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Norman Finkelstein: Discussing his book “Gaza: An inquest into its marty… https://youtu.be/yPBAcXTB3OQ?si=0W7KCl9HRrOdnFqF

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Norman Finkelstein: Discussing his book “Gaza: An inquest into its martyrdom.”

Bideoa: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yPBAcXTB3OQ

This is a deep dive into Norman Finkelstein‘s magnum opus Gaza: An Inquest into its Martyrdom. TO our knowledge, there was no in-depth video analysis of his book before. We asked Finkelstein about the making of the title of the book, especially the word Martyrdom. We discussed the question of agency when it comes to the Palestinian resistance movement, and how that squares with his all-out call for non-violence in his book. Finkelstein said he has changed his views since he wrote his book on the question of violence/non-violence. We have gone into great detail to discuss the Israeli atrocities that Finkelstein documents assiduously in his book. We have also spent considerable time discussing Finkelstein’s indictment of human rights reports for taking sides with Israel. Throughout the interview, Finkelstein has placed the context of his book side by side with what has happened since he wrote his book.

Transkripzioa:

0:09

hello and welcome to another episode of India  & Global Left today we have with us a very 

0:15

special guest professor Norman Finkelstein today  we’re going to discuss his magnum opus Gaza and 

0:23

inquest into his martyrdom Norm welcome back to  Indian Global Left well thank you for having me 

0:29

it’s always my pleasure to talk to you I wanted  to discuss your book and and it’s an incredible 

0:35

privilege to to to discuss it with you for  obviously um you know on a lighter note I didn’t 

0:42

want to give you a lot of opportunity to shame me  that I haven’t completed the book but on a more 

0:48

serious note I think um it’s uh a lot of people  now know about your book a lot of people are 

0:56

interested in your book but some of them might not  have the time or energy to go through the book so 

1:03

I thought it would be a good video archive  of a book that you have produced and it’s so 

1:10

so important at this moment I want to kick start  by asking you a little bit to reflect on your 

1:20

title of the book because one of the things that  struck you begin by saying that this is not a book 

1:27

on Gaza this is a book on what is done to Gaza so  the subject it feels is the perpetrators Israel 

1:35

and you can add a bunch of allies and stuff  halfway through your book one doesn’t get a 

1:42

sense of martyrdom and it’s only when you start  discussing the operation castlet and protective 

1:48

edge one understands what that martyrdom is tell us a little bit about the making of the title 

1:58

well the title came instinctively but that’s  because by the time I filed the book I had 

2:08

a clear conception in my mind of what the book was  about now I’ll say as a as a preliminary remark 

2:17

one of the referees the readers of the  book for university of California press 

2:24

objected to the title he’s a person ostensibly  of the left but he didn’t think the term 

2:31

the word martyrdom should be in the  title of a book from a university press 

2:39

and I wasn’t in the least deterred or dissuaded  by that remark because the title is an indication 

2:50

or reflects what I was trying to do in the book  inquest refers to a very systematic methodical 

3:02

tedious manuscript I very much doubt many people  read it the last chapters when they go through 

3:11

the chapters called betrayal one and betrayal  two where I analyze the misrepresentations 

3:19

and falsifications in the human rights reporting  on Gaza it’s a very detailed very difficult 

3:27

very difficult chapters to read I don’t  really write for people I write for history 

3:34

I want the record to be there because I  don’t believe it may be hubris on my part 

3:41

but I don’t believe maybe no persons have the 

3:49

the discipline for detail that I  do and so if I don’t go through it 

3:58

point by point line by line methodically  demonstrating the misrepresentation 

4:05

I don’t believe anybody else will do it they  don’t either because they don’t have the patience 

4:10

the discipline or because they don’t think it’s  important I believe it’s important I do believe 

4:18

the devil is in the details and unless you master  the details you don’t really know what’s going on 

4:26

so inquest refers to that to the forensic side  of the book but there’s another side of the book 

4:38

there’s indignation there’s outrage there’s a lot  of disgust at what’s been done to those people 

4:49

they have been martyred and I don’t believe  that I don’t believe in writing a book 

4:56

that’s strictly clinical you are an economist by  training now and you will recognize the tradition 

5:07

from where I come which is to say the tradition  beginning with marks very rigorous very methodical 

5:19

very dry especially those first chapters of Das  Kapital extremely dry you know what is a commodity 

5:31

and but on the other hand it  is replete with rage outrage 

5:42

at what’s been done to the toiling classes  and the whole system of capitalism which 

5:52

marks describes as coming into the world with  blood and dirt dripping from all its pores 

6:03

that’s not clinical language that’s indignation  and that’s outrage and those were all those were 

6:14

from a fairly young age the models for  me the ability to combine the forensic 

6:26

aspect with the moral indignation so that  was what the title attempted to capture 

6:42

it is an inquest it’s a it’s a 

6:48

a coroner’s report but it’s also  as I said replete with outrage 

7:00

yeah no outrage not only what was done  what has been done to those people 

7:06

that’s only half the outrage the other half  is the lies right the force of falsifications 

7:15

the betrayal of the human rights organizations  the cowardice of the human rights organizations 

7:25

I was struck um this is a side note but it’s not  irrelevant so as all you as you know and as your 

7:34

viewers no doubt know the current scandal  is how the Israeli secret services 

7:42

attempted to blackmail the former chief  prosecutor of the ICC Fatou Bensouda 

7:50

you’re aware of that story correct yes it’s  all over the place and I had to say I was 

7:58

bemused and amused when Henry Roth the former  executive director of human rights watch 

8:09

he wrote an article in yesterday’s guardian  newspaper celebrating the heroism and the 

8:17

courage of Fatou Bensouda who  did not succumb to the blackmail 

8:26

she was she was chief prosecutor I think for eight  years I think it’s eight years no it would be 

8:38

maybe six years uh she was chief prosecutor  she had one case having to do with Gaza 

8:46

which she systematically desperately tried  to quash in the most shameless embarrassing 

8:54

absurd ways and then she had a second case  where she kept kicking the can down the block 

9:05

and by the time it was time to move to  investigate this case which began in 2015 

9:14

when it came time to finally investigate  the case she had three months left in office 

9:22

this is courage yeah I think you’re  giving away a little bit which uh 

9:28

I mean a lot of the readers of your book  would be very surprised who would often  hear you speaking because they will think oh  Norman keeps quoting human rights reports all 

9:39

the time but your book is about actually being  very very critical about human rights reports 

9:45

including Amnesty International which we would  discuss but I want to go a little bit more  systematically that’s an important point yeah no  we would definitely just a large part of my life 

9:58

yes holding those reports but an as large part  of my life exposing the falsity of those reports 

10:08

absolutely but before that I wanted to have a  comment on the subjectivity aspect of the book 

10:21

because you start by saying that this story of  people of Gaza even though it’s not not directly 

10:28

a story of people of Gaza it has very muted  agency so you say that my book is not about agency 

10:35

because it’s people like you know people in Gaza  cannot have that kind of agency and I think this 

10:43

was one of the remarkable aspect that I found  in your book you did tremendously well in not 

10:50

fetishizing agency which is sometimes it becomes  an academic trend to talk about agency all the 

10:57

time and at the same time not casting the  Palestinians as passive victims I mean your 

11:04

discussion about what happens in 2009 but more  significantly 2012 these possibilities are opening 

11:10

up there are you know things that they are doing  obviously there is resistance and stuff like that 

11:17

so that was one comment and on on the examination  part so that’s the comment on martyrdom and 

11:23

subjectivity and on on examination I think  obviously you were examining kind of two aspects 

11:31

you’re examining the blatant Israeli propaganda  narrative on one hand but you are also examining 

11:38

your sources at the same time so I just  wanted to hear your thoughts on that 

11:45

well first of all there’s  always agency the question   is the limits the parameters on the agency if you take the case of the United States there  

11:56

were slave revolts but actually there weren’t that many if you consider that the biggest was  

12:03

Nat Turner and all of 60 white people were killed and it was all over in two days less than two  

12:13

days it’s not exactly a impressive record of slave revolts and then the question is how  

12:23

do you explain the lack of those revolts namely the very limited parameters slaves had to act and  

12:32

it’s a complex question obviously how you explain that but I don’t think a true history of  

12:41

African-American or true African-American history would at least with regard to the slaves attribute  

12:50

a large amount of agency to them no it’s true there was the underground railroad and then there  

12:55

was the abolitionist movement and all those sorts of things but the fact that the matter is within  

13:02

that big picture the actual amount of agency of the slaves is rather limited in my opinion and I  

13:09

think it’s the same thing with a situation in Gaza it was a concentration camp you know how much  

13:18

agency do you have in a concentration camp it’s not realistic so they take the case of the Jews  

13:28

during World War II there’s all sorts of example you know exaggeration about the amount of number  

13:35

of revolt in the partisan  sister colonies practically  nothing there are reasons for it why I mean that’s  always been a big question why was there so little 

13:47

resistance to the Nazis and one of the standard  answers is show me in the country where there was 

13:53

a lot of resistance there really wasn’t much you  know in the case of France it was like nobody 

14:02

the whole the whole notion of the French  resistance is a complete fabrication of a people 

14:08

who’s given to very large fabrications about  themselves the French so by and large these 

14:16

notions of resistance in the face of overwhelming  power tend I think to be very exaggerated that 

14:25

was a ghetto uprising was very very limited  actually the greatest historian on the subject 

14:34

of the Nazi extermination Raoul Hildberg he was  very severely criticized for saying there was 

14:42

a ghetto uprising it was practically nothing and  my mother was very insistent my mother and father 

14:50

were in Warsaw during the uprising and she said  we had like four guns what are you talking about 

15:00

if the Red Army had a very large difficulty  defeating the Nazis what do you expect from 

15:07

Jews who have four guns it’s not realistic  it’s just fantasy so I don’t think obviously 

15:16

Hamas’s capabilities have increased over time  I think they’re vastly exaggerated even now 

15:25

if you follow the news for example have you read  about one single battle in Gaza battle I mean a 

15:32

battle where one side the other  side there’s no report of a battle 

15:39

there may be a couple of people snipers  here and there and they kill two or  right now it’s seven months and I think  it’s 290 soldiers but I think that includes 

15:53

well it doesn’t include you know it doesn’t  include but 290 soldiers in seven months is 

15:58

not exactly a huge number so I tend to be  skeptical of these kind of Hollywood depictions 

16:11

of resistance and agency obviously you have  certain within I gave the examples of Nelson 

16:19

Mandela and Frederick Douglass who showed  a certain amount of agency Douglas escaped 

16:30

slavery and Mandela managed eventually to  command the respect even of his jailers 

