Helen Walters: On Tuesday, May 7,
Israeli tanks entered Rafah
in southern Gaza,
as part of a military operation
to rid the city of Hamas fighters
and infrastructure.
The invasion had long been anticipated,
with much fear for the 1.2
million Palestinians
estimated to be sheltering in the area.
It feels like a pivotal moment
in an ongoing war
and humanitarian crisis,
so we thought we would try to get
a deeper sense of what is going on
and what we should be paying attention to.
I am delighted to be joined
once more by Ian Bremmer,
president and founder
of political risk research
and consulting firm Eurasia Group,
and my conspirator in this
"TED Explains the World" series.
Even though Ian has a terrible
voice right now --
Ian Bremmer: A terrible voice,
a terrible voice.
I mean, I sound
so non-Ian-like, it's horrible.
HW: You sound really terrible.
But the good news is that the insight
and the wisdom will flow all the same.
So thank you so much
for being here, Ian, and welcome.
IB: Thank you Helen, good to see you.
HW: OK, so can you lay it out for us?
Share your perspective
of what is going on right now.
And crucially, what are we not seeing
or appreciating in this moment?
IB: Well, look,
so much of this conflict has been
about the fact that the two antagonists,
the Israeli government and Hamas,
have virtually no alignment,
no overlap in what
they're trying to accomplish.
And it’s very hard to come
to a sustainable peace,
or even a ceasefire
that can last for anything,
when that's true.
I mean, the perspective of the Israelis,
and I’m not just talking
about the war cabinet,
but the whole Israeli population --
and there have been some
that have been protesting
and demanding that, you know,
the Israeli government accept
the Hamas ceasefire --
most from the right,
the center and the left
want Hamas destroyed.
They want the leadership
of Hamas brought to justice,
either killed or captured.
They want the military capabilities
of Hamas destroyed
beyond an ability to continue
to launch rockets against Israel,
irrespective of Israeli defense.
And they want the fighters,
some 30 to 40,000 estimated
Hamas fighters, to be gone.
And they're not close
to that military outcome yet.
Hamas, of course, is trying
to find a way to continue to fight
and to represent their ideology
and their aspirations
for control of territory that they believe
belongs to the Palestinians.
And of course, they don't recognize
the right of Israel to exist.
So, I mean, even negotiating
with a terrorist organization
is something that we don't,
in normal times,
think a lot about doing.
That is what the Americans,
the Egyptians, the Qataris
have tried to facilitate
over the past months.
But the reality is that while
everybody else in the world
wants the fighting to be over,
the two groups that are actually fighting
don't share common interests.
They don't.
And no one has been forced to cry uncle.
I mean, Hamas just obviously
hasn't faced enough damage
that they feel like
they have no alternative
but to accept what is being
offered to them by the Israelis.
And the Israeli government,
despite the isolation they're feeling,
and, you know, with even President Biden
now suspending a small number
of offensive weapons,
which he was incredibly reluctant
to even talk about as a possibility
just a couple months ago,
he's now doing it.
And the Saudis coming out and saying,
warning Israel to stop
what the Saudis are calling a genocide
against the Palestinian people.
That is a big step for a country
that's preparing to normalize
relations with Israel.
Despite all of that,
Israel does not feel the need
that they have to change
and give more to the negotiating process.
And that's why,
despite the ultimatums
that have been given
consistently by the United States
not to go into Rafah, they've gone in.
And to be fair, they haven't,
at this moment, you and I talking,
they haven't gone all the way in.
They've done more than dip a toe.
There are significant airstrikes.
There are tanks that have rolled
into some of it.
They have given evacuation flyers,
and they're moving a lot of the territory
out of big parts of Rafah.
But you would not call this
a full-on ground invasion.
And at this point,
the Americans have not said
that the Israelis
have breached the red line,
of which there is one.
What the Americans will do
if they proceed is an open question.
And so we're, you know,
we're in a bit of a gray zone.
A lot of the Middle East operates
in gray zones in conflict all the time.
But this is very dangerous,
both for the region
and more broadly.
And I think it’s a good time
to be talking about what's at stake here.
HW: So it's interesting that you say
that Hamas doesn't feel like they have,
I don't know if you put it
"suffered enough,"
but, you know, 35,000 Palestinians
have died in this conflict.
