It's a theme of most of the discussion around this issue, general notions presented as solutions with no specifics. Usually the solutions are fundamentally untenable, ignore the reality on the ground, and require the Israelis to make massive concessions for essentially nothing in return. Even amongst people who make a living studying this there seems to be a fundamental lack of serious and realistic thinking around how their solutions will work.
He wants Israel gone, but knows that's a thing NYT readers are not happy to hear that, so he does not give an answer. He's basically doing the good ol' "I'm going to repeat your question in my own words, it's a very good question, but now I'm answering another question" shtick.
I think it was relatively clear: Israel reverts to 1967 border lines, Palestinians make East Jerusalem their capital, the “right of return” can look like reparations and be paid rather than granted specifically in land (like Germany did for the jews) - which would double by acknowledging that the nakba did happen. Palestinians would get control of their borders and their economy and military, same as South Africa. And of course the Israeli settlements would need to stop. Then, instead of billions of dollars going to Israel and the US continuing occupation of Palestine they could invest in other industries and Palestinians could have autonomy. And my guess is, since this is the only solution that hasn’t been tried since Israel’s founding, maybe both countries could experience a level of security. And maybe in a hundred years you could have Jews and Arabs living side by side in the place they both call their home country, just like they did historically.
@@isuckatguitarbut the idea of making mass concessions with nothing in return is not the right way to look at it. Israel made the present absentee law to void any international law regarding ethnic cleansing, and refugee land dispossession. They also knew the settlements in post 1967 were illegal, and dispossessive. It's not a concession when it's deliberately taken and knowingly illegal. Now, the idea of right to return is significantly more complex now that it's 75 years later than when it happened in 1946, 47, or 48. However, PLO was willing to take any form of compensation in lieu of land where someone's house used to be, but Israel has never claimed they are at fault, or in any position to pay people for their dispossession.
“The Israelis need to be more diplomatic but also we have minimum demands that are completely unreasonable about and unwilling to compromise on” “Israel’s unwillingness to advance peace because Hamas kept doing terrorism is validation of the claim that Israel doesn’t want peace” So blissfully unaware of the core logical conflicts in his statements. Palestinian supporters also like to conveniently leave out the part about being willing to live at peace with your neighbors when discussing the right of return as international law (the text of UNR-194 he references says: “refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date”)
Two more points to add: UNR-194 is not "international law", it is just a UN resolution (which the Arabs ignored at the time). UN resolutions are not international law - the UN is not a legislature. It mentions "refugees", not their descendants, even if they did have peaceful intentions, which they clearly do not have.
Because that's the pattern of speech that these Hamas advocates use to avoid actually addressing the question because they can't answer it without sounding like genocidal sociopaths.
I noticed he didn't answer the question about how alot of groups have been displaced in history thru war and those people had to move on. Nobody is guaranteed a "homeland ". There was a war, they lost multiple times, move on and rebuild. But they won't do that because then their fight would be over and they're freedom fighters, its what they do, fight.
Move on? Move where? Are you offering a piece of your country for them to build new Palestinian on? Or is your country opening its doors for them to emigrate to and assimilate in to? Talk is cheap. It is easy to express a desire that some other country do it. But if your own country is unwilling, then you are not serious.
What I got from that part of the podcast was really why America can never support a right to return. They'd have to give it all back to the Native American population. The right to return is a non-starter and while we can agree that ethically, it's not okay, we also have to agree that it'd be a political nightmare that nobody wants to take on. With good reason. And what's more... Hamas knows this. The right to return might just be a demand they throw out to ensure that peace will never be possible
@@danielch6662They were previously welcomed in Kuwait, in Jordan in Lebanon. They incited unrest, tried to overthrow governments and were in part responsible dor a 15 year Civil War, in those countries, so yes, in part you are right, many countries do not want them to come. Also when Israel gave them Gaza to have sovereignty over they turned it into a terrorist base. It’s understandable that trust is more than a little tainted in the region. They could still choose to overthrow Hamas and turn Gaza into a prosperous place it has every potential to be.
So those arab armies should have just watch while armed zio gangs coming from poland france america..armed to the teeth by colonial west, invaders and in barbaric gruesom way ethnicly cleansed the palestinians just cause a thousands of years old book told them to do so?!
But The Arab countries only waged war on Israel three months into the Nakba , let's not lose sight that it was the Zionist settlers who have perpetrated that
Black Africans came to the Americans in chains the concession by white Americans to make them full citizens was a strategic mistake since freedom was never something they had in America, I would hope you agree with this.
4:46. Already has accused Israel of dishonesty. Called peace accommodation. Called israel “Occupation” twice. Called “ propaganda “critique.” Called terrorism “confrontation.” Calls this presentation “understanding.”
This whole 'right of return' thing is just incredibly depressingly cynical. 'Yes we want two states except your state is also ours too'. Never gonna happen, ever.
@@pcolt4 because he is going to tell you who would have the 'right of return' to your city/house if you applied these standards to yourself. because there is nowhere on earth, with the possible exception of Antarctica, that wasnt fought over by humans at some point.
@@pcolt4 presumably then youll be advocating for the right of jews to return to poland, germany, russia, france, italy, belguim, holland, iraq, iran, syria, jordan, morocco and so on and claim the house that their ancestors owned before they were forced out during the 20th century? because as you said, that is unacceptable. right?
I am Pro Palestinian but there is no way they are ever getting the right of return. It's simply never going to happen... Israel would never ever allow it ever.. they need to give it up...
It's not only about returning. Israel don't want Palestinians to create a government for themselves. They want the division between Hamas and organizations such as PLO because otherwise they would get international recognition. For instance, the prime Minister allowed funds from Qatar to reach Gaza to keep Palestinians separate. You'll never hear Israelis saying we want a two state solution. They want to keep terrorist there even if that is dangerous for their own lives.
@@Eneroino problem at all. Arab countries can simply transfer to the Palestinians the compensation arab countries will need to pay for some 500000-700000 sefardic jews who were expelled to israel at the same period. Easy....
"Historic Palestine" there was never a historic Palestine in all of history. A name taken from the Romans, borders drawn on a map by the British, leaders born in Egypt and Jordan........ Palestinian?????
Wait- First the guest says that Hamas believes that Palestine cannot be divided, that is belongs to the Muslims intact in perpetuity, and then says they made concessions. Seems like contradictory statements to me
The first two minutes was the incisive lie. The Muslim Brotherhood is not a ‘health and supportive’ organization. The MB, in fact, IS the mover of the little pins around to make sure those in the world who are not Muslim convert or die. How can you NOT know this. Perhaps deeper, wider, broader study will help. Yes, Ezra, I am shocked.
I wouldn’t presume he doesn’t know this or even agree with what you are saying. He is opening a dialogue to better understand Hamas’ standpoint. A difficult and brave thing to do. It took me three tries to listen to this and be open enough to absorb what was being said. I still disagree with much of the the interviewee is saying and think a lot is revisionist history and lies. And the amount I trust Hamas is basically not at all. But it is still useful to understand this persecution. Hard, frustrating, exasperating, but useful.
I don't believe it's a lie, large organisations can be more than one thing at a time. Of course the Muslim Brotherhood credentials were exposed when they gained power in Egypt after the Arab Spring led to the ousting of the military dictatorship and the MB leadership proved to be corrupt and inept. In the 80's when the PLO dominated the politics of Gaza, the Muslim Brotherhood through Hamas had a largely social presence through charities. It was the breakdown of partnerships between the PLO and the MB(the PLO leader Arafat had fought alongside the MB as early as '48) that contributed to Hamas becoming more political, which led to being more militant and conducting terrorism. This is in no way an excuse for the horrific violence over many years that the MB has been a part of, but to deny the social programs and charities they have also done would be wrong and a failure to accurately understand their history and support in the region. To try to work out constructive solutions without truly understanding the problem is pure folly. Everything said by both sides of a conversation doesn't have to be agreed with to gain understanding and learn from it.
You seem to be unfamiliar with how the muslim brotherhood gained traction in gaza to begin with. Aid is the carrot, Islamism is the stick. And the occupation is the reason why the donkey does not revolt
#1 problem is that the people do not want a peaceful 2-state settlement. Any Palestinian “leadership” who tries to cooperate with Israel at all, much less actually reach agreement on partition, instantly loses the people’s support. Politics are downstream of culture, so until there’s a massive ideological shift among Palestinians, there will never be peace, & there can never be a settlement without peace. As Erza rightly observed, every time there were attacks during negotiations, the Israeli left dried up & the will to compromise was lost. It’s hard to feel empathy for people committing acts like Oct7. If you read the independent third party audits of the UN school curriculum, you’ll find that in the last few years since Hamas has been in power, the curriculum has been changed at every level to introduce jihadism. That word is not hyperbole, either- it’s literally the word used in the reports. So the problem just continues to get worse. There’s no transactional solution to ideological differences. There’s no amount of land you can give a jihadist neighbor to ensure his peace.
This narrative is completely false. It is Israel that does not want a peaceful 2-state settlement. The irrefutable proof of this is how Israel NEVER ceased building settlements in occupied Palestinian territory. So GTF out of here with that false narrative.
"so until there’s a massive ideological shift among Palestinians, there will never be peace" In other words, there never will be peace - at least not in the foreseeable future.
If the only way Palestine would negotiate peace with Israel is for the right of return, I can understand why Israel doesn’t take them seriously. Really great questions Ezra.
Explain the logic and justice behind granting the “right to return” to a second-generation Jew, born & raised in the USA (or any part of the world) & never set foot on Israel, but a Palestinian born & raised in Palestine but taken out of their home (perhaps to make room for an American Jew) does not have a right to return to their homeland. (This is a real life example). I agree it is a practical solution if your stated goal is the expulsion or extermination of all Palestinians, as it was & is for the original & current Zionists in power in Israel. “We must expel the Arabs and take their place. I support forced transfer, and see nothing unethical in it.” - Ben-Gurion, first PM of Israel, founding Zionist
@pw323 So tired of historical illiteracy. The Jews are no more colonizers than the Arabs are - there have been many thousands of Jews in the area for eons. Zionists didn't steal the land in the early 20th C - overwhelmingly they bought it from the Ottomans and later landowners. The state that they were given was a tiny meandering strip connecting Jewish majority towns, while Arabs received the vast majority of land (Syria, Iraq, Jordan, etc). The Jews accepted but the Arabs refused to allow another faith to have any control over territory they think is religiously theirs. When you attack someone repeatedly with the goal of its extermination, you don't get to cry foul when you lose and they take some of YOUR land.
This show has been hitting it out of the park on this issue. Ezra has a black belt in non-confrontational pushback. Excellent guests and brilliant interviews.
This is not non-confrontational. This is more of the far-left rabbithole that exists to tear down Western Democracies. Hamas is a far-right group. Full stop. They kill their own LGBT citizens. Hamas was TRAINED by Russia to do this attack. Hamas is funded by Iran to do this attack. Hamas is NO friend of the USA. This is equivalent of sitting down with Hitler to understand his point of view. Why don't we bother understanding North Korea's point of view? Ezra Klein is acting like an Uncle Tom. There were plenty of Jews who did this with Hitler, as well. THEY WERE ON THE WRONG SIDE. With this said, it is horrifying that Hamas is using its civilians as Human Shields. Ezra Klein, in playing Uncle Tom, is trying to use Western values to explain away a vicious terrorist group.
Bottom line is he is a terror apologist. The amount of falsehoods was stunning. However, he did make several valid points. But it’s hard to overlook the majority of his arguments which were outrageous.
It is conspicuous that nowhere in this discussion is Iran mentioned. It is as if the ONLY two players in this are Israel and Palestinians, with a side-order of the U.S. Yet the reason why the Occupied territories exist was a result of Soviet encouragement of surrounding nations to attack Israel in '67 and '73, and the subsequent need for a buffer zone to prevent further attack. At present Hamas is supported by Iran and Hezbollah largely an organ of Iran. Does your guest realistically expect that Iran, and any other parties who treat Palestinians as a "lever" they can use, would take a back seat and say "Well, that's *their* problem now, and we'll just stay out of it and leave it up to them to sort out."? In this respect I find him thoughtful, but hopelessly naive and unrealistic.
This is right. In truth, both of these peoples (Israelis & Palestinians) are trapped in alliances that prevent peace, even if they themselves wanted peace. But of course they don’t. The US & the West values Israel as an important regional ally. In exchange for aid, trade & protection, Israel is tasked to serve as custodian of the holy land. That means maintain secular democracy, keep the sacred sites safe for all tourists, & serve as defense/ intelligence ally. Unless Israel fails on that mandate, it will always exist & be protected. So the “Palestinian cause” of eradicating Israel is a pipe dream, just a way for Iran to weaken the US reputation on the global stage
@@scarletsletter4466 Not meant as a criticism of yourself, but I bristle at the use of the term "Israelis" or "Israel". Netanyahu, and the shaky coalition he has cobbled together is not representative of "Israel", any more than Donald Trump was "America" or Hamas is "Palestinians". I keep reminding people that Netanyahu is only PM because Likud has 32 seats out of 120, and he managed to gather up a number of other marginal parties (several hard-right religious parties among them) to form a coalition of 64. Israel has had 5 elections in the last 4 years, largely *because* these coalitions are so shaky, and cannot meet the demands of the various extremists. The day after the Hamas attack, Ha'aretz had an op-ed that read: "Netanyahu must step down now. Not after the conflict is over. Not after he has struck a plea deal on corruption charges. But right now." (perhaps not verbatim, but every bit as concise and blunt as this). There is a large segment of Israeli society that does not view the current administration as representative. But, as unrepresentative of the electorate as it is, the Israeli Knesset is pretty much the only actual democracy in the region. At the same time, however, it is a vital lesson in how proportional representation can end up backing a country into a policy corner. Israel has never NOT had a coalition government, and these days, more and more, Netanyahu has relied on extremist religious and openly anti-Arab parties to form coalitions and remain in power. This has resulted in face-palming cabinet choices like Itamar Ben-Gvir as National Security Minister.
This is my biggest problem with Ezra's podcast. His humanistic approach to the issue, doesn't allow a honest discussion involving culture, religion and globel context. When ever you have a pro palastinian guest, it always go back to "social justice" language of oppresor-oppresed-aparthide as if it a system exsiting in isolation.
@@iditbes6962 In fairness, I think Ezra simply wanted to let the guest present his perspective, without attempting to shape or seriously challenge it, so we could understand their perspective, without necessarily accepting it or sympathizing. Admittedly, one IS prompted to want to shout "But what about...?" at the screen. The weakness I pointed out (i.e., what about Iran?) lies in the thinking and argumentation of his guest, and less so in the podcast.
This is quite interesting but every time I hear a Palestinian talk they're so out of touch with the reality of the situation it's hard for me to even fathom hell a group of otherwise intelligent people could be so far from reality. As an American part of me can really appreciate a really small underdog trying to get sovereignty over their land from a huge regional superpower: colonizer but in this United States we had France as an ally and we were actually pretty powerful and already relatively wealthy and had lots of other advantages Palestine has none of these and there is zero chance they will get any of these extreme demands so this is just idiotic.
Yeah it was delusional all this talk of right of return is frustrating. If you haven't lived in a place for 75 years you have no claim to it... this is the same delusional argument that created Israel in the first place... Rights for Palestinian in Palestine absolutely but you can't turn back the clock and start resettling people who have lived a lifetimes elsewhere back in Palestine...
Ryan. It is the same all over the world. All the new countries that were formerly colonies of one western country or another. The colonizer was a superpower compared to what the locals could muster. But look at the world today. Why did North America, Hawaii, Australia, and New Zealand became European? Large numbers of North American natives died of disease, and Australia and New Zealand were very sparsely populated. So the Europeans moved more of their population there until the natives were outnumbered. This is impossible in Israel. There are not enough Jews in the entire world, and many of them are not Zionists and do not want to move to Israel. Even if we could somehow force them, there still isn't enough of them. I live in one of the many former British colonies encircling the globe. The population here was a bit higher, and the British never tried to move large numbers of their people here.
Jews are no more colonizers than the Arabs are. There have been many many thousands of Jews in the region for literally eons. They didn't steal land - they bought it from the Ottomans and later local landowners. Their state was to a TINY meandering strip connecting Jewish towns while the Arabs got the vast majority of the larger mandate area (Jordan, Iraq, Syria, etc). So let's be real - the Arab Muslims could not tolerate ANY other faith having a majority state in the region that they felt was theirs. Once Islam conquers an area, its not supposed to ever go backward; after all, their ultimate goal is a one-faith world. While the Nakba is a real thing, no one talks about the fact that more Jews have been forced out of Arab nations.
@@danielch6662 Israel isn’t a colony though. This is the fundamental misunderstanding to the situation. Palestine believes they are Algeria and Israel are the French. They and many others believe the Jews can go back to ‘where they came from’ but ‘where they came from’ doesn’t exist.
Re. recognition of the Nakba & right of return: (As a white Australian, we share some historical similarities; so I speak from the perspective of an oppressor.) We stole our continent over 200 years ago; declared it “empty” & labeled the indigenous populations “fauna.” We *crushed* the opposition, at a time in history when that was kinda “just the done thing.” Big dry continent, so they were widely dispersed, disparate peoples. We had greater tech, firepower & numbers; between our massacres; lies turning tribes against each other, enslaving them, raping women, then stealing children & whipping them if they dared speak their own languages; very few groups managed to mount a lasting defence. We dominated them & wrote the history books to suit our narrative. Guess what? 200+ years on & the black fellas STILL haven’t gotten over it! If you think for a minute the Palestinians can just get over history and quietly go off into the Sinai, think harder. No occupied group in the world has done it yet, why would Palestinians be any different? You’re right about the impossibility of restoring historical justice; the Palestinians (like our Aboriginal peoples) can’t and won’t ever be fully compensated for decades of murder & oppression. If a “fair” compensation amount could somehow be calculated, nobody could afford the bill; but this kind of cost can’t be counted. But that doesn’t justify denying the truth & certainly doesn’t justify maintaining the status quo. If you take seriously the demand for justice, look around at the rest of the post-colonial world. We haven’t fixed things by a long shot & we’re still learning as we go. We still grapple with huge socioeconomic disparities, high crime, poverty/drugs/alcohol & unbelievable comparative rates of incarceration & deaths in custody, massive gaps in health and life expectancy etc. etc… But we’ve been able to acknowledge & apologise for our national crimes; it didn’t bankrupt us. We legally recognised traditional land rights and it didn’t destroy us. We’re still learning how to begin addressing ongoing injustices, but conversations can be had & for the most part, nobody’s getting blown up here. You might be surprised by how willing oppressed peoples are to make peace if you give them half a chance. Even without justice, people WANT to get on with their lives; but most humans need our truth & our pain acknowledged before we can move on. I think that’s behind how Hamas’ charter is worded: they aren’t insisting on a specific outcome & they leave room for pragmatic negotiation; they just NEED those fundamental injustices to be at least named & acknowledged as a starting point. And shoot, apologies cost nothing!! 🤯
The widely-held consensus in the West, that the Palestinians should just "get over it," denies the reality that the Nakba has never ended, and abuse of Palestinians and theft of their land has never halted. The resistance isn't about turning back the clock to 1917. But the "get over it" crowd doesn't care, because they aren't actually interested in justice at all. They are advocating for a position they would never accept themselves if the roles were reversed. They have decided, long ago, that Israel are the good guys, and they get upset by any evidence to the contrary. The real reason for the ascendancy of Hamas is the fact that Israel has *never* negotiated in good faith.
