AS

Ask Haviv Anything

Haviv Rettig Gur

Future of the US-Israel Alliance

From 125: Did Netanyahu misread Trump? With Ross DouthatJun 21, 2026

Excerpt from Ask Haviv Anything

125: Did Netanyahu misread Trump? With Ross DouthatJun 21, 2026 — starts at 0:00

Thank you for joining me. Ross Alphfet, columnist for the New York Times, will be joining me. We're going to discuss the memorandum of undernderstanding between Iran and the United States. It is june eighteenth Thursday. I'm going to mention that again. Just so people know that these are fast developing events. We don't entirely know all the details But we're going to discuss what we know of the MOU where whether Ross thinks it's a good idea or not such a great idea. He comes to the podcast shortly after interviewing Vice President JD Vance, the man who's going to be negotiating the full agreement between Iran and the US. according to the White House's plan for how this is all going to go down. I'm very excited to have someone to discuss all of that with who is an opinion columnist At the New York Times, a very highly regarded one, he also hosts a podcast at the times called Interesting Times. He's the author of seven books about culture, religion, politics, his latest book is believe why everyone should be religious. He is also the film critic for a national review Before we get into it, I want to tell you that this episode has a sponsor, a return sponsor Israel became the startup nation by turning talent into strength and ideas into industries For more than a century, the Technon has trained the engineers, the scientists, the entrepreneurs, who transformed Israel into the startup nation and delivered breakthroughs that changed the world Technian scientists are advancing the next wave of innovation power Israel's next chapter. Israel Engineered by the Testlon Join us visit as d. org slash Rebuild I'd also like to invite everybody who iss listening to us who gets a lot of this out of this podcast, out of this episode, to join our Patreon, our Substack If you're interested in asking the questions that guide the topics we choose to talk about, the people we choose to interview, you do that in that Patreon community or as a subscriber on Substack. You also get to take part in monthly live streams where I answer your questions Live. That's at patreon d. com slash Askhabiv anythingthing or Khiv Gore. sububstack C those links are in the show notes. Ross Stelthed, how are you I'm a little tired Okay, how are you You've been on the road. You Well not not exactly. I I was in New York U an interview with the vice presresident of the United States yesterday, and then my family and I are about to leave for a trip to the United Kingdom. So there's a lot of juggling going on in my home right now How do you assess the U. S. Israel relationship in the wake of this war. We have seen and you've talked, you've written about dramatic shifts on the right on the left capping, you know, years of shifts what do you think is now the state of the relationship Can we call it strained I think I think strained might be the right word We can be stronger than that on this podcast. We got tough. Well but don't I don't know just how I don't know just how strong a word to use right now I mean, I would say that there has been essentially a rolling transformation in U. S. public opinion aboutout Israel goingo back many years, but really I think accelerating in the last few years, especially later in the war in Gaza, accelerated by a lot of different forces inside the U S as well as events in the Middle East And thenen I think the Iran war which Our government didn't want to call a war coursese and essentially brought to a kind of really sharp point. the You know, what had been the critique of the U.S. Israel relationship in the U. S. for a long time mostly from the left sometimes from the right, more from the right lately than before which is that, you know, the US acts in the Middle East on Israel's behalf and I think historically that was relatively weak. because people could look around and see that There were just a lot of different forces in play. when the U.S. was profoundly involved in the Middle East. you know, if you go back to something like The Iraq War Israel's influence was very complicated Israeli elite opinion on the wisdom of the Iraq warar was divided And there were just a lot of other, you know balls that the Bush administration was juggling as it sort of made the case for war and talked itself into the war In this case you had a conflict that started in part because Benjamin Netanyahu Donald Trump seemingly into the idea that you could achieve regime change in Iran fairly rapidly. Now that was not the only reason that Donald Trump decided to go to war And Trump himself is responsible for his own decisions, right?ob Nobody tricked him It was a You know a sort of unique case where you could get reporting on the run up to the war that basically said This was something that Netanyahu had wanted for a long time and he finally talked the U.S. president into it. And so that then Yeah, empowered the internal critique of the US. Israel relationship A. to a remarkable degree The reason I say strained rather than something more than that is that point of view of Americans, which I know is quite different from the point of view of Israelis right now. The worst case scenario did not happen in the worst case scenario being a global economic crisis that destroyed energy markets and the U. S. stock market Um, and Americans are you know, a commercial people Economic solopists, you might say and That scenario sort of loomed over the war once the swift regime change scenario didn't happen It loomed over the Trump administration, in its decision making and ultimately in its willingness to cut a deal from the point of view of American concerns about the nature of our alliance with Israel Um I think there are a lot of people who You know Se like this war was a mistake but a recoverable mistake not a scenario like the Iraq warar, not a Qagmire on and becausecause of that, I think You know, It's actually less dire potentially for American opinions about Israel, the Netanyahu government and so on than it might otherwise have been Some of the clever people in Israel who understand a great deal about the U. S. Israel relationship, think that this is the best possible way that this war could have ended, except for obviously tremendous easy victory in which the Iran Union me was that beautiful democracy replaces it. That was the best possible way, right? Just to clarify. Second best is an unassailable clarity as to whether or not the Israelis secretly control the White House. And we got that We got that now hopefully Y Trump team will negotiate a much more serious deal with Iran than the MOU appears to be at first glance to at least Israeli readers But that has been clarified. So we had, you know, the Rck Ws, for example People like Dave Smith have been running around every podcast that every young man in America watches and talking about how Netanyahu secretly actually pushed America into the Iraq warar. And I was there. I was conscious. I was an adult, a young soldier actually in that era. And I distinctly remember that Sharon was opposed. And I distinctly remember reports in the Israeli press about pressure from the Americans that made Sharon agree And so all of this discourse about Israeli control is something that was overwhelming the senses U Let me rephrase that