What do you think will bring Hamas
to the table in some meaningful way?
IB: Look, I mean, their leaders,
some of their leaders have lost
a lot of their families.
That's true.
My understanding is
that the military leader of Hamas
has actually had the over 30
members of his family killed.
You know, so clearly,
there's a level of personal suffering.
And while ideology is driving them
in ways that is hard
for you and I to imagine,
it is hard to say
it's driving them blindly.
You have to believe
that there are other things
that are also weighing on their decisions,
like the wellbeing of their families,
and like their ability to continue
to live and fight another day.
Now, I'm sure that that's
a part of the reason
they don't want to give up the hostages,
not just because there aren't that many
left alive for them to give up.
And of course,
that has been a wrinkle
in the negotiations over the past weeks
as well as the Israelis have learned
that the first tranche of hostages
that were going to be released
weren't all going to be alive.
I mean, you know, no one's going to accept
that bait and switch in Israel.
And also,
the fact that the only way that Hamas
is protecting their leaders,
in all likelihood,
is because they're deep under Rafah
in tunnels with those hostages.
So, you know, one of the ways
that you get them out
is if there is a possibility
of safe passage.
I mean, I remember when you and I
were talking about Prigozhin,
Yevgeny Prigozhin,
who was, you know, marching to Moscow,
and he was in an absolutely
no-win situation.
And yet he was willing
to cut a deal with Putin
that gave him another few months
of life on this Earth
and allowed, you know, his lieutenants
and some of his advisors to continue
with their contracts and their jobs.
You and I both knew
that he was dead man walking.
So, I mean, part of the question
is Hamas has gotten themselves,
in terms of their leadership,
into an incredibly impossible position.
They will be marked,
no matter where they are,
for death by the Israelis,
by the Americans, by many others,
for the rest of their lives.
That hardens their position.
It makes it harder to negotiate with them.
But even then, if things get
too impossible for them,
they might be willing
to accept an exit clause,
to get out
for a third, undisclosed country
for a period of time.
And I've got to tell you,
most of the world would accept that
if it meant that we could have
an end of Hamas in Gaza,
an end of the fighting in Gaza.
But again, at this point, you know,
what we're negotiating over right now,
and Bill Burns, the director of the CIA,
who has been the adult
from the United States,
riding herd on these negotiations,
him going to Israel
is the last opportunity
to get a deal done,
to get any time of ceasefire
and back away from full-on
onslaught of Rafah
that will cause many thousands
more civilian deaths,
much more famine and hardship
for the other Palestinians living in Gaza,
and much more retaliation
from the axis of resistance
and more broadly, across the Middle East.
So he's going there.
But what we're talking about,
even if he is successful,
is not a permanent ceasefire.
And I think it's almost impossible
to get this Israeli government,
and particularly its prime minister
and his far-right coalition,
off of the idea
that they still have unfinished
military business on the ground in Gaza,
and they may delay it
for a month or six weeks,
but they are not going
to delay it indefinitely.
That is not in the cards, in my view.
HW: So you mean a full-scale invasion
of Rafah is still on the cards?
IB: I do, I absolutely believe that.
Now, what is defined
by full-scale invasion?
It's interesting.
The Americans have never told the Israelis
that they oppose a full-scale invasion.
They haven't said that. They haven't.
You'd think they'd say that,
they hadn't said that.
They've said that they want guarantees
that the Palestinian civilians
living in Rafah,
over a million, as you say, 1.2 million,
have a safe haven,
have an ability to evacuate,
that the Americans
consider a hold water.
And -- that's number one --
number two,
that adequate humanitarian aid
is able to get in to Gaza,
across the territory,
to allow the Palestinians
to continue to survive
in anything that looks like life.
And as of right now,
neither of those two conditions
have been upheld.
You know, and so if the Israelis --
and the Americans have made
that very clear as of today.
So if the Israelis were to persist
with a full-on invasion,
absent those conditions,
the Americans would be forced
to what, suspend,
cut off offensive weaponry.
Make the Israelis buy it on the market,
reduce their ability to actually continue
a fight for more than a few weeks
the way they would like to in Rafah.
That is what the Americans
are trying to say to Israel right now.
But it is not the case.
I mean, I feel like,
well, if we don't get a ceasefire,
a temporary ceasefire,
what is likely to happen
is that the Israelis
will evacuate more people,
non-military-age men, right?