Man, you got this all wrong. The Jews ARE the natives of Israel. The Roman colonizers exiled many of them (but not all), then other colonizers came. The Palestinians are the children of the colonizers. Whatever happened in Australia, the situation is not at all similar.
@@MarianneExJohnson according to whom? The UN? The UN made a partition plan in 1947 (which they did not accept). Technically speaking many Palestinians did not own the rights to the homes they lived in since before the British mandate. That's not to justify anyone losing their home, but just to explain the futility of this kind of talk. What about the property rigts of my family in Germany, Poland and Lithuania? What about the land of all the hundreds of thousands of Jews that were expelled from Muslim and Arab nations? Will we give them all their land/homes back? That can't possibly work. We can never achieve 'justice' in this case, because the rights of many people are in conflict. It is comparable to you being chased by gangs out of your house, and several generations later your great-grandchildren come back and claim it. Did they have a right to it even if squatters took it over in the meantime? Have you asked yourself why any other refugee population in the world can only have the status of refugee for one generation and Palestinians remain 'refugees' even after being granted citizenship in another land? This is all part of a political game played between the 'West' and the Arab nations. Unfortunately the Palestinians are the ones to suffer most. But it will never be resolved by maintaining unrealistic expectations. They can't go back to homes that are not there, and millions of Jews are not going to leave. They have no where to go.
What about the Zionist "consciousness"? Clearly the Zionist regime hasn't valued peace in the slightest, because they cynically manipulated the misnomered "peace process" to perpetuate its occupation of the Palestinian territories.
That sounds like something an ultra-zionist living in an illegal settlement in the west bank, or an apartment in Manhattan, would say. I think that the Palestinians want to be left alone in their own land and have the ability to thrive as a society without Israel or the US setting the terms. Israel has been controlled by a racist ultra-zionist movement since its birth, and they have treated the Palestinian people as sub-human who don't have a right to live there and whose towns and villages should not even be on a map. The first thing that Israelis' did was to push out 870,000 Palestinians out of their homes, change the names of the towns to Hebrew names, and then establish new geography books showing Israel. This is a genocidal process that we are talking about, and the U.S. and western states should join the rest of the world in not supporting Israel in this genocidal process ... and start supporting the Palestinian people.
It was confusing, but I think Baconi explained that there is the ideological stance and then there is the political position. Ideologically (and my guess is, in deference to the Palestinian public), no Palestinian leader can say Israel is a legitimate power, because that's a tacit admission to Palestinians having no right to full sovereignity in the West bank and Gaza. But politically, they will take the 22 percent with full sovereignty, and half of Jerusalem. No Israeli leader has agreed to that much, not with full sovereignity, now with the Israel not controlling air and sea rights and thus precluding military autonomy. I think Americans constantly don't understand this rhetorical, face-saving maneuver, and it IS confusing.
It us quite astounding that the speaker, while pro-Palestinian, neglects to give a full geo-historical abd political perspective... ignoring the Biblical and traditional Jewish claim to the area, historically the whole region is a vast affiliation of various tribes...it's an Arab/Middle Eastern mentality that westerners don't get: a "blood-land" thing ...the various Arab countries see the Palestinians as "of the blood" but without land...they are in that way like the black sheep. Since modern times, however, the Palestinian Arabs have not endeared themselves to their Arab (and largely Muslim) brothers : look at Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt to understand why they all talk bug no one wants the Palestinians. Israel developed since its inception, while Palestinian society remains backward, victim-looking. Regarding the Israelis, the settlements, are a pivotal point of contention and must go. If anything preempted the vile terrorist attack of October 7th, it was the increasingly right wing-leaning government. Notice that Ben Gvir was not elected to Netanyahu's war cabinet. What is so sad is that the region as a whole was starting towards reconciliation and a peaceful solution with Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
If the Palestinian have a right to return, then give a right to return to the Armenians pushed out of Turkey and a right to return to the Jews and Christians pushed out of genocided after WW1, WW2 and in previous centuries in all muslim ME countries. There can be no double standard.
Dont forget the Greeks in North Cyprus. Ukrainians in Crimea. The Dali Llama in Tibet. Heck 2 UN security council members, and a NATO member all with illegally occupied land, and unlike Israel, none for their own self defense. The UN is such a hypocritical joke. Didn't Azerbaijan steal more of Armenia earlier in the year? Turkey and Armenia are completely trying to squeeze Armenia, the oldest Christian nation on the planet basically, off the map. So they can create one continuous pan-Turkic coalition. Same dream the Arabs have. Same reason they want Israel so bad. They dont even hide it, but these vapid neo marxists gaslight and intentionally ignore it. Zuheir Mohsen (1936 - 25 July 1979) was a Palestinian leader of the Syria-controlled as-Sa'iqa faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) between 1971 and 1979. Quotes The Palestinian people do not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct "Palestinian people" to oppose Zionism. Yes, the existence of a separate Palestinian identity exists only for tactical reasons, Jordan, which is a sovereign state with defined borders, cannot raise claims to Haifa and Jaffa, while as a Palestinian, I can undoubtedly demand Haifa, Jaffa, Beer-Sheva and Jerusalem. However, the moment we reclaim our right to all of Palestine, we will not wait even a minute to unite Palestine and Jordan. “Wij zijn alleen Palestijn om politieke reden,” James Dorsey, Trouw, 31 March 1977.
@@ziruini5071 because the Palestinian cause is an explicitly Arab nationalistic and Arab supremacist cause which demands total Arab hegemony from Morocco to iraq?
@@ziruini5071 You are joking right? More than 50% of those who support Palestinian right to return, blatantly would oppose Armenian return and Turkish/Azerbaijani pull back. The Islamist world would have a legitimate hissy fit. How deluded are you? Are you some ideologically marxist simpleton who thinks the rest of the world feels just like people living in Cushy suburban America? That they want the same things? How absolutely ignorant. Stay naive child.
how can Hamas be seen to be supportive of the Palestinian people when it builds tunnels for it's soldiers but no safe shelters for the ordinary citizenry / Also, what about the 'leadership' of Hamas living on billions and living in luxury in Qatar?
Could Baconi also recommend books on the Jewish Holocaust/genocide/persecution over millennia , the Christian Armenians who even today dream of reclaiming their homes and properties from muslim Turkey and the history and archaeology of Judaism since 1800 BCE. Arab Palestinians do not have sole right over this land (it was part of the Turkish Ottoman Empire prior to 1922). Historically these arabs have never been as persecuted and victimized as the Jews in the biblical land called Israel.
Tareq Baconi’s full-throated defense of Hamas, and his rationalization of a wide range of horrific terrorist attacks, culminating in the vicious massacres on October 7, is disheartening and disturbing to hear - and his perspectives are those of a moderate Hamas supporter.
Agreed. Arab Jews lived in the area too. Just because European Jews came there as refugees but that doesn't make them colonizers of anyone but the Arab Jews that welcomed them there. The other arab nations in the area expelled their jews to Israel, and then tried to launch a full scale war to eradicate them. The Palestinians are unfortunately entitled sore losers.
49:45 Why the hell should the PA speak on behalf of Israeli citizens of Arab descent? That's the most direct recipe for a disaster. Just like Hitler spoke on behalf of Germans in Czechoslovakia or Putin on behalf of Russians in Ukraine.
I really want to listen to this in good faith as I'm pretty agnostic as to which side I support But the more it goes on the more I really lost respect for the Palestinian here. Honestly they're just being childish and super unrealistic and they know it's going to end in war and huge amounts of death of their own people and there's still maximalist even when they're extremely weak. This makes no sense to me at all besides if they all want to be martyrs.
There's nothing to be agnostic about. I am an historian and the Arab version of history is complete propaganda. Jews are no more colonizers than the Arabs are - there have been many thousands of Jews in the region for eons, and those who moved there (the Zionist movement) overwhelmingly purchased their lands from the Ottoman Empire of local landowners. They did NOT steal it. The UN plan gave the Jews a tiny meandering strip of land connecting majority-Jewish towns while the Arab Muslims got the vast majority (Syria, Iraq, Jordan). But the Arabs couldn't accept that another faith could ever control ANY of the region that they felt was theirs. When you launch repeated wars with a goal of exterminating your opponent, you don't get to cry foul when you lose and they take some of YOUR land. It also neglects to mention (interestingly) that more Jews were forced out of Muslim nations than Arabs were forced out of present-day Israel. BTW, Arabs in Israel do not want anything to do with being part of another nation - despite the rhetoric of "apartheid," Muslim Arabs in Israel have full rights, can vote and form political parties, serve in the police and military, and hold seats in both the Knesset and on the Supreme Court. These are easy to look up. In short, there is no moral equivalency here. If Hamas et al were to recognize Israel's right to exist and lay down their arms, there would be peace. if Israel laid down their arms, you'd see 10/7 on a vast scale.
The more I try to learn from both sides, the more I see that Palestine is mainly playing the victim card. As for my understanding, it is an ongoing war between 2 national movements that lasts bloody long with many international political factors. Israel is the winning side so far and keeps growing in terms of economy, military, and also their society, while on the other side, Palestine is losing for their weak organized society and maybe the influence of their religious faith that makes them hard to sit down and accept some compromise condition to get peace and then a chance for develop their community. Also, Israel showed more offers to deal with the matter than Palestine who said NO multiple times, because they just wanted to claim the land back without any Jews or Jews being secondary citizens. The more they suffer, the society has no chance to grow but lean toward extremism, it is like a vicious circle. Even with this attack by Hamas, what is the plan after killing and kidnapping so many Israelis anyway, did they hope that Israel will give up their winning condition? How peace could be set, it seems impossible in any near future.
@@tranngocminh269 The Palestinian peoples actions would support this. They tried to help other arab nations "erase Israel from existence" which failed due to the hubris of Egypt, Jordan, and Syria with Palestinians in their occupied territories. Israel heard what they were doing and launched a preemptive attack leading to Israeli victory in the 6 day war. After the 6 day war A large portion of the Palestinian militants were expelled into Jordan which lead to a Palestinian lead civil war known as Black September. They keep picking fights, and keep losing, then they blame everyone else for their struggles. a peace sign in one hand and a dagger in the other.
I'm not Jewish, but I've always been protective of the Jews and their culture. In high school I chose to do my research paper on the Holocaust. I got to shake the hand of a Holocaust survivor many years ago. That remains a special moment to me.
It's extremely hard to hear someone talk with inaccurate information and not once corrected or even asked about it. I'm sure we all know how in Arabic the things that are said are very different from the things that are spoken to the English speaking world. I feel like this is what's happening here.
Well yea, pretty much. It's extremely toned down for the sake of western mass appeal. I find it's really hard to claim the moral high ground of a internationally recognised terrorist organisation who have been firing missiles into their neighbours country on a daily basis. It just a utterly bizarre situation.
@@dexterdextrow7248 What about the internationally recognized terrorist state that has been violently occupying foreign territory for nearly a half-century now while stealing ever-greater patches of said territory for its own violent settlers while preventing the free movement and tightening the territorial encirclement of said territory's rightful inhabitants? The hypocrisy is disgusting.
@@pcolt4 Foreign Territory? The former Ottoman lands voted on unanimously in 1922 by the League of Nations Mandate of Palestine Charter which stated; *_"Whereas recognition has thereby been given to the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine and to the grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country"_* *Buy a book! Google is free!*
@@shainazion4073 I assure you I"ve done more reading than you have on this topic, Pilgrim Shaina. The bloody greedy British and French imperialists certainly had no right to murder and dispossess the existing inhabitants of Palestine, any more than the murderous terrorizing Zionists did. Also, where in the charter does it say that the white European Zionists have the right to force 800,000 Palestinians to flee their homes, the right to steal their land, the right to hold them in mass concentration camps of 2.3 million people, the right to bomb them under the false pretext of fighting the very terrorism that they are guilty of causing? No, Madam Pilgrim: YOU read a book,, YOU use the internet, YOU quit spreading your lies since the honest people of the world no longer are willing to swallow them.
Portraying South Africa as a post colonial success story is ridiculous. Many white afrikaaners were brutally murdered and the overall murder rate in the country is the 3rd highest in the world.
The right of return is a paradox which does not have a solution except in the context of something like a federation which enshrines ‘freedom of movement’. It may happen sometime in the future but I am glad we are talking about the two state solution again. IMHO , Israel cannot survive without it.
This guest is the best pro Palestinian proponent I have ever heard. He still failed to managed to mention that Hamas teaches its children to murder Jewish civilians because of their race. He failed to mention that when Israel gave them the equivalent of Mayor of Gaza that they used that position to build an army to launch a surprise attack to kill Israeli civilians and thus proven that they must never be allowed enough power to build an army ever again. He keeps speaking about Hamas as if it has the capability of being a responsible neighbor of not murdering its neighbors children when their behavior and Constitution shows that that is who they are. I am glad that I finally found the most powerful pro Palestinian argument because it doesn't measure up and it shows once again that Israel must never allow a Palestinian government that can build an army like it did in Gaza these last few years.
Israel will acknowledge the horror of the Nakba when Palestinians acknowledge that the Jews have an indigenous and rightful claim to the land just like the Palestinians do.
I keep listening to “moderate” well-educated pro-Palestinian voices and I am getting more and more radicalized because they all seem to speak the same language of “right of return”, apartheid, colonialism, etc. There seems to be zero responsibility taken for the Palestinian situation. I’d like to hear just one person say “we should have accepted the 1948 borders”. Hundreds of thousands of Jewish refugees were able to “start over”. They were pushed out of Europe and most Arab countries to the extent there are nearly zero remaining in the Muslim countries. Why have the Palestinians been so unwilling to accept facts on the ground and try to build a better future for their children? “Right of return”’ is a total dead end in any negotiation. Jihadism is a cancer that undermines the Palestinian cause and creates chaos all over the world, not just Israel. Yes the settlements in the West Bank are a big problem. But that ignores the bigger narrative that the Palestinians reject an Israel of any size and any borders going back to 1948 and Israel has had to fight a series of defensive wars. Usually the victor in wars gets to keep what they conquer. If Israel left tomorrow would there be peace? No. We’d probably have a second Iran run by Hamas that would then spread jihadism to neighboring states.
You are simply tone deaf and so biased as to have a warped conception of reality on this issue. The offered 1948 borders were a disaster. The expelled Jews from Europe had a legitimate gripe and legitimate demand for their own land free from oppression… and they are owed that by Germany and Italy and should’ve been given land within Germany along with reparations. Palestine had nothing to do with European antisemitism. Imagine Mexican illegal immigrants invading your house and saying, well, we can give you half of your house. BS. Now imagine the illegal immigrants have the strongest military in the world supporting them. For decades. And they start abusing you and creating walls and video cameras everywhere to demoralize. And half your family escapes and become refugees and just want to go home. But they can’t go home, but the illegals invite more and more to come from all over the world take up more of YOUR space. It’s utterly absurd once you get out of your echo chamber.
Hmmm. I didn’t know that. Israel has often claimed the additional land forms a security buffer zone and they have repeatedly offered to trade back that land for a promise of security as they did with Egypt. They gave back Gaza with no promise of peace. After the 67 war the Arab nations gave their famous 3 Nos of Khartoum. No recognition, negotiation, or peace.
No. Wrong. Murder and dispossession and forcible expulsion are not acceptable under any conditions. Full stop. All of your blathering doesn't change that.
Ugh Could he be more biased in favor of Hamas? It LITERALLY says to destroy Israel on Hamas' charter. Tareq Baconi: "They actually wanted a settlement"
My two Israeli POV cents (or shekels), the reason the Palestinians insist on the right of return is because they know israel will not accept it. It’s a basic middle eastern negotiation tactics. Another one is that who ever we end up sitting down with can not really take any decisions for the Palestinians as a nation. Really frustrating
@doronmutsafi Your "argument" is flawed. It presents a falsity, & uses that assumption to "prove" the assumption. The Right To Return is actually fair, under a 2-State Solution (it's one of many reasons why this solution is better). In a 2-State, most Palestinians would return to Palestine - few would return to Israel. So it won't shift Israel's voting & demographic numbers by much. Israelis (really, the Zionists) find the Right To Return as antithetical because Israel today is not democratic (it's more like a theocracy). Its laws favor the Jewish religion. If the Right to Return were allowed, we know the population would be about equal - giving equal voting power to Palestinians. Since Zionists don't want Palestinians to vote (today they can''t), so they outright dismiss the Right to Return - even though this Right is preferred & equitable in a 2-State Solution. They create this falsity because they say the only option is a "1-State Solution" (because, again, Zionists don't want Palestinians to get land - their own state - that Israel wants all of). This Zionist/Israeli position is fundamentally flawed due to racism & hate, held by Jews & Muslims against one other. It's why the 2-State Solution is the only viable option. It allows the Right to Return, & maximizes safety for all. Please learn history and logic. It would allow you to not make inconsistent, even nonsensical, arguments.
I would say it differently - the "Right of Return" position is all about symmetry. The Israeli's have it and there will not be equality without symmetry.
I think the right of return is non feasible. BUT I also get the idea that there's and asymmetry and thus injustice in the current system. There and asymmetry when there are Palestinians whose people were pushed out and would love to return after just 75 years have past, while there are also people of Jewish ancestry who can return whenever whose nearest ancestor hasn't lived in the region for millenia with extreme ease. That also doesn't make any sense and from a Palestinian perspective I could see how that would be seen as a form of cruel injustice.
@@bluedreams517 what I am trying to point out is that the 1948 war population transfer went both ways. The majority of Jewish people living in Israel right now were expelled from Arab/Muslim majority countries. If they don't have a right of return to Iran for instance then it's not asymmetry to say that Arabs displaced by the 1948 war don't have a right of return to Israel. What would be symmetry, would be for the countries who invaded Israel in 1948 to offer a right of return to the Arab population displaced by that war.
Theres an old saying " the proof is in the pudding" anyone who witnessed the atrocities inflicted on October 7 and doesn't call for the complete destruction of hamas and their ideology is in total denial of the truth.
Where do the 6000+ Gazans killed by the IDF (including 2000 children) over the previous 15 years (compared to approx 300 Israelis) feature in your “pudding”?
So glad you brought up the Palestinian refugee issue. Any person not a Jew living in the British Mandate of Palestine from 1946 can be considered as a Palestinian refugee. Most of the "refugees" are actually IDPs (Internally Displaced Persons), not refugees. And, Palestinian "refugees" are the only population ever that passes their refugee status to their children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and adopted children. They have their own refugee agency, UNRWA, while all other refugees in the world share a different refugee agency.