16:40

so yeah there’s a certain amount of Asians  I consider it very limited the Palestinians 

16:46

couldn’t do very much the Palestinians  in Gaza couldn’t do very much 

16:54

I think one of the over-arching or very  central point to understand as I read your book 

17:02

is your point about establishing in  fact re-establishing again and again 

17:09

what you are calling the deterrence capacity I  think it would be like one would misread your 

17:16

book completely or miss a significant part of the  main point because even with your diagnosis and 

17:24

inquest of a lot of the human rights reports  and stuff that is a very central point so to 

17:31

understand this conflict this this point is very  important in so far as your argument is concerned 

17:38

so can you can you tell our viewers why is  it such an important point and what is it 

17:46

well deterrence capacity or capability  deterrence capacity or capability is just 

17:56

it’s a fancy technical term for instilling  the fear in Arabs of Israel the fear of their 

18:05

military might the fear of their retaliatory  capacities the fear of their intelligence 

18:13

capabilities to keep the Arabs in place to keep  them in check and that has been an overarching 

18:23

thing of the Zionist and then the Israeli history  basically because it goes back to Ben-Gurion who 

18:33

was the first prime minister of the state of  Israel he never believed that Arabs would accept 

18:40

the state of Israel in their midst  he thought that was an impossibility 

18:46

and therefore given that that’s an impossibility  there’s no possibility of peace agreements 

18:54

between the Arab states in Israel or let’s  say permanent peace agreements between the 

19:00

Arab states in Israel and for him the biggest  fear was always what he called an Egyptian 

19:08

Ataturk would come I should say an Arab Ataturk  would come along modernize the country and then 

19:20

become a formidable military deterrent and even at  some point aggressor so you had to keep the Arab 

19:28

world backwards backward that was sent that  was a tenet of Zionist policy and that to me 

19:41

is probably the most significant factor in all  of Israel’s wars the fear of looking weak because 

19:53

the moment they look weak the Arab world will  exploit the moment to eradicate them because 

20:00

the Arab world will never accept a Jewish state  in its midst that’s why it’s very in my opinion 

20:10

it’s very unlikely we’re going to find an  early conclusion to the current situation 

20:21

because the worst catastrophe of Israel in  October 7 was that it revealed to the world 

20:29

its fundamental weakness that here was this  high-tech state cutting-edge technology 

20:37

cutting-edge surveillance technology run by  the Israeli Uber mention these commandos who 

20:48

carry out all of these raids which seem very  impressive and then come October 7th and this 

21:01

ragtag army of Untermenschen not only carry  out the massacre that was a concern for sure 

21:10

an outrage for sure but that wasn’t the  only outrage it was the technical competence 

21:20

that the Hamas displayed and it quickly  transmitted the message throughout the Arab world 

21:29

of hey Israel isn’t as invincible as we thought  it was Israel isn’t as strong as it was we thought 

21:37

it was and what follows from that maybe we  have a military option and that’s that’s where 

21:47

the deterrence capability sets in we have  to transmit the message to the Arab world 

21:55

you don’t have a military option you have  to reinstill the fear in the Arab world 

22:06

of ever  ever even contemplating the possibility  of defeating us militarily and sometimes 

22:19

it takes strange forms for example Israel  suffered a major defeat in 2006 in Lebanon 

22:28

on what Sayyid Nasrallah called the divine  victory and it was very clear that a critical 

22:38

component of operation protective edge in  beginning December 26 2008 and ending January 17 

22:51

2009 with Amnesty International called  the 22 days of death and destruction 

22:59

one of the main purposes of protective edge  was to restore Israel’s deterrence capacity 

23:09

after the defeat it suffered in Lebanon in  2006 in other words had nothing to do with Gaza 

23:18

they were trying to restore their deterrence  capacity which had suffered a hit in Lebanon 

23:26

by destroying Gaza because they didn’t want they  weren’t ready for a round two with party of God 

23:38

yeah I think this is a very good segue into the  part two of your book so just four of yours part 

23:44

one consists of a chapter called self-defense  the second chapters deterring Arabs and deterring 

23:51

peace then spin-offs and human shields I think  where we are today at this point in time these 

23:58

two chapters become very obvious so I’m just  skipping them because most of our viewers should 

24:04

know like things like human shields and spin-offs  are essentially these are propaganda narratives 

24:12

so I’m jumping to part two and I think  you must tell a little bit about the 

24:18

Goldstone report but because I think the  significance of the gold Goldstone report if I 

24:26

review correctly is that for the for the first  time the idea of human right was projected 

24:33

uh to to the talks or public debates about  conflicts I mean even before that maybe human 

24:39

rights has always been there but this is a  significant time you don’t you don’t use the  word hegemony but one can understand that where a  counter hegemony was established where Israel was 

24:50

taken into account of its terror and violence and  then obviously there is a second part to it but 

24:58

first tell us about the significance of the  Goldstone report well it wasn’t it was a very 

25:04

dramatic moment I think it’s forgotten now  operation cast led was a real horror show 

25:14

actually it’s amusing now in retrospect I wrote  a book on operation a cast led I took the title 

25:24

from an article by Gideon Levy and the title was  this time we went too far it was believed back 

25:33

then that a new threshold had been crossed and  a threshold so high that was almost unthinkable 

25:43

it could be further crossed in fact I’ll get back  to your point in a moment but just for the sake 

25:52

of your listeners um operation cast led was then  paled in comparison to operation protective edge 

26:05

protective edge comes in 2014 july july  9th to august 26th 51 days operation 

26:19

uh protective edge and that was thought  to be a new uncrossable threshold uh the 

26:26

president the head of the icrc the international  committee of the red cross his name is peter 

26:31

mora or was peter mora and he said never in his  life had he had seen the magnitude of destruction 

26:38

as he saw in gaza well guess  what the estimate the estimate is 

26:48

in operation protective edge there was  2.5 million tons of rubble left behind 

26:56

do you know what the current estimate  now for gaza is 38 million tons of rubble 

27:04

so each time we cross the threshold that we  think can be crossed and it gets crossed in 

27:14

spectacular ways this time they estimate it’ll  take 10 to 15 years just to clear out the rubble 

27:21

from gaza before you can begin the rebuilding  and was it somewhere around 300,000 tons or 

27:27

something for cast lead around that rate 600,000  600,000 right um in any event so to get back to 

27:36

that the first thing to remember is uh it’s  forgotten now cast lead didn’t provoke a huge 

27:45

international outcry there were very large  demonstrations throughout the world in support 

27:51

of the people of gaza and that in turn caused a  demand for accountability now the human rights 

28:01

organizations happened to have been excellent  after caslet amnesty as i mentioned to you a 

28:09

moment ago produced a very comprehensive and  compelling volume called 22 days of death and 

28:18

destruction human rights watch put out seven  separate reports on things like um rain of fire 

28:27

one was called on israel’s use of white phosphorus  during caslet another was called white flag 

28:35

killings about palestinians who were shot dead  holding white flags another was on the drone 

28:43

warfare so they were very good for sure after  caslet however they weren’t the turning point 

28:53

the turning point was the human rights council  did something unprecedented the human rights 

29:01

council is corrupt even though generally the  standards of its mission reports are quite high 

29:07

in my opinion they decide to appoint richard  goldstone the head of the mission to investigate 

29:16

what happened during caslet now richard  goldstone is a south african jurist 

29:23

uh he was on one of the international uh uh  commissions on yugoslavia my memories yes yeah 

29:32

and what made goldstone’s choice so unusual  was two things number one he’s jewish he’s a 

29:41

self-identified zionist i  don’t like the term but he   calls himself so i’ll call him a self-identified zionist uh and he was active in many israel causes  

29:53

he was he sat on the board of directors of the hebrew university in jerusalem  

30:00

so that was one thing that  was unusual the other thing is  the human rights council said look you can write  your own terms of reference whatever you want to 

30:09

do in terms of your mission we will accept  and that put goldstone in a peculiar position 

30:18

because as he said later on i couldn’t in  good faith turn it down they were saying 

30:24

i can write my own terms of reference so he  accepted the um appointment and then he and 

30:32

three others uh travers not so important  for our purposes desmond travers and uh 

30:42

other names will come to me we’ll go on to  hold their grounds later yes they produced an 

30:49

extraordinary report it was about 400 pages and  uh it was very uh pulled no punches it said israel 

30:59

was terrorizing attempting to terrorize the  palestinian population they committed multiple 

31:07

war crimes plausible crimes against humanity uh  and it didn’t stop at cas led it described the 

31:16

whole occupation and it talked about the west  bank it was very comprehensive and devastating 

31:24

well uh richard goldstone came under uh  a torrent of abuse vituperation anger 

31:34

indignation uh alan dershowitz the harvard law  professor compare compared him to dr mengala 

31:44

in auschitz um it was very ugly the chief rabbi  in south africa said that he couldn’t attend his 

31:54

grandson’s bar mitzvah um so he came under  a torrent of abuse but he held his ground 

32:04

he held his ground until april 1st 2011 

32:12

when we first read it he had an op-ed in the  washington post in which he recanted the whole 

32:21

report and the first reaction was is this an  april fool’s it was april 1st april fool’s day 

32:31

um but that that was quickly uh superseded by  the reality yeah this thing happened it was very 

32:41

devastating i was i remember the day it happened i  was absolutely shattered this was a very powerful 

32:50

weapon how can you question the bona fides of  richard goldstone he’s an internationally regarded 

33:00

jurist he was jewish he was a zionist what  would be his motive for falsifying the record 

33:12

uh so i remember i was quite shattered i i was  in communication at that point with john dugard 

33:20

who currently heads up the south  african delegation before the icj 

33:27

now he’s about 87 and he’s the one  for those of you listeners who watch 

33:33

the hearings he’s the one person  with the red robe in the um hearings 

33:41

and i wrote to him and i said you know  something just died in me and he said me too 

33:49

he said me too because it was a  huge victory and then it was undone 

33:58

my own view was he was probably blackmailed  because there was nothing in the 

34:05

in his washington op-ed that could explain  why he did what he did he claimed there was 

34:13

new information that caused him to reconsider  his conclusions but that was totally untenable 

34:21

there was no new information i i go through it  very carefully in the book but there’s no point 

34:27

in doing that now i’ll just quote you john dugard  who i mentioned a moment ago is also from south 

34:34

africa he was actually the a family attorney for  nelson mandela’s family and also for bishop tutu’s 

34:46

family he’s an extremely honorable guy no question  about that in my mind in any event he wrote 

34:58

uh in an article in the new statesman he wrote  quote there are no new facts that exonerate 

35:08

israel and that could possibly have led goldstone  to change his mind what made him change his mind 