But others and they can't force them,
they're not ordering them,
but they're flying leaflets
and they're saying,
get out and we'll give you safe passage
for a period of time, a couple days,
four days, whatever it is.
And they'll let in more humanitarian aid,
some of which is no longer,
frankly, in their control.
They've said an American
private security company
is going to be given control of the border
that they've just taken over at Rafah.
That's new, that's the last 24 hours.
And they've also, of course, allowed,
though they don't formally occupy it,
so it's not really
up to Israel to allow it,
the United States to build this pier
to allow goods to get shipped in,
which might be open
in the next few days even
to allow some additional aid in.
I think that those things will happen.
Israel will say that they’ve met
American demands,
and then they’ll do full-on invasion.
I think that is the plan
right now, absolutely,
short of Bill Burns being successful
when he gets to Israel.
HW: How do you rate his chances?
IB: If it was anybody but him,
they'd be really low.
He's well-respected by all sides.
He really is.
He wouldn't be going
if he didn't have a serious plan.
He's not going for window dressing.
He's not going to show
that the Americans are giving their all.
He believes there's a way through.
I have a lot of respect for Bill.
So, I mean, I'd like to say
it's at least a coin flip.
I think they're still really talking.
They're still really engaging.
But let's also keep in mind, Helen,
a couple of things here.
First, talking to Hamas is hard.
Getting messages
to the military leadership,
just one message back and forth,
can frequently take
one to two weeks by the Qataris.
So between the time
that they have said something
and when you are responding to them,
frequently, the facts
on the ground change.
And that makes it a lot harder
to get to a deal.
And that's how the Americans have,
earlier, a couple of months ago, said,
yeah, we think a deal is about to happen.
And then, you know,
you hear back from Hamas
and it turns out life is different
than you thought.
And Biden's being a lot more careful,
more cautious this time around
than he was a couple of months ago,
everybody has noticed.
Also, the fact that if Netanyahu
gives too much up in a deal,
he will lose his right-wing
government, and then he’ll fall.
And this is a government
who have ministers,
in a sitting government,
who have called for genocide
against the Palestinians, right?
I mean, publicly, who have said
Gaza should be leveled,
full ethnic cleansing,
they should be occupying it.
You know, these are ministers
of the Israeli government.
They are not members
of the war cabinet, thankfully.
So they don't have control
over the war in Gaza.
But they are indispensable to Netanyahu
maintaining his power.
And so he is being pushed.
I mean, I have no doubt
that Bibi will find a way, you know,
to come to terms with the deal
if he can survive politically
with that deal.
But if he can't, he'll throw it away.
And so, that's where we are right now.
It's hard to work with Hamas,
it's hard to work with this Israeli
war cabinet because of the leadership.
And that's just to get
a temporary deal of a few weeks,
which everyone will see
as an incredibly improbable win.
Like we are at the brink right now.
And I would consider it, you know,
a big breath of fresh air.
Oil prices will go down,
we will have a cessation of attacks
in the Red Sea by the Houthis
for as long as the ceasefire is going on.
There’ll be huge shuttle diplomacy
to talk about next steps,
Palestinian leadership, governance,
all of these things.
But the reality is, we'll still only be
looking at a temporary ceasefire,
with Hamas holding on
to a smaller number of hostages,
each of whom mean a lot more
to Hamas's survival, right?
And the Israelis being pushed
harder and harder to say,
"What are you doing to get them out?"
And what are you doing to end Hamas?
So I don't think this gets easier,
even if we manage
to pull a rabbit out of a hat
with these negotiations,
these last- ditch negotiations.
HW: How do you rate Netanyahu's
chances of surviving as the leader?
IB: I mean, you know,
he has survived longer,
over many administrations,
than almost any of his detractors
would have expected.
So his survival skills
are quite something.
His political instincts,
his ability to play higher-stakes poker
than you are willing to
and push all of his chips in.
Does it repeatedly.
There's no question that Bibi thinks
he's got a better chance
with his coalition
if he can make it through
the US election and Trump wins.
Not because Trump loves Bibi, he doesn't.
Trump doesn't trust Netanyahu.
Didn't like, really didn't like the fact
that Netanyahu, who promised
to be there with the Americans
when the US was going
to assassinate Qasem Soleimani
and then a week beforehand pulled out.