Ezra Klein completely failed to mention the agreement that Ehud Barak, Bill Clinton, and Yasser Arafat agreed to in late 2000 that Arafat waffled on and then ultimately walked away from. In that instance, as well as with respect to offers by Ehud Olmert’s government later in that decade, it was the Palestinians who weren’t negotiating in good faith. That was the minimum research that Ezra needed to do before interviewing a guest who would make the claims that a guest like this would and did. He didn’t do his homework.
Ehud Olmert's offers suffered from the same problems as Barak it wasn't an offer of proper statehood but rather autonomy when one looks at the details. Also Olmert's final offer was hollow given he resigned a few days after anyways. Israel was never interested in a proper genuine two state solution what some on the Israeli left like Rabin were offering in practice was autonomy not actual real statehood.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 Ehud Barak’s offer, negotiated through Bill Clinton, was good enough for Yasser Arafat to agree to it . . . until he lost his nerve a few months later. At the very least, these offers clearly should have been raised by Ezra Klein.
@@georgekleinfelter7041 Neither Barak nor Arafat fully accepted Clinton's offer as both had their respective issues with it. Suffice it to say the Israeli conception of a Palestinian state(among those in power that claimed to want it) was in essence Palestinian autonomy not actual full independence.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 How long would it take a fully independent Palestinian state to be flooded with Iranian missiles? If you're rational, our only disagreement is that I'm saying seven minutes and you're saying 12. Israel, at its narrowest point, is nine miles wide.
@@georgekleinfelter7041 So be upfront and just say one doesn't want an actual independent Palestinian state, at least one will be honest. But this whole notion of playing this double game needs to end, one should be clear about what it is they want not give a façade of wanting one thing in public but a different thing in private.
I was going to say that it's depressing to hear such a lot of self-serving delusions from our Palestinian friends, but on second thoughts we're used to it. We've gotten used to it over the decades of rejectionism, excuses, and what-aboutery. And it's not just me. The rest of the Arabs have also had a belly-full. Don't see them rushing to help. And as for nobody hearing the Palestinian voice, it's constant and shrill. So nobody listens and "stop interfering in our politics." And when poor old 97yr liberal President of the US (a position that used to mean something), rushes nine thousand miles on day two of the conflict to try to damage limit, or whatever, YOU WON'T EVEN TALK TO HIM! But it's very kind of you Ezra to note that the Jews may also have some issues with displacement. But why did you not mention their displacement from the puzzling-named Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem, or from Hebron, or from Gush Etzion (look it up), or indeed from Gaza itself? As for the assessment of the security of Israel that your guest supposes, I fear that he may perhaps have succumbed to confirmation bias. A simple look around should help that, but like so much in certain quarters, probably won't.
Most of the Arab populace in the region(and the wider Muslim world) strongly support Palestinians and that is evidenced with the protests in support of them, not to mention last year during the World Cup when Arabs gave the cold shoulder to Israeli media . The governments hardly ever represented the will of the their peoples in this matter.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 This dichotomy is explained by the long-standing tradition of separating actual Palestinian people from the actual Arab people. Egypt, for example, continues to protect the Arab people by not opening a gate, at Rafah. Gives you a warm feeling.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 The problem that worries me, is the wild celebrations of every atrocity all religious extremists commit, by the Arab street. It's against all westerners, including those trying to help them. In this, local (undemocratic) governments worry - and would have worked for peace DESPITE their bloodthirsty citizens, but for 7/10... Who all want to live in the West, yet hate our values (honour killings in the UK, and plenty admitted agreeing with killing Rushdie - others just kept quiet)
@@WilliamDuff-b3o Israelis(including the elite) have openly called for genocide against Gazans reffering to them as Amalek. To act like its one sided is pathetic. Also the reason why the locals oppse these "peace deals" is becuase they throw Palestinians under the bus and just sanitize Israeli occupation and oppresion of Palestinians which is a daily reality.
Ezra and Tareq, Much gratitude to you both for this very thoughtful, informative discussion and all the valuable context. You model the kind of respectful, curious exchange we so badly need more of.
The guests’ version about what was addressed during the Oslo negotiations differs from what I heard at the time. AFAIK the idea of including compensation, both to descendants of the Palestinians displaced during the ‘48 war and to those Jewish population expelled from Arabic countries, was discussed during at the time. Arafat countered that he did not have a right to negotiate away the people’s rights, and that the right of return was an individual right. Israel would not concede the narrative of expulsion, because they perceived that instead of opening the door to a final settlement it would be used as a tool for continuing demands of return, which are logically seen as an existential threat. Israelis don’t deem it as a symbolic concession, and I doubt this will change anytime soon. That has made many Israelis say that a two state solution cannot mean that Palestinians get booth one state without Jews and another state with Jews in a dwindling proportion.
“A 2 state solution cannot mean that Palestinians get both 1 state without the Jews & another state with the Jews in dwindling proportion.” Yes. This is the crux of the problem. As long as the ideological issue exists (Palestinians want to eradicate Israel) then a 2 state solution seems pointless. Also, Gaza being independently run was a bit of a 1st step to see if a 2-state solution would be viable. Meaning, could an independently run Palestinian area be peaceful. Of course people will complain about the security measures, but Oct7 certainly proved the mini-2 state solution failed & Palestinians seem to have less appetite for peace than ever
@@scarletsletter4466 I always saw disengagement without an agreement more of a retreat to cut the burden of guarding the settlers in Gaza. I wasn’t too surprised that Hamas took control there.
Right off the bat, you allowed him to go on a rant insisting that the Hamas position is full of conciliatory energy - whilst not ONCE demonstrating how, when and where, exactly they would recognize Israel's right to exist and to exist there -- where and as it is. So.... the rest is a moot point. Anyway, thanks for trying, I guess, to speak to a pro Hamas person, so we can hear it first-hand?
@kereneldad2960 What you claim wasn't said, was in fact said. I hope you can do a better job listening. And not blaming others for your flaws. This seems to be the "Israeli" position -- ignoring its 75 years of brutal apartheid, etc. and pretending it is innocent. The truth of today shows us Israelis support its extremist government killing innocent people. (Remember, Palestinian children caused none of this - but YOU'VE LET ISRAEL KILL 7000+ CHILDREN).
Ezra, as a typical Tel Aviv settler leftist, I would like to thank you for demonstrating again how little difference there is between Palestinian moderates and Palestinian extremists.
This podcast is very misleading! (And I do respect Ezra).historically speaking,In the late 40s there were about 100 “Nakbas” around the world, and that included the expulsion of many ethnic groups such as the Jews and other minorities from their homes..due to the 2nd world war.The land of Israel, was GIVEN to the Jews, while the local Arabs(who called themselves Palestinians thanks to a PLO terminology since 1963 ish), chose to fight the Jews while disagreeing to the UN partition plan. THAT is a fact that wasn’t mentioned in this podcast. Enough of this woke progressive propaganda already. The Mufti of Jerusalem was antisemite since the 20s. Did this podcast mention the pogroms of 1921, 1929 and 1936!!?? No it didn’t. The gust fails to mention too many historical facts prior to 48, and AFTER 67. Instead of being incited to violence the Palestinians could resort to cooperation with Jews like their brothers Arab Israelis who chose to stay and are living a very comfortable life(although I don’t say perfect). I do agree that Hamas was a godsend to right wingers such as Netanyahu, who banked on THEIR violence to stay in power since 1995, and after 2000s.
Why would Palestinians accept the shameless U.N deal which awarded the Zionists 55%of the land despite owning only 7% of the land, and making up 33% of the population(most of whom were fairly recent arrivals in the years prior). So yes ofc Arabs rejected such a stupid offer. As for Arab-Israelis they are literally 2nd class citizens in Israel and things have been getting worse for them as successive Israeli governments have gotten more right-wing.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 Why were the Arabs given 77% of the land, to become trans-Jordan leaving only 23% to become the future Jewish state? Why did the Arabs turn down the 1937 Peel Commission offer of 80% of the land? They turned this down because they didn't want the Jews to even have the 17% offered to them (4% of the original Mandate of Palestine lands). The 55% of the lands partitioned to the Jews was the majority of the Negev desert with no agricultural abilities and no infustructure, while the Arabs were partitioned the best farmland in the state, the Jordan Valley, with already existing infustructure!! Remember the Arabs already were given the 77% of the Mandate of Palestine as Trans-Jordan.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 And, most people claiming to be Palestinians are not from Palestine. They are Muslim refugees invited into the land in the 1800s and 1900s by the Ottomans. Bosniaks, Circassians, Chechins and Sudanese are not Palestinians! And most of the others, Arab laborers that came into the land as support personnel for the British and because of the prosperity brought by the Jews reclaiming the land. Egyptians, Syrians, Jordanians, Iraqis and Lebanese are not Palestinians!
@@shainazion4073 In the case of Syrians and Jordanians they are part of the Levant which Palestine was part of and well integrated with. Clans have members in all regions going back centuries. As for other Muslims like Circassians, Sudanese, etc. they became integrated into Palestinian society(not every Palestinian is ethnically Arab) some of these people like certain Kurdish families has settled in the region hundreds of years going back to the Crusader period and intermarried with the local people.
I feel in some of these conversations that Ezra acts like a left wing Joe Rogan w/o push back to the false things his guests assert. If you can't push back/critique, maybe you shouldn't be interviewing these people b/c it doesn't help to understand the situation any better. I left this conversation not knowing/hearing anything I hadn't heard before and more disappointed in the left that I was previously. Why use liberalism to allow someone to harm you?
Yet it's what the Zionist Jews believed, that they had a right to return and take the land although they had lived in Europe and all over the world for dozens of generations.
@@danielch6662 because Jews in Israel are never going to accept that are would sooner go rogue state status than to allow it. If you’re asking why, you fail to understand the Israeli perspective
@@danielch6662well jews agreed to limit their right of return only to some parts of historic Israel. They accepted partition plan, they dont demand return to ancient Iseaeli territories on east bank of Jordan river and in all proposed peace plans they would have abandoned right to return to their ancestoral lands in judea and samaria. So why palestinians not limit their right of return to parts of Palestine that are not Israel?
@@danielch66621. Jews bought the land or won during a war that was waged on them. Like Poland. Should poles give those northeastern provinces back to Germany? 2. The entirety of Jewish tradition is dedicated to returning.
Interesting how Baconi twists the discussion into defending/rationalizing the role Hamas plays in defending the Palestinian position. A bit like arguing that Hitler's position was worthy in defending the German state. Think about it.
Just about the best hour I've heard on this issue since Oct 7th. A well-informed, intelligent, measured, attentive person from different sides, the Liberal American jew and the Palestinian (I think Baconi was born in Jordan and si now a UK academic in the UK ) . Like it or not there are two sides here and Hamas is fighting for one of them. Tacomi is making the best case for Hamas's actions that can be made. I tend to side with Klein, no surprise there, and he asks all the pertinent questions that needed to be asked and makes the objections that a politically savvy person would make to Baconi's powerful, thoughtful articulations of Hamas's reasoning. I'd add one more point to Klein's sympathetic objections: the analogy of South Africa and Palestine is imperfect. The ANC and its component elements never had any maximal position, it wanted the same rights and democratic power as the Whites, and never postulated the extermination or expulsion of the Whites, never represented the spear of surrounding nations which also, at one point, sought to destroy the oppressor, never sought to impose an ideological/religious ideology on that oppressor. It also had a policy of never targeting White civilians. White Boers or American Whites in Jim Crow had no experience of the oppressed groups trying to destroy or expel them; their fears of destruction were groundless. omalley.nelsonmandela.org/index.php/site/q/03lv02167/04lv02264/05lv02303/06lv02304/07lv02305/08lv02312.htm There is always the problem, too, of what sort of governance Hamas represents. What would it look like? The other Arab majority nations in the region offer no good alternatives or promise, on the contrary. Hamas decided not to build air raid shelters for the population only tunnels for their military. That does not inspire confidence. This doesn't make them evil or the Israelis good. But we can judge them by results not simply by their aspirations, and how well they strategize and plan. It does mean they cannot be trusted to GOVERN well. They know how to fight, for sure. What we are seeing today shows that they have not been effective representatives, they have chosen terrible policies to achieve their objectives. Israel can choose terrible governments and survive comfortably; the Palestinians don't have that luxury.
Listen to the Sam Harris Making Sense recent podcast about jihadism. Hamas is not just “one side” of the conflict fighting for their people. They represent jihadism which is an existential threat to free societies everywhere. Watch Hotel Mumbai. Listen to the son of the Hamas founder speech he gave at the UN recently.
The point you make about comparisons with other oppressed groups having political victories is a good one. Over simplifying comparisons with other struggles against oppression can lead to ignoring/failing to understand important factors of the conflict.
I agree with a lot of your points, but I can’t help but think you’ve overlooked the elephant in the room. And that is the ongoing absorption of land by Israel - they are literally eating it up slowly and steadily, coming from a position less than 100 years ago of 10% Jewish occupation to 90% non-Jews, to today when the ratio is now 78% to 22%. Hamas has only been in existence for just under 40 years. But nothing in all that time seemed to have any impact on the ongoing illegal acquisition of land by Israel. In all wars, shocking atrocities have been carried out by the military. The vast majority of casualties are always civilians. Is that not terrorism too? Doesn’t that make any government that declares war on any nation or community a terrorist group too? War terrorises, period. If you’re going to build up a huge army and a multitude of deadly weapons, then your intention is clearly to go to war. It is clearly not for defense, because more than 50% of the population of Gaza are children - who needs to defend themselves against children? It is also not for ‘security’. There is no one in the world who feels secure right now, because of the actions of a ‘democratic’ State! If Israel represents a modern civilised democratic society, then we are all in trouble. Who are we then to say that Hamas could not do any better?
‘Israel can choose terrible governments and survive comfortably’ - that statement has been troubling me, because my understanding is that the present PM is facing charges of corruption and could in fact be facing a jail sentence, so this outbreak has been a blessing in disguise for him …. Is that why he declared that this was going to be a long war? Is he hoping to somehow become a hero for driving out Hamas (the ‘collateral’ damage, ie innocent women and children, hospitals, schools, homes etc can’t be helped!) just as long as he gets off the hook. Personally I can’t think of any worse type of governance, where even your own people are sacrificed - the hostages he made no attempt to save, the Israeli people who have to live with the brutality of his actions, afraid to speak up when they disagree. I wouldn’t call that comfortably surviving. Btw - I don’t think Hamas is any better, but I know less from that side because I imagine that Palestinian people are also afraid to speak out. The poor governance from Israel is much more visible.
@@valtracey6180if you're interested, you said at the end that you know little about Hamas's rule in Gaza, the video below is a Vice video of when the part owner Suroosh visited Gaza in 2011, 4 years after they took over governing the area. Gives a reasonable idea of what day to day governing was like at the time compared to how their spokespersons stated the situation was. ua-cam.com/video/RWJFC98jPrQ/v-deo.htmlsi=8SpCixtuipegttzL
What a terribly conducted interview. Accepting so many ridiculous statements and propositions with very little pushback. The notion that Hamas’ position was vindicated by them committing terrorism and sabotaging peace is so absurd.
The guest tries to defend Hamas when their manifesto suggests the annihilation of the Jews. Their action shows their intent very clearly. How about the Middle Eastern Jews who were displaced from different Arab nations, do they have the right to return?
0:10: 🔍 The video discusses the need to hold two thoughts at once regarding Hamas and its actions. 5:52: 🤝 The video discusses the potential for reconciliation between Hamas and Israel through political negotiations and concessions. 11:42: 🤝 The video discusses the political equilibrium and collusion between Hamas and Israeli hardliners. 17:38: 🇵🇸 Hamas is willing to accept the creation of a Palestinian state on the 1967 lines with East Jerusalem as its capital and limit its resistance to the Israeli occupation. 23:23: 🇵🇸 The video discusses the importance of resolution 194 to Palestinians and the root causes of the conflict. 29:10: ⚖ The video discusses the issue of Palestinian right of return and its impact on negotiations between Israel and Hamas. 35:13: 💬 The video discusses the flawed notion of security through maintaining oppressive rule over Palestinians and the need to dismantle such systems. 40:57: 🤔 The speaker discusses the challenges faced by Palestinians in achieving security and the right of return. 46:22: 🕊 The peace process between Israel and Palestine faced challenges due to differing perspectives on sovereignty and security. 52:17: 🌍 The video discusses the paradox of Hamas losing control over Gaza while also emerging as a central figure in the Palestinian struggle. 58:14: 🤔 Hamas sees their actions as a victory in disrupting Israeli security and occupation. Recapped using Tammy AI
Tareq baconi's framing of the event and the conflict in general is completely wrong. The power balance the state of Israel needs to maintain is is with at least 10 muslim arab states surrounding it, not just the palestinians. Tagging the state of Israel as an apartheid state is factually wrong. Not all injustice and inequality can be labeled as "apartheid". The use if this term erodes the credibility of his other arguments. 36:43
Why? A poll of Middle East academics in 2021 a majority of them called Israel an apartheid state. The largest human rights organizations in the world - Amnesty International, and within Israel - B’tselem, also call Israel an apartheid state. People that were fundamentally part of the dismantling of South African Apartheid, Desmond Tutu and Ronnie Kasrils, also have referred to Israel as an apartheid state. Can you explain why you disagree? From where I stand the evidence is overwhelming. Have you read any of the human rights reports?
Middle east academics is all you need to say. The arab academy is very low level Islamic antisemitic bent. Palestinians are citizens of the PLO, as of the Oslo accords. Israel does not owe right to thier enemy's citizens. Zinoism is not colonialism and war is not aparthide
Calling Israel an apartheid state is pretty uncontroversial when it comes to human rights organizations, as @@kylemarshall4559 so helpfully detailed. It's also uncontroversial to explain Gaza (pre Oct 7) as the world's largest open air prison. Also simply labeling the states surrounding Israel as "Muslim Arab" is somewhere between an oversimplification and untruth. As for the Muslim portion, yes, the majority of their neighbors are majority Muslim. However that's oversimplified, the Sunni-Shia divide is very real (along with other various other divisions) and leads to geopolitical tensions between majority Islamic nations. As for the Arab portion - it's false. Calling Turks & Iranians Arabs is like calling Koreans and Japanese Chinese. The middle east is a diverse part of the world & that needs to be understood during any discussion of middle eastern geopolitics (not to mention North Africa as a part of the Islamic world).