35:19

therefore remains a closely guarded secret  and i think he was blackmailed um that’s why 

35:28

um i believe the same thing with uh what happened  with fatu bentsuda even though she’s completely 

35:36

disreputable she was a complete crook the uh icc  takes people like you know at that point the icc 

35:43

the international criminal court it was called  the international caucasian court because it only  prosecuted africans so it had to change its image  so they got a african to prosecute africans they 

35:57

got fatu bentsuda and they purposely chose  her because she was so corrupt she had a very 

36:03

notorious reputation in the gambia because when  she’s so corrupt it’s easy to manipulate her 

36:10

you know we know the skeletons in your closet  and israel found the skeletons also it’s not so 

36:15

difficult in any event to get back to the point  at hand yeah it was a a real moment of reckoning 

36:23

my own view is uh you i’ve already mentioned  earlier i have two choppers in the book called 

36:29

betrayal which refers to the silence and worse the  silence and worse of the human rights community 

36:39

after operation protected edge and my own view  is everybody was afraid of being gold stoned 

36:47

that became an expression to be gold stoned they  were afraid that israel would get the goods on 

36:54

them and as you know you’re old enough i don’t  know how old you are but if you’re over 25 you’re 

37:00

old enough to know everybody’s got skeletons in  their closet and if you don’t have skeletons in 

37:06

your closet your friends do your relatives do i  actually don’t believe goldstone was blackmailed 

37:12

for something he did because that would have  come out a long time earlier in my opinion 

37:19

but his daughter uh lives in israel so tap the  phone she’s having an affair her husband’s having 

37:28

an affair and you could just imagine the scene of  her pleading daddy please please do what they say 

37:35

they’re going to destroy me destroy my family  destroy your grandchild it’s very easy to imagine 

37:41

i remember talking to professor chompsky about  this situation and then he began to publicly say 

37:51

you can’t really blame goldstone because  when you’re under those sorts of pressures 

37:56

you know he’s a he was a family  man professor chompsky and his   wife his children his grandchildren and i’m sure in his own mind’s eye he  

38:07

thought well if the same thing  was done to me and my wife or  my kids begged me i’d probably do it so um there  was another betrayal in april april 26th by the 

38:25

former president of the icj the international  court of justice jone dunahue because it was 

38:36

like goldstone we thought we had a big victory  when the court declared that israel is plausibly 

38:42

committing genocide and then she went on this bbc  program hard talk and she said we never concluded 

38:49

that but in her case a goldstone moment yeah it  was a goal it was very coincidental it was both 

38:58

in august both occurred excuse me april both  occurred in april goldstone was april 1st she 

39:04

was april 26th as elliot said the cruelest month  april and it was a cruel month um they both went 

39:13

around their peers goldstone never told the three  other members of his mission that he was going to 

39:20

do it she never told anybody in the court what  she was going to do she just went on uh the bbc 

39:30

and rescinded the whole icj proceeding conclusions  but in her case it wasn’t blackmail it was pure 

39:41

careers and nobody put a gun to her head it’s just  that she’s no longer president of the court she’s 

39:47

looking for a job yeah um  i want to actually move to  

39:57

um very quickly uh the operation pillar of defense um and just to keep uh just to  

40:04

refresh um the timeline for our  viewers 2006 the second lebanon 

40:09

war israel gets a bloody nose its deterrence  capacity is under challenge 2008 when uh you 

40:16

know president obama i think it was november 4th  or something or obama was being soared in there 

40:22

are these now yeah there was a ceasefire signed  in june and they provoked a break that to me is an 

40:34

important point for the current situation  because as you as you know a critical part of the 

40:45

negotiations between hamas and israel is this  whole issue of a ceasefire and in its current 

40:56

uh in its current iteration i’m speaking now  today but you’ll explain to your viewers because 

41:03

it could change tomorrow they’re talking about  a six-month ceasefire and then negotiations 

41:12

and i don’t believe there are easy alternatives  to that formula but i can’t see how it could 

41:19

possibly work because the moment the hostages  are returned israel always breaks ceasefires 

41:27

it figures ways to provoke a break in the  ceasefire it will assassinate some hamas leader 

41:35

uh it’ll eventually find out where sinwar is  assassinate some hamas leader and then it’ll 

41:41

have the pretext to go in again but this  time without any hostages to worry about 

41:48

uh so if you look at the history uh  the ceasefires are utterly meaningless 

41:56

uh if it’s intended they’re going to last  if you take lebanon in 1982 there was a 

42:02

fire that began in january excuse me i shouldn’t  talk so fast there was a ceasefire that began in 

42:10

july 1981 and israel used the ceasefire to  prepare for an attack on lebanon and then come 

42:25

may 1982 they began provoking and provoking and  provoking until finally the plo had to react 

42:37

um and they went into lebanon and same thing with  june 2008 there’s a ceasefire israel prepares for 

42:47

the attack on lebanon sesame the attacker in  gaza and then they provoke a um uh they provoke 

43:07

uh so i don’t see how you could  stop them the only possibility  i could see is if you have separating  them an international peacekeeping force 

43:17

which at least can monitor the situation and say  who’s responsible even though those never really 

43:24

work either israel is quite effective at drowning  out the findings of the peacekeeping forces 

43:33

when it wants to so i i’m very skeptical of this  notion of a ceasefire yeah so uh so so castlet 

43:43

happens the goldstone report comes in uh israel  loses a lot of its legitimacy later on it’s 

43:48

recanted but it seems like from 2009 to even  uh pillar of defense 2012 there is some sort of 

43:58

opening going on uh more journalists moved into  gaza there’s the arab spring then you know wake 

44:03

up 2012 that happens and the interesting thing  that i found in your discussion on the pillar 

44:10

of defense is that when there are regional support  significantly egypt but one can think about you 

44:16

know turkey and so on um even a lot of people  are not talking about jordan and and so on 

44:24

israel cannot act with the impunity that it acts  and your discussion on pillar of defense which 

44:31

is relatively shorter is a sort  of uh testimony to that so tell  

44:36

us a little bit about why pillar of defense was so unsuccessful as   far as israel was concerned well  first of all it’s an interesting 

44:46

moment because morrissey is in power the  muslim brotherhood is in power in egypt 

44:55

and um and hamas is a muslim brotherhood  organization for our viewers an offshoot yeah 

45:02

and um they were getting a lot of support  they were getting financial support from katar 

45:09

they were getting diplomatic support and  that’s not supposed to happen you see 

45:15

this is supposed to be a terrorist organization  that cheats its people steals all the money and 

45:23

all of that but in fact it was temporary as  server roy has pointed out it was temporary 

45:30

and it was built based on a housing boom but  actually the economy wasn’t doing very badly 

45:36

at that moment in fact many people in the west  bank envied the standard of living in gaza because 

45:45

things were falling into place and even on a  person not in the personal but on a humanist note 

45:54

professor chompsky goes to gaza and he gives  lectures at gaza university it was an optimistic 

46:02

moment and for israel that’s a total disaster  because that’s going to give hamas legitimacy 

46:09

and it will make hamas a an interlocutor  in any peace negotiations and a lot of 

46:17

journalists through the egyptian border uh into  gaza yes american um so uh it had to be stopped 

46:29

uh but there was a relatively limited operation  because both the egyptians and the turks 

46:37

both egyptian and egypt and turkey said we’re  not going to let you do another cast lead 

46:46

and the united states at that point under obama  was hoping to cultivate relations with egypt and 

46:53

turkey and so it gave the transmitted the message  to israel that this has to stop and turkey already 

47:02

had the mavi marmara incident that you discussed  in your books in your book actually i discussed 

47:08

mavi marmara at great length because you see  that’s what happens when you even have a medium 

47:13

amount of power turkey was not going to let that  incident pass and so there was a huge number of 

47:21

reports that came out and that’s my sort of  may ta analyzing these reports um so it was uh 

47:32

it was even though i don’t like to use the word  only but i’ll use it strictly relatively speaking 

47:39

only 10 people were killed aboard the mavi  marmara it nonetheless create an international 

47:45

i wouldn’t call it a crisis but certainly an  international scene that had to be accommodated 

47:53

and so there were banking moon appointed this  commission to investigate what was happening 

48:00

it was a completely a complete joke the  person who basically headed up the commission 

48:07

uh it was formerly a new zealander but it was  this guy alvaro uribe from columbia who’s probably 

48:16

one of the biggest murderers and crooks and gods  are a perfect choice by banking moon and he wrote 

48:23

a completely fraudulent report um but um because  turkey had the clout uh they had to address it 

48:35

and uh so come back to pillar of defense there  is turkey there is a muslim brotherhood in aj 

48:40

more american journalist professor chompsky makes  this visit uh yeah wrap up that uh pillar of 

48:46

defense yes so it was all it was over relatively  quickly and the number of people killed by the 

48:52

standards of israel’s uh high-tech murder sprees  um the number of people killed was relatively 

49:00

was on the low end i can’t remember was the  double or the triple digits right now um and then 

49:09

things went quickly from bad to worse  because the muslim brotherhood was overthrown 

49:16

and then cc came to power he closed the whole  tunnel economy that was at that point connecting 

49:25

hamas with the outside world and  the the situation was already um 

49:39

abysmal but then it turned radically worse when  hamas won the election in january 2006 and um 

49:53

uh let me just get the dates right pillar  of the pet pillar of defense is 2012 

50:05

so what happened was there was a relaxation in  the economy yeah now i remember i have to just 

50:10

get the dates clear my mind after the mavi mamara  incident all the international leaders said this 

50:18

situation is unsustainable the situation is  unsustainable so there was some relaxation 

50:25

of the blockade on gaza uh but then  after the muslim brotherhood was defeated 

50:34

the blockade uh it was tightened even more because  the uh tunnel economy uh for those of you who 

50:45

don’t know uh they had developed a very  sophisticated uh tunnel system between um 

50:55

uh gaza and egypt they were smuggling in  horses it was very fabulous huge tunnels 

51:05

um cars were smuggling through the tunnels uh  automobiles uh so uh once that was shut down 

51:18

uh the situation radically deteriorated in  gaza and then uh in uh 2012 and then in 2014 

51:33

i’m not going to go through the background because  there it’s a little bit more complicated what  happened but uh in 2014 israel launched operation  protective edge which was uh it was i remember 

51:47

the scenes the descriptions of what was going on  uh where as they say they pale in comparison to 

51:57

what happened after october 7 but it was  quite horrible it was um 2 200 people killed 

52:07

550 children 18 000 homes destroyed um 203 mosques  yeah it was horrible but even you take the homes 

52:22

at that point 18 000 seemed astronomical and now  the current figure according to the world bank 