Also really didn’t like that Netanyahu
immediately called Biden
to congratulate him after the election.
Said, "I'm ready to work with you."
Trump couldn't stand those things.
Trump remembers those things,
talks about it.
But Trump on Israel
supports the far-right position.
And Trump's advisers, foreign-policy
advisers around the Middle East,
support that position.
This is the guy that recognized
Israel's ownership of the Golan Heights.
He's the guy that moved the embassy,
the US embassy, to Jerusalem.
He didn't have a problem with expanded
settlements in the West Bank.
I mean, so a lot of places
where Biden is strongly pro-zionist
but is more of a centrist
in terms of who he supports
in the Israeli political spectrum,
you know, Trump would
support the far-right
that Bibi has as his lifeline.
It’s Likud, right-wing
party, center right,
and it's the far-right coalition.
That's it.
So I think that Netanyahu thinks
that if he sticks around,
there can be other things on the table,
that can allow him
to be a leader for longer.
But he has to stick around.
At this point,
I think it’s more likely than not
that he’s still prime minister
come November.
Because even if you have
a no-confidence vote,
and you force a new election,
it's three months from
when that happens to the election.
And, you know, we had this big,
I'm sure we'll talk about this,
but we had this big fight
between the Israelis
and the Iranians,
that made Netanyahu
look like more of a patriot.
He had been responsible for October 7.
That's his legacy.
Then he's responsible
for Israel with allies
defending itself against
unprecedented Iranian strike
without a single Israeli casualty.
So I think he's bought himself more time
by virtue of how this war has gone,
and how the war has expanded
and also how he's managed to keep
his own coalition on side.
So, yeah, I think if you made me bet,
I think he's got at least another
six months in him at this point.
HW: So the mention of Iran,
I think is, is really important.
As you mentioned, like in April,
we saw Iran launched hundreds
of drones and missiles
onto Israel in response
to an Israeli attack.
And I think there was real kind of,
everyone holding their breath to see
how that actually shook out.
Do you think that Iran will respond
to this attack on Rafah,
or do you think that they're going
to get involved in any bigger way
at this moment?
IB: Not directly, but indirectly.
But, you know, here's a really
interesting point, Helen.
You know, the Israelis
have had a common practice
of killing IRGC members
when they can find them
in other parts of the Middle East,
not in Iran itself.
They've had major cyber attacks in Iran
against their nuclear program.
They’ve assassinated
nuclear scientists, right?
I mean, there have been
all sorts of Israeli attacks
against core Iranian interests.
It's fairly clear from what happened
just a few weeks ago,
the Iranian response to an Israeli attack
against an Iranian consular building,
basically part of the Iranian embassy,
which Iran considered an attack
on its own territory,
the 300-plus missiles
and drones against Israel.
And they said, "You do this again,
this is going to be much worse."
So the stakes for the status quo ante
policy of Israel have gotten a lot higher.
Next time Israel is thinking about,
"OK, it's time to go
after Iran's nuclear program again,"
the potential for that to become
a war -- much higher.
So let's break down
two different parts of this.
First, let's look at what happened
between Israel and Iran.
Then let's look at what the Iranians
are doing going forward.
First, what happened?
So the Israelis,
who have been on the receiving end
of attacks from all of these Iranian
proxies across the region,
and Iran gives the money and weaponry
and training and intelligence.
So then the Israelis see this
target in Damascus.
The IRGC, Islamic Revolutionary Guards
Corps, their head for Syria.
And so they send missiles in.
They blow up the building,
they kill him and some other officers.
And so then the Iranians,
on the one hand, they clearly
don't want a war,
so they tell the Turks
and Iraqis in advance,
"Here's what we're planning on doing,"
They wait a week.
The messages get to the Americans.
"Just going to attack military targets,
not going to attack any civilians.
This isn't about the United States.
We don't want the US involved."
Then they send the weapons over.
While the weapons are in,
you know, in transit,
the Iranian mission to the UN says,
"Hey, this is all we're doing.
It's in response to what the Israelis did.
We consider this now closed."
That all sounds pretty good.
Sounds de-escalatory, tit for tat.
Except, they sent over
300 missiles and drones.
And I will tell you that no one
in the Biden administration,
in the Pentagon, in the White House,
no one thought that that
was going to happen.