Was it overwhelming the senses or is it a selection bias that I'm prone to because I happen to work with Jews all day? I mean, it's all selection bias in the age of the algorithm, right Innet the interternet feed to things that either match your best hope or your absolute worst fears Um pretty consistently So yeah I don't You know, in any situation, I don't know how exactly to judge while staring at something. algorithmically designed to feed into my psyche exactly what is going on I think that you are not wrong that the war created a situation. againg because of the very active role that the Netanyahu government played in arguing for the war. because this has been a long standing policy goal Benjamin Netanyahu Because of that, yeah, it it It folded incredibly well into a narrative, a broader narrative of Israeli control, and a world where let's say, you know the U. S. snd in ground troops or absorbed economic calamity in the service of its initial war aims Um, Maybe that's a world in which victory is achieved at great cost down the road, but it's certainly a war in which the people saying Netanyah who has something on Trump. Trump is afraid of Mossad, all these things like those those narratives turbo chargeed, the deeper the U S. went in So this ending where the U. S. says you know, look, we, you know, we we did what we wanted to do U We did something that's very helpful. to Israeli security and you know, we're not going to risk a global economic crisis. and so you know, we're making a deal and see how it goes Yeah, that is a world that I think absolutely tends to undermine the most conspiratorial narratives Do you think that in the White House, Israeli security was front and center and not gulf security and not Trump's you know, decades of talking very explicitly about the absolute critical need not to allow Iran to ever have a nuclear program. How do you know, no, no, I know. I think I think your description is basically right. I think what was front and center in the White House was that Donald Trump conducted a very successful form of u genetic pseudo regime change, let's say in Venezuela where he was able to remove a troublesome head of government and findind a new government, discover inside the existing government, a new government that was willing to cut deals with the United States at the cost of one you know, substantial, but just one special forces raid and I think Trump looked at that. and said, well, this is a model for foreign policy. This is a model can handle Um long running challenges that the United States has faced. Trump has, as you said, he has a, you know, a kind of Reagan era on Iran. He references he was a guy who knew what Karg Island was, right, which is not on something that most people involved in US. politics would have immediately at the tip of their tongues But Trump you know, going back to the seventies, going back to the Cter era, going back to the hostage crisis, has a kind of narrative about Iran as a bad actor and a dangerous actor and a thorn in the American side in his head. And I think that he looked at the experience in Venezuela and said, great the mistake that You know, George W. Bush made in Iraq was trying to affect regime change from the bottom up. take over the country dissolve the elite, create a new elite. that didn't work But what if we just do it from the top down Um, And I think that then Yahoo seemingly H played on that impulse and said, yeah, we can we can absolutely we can absolutely do this This will work, right? But I think that was that was Trump's thinking. And I think that that it was driven by his sense of the American national interest and his desire to be the guy who Solved Iran issue once and for all and also by a sense, like with Venezuela, right What happened in Venezuela was seen as kind of stealing a march on the Russians and the Chinese. It was like, oh, you thought you had this Ally. over in the western hemisphere, but guess what? we can take them out like that. and why not do the same thing with the biggest power that's sort of aligned with Russia and China in Eurasia. Why not, you know, think about think about the knock on effects for U. S. dealings with to major adversaries right now if we can just snap our fingers and remove the remove the Iranian regime. So that's I think that was the thinking. one of the things that I think Netanyau's ace card that he pulled in the White House U as far as I have God, I hope I'm not projecting The June War, the june twenty twenty five war was a war in which the Israeli Air Force flying almost entirely, mostly American hardware A lot of Israeli software, a little bit of Israeli things here and there, mostly American hardware demonstrated that all of the missile defense, all the radar systems, all the cyber, everything the Chinese and Russians had sold Iran, everything that they could deploy were just meaningless in the face of American capabilities. And that cleared a path. Win eno went into the White House and said We can do this U there were there were these signals that the White House really had to right If the Israelis can do it with an F thirty five, the Americans should be able to do it twice as well with the F thirty five, right Um, and so there was a lot of a lot of intersecting data points that made it a rational decision from Trump's perspective Um what do you think of the MOU What do you think of this deal You've talked to the vice presresident now What's your assessment about it? Sure. I mean, what he told me is available on you know, the New York Times website and my podcasts interestnteresting Times. and he's been doing a lot of interviews. I think there's in part the vice president believes sincerely that there is a way that In fact in killing a bunch of people in the Iranian leadership Um that The Trump administration really has reached a layer of people who might be easier to work with going forward, more reasonable than then sort of or at least, I mean, I think what he said to me was more capable of actually negotiating, more capable of telling us what the Iranian government which I think from the Trump administration perspective had been one of their perceived problems in negotiationsri prior to this war Um and He thinks that out of this there's yeah, that there is a scenario where Aran really does U sort of except except the You sort of makeake real the promise not to pursue a nuclear weapon And welcome an influx of foreign money and a return of some of their own money as a means to rebuild their economy and sort of stabilize and normalize to a greater degree than has been heard for the case. And then there's another part of his mind, which thinks Okay, if that doesn't happen We've set there nuclear program back reasonable amount. We've bought ourselves, you know a certain amount of a time and it's not eternal, but maybe it's five years, maybe it's twelve years Um we are going to, you know, we're going to get the straight open again. We're not pulling our troops out of the Middle East. and this is, you know, the worst case scenario from the American perspective is that the warb bought us a bunch of time to deal with it again in the future and that they're not, you know They're not going to be threatening anyone with a nuke in the next five years and as a sort of lower bound outcome And then finally, now'll let me now pivot to my my own view, which is that My own view is that U Vice president was according to all reporting, although he wasn't going to