@@PMickeyDee all the countries you mentioned are strongly anti israel and muslim authocrtactic with very little acdameic freedom and integrity (iran still vows to destory israel), showed by the lack of actual sceince being conducted there. Gaza is also bordered by egypt, which most times let Rafah open. The only one keeping Gazans in is Hamas. On the israel side, we are enemies at war, closed borders are the only way to keep us safe as shown by the 7/10 massacres and like evety two countries at war. You use extra language just cause its about Israel. All muslims living in israel proper are full citizens with the most amount of rights and freedoms in the middle east by far. Palestinians are governed by the PLO/Fatah and Hamas, they are responisble for thier own, they have thier rules, laws, ID and governments. I dont know what each organization think this is aparthied but the reality is different
It is uncotrovesial only in circles of pretty radical left. There is a problem with all kind of rights organisation whose politics is heavily leaning towards radical left as well as automatic anti israeli majority in un institutions beacause of cold war soviet anti israeli heretage as well as large muslim block. You are right that there are divisions among muslims but they are historically united in they animosity towards Israel.
It seems the right of return is actually first and foremost a call for the suffering of displacement and ethnic cleansing that happened in 1947 to be recognized, seen, acknowledged, felt by Israel. Most violence comes from the desire for one's suffering to be measured by the other party. If that were done, with humility and awareness that early XXth century was what it was (soaked in colonialism), and a honest desire to evolve beyond it, then a seed of peace might be planted. This conflict needs restorative justice on a massive scale.
Yes, if it was about acknowledgment there could be a place to move forward from. It seems to be about more than that, unfortunately. And a lot or the room for that acknowledgment has been damaged by the atrocities if October 7th. That level of violence and brutality discredits a lot of the goodwill and compassion that might otherwise be there, was there.
Really? So there's a legitimate reason why they raped women while breaking their pelvises and legs? Why they put a baby in the oven while they were raping his mother and then killing her? Why they put a grenade in a dead woman's vagina, to kill the people who would come to tend to the dead? Why they didn't feed any of the children that they kept hostage for weeks?
@@MrBezigebij I was taught when I was very young that you don't mean it when you say 'sorry' if you keep doing the thing you apologized for after you apologize. Acknowledgement intrinsically means earnestly seeking to make amends, and to produce a just resolution to the thing one is apologizing for. That's not unfortunate, that's the requirement that integrity, honesty, and viewing humans as having equal values comes with. Once the conversation about what a just resolution honestly looks like begins, is when sustainable peace will also come.
I have always assumed the "right of return" was a euphemism for conquest. After all why after decades of fighting would Palestinians want to surrender the idea of true sovereignty and cultural independence to get a few plots of land back? even if 14 million Palestinians were to suddenly arrive and integrate into Israeli society the only thing they would change about Israel is its Jewish character. Israel would still be western society, the Palestinians would still be behind in terms of education and economic power, they would be a majority in a nation not their own. As a culture looking to survive, wouldn't they rather build their own nation with their own cultural values at its core?
What's a "Jewish Character"? What's a "Muslim Character"? What's a "Christian Character"? Is Israel an Ethnostate or is it secular? Is Judiasm a cultural identity or an ethnicity? Is Amy Schumer an indigenous Palestinian woman and the Old Lady that was ethnically cleansed from Yaffa in 1947 isn't? Is Israel an Apartheid state or a democracy? Are the 2 million Arab Israelis in Israel considered Israeli? What about the other Arabs in the WB? WTH is a settlement? Are settlers colonizers? Are settlers terrorist? Are Mizrahi Jews the same as Ashkenazi Jews? If Israel is secular? Why does Israel have religion based parties and openly Jewish Surpremacist Ministers (but Ssshhh, it's ok) ? How many Israeli PMs were Warcriminals/Terrsts? 🤔🤔🤔 Is it anti-semetic to criticize Israel? I guess we will never know.
What is a Jewish character? go Israel it will be pretty apparent once you get there What is a Muslim character? go to Turkey, Saudi Arabia, or most other Muslim majority nations it will be pretty apparent What is a Christian character? go to any European nation or to Texas for that matter, it will be pretty apparent Is Israel an Ethnostate or is it secular? These are not mutually exclusive Turkey is an example of an Ethnostate that is also secular. However Israel is not an Ethnostate Is Amy Schumer an indigenous Palestinian woman and the Old Lady that was ethnically cleansed from Yaffa in 1947 isn't? Are you high? Is Israel an Apartheid state or a democracy? Interpretations vary but generally no. Israel has created apartheid like conditions in the West bank but is not an Apartheid state like South Africa before the 90s. However with a lose enough definition all pluralist nations are Apartheid. Are the 2 million Arab Israelis in Israel considered Israeli? The answer is in the question. What about the other Arabs in the WB? Do want a history, an ethnography, or prediction of the future? WTH is a settlement? Depends on the context, In reference to Israel and Palestine it is an Illegal Israeli town in the West Bank or east Jerusalem. Are settlers colonizers? Depends on the context but generally yes. Are settlers terrorist? Some are, other are not. Are Mizrahi Jews the same as Ashkenazi Jews? These are different ethnic groups with different histories and cultures. If Israel is secular? It is however like in other countries that is opposed by certain political factions Why does Israel have religion based parties and openly Jewish Surpremacist Ministers (but Ssshhh, it's ok) ? Like other democratic nations Israel has many political parties. Currently a rightwing populist coalition has power. How many Israeli PMs were Warcriminals/Terrsts? That depends on who you ask, what constitutes as these titles are subjective. Many world leaders have been accused of being war criminals and terrorist's some with more evidence then others. Is it anti-semetic to criticize Israel? Like anywhere else in the world it depends how you do it. If you are intending to criticize a country like China but use derogatory language referring to their leaders eyes you are perpetuating anti-Asian hate, not simply being critical of china. If you attempt to criticize Israel but discredit Jews has having no history or right to self determination in the region, as has become commonplace on the left, or Jews as being conniving and conspiratorial, as has become commonplace on the right, then yes. If you single out political factions such as the Likud party then no.
Ezra, your questions are right out of my head. And your interlocutor either circles with words in essence saying yes, Israel has got to go. Your patience is truly holy.
It seems that this man were on vacation on 7 october. I don't understand how can someone can tell that hamas is open to negotiations and that they don't want Israel destruction, above all after 7 oct.
On the right of return, Egypt lost Sinai which was promptly colonised with settlers so what did Egypt do? Assess their positions and negotiate in accordance with their capacity. They tried war and it didn't work unlike Hamas who are yet to take the note
@whdc425 Your point shows many levels of ignorance. "War" can only occur between two groups with equal human rights & autonomy. This isn't the case in Gaza. Gaza is a concentration camp for families, which has been blockaded by Israel, and turned into a giant tomb. Israel controls their water, fuel, food, electricity, medicine, even the air. So you can't have a "war" between the victims locked in the tomb and the people outside freely drinking sweet Zionist wine.
The implicit threat that they wield is that there is an enormous army of Muslim extremists surrounding Israel from all sides. It's not just the ones in Gaza.
Wow Ezra this is exactly the info I've been wanting as I research and try to understand the Palestinian and Israeli issues. This podcast is so densely packed with important information I'm going through it slowly and repeatedly. Thank you SO much!!! This info needs to go mainstream!
I totally agree! I have listened to hundreds of podcasts at this stage, but this is the first time I have heard the Hamas perspective - and like you, I am listening to it repeatedly because there is so much here. I am coming to the belief that there is a possible solution, but only if BOTH sides are EQUAL to begin with ie the first move must be to provide Statehood for Palestine, even if it is just for a 22% share of the total. The share is what then needs to be negotiated,but can only be between two recognized States. Why should Israel constantly demand that Palestine recognises its State, but they don’t equally recognize a Palestinian State. I have even heard interviewers ask Palestinian representatives this question ‘if you were granted your own sovereign State, would you be able to govern it’? The implication is clearly there that they don’t believe Palestinian people are capable of this. How arrogant is that? They said the same about most nations that fought for independence from colonizers and empires. When we gained independence in Ireland after more than 700 years of occupation, we had no experience of government, but we quickly learned by making our own mistakes. Locking Palestinians into a cage hasn’t resolved Israel’s security problems so surely it’s time to release them and make amends?
@@valtracey6180 yes! It's Israel's responsibility to make the first move, as they are the ones with power. You can't ask a non-state entity to give away the one bargaining tool they have, to say: we won't recognize you until you recognize us, and allow us a state. Otherwise they have nothing. That's what Baconi means by negotiate from "a position of strength." WHich is why it's so sickening to hear one Israeli or American Zionist after another, insist that Palestinians always walk away from the negotiating table. There have been so few good-faith negotiations.
It's fairly simple, Joan. (1) They want Israel gone. (2) Murder is fine to get there. No need to overcomplicate things. Use your empathy for people who aren't murderers who're still ready to go. Unless of course you're inviting them to your house. Because if you're going to make things soft for murderers, you shouldn't be putting other people at risk, that's not very empathetic of you. You should be taking on the danger yourself.
@@litsci1877 in my perspective that is what took place. Evil attracts evil. What were they doing in West Bank? Why were IDF persecuting Muslins worshipping in their mosques?
The end of Zionism is not the end of Israel as a country or the right of Israelis to live in historic Palestine: it is a recognition that Israel was founded on a deliberate program of demographic engineering and has pursued it to this day and that no state has a right to exist as a racist order. The US South still exists, South Africa still exists, Northern Ireland still exists, despite the fact that their former racist orders have been dismantled.
I think something that commentators intentionally refuse to discuss is the cultural differences. Even if tomorrow Israel would decide to have equal rights, full compensation, there would be no peace. Because Palestinians are hard core Islamists, they want their society rules. They want women covered amd uneducated, they want Koran worship. That is contrary to Israel way of life. I see them here in Europe all the time. At some point there was a militia in a Duch town, in a neighborhood that was harassing women on the streets because they were looking differently than they should. It ended with the police intervention. Europe as a whole realized that cultures are different and is the reason people don't want immigration here anymore.
This is painful. This man justifies the attitudes of the farthest-right Israelis. Surely there are more reasonable representatives of Palestinian aspirations -- i.e., more open to coexistence and compromise. PS - His suggestion re post-Apartheid South Africa is deceptive. Yes, obviously, Apartheid had to end -- but the outcome has been very dysfunctional so far, and not just for the Afrikaners. I have spent some time there, and I can tell you, people are miserable. Crime has increased exponentially, real estate values have plummeted, etc. etc. There has been a lot of retribution, which is understandable; but the situation could have been handled much, much better.
The order and the premis of things presented is not correct. The whole point of the conflict until Oct 7th was based on the fact that Palestinians want a political resolution. There were at least 5 offers of concessions made by the Israelis during peace process to all of which the Palestinians refused, including 98% of the West Bank by Ehud Barak. The information presented in this interview is false and distorted at best, and blatant lies at the worst case scenario.
@smarinay World history disagrees with the Israeli view. World history books record every Palestinian offer made to oftentimes extremist Israeli governments. The offer you refer to by Barak was a non-starter because it did not give Palestinians *_sovereignty_* over the land being offered as "theirs". Offers by Israel have been to keep the land under Israel, but to only "let the Palestinians stay there", and Israel agreeing to exert "minimum control over them."
As Avi Shlaim quotes, I'm paraphrasing, 1st by importance demand of the PLO was return of the refugees and 2nd is their own state. Israel would never agree to the 1st demand and that makes any negotiations futile. Even if there were a single body representing wishes of palestinians, if their demand were returning of refugees, any negotiations with Israel would be futile.
This is a high quality discussion, and I learned a great deal about how Hamas views the situation. I don't agree with them, and I think Ezra should have pushed back aggressively on some of his guest's assertions, but this is really valuable.
his guest wasn't speaking on behalf of Hamas. he was explaining what Hamas is doing what it's doing. Ezra did the right thing by not pushing anything aggressively.
At the end of the day, regardless of the history, the Palestinians deserve their own state; that is, a legitimately recognized but thoroughly dysfunctional state from which they can properly emigrate to Europe or the U.S. to seek a better life 😎.
What? A dysfunctional state? That they can emigrate from? How would you feel being in a dysfunctional state? How would you feel being forced to leave your homeland?
@@BurroGirl I think that polygot8 was making a joke. He is pointing at Syria, Lebanon and Iraq, which you must admit can all be described as failed states, and saying that a Palestinian state would be no different.
There is no Apartheid in Israel!! *Apartheid?* The Apartheid is on the Arab side, not in Israel. In Israel there are 2 million Arab citizens (1.8 Muslim citizens) all with the same rights and benefits. How are Jews treated in the Arab world? Talk about Apartheid, there are less than 10,000 Jews total in all the Arab and Muslim countries in the Middle East, possibly the Arab world. Gaza and the West Bank are not Israel. They have their own governments, laws, taxes, schools, police, services. They are not Israeli citizens, but citizens of Hamas and the Palestinian Authority. If a Canadian or Mexican wants to vote in US elections, can they? No, because they are citizens of other lands. Can a Canadian or Mexican come across the border to the US without identifying themselves, or giving a valid reason for their travel? No, they must have ID, and state how long they plan to stay in the US and why they are coming into US territories. That is the same as Israel with the Palestinians. There is no Apartheid! *Please buy a dictionary! Google is free!*
Tareq's comparison of black right in the united states to Palestinians in Israel is an absurd comparison. 17 million Palestinians in Israel would eliminate the Jewish homeland. White Americans didn't have legitimate fears of Black people as Israel has to fear Palestinian militants. Thousands of Israelis have been murdered by Palestinian militants. That's not an analogy for Blacks in America.
This guy, Tareq Baconi, is full of it. ignoring basic facts and historical events... and the written manifesto of the leading Palestinian terrorist organization (called Hamas). It is really frustrating that they cannot provide anything which could be taken seriously.
Tour podcasts have really helped me digest a lot of these complicated issues. As a jew raised in Asia - it has been difficult for me to square my anger at Arab intransigence and the destruction of so many lives in Gaza as well. . . Thank you
This particular episode if full of propaganda and lies, sorry to disappoint you. Hamas isn't a freedom fighting organization trying to save their people. If they were. They would use their tunnels ars bomb shelters for the Gaza civilians, they wouldn't go into Israel to rape women and burn families alive. Show me the freedome fighters elsewhere who behaved in such a barbaric fashion?
Begun listening and stopped after less than 15 minutes. Your guest is trying to push false nattatives, much more than share knowledge. As a part of the Israeli left I know for a facr his claima regatding Oslo are false. Was about to subscribe to the thread and follow it and decided not to
Ezra, can you pls formulate your basic premise why we ought to see the things from the perspective of a rapist as long as he is a palestinian Arab? Normally, we put him into jail once convicted of the crime. Why is this rapist different from all other rapists?
I think podcast was quite useful in showing people that Hamas is fundamentally unserious. A lot of westerners have a delusional idea that Hamas just wants a Palestinian state but it’s not true
SO MUCH PROPAGANDA YOU ALL PEOPLES DO , JUST UNBELIEVABLE, BUT THANKS TO SOCIAL MEDIA,THE WORLD STARTED TO KNOW THE REALITY AND THE TRUTH,FREE FREE PALESTINE 🇵🇸, LEAVE THEM ALONE FOR GOD SAKES PLEASE
Excellent conversation. As an old veteran and historian, I still walk away feeling it’s up to Palestinians to get a grip on the historical context of their plight & commit to moving forward instead of backwards. Not as Iran’s proxy of destabilization, but as constructive regional partners. And I do not feel the situation is comparable to the US & SA. But I do have a far better sense of how solutions are continually thwarted. And will continue to fail unless there is a significant shift in ideology.
Not sure we were listening to the same show, but it seems clear they don't have a willing partner. Iran may be the only thing that prevents them from being silenced forever.
"Yes, this poll had a small sample size and yes it's 'hard' [due to fact people's lives can be endangered when they speak against violent groups] to get representative samples ..."
Am I the only one who still doesn’t understand how the right of return would work in practice? The guest dances around actually answering.
It's a theme of most of the discussion around this issue, general notions presented as solutions with no specifics. Usually the solutions are fundamentally untenable, ignore the reality on the ground, and require the Israelis to make massive concessions for essentially nothing in return. Even amongst people who make a living studying this there seems to be a fundamental lack of serious and realistic thinking around how their solutions will work.
the same way it works for Jewish people.
He wants Israel gone, but knows that's a thing NYT readers are not happy to hear that, so he does not give an answer.
He's basically doing the good ol' "I'm going to repeat your question in my own words, it's a very good question, but now I'm answering another question" shtick.
I think it was relatively clear: Israel reverts to 1967 border lines, Palestinians make East Jerusalem their capital, the “right of return” can look like reparations and be paid rather than granted specifically in land (like Germany did for the jews) - which would double by acknowledging that the nakba did happen. Palestinians would get control of their borders and their economy and military, same as South Africa. And of course the Israeli settlements would need to stop. Then, instead of billions of dollars going to Israel and the US continuing occupation of Palestine they could invest in other industries and Palestinians could have autonomy. And my guess is, since this is the only solution that hasn’t been tried since Israel’s founding, maybe both countries could experience a level of security. And maybe in a hundred years you could have Jews and Arabs living side by side in the place they both call their home country, just like they did historically.
@@isuckatguitarbut the idea of making mass concessions with nothing in return is not the right way to look at it. Israel made the present absentee law to void any international law regarding ethnic cleansing, and refugee land dispossession.
They also knew the settlements in post 1967 were illegal, and dispossessive.
It's not a concession when it's deliberately taken and knowingly illegal.
Now, the idea of right to return is significantly more complex now that it's 75 years later than when it happened in 1946, 47, or 48. However, PLO was willing to take any form of compensation in lieu of land where someone's house used to be, but Israel has never claimed they are at fault, or in any position to pay people for their dispossession.
“The Israelis need to be more diplomatic but also we have minimum demands that are completely unreasonable about and unwilling to compromise on”
“Israel’s unwillingness to advance peace because Hamas kept doing terrorism is validation of the claim that Israel doesn’t want peace”
So blissfully unaware of the core logical conflicts in his statements.
Palestinian supporters also like to conveniently leave out the part about being willing to live at peace with your neighbors when discussing the right of return as international law (the text of UNR-194 he references says: “refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date”)
Two more points to add:
UNR-194 is not "international law", it is just a UN resolution (which the Arabs ignored at the time). UN resolutions are not international law - the UN is not a legislature.
It mentions "refugees", not their descendants, even if they did have peaceful intentions, which they clearly do not have.
He is aware,
Just dishonest and manipulative
Why is Tareq avoiding or twisting every sensitive question? Mostly by "contextualizing" it.
He wants Israel gone, but knows NYT readers are not happy to hear that, so he just refuses to answer.
Because that's the pattern of speech that these Hamas advocates use to avoid actually addressing the question because they can't answer it without sounding like genocidal sociopaths.
Tareq assumes, what HAMAS says politically and what it does on the ground has any connection to each other.
Same for the Zionist regime.they never do what they say.
He is a Hamas spokesperson in disguise, not a real scholar of any kind.
I noticed he didn't answer the question about how alot of groups have been displaced in history thru war and those people had to move on. Nobody is guaranteed a "homeland ". There was a war, they lost multiple times, move on and rebuild. But they won't do that because then their fight would be over and they're freedom fighters, its what they do, fight.
