heard a woman cooking in their kitchen and even changing their Netflix
settings to Arabic, which was how long it took for the security services to get back. So yeah,
there are a lot of questions about how wide, how wide this went, how this happened, and
questions about how we prevent this happening again.
Well, well, Elon, I know it's late over there.
I'll wrap it up because I can ask you questions
for another hour, but I won't do that to you.
Well, gladly come back,
but I think you've got more than enough material
for a whole podcast.
Yeah, I think I do.
Thank you.
I appreciate you coming on.
It was really, it was very informative.
And I like I said, I appreciate your time. I know it's late there.
Say on a note to any Jewish visitors, any Jewish listeners you have, we are busy fighting this war
against Hamas, but the question of anti-Semitism around the globe has been a top new story here in
Israel. Everyone here has been horrified just as you have family here in Israel.
We all have family in the diaspora.
And really our hearts are with you in this very
difficult moment.
And hope that YouTube will be able to rebuild
better and stronger out of the current crisis.
Well, thank you.
Yeah, I didn't touch upon the anti-Semitism as much
as I would normally just because I've covered it so many
times or so many people,
I wanted to ask you questions that other people would not have the knowledge base, because they're
not doing what you're doing. So, but I appreciate you saying that, and I wish you peace and safe,
be safe over there, be safe over there. We get all the hostages back home safely,
and let's hope this will end as soon as possible, but ends thoroughly and properly.
Is that thoroughly and properly
is exactly a great way to say it?
I have to finish the job.
We don't have a choice.
And we will.
Thank you very much.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Bye.
Bye. This episode is brought to you by the YAP Media Podcast Network.
I'm Holla Taha, CEO of the award-winning digital media empire YAP Media, and host
of YAP Young & Profiting Podcast, a number one entrepreneurship and self-improvement
podcast where you can listen, learn, and profit.
On Young & Profiting Podcast, I interview the brightest minds in the world and I turn
their wisdom into actionable advice that you can use in your daily life.
Each week we dive into a new topic like the art of side hustles, how to level up your
influence and persuasion and goal setting.
I interview A-list guests on Young & Profiting.
I've got the best guest.
Like the world's number one negotiation expert, Chris Voss,
Shark, Damon John, serial entrepreneur, Alex and Leila Hermosi,
and even movie stars like Matthew McConaughey.
There's absolutely no fluff on my podcast,
and that's on purpose.
Every episode is jam packed with advice
that's gonna push your life forward.
I do my research, I get straight to the point,
and I take things really
seriously. Which is why I'm known as the podcast princess, and how I became one of the top
podcasters in the world in less than five years. Young and profiting podcast is for all ages.
Don't let the name fool you. It's an advanced show. As long as you want to learn and level up,
you will be forever young. So join podcast royalty and subscribe to Young & Profiting podcast. Or, yeah,
like it's often called by my app fam on Apple Spotify Cast Box or wherever you listen
to your podcast.