confirm it to me, obviously, but according to all good reporting, he was the person in the White House who was most against the war from the start and for reasons that were vindicated By events and when you make when you know, when you go to war with an idea of what you can accomplish doesn't actually come to pass you have a choice between escalation and making a less than ideal deal And because Fance had been against the war from the start, he was put in charge of making the less than ideal deal. And this is just seems obviously a less than ideal deal. to me But the options on the table for the US I think we're get out to not make a deal like this Were basically politically untenable. The American public was not going to support a global economic crisis or a massive influx of ground troops. and it's not clear to me what the other sort of ish option from where we were U you know, a month into the war was. I mean, the other thing that the war has revealed is things that people in sort of Vance's camp inside the administration had been arguing for a while, which was that The U.S doesn't have the material to run A long war right now We just, you know, you we run out of missiles. You know, we run out of the material that you need. We have the material to be devastating in a short war but we're not built for a long, big war and we're certainly not built for a long, big war if we also are trying to deal with Russia and deter China And that I think is quite apparent Um at this moment. again, it's it's a bad it's bad, right? It's not good. But you can't sort of sort of finesse your way out of that problem in a month of negotiations One of the things that really struck me was that how surprised A few days before the war We put out a podcast episode. that was a two hour deep dive into the theological origins of the regime But the bottom line is that they have this martyrdom ethos based in Shia schatology and Leninist anti imperialism. But the YouTube thumbnail text on that episode was bombs won't Bing them down They are built for catastrophic war And martyrdom is part of the ethos of the regime and death is part and it's big and rich and deep and it has one hundred and fifty years of Muslim theology behind it And so you have to go into a war like this with a very high threshold of pain. and did it. It felt It felt that there's something, I get that the American discourse is blaming Netanyahu, but How could they not have understood this The Israelis went into this war willing to take on a massive amount of pain hundredundreds of dead troops, missile bombard ballistic missile bombardments on their cities, economic downturn. Why? Because it seems obvious that it's existential. The Americans went into a war that they didn't understand. Does the White House not understand the kinds of enemies it faces? I would ask that I guess I would ask that question then of the Israeli government though, too, right? Because I could record for you a long ninety minute podcast about the ideological roots of the American regime I think you know, if you believe what I said would make it clear to you that the United States and the Americans wouldn't right Yeah, if if if the, you know, if the twelve orhism is built for Martyrdom. Um American empire built for pursuing absolute victory under conditions where the U S. itself is perceived to be under existential threat. Americans do not see themselves as under existential threat from the Iranian regime in the way the Israelis do And so I don't think that maybe there was no world where bombs down the Iranian regime, but in that case, there was also no world where The United States was going to absorb kind of pain that you're saying Israelis were ready to absorb. There's just no such world. Now. I mean, you could also add, we're talking about Donald Trump here in particular Right? Donald Trump is a very unpopular president. He is not a great persuader He's not a great legislative bridge buildilder. I'm using mild understatement here. right? If you go back to the Iraq warar, George W. Bush speent months and months making a very public case for the war seeking congressional approval trying to persuade wavering Americans that this was a good idea Um And in the end, it all of that persuasion didn't help him politically when the war turned into a quagmire, but he did do it, and he did have a lot of public support behind it when the war started onald Tump idn't do any of that. none of those things isn't capable of that. And again, sold it was very clear to me that he sold himself on the war on the theory that Maybe bombs wouldn't bring down the regime. bombs pllus assassinations plus you know, some kind of emergent Iranian opposition and or some factions inside the Iranian regime that aren't devoted to martyrdom U which may or may not exist, right? I know Israelis are skeptical that they exist was that was Trump's perception. Trump Trump clearly from the start was not going in not going in intending to be in a multi year war that required absorbing lots of pain I think the question for Israelis and for Netanyahu, especially is knowing that, like Kowing that, knowing that you were never going to get no world in which you were going to get Donald Trump sending in one hundred thousand American troops or Donald Trump accepting eight dollar gas prices and stock market shocks Was it worth it Did Israel get enough out of the war because I think you got what you were likely to get I think we've got more than any Israeli imagined. And that was a credit to Netanyahu politically up until this moment. What I argued in the free press, for example, was eighty twenty, eighty percent of the war we'd overlap. And then the Americans would bail out, they would leave the war because it would no longer be in their interest And I have been learning this week that Nitanyu had no plan for that. And as you say he should have had this calculated in at the very beginning. We knew at some point Trump was going to leave the war. Why would the Americans stay for as long as the Iranians can tolerate pain? That's not a reasonable expectation. I'm sort of puzzled by the expectation either from Netanyahu or from Israelis generally that this could be sustained, right? Because I think everything I've just said about Trump is apparent public material, public conversation from just the way he acts and behaves in the world. He has never seen he's done many, many unpopular things But he has never seen one of them through in a way that destroys his approval rating or turns his own party against him. you know, he he he does terrorists to an extreme and then the bond markets react and he backs up, right? Like this this happens time and time again. So I just think you shouldn't have needed secret White House insights to understand this. I also think that And you can tell me if this is wrong, like Don't you think that part of the Israeli government believed in a version of the repitation and Iranian people rise up scenario? or was that was that absolutely? Okay. so that so that then was what they There was an Israeli belief that you wouldn't have to for three years. Yeah. You put together January uprising, you put together the extraordinary The disco the problem with the june twenty twenty five war was that everything went perfectly right Now you don't you know, you make your best laid plans and then half of them go awry in war. war, you encounter an enemy. The enemy surprises you. The arena is not quite what you expected