Move on? Move where? Are you offering a piece of your country for them to build new Palestinian on? Or is your country opening its doors for them to emigrate to and assimilate in to? Talk is cheap. It is easy to express a desire that some other country do it. But if your own country is unwilling, then you are not serious.
Apparently there is a guarantee of a "homeland" through corruptive means such as the Balfour declaration.
What I got from that part of the podcast was really why America can never support a right to return. They'd have to give it all back to the Native American population.
The right to return is a non-starter and while we can agree that ethically, it's not okay, we also have to agree that it'd be a political nightmare that nobody wants to take on. With good reason.
And what's more... Hamas knows this. The right to return might just be a demand they throw out to ensure that peace will never be possible
@@danielch6662They were previously welcomed in Kuwait, in Jordan in Lebanon. They incited unrest, tried to overthrow governments and were in part responsible dor a 15 year Civil War, in those countries, so yes, in part you are right, many countries do not want them to come. Also when Israel gave them Gaza to have sovereignty over they turned it into a terrorist base. It’s understandable that trust is more than a little tainted in the region. They could still choose to overthrow Hamas and turn Gaza into a prosperous place it has every potential to be.
@@danielch6662 move on is a phrase, as in, get over it, focus on something new.
27:00 so should the Arab countries that waged war on Israel and contributed to the Nakba also contribute through compensation and land allocation?
So those arab armies should have just watch while armed zio gangs coming from poland france america..armed to the teeth by colonial west, invaders and in barbaric gruesom way ethnicly cleansed the palestinians just cause a thousands of years old book told them to do so?!
Of course but Baconi could not be more disingenuous. He makes literally every excuse for hamas while claiming not to advocate for them
But The Arab countries only waged war on Israel three months into the Nakba , let's not lose sight that it was the Zionist settlers who have perpetrated that
A Palestinian "concession" is offering something that they never even had.
Miscalculated their strategic position for an entire century straight.
Black Africans came to the Americans in chains the concession by white Americans to make them full citizens was a strategic mistake since freedom was never something they had in America, I would hope you agree with this.
4:46. Already has accused Israel of dishonesty. Called peace accommodation. Called israel “Occupation” twice. Called “ propaganda “critique.” Called terrorism “confrontation.”
Calls this presentation “understanding.”
This whole 'right of return' thing is just incredibly depressingly cynical. 'Yes we want two states except your state is also ours too'. Never gonna happen, ever.
Sorry but theft and dispossession and murder are not acceptable. Full stop. Right of return is not negotiable under any decent standard.
@@pcolt4where do you live?
@@TheMswizzy Why are you asking me such a question?
@@pcolt4 because he is going to tell you who would have the 'right of return' to your city/house if you applied these standards to yourself. because there is nowhere on earth, with the possible exception of Antarctica, that wasnt fought over by humans at some point.
@@pcolt4 presumably then youll be advocating for the right of jews to return to poland, germany, russia, france, italy, belguim, holland, iraq, iran, syria, jordan, morocco and so on and claim the house that their ancestors owned before they were forced out during the 20th century? because as you said, that is unacceptable. right?
I am Pro Palestinian but there is no way they are ever getting the right of return. It's simply never going to happen... Israel would never ever allow it ever.. they need to give it up...
It's not only about returning. Israel don't want Palestinians to create a government for themselves. They want the division between Hamas and organizations such as PLO because otherwise they would get international recognition. For instance, the prime Minister allowed funds from Qatar to reach Gaza to keep Palestinians separate. You'll never hear Israelis saying we want a two state solution. They want to keep terrorist there even if that is dangerous for their own lives.
Israel can accept the nakhba happened, and be compensated for their properties.
It is happening RIGHT NOW !
@@Eneroithat might be reasonable, but that’s not what any Palestinian leadership has ever proposed
@@Eneroino problem at all. Arab countries can simply transfer to the Palestinians the compensation arab countries will need to pay for some 500000-700000 sefardic jews who were expelled to israel at the same period. Easy....
"Historic Palestine" there was never a historic Palestine in all of history. A name taken from the Romans, borders drawn on a map by the British, leaders born in Egypt and Jordan........ Palestinian?????
Wait- First the guest says that Hamas believes that Palestine cannot be divided, that is belongs to the Muslims intact in perpetuity, and then says they made concessions. Seems like contradictory statements to me
Unfortunately, the tells always come to the surface
Yeah, guess why.
The first two minutes was the incisive lie. The Muslim Brotherhood is not a ‘health and supportive’ organization. The MB, in fact, IS the mover of the little pins around to make sure those in the world who are not Muslim convert or die. How can you NOT know this. Perhaps deeper, wider, broader study will help. Yes, Ezra, I am shocked.
I wouldn’t presume he doesn’t know this or even agree with what you are saying. He is opening a dialogue to better understand Hamas’ standpoint. A difficult and brave thing to do. It took me three tries to listen to this and be open enough to absorb what was being said. I still disagree with much of the the interviewee is saying and think a lot is revisionist history and lies. And the amount I trust Hamas is basically not at all. But it is still useful to understand this persecution. Hard, frustrating, exasperating, but useful.
I don't believe it's a lie, large organisations can be more than one thing at a time. Of course the Muslim Brotherhood credentials were exposed when they gained power in Egypt after the Arab Spring led to the ousting of the military dictatorship and the MB leadership proved to be corrupt and inept. In the 80's when the PLO dominated the politics of Gaza, the Muslim Brotherhood through Hamas had a largely social presence through charities. It was the breakdown of partnerships between the PLO and the MB(the PLO leader Arafat had fought alongside the MB as early as '48) that contributed to Hamas becoming more political, which led to being more militant and conducting terrorism. This is in no way an excuse for the horrific violence over many years that the MB has been a part of, but to deny the social programs and charities they have also done would be wrong and a failure to accurately understand their history and support in the region. To try to work out constructive solutions without truly understanding the problem is pure folly.
Everything said by both sides of a conversation doesn't have to be agreed with to gain understanding and learn from it.
Deborah, enough with the disgusting lies. Narratives like that are just so cynically false. Quit making up false narratives to justify the genocide.
I have the same problem when I'm told that CAIR fights for the civil rights of Muslims. These Islamic organizations should be outlawed.
You seem to be unfamiliar with how the muslim brotherhood gained traction in gaza to begin with. Aid is the carrot, Islamism is the stick. And the occupation is the reason why the donkey does not revolt
#1 problem is that the people do not want a peaceful 2-state settlement. Any Palestinian “leadership” who tries to cooperate with Israel at all, much less actually reach agreement on partition, instantly loses the people’s support. Politics are downstream of culture, so until there’s a massive ideological shift among Palestinians, there will never be peace, & there can never be a settlement without peace. As Erza rightly observed, every time there were attacks during negotiations, the Israeli left dried up & the will to compromise was lost. It’s hard to feel empathy for people committing acts like Oct7.
If you read the independent third party audits of the UN school curriculum, you’ll find that in the last few years since Hamas has been in power, the curriculum has been changed at every level to introduce jihadism. That word is not hyperbole, either- it’s literally the word used in the reports. So the problem just continues to get worse. There’s no transactional solution to ideological differences. There’s no amount of land you can give a jihadist neighbor to ensure his peace.
Agreed
This narrative is completely false. It is Israel that does not want a peaceful 2-state settlement. The irrefutable proof of this is how Israel NEVER ceased building settlements in occupied Palestinian territory. So GTF out of here with that false narrative.
Ha-MESS will never agree to any peace treaty. Not now, not in 100 years, not in a thousand years. That's why we are seeing what we are seeing.
Unfortunately you make a lot of sense.
"so until there’s a massive ideological shift among Palestinians, there will never be peace"
In other words, there never will be peace - at least not in the foreseeable future.
If the only way Palestine would negotiate peace with Israel is for the right of return, I can understand why Israel doesn’t take them seriously. Really great questions Ezra.
You lack imagination
@@misterMagoo4 no, I’m just practical in my idealism.
Explain the logic and justice behind granting the “right to return” to a second-generation Jew, born & raised in the USA (or any part of the world) & never set foot on Israel, but a Palestinian born & raised in Palestine but taken out of their home (perhaps to make room for an American Jew) does not have a right to return to their homeland. (This is a real life example). I agree it is a practical solution if your stated goal is the expulsion or extermination of all Palestinians, as it was & is for the original & current Zionists in power in Israel.
“We must expel the Arabs and take their place. I support forced transfer, and see nothing unethical in it.”
- Ben-Gurion, first PM of Israel, founding Zionist
The right of return would only be an interim step towards an overall end goal of reconquest. And the Israelis know it.
@pw323 So tired of historical illiteracy. The Jews are no more colonizers than the Arabs are - there have been many thousands of Jews in the area for eons. Zionists didn't steal the land in the early 20th C - overwhelmingly they bought it from the Ottomans and later landowners. The state that they were given was a tiny meandering strip connecting Jewish majority towns, while Arabs received the vast majority of land (Syria, Iraq, Jordan, etc). The Jews accepted but the Arabs refused to allow another faith to have any control over territory they think is religiously theirs. When you attack someone repeatedly with the goal of its extermination, you don't get to cry foul when you lose and they take some of YOUR land.
This show has been hitting it out of the park on this issue. Ezra has a black belt in non-confrontational pushback. Excellent guests and brilliant interviews.
This is not non-confrontational. This is more of the far-left rabbithole that exists to tear down Western Democracies. Hamas is a far-right group. Full stop. They kill their own LGBT citizens. Hamas was TRAINED by Russia to do this attack. Hamas is funded by Iran to do this attack. Hamas is NO friend of the USA. This is equivalent of sitting down with Hitler to understand his point of view. Why don't we bother understanding North Korea's point of view? Ezra Klein is acting like an Uncle Tom. There were plenty of Jews who did this with Hitler, as well. THEY WERE ON THE WRONG SIDE.
With this said, it is horrifying that Hamas is using its civilians as Human Shields.
Ezra Klein, in playing Uncle Tom, is trying to use Western values to explain away a vicious terrorist group.
Meh. Being obsequious gets you nowhere.
Bottom line is he is a terror apologist. The amount of falsehoods was stunning. However, he did make several valid points. But it’s hard to overlook the majority of his arguments which were outrageous.
It is conspicuous that nowhere in this discussion is Iran mentioned. It is as if the ONLY two players in this are Israel and Palestinians, with a side-order of the U.S. Yet the reason why the Occupied territories exist was a result of Soviet encouragement of surrounding nations to attack Israel in '67 and '73, and the subsequent need for a buffer zone to prevent further attack. At present Hamas is supported by Iran and Hezbollah largely an organ of Iran. Does your guest realistically expect that Iran, and any other parties who treat Palestinians as a "lever" they can use, would take a back seat and say "Well, that's *their* problem now, and we'll just stay out of it and leave it up to them to sort out."? In this respect I find him thoughtful, but hopelessly naive and unrealistic.
This is right. In truth, both of these peoples (Israelis & Palestinians) are trapped in alliances that prevent peace, even if they themselves wanted peace. But of course they don’t. The US & the West values Israel as an important regional ally. In exchange for aid, trade & protection, Israel is tasked to serve as custodian of the holy land. That means maintain secular democracy, keep the sacred sites safe for all tourists, & serve as defense/ intelligence ally. Unless Israel fails on that mandate, it will always exist & be protected. So the “Palestinian cause” of eradicating Israel is a pipe dream, just a way for Iran to weaken the US reputation on the global stage
@@scarletsletter4466 Not meant as a criticism of yourself, but I bristle at the use of the term "Israelis" or "Israel". Netanyahu, and the shaky coalition he has cobbled together is not representative of "Israel", any more than Donald Trump was "America" or Hamas is "Palestinians". I keep reminding people that Netanyahu is only PM because Likud has 32 seats out of 120, and he managed to gather up a number of other marginal parties (several hard-right religious parties among them) to form a coalition of 64. Israel has had 5 elections in the last 4 years, largely *because* these coalitions are so shaky, and cannot meet the demands of the various extremists. The day after the Hamas attack, Ha'aretz had an op-ed that read: "Netanyahu must step down now. Not after the conflict is over. Not after he has struck a plea deal on corruption charges. But right now." (perhaps not verbatim, but every bit as concise and blunt as this). There is a large segment of Israeli society that does not view the current administration as representative.
But, as unrepresentative of the electorate as it is, the Israeli Knesset is pretty much the only actual democracy in the region. At the same time, however, it is a vital lesson in how proportional representation can end up backing a country into a policy corner. Israel has never NOT had a coalition government, and these days, more and more, Netanyahu has relied on extremist religious and openly anti-Arab parties to form coalitions and remain in power. This has resulted in face-palming cabinet choices like Itamar Ben-Gvir as National Security Minister.
This is my biggest problem with Ezra's podcast. His humanistic approach to the issue, doesn't allow a honest discussion involving culture, religion and globel context. When ever you have a pro palastinian guest, it always go back to "social justice" language of oppresor-oppresed-aparthide as if it a system exsiting in isolation.
@@iditbes6962 In fairness, I think Ezra simply wanted to let the guest present his perspective, without attempting to shape or seriously challenge it, so we could understand their perspective, without necessarily accepting it or sympathizing. Admittedly, one IS prompted to want to shout "But what about...?" at the screen. The weakness I pointed out (i.e., what about Iran?) lies in the thinking and argumentation of his guest, and less so in the podcast.
Mark: Israel attacked first in the 1967 war, not the other way around. This is not in dispute
This is quite interesting but every time I hear a Palestinian talk they're so out of touch with the reality of the situation it's hard for me to even fathom hell a group of otherwise intelligent people could be so far from reality. As an American part of me can really appreciate a really small underdog trying to get sovereignty over their land from a huge regional superpower: colonizer but in this United States we had France as an ally and we were actually pretty powerful and already relatively wealthy and had lots of other advantages Palestine has none of these and there is zero chance they will get any of these extreme demands so this is just idiotic.
Yeah it was delusional all this talk of right of return is frustrating. If you haven't lived in a place for 75 years you have no claim to it... this is the same delusional argument that created Israel in the first place... Rights for Palestinian in Palestine absolutely but you can't turn back the clock and start resettling people who have lived a lifetimes elsewhere back in Palestine...
It’s the same as keeping talking about a peaceful meaning of jihad in the face of the real events.
Ryan. It is the same all over the world. All the new countries that were formerly colonies of one western country or another. The colonizer was a superpower compared to what the locals could muster. But look at the world today.
Why did North America, Hawaii, Australia, and New Zealand became European? Large numbers of North American natives died of disease, and Australia and New Zealand were very sparsely populated. So the Europeans moved more of their population there until the natives were outnumbered.
This is impossible in Israel. There are not enough Jews in the entire world, and many of them are not Zionists and do not want to move to Israel. Even if we could somehow force them, there still isn't enough of them.
I live in one of the many former British colonies encircling the globe. The population here was a bit higher, and the British never tried to move large numbers of their people here.
Jews are no more colonizers than the Arabs are. There have been many many thousands of Jews in the region for literally eons. They didn't steal land - they bought it from the Ottomans and later local landowners. Their state was to a TINY meandering strip connecting Jewish towns while the Arabs got the vast majority of the larger mandate area (Jordan, Iraq, Syria, etc).
So let's be real - the Arab Muslims could not tolerate ANY other faith having a majority state in the region that they felt was theirs. Once Islam conquers an area, its not supposed to ever go backward; after all, their ultimate goal is a one-faith world.
While the Nakba is a real thing, no one talks about the fact that more Jews have been forced out of Arab nations.
@@danielch6662 Israel isn’t a colony though. This is the fundamental misunderstanding to the situation. Palestine believes they are Algeria and Israel are the French. They and many others believe the Jews can go back to ‘where they came from’ but ‘where they came from’ doesn’t exist.
Re. recognition of the Nakba & right of return:
(As a white Australian, we share some historical similarities; so I speak from the perspective of an oppressor.)
We stole our continent over 200 years ago; declared it “empty” & labeled the indigenous populations “fauna.” We *crushed* the opposition, at a time in history when that was kinda “just the done thing.” Big dry continent, so they were widely dispersed, disparate peoples. We had greater tech, firepower & numbers; between our massacres; lies turning tribes against each other, enslaving them, raping women, then stealing children & whipping them if they dared speak their own languages; very few groups managed to mount a lasting defence. We dominated them & wrote the history books to suit our narrative.
Guess what? 200+ years on & the black fellas STILL haven’t gotten over it!
If you think for a minute the Palestinians can just get over history and quietly go off into the Sinai, think harder. No occupied group in the world has done it yet, why would Palestinians be any different?
You’re right about the impossibility of restoring historical justice; the Palestinians (like our Aboriginal peoples) can’t and won’t ever be fully compensated for decades of murder & oppression. If a “fair” compensation amount could somehow be calculated, nobody could afford the bill; but this kind of cost can’t be counted.
But that doesn’t justify denying the truth & certainly doesn’t justify maintaining the status quo. If you take seriously the demand for justice, look around at the rest of the post-colonial world.
We haven’t fixed things by a long shot & we’re still learning as we go. We still grapple with huge socioeconomic disparities, high crime, poverty/drugs/alcohol & unbelievable comparative rates of incarceration & deaths in custody, massive gaps in health and life expectancy etc. etc…
But we’ve been able to acknowledge & apologise for our national crimes; it didn’t bankrupt us. We legally recognised traditional land rights and it didn’t destroy us. We’re still learning how to begin addressing ongoing injustices, but conversations can be had & for the most part, nobody’s getting blown up here.
You might be surprised by how willing oppressed peoples are to make peace if you give them half a chance. Even without justice, people WANT to get on with their lives; but most humans need our truth & our pain acknowledged before we can move on.
I think that’s behind how Hamas’ charter is worded: they aren’t insisting on a specific outcome & they leave room for pragmatic negotiation; they just NEED those fundamental injustices to be at least named & acknowledged as a starting point. And shoot, apologies cost nothing!! 🤯
That said, there’s a whole bunch of freshly built housing in the West Bank, that could be a start, given they’re within the original borders…
The widely-held consensus in the West, that the Palestinians should just "get over it," denies the reality that the Nakba has never ended, and abuse of Palestinians and theft of their land has never halted. The resistance isn't about turning back the clock to 1917. But the "get over it" crowd doesn't care, because they aren't actually interested in justice at all. They are advocating for a position they would never accept themselves if the roles were reversed. They have decided, long ago, that Israel are the good guys, and they get upset by any evidence to the contrary. The real reason for the ascendancy of Hamas is the fact that Israel has *never* negotiated in good faith.
Man, you got this all wrong. The Jews ARE the natives of Israel. The Roman colonizers exiled many of them (but not all), then other colonizers came. The Palestinians are the children of the colonizers.
Whatever happened in Australia, the situation is not at all similar.
@@yahavrave Genealogy is a nice hobby, sure. What's at issue is property rights. The Palestinians are the rightful owners of the land.
@@MarianneExJohnson according to whom? The UN? The UN made a partition plan in 1947 (which they did not accept). Technically speaking many Palestinians did not own the rights to the homes they lived in since before the British mandate.