They thought that was such
a larger response from Iran.
I mean, if you wanted to just hit Israel
to show that this is serious,
you send 20, 30 drones, whatever,
you know they're going to knock them down.
You send over 300, the intention
is for a bunch of them to get through.
The intention is to blow up
a major Israeli base,
to kill Israeli military men and women.
If that had happened,
the ability of the United States
to contain the Israeli response
to something symbolic
would have been very, very challenging.
In other words,
we might right now be
in an Iran-Israel war
that the Americans got sucked into.
The Straits of Hormuz
would have been disrupted.
Iran also boarded an Israeli-linked ship
just outside the Straits of Hormuz,
right before they sent those weapons,
showing "this is where this can go
if this gets really ugly."
That's 150-dollar oil.
That's Trump is the next president, right?
That's a that's a major war
in the Middle East
that the Americans are actively
fighting with allies.
Horrible situation.
I don't think it was likely,
but the Iranians
were prepared to risk that,
at least to a limited degree.
And that's something that everyone
in the region now understands.
And the Israelis understand it, too.
OK, so that's what just happened.
Fortunately, that's in
the rear-view mirror.
Going forward,
if this attack on Rafah goes ahead,
either in the coming days
because there’s no agreement
on the hostages,
or in the coming weeks
because there is an agreement
and then it's over
and they haven't extended it,
then you're going to see
the Iranians continuing to provide
all sorts of support
for these so-called axis
of resistance members
who the US considers
to be terrorist organizations.
They don't recognize the right
to Israel to exist.
They're going to be engaging
in strikes on shipping,
on warships and military targets
of the US and the UK,
and also against Israel.
And the Israelis are likely
to make strikes against Iran
as a consequence going forward.
So we could very easily have a repeat
of what we just saw
between Israel and Iran.
But with that deterrence having failed,
we're now at a new point of escalation,
more dangerous than it was
last time around.
Got to do more to show
that you're serious, right?
Also, final point, in case
that wasn't enough,
you've got over 100,000 Israelis
that have been evacuated
from the north of the country,
evacuated because at the beginning
of the war, they were concerned
that Hezbollah was going to continue
to send missiles against them
and make them unsafe and kill them.
So they're out.
But there's a lot of pressure
to get them back in,
especially by September,
start of the school year.
The only way you get them back
is if you either have a peace plan
that's agreed to,
which we don't have,
or you've taken some actions
against Hezbollah.
Now, most of the conversations
I've had with Israeli leadership
and even with some centrist members
of outside of the Israeli government,
is that action needs
to be taken against Hezbollah.
And if it's a two-front war,
it's a two-front war.
It's one of the reasons they don't want
to have a lot of troops in Gaza.
Most of them have pulled back
because they have to defend
themselves against Hezbollah.
So if the only way you get
your 100,000 citizens back
to their homes
is you need to start striking Hezbollah
to a more serious degree.
Hezbollah is by far the most important
ally of Iran in the region.
They're the ones the Iranians
would do much more to defend.
So that's another proximate way
that we get from the war
that we have right now
to something that could expand
and bring the Iranians in.
There's just a lot
of vectors of instability
as we look over the coming months.
HW: Is there any genuinely credible path
to a two-state solution,
or to peace in the region any time soon?
IB: I think there's
absolutely a credible path.
I just don't know that it's any time soon.
I mean, the credible path
is you have a Palestinian Authority
that appoints a technocratic
government for Gaza,
Palestinians who have worked
in multilateral organizations
and understand what it means
to actually build an economy.
Those people exist.
And there are certainly people
that could run a Palestinian
Authority in Gaza,
some of them are
in the Emirates and Egypt.
There are, you know,
the ones in jail in Israel.
I mean, there are possibilities, right?
And then the military,
the security would be funded
by the Gulf states, maybe the US,
with a lot of the physical security
provided, probably, by Egypt.
Maybe a little with Jordan,
maybe some others, right?
Maybe the UN would get involved.
That's feasible.
And there's been a lot of conversations
involving the Gulf states
around precisely that.
And some of the conversations,
even in the Bahrain Peace Conference,
that was the precursor
to the Abraham Accords under Trump,
discussed that.
So, I mean, these solutions exist.
But, Helen, over the last
seven months, you know,
October 7 has radicalized
a generation of Israelis
against the solution like that.