Everything went exactly right. and I think that that created a sense among the Israelis that you know, we have a long history of pulling off unbelievable things militarily And we could we could do this and January taught us what the Iranian people secretly always wanted. And it happened to be what we always wanted for the Iranian people. My sense was that it's That signaled to people in Trump world And I don't know if this is true of the Israelis, but it signaled to people in Trump world Oh, the Iranians will'll just kind of take it We will dish it out and they will just takeake it. And there, I think That was true of strikes on the Iranian military but it wasn't true of decapitation. in ways that should have been obvious, right? Because the regime whatever it's ultimate, you know theological ambitions, the regime just cares about its own survival And so was willing to do things once It own officials were being assassinated in terms of threatening the Gulf monarchies and threatening the global supply of oil and threatening a kind of murder suicide that it wouldn't have been willing to do if you know, the U. S and Israel have just been striking. It's missiles and bunkers and rockets. That was not adequately factored in. It was like, well, what will You know, what will the Iranians do differently? if we are assassinating them instead of just bombing them. And I think it should have been clear that what they would do differently is make more existential threats Although you know, there's also I mean, there's also a fault here to be laid at the feet of the Gulf Arabs because The message Israel was receiving from some of them obbviously, Kuwait and Qatar and the Emiratis are very, very different actors on this The message from some of them was go for it. do it. Come on. you believe in you, right? Yes.es And this is and this this they turned out to be completely useless and scared and not willing to fight back. less so the Amiratis, less are the Amiri Definitely the Saudis I mean And so they hoped someone else would do all the work and they weren't willing to do any of the work. But that message from them to the Israelis also played into the Israeli calculations. Look what we got. We got this whole array of Arab countries waiting for us to do this thing that we're amazing at B in the world at we're going to bring in the Americans on right? They invented all these platforms What could go wrong? I can see how that logic would play out Yeah, and I think in my own sort of debates and arguments around the US Israel relationship here I often find myself emphasizing especially to conservatives, younger conservatives who are sort of pilled, as we say on the internet about Israel that the U. S. Saudi relationship Yes just as important. rightight If you're if you're trying to like track Why is the US, you know so involved in the Middle East. Why are we getting in wars that are tough to explain to people back home? what is the what foreign power is shaping U. S decision making Um, People in the U. S. should probably focus much more on our relationship to Saudi Arabia relative to the amount of attention paid to our relationship to Israel. And I think this conflict was a good example, as far as I could tell Um, it, yes, it mattered a great deal that Netanyahu was making the case to Trump But it also mattered a great deal that the Saudis seemed to be enthusiastic about it or at least you know At least the leader of Saudi Arabia seemed to be temporarily enthusiastic about it. and that that relationship, especially for Trump, right? who' someone who from the beginning of his first presidency has sort of made cultivating a kind of tough guy alliance with regimes that The Obama administration had been trying to sort of pull back from its relationship with like that That matters a lot I think to decisions Trump actually makes in the Middle East, his relationship to the Saudis, the Gulf Arabs and so on So I want to take a step back from the war. The US Israel relationship, I'm just going to give a tiny bit of background so I can bring in An argument that you have made that you made back in April in a column in the New York Times that I found profound. I have over the last few months engaged a few anti Israel voices, anti Israel accounts on X, I have made a very simple argument, which is that the anti Israel marches, the anti Israel activism, the Gaza warar, attention is totally unique in the history of Western protest and Western politics. There's never been anything remotely like it. When I say in the United States to somebody on a panel who is coming at me on the Gaza War, I have a lot, a lot of disquiet over the Gaza War. I know you do Nevertheless, talking about the Gaza War, somebody comes and says, We have a right to pay special attention to the Gaza War because we fund it, We send you weapons, we send you military aid My answer is, okay, but you had the identical phenomenon of the identical protests sharing the same vocabulary. in Copenhagen And in Madrid, and they don't fund us. And in Jakarta, you had a million people marching. And in Algiers, you had a million people. And so all over the world you have this protest movement that there's one thing tank that counted forty seven thousand protests. all over the world Again, and again, and again, hundreds of millions of people have participated. It has reshaped progressive politics in the United States. in a way that there's almost no other issue that does now define it's the litmus test. You can disisagree on health carere. You can disagree on minimum wage in progressive stbate. You cannot disagree on Israel, you can't disagree on the Gaza War. you can't disagree on Zionism really. I mean you'll have trouble. U And so this has become a def that's unique Totally unique The regularity of these protests, the duration of this movement, the sheer scale of it has never happened before. You want to compare to apareid South Africa, compare it to apartheid South Africa? It wasn't within an order of magnitude of what the Gaza W has received And my point also was the Saudi war on Yemen was a war eighty five thousand children starved to death, two hundred fifty thousand total starvation deaths, three hundred seventy seven thousand dead estimated, we'll never probably know the real full number. And that was done with Western weapons, American weapons, and also intelligence and logistical support. And my argument, of course, was, had it not been Jews, it would not have been possible And so there's antiemitism that's happening here. Now. I defeated with this argument everybody until you came along and Uh and I'm going with forgive me, u It's gonna take me three minutes. I want to read from this column two paragraphs. becausecause you made a point that dives into a real deep, I think, much deeper sense of what Israel is in the American imagination and the American moral imagination, in American political discourse. It' not there's definitely anti Semitism here, but it's not just that. I lay this out. and then you actually quoted one of my debate with Matthew Iglesias. We discussed this and I made this case. And then you write Um Americans have a fundamentally different relationship to Jews, Judaism, Zionism, and Israel than to any of the much worse governments in quotes that Guru is referring to when I was talking about Saudis in Yemen And then you say, I say this as the child of the nineties, educated at the peak of World War I and Holocaust memorializing in