52:32

for gaza is 300 000 so we’re talking  about a totally different magnitude 

52:40

um and after operation cast led  the the population was so shattered 

52:54

by just the sheer density and the density of  the israeli assault that the prospect of armed 

53:05

resistance seemed very remote and so the next  thing they tried was non-violent civil resistance 

53:15

the greater return which is not in the book which  yeah hold on a little bit because i think yeah 

53:20

that chapter um i want to discuss uh the two  reports that you discussed because just for 

53:28

our viewers 2014 protective edge happens and  this is the moment where things now starts 

53:34

going downhill right and what you argue in your  book is that you accuse amnesty international 

53:41

and also u.n human rights council reports  um so they played a big part i mean uh in 

53:49

in in in in sort of the downward uh trend that  started um obviously these are long chapters that 

53:57

you have written you have uh you know you have  gone into the most micro detail that’s possible 

54:04

you know including things like oh how many  palestinian ngo organizations they took into 

54:10

account when they were looking into the   reports and how many israeli  reports they took into account 

54:16

um but i think um i wanted to uh flag um two  things that essentially i figured out as the 

54:23

sort of big i’d like to make yeah i’d  like to make a few comments because 

54:29

first of all i don’t think not because of any  intention but i don’t think you gave the full 

54:35

picture with operation cas led in 2008-09 dennis  uh desmond travers told me the estimate was there 

54:45

were 300 human rights reports on cas led in the  case of protective edge it was almost nothing 

54:56

um human rights watch which produced seven  reports on cast led it produced one nothing 

55:06

report on attacks on schools when everybody  already agrees you know the talking schools  it was like 12 pages and that was it everybody  sat it out and as i said my speculation was it 

55:19

was fear so amnesty international was put in a  peculiar position you see because in the internet 

55:26

in the human rights community everybody’s watching  the others back so if you take for example the 

55:33

recent reports on israeli apartheid the first  report is by bet selam says israel is an apartheid 

55:41

state that’s quickly followed by a report by  human rights watch israel is an apartheid state 

55:48

which is then quickly followed by a report by  amnesty israel is an apartheid state and you see  that pattern all the time they’re watching out  for each other that if you’re going to go out on 

55:59

the limb we’ll go out with you but this didn’t  happen this time so amnesty got very scared 

56:07

because it was going out on the limb on its  own and so it produced this horrible report 

56:14

horrible horrible horrible i was so enraged by  what they did um human rights watch sat it out 

56:25

and then they pointed this  american judge from new york the un 

56:32

appointing this american  judge what was her name mary 

56:39

what was her name mary one second 

56:48

it slips my mind i think she was irish mary 

56:57

real fine yeah fine in the moment mary mcgowan davis yeah their point is and he knew 

57:12

the moment they appointed the american judge we  know it’s going to be a disaster and of course  i said at the time would be a disaster  and it was a disaster so they all wrote uh 

57:25

i should say not they all it was really only  two major reports on protective edge but there’s 

57:33

another interesting side note because the  history in itself is interesting but it’s always 

57:40

interesting to also compare it to the present  one of the interesting phenomena from the 

57:47

since october 7th is that the human rights  community has been almost completely effaced 

57:54

you very there are a couple of uh statements by  human rights watch and a couple of statements 

58:01

by amnesty but really nothing significant  it all came from the internal un system 

58:08

yeah the one well is everyone world health  organization world food program unesco 

58:19

um unicef it was a very interesting thing  that happened which is actually a hopeful sign 

58:32

that the whole un system aligned itself with the  people of gaza and they became very aggressive 

58:43

aggressive in their statements be it we  left out of course the most important unra 

58:51

the statements by philip lazarini the head of  unra the statements by all of those organizations 

59:00

it was a deeply moving sight to behold  that they finally found their backbone 

59:07

you usually use those reports from those  organizations you use them just for numbers 

59:14

infant mortality uh you know things like that  you want the figures you never use them as 

59:22

political documents and so this time if you for  example look at the south african application 

59:31

to the international court of justice it contains  literally hundreds of footnotes and each footnote 

59:37

often has 10 and 15 references and interestingly  there’s a conocasional reference to an amnesty 

59:47

report or human rights watch report but that’s  no longer the case in general it’s all the un 

59:55

agencies and i thought that was a a very hopeful  sign as i said they finally found their spine 

1:00:04

they finally found their backbone and they were  just pulling no punches the past seven months 

1:00:13

and they have proven to be a very formidable  force that israel has a lot of difficulty 

1:00:21

responding to so if you look at for  example the last provisional measures 

1:00:28

of the court the ones issued on may 24th the  core of the that particular moment it was the 

1:00:37

fourth time south africa went to the court asking  for provisional measures the core was who to 

1:00:45

believe the international agencies the whole un  system the entire un system says we’re facing 

1:00:54

a catastrophe a disaster apocalyptic conditions  there are no words to describe what’s going on in 

1:01:01

gaza on the other side is israel saying there’s  no catastrophe there’s no disaster there are few 

1:01:07

kinks but no big problems and the court had to  decide who to believe and they said we believe 

1:01:16

the agencies we believe the agencies um so for me  i find it morally uplifting that these so to speak 

1:01:27

bureaucrats in all of these organizations  finally saw the humanity of their subjects 

1:01:37

but not just doing bookkeeping on inanimate  objects but a people that’s being martyred 

1:01:45

and they found the courage to come what may you  know philip philip lazarini they were out to get 

1:01:56

him including the germans including the germans  probably especially the germans because they’re  all nazis uh they were out together lazarini  wouldn’t stop him that’s a crap i mean no one 

1:02:09

was an interesting reaction by me my reaction was  i’m so glad because i don’t have to do that work 

1:02:17

now it’s all been done it’s all been documented  normally that’s what i would do i would go through 

1:02:24

the human rights supports to try to present  an accurate depiction and i thought to myself 

1:02:33

thank god i’ve been rendered superfluous it’s  been done all you have to do is look at any of 

1:02:39

the reports coming from south any of the compendia  coming from south africa or any of the agencies 

1:02:45

or anybody who compiles and you have the whole  picture yeah um i i wanted to pick up two things 

1:02:54

i mean obviously no one can uh do it justice uh  on these uh two massive chapters where you take 

1:03:02

on amnesty international anyone human rights  council reports but i think to do some justice 

1:03:07

i wanted to pick up on two points which i think  kind of the bigger picture on on what you were 

1:03:14

saying so i think two essential point was that  one both amnesty international and human rights 

1:03:20

council did the mistake of treating the point  that we discussed earlier the deterrence capacity 

1:03:27

treating israel’s response in protective edge as  a military response so that’s one point they did 

1:03:34

the mistake on where maybe they didn’t need norm  Finkelstein and the second point i think the big 

1:03:39

point that you were making is that kind of the  balancing approach that these human rights uh 

1:03:47

organizations did that oh here is violence in  this case there is violence in that case and so  both are complicit in war crimes what you are  saying is that that’s not possible where the 

1:03:57

asymmetry is large and there is a table i would  plug in i mean my producer would obviously uh 

1:04:03

screenshot it it’s in page number 311 where you  give this sort of ratio and you’re saying that 

1:04:10

this ratio of killing of destruction is so high  and the kind of spaces that amnesty international 

1:04:19

human rights councils gives is like in the ratio  of three is to four while the destruction are in  the ratio like hundreds sometimes thousands and so  these are the two big points i think that came out 

1:04:29

of these two chapters for me one treating it as  protective as a military operation the other is 

1:04:35

the asymmetry so elaborate a little bit on that  because i think that was a very very powerful 

1:04:41

point you made through very rigorous analysis of  the two reports well i’ll make it again i’ll try 

1:04:55

to make it current but it makes the same point  immediately after october 7th israel won 99 of 

1:05:06

the propaganda war 99 beginning october 8th  because every single media outlet every single 

1:05:15

media outlet bar none used the headline  israel hamas war it was an israel hamas war 

1:05:28

namely it was a war to inflict the defeat  on hamas and the first attempt unsuccessful 

1:05:39

to recast what was actually happening was  what south africa did with its application 

1:05:47

this isn’t an israel hamas war this is a war  against the people of gaza this is a genocide 

1:05:56

it’s not a war it’s a genocide it’s something  very different now i will acknowledge because 

1:06:05

i don’t want to be dogmatic about these things  yes it had a component it wanted to inflict a 

1:06:14

military defeat on hamas and also it wanted to  get back to hostages i’m not going to dispute that 

1:06:25

but that was only a part of the  picture the big picture was that we are 

1:06:35

determined to once and for all put an  end to this uh gaza question this gaza 

1:06:46

thing has to end as i quote at the  very end of the book i quote from 2015 

1:06:58

i quote an israeli official as saying  um let’s just get the exact quote 

1:07:09

um one second 

1:07:19

just tell us also the page number  so that we can flash the quotation 

1:07:29

okay so 

1:07:55

here at the very end of the book i say i quote  an israeli a senior israeli official is saying 

1:08:04

another war with gaza is inevitable we  cannot conduct a constant war of attrition 

1:08:14

therefore the next conflict has to be the  last conflict and that’s exactly what happened 

1:08:22

that they said we can’t be uh we can’t  keep going in and mowing the lawn 

1:08:28

so they now were not going to mow the lawn they  were going to extirpate every one of the 2.1 

1:08:38

million blades of grass and in gaza so in their  minds to defeat hamas permanently to put an end 

1:08:52

to this we have to destroy gaza we  have to put an end to it um and so 

1:09:03

if you treat it as our press treated it and as  the human rights supports treated after operation 

1:09:10

protective edge as a military as a war you miss  what’s going on yes that’s an element i’m not 

1:09:21

going to deny that but uh there was also the  element back then of restoring our deterrence 

1:09:32

capacity putting the palestinians in their place  trying to uh prevent them from getting too uppity 

1:09:42

uh and so that involved massive death  and destruction that had nothing to do 

1:09:48

with the actual military aim the systematic  death and destruction actually uh 

1:09:58

the goldstone’s report was very good on that  the goldstone report was the first report 

1:10:07

to actually capture that so  let’s see if i can just find it 

1:10:22

just give me half a moment  because it’s it’s worth quoting 

1:10:38

here this is what the goldstone report said  about operation uh castlet it concludes 

1:10:46

it concluded that the israeli  assault constituted a deliberately 

1:10:55

disproportionate attack designed to punish  humiliate and terrorize a civilian population 

1:11:07

well that was what the real aim was and when  you cast it as a military confrontation strictly 

1:11:17

you’re missing the point that actually it was  being the the assault was targeting the civilian 