Not all of them,
but a majority, a majority.
A two-state solution
is no longer something
that anybody in Israel
with a big party wants to run on,
because it's very unpopular in Israel,
particularly among Israeli Jews.
Israeli Arabs, different story.
Israeli Jews strongly oppose
a two-state solution right now.
Then you've got the Palestinians,
and not just in Gaza,
but in the occupied
territories, the West Bank,
where much more land has been taken
illegally over the past months.
I mean, Netanyahu appointed
a member of the far right
to be in charge of demolitions
in the West Bank.
They're taking more land,
more Palestinians are fighting,
more Palestinians are getting killed,
fighting against settlers,
also fighting with the IDF.
So we're farther
from a two-state solution,
even in the West Bank, you know.
And then, of course, we have
the animosity from Palestinians
who are refugees,
living without full rights
in Jordan or in Lebanon.
You know, you put all of that together,
and this is an incredibly,
an incredibly difficult path
to get from here to there.
I mean, look, the Saudis are holding out,
"We will normalize relations with Israel,
even as we say,
you're committing a genocide."
When's the last time
you've had a country say,
"We're going to normalize
relations with you.
You're committing a genocide,
but we're prepared to do it,
just stop
and let's have a defined path
for a new state for the Palestinians
that you will recognize.
And then we'll do it."
And the Americans have spent
a lot of time with the Saudis
working on what that plan would be.
And I think you could get that through
with a new defense pact
that would pass Democrats
and Republicans in Congress.
But you have to have
Israeli normalization.
That means you have to have
a Palestinian state.
Helen, there is much more support
for a Palestinian state today
around the world,
than there was when you and I
were talking about this last time.
When October 7 happened,
it was in part the result
of years and years and years
of everybody talking
about Palestinian need
for self-autonomy and determination,
and no one actually doing it.
We now have a lot more people
recognizing talk is cheap.
This is causing a real problem.
We need a Palestinian state.
But I mean, if the people
that are fighting the war
have inclinations against each other
that preclude any such possibility,
you asked me at the beginning,
why don't we have a deal?
We don't have a deal
because there's not overlap
between Hamas and the war cabinet.
Why don't we have a two-state
solution pathway?
Because the Palestinian people
and the Israeli people
have gotten further apart.
Despite all of this pain,
because of all of this pain.
HW: It is so painful.
There is so much pain everywhere.
What's interesting, too, I think,
is that the global response to this
has been so divided itself.
There is so much anger at Israel
for what people are seeing
that is happening to the Palestinians,
the death and the destruction of Gaza
and the pictures that we see.
The support for Israel that I think
materialized after October 7
does in some ways seem to have evaporated
on a global, kind of, basis.
But I'm wondering
if the rise of anti-Semitism
and the rise of the kind of angry rhetoric
that we see rolling out
and playing out across the world
is playing into any
of the factors on the ground
and with the leadership who are actually
making the decision?
What is your response to that?
And how are you seeing this type of strife
that is happening around the world
actually impact anything
that's happening on the ground?
IB: I mean, of course,
we're seeing a rise in anti-Semitism,
which frankly predated October 7.
Those numbers were going up in Europe
and the United States before that.
And it's gotten worse.
And I think a lot of that has been
just the polarization
and the misinformation in society,
the extremism that is carried
algorithmically through social media.
I mean, things that you and I talk about,
that's getting worse.
And, you know, you mentioned
that there was, you know,
an outpouring of support
for Israel after October 7.
And that's true.
And we saw big demonstrations,
massive in Germany,
in the United States and elsewhere.
But there was still a lot
of anti-Semitism.
And, you know, even in the early days,
if you were an Israeli Jew,
you felt like there wasn't as much
support as you would think.
There was a lot more sympathy
for the Hamas position,
even as they just carried out
the most brutal atrocities
we'd seen against Jews
since the Holocaust.
And, you know, Joe Biden,
on Holocaust Memorial Day,
Remembrance Day came out and, you know,
seven months after,
reminded people of that,
that the hostages are still there.
These atrocities were still committed.
The people that were responsible
for those atrocities,
that carried them out, that ordered them,
they're still commanding their forces.
And that's clearly not acceptable, right?
I mean, the Americans didn't consider
that acceptable after 9/11.
No country that had
that brutality against them
would consider that acceptable.