American culture. What I was taught and what many Americans were taught, is that the story of the Jews, the history of anti Semitism, the enormity of the shhah and the foundation of Israel together form one of the central dramatic streams in Western history With the Jewish experience in America linked to both the European and Israeli aspects of the story. It wasn't an incidental idea at the margins of my education. It was essentrial cult teaching. Nobody taught me in depth about the Saudi experience or Pakistani history. deebates within Islamic or African civilizations weren't treated as central to Western or American history Those stories were understood to be outside our own, whereas the story of the Jews and the story of Israel were fundamentally Inside. So part of the answer to this question, why do Westerners freak out in a unique way about Israel policy is connected to identification, not hostility. and to the feeling that Israel is part of our zone of identity and responsibility in a way that the Saudi monarchy is not I want to start with one simple question you yourself are becoming by your own admission in your New York Times columns, more and more skeptical of the US Israel relationship. Can you lay out for us that critique? And then I would and then the next follow up will be this story, there is an element of identification. I should just also tell people, you did talk about anti Semitism is common. You do think that's a factor. Right. Iess there's more Yeah, I mean, let me say a few things. One of which is that anti Semitism and its interaction with digital culture is one hundred percent a powerful force in everything that you describe And certainly when you're talking about sort of the internationalization of protests, Like it's not protests in you know, Indonesia are not about American identification with Israel, obviously. Europe Europe is more complicated Um sort of the global style of protest and the way the Internet has enabled it. and We don't know what like the anti apartheid movement would have looked like in the age of the Innet Um I think it would have been bigger than it was. I think the internet like the internet basically says, you know, it makes a lot of things smaller by fragmenting everything, But then every once in a while the digital create some kind of universal moment and we had that with like the George Foullley protests in the United States in twenty twenty that were themselves connected in some way to um to anti Israel protests. But I have been struck by and often shocked by quickly hardcore anti Semitism has come back in this context. and I think that I have just a greater appreciation than I did in the nineteen nineties or fifteen years ago for the resilience of anti Semitism as like a force unto itself that is just really, really hard to suppress. So I just want to say that. Um because I think it's true, and I think it's part of the story that you're telling. I think you're right about it. to some degree Um At the same time, yeah, I also believe a version of the story that you quoted that there is a way in which when Westerners generally, but Americans especially look at things that Israel does. They don't judge them the way they would judge war crimes in Congo or war crimes in Yemen or war crimes anywhere outside the West They judge them as if the United States was doing it ourselves and And that is itself connected to different forms of profound identification that American culture has had with the state of Israel in the course of the last few generations. and some of those have been Lberal forms of identification that were most powerful when sort of secular Zionism was ascendant but that sort of linger in the bloodstream of American liberalism to this day And then there's obviously Christian Zionism as a force among American Christians and on the political right that is also connected to sort of Dep forces in American culture going back to the founding era, this kind of profound American identification with the Old Testament, the idea of an errand in the wilderness, all these things And yeah, those things just make They lift Israel up. in our consciousness and our imagination When times are good, they create really profound identifications, but they also create material for backlash and a kind of hyper attention to things that Israel is doing wrong h that that is unique in terms of the change that you've discerned in my own columns or anywhere else. I mean, I I have never been someone who writes a ton about Israel. I'm, you know, not Jewish, I'm Catholic My feeling as an American journalist was always that there were really smart Jews on every side of every debate about Israel I mean it wasn't always. I wasn't always the right person to get to get mixed up in it I take the flag on X. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, well, and you know, there's plenty of areas where I where I take the flag on X. so right that's true. But but there is I've become more invested probably because for reasons you're describing, it has bled into campus protest in the United States, right versus left debates, internal splits within conservatism T a greater degree than in the past and the change does I guess, you know, this is sort of the argument that I make to my most pro Israel friends. It's not just about the algorithm, and it's not just about anti Semitism. it also is very concretely about specific things that Israel is doing and You know, Israel is stuck in an incredibly difficult and dangerous position And I think American conservatives have tended to basasically give Israel the benefit of the doubt in the debates over the occupation. right That this has been sort of the American conservative perspective has been Yes, ideally This is not how things would be we can understand whyy Israel feels stuck and unable to find its way through a deal. because of the failures of past negotiations and the difficulties of finding a negotiating partner and we basically We're not the Israeli occupation of the West Bank is not something that would divide the American right, I think, in some profound way and The war in Gaza just, I think, has been different because it's a war rather than an occupation. and in part in ways that I think have some parallels with what's been happening in Iran because it seemed to be it seemed to be unclear past a certain point what the Israeli plan was. And I think that there was a transition just, you know, in my own analysis of the war, which was, I think matched in more extreme ways by other people on the right from you know This is a just un necessary war and we hope it works out to This was a just a necessary war a war continued without a plan for victory can become unjust That was that was my perception of Gaza With Iran, it was different from the start. I just thought this is not going to work U when it didn't work in the first week My sense was it's just not going to work, period And so yeah, I was to the extent that I felt like You know, I felt like The Israeli government, the Israeli Prime minister had pushed for something that they felt was in Israel's interest that I did not think was in the U S.'s interest U didn't, you know, didn't didn't endear the Israeli government to me. and Both of those are just very concrete things. They're not about my attitude towards existence of Israel or Judaism or anything like that, I think that I think that the war in Gaza past a certain point became unjust. and I think the Iran war