1:11:27

the civilian population to punish humiliate  and terrorize a civilian population 

1:11:38

yeah so uh that’s never stated in those human  rights supports that came after operation 

1:11:49

protective edge and everybody treated it as if  it were just a conventional war between two sides 

1:12:00

and that was the great lie what you  might call the foundational lie of 

1:12:07

post october 7th and that lie they tried to  shatter uh south africa tried to shatter it 

1:12:16

i don’t think it was very successful because  the media still continued to call it a 

1:12:22

israel hamas war every single article begins that  way israel hamas war yeah so um we are coming to 

1:12:32

an end but i still want a little bit of time um i  think i want to go back so yeah this is the last 

1:12:39

chapter uh betrayal 2 un human rights council  betrayal 1 was the preceding penultimate chapter 

1:12:45

amnesty international and then a conclusion to  which i will come to but i want to actually sort 

1:12:51

of round up this uh by going to the first  chapter in fact which is the self-defense 

1:12:58

and what i uh thought is that there are three  aspects one is the moral aspect of self-defense 

1:13:04

where which is like whether people of palestine  or hamas has the right to resist which is like  an unambiguous yes then there’s the legal aspect  where people under occupation can have the right 

1:13:17

to resist through arms which i think is also an  unambiguous yes but i wanted to ask you about the 

1:13:24

third aspect which is the political prudence or  the strategic aspect and i think that relates to 

1:13:31

where you end the book uh in a way where you  uh you you call for a kind of um because your 

1:13:38

diagnosis is that here is the sort of world’s most  powerful military machine one of the world’s most 

1:13:45

powerful military machine machine and there is a  mass which is not even a kind of proper army they  can defeat them militarily so the way out is  and that’s probably also tells a lot about your 

1:13:56

interest in gandhi uh to some extent maybe  professor chonsky you call for a mass sort of 

1:14:03

mobilization with support and so on so forth so i  think the question that comes to uh many people’s 

1:14:13

mind also keeping in mind the october 7 incident  um how do you evaluate uh the political prudence 

1:14:22

of a military resistance by people of palestine  uh against israel well there are two questions 

1:14:30

there are several questions there and i think  we’re going to leave it off with these several  questions because otherwise you will bear witness  to my demise maybe you would like that so you’ll 

1:14:41

get a lot of it’ll go viral especially among  zionists uh but i would prefer to we might get 

1:14:50

more views than lex friedman in  that case if you die you know 

1:14:59

um there was some there’s a legal  issue of the right to self-defense 

1:15:05

on the right to use armed force and there  is a um a uh there’s also a moral question 

1:15:16

and let’s say if you take the case of what  happened in october 7th one of the standard 

1:15:22

questions is what what did you expect israel to  do what could it have done and i will acknowledge 

1:15:30

that they had a legal right to self-defense i i  don’t think that’s a difficult question to answer 

1:15:37

because hamas continued to fire rockets in israel  and hamas kept uh hostages so uh legally they had 

1:15:46

a right to self-defense uh israel in this case  not hamas israel had a right to self-defense 

1:15:52

but in my opinion there’s a difference  between a legal right and a moral right  so what do i mean by that let’s take the  case of a husband who batters his wife 

1:16:04

and he batters her for 20 years okay and she’s  screaming and yelling and nobody does anything 

1:16:14

she calls the police the police say it’s a  domestic dispute we’re not going to interfere 

1:16:20

which was typical when i was growing up that was  you know was the adage a man’s home was his castle 

1:16:26

castle and cops didn’t interfere it’s a domestic  dispute and then finally this woman in a fit of 

1:16:34

desperation she picked picks up a uh a kitchen  knife and she charges headlong to her husband 

1:16:48

he has a gun handy and he shoots her dead now in  the court of law he would probably be acquitted 

1:16:56

even if all the description of what he had done  to her because technically his life was in danger 

1:17:04

he had a right of self-defense but my view is he  forfeited that right by what he did to that woman 

1:17:11

for 20 years maybe legally he had that right but  morally he forfeited that right he had no right 

1:17:17

to kill her she had the right to live he did  he lost he forfeited that right of self-defense 

1:17:25

and i believe the same thing is true with the  people of gaza israel yes legally had a right 

1:17:31

of self-defense did it have the right to go  in no in my opinion it forfeited that right 

1:17:37

after what it did done to the people of gaza for  20 years so uh that’s one aspect of your question 

1:17:45

the second aspect of your question when  they just tell you frankly i was wrong 

1:17:51

there wasn’t a non-violent option it was tested  on march 30th 2018 the great march of return 

1:18:01

that was non-violent overwhelmingly non-violent  for the first six weeks from march 30th to may 

1:18:08

14th when israel committed a massacre and then  things began to deteriorate uh the whole world 

1:18:16

ignored it even the palestine solidarity movement  totally ignored it they didn’t have a non-violent 

1:18:23

option i was wrong i thought it would work in  fact i was in touch with people there and i was 

1:18:31

one of the people encouraging it and i was very  embarrassed i would end it you know it’s it 

1:18:37

revealed my naiveté and my not just my  fallibility which everybody’s throwable 

1:18:43

it revealed my naiveté it was completely ignored  it had no nonviolent option and nobody will ever 

1:18:50

convince me otherwise in reaction to that  non-violent uh resistance according to a un 

1:18:59

mission they put out a 250 page report single  space single space 250 page report what did it 

1:19:08

find it found that israel the snipers they had  among their best snipers lined up along the 

1:19:13

perimeter fence with gaza the snipers were  targeting children the target snipers were 

1:19:20

targeting journalists medics who was even targeted  they were even targeting uh disabled people double 

1:19:27

amputees 300 meters from the uh perimeter fence is  this the point on which you call someone a moron 

1:19:39

no that was another well i called that person  the moron many times actually every opportunity 

1:19:45

that availed me i couldn’t resist sorry for the  distraction i couldn’t resist the reality check 

1:19:54

um so uh they didn’t have a nonviolent option  and that and that’s why i i feel that before you 

1:20:04

um render judgment on anybody be it putin  in february 2022 or hamas on october 6th 

1:20:15

before you render a judgment a legal judgment  okay legal judgments are beyond our control 

1:20:22

but before you render a moral judgment you have  to show me options what option did putin fail to 

1:20:30

exploit i’m curious i don’t know of any i don’t   know of any option i know he desperately just saw it not just him the whole sylvia leadership  

1:20:39

from 1990 was desperately seeking or 1991 was desperately seeking some resolution of this  

1:20:47

issue with nato um so uh you couldn’t appease the west there was no way they were determined  

1:21:00

as a lining up their chess pieces for the war with china they were determined to um 

1:21:12

humble is not the right word they were  determined to uh neutralize russia 

1:21:21

in preparation for this confrontation they’re  preparing with china there’s nothing to do 

1:21:28

and then it’s the same thing with the  people of gaza what were they supposed to do 

1:21:34

on october 6th gaza was a dead issue  dead as a doornail i know because i quit 

1:21:43

i know because i quit i stopped writing on gaza  in 2020 we had a show with you prior to this where 

1:21:49

you know the tone and tenor was very very uh i i  don’t know if we should use the word pessimistic 

1:21:57

but it was there was significant moment of  significant tone of uh helplessness in your voice 

1:22:04

yeah i was embarrassed i had given up i had  always said i’m not a quitter but this time i 

1:22:11

quit first time ever because i couldn’t see any  way out um that was the moment when it looked 

1:22:19

like there was going to be a deal with saudi  arabia everything was going to be done over  the heads of the people of gaza and it would be  everyone lives happily ever after and the people 

1:22:30

of gaza would be left to languish and die in the  concentration camp so oh whether it was prudent 

1:22:39

what they did in october 6th i don’t know and it’s  not for me to decide it’s for the people of gaza 

1:22:46

to decide whether it was worth it that that that  throw of the dice uh as mouin rabbani my colleague 

1:22:56

and comrade says the the main purpose of  october 6 was to shatter the status quo 

1:23:04

october 7th is to shatter the status quo  that this can’t go on now as to what ensued 

1:23:17

i’m not passing judgment 40 000 people are  dead there but for the grace of god go i 

1:23:25

so i’m not going to be glib and say it was worth  it that’s not going to happen i’m not doing that 

1:23:32

but on the other hand i think it’s within  the right of the people of gaza to decide 

1:23:38

whether whether it was worth it was  were crimes committed on october 6 sure 

1:23:46

uh going to october 7th you know my mind is not  going yeah i have so many dates in my dates in 

1:23:52

my head at this point i’m losing track of  everything uh i’m not going to deny horrific 

1:24:00

things happened october 7th but i never if you  look at the abolitionists after the slave revolts 

1:24:07

they never condemned the slaves for what they  did they just did not they said what happened was 

1:24:13

horrible but they never blamed them i mean how  could you blame a slave a slave is somebody who 

1:24:22

from birth to death is condemned to servitude and  if they decide they’re not going to accept that 

1:24:29

servitude and whatever crazy thing they do if it’s  crazy i don’t know it’s crazy but whatever they 

1:24:35

do i’m not going to condemn them i’ll say hey  beheading babies and here i’m referring to not 

1:24:40

turner not to hummus behavior beheading babies  not not a not a nice thing but i’m not going to 

1:24:48

condemn them and that’s not because i’m you know  a radical pose i’m not woke but i feel the same 

1:24:58

position as the abolitionists see the difference  between me and everybody else is in the case of 

1:25:06

the abolitionists they saw the slaves every  day of their lives they saw the slave auctions 

1:25:13

they knew about the humiliations and rapings of  the women everybody knew they saw the humiliation 

1:25:20

degradation of a slave every day so they didn’t  have it in them to condemn the slaves when there 

1:25:29

was the revolt or revolts um and with me i knew  gaza before october 7th i spent 15 years going 

1:25:41

through those human rights reports that’s  basically what i did for 15 years of my life 

1:25:48

so if you were as close to the material as  i was you would be as reluctant as i was 

1:25:55

to condemn them i know what  happened to those people  to let you i i i don’t address the prudence  because i don’t believe they had any options 

1:26:07

october 7th was a throw of the dice and it’s for  the people of gaza to decide whether it was worth 

1:26:13

it totally fair to let you go with this parting  um you know on a lighter note uh if i was your 

1:26:22

student in your one of your political science  classes uh how much mark or grade would you give 

1:26:28

me uh in terms of my reading of your book of  course there would be great back uh to the 

1:26:35

extent that i read your book way too late but  what would be that great well first of all i’m 

1:26:41

going to be honest with you and i don’t mean this  in any way the meaning way to my students i don’t 

1:26:47

assign books anymore nobody reads i don’t even  bother uh people think a tweet is an argument 