But it's also true that, more broadly,
there is --
Israel today is in a very isolated place.
Almost the entire --
When Hamas accepted the plan
that was offered by the Egyptians
and the Qataris
and the Israelis said no,
pretty much the entire world
was in the Hamas negotiating position.
And that's not good for Israel.
Now, has that really made
a difference to the people
engaging in the substance
of this conflict and potential resolution?
No.
And has it led to any major attacks?
No. Not yet.
I mean, look, the major terrorist
attack that we've seen
since you and I have spoken to each other,
an Islamist extremist
attack was in Moscow,
for some Tajiks
that were attached to ISIS-K.
And the reason it was Moscow
is because, you know,
Putin is a big friend and ally
of Assad in Syria
and helped to take ISIS
out of the territory
that had been their caliphate.
Now, that was a while ago.
But it takes a terrorist
organization a long time
to organize a spectacular attack.
You know, everyone's trying to get them.
They need to operate under the radar
with a lot of anonymity,
and they don't have a lot of resources.
A lot of them aren't very capable.
So, I fear that the fact
that we haven't seen anything yet
is just because there hasn't
been enough time
for those plans to manifest.
I mean, certainly US
and allied intelligence believes
that we are going to see a generational
change in support for anti-Israel
and anti-US Islamist extremist terror
because of what has transpired
in the last seven months
on the ground in Gaza.
I absolutely expect that.
I hope that the amount
of effort and resource
that has been put
into combating that post-9/11
will enable us to prevent it,
or at least the vast majority of it.
But, you know, I don't know
how lucky I feel.
HW: Well, that is depressing, thank you.
So what are you watching for next?
What should we be looking out for?
What are the signals
that we should be looking for
that something new and interesting
and big is happening
that we should be paying attention to?
IB: Well, first of all,
what we talked about,
a few of those in the region,
we want to watch very carefully
what comes out of Bill Burns's
trip to Israel,
if there's going to be a short-term
agreement, that's what it is.
And/or if more time is bought,
in terms of a Rafah attack,
full-bore Rafah attack.
And we want to watch how many,
how much the Israelis move
on the other precursors,
humanitarian aid and the evacuations
because then they've checked the boxes,
they can go in, right?
So it's the American perspective,
it's the Israeli perspective.
That's what we want to watch.
Assuming Rafah happens,
we want to watch very, very carefully
all of the attacks from the Houthis.
Because they've been expanding,
they just threatened
the Mediterranean for the first time,
they also struck a ship
in the Indian Ocean for the first time
using ballistic missiles.
Clearly, that's a problem.
They're attacking a lot
of American warships,
while the Iranian-supported proxies
in Syria and Iraq have stopped,
ever since the three servicemen and women
were killed in Jordan
a few months ago.
The Americans brushed them back
pretty hard, and that that stopped,
but the Houthis are still
hitting the Americans.
And if they were to blow up a warship
or kill a bunch of American
servicemen and women,
I think that would clearly
lead to an escalation.
Finally, in the region, we want
to watch the Hezbollah,
northern Israel front,
the Lebanon front.
And as we get closer to the fall,
what are the Israelis
preparing to do on that?
Don't fall asleep on that.
But beyond the region, well,
the one thing we haven't talked
about is the US election,
because Biden is in no man's land
on this issue, right?
I mean, you have a very --
very few Americans consider Gaza
the issue they're going to vote on.
But this makes Biden look weak.
He has been telling
his top ally in the Middle East,
“You must let humanitarian aid in.
You must do more
to protect the civilians.
You must protect journalists.
You must protect aid workers.
Do not dare go into Rafah.
You must support a two-state solution.”
And the Israeli prime minister
has told Biden,
the president of the most powerful
country in the world,
who is an enormous
supporter of his country,
has told him talk to the hand.
Talk to the hand.
And has even told him, you know,
on Holocaust remembrance,
the eve of Holocaust remembrance
that the Israelis have to only
count on themselves,
can't count on any other
countries around the world.
After everything the Americans did
to defend Israel with the Iranian strikes,
despite the opposition of, like,
almost every country in the world
to what Israel is doing right now.
And the American vetoes
at the Security Council, I mean,
everything the US is doing to stand up
to Israel and Netanyahu, at least,
I mean, it may work in Israel.