was not in America's interest. And I am They are they are too cases where I am opposed to what I take to be the policy of the Israeli government and that cast a shadow over my view of the U.S. Israeli alliance I have argued that you can't If you're going to cause the damage that you're causing in Gaza And you know, denucification involved the firebombing of cities. You could argue that the nature of this enemy, the tunnel system unprecedented in the history of war, by half an order of magnitude bigger than the second biggest tunnel system ever built for war into which Hamas hasn't allowed a single child to step foot and in three years, right? If you're going to fight a war that maybe you want to argue is justified, but it's going to cause that scale of damage, you have to narrate the war. You have to tell The story, you have to say this is not just to cause the damage. This is denazification, meaneaning I'm going to cause this much damage because that's what it takes to pull the Nazism out of Germany But afterwards, there's going to be a great rebuilding. The purpose is a different you know, Gaza to bring it back to Gaza, right And Netanyahu refused to narrate the Israeli intentions. and so all you had And not only that, of course, we had Beng Ver and Smutrich publicly talking for two years and being the only Israelis talking from official Israelis talking about what the purpose of the war was about ethnic cleansing very, very bluntly And and so for me, it has been, I've been having these Hebrew debates back back home Um, about just Israelis who don't, we speak Hebrew and we don't necessarily follow the world debate about us. And there's a sense that the world's all set against us, but there's a lot of provincialism. I try to convey to people how The amount of attention the world pays to Israel is not matched by the amount of attention Israeliis payid to the world. Th think of also true of the United States Yes. Let's go to the United States. I' was going to use a comparison of like the bosqu or something. You know, we have our own tiny little internal life and internal language and internal culture U but in fact, we are losing We're losing the Ross Dous and we're losing Um people we should not that's on us in otherds, that's on us. like the the anti Semitic campaign that sent a million people into the streets in Copenhagen convinced that Zionism shouldn't the Jews should never have built the country, the last living Jews in the easastern hemisphere, who had nowhere else to go shouldn't have? That we could never have not lost. It didn't matter. And it was only a question of time because there's a radicalization happening there that's independent of our actions. But if we're losing so many of our supporters and so many people who are willing to walk a very long way, that is on us. And that failure to me counts in the Israeli column. That is an Israeli failure. Israelis have to explain it, and Netanyahu' refuseed How much has it just been that very pragmatic thing you're describing and a real deep sense of Again, identification as you described it, as being a kind of B betrayal. I guess what I'm asking is what the hell is happening on the right?. I mean, same is that happening on the left I think It's different from what's happening. So what's happening on the left. is it's many it's many things. but in part it's also itself kind of about America. where there is a America is the global hegemon America is u the the last big part of Western civilization that's filled with people who are really confident in Western civilization. Right? America is a country that has a lot of guilt about its own past but has a lot of pride about its own past relative to a lot of countries in Western Europe right now and the left use sort of naturally and more so under sort of, you know, what we in the US would call woke conditions, right is a raid in persistent critique of America, the American past and, you know, sort of sort of Fideful relationship to the American past But it's a raid and a critique that sometimes feels like anachronistic, right? It's like, you know, you go to the United States and you go to progressive spaces and they'll do a land acknowledgement. Have you encountered a land acknowledgement In Australia, I did. yes. Yes. So you right. So I was embarrassed for them because they were not giving them anything. They were just literally feeling good about being white. Exactly. Yes. So in the settler societies of North America and Australia. You have in progressive spaces, people will stand up and say, we are on the ancestral land of so and so and such and such and they aren't giving the land back, but also people they're referencing the tribes and groups are small and unimportant and politically impotent. Right? There's no live debate about whether you should give Manhattan to Native Americans. there's just a kind of virtue signaling about the sins of our ancestors But here's Israel alsoso a society in ways that bonded it to America once upon a time on patterns of Settlement. making the desert bloom, right and a society that has where you can say, oh, but here here's the indigenous population. And here are the settlers and the settlers bad and the indndigenous population is oppressed. and the whole critique of America, you know, manifest destiny, the American past can be transposed onto that conflict I think in ways that are really are important to understanding the intensity. And I don't think it's a coincidence that sort of Palestine sentiment on the left sort of followed from wokeness. It was like you had peak wokeness And it was about, you know slavery and segregation and other things, but it was like, all right, that need you need an actual concrete example of settler colonialism today, and it's got to be Israel That is something that's important and has no and doesn't doesn't correlate with what's happening on the right. I'll actually answer your question onn the right Sorry. It's much more It's much more sort of Um, the dark stuff is much more just kind of conspiratorial reaction against the establishment and the elite and everything sort of highest associated with it And so it's like, oh, you know The establishment in the U.S. has been pro Israel for a long time, and therefore we probably should be anti Israel There are a lot of Jews in the American establishment. Have you noticed that? A Well, you know, the establishment is bad. therefore you know, we should be open to open to anti Semitic or borderline anti Semitic arguments, right? Like That's That's I think the maybe not the heart, but an important part of the phenomenon on the younger right, especially. You've grown up alienated from the establishment of your own country and you partart of that alienation is a reaction against the left, But the more alienated you get, the more you're looking for a kind of bigger narrative. and anti Semitism is just always there as as a big as a big narrative with Israel has then becomes the actor, you know, the puppet master. and so on. And that And that stuff is real. Like I again, I'll have arguments with with Zionist Zionist Jewish friends who will say oh, isn't that bad That's just, you know, people overestimate how much antiemitism there is on the right. I mean I don't know how you estimate it exactly, but there is a There is a lot of that stuff on On the right. Some of it dis connected. G on, sorry I just there well, there's so much, but Nick Fluentz would be the example, right the sort