1:26:57

people think believe that they think a tweet is  an argument there’s no concept of what an argument 

1:27:03

is you know the construction of an argument is so  tough it’s so mentally exhausting to construct an 

1:27:11

argument the human mind uh you know a normal  human mind i’m not being a professor chamsky 

1:27:18

uh a human mind can construct an argument maybe  of a paragraph in length but anything more than 

1:27:25

a paragraph you have to work it out on paper in  order to see how things flow uh you know there 

1:27:33

was the great indian mathematician raman nuchen  and what they said was most remarkable thing about 

1:27:42

him is he was able to skip a thousand steps he  just could go from here to here and didn’t have 

1:27:51

to work all that out to get there but most people  they they have to work it out on paper go from 

1:27:57

step to step to step to step to step um so uh  they don’t read i i just assume they don’t read 

1:28:10

and i go over the material in class so like the  fact that you read the book though i’m dubious 

1:28:16

you read the last two chapters because they’re  so tough i had to reread the book you know after 

1:28:21

october 7 because i had forgotten a lot the book  came out in 2018 and i needed to as it were arm 

1:28:29

myself for the battles and head and i was amazed  at the level of detail and the complexity of the 

1:28:38

argument i i think it’s a great book i don’t care  what anyone says the mental investment you know 

1:28:44

most authors professor czapski said most  historians are good clerks they go through 

1:28:51

archives and then what do they do they arrange  in material logically what’s called nowadays a 

1:28:57

narrative there is no such thing as that in this  book every paragraph has an argument you know 

1:29:06

worked out trying to make sense of what’s going  on here was very wasn’t a labor of love it was 

1:29:16

a labor of you you write this in your uh preface  or introduction yeah uh it wasn’t the labor of 

1:29:23

love to complete this book so angry at the lies  you know right now i’m writing something on 

1:29:34

john donahue the icj president who claimed they  didn’t find israel as plausibly it’s so hard it’s 

1:29:44

so because a lot of the legal language is so  purposely opaque so as to pretend that they’re 

1:29:51

doing something profound which they’re not so  trying to work it through you know and i struggle 

1:29:59

because no she’s not going to get away with it  you know and i do believe i mean this may sound 

1:30:05

like hubris again i don’t believe anybody else  will ever do what i did do you know every report 

1:30:12

i read i had to read at least three times yeah i  can totally imagine that you know the first time 

1:30:19

you read it to see where the argument is going  that’s the first reading second reading is you’re 

1:30:26

looking for what are the gaps in the argument  now i know where it’s going to now i know where 

1:30:33

it’s going to end let me see what does it work and  the third reading is did i get it right or did i 

1:30:42

miss miss some of the arguments that i thought  were gaps so i didn’t have to check if i got it 

1:30:48

right so everything i read over the last 15 years  i read at least three times the fourth time would 

1:30:57

be the fact check time but by the end i start  to get people on the web who are supportive of 

1:31:04

me to do the fact checking because it was becoming  mentally impossible anymore i just couldn’t do it 

1:31:11

anymore and now it’s harder and harder  and harder and harder but it’s an enormous 

1:31:21

mental effort i could assure you thanks  for writing this book and also thanks for 

1:31:29

for this discussion i think a lot of people like  to consume things in video format these days i of  course assume i get approved for the discussion  and the reading but it’s too late there

oooooo

@tobararbulu # mmt@tobararbulu

2 h

Norman Finkelstein offers a critical examination of President Biden’s ce… https://youtu.be/XhVo1C1DHJU?si=VzgrSfQ37HzL_c27

Honen bidez:

@YouTube

Bideoa: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhVo1C1DHJU

Norman Finkelstein is a renowned political scientist and author specializing in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. With over four decades of experience studying the region, Finkelstein has extensively written on the topic, focusing on factual accuracy and justice. He is known for his critical analyses of Israeli policies and the conflict, providing unique perspectives on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

Episode Summary:

In this profound and thought-provoking episode, Norman Finkelstein discusses the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas, offering a critical examination of President Biden’s ceasefire plan. Finkelstein sheds light on the disconnect between political rhetoric and ground realities, emphasizing historical patterns of ceasefires being exploited by Israel to further its military agenda. He paints a grim picture of the ongoing situation, highlighting the extreme measures taken by Israel and the lack of a genuine desire for peace within the Israeli establishment.

Transkripzioa:

0:03

hello and welcome to the brief podcast where we try to bring you context analysis and perspectives on current

0:09

events and international Affairs I’m your host Jim Clancy be sure to follow us if you like what you find here on

0:16

YouTube Spotify or apple podcast the Biden Administration has put forward a

0:21

ceasefire deal for Gaza despite public comments by Israel and Hamas that they

0:26

support the offer ironing out differences and making amendments to that deal isn’t working the conflict

0:33

continues and casualties among Palestinian civilians increase daily

0:39

there are many risks a wider War failing us diplomacy and shifting public

0:45

sentiment this war in Gaza has raised many questions joining us to help answer

0:50

some of them is Norman finklestein activist political scientist and educator Norman finlin hello and welcome

0:58

to the brief thank you for having me I want to begin where we stand right now

1:04

with President Biden’s offer of a ceasefire that he laid out the UN Security Council unanimously uh

1:11

supporting it at the same time we see both sides that the israelies and

1:17

Hamas indicating to us that they want to make changes in it they may be reluctant nobody is sure the deal will go through

1:24

and so nothing right now is happening once again we’re left in limbo and don’t think it’s correct to

1:32

allocate equal responsibility on both sides first of all when President Biden

1:39

presented the plan he presented it as an Israeli plan he said this was

1:46

netanyahu’s plan that he was presenting immediately as he stated that

1:53

the Israeli government repeatedly said they do not accept any plan that

1:58

includes a CE fire before Hamas is militarily defeated and that Hamas would

2:06

have no future role in Gaza so on that side there was from the

2:15

beginning a complete not a partial a complete disconnect between what Biden

2:21

was saying and what Israel was saying on the Palestinian side I think there are

2:27

two things to consider number one Biden by his own admission was presenting

2:34

Israel’s plan that’s how he described it so it seems to me that Hamas has a a

2:43

right to express concerns or a desire for some

2:49

modifications to a plan which was presented as having been written by

2:55

Israel so beyond that there has been some areas of disagreement about what

3:03

Hamas has actually said Hamas has been emphatic that it accepts the Biden plan

3:11

apparently with some modifications whether they’re substantial or not I can’t say because I

3:19

haven’t seen what Hamas has presented to

3:24

the negotiators now there’s a separate issue the separate issue is not the plan

3:32

itself but what are its prospects and that’s independent on what

3:39

the three parties to it have to say what Israel has to say what Hamas has to say

3:46

what the United States has to say that’s one side the second side is based on

3:53

historical experience what are the prospects for this plan in my opinion

4:00

and I hate to sound like a Cassandra or a doomsday forecaster I see Zero

4:06

prospects for the plan I don’t say that gleefully of course one would want at

4:12

any cost to see the suffering of the people of God are mitigated but this

4:18

plan reminded me when I started to read it it reminded me of for those of you

4:24

most of your viewers will have no recollection whatsoever but I think it was in 20

4:31

2002 maybe yeah I think it was 2002 but I can’t say for sure or maybe a little

4:36

later uh President Bush presented what was called a road map to peace and as

4:43

you’ve noticed they’ve been calling this plan a road map now what happened to

4:49

that original road map to piece of course nobody remembers it except those

4:54

who specialize in the area Israel accepted the plan it was under i o

5:00

cheron when he was prime minister Israel formally accepted the plan and then

5:07

proceeded to enter qualifications which effectively nullified the plan so they were

5:15

technically on record as supporting it but then they said we don’t accept Clause one we don’t accept Clause two we

5:22

don’t accept clause three and actually Jimmy Carter in his a book his book

5:28

called peace not aart at the very end he analyzes the Israeli

5:34

systematic repudiation rejection of the plan that it accepted forly and I think

5:42

the same thing is going to happen here anybody has any historic knowledge of

5:47

the conflict knows that Israel accepts ceasefires and then it’s very Adept at

5:55

provoking reactions from the other side when it wants to break the ceasefire so

6:02

I attach based on the historic record I attach zero value to Israel’s commitment

6:10

to upholding a ceasefire it upholds the ceasefire until it’s ready for another

6:17

attack and then it starts the provocations we know that from February

6:23

1955 when it wanted to provoke Abdul Nasser into war we know

6:30

that from May 1967 when it wanted to provoke a war in

6:36

Lebanon we know that from June 2008 when

6:42

it wanted to provoke a war with uh Hamas in Gaza it always has as I said it’s

6:50

very skillful it’s very adapt at breaking the ceasefires so that also

6:56

makes me very skeptical of any plan based on the ceasefire now you might say

7:03

and it’s completely legitimate but Professor fingery if you can’t if you

7:09

can’t present a plan with a ceasefire then how do you resolve this and I admit

7:16

that’s a tough question if I were the negotiator and I had the power to impose

7:23

my will I would support probably a full

7:29

Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and a peacekeeping force along the border

7:34

between Gaza and Israel now as you know Israel will never accept that it will

7:39

never accept the peacekeeping force for a very simple reason a peacekeeping force is an impediment to provoking a

7:47

new conflict when it’s ready to provoke a new conflict so it will never accept

7:53

the peacekeeping force and there’s a second problem we have to be honest about the fact that we’re at a very

8:00

uh a very nebulous moment let’s say we want as you know I think since October

8:07

two uh since October 7th more than 500 Palestinians have been killed in the

8:13

West Bank and there is a massive land grab going on the West Bank if there is

8:19

a war with Hezbollah which is not unlikely if there is a war with Hezbollah there’s going to be a massive

8:26

e ethnic cleansing in the West Bank there is no question whatsoever in my mind about that let’s

8:33

talk about the party and their similar interest because it occurs to me or it appears I should say that uh Yaya senoir

8:43

and Benjamin Netanyahu their primary interest is preserving their position

8:48

and power I don’t really agree with that um first of all I’ll take it on both sides

8:55

I don’t agree on both sides first of all there is no opposition either in the ruling Elite or

9:04

among the population in Israel about the desire to inflict a massive

9:12

irrevocable military defeat on Hamas there’s no disagreement about that it’s

9:18

not just Netanyahu has an interest in preserving his power the whole of the

9:25

Israeli ruling Elite the whole of the Israeli

9:31

establishment and the whole of Israeli Society if you look at the polls exactly

9:39

as of the most recent poll only 4% of Israeli Jewish society believes

9:47

Israel is using too much force in Gaza it’s just 4% Israel is a parliamentary system