That's not to justify anyone losing their home, but just to explain the futility of this kind of talk.
What about the property rigts of my family in Germany, Poland and Lithuania? What about the land of all the hundreds of thousands of Jews that were expelled from Muslim and Arab nations? Will we give them all their land/homes back? That can't possibly work.
We can never achieve 'justice' in this case, because the rights of many people are in conflict. It is comparable to you being chased by gangs out of your house, and several generations later your great-grandchildren come back and claim it. Did they have a right to it even if squatters took it over in the meantime?
Have you asked yourself why any other refugee population in the world can only have the status of refugee for one generation and Palestinians remain 'refugees' even after being granted citizenship in another land?
This is all part of a political game played between the 'West' and the Arab nations. Unfortunately the Palestinians are the ones to suffer most.
But it will never be resolved by maintaining unrealistic expectations. They can't go back to homes that are not there, and millions of Jews are not going to leave. They have no where to go.
Until the Palestinian collective consciousness values peace over perfect justice there will be no peace.
What about the Zionist "consciousness"? Clearly the Zionist regime hasn't valued peace in the slightest, because they cynically manipulated the misnomered "peace process" to perpetuate its occupation of the Palestinian territories.
That sounds like something an ultra-zionist living in an illegal settlement in the west bank, or an apartment in Manhattan, would say. I think that the Palestinians want to be left alone in their own land and have the ability to thrive as a society without Israel or the US setting the terms. Israel has been controlled by a racist ultra-zionist movement since its birth, and they have treated the Palestinian people as sub-human who don't have a right to live there and whose towns and villages should not even be on a map. The first thing that Israelis' did was to push out 870,000 Palestinians out of their homes, change the names of the towns to Hebrew names, and then establish new geography books showing Israel. This is a genocidal process that we are talking about, and the U.S. and western states should join the rest of the world in not supporting Israel in this genocidal process ... and start supporting the Palestinian people.
It was confusing, but I think Baconi explained that there is the ideological stance and then there is the political position. Ideologically (and my guess is, in deference to the Palestinian public), no Palestinian leader can say Israel is a legitimate power, because that's a tacit admission to Palestinians having no right to full sovereignity in the West bank and Gaza. But politically, they will take the 22 percent with full sovereignty, and half of Jerusalem. No Israeli leader has agreed to that much, not with full sovereignity, now with the Israel not controlling air and sea rights and thus precluding military autonomy. I think Americans constantly don't understand this rhetorical, face-saving maneuver, and it IS confusing.
It us quite astounding that the speaker, while pro-Palestinian, neglects to give a full geo-historical abd political perspective... ignoring the Biblical and traditional Jewish claim to the area, historically the whole region is a vast affiliation of various tribes...it's an Arab/Middle Eastern mentality that westerners don't get: a "blood-land" thing ...the various Arab countries see the Palestinians as "of the blood" but without land...they are in that way like the black sheep. Since modern times, however, the Palestinian Arabs have not endeared themselves to their Arab (and largely Muslim) brothers : look at Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt to understand why they all talk bug no one wants the Palestinians. Israel developed since its inception, while Palestinian society remains backward, victim-looking. Regarding the Israelis, the settlements, are a pivotal point of contention and must go. If anything preempted the vile terrorist attack of October 7th, it was the increasingly right wing-leaning government. Notice that Ben Gvir was not elected to Netanyahu's war cabinet. What is so sad is that the region as a whole was starting towards reconciliation and a peaceful solution with Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
If the Palestinian have a right to return, then give a right to return to the Armenians pushed out of Turkey and a right to return to the Jews and Christians pushed out of genocided after WW1, WW2 and in previous centuries in all muslim ME countries. There can be no double standard.
Dont forget the Greeks in North Cyprus. Ukrainians in Crimea. The Dali Llama in Tibet. Heck 2 UN security council members, and a NATO member all with illegally occupied land, and unlike Israel, none for their own self defense. The UN is such a hypocritical joke.
Didn't Azerbaijan steal more of Armenia earlier in the year? Turkey and Armenia are completely trying to squeeze Armenia, the oldest Christian nation on the planet basically, off the map. So they can create one continuous pan-Turkic coalition. Same dream the Arabs have. Same reason they want Israel so bad. They dont even hide it, but these vapid neo marxists gaslight and intentionally ignore it.
Zuheir Mohsen (1936 - 25 July 1979) was a Palestinian leader of the Syria-controlled as-Sa'iqa faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) between 1971 and 1979.
Quotes
The Palestinian people do not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct "Palestinian people" to oppose Zionism. Yes, the existence of a separate Palestinian identity exists only for tactical reasons, Jordan, which is a sovereign state with defined borders, cannot raise claims to Haifa and Jaffa, while as a Palestinian, I can undoubtedly demand Haifa, Jaffa, Beer-Sheva and Jerusalem. However, the moment we reclaim our right to all of Palestine, we will not wait even a minute to unite Palestine and Jordan.
“Wij zijn alleen Palestijn om politieke reden,” James Dorsey, Trouw, 31 March 1977.
Of course, why would anybody in favor of Palestinians’ right to return ever oppose those other things?
@@ziruini5071 because the Palestinian cause is an explicitly Arab nationalistic and Arab supremacist cause which demands total Arab hegemony from Morocco to iraq?
@@ziruini5071 You are joking right? More than 50% of those who support Palestinian right to return, blatantly would oppose Armenian return and Turkish/Azerbaijani pull back. The Islamist world would have a legitimate hissy fit.
How deluded are you? Are you some ideologically marxist simpleton who thinks the rest of the world feels just like people living in Cushy suburban America? That they want the same things?
How absolutely ignorant. Stay naive child.
Jews and other holocaust victims do have a right of return in Europe
how can Hamas be seen to be supportive of the Palestinian people when it builds tunnels for it's soldiers but no safe shelters for the ordinary citizenry / Also, what about the 'leadership' of Hamas living on billions and living in luxury in Qatar?
Could Baconi also recommend books on the Jewish Holocaust/genocide/persecution over millennia , the Christian Armenians who even today dream of reclaiming their homes and properties from muslim Turkey and the history and archaeology of Judaism since 1800 BCE. Arab Palestinians do not have sole right over this land (it was part of the Turkish Ottoman Empire prior to 1922). Historically these arabs have never been as persecuted and victimized as the Jews in the biblical land called Israel.
Man, you must be watching right wing Christian Zionist propaganda vs real history.
Tareq Baconi’s full-throated defense of Hamas, and his rationalization of a wide range of horrific terrorist attacks, culminating in the vicious massacres on October 7, is disheartening and disturbing to hear - and his perspectives are those of a moderate Hamas supporter.
The word “ colonialisation” of Palestinians by Israel is a wrong term in this context!
Agreed. Arab Jews lived in the area too. Just because European Jews came there as refugees but that doesn't make them colonizers of anyone but the Arab Jews that welcomed them there.
The other arab nations in the area expelled their jews to Israel, and then tried to launch a full scale war to eradicate them. The Palestinians are unfortunately entitled sore losers.
49:45 Why the hell should the PA speak on behalf of Israeli citizens of Arab descent? That's the most direct recipe for a disaster. Just like Hitler spoke on behalf of Germans in Czechoslovakia or Putin on behalf of Russians in Ukraine.
I really want to listen to this in good faith as I'm pretty agnostic as to which side I support But the more it goes on the more I really lost respect for the Palestinian here. Honestly they're just being childish and super unrealistic and they know it's going to end in war and huge amounts of death of their own people and there's still maximalist even when they're extremely weak. This makes no sense to me at all besides if they all want to be martyrs.
There's nothing to be agnostic about. I am an historian and the Arab version of history is complete propaganda. Jews are no more colonizers than the Arabs are - there have been many thousands of Jews in the region for eons, and those who moved there (the Zionist movement) overwhelmingly purchased their lands from the Ottoman Empire of local landowners. They did NOT steal it. The UN plan gave the Jews a tiny meandering strip of land connecting majority-Jewish towns while the Arab Muslims got the vast majority (Syria, Iraq, Jordan). But the Arabs couldn't accept that another faith could ever control ANY of the region that they felt was theirs. When you launch repeated wars with a goal of exterminating your opponent, you don't get to cry foul when you lose and they take some of YOUR land. It also neglects to mention (interestingly) that more Jews were forced out of Muslim nations than Arabs were forced out of present-day Israel. BTW, Arabs in Israel do not want anything to do with being part of another nation - despite the rhetoric of "apartheid," Muslim Arabs in Israel have full rights, can vote and form political parties, serve in the police and military, and hold seats in both the Knesset and on the Supreme Court. These are easy to look up.
In short, there is no moral equivalency here. If Hamas et al were to recognize Israel's right to exist and lay down their arms, there would be peace. if Israel laid down their arms, you'd see 10/7 on a vast scale.
You are not a good-faithful listener if you're reacting like this.
The more I try to learn from both sides, the more I see that Palestine is mainly playing the victim card. As for my understanding, it is an ongoing war between 2 national movements that lasts bloody long with many international political factors. Israel is the winning side so far and keeps growing in terms of economy, military, and also their society, while on the other side, Palestine is losing for their weak organized society and maybe the influence of their religious faith that makes them hard to sit down and accept some compromise condition to get peace and then a chance for develop their community. Also, Israel showed more offers to deal with the matter than Palestine who said NO multiple times, because they just wanted to claim the land back without any Jews or Jews being secondary citizens. The more they suffer, the society has no chance to grow but lean toward extremism, it is like a vicious circle. Even with this attack by Hamas, what is the plan after killing and kidnapping so many Israelis anyway, did they hope that Israel will give up their winning condition? How peace could be set, it seems impossible in any near future.
@@tranngocminh269 The Palestinian peoples actions would support this. They tried to help other arab nations "erase Israel from existence" which failed due to the hubris of Egypt, Jordan, and Syria with Palestinians in their occupied territories. Israel heard what they were doing and launched a preemptive attack leading to Israeli victory in the 6 day war.
After the 6 day war A large portion of the Palestinian militants were expelled into Jordan which lead to a Palestinian lead civil war known as Black September.
They keep picking fights, and keep losing, then they blame everyone else for their struggles. a peace sign in one hand and a dagger in the other.
I'm not Jewish, but I've always been protective of the Jews and their culture. In high school I chose to do my research paper on the Holocaust. I got to shake the hand of a Holocaust survivor many years ago. That remains a special moment to me.
It's extremely hard to hear someone talk with inaccurate information and not once corrected or even asked about it. I'm sure we all know how in Arabic the things that are said are very different from the things that are spoken to the English speaking world. I feel like this is what's happening here.
Well yea, pretty much. It's extremely toned down for the sake of western mass appeal. I find it's really hard to claim the moral high ground of a internationally recognised terrorist organisation who have been firing missiles into their neighbours country on a daily basis. It just a utterly bizarre situation.
@@dexterdextrow7248 What about the internationally recognized terrorist state that has been violently occupying foreign territory for nearly a half-century now while stealing ever-greater patches of said territory for its own violent settlers while preventing the free movement and tightening the territorial encirclement of said territory's rightful inhabitants? The hypocrisy is disgusting.
@@pcolt4?????
@@pcolt4
Foreign Territory? The former Ottoman lands voted on unanimously in 1922 by the League of Nations Mandate of Palestine Charter which stated;
*_"Whereas recognition has thereby been given to the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine and to the grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country"_*
*Buy a book! Google is free!*
@@shainazion4073 I assure you I"ve done more reading than you have on this topic, Pilgrim Shaina. The bloody greedy British and French imperialists certainly had no right to murder and dispossess the existing inhabitants of Palestine, any more than the murderous terrorizing Zionists did. Also, where in the charter does it say that the white European Zionists have the right to force 800,000 Palestinians to flee their homes, the right to steal their land, the right to hold them in mass concentration camps of 2.3 million people, the right to bomb them under the false pretext of fighting the very terrorism that they are guilty of causing? No, Madam Pilgrim: YOU read a book,, YOU use the internet, YOU quit spreading your lies since the honest people of the world no longer are willing to swallow them.
Portraying South Africa as a post colonial success story is ridiculous. Many white afrikaaners were brutally murdered and the overall murder rate in the country is the 3rd highest in the world.
About the latest version of their charter, Baconi says basically that Hamas was offering a truce (until the next war) not peace
"Hudna" is Arabic for surrender to the head choppers.
The right of return is a paradox which does not have a solution except in the context of something like a federation which enshrines ‘freedom of movement’. It may happen sometime in the future but I am glad we are talking about the two state solution again. IMHO , Israel cannot survive without it.
This guest is the best pro Palestinian proponent I have ever heard. He still failed to managed to mention that Hamas teaches its children to murder Jewish civilians because of their race. He failed to mention that when Israel gave them the equivalent of Mayor of Gaza that they used that position to build an army to launch a surprise attack to kill Israeli civilians and thus proven that they must never be allowed enough power to build an army ever again.
He keeps speaking about Hamas as if it has the capability of being a responsible neighbor of not murdering its neighbors children when their behavior and Constitution shows that that is who they are.
I am glad that I finally found the most powerful pro Palestinian argument because it doesn't measure up and it shows once again that Israel must never allow a Palestinian government that can build an army like it did in Gaza these last few years.
Israel will acknowledge the horror of the Nakba when Palestinians acknowledge that the Jews have an indigenous and rightful claim to the land just like the Palestinians do.
As much as I wanted to listen to this to gain insights, I was weighed down by so much apologetic rhetoric that I gave up after 30mins
Great way to advertise your apathy. 😔
Yep, a lot of historical revisionism from the guest
made it to 40. last 10 mins got even worse.
@@michalyweiss 40:00 was where Ezra asked the key questions to which the interviewer had no answer. It went downhill after that.
I can understand Klein's reticence to even speak on this issue. I agree with you and it pains me greatly.
I keep listening to “moderate” well-educated pro-Palestinian voices and I am getting more and more radicalized because they all seem to speak the same language of “right of return”, apartheid, colonialism, etc. There seems to be zero responsibility taken for the Palestinian situation. I’d like to hear just one person say “we should have accepted the 1948 borders”. Hundreds of thousands of Jewish refugees were able to “start over”. They were pushed out of Europe and most Arab countries to the extent there are nearly zero remaining in the Muslim countries. Why have the Palestinians been so unwilling to accept facts on the ground and try to build a better future for their children? “Right of return”’ is a total dead end in any negotiation. Jihadism is a cancer that undermines the Palestinian cause and creates chaos all over the world, not just Israel. Yes the settlements in the West Bank are a big problem. But that ignores the bigger narrative that the Palestinians reject an Israel of any size and any borders going back to 1948 and Israel has had to fight a series of defensive wars. Usually the victor in wars gets to keep what they conquer. If Israel left tomorrow would there be peace? No. We’d probably have a second Iran run by Hamas that would then spread jihadism to neighboring states.
You are simply tone deaf and so biased as to have a warped conception of reality on this issue. The offered 1948 borders were a disaster. The expelled Jews from Europe had a legitimate gripe and legitimate demand for their own land free from oppression… and they are owed that by Germany and Italy and should’ve been given land within Germany along with reparations. Palestine had nothing to do with European antisemitism. Imagine Mexican illegal immigrants invading your house and saying, well, we can give you half of your house. BS. Now imagine the illegal immigrants have the strongest military in the world supporting them. For decades. And they start abusing you and creating walls and video cameras everywhere to demoralize. And half your family escapes and become refugees and just want to go home. But they can’t go home, but the illegals invite more and more to come from all over the world take up more of YOUR space.
It’s utterly absurd once you get out of your echo chamber.
"Usually the victor in wars gets to keep what they conquer. "
No, this violates the Geneva Conventions. Wars are no longer fought this way.
Hmmm. I didn’t know that. Israel has often claimed the additional land forms a security buffer zone and they have repeatedly offered to trade back that land for a promise of security as they did with Egypt. They gave back Gaza with no promise of peace. After the 67 war the Arab nations gave their famous 3 Nos of Khartoum. No recognition, negotiation, or peace.
UN law say land grabbed through war is
Not legal
No. Wrong. Murder and dispossession and forcible expulsion are not acceptable under any conditions. Full stop. All of your blathering doesn't change that.
Ugh
Could he be more biased in favor of Hamas?
It LITERALLY says to destroy Israel on Hamas' charter.
Tareq Baconi: "They actually wanted a settlement"
My two Israeli POV cents (or shekels), the reason the Palestinians insist on the right of return is because they know israel will not accept it. It’s a basic middle eastern negotiation tactics. Another one is that who ever we end up sitting down with can not really take any decisions for the Palestinians as a nation. Really frustrating
@doronmutsafi Your "argument" is flawed. It presents a falsity, & uses that assumption to "prove" the assumption. The Right To Return is actually fair, under a 2-State Solution (it's one of many reasons why this solution is better). In a 2-State, most Palestinians would return to Palestine - few would return to Israel. So it won't shift Israel's voting & demographic numbers by much. Israelis (really, the Zionists) find the Right To Return as antithetical because Israel today is not democratic (it's more like a theocracy). Its laws favor the Jewish religion. If the Right to Return were allowed, we know the population would be about equal - giving equal voting power to Palestinians. Since Zionists don't want Palestinians to vote (today they can''t), so they outright dismiss the Right to Return - even though this Right is preferred & equitable in a 2-State Solution. They create this falsity because they say the only option is a "1-State Solution" (because, again, Zionists don't want Palestinians to get land - their own state - that Israel wants all of). This Zionist/Israeli position is fundamentally flawed due to racism & hate, held by Jews & Muslims against one other. It's why the 2-State Solution is the only viable option. It allows the Right to Return, & maximizes safety for all.
Please learn history and logic. It would allow you to not make inconsistent, even nonsensical, arguments.
I would say it differently - the "Right of Return" position is all about symmetry. The Israeli's have it and there will not be equality without symmetry.
None of the Arab majority countries that Jewish people were expelled from are offering Jewish people the right of return though.
I think the right of return is non feasible. BUT I also get the idea that there's and asymmetry and thus injustice in the current system. There and asymmetry when there are Palestinians whose people were pushed out and would love to return after just 75 years have past, while there are also people of Jewish ancestry who can return whenever whose nearest ancestor hasn't lived in the region for millenia with extreme ease. That also doesn't make any sense and from a Palestinian perspective I could see how that would be seen as a form of cruel injustice.
@@bluedreams517 what I am trying to point out is that the 1948 war population transfer went both ways. The majority of Jewish people living in Israel right now were expelled from Arab/Muslim majority countries. If they don't have a right of return to Iran for instance then it's not asymmetry to say that Arabs displaced by the 1948 war don't have a right of return to Israel. What would be symmetry, would be for the countries who invaded Israel in 1948 to offer a right of return to the Arab population displaced by that war.
Theres an old saying " the proof is in the pudding" anyone who witnessed the atrocities inflicted on October 7 and doesn't call for the complete destruction of hamas and their ideology is in total denial of the truth.
Where do the 6000+ Gazans killed by the IDF (including 2000 children) over the previous 15 years (compared to approx 300 Israelis) feature in your “pudding”?
