Nov 4, 2024
Netanyahu Reportedly SABOTAGED Ceasefire Talks
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office may have been sandbagging a hostage deal.
- 10 minutes
Benjamin Netanyahu's office is in the
throes of a scandal, and it's generating
a growing controversy in Israel.
Multiple suspects, including a close aide
to the prime minister,
are being detained for allegedly sharing
and distorting classified information.
[00:00:15]
The leak, seemingly unlawful,
appears to have served Netanyahu's
own interests and may have prevented
a hostage deal with Hamas.
So let's break it down.
Two months ago, Netanyahu said
that Israel troops Israeli troops
had to control Gaza's border with Egypt.
[00:00:31]
This is southern Gaza to prevent Hamas
from rearming and smuggling Israeli
hostages that they took into Egypt.
Well, many in Israeli security
establishment dismissed the demand
and accused Netanyahu of avoiding
a deal to keep the war going.
Yet within days, two journals, Germany's
Bild and London's Jewish Chronicle,
[00:00:47]
published articles based on documents
that supported Netanyahu's point and point
and suggested that Hamas
was obstructing a deal.
The reports centered on three documents.
The first was Netanyahu presented
the first in early September, the day
after Hamas killed six Israeli hostages.
[00:01:03]
Netanyahu said it was the outline
of Hamas's strategy to use psychological
warfare against the Israeli public.
The second document reinforced Netanyahu's
claim that then Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar
would use an Israeli withdrawal
from the Egyptian border
to smuggle hostages to Egypt and Iran,
[00:01:20]
and possibly Yemen.
A third was said to have been found on
Sinwar's computer, laying out instructions
on how to handle negotiations
in a way that would lead to deadlock.
Netanyahu referred to the document at
a cabinet meeting after its publication,
and said it reveals Hamas's plans
to wage war until further notice
[00:01:37]
until Israel is defeated.
While the validity of the reports based
on these documents was almost immediately
questioned, and it appears that some of
the so-called evidence had been distorted.
According to an Israeli newspaper, Israeli
intelligence doesn't know who wrote the
[00:01:53]
first document, which doesn't match the
handwriting of any senior Hamas leader.
The document, allegedly from Sinwar,
had been manipulated to present Hamas,
Hamas's stand, as more hawkish than it
was, and was likely written by mid-level
officials rather than Hamas leadership.
The reports actually triggered a rare
investigation accusing Israeli officials,
[00:02:12]
including a Netanyahu aide,
of leaking classified documents
and exaggerating their significance.
Until now, a judicial gag order
had prevented most of the details,
though, from being released.
The judge in the case partially lifted
the order on Friday, revealing
a joint investigation by the Shin Bet,
[00:02:27]
the Israeli police and the IDF
concerning a suspected breach of security
involving the illegal distribution
of classified information.
A court order made public on Sunday
said that information taken from Israeli's
military systems and illegally issued,
may have damaged Israel's ability
to free hostages held by Hamas in Gaza,
[00:02:46]
and it may have put Israeli intelligence
sources in danger as well.
Four suspects were initially
arrested for for taking the intelligence
and leaking it to the media,
and one was released on Sunday.
Two of the three suspects
are still in custody.
They are defense intelligence
and intelligence officials.
[00:03:01]
The third is named Eli Feldstein,
who served as an aide
in the Prime Minister's office.
Feldstein began working there
a few days after the October 7th massacre,
but actually failed a Shin Bet
background and security check.
Nonetheless, Feldstein took on the role
of Bibi's spokesperson
[00:03:16]
and was responsible for media relations
along with some other folks.
He was in Netanyahu's close circle
and even attended classified meetings
with Netanyahu.
Of course, Netanyahu's office denies
there have been any leaks.
They say the investigation
is part of a deep state witch hunt
[00:03:32]
aimed at undermining him.
Sounds familiar, right?
Well, but Netanyahu's opponents
in the Israeli government disagree.
Opposition leader Yair Lapid on Sunday
accused the prime minister's office
of leaking fake is fake secret documents
to torpedo the possibility of a hostage
deal to shape a public opinion,
[00:03:49]
influence opposition
against the hostages families.
They said it implied an
active campaign to discredit them.
The families of the hostage families
said this implied an active campaign to
discredit them, and the hostage families
called it a moral law that has no depth.
This is a fatal injury
to the remnants of trust
[00:04:06]
between the government and its citizens.
The hostage families are calling