9:55

which means that if you are strongly in disagreement with netanyahu’s policies

10:03

in Gaza you have the option of setting up a new party and Tiny parties in

10:09

Israel actually wield power because of its parliamentary system do you see

10:16

people like guns people like well la all of them they’re they’re not they’re

10:23

disagreements for sure but there’s no fundamental disagreement

10:30

over wiping out Hamas and as they have said making sure this

10:40

conflict is the last one which is basically making Gaza

10:48

unlivable and uninhabitable that’s what accounts for

10:54

the massive destruction in Gaza the mega deaths in Gaza it’s not because Hamas is

11:01

using Palestinians as human Shields it’s not because they’re trying to uproot or

11:09

explode the tunnel system that’s not the reason the reason is very simple the

11:16

ultimate aim of this assault on Gaza is for once and for all to resolve

11:28

this Gaza problem and that means it tried in the first couple of

11:36

weeks a massive ethnic cleansing didn’t work because the head of state of Egypt

11:44

vetoed that idea it spoke very clearly and

11:53

unequivocally in genocidal terms speaking of remember AMC

12:00

from the Bible speaking of no food water

12:05

fuel or electricity will be allowed to enter a captive population in a concentration

12:13

camp that’s a recipe that is a recipe

12:18

for genocide that also had its obstacles one

12:25

of them being because of the pressures exerted on President Biden by the

12:32

anti-genocide movement he began pressuring Israel to admit humanitarian Aid now from October

12:41

7th to October 20th the genocidal plan was in place no

12:48

food fuel water or electricity was entering Gaza Biden put the pressure and

12:56

some started to enter but all already by November Human Rights Watch was saying

13:04

that Israel is using starvation as a weapon of

13:09

war and by that was November it was only the second month and it was already

13:15

being said by April every un official every un official was saying

13:23

that Israel is using a man-made starvation or famine

13:30

as a weapon of War so that’s a long way of saying in

13:36

answer to your question I do not believe this is about

13:42

Netanyahu his fear of going to jail the

13:48

prospects of a new election were all that true were it an individualized

13:55

question of Biden then you would have to ask a very simple question can you show

14:02

me one single member one single member of the Israeli ruling

14:11

Elite who is condemning the genocidal assault on Gaza

14:18

is there one there is not one I know I’ve studied it very closely and I

14:24

follow it every day and there’s only 4% of the population Jewish population 4%

14:32

of the Jewish Israeli population who believes Israel is using too much too

14:37

little force and you’ll be perhaps surprised to learn fully

14:43

40% believe it’s using too little force a very very Bleak picture with no

14:51

way out because you seem to be saying until and unless they succeed with this

14:57

ethnic cleansing project you you know we can get hung up on terms here I agree with you unless they succeed it doesn’t

15:04

end well I think it is very Grim right now I try to treat people like adults

15:11

and treating people like adults is not giving pep talks that you don’t believe in I think it’s a very Grim moment and I

15:20

do not believe Israel will let Hezbollah get away what it did with what it did

15:26

the past 6 and a half months about the estimates vary but between 60 and

15:32

100,000 Israelis are still displaced in the north and Hezbollah has made clear

15:40

it will not relent until the assault in Gaza ends and I don’t think Israel which

15:48

it the the centerpiece of its strategic Doctrine is what it calls deterrence

15:55

capability it’s just a technical term every one of your viewers will

16:00

understand it when I translate it into simple English it means you have to

16:06

maintain the Arab world’s fear of you that’s their deterrence capability that

16:14

the Arab world is fearful of reacting to

16:19

Israel and Hezbollah has made clear it’s not deterred you know early on President

16:28

Biden sent uh warships and aircraft carriers to the

16:33

Eastern Mediterranean as a way of trying to Tamp down the possibility of a wider

16:39

conflict but it would seem after a series of provocations and crossborder

16:44

uh tit fortat attacks with missiles and Rockets and drones that we’re edging closer to that confrontation we’re very

16:52

we’re very near I I I’ve written on this subject you know I I I think we’re

16:59

uh very near a terminal event because the other side this time around I have

17:07

to say on both sides Israel is determined this is going to be the last

17:12

conflict with Gaza it used to speak of mowing the lawn

17:18

in Gaza and mowing the lawn meant periodically it carried on in a Hightech

17:23

murder streee in Gaza uh beginning in well actually it goes back quite the

17:29

long ways but the things that people will most recently remember was Operation castled in 20089 and operation

17:37

pillar of Defense uh 2012 then operation protective Edge

17:43

2014 these periodic high-tech murder spre um called mowing the lawn but after

17:52

October 7th Israel decided we’re not mowing the lawn anymore we’re going to exter Pate which is the fancy word for

17:59

pull out by the roots we’re going to extrae every one of those 2.3 million

18:06

Blades of grass in Gaza that’s what we’re going to do it’s no longer mowing the lawn now it’s extraa every one of

18:15

those 2,000 2,300,000 Blades of grass half of whom by the way are children uh

18:22

in Goda that’s the goal you you put forward these views which some see as

18:28

you a realistic take on the situation but others see as very disloyal as a Jew

18:35

I mean it was only recently uh a rabbi famously called you

18:41

a Jewish hater of Jews look facts are in Jewish and facts

18:49

AR in Gentile uh facts are facts I’m presenting the factual record as I

18:55

understand it based on not a trivial amount of study based on I started

19:01

studying the conflict in June 1982 so we’re talking about a track record now of 42 years and uh I’ve

19:09

written extensively on the topic I think I could say with a reasonable amount of

19:15

confidence that my understand my academic record uh so far as being

19:23

faithful to the facts uh the record is quite strong now I will say that might

19:29

be a minimal standard for people but for me it’s an important standard I think I

19:35

I do pride myself on factual accuracy so leaving aside that aspect I don’t think

19:43

it’s a question of whether you’re Jewish or whether you’re not Jewish whether you’re Jewish or whether you’re Gentile

19:50

I think the critical question is are you loyal are you faithful to truth and are

19:55

you faithful to Justice uh and those are my load stars and everything else I try

20:03

everybody of course is susceptible to this or that personal Prejudice uh but

20:08

you make a determined effort to fight the Prejudice and contend with the facts

20:13

as the record shows them I was there in the summer of 82 on the streets of West

20:18

Beirut uh during Israel’s attack on the PLO uh inside the city and what I you

20:26

know it was a different world for me I began to see things in a different when I looked at the facts on the ground they

20:33

didn’t jive with what I had learned about Israel what I was being told about Israel the whole you know the bent on

20:39

this is the only democracy in the Middle East that we’re being forced uh to fight

20:45

against these people it’s a really rough neighborhood I saw you know things

20:51

getting a lot worse because precisely because of what the Israelis were doing look unfort unfortunately people

20:59

have short memories in the one hand and unfortunately I’m an old man on the other hand uh I remember in

21:07

1982 you realize I suspect that until October

21:13

7th 2023 and the

21:18

aftermath the worst Blood leing by the Israelis was not in Gaza it was Lebanon

21:28

in in June to September 1982 the estimates are about 18 to

21:34

20,000 Lebanese and Palestinians overwhelmingly civilians were killed

21:42

during the Lebanon war if you take the high points of Israel’s murder spres in

21:48

Gaza operation castled it was about 1400 people killed operation protective Edge

21:56

was about 2200 people killed and then you compare it to Lebanon it was 15 uh

22:04

18 to 20,000 uh people killed overwhelmingly in all cases

22:11

civilians so the reason for a lot of that was that the PLO had tunnels

22:16

beneath West Bay rout and they hid in those tunnels and that’s well I was

22:22

there and I can tell you that it was the Lebanese that paid for paid the price

22:27

they were caught in the cross I’m not going to sing any praises to the

22:32

PLO I I never had a particularly hard high regard for them but I think that’s

22:40

totally in my opinion it’s totally un beside the point what you think of the PLO the facts were very very clear

22:48

because many Israelis wrote about it afterwards the facts were very simple

22:54

the PLO had become too much it yasa Arafat was openly calling for a

23:03

two-state settlement but a two-state settlement on the June 1967 border

23:11

Israel did not want to withdraw from the West Bank and so because of what and

23:19

I’ll quot I’ll quote to you the senior Israeli historian on the topic or political scientist Yan uh anner Yaniv

23:28

is name uh because he wrot an exhaustive book in the Lebanon war called dilemas

23:34

of security he said because and now I’m using his phrase because of the pl’s

23:41

peace offensive the pl’s peace offensive

23:48

Israel decided it had to eliminate the PLO not because it wanted to destroy the

23:55

state of Israel not because it wanted to sweep the Jews into the sea but because

24:03

the PLO had become too moderate and

24:08

there had been a ceasefire it was negotiated in July 1981 between Israel and the

24:16

PLO all accounts Bar None I can even

24:22

quote to you AB aen at the time he said the northern border was

24:31

quiet all the accounts show that the PLO

24:37

scrupulously upheld the ceasefire it was Israel that provoked and provoked and

24:45

provoked because it wanted a pretext to

24:51

eliminate the PLO not because it was too murderous or genocidal or

24:58

anti-semitic but because it was too moderate the pl’s peace offensive and

25:06

since you brought up the subject that’s why I’m skeptical about a ceasefire now

25:13

because I know how Israel Carries On It negotiates the ceasefires until the

25:20

moment comes when it’s ready to launch a new attack and then it looks for the

25:27

pretext provokes the pretext and attacks there

25:33

isn’t as you’ve noted there’s not a a force for peace uh in the political establishment anywhere to be found in

25:39

Israel or in very small dark corners but what will they choose do they want to be

25:46

a pariah State

25:51

look they haven’t felt the full effects of being a pariah State because of the United States

25:58

if the United States made them feel the full effects of a Pari State you know

26:07

the expression I know which side my bread is being

26:13

buttered if they don’t have the support of the US they could rather quickly turn around

26:22

in my opinion first of all they couldn’t have carried out the genocide last 6 months without the US weapons that’s

26:28

just a fact that’s just a fact so I don’t believe that they have

26:36

been compelled yet to feel the full effects of being a Paras state where

26:44

they to feel those effects knowing which side their bread is being buttered or in

26:50

this case no longer being buttered I would say they might come

26:56

around so long as the solution that’s being proposed to them is reasonable now I do I will agree with

27:03

you that if the solution being proposed to them

27:10

appears totally unreasonable they would probably fight

27:15

to the last person and that’s probably true so the proposal has to be on its

27:22

face reasonable now I would say in this particular

27:30

context reasonable would be the proposal that has been on the table for literally