It certainly works for his coalition.
But in the United States,
in an election year, it's insane.
And so Biden is in damage-control mode,
and this is hurting him.
And this war, I think that Netanyahu
is still going to be there in November,
and I fear the war is still
going to be going on.
And if it's still going on in the
summer and in the fall, I mean,
the students are going
to go home, they graduate.
And I mean, I'm doing the Columbia
SIPA graduation ceremony,
I'm their speaker on Monday.
That's going to be a very different speech
than I expected when they originally
asked me to give it.
So I'm going to go
and do my best for the students.
But they'll all go away.
But then come August,
we've got the convention in Chicago,
which is fraught with incredible symbolism
and a lot of anger
and certainly will be a place
where, you know,
professional agitators will show up
to make this look bad for the Dems.
And then after that, I mean,
if this war is still going on when campus
gets back in place, August, September,
you know, these universities
are going to be lit.
It's going to be a serious,
serious problem for Biden.
The kids are not alright.
And in an election that is tight
with a small number of swing states,
and that counts on people coming out
and being supportive of the incumbent,
Biden is in serious danger of losing
critical votes on this issue.
HW: Obviously, there's no
quick fix for Biden,
but what do you think he should do?
IB: Look, I think Biden should have
come out very, very strongly
against Netanyahu
and with Israel on day one
after October 7.
Which, by the way, is the position
of the overwhelming majority
of the Israeli people.
You know, I mean, give direct interviews
to the JPost and Haaretz
and say, you know,
how the Israeli prime minister
failed his people, right?
I mean, in other words,
really put your thumb on the scale,
which would have, you know,
it would have been painful,
but Bibi would have done it to Biden,
would have been happy to, right?
And Biden's not that kind of a guy.
But when you're playing
against that sort of person,
that's what you need to do.
And the United States
doesn't just support Israel.
It also supports Israeli democracy,
which Netanyahu is an enemy of, right?
That's what he needed to do.
And he could have absolutely done
just as much to provide the support
you know, get the money
to the Palestinians.
There’s aid going in.
But also get military
support to the Israelis,
redouble the American defense support
so that the Israelis can make sure
that they can deal with incoming
missiles and rockets.
You can do both of those things
at the same time.
A final thing is, I think Biden
should have talked a lot more
about the American hostages
in the early days.
And I don't know, I'm not privy
to whether the Americans
seriously considered a raid,
but I’d like to believe -- from day one,
they were saying the Israelis
are in charge of the hostages.
The Israelis are in charge
of the hostages.
You've got American citizens
that are hostages.
I don't know why the Israelis
should be in charge of those hostages.
I think that's either a joint raid
or the Americans go in
and do it themselves.
But I would have wanted
Biden on top of that.
And it's not that Biden wasn't,
it's not that Biden refused that,
a lot of people were coming
to him with that advice.
Biden's 81.
And I just don't think
he's willing to be as decisive,
as assertive on these issues
as he was 10, 15, 20 years ago.
I'm hearing a lot more of like,
"Yeah, yeah, that sounds interesting.
Let's think about that."
As opposed to being decisive on the issue.
And this is one where Biden
being too cautious,
too late, too slow
in articulating a position
that he has gotten to.
He has now actually,
you know, suspended
some of this military aid,
but you don't want to wait until,
you know, after the World
Central Kitchen debacle.
This was happening before
to lots of aid workers,
they just weren't Americans.
But it was happening.
I mean, they've been incensed
with what the Israeli
prime minister has been doing
and the war cabinet for months now,
but they've been very careful.
I agree that your allies,
you should talk to privately differently
than you talk to publicly.
And that the US policy towards something
that the Israelis do when it's wrong,
shouldn't be the same as when the Russians
do something that's wrong
because they're your ally, I get that.
But this is beyond
the pale for the Israeli PM,
and I think he thinks he can walk
all over the United States right now.
And that's not a good position to be in.
HW: Ian, it is always
a pleasure to talk to you
despite the toughness
of the conversations.
I'm so glad your voice held out.
Thank you so much for being here,
and we will see you again soon.
IB: Let's hope for the best
on these negotiations.
Let’s hope that we at least
get some good news
and stop some of this fighting
for a period of time,
get some of this aid in.
But either way, I'm sure
you and I will be talking again soon.
HW: Thanks, Ian.