Nice to see polite conversation on topics so often obscured by violence.
So glad you brought up the Palestinian refugee issue. Any person not a Jew living in the British Mandate of Palestine from 1946 can be considered as a Palestinian refugee. Most of the "refugees" are actually IDPs (Internally Displaced Persons), not refugees.
And, Palestinian "refugees" are the only population ever that passes their refugee status to their children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and adopted children. They have their own refugee agency, UNRWA, while all other refugees in the world share a different refugee agency.
Ezra Klein completely failed to mention the agreement that Ehud Barak, Bill Clinton, and Yasser Arafat agreed to in late 2000 that Arafat waffled on and then ultimately walked away from. In that instance, as well as with respect to offers by Ehud Olmert’s government later in that decade, it was the Palestinians who weren’t negotiating in good faith. That was the minimum research that Ezra needed to do before interviewing a guest who would make the claims that a guest like this would and did. He didn’t do his homework.
Ehud Olmert's offers suffered from the same problems as Barak it wasn't an offer of proper statehood but rather autonomy when one looks at the details. Also Olmert's final offer was hollow given he resigned a few days after anyways. Israel was never interested in a proper genuine two state solution what some on the Israeli left like Rabin were offering in practice was autonomy not actual real statehood.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 Ehud Barak’s offer, negotiated through Bill Clinton, was good enough for Yasser Arafat to agree to it . . . until he lost his nerve a few months later. At the very least, these offers clearly should have been raised by Ezra Klein.
@@georgekleinfelter7041 Neither Barak nor Arafat fully accepted Clinton's offer as both had their respective issues with it. Suffice it to say the Israeli conception of a Palestinian state(among those in power that claimed to want it) was in essence Palestinian autonomy not actual full independence.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 How long would it take a fully independent Palestinian state to be flooded with Iranian missiles? If you're rational, our only disagreement is that I'm saying seven minutes and you're saying 12. Israel, at its narrowest point, is nine miles wide.
@@georgekleinfelter7041 So be upfront and just say one doesn't want an actual independent Palestinian state, at least one will be honest. But this whole notion of playing this double game needs to end, one should be clear about what it is they want not give a façade of wanting one thing in public but a different thing in private.
I was going to say that it's depressing to hear such a lot of self-serving delusions from our Palestinian friends, but on second thoughts we're used to it. We've gotten used to it over the decades of rejectionism, excuses, and what-aboutery. And it's not just me. The rest of the Arabs have also had a belly-full. Don't see them rushing to help. And as for nobody hearing the Palestinian voice, it's constant and shrill. So nobody listens and "stop interfering in our politics." And when poor old 97yr liberal President of the US (a position that used to mean something), rushes nine thousand miles on day two of the conflict to try to damage limit, or whatever, YOU WON'T EVEN TALK TO HIM! But it's very kind of you Ezra to note that the Jews may also have some issues with displacement. But why did you not mention their displacement from the puzzling-named Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem, or from Hebron, or from Gush Etzion (look it up), or indeed from Gaza itself? As for the assessment of the security of Israel that your guest supposes, I fear that he may perhaps have succumbed to confirmation bias. A simple look around should help that, but like so much in certain quarters, probably won't.
Most of the Arab populace in the region(and the wider Muslim world) strongly support Palestinians and that is evidenced with the protests in support of them, not to mention last year during the World Cup when Arabs gave the cold shoulder to Israeli media . The governments hardly ever represented the will of the their peoples in this matter.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 This dichotomy is explained by the long-standing tradition of separating actual Palestinian people from the actual Arab people. Egypt, for example, continues to protect the Arab people by not opening a gate, at Rafah. Gives you a warm feeling.
@@frankincensemerchant1284 The problem that worries me, is the wild celebrations of every atrocity all religious extremists commit, by the Arab street. It's against all westerners, including those trying to help them.
In this, local (undemocratic) governments worry - and would have worked for peace DESPITE their bloodthirsty citizens, but for 7/10...
Who all want to live in the West, yet hate our values (honour killings in the UK, and plenty admitted agreeing with killing Rushdie - others just kept quiet)
@@WilliamDuff-b3o Israelis(including the elite) have openly called for genocide against Gazans reffering to them as Amalek. To act like its one sided is pathetic. Also the reason why the locals oppse these "peace deals" is becuase they throw Palestinians under the bus and just sanitize Israeli occupation and oppresion of Palestinians which is a daily reality.
Ezra and Tareq, Much gratitude to you both for this very thoughtful, informative discussion and all the valuable context. You model the kind of respectful, curious exchange we so badly need more of.
The guests’ version about what was addressed during the Oslo negotiations differs from what I heard at the time.
AFAIK the idea of including compensation, both to descendants of the Palestinians displaced during the ‘48 war and to those Jewish population expelled from Arabic countries, was discussed during at the time.
Arafat countered that he did not have a right to negotiate away the people’s rights, and that the right of return was an individual right.
Israel would not concede the narrative of expulsion, because they perceived that instead of opening the door to a final settlement it would be used as a tool for continuing demands of return, which are logically seen as an existential threat. Israelis don’t deem it as a symbolic concession, and I doubt this will change anytime soon. That has made many Israelis say that a two state solution cannot mean that Palestinians get booth one state without Jews and another state with Jews in a dwindling proportion.
“A 2 state solution cannot mean that Palestinians get both 1 state without the Jews & another state with the Jews in dwindling proportion.”
Yes. This is the crux of the problem. As long as the ideological issue exists (Palestinians want to eradicate Israel) then a 2 state solution seems pointless. Also, Gaza being independently run was a bit of a 1st step to see if a 2-state solution would be viable. Meaning, could an independently run Palestinian area be peaceful. Of course people will complain about the security measures, but Oct7 certainly proved the mini-2 state solution failed & Palestinians seem to have less appetite for peace than ever
@@scarletsletter4466 I always saw disengagement without an agreement more of a retreat to cut the burden of guarding the settlers in Gaza. I wasn’t too surprised that Hamas took control there.
Right off the bat, you allowed him to go on a rant insisting that the Hamas position is full of conciliatory energy - whilst not ONCE demonstrating how, when and where, exactly they would recognize Israel's right to exist and to exist there -- where and as it is. So.... the rest is a moot point. Anyway, thanks for trying, I guess, to speak to a pro Hamas person, so we can hear it first-hand?
@kereneldad2960 What you claim wasn't said, was in fact said. I hope you can do a better job listening. And not blaming others for your flaws. This seems to be the "Israeli" position -- ignoring its 75 years of brutal apartheid, etc. and pretending it is innocent. The truth of today shows us Israelis support its extremist government killing innocent people. (Remember, Palestinian children caused none of this - but YOU'VE LET ISRAEL KILL 7000+ CHILDREN).
Ezra, as a typical Tel Aviv settler leftist, I would like to thank you for demonstrating again how little difference there is between Palestinian moderates and Palestinian extremists.
And how little difference there is between the Israeli Left and the Israeli Right.
"Settler-leftist" - talk about an oxymoron.
This was not the case in the past but now I tend to agree with your assessment
seems to me baconi's already been exposed as something of a hamas patsy, which really ought not to be too surprising
This guy is too biased, his reading of the 2017 Hamas charter is too charitable.
This podcast is very misleading! (And I do respect Ezra).historically speaking,In the late 40s there were about 100 “Nakbas” around the world, and that included the expulsion of many ethnic groups such as the Jews and other minorities from their homes..due to the 2nd world war.The land of Israel, was GIVEN to the Jews, while the local Arabs(who called themselves Palestinians thanks to a PLO terminology since 1963 ish), chose to fight the Jews while disagreeing to the UN partition plan. THAT is a fact that wasn’t mentioned in this podcast. Enough of this woke progressive propaganda already. The Mufti of Jerusalem was antisemite since the 20s. Did this podcast mention the pogroms of 1921, 1929 and 1936!!?? No it didn’t. The gust fails to mention too many historical facts prior to 48, and AFTER 67.
Instead of being incited to violence the Palestinians could resort to cooperation with Jews like their brothers Arab Israelis who chose to stay and are living a very comfortable life(although I don’t say perfect). I do agree that Hamas was a godsend to right wingers such as Netanyahu, who banked on THEIR violence to stay in power since 1995, and after 2000s.
Why would Palestinians accept the shameless U.N deal which awarded the Zionists 55%of the land despite owning only 7% of the land, and making up 33% of the population(most of whom were fairly recent arrivals in the years prior). So yes ofc Arabs rejected such a stupid offer. As for Arab-Israelis they are literally 2nd class citizens in Israel and things have been getting worse for them as successive Israeli governments have gotten more right-wing.
@@frankincensemerchant1284
Why were the Arabs given 77% of the land, to become trans-Jordan leaving only 23% to become the future Jewish state?
Why did the Arabs turn down the 1937 Peel Commission offer of 80% of the land? They turned this down because they didn't want the Jews to even have the 17% offered to them (4% of the original Mandate of Palestine lands).
The 55% of the lands partitioned to the Jews was the majority of the Negev desert with no agricultural abilities and no infustructure, while the Arabs were partitioned the best farmland in the state, the Jordan Valley, with already existing infustructure!! Remember the Arabs already were given the 77% of the Mandate of Palestine as Trans-Jordan.
@@frankincensemerchant1284
And, most people claiming to be Palestinians are not from Palestine. They are Muslim refugees invited into the land in the 1800s and 1900s by the Ottomans. Bosniaks, Circassians, Chechins and Sudanese are not Palestinians! And most of the others, Arab laborers that came into the land as support personnel for the British and because of the prosperity brought by the Jews reclaiming the land. Egyptians, Syrians, Jordanians, Iraqis and Lebanese are not Palestinians!
@@shainazion4073 In the case of Syrians and Jordanians they are part of the Levant which Palestine was part of and well integrated with. Clans have members in all regions going back centuries. As for other Muslims like Circassians, Sudanese, etc. they became integrated into Palestinian society(not every Palestinian is ethnically Arab) some of these people like certain Kurdish families has settled in the region hundreds of years going back to the Crusader period and intermarried with the local people.
I don't understand why would anyone want to live in an area where no one wants you there . There is no explanation other than ideological .
Thank you for the discussion. It provided a better understanding. Keep the discussions going.
I feel in some of these conversations that Ezra acts like a left wing Joe Rogan w/o push back to the false things his guests assert. If you can't push back/critique, maybe you shouldn't be interviewing these people b/c it doesn't help to understand the situation any better. I left this conversation not knowing/hearing anything I hadn't heard before and more disappointed in the left that I was previously. Why use liberalism to allow someone to harm you?
When Hamas says they want to destroy Israel you'd better believe they mean it.
Insisting on “right of return” really makes any negotiations pointless.
Palestinians need to get over it.
Why? Jews who left 2000 years ago have a right to return. Why not non-Jews who were forced out less than 100 years ago?
Yet it's what the Zionist Jews believed, that they had a right to return and take the land although they had lived in Europe and all over the world for dozens of generations.
@@danielch6662 because Jews in Israel are never going to accept that are would sooner go rogue state status than to allow it. If you’re asking why, you fail to understand the Israeli perspective
@@danielch6662well jews agreed to limit their right of return only to some parts of historic Israel. They accepted partition plan, they dont demand return to ancient Iseaeli territories on east bank of Jordan river and in all proposed peace plans they would have abandoned right to return to their ancestoral lands in judea and samaria. So why palestinians not limit their right of return to parts of Palestine that are not Israel?
@@danielch66621. Jews bought the land or won during a war that was waged on them. Like Poland. Should poles give those northeastern provinces back to Germany?
2. The entirety of Jewish tradition is dedicated to returning.
Interesting how Baconi twists the discussion into defending/rationalizing the role Hamas plays in defending the Palestinian position. A bit like arguing that Hitler's position was worthy in defending the German state. Think about it.
Just about the best hour I've heard on this issue since Oct 7th. A well-informed, intelligent, measured, attentive person from different sides, the Liberal American jew and the Palestinian (I think Baconi was born in Jordan and si now a UK academic in the UK ) . Like it or not there are two sides here and Hamas is fighting for one of them. Tacomi is making the best case for Hamas's actions that can be made. I tend to side with Klein, no surprise there, and he asks all the pertinent questions that needed to be asked and makes the objections that a politically savvy person would make to Baconi's powerful, thoughtful articulations of Hamas's reasoning.
I'd add one more point to Klein's sympathetic objections: the analogy of South Africa and Palestine is imperfect. The ANC and its component elements never had any maximal position, it wanted the same rights and democratic power as the Whites, and never postulated the extermination or expulsion of the Whites, never represented the spear of surrounding nations which also, at one point, sought to destroy the oppressor, never sought to impose an ideological/religious ideology on that oppressor. It also had a policy of never targeting White civilians. White Boers or American Whites in Jim Crow had no experience of the oppressed groups trying to destroy or expel them; their fears of destruction were groundless.
omalley.nelsonmandela.org/index.php/site/q/03lv02167/04lv02264/05lv02303/06lv02304/07lv02305/08lv02312.htm
There is always the problem, too, of what sort of governance Hamas represents. What would it look like? The other Arab majority nations in the region offer no good alternatives or promise, on the contrary. Hamas decided not to build air raid shelters for the population only tunnels for their military. That does not inspire confidence. This doesn't make them evil or the Israelis good. But we can judge them by results not simply by their aspirations, and how well they strategize and plan. It does mean they cannot be trusted to GOVERN well. They know how to fight, for sure. What we are seeing today shows that they have not been effective representatives, they have chosen terrible policies to achieve their objectives. Israel can choose terrible governments and survive comfortably; the Palestinians don't have that luxury.
Listen to the Sam Harris Making Sense recent podcast about jihadism. Hamas is not just “one side” of the conflict fighting for their people. They represent jihadism which is an existential threat to free societies everywhere. Watch Hotel Mumbai. Listen to the son of the Hamas founder speech he gave at the UN recently.
The point you make about comparisons with other oppressed groups having political victories is a good one. Over simplifying comparisons with other struggles against oppression can lead to ignoring/failing to understand important factors of the conflict.
I agree with a lot of your points, but I can’t help but think you’ve overlooked the elephant in the room. And that is the ongoing absorption of land by Israel - they are literally eating it up slowly and steadily, coming from a position less than 100 years ago of 10% Jewish occupation to 90% non-Jews, to today when the ratio is now 78% to 22%. Hamas has only been in existence for just under 40 years. But nothing in all that time seemed to have any impact on the ongoing illegal acquisition of land by Israel. In all wars, shocking atrocities have been carried out by the military. The vast majority of casualties are always civilians. Is that not terrorism too? Doesn’t that make any government that declares war on any nation or community a terrorist group too? War terrorises, period. If you’re going to build up a huge army and a multitude of deadly weapons, then your intention is clearly to go to war. It is clearly not for defense, because more than 50% of the population of Gaza are children - who needs to defend themselves against children? It is also not for ‘security’. There is no one in the world who feels secure right now, because of the actions of a ‘democratic’ State! If Israel represents a modern civilised democratic society, then we are all in trouble. Who are we then to say that Hamas could not do any better?
‘Israel can choose terrible governments and survive comfortably’ - that statement has been troubling me, because my understanding is that the present PM is facing charges of corruption and could in fact be facing a jail sentence, so this outbreak has been a blessing in disguise for him …. Is that why he declared that this was going to be a long war? Is he hoping to somehow become a hero for driving out Hamas (the ‘collateral’ damage, ie innocent women and children, hospitals, schools, homes etc can’t be helped!) just as long as he gets off the hook. Personally I can’t think of any worse type of governance, where even your own people are sacrificed - the hostages he made no attempt to save, the Israeli people who have to live with the brutality of his actions, afraid to speak up when they disagree. I wouldn’t call that comfortably surviving.
Btw - I don’t think Hamas is any better, but I know less from that side because I imagine that Palestinian people are also afraid to speak out. The poor governance from Israel is much more visible.
@@valtracey6180if you're interested, you said at the end that you know little about Hamas's rule in Gaza, the video below is a Vice video of when the part owner Suroosh visited Gaza in 2011, 4 years after they took over governing the area. Gives a reasonable idea of what day to day governing was like at the time compared to how their spokespersons stated the situation was.
ua-cam.com/video/RWJFC98jPrQ/v-deo.htmlsi=8SpCixtuipegttzL
Would have been interesting to hear how the Iranian question fits into this?
What a terribly conducted interview. Accepting so many ridiculous statements and propositions with very little pushback. The notion that Hamas’ position was vindicated by them committing terrorism and sabotaging peace is so absurd.
The guest tries to defend Hamas when their manifesto suggests the annihilation of the Jews. Their action shows their intent very clearly. How about the Middle Eastern Jews who were displaced from different Arab nations, do they have the right to return?
0:10: 🔍 The video discusses the need to hold two thoughts at once regarding Hamas and its actions.
5:52: 🤝 The video discusses the potential for reconciliation between Hamas and Israel through political negotiations and concessions.
11:42: 🤝 The video discusses the political equilibrium and collusion between Hamas and Israeli hardliners.
17:38: 🇵🇸 Hamas is willing to accept the creation of a Palestinian state on the 1967 lines with East Jerusalem as its capital and limit its resistance to the Israeli occupation.
23:23: 🇵🇸 The video discusses the importance of resolution 194 to Palestinians and the root causes of the conflict.
29:10: ⚖ The video discusses the issue of Palestinian right of return and its impact on negotiations between Israel and Hamas.
35:13: 💬 The video discusses the flawed notion of security through maintaining oppressive rule over Palestinians and the need to dismantle such systems.
40:57: 🤔 The speaker discusses the challenges faced by Palestinians in achieving security and the right of return.
46:22: 🕊 The peace process between Israel and Palestine faced challenges due to differing perspectives on sovereignty and security.
52:17: 🌍 The video discusses the paradox of Hamas losing control over Gaza while also emerging as a central figure in the Palestinian struggle.
58:14: 🤔 Hamas sees their actions as a victory in disrupting Israeli security and occupation.
Recapped using Tammy AI
Tareq baconi's framing of the event and the conflict in general is completely wrong. The power balance the state of Israel needs to maintain is is with at least 10 muslim arab states surrounding it, not just the palestinians. Tagging the state of Israel as an apartheid state is factually wrong. Not all injustice and inequality can be labeled as "apartheid". The use if this term erodes the credibility of his other arguments. 36:43
Why? A poll of Middle East academics in 2021 a majority of them called Israel an apartheid state. The largest human rights organizations in the world - Amnesty International, and within Israel - B’tselem, also call Israel an apartheid state.
People that were fundamentally part of the dismantling of South African Apartheid, Desmond Tutu and Ronnie Kasrils, also have referred to Israel as an apartheid state.
Can you explain why you disagree? From where I stand the evidence is overwhelming.
Have you read any of the human rights reports?