27:39

four decades now no five decades now since the early

27:45

1970s five decades now namely the two states along the June 1967 border and a

27:53

reasonable resolution of the refugee question I can got so re reasonable

27:59

solution but since the last 6 and A2 coming on 7

28:06

months I think it’s correct to say that the legitimacy of Israel as a Jewish

28:15

state has now been called into question with many people

28:22

doubting in the International Community as well as you will perhaps notice if

28:28

you’re sensitive to the language now there’s a lot of talk about

28:36

75 76 years of Israeli Injustice to the

28:44

Palestinians which means they’re not going back to 67 now if you count 76

28:50

years they’re going back to 48 which means questioning the

28:56

legitimacy of the UN decision in 1947 to create two states in

29:04

Palestine and so I think there’s a

29:10

large amount of doubt now settling

29:16

in as to whether it’s possible to

29:23

coexist with this Jewish supremacist state

29:28

and I’ve heard it from many reasonable people that they’re now

29:34

doubting in light of the sheer

29:40

Insanity Unleashed by Israel over the past 6 and 1 half months the magnitude

29:48

of the lunacy that’s now been on

29:54

display if not in the mainstream media then on the

30:00

web the lunacy the madness the

30:06

complete loss of connection with reality by this that is what it would appear

30:13

That’s What college students in the United States and then later in Europe that’s the message they seem to be

30:19

saying this is insane and we’re not going on with it yeah I I I’m not happy

30:26

saying it but I do believe you are correct I think

30:32

among the younger generation among the younger

30:38

generation the legitimacy and the sacral sanct

30:45

nature of a Jewish state in the Middle East has now been called into question I

30:52

think that’s correct do I think it’s a good thing

30:59

I’m not sure I I have a very close friend and he

31:05

says that he’s always supported the two states he’s he’s

31:10

Palestinian um but he says that the way the current Israeli state

31:17

is constituted it’s simply not possible to live with it it’s the situation does appear to be

31:25

getting worse I mean with this is the hardest most extremist government ever elected

31:32

uh to run this conflict right but I think we have to bear in mind the two

31:39

prongs of what you just said you said the most

31:45

extremist government but then you added ever

31:52

elected it’s representative of Israeli Society we just can’t get around that

32:00

fact or a Jewish Israeli Society it is representative of that Society

32:08

now I will admit many countries go through periods of sheer Insanity I

32:15

think Germany during World War II I think Japan during World War II went

32:22

through paroxismo uh in particular Germany

32:28

beginning in 43 and the same thing with the Japanese I mean people forget the

32:33

Japanese killed about 25 million Chinese I mean they they were not second to the

32:41

Nazis they really were not so but then as you know after World

32:47

War II uh they became quite

32:53

decent until recently with Germany quite decent Humane Society

32:59

so I recognize societies can also change and remember our own

33:05

country it took a Civil War in which you know people forget the estimates are now

33:13

I was surprised because they’ve risen now the figures how you see 700,000

33:18

Americans were killed there’s nothing comp comparable to that any time in American history you

33:25

know you take World War II yes MIT about 250,000 Americans were killed in their

33:32

own Civil War it was about three times that yeah three times that so even for

33:40

ourselves to uh write a wrong in our own

33:46

country it took a massive amount of very

33:52

brutal uh FR uh fraternal death assume that Israelis want you know the the

33:59

government the the the Homeland safety that it might

34:05

provide when it was founded there was that hope among Israelis and it wasn’t

34:11

easy to achieve because there was so much opposition uh from the Arab world at the establishment of Israel at the

34:18

same time will they ever return to that aspiration or how are they encouraged to

34:24

return to that kind of an aspiration where uh you know a light unto all other

34:30

nations that was the hope right well first of all I don’t like the idea of light unto all nations because it has

34:38

this notion of superiority built into it uh and I find those Notions easily

34:45

become uh become racist chauvinist and so forth just be a normal Nation you

34:52

know that for me that’s fine you don’t have to be a light onto on two Nations just be a normal

34:58

Nation what where Israeli Society is now I don’t know I’ll be honest with you

35:06

I don’t you know sometimes people wonder are my feelings

35:13

torn between criticizing Israel and on the one hand and it being a Jewish State

35:20

on the other hand and I have to say

35:25

maybe 30 years ago that would be the case but for me and I’m going to if you

35:31

don’t mind I’ll end it on this note for me Israel is not recognizably

35:37

Jewish now you might be perplexed at that statement so I’ll just I so I’ll

35:44

just tell you my uh explanation uh being Jewish meant very

35:50

specific things when I was growing up it meant being devoting investing a lot in

35:57

academic achievement that was being Jewish it meant being liberal or even more than

36:05

liberal on social issues it meant being sensitive to issues like civil rights

36:14

sensitive to issues like oppression of ethnic groups racial

36:21

groups a Jew for us growing up and you’re roughly of my age cohort if you

36:26

were in Le in 1982 a Jew for us was somebody like of

36:32

course Einstein you know the intellectual achievement and then creativity for us

36:40

My Generation the paradigmatic Jew was of course Woody Allen the horn Rim

36:49

glasses scrawny of physical his physical

36:54

his constitutional being scrawny being a little bit eccentric

37:01

creative you know that was a Jew

37:10

Israelis them what do you want me to tell you they’re monsters when you read about how they

37:19

conduct themselves in these conflicts the the

37:25

Glee the Glee and joy they derive from blowing up people’s

37:33

homes how they posted on all the social media as they gleefully and I don’t mean

37:41

just after October 7th go back and read the compendium

37:49

called by breaking the silence the Israeli organization documenting how

37:56

soldiers car on in during Israeli those killing spre called

38:03

operations you look at the their collection called how we

38:09

fought and that was for the protective Edge in 2014 it’s the same

38:17

mentality how could you be Gul

38:23

Gul at blowing up the homes of a

38:29

population 70% of whom are refugees or

38:34

their descendants people who were expelled in 1948 half of whom are

38:44

children how could you now now be

38:52

inflicting a human-made famine on the

38:58

population that’s one half children the people outside Gaza who are

39:06

blocking humanitarian trucks from getting in half the population are

39:16

children that to me is UN

39:23

recognizable as a Jew so for me those are

39:30

Israelis they’re not Jews Israel is the most admired state in

39:37

the world by the far right you understand

39:43

that by a bonaro in Brazil by an herban in Hungary

39:51

the far right which historically has been the seedbed of

39:56

anti semitism they

40:03

admire the state of Israel because they don’t see it

40:09

as a Jewish State they see it as a white supremacist

40:17

state where the whites just happen to be

40:23

Jewish that’s why the far right admires

40:28

Israel Israel’s closest in its relations just as it was very close to

40:34

South Africa under the apartheid regime part of Why the i the South

40:41

Africans are going before the court over and over and over again you know part of it of course is Sympathy for the people

40:49

of Gaza but part of it is I believe a

40:54

settling of scores with that state which broke all the

41:01

boycotts of South Africa during the apartheid regime and

41:07

cooperated with it so for me there’s no

41:12

conflict anymore because there’s nothing

41:18

recognizably Jewish as I growing up

41:24

understood being Jewish there’s nothing recognizably Jewish in that state it’s

41:31

completely and totally alien to me but is there and a final

41:39

question is there a glimmer of hope here that people might you know transform

41:46

that they might change their ways so to speak and I think everybody has to be there everybody should support that

41:53

President Biden has put his whole election on the line look I totally agree with the possibility of people

42:02

changing but the question is how you get them to change you will remember in our

42:09

own Civil Rights Movement at the beginning of the

42:15

transformations in the American South at the beginning they had to be imposed by

42:22

force federal troops have to be brought in and and the South was

42:30

forcibly desegregated the Civil Rights Movement

42:36

forced the federal government to use

42:41

force in order to desegregate the South it was imposed from without but I

42:49

completely agree with you in fundamental ways fundamental ways the American South

42:55

is a very different place it is a lot of black people you know

43:01

there they talk now about a reverse migration there’s many many black people are going down south again so can people

43:09

change yes but I don’t believe it’s going to come internally I don’t believe

43:16

it would have come internally in Germany I don’t believe it would have come internally in Japan and I don’t believe

43:23

it’s going to come internally uh I don’t believe it would have come internally in the American South if the American South

43:29

had been left to its own devices the federal government butt out okay and the whole North but out uh they would have

43:36

just killed all the Civil Rights workers it would have been they just been finished there would have been no

43:42

possibility and they knew it the Civil why did the Civil Rights Movement try to

43:47

reach the north try to reach the federal government and also to reach the world

43:53

to embarrass the United States with the whole issue of segregation yeah to remember was the middle of the Cold War

43:59

and the United States was saying it’s a democracy versus totalitarianism and the Soviet Union was saying oh really

44:05

democracy look at the American South so part of it was to embarrass the American South but within the American South on

44:13

its own there’s no possibility it would have desegregated just like there was no

44:19

possibility as I’m sure you understand that the American South would have ended slavery were it not for the Civil War

44:27

we have to be realistic about those things it took 700,000 Americans for the American South to end slavery and it

44:36

took uh the imposition of force from the uh outside the south in order to end Jim

44:43

Crow in the American South and I don’t believe it’s going to come from within Israel I just look at the poll numbers I

44:50

look at the governments uh no it’s not going to happen the place is completely lunatic at this point when you reach a

44:58

point when you reach a point when you are there is a broad consensus to starve

45:05

a civilian population half of whom are children you’ve lost your mind you hear

45:10

me you have lost your mind 1/ half of the people in Gaza are

45:22

children we’re going to leave it there professor

45:28

I would say that it’s been great talking with you but your reality it it’s uh it’s not a very

45:34

pretty one it’s not a very happy one uh but it is as I say the reality of the

45:41

situation Norman finklestein thanks so much for being with us and sharing your views and unique perspective here uh

45:49

we’ve got a long hard road ahead and thank you for having me I didn’t realize you were a veteran of 1982

45:57

which means you see the world through a completely different lens most people have completely forgotten that I want to

46:04

just end on one note I don’t because I don’t want to misrepresent myself I don’t claim mine to be a Jewish

46:13

perspective I would say speaking as a person who is Jewish I don’t find

46:18

anything in Israel As I understood it growing up being Jewish I don’t find

46:23

anything Jewish in Israel it’s a completely alien entity to my moral

46:30

Universe my intellectual Universe my family Universe the idea that a

46:38

population would uh reach a consensus to starve another population half of

46:46

woman’s children starve them to death not

46:52

Jewish As I understood it and we hope you enjoyed the discussion with Norman

46:58

finklestein and we invite you to sample other additions that are available here

47:03

on YouTube or on Spotify or apple podcast give us a like a follow or

47:08

subscribe again thanks I’m Jim Clancy and you’ve been breached

47:16

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