of poster child of that feeling that experience, that cultural share. Fuentes F Yeahah, Fuentes generationally, right is is right there Um Yes, but then he's laundered by Tucker Carlson Who does a podcast with the vice presresident? And Tucker hosts the Holocaust deniers. I mean Almost quite literally a denier C certainly a denier of Nazi intentions. you know Darryl Cooper. Where's the line drawn? How big is the phenomenon? How big is your phenomenon I've I've every I've I think my I think my phenomenon My phenomenon is the phenomenon that Oh is sort of what you would want to think of as the the fixable problem. Right? Yeah but the phenomena lead like there's there's a fixable problem. where people on the American right or center right who had a kind of General pro Israel default U, are, you know, sort of re have strong negative reactions to Israeli policy, likeike Most Americans aren't paying the kind of attention that you're paying to events in Israel and Gaza, right? But if you're trying to judge from afar and you're looking for heuristics. you're like, oK, this thing that happened in the war seems bad, but there's people arguing it on both sides. But oh, over here, part of the Israeli government seems committed to ethnic cleansing. makes me read the event through or skeptical lenens, right? inevitably Um But I think, I mean, I've had this argument on my own podcast with, you know, folks like Yaram Hazonei, right?' the, you know I sort of would be architect of a kind of an national nationalism and so on. And he, you know, he wants to say he' he's very concerned about rising anti Semitism on the right He wants to say, no, it's separate from or he I think he wanted to say it's just' separate from really concrete events like the war in Gaza And I just think you have to see it as this continuum, right? There's There's people who under internet conditions are going to be pulled into paranoid anti Semitism. And there's people who absolutely aren't And then there's people in between who are just sort of move back and forth by events and vis her perception of events and get a little bit closer to the paranoid style if they think Israel is committing war crimes and get a little bit close to Um a more mainstream rereating if they don't. So I think I think events and policies and sort of, you know Wh who is seen to be speaking for Israel? these all of these things matter a great deal. I think one thing Yuram said to me was which I also think is right is that You know, there's there's certain on the right, you get kind of rediscoveries of traditional Christianity often internet mediated that are themselves can, you know make anti Semitism more attractive because traditional Christianity was sometimes intertwined with anti Semitism, right? So there's There's and that's not something Israel can solve, right? Like there are things Israel cannot magically make the history of Catholic anti Semitism go away so that if someone wants to become Catholic, they never encounter it, right? Like that's not Israel's problem to solve Um, you also how the world perceives Israeli policy towards Gaza and the wisdom of the Iran warar. that is part of partart of Israel's problem to solve. Yeah I think you laid out that those spectrum, those spectra in a way that fits what I have experienced. I can't tell which way it's going. And I genuinely can't tell I had an argument about JD Vance, his very close relationship to Tucker Carlson who, for some reason can't stop talking about Jews and Nazis You raising Catholicism is fascinating because you are a very believing. You write about it a great deal. That was what your last book was about, which by the way, was absolutely fascinating. and you can read it. It's not about Catholicism, except at the end. you are a convert to Catholicism and a believing convert to Catholicism. and you're still willing to say and also Um, that that someome of this return to a kind of piatism Um might trigger also some of that anti Semitism. And that in that vein I want to ask two questions to end. Tucker Carlson I have decided. I have concluded at watching him speeches trying to dive a little bit into his thinking, into his critique of, you know, episcopalianism and, you know, churches that he now says are hollowed out tree husks that are inhabited by raccoons. The raccoons, theseese are the mainline Protestant churches of America that he grew up in the raccoons are progressives in his analogy. And he talks about a return to a kind of piotism. He talks about the collapse of of social mors of the addiction to pornography among young men that's ruining the ability to have intimacy in the American families. And by the way, that Israeli intelligence is running the largest porn sites in America, something he has said Publicly, out loud, I watched the podcast to make sure he actually said it and it wasn't just a claim about him. Um, So a man who brings in launders anti Semitism You know, launders Nic Fuentes, launders Holocaust, a little bit of a clever version of Holocaust denial a man who is close friends with JD Vance, who I do not suspect of being antiemitic But I do suspect of politically being willing to walk with those people political alliance purposes Um I think that this man is a Muslim brother U And what do I mean by that? The Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt H a theory. Islam is weak. Islam is backward. It's encountering European empires chopping up the Ottoman Empire coming in and the response to Islamic weakness was We used to be powerful when we were close to God. The earliest generation of Islam were also the conquering generations,? Islam is born as this conquering empire. piety, closeness to the Quran, closeness to this kind of originalist pietism. They call themselves Salafist. A Salaaph is a forefather. So the forefatherists movement was what they called themselves in nineteenth century Egypt, where this movement really gets going This is a movement that produced the theologians who taught Hasan Albana, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood in the nineteen twenties And which Hamas in eighteen eighty seven is founded in Gaza as a Gaza branch of the Muslim brother. The Muslim Bother's main idea was all of our problems today are modernity. Our weakness geopolitically, economically, scientifically is a weakness that stems from having abandoned our original true, pious religion And if we return to religion, All things will fix themselves And the Muslim Brotherhood as it built out this piotistic return theology, Hamas, for example, doesn't believe it needs to free Palestine They're not about the Palestinian independence. They believe they need to ensure that Islam can defeat this Jewish imposition that is the weakest thing that ever pushed Islam back. showing that the pious when they return to their piety can overcome the geopolitical obstacles and Islam can return to be a redeeming, conquering force in the world again. That's why Hamas is willing to oversee the destruction of Gaza and think it's winning. The Muslim Brotherhood. For a hundred years, never, ever stop talking about Jews And it talked about Jews in these wild, you know protocols, thel design kind of conspiratorial ways. And it built out a whole theology of Islamic weakness and correcting it through piatism constructed itself around the villain of the Jew And I might be coming from the Middle East and imposing a thing I've already am familiar with onto something I don't understand when I look at the Tucker Carlson's and Candace Owens's orr maybe they're Muslim brothers. And by the way, he's super good friends with the Qatari leadership, who are the biggesturveyors of Muslim brother theology in the world right now through Al Jazeera and officially believe in these in these ideas What's happening to the American Christian right? How much am I exaggerating? Does any of that make sense to you? I think that if you are looking, if you are looking for If you're looking for people who are folding anti Semitism into a kind of extremist Christian view that involves, you know accepting destruction for the sake of refounding Western civilization You need to look to figures who are more obscure. than Tucker Carlson. you need to look to sometimes they're Catholic, sometimes they're Calvinist, but there are people with those views on the American right there I would say flight in terms of like having a worked out ideology that's equivalent to the Muslim Brotherhood I think they're quite marginal. I think just because I thinkuck I think what Tucker rep. I think what you're seeing in Tucker is what I just described a minute ago. Tucker. decided that the elite in which he existed and worked and so on for a long time was Iirreredeemably corrupt and everything then starting with the liberal elite but then including the elite within conservatism that was in favor of free markets in favor of a close relationship with Israel, a hawkish foreign policy, and everything you see from him whether he is going to Moscow and marveling at the supermarkets there or saying, ye, maybe, you know Maybe why mayaybe the Muslim Brotherhood isn't so bad or whatever or when then why wouldt the Jew to have invented pornography Why the obsession? You can do all of that without being anti Jewish or bunded some of that Because there is again, I'm not I don't want to oversycho analyze, but there is a If you're going also as if you're going after the piy, if you're if you're rejecting the pieties whether this is or not, this is true of Tucker. This is true as a phenomenon. when you are rejecting the pieties of the American establishment, you like Piloemitism is a great piety of the American establishment. It's an incredibly powerful piety and Its rejection is I think It's like the part of the longest way or one of the strongest ways that you can that you can reject any it's it's like you' burning you're burning your ships. There's no going back. We're just, you know,'re we're rejecting everything and anything that the establishment considers ious and good. There was no force more powerful in American culture, when I was a kid or at least the parts that I was exposed to then kind of anti anti Semitism, right? Like that was that it was, you know, it was it was Chindler's List and Anne Frank and Elie Voiseelle and everybody, you know, like that that That was just it just loomed really large in American culture. And I think It's turn towards extreme anti Israel conspiracy theories should be understood in terms of like our not a consonsciously building up a new you know Christian Brotherhood project or something, but as rejectionism as we're we're we're rejecting it all, including U including sort of the idea that you know, Holocaust was a unique evil and anti Semitism was a unique sin. But let me say something pastive just Yeah, I was just going say just just like with something. Well, well, so you your advice I often I often have these conversations, I think with Full American Jewish consonservatives who sometimes want to minimize these tendencies on the right. And I don't want to minimize them I also don't want to overhype them the, you know, the the the kind of like Nick Fuentes, you know, he has these moments. He sort of flares up and gets all kinds of attention Is Nick Fuentes really the spokesman? for where the American Republican Party is going in the next twenty years? No. I don't think that he is at all. Right Is JD Vance frustrated? with the government of Israel. Yes, absolutely. And you can see that in my interview with him and you can see it in his public contact. was He was against the war and he feels like Netanyahu talked Trump into it. and that informs his you know, how he thinks about the Israeli government, does that mean that Avanceceds presidency would break the U S Israel relationship? No, it does not. I don't think. because the U. S. Israel relationship on the American right is connected to the ways in which There is just as there's a kind of natural kind of natural left wing hostility to Israel that's also connected to hostility to America There is a natural American conservative affinity for Israel that is connected to affinities between the American Project and Israel, and I don't think that has gone away. I think it has this is why I said strained. I'll end where where I began. I think there is a great strain in that connection, but it hasn't removed fundamental reasons why countries that share a powerful sense of national mission and, you know, a connection to the biblical God and everything, you know, everything else, like There's I don't think that connection just gets snapped U it gets strained Thank you for staying longer than we agreed. One last question. How do you see the future of the relationship and do you Any advice? Israelis, knowing American politics, American culture in the way that you do. I think that Israelis who are interested in the Israeli American relationship need to figure out ways basasically they need to figure out, okay, What are the there are lots of bad reasons that Americans might be turning against Israel What are the reasons that we can actually argue with and engage with including not just on the right, but on the center left. You need there you need to, you can't just say, oh, the well, we're going to accept that the Democratic Party is going to be anti Israel forever. I think that would be a big mistake that you need to you need to find ways of engagement and argument and you need to argue in a way that except it's not the nineteen nineties anymore, right and If you tell people, oh that argument is anti Semitic That's how a Trump card Heer, you don't win by making that argument. You win by saying, oh no, actually, here's why you're mistaken. about the U.S, you know, the Israeli role in the in the Iraq warar Do you convince everyone with that argument? No, of course not. But you have to be willing to make the argument. You have to say, okay, there are people who are getting drawn into conspiracy theories who aren't necessarily anti Semitic or conspiratorial. They're just reacting to events in the world And you need to go and sort of be tough minded and have arguments with them and make the case, right U So that's my advice I guess You know, ell the story tellell the storyy the make the case and recognize that yeah, that there is a role, policy is playing a role. It's not just It's not just algorithms and it's not just the resilience of anti Semitism as important and real as those things are Ralst Stalthth, thank you so much for joining It was my pleasure. Thanks for having

This excerpt was generated by Smart Features

Listen to Ask Haviv Anything in Podtastic

For listeners, not advertisers

All podcast names and trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Podcasts listed on Podtastic are publicly available shows distributed via RSS. Podtastic does not endorse nor is endorsed by any podcast or podcast creator listed in this directory.