Middle east academics is all you need to say. The arab academy is very low level Islamic antisemitic bent. Palestinians are citizens of the PLO, as of the Oslo accords. Israel does not owe right to thier enemy's citizens. Zinoism is not colonialism and war is not aparthide
Calling Israel an apartheid state is pretty uncontroversial when it comes to human rights organizations, as @@kylemarshall4559 so helpfully detailed. It's also uncontroversial to explain Gaza (pre Oct 7) as the world's largest open air prison. Also simply labeling the states surrounding Israel as "Muslim Arab" is somewhere between an oversimplification and untruth. As for the Muslim portion, yes, the majority of their neighbors are majority Muslim. However that's oversimplified, the Sunni-Shia divide is very real (along with other various other divisions) and leads to geopolitical tensions between majority Islamic nations. As for the Arab portion - it's false. Calling Turks & Iranians Arabs is like calling Koreans and Japanese Chinese. The middle east is a diverse part of the world & that needs to be understood during any discussion of middle eastern geopolitics (not to mention North Africa as a part of the Islamic world).
@@PMickeyDee all the countries you mentioned are strongly anti israel and muslim authocrtactic with very little acdameic freedom and integrity (iran still vows to destory israel), showed by the lack of actual sceince being conducted there. Gaza is also bordered by egypt, which most times let Rafah open. The only one keeping Gazans in is Hamas. On the israel side, we are enemies at war, closed borders are the only way to keep us safe as shown by the 7/10 massacres and like evety two countries at war. You use extra language just cause its about Israel. All muslims living in israel proper are full citizens with the most amount of rights and freedoms in the middle east by far. Palestinians are governed by the PLO/Fatah and Hamas, they are responisble for thier own, they have thier rules, laws, ID and governments. I dont know what each organization think this is aparthied but the reality is different
It is uncotrovesial only in circles of pretty radical left. There is a problem with all kind of rights organisation whose politics is heavily leaning towards radical left as well as automatic anti israeli majority in un institutions beacause of cold war soviet anti israeli heretage as well as large muslim block. You are right that there are divisions among muslims but they are historically united in they animosity towards Israel.
It seems the right of return is actually first and foremost a call for the suffering of displacement and ethnic cleansing that happened in 1947 to be recognized, seen, acknowledged, felt by Israel. Most violence comes from the desire for one's suffering to be measured by the other party. If that were done, with humility and awareness that early XXth century was what it was (soaked in colonialism), and a honest desire to evolve beyond it, then a seed of peace might be planted. This conflict needs restorative justice on a massive scale.
Yes, if it was about acknowledgment there could be a place to move forward from. It seems to be about more than that, unfortunately. And a lot or the room for that acknowledgment has been damaged by the atrocities if October 7th. That level of violence and brutality discredits a lot of the goodwill and compassion that might otherwise be there, was there.
Really? So there's a legitimate reason why they raped women while breaking their pelvises and legs? Why they put a baby in the oven while they were raping his mother and then killing her? Why they put a grenade in a dead woman's vagina, to kill the people who would come to tend to the dead? Why they didn't feed any of the children that they kept hostage for weeks?
@@MrBezigebij I was taught when I was very young that you don't mean it when you say 'sorry' if you keep doing the thing you apologized for after you apologize.
Acknowledgement intrinsically means earnestly seeking to make amends, and to produce a just resolution to the thing one is apologizing for. That's not unfortunate, that's the requirement that integrity, honesty, and viewing humans as having equal values comes with.
Once the conversation about what a just resolution honestly looks like begins, is when sustainable peace will also come.
I have always assumed the "right of return" was a euphemism for conquest. After all why after decades of fighting would Palestinians want to surrender the idea of true sovereignty and cultural independence to get a few plots of land back? even if 14 million Palestinians were to suddenly arrive and integrate into Israeli society the only thing they would change about Israel is its Jewish character. Israel would still be western society, the Palestinians would still be behind in terms of education and economic power, they would be a majority in a nation not their own.
As a culture looking to survive, wouldn't they rather build their own nation with their own cultural values at its core?
Massive assumption to think they'd "assimilate"
That is a terrible idea.
What's a "Jewish Character"? What's a "Muslim Character"? What's a "Christian Character"? Is Israel an Ethnostate or is it secular? Is Judiasm a cultural identity or an ethnicity? Is Amy Schumer an indigenous Palestinian woman and the Old Lady that was ethnically cleansed from Yaffa in 1947 isn't? Is Israel an Apartheid state or a democracy? Are the 2 million Arab Israelis in Israel considered Israeli? What about the other Arabs in the WB? WTH is a settlement? Are settlers colonizers? Are settlers terrorist? Are Mizrahi Jews the same as Ashkenazi Jews? If Israel is secular? Why does Israel have religion based parties and openly Jewish Surpremacist Ministers (but Ssshhh, it's ok) ? How many Israeli PMs were Warcriminals/Terrsts? 🤔🤔🤔 Is it anti-semetic to criticize Israel? I guess we will never know.
What is a Jewish character? go Israel it will be pretty apparent once you get there
What is a Muslim character? go to Turkey, Saudi Arabia, or most other Muslim majority nations it will be pretty apparent
What is a Christian character? go to any European nation or to Texas for that matter, it will be pretty apparent
Is Israel an Ethnostate or is it secular? These are not mutually exclusive Turkey is an example of an Ethnostate that is also secular. However Israel is not an Ethnostate
Is Amy Schumer an indigenous Palestinian woman and the Old Lady that was ethnically cleansed from Yaffa in 1947 isn't? Are you high?
Is Israel an Apartheid state or a democracy? Interpretations vary but generally no. Israel has created apartheid like conditions in the West bank but is not an Apartheid state like South Africa before the 90s. However with a lose enough definition all pluralist nations are Apartheid.
Are the 2 million Arab Israelis in Israel considered Israeli? The answer is in the question.
What about the other Arabs in the WB? Do want a history, an ethnography, or prediction of the future?
WTH is a settlement? Depends on the context, In reference to Israel and Palestine it is an Illegal Israeli town in the West Bank or east Jerusalem.
Are settlers colonizers? Depends on the context but generally yes.
Are settlers terrorist? Some are, other are not.
Are Mizrahi Jews the same as Ashkenazi Jews? These are different ethnic groups with different histories and cultures.
If Israel is secular? It is however like in other countries that is opposed by certain political factions
Why does Israel have religion based parties and openly Jewish Surpremacist Ministers (but Ssshhh, it's ok) ? Like other democratic nations Israel has many political parties. Currently a rightwing populist coalition has power.
How many Israeli PMs were Warcriminals/Terrsts? That depends on who you ask, what constitutes as these titles are subjective. Many world leaders have been accused of being war criminals and terrorist's some with more evidence then others.
Is it anti-semetic to criticize Israel? Like anywhere else in the world it depends how you do it. If you are intending to criticize a country like China but use derogatory language referring to their leaders eyes you are perpetuating anti-Asian hate, not simply being critical of china. If you attempt to criticize Israel but discredit Jews has having no history or right to self determination in the region, as has become commonplace on the left, or Jews as being conniving and conspiratorial, as has become commonplace on the right, then yes. If you single out political factions such as the Likud party then no.
Ezra, your questions are right out of my head. And your interlocutor either circles with words in essence saying yes, Israel has got to go.
Your patience is truly holy.
It seems that this man were on vacation on 7 october. I don't understand how can someone can tell that hamas is open to negotiations and that they don't want Israel destruction, above all after 7 oct.
On the right of return, Egypt lost Sinai which was promptly colonised with settlers so what did Egypt do? Assess their positions and negotiate in accordance with their capacity. They tried war and it didn't work unlike Hamas who are yet to take the note
"They tried a war and it didn't work" Fantastic tactical analysis of the Yom Kippur War lol.
Wars have consequences. Can’t keep losing over and over and saying the victors owe you something
@whdc425 Your point shows many levels of ignorance. "War" can only occur between two groups with equal human rights & autonomy. This isn't the case in Gaza. Gaza is a concentration camp for families, which has been blockaded by Israel, and turned into a giant tomb. Israel controls their water, fuel, food, electricity, medicine, even the air. So you can't have a "war" between the victims locked in the tomb and the people outside freely drinking sweet Zionist wine.
The implicit threat that they wield is that there is an enormous army of Muslim extremists surrounding Israel from all sides. It's not just the ones in Gaza.
Wow Ezra this is exactly the info I've been wanting as I research and try to understand the Palestinian and Israeli issues. This podcast is so densely packed with important information I'm going through it slowly and repeatedly. Thank you SO much!!! This info needs to go mainstream!
I totally agree! I have listened to hundreds of podcasts at this stage, but this is the first time I have heard the Hamas perspective - and like you, I am listening to it repeatedly because there is so much here. I am coming to the belief that there is a possible solution, but only if BOTH sides are EQUAL to begin with ie the first move must be to provide Statehood for Palestine, even if it is just for a 22% share of the total. The share is what then needs to be negotiated,but can only be between two recognized States. Why should Israel constantly demand that Palestine recognises its State, but they don’t equally recognize a Palestinian State. I have even heard interviewers ask Palestinian representatives this question ‘if you were granted your own sovereign State, would you be able to govern it’? The implication is clearly there that they don’t believe Palestinian people are capable of this. How arrogant is that?
They said the same about most nations that fought for independence from colonizers and empires. When we gained independence in Ireland after more than 700 years of occupation, we had no experience of government, but we quickly learned by making our own mistakes. Locking Palestinians into a cage hasn’t resolved Israel’s security problems so surely it’s time to release them and make amends?
@@valtracey6180 yes! It's Israel's responsibility to make the first move, as they are the ones with power. You can't ask a non-state entity to give away the one bargaining tool they have, to say: we won't recognize you until you recognize us, and allow us a state. Otherwise they have nothing. That's what Baconi means by negotiate from "a position of strength." WHich is why it's so sickening to hear one Israeli or American Zionist after another, insist that Palestinians always walk away from the negotiating table. There have been so few good-faith negotiations.
Enlightening conversation.
Great interview and an amazing guest.
A great war strategy starts with "understanding" the enemy. Thank you for your high quality podcast contents!
Not a peace strategy, huh?
@@JohnMoranLet’s not put the cart before the horse.
It's fairly simple, Joan. (1) They want Israel gone. (2) Murder is fine to get there.
No need to overcomplicate things. Use your empathy for people who aren't murderers who're still ready to go. Unless of course you're inviting them to your house. Because if you're going to make things soft for murderers, you shouldn't be putting other people at risk, that's not very empathetic of you. You should be taking on the danger yourself.
@@litsci1877 in my perspective that is what took place. Evil attracts evil. What were they doing in West Bank? Why were IDF persecuting Muslins worshipping in their mosques?
@@litsci1877 Baffles me how people can spout stuff like this while IDF are still killing children daily - seven thousand so far
The end of Zionism is not the end of Israel as a country or the right of Israelis to live in historic Palestine: it is a recognition that Israel was founded on a deliberate program of demographic engineering and has pursued it to this day and that no state has a right to exist as a racist order. The US South still exists, South Africa still exists, Northern Ireland still exists, despite the fact that their former racist orders have been dismantled.
I think something that commentators intentionally refuse to discuss is the cultural differences. Even if tomorrow Israel would decide to have equal rights, full compensation, there would be no peace. Because Palestinians are hard core Islamists, they want their society rules. They want women covered amd uneducated, they want Koran worship. That is contrary to Israel way of life. I see them here in Europe all the time. At some point there was a militia in a Duch town, in a neighborhood that was harassing women on the streets because they were looking differently than they should. It ended with the police intervention. Europe as a whole realized that cultures are different and is the reason people don't want immigration here anymore.
51:00 if Israel supports (Hamas, Abbas) or undermines (Abbas, PLO) Palestinian leadership it is considered at fault.
This is painful. This man justifies the attitudes of the farthest-right Israelis. Surely there are more reasonable representatives of Palestinian aspirations -- i.e., more open to coexistence and compromise. PS - His suggestion re post-Apartheid South Africa is deceptive. Yes, obviously, Apartheid had to end -- but the outcome has been very dysfunctional so far, and not just for the Afrikaners. I have spent some time there, and I can tell you, people are miserable. Crime has increased exponentially, real estate values have plummeted, etc. etc. There has been a lot of retribution, which is understandable; but the situation could have been handled much, much better.
Extremely respectful dialogue, but it seems to me that Hamas has not interest in the two states solution. I am unclear if Israel does want it.
Hamas losing 10% of their fighting force is devastating loss.
This guy doesn’t understand the reality.
The order and the premis of things presented is not correct. The whole point of the conflict until Oct 7th was based on the fact that Palestinians want a political resolution. There were at least 5 offers of concessions made by the Israelis during peace process to all of which the Palestinians refused, including 98% of the West Bank by Ehud Barak.
The information presented in this interview is false and distorted at best, and blatant lies at the worst case scenario.
@smarinay World history disagrees with the Israeli view. World history books record every Palestinian offer made to oftentimes extremist Israeli governments. The offer you refer to by Barak was a non-starter because it did not give Palestinians *_sovereignty_* over the land being offered as "theirs". Offers by Israel have been to keep the land under Israel, but to only "let the Palestinians stay there", and Israel agreeing to exert "minimum control over them."
As Avi Shlaim quotes, I'm paraphrasing, 1st by importance demand of the PLO was return of the refugees and 2nd is their own state. Israel would never agree to the 1st demand and that makes any negotiations futile. Even if there were a single body representing wishes of palestinians, if their demand were returning of refugees, any negotiations with Israel would be futile.
You need to push back on all the false claims about "giving away 77% of their land" et. al.
Hamas simply undermined any pre-existing underdog support they had.
Oh, come on. That's totally disingenuous. You're telling me that in September 2023, you supported Hamas? Right. Sure.
@@danielch6662no I didn’t. I meant the perception by many
In the west maybe, but I dont think you are the target audience.
This is a high quality discussion, and I learned a great deal about how Hamas views the situation. I don't agree with them, and I think Ezra should have pushed back aggressively on some of his guest's assertions, but this is really valuable.
his guest wasn't speaking on behalf of Hamas. he was explaining what Hamas is doing what it's doing. Ezra did the right thing by not pushing anything aggressively.
At the end of the day, regardless of the history, the Palestinians deserve their own state; that is, a legitimately recognized but thoroughly dysfunctional state from which they can properly emigrate to Europe or the U.S. to seek a better life 😎.
They already do. Look at the “protests” organised by their sleeping cells.
What? A dysfunctional state? That they can emigrate from? How would you feel being in a dysfunctional state? How would you feel being forced to leave your homeland?
@@BurroGirl I think that polygot8 was making a joke. He is pointing at Syria, Lebanon and Iraq, which you must admit can all be described as failed states, and saying that a Palestinian state would be no different.
@@joshpatt8341 oh geez, my bad. I apologize @polyglot8 .
My bad for misunderstanding your comment as sarcasm. I apologize.
This is my new favorite channel. Thank you for the long format that these conversation deserve.
There is no Apartheid in Israel!!
*Apartheid?*
The Apartheid is on the Arab side, not in Israel. In Israel there are 2 million Arab citizens (1.8 Muslim citizens) all with the same rights and benefits. How are Jews treated in the Arab world? Talk about Apartheid, there are less than 10,000 Jews total in all the Arab and Muslim countries in the Middle East, possibly the Arab world.
Gaza and the West Bank are not Israel. They have their own governments, laws, taxes, schools, police, services. They are not Israeli citizens, but citizens of Hamas and the Palestinian Authority.
If a Canadian or Mexican wants to vote in US elections, can they? No, because they are citizens of other lands. Can a Canadian or Mexican come across the border to the US without identifying themselves, or giving a valid reason for their travel? No, they must have ID, and state how long they plan to stay in the US and why they are coming into US territories. That is the same as Israel with the Palestinians.
There is no Apartheid!
*Please buy a dictionary! Google is free!*
Tareq's comparison of black right in the united states to Palestinians in Israel is an absurd comparison. 17 million Palestinians in Israel would eliminate the Jewish homeland. White Americans didn't have legitimate fears of Black people as Israel has to fear Palestinian militants. Thousands of Israelis have been murdered by Palestinian militants. That's not an analogy for Blacks in America.
2nd Amendment for gun rights is a manifestation of white fears
Hi @Ezra! It would be great if you could have a conversation with Dr. Einat Wilf . I think it would be extremely valuable. Thank you!
This guy, Tareq Baconi, is full of it. ignoring basic facts and historical events... and the written manifesto of the leading Palestinian terrorist organization (called Hamas). It is really frustrating that they cannot provide anything which could be taken seriously.
Tour podcasts have really helped me digest a lot of these complicated issues.
As a jew raised in Asia - it has been difficult for me to square my anger at Arab intransigence and the destruction of so many lives in Gaza as well. . .
Thank you
This particular episode if full of propaganda and lies, sorry to disappoint you. Hamas isn't a freedom fighting organization trying to save their people. If they were. They would use their tunnels ars bomb shelters for the Gaza civilians, they wouldn't go into Israel to rape women and burn families alive. Show me the freedome fighters elsewhere who behaved in such a barbaric fashion?
Begun listening and stopped after less than 15 minutes. Your guest is trying to push false nattatives, much more than share knowledge. As a part of the Israeli left I know for a facr his claima regatding Oslo are false.
Was about to subscribe to the thread and follow it and decided not to
Ezra, can you pls formulate your basic premise why we ought to see the things from the perspective of a rapist as long as he is a palestinian Arab? Normally, we put him into jail once convicted of the crime. Why is this rapist different from all other rapists?
I think podcast was quite useful in showing people that Hamas is fundamentally unserious. A lot of westerners have a delusional idea that Hamas just wants a Palestinian state but it’s not true
Not bad, Ezra. I learned some stuff and gave you some gruff. Thumbs up.
SO MUCH PROPAGANDA YOU ALL PEOPLES DO , JUST UNBELIEVABLE, BUT THANKS TO SOCIAL MEDIA,THE WORLD STARTED TO KNOW THE REALITY AND THE TRUTH,FREE FREE PALESTINE 🇵🇸, LEAVE THEM ALONE FOR GOD SAKES PLEASE
Yeah, you're correct. But when you use all capital letters . . eh, nevermind.
Free Palestine!
Excellent conversation. As an old veteran and historian, I still walk away feeling it’s up to Palestinians to get a grip on the historical context of their plight & commit to moving forward instead of backwards. Not as Iran’s proxy of destabilization, but as constructive regional partners. And I do not feel the situation is comparable to the US & SA. But I do have a far better sense of how solutions are continually thwarted. And will continue to fail unless there is a significant shift in ideology.
Not sure we were listening to the same show, but it seems clear they don't have a willing partner. Iran may be the only thing that prevents them from being silenced forever.
"Yes, this poll had a small sample size and yes it's 'hard' [due to fact people's lives can be endangered when they speak against violent groups] to get representative samples ..."
There was never a historic Palestinian Arab land.
That was fascinating.
What is Tahir's academic affiliarion? His personal and political backgroundm
Very interesting discussion. It does make things clearer. Ezra asked good questions that elicited useful answers.
Much in this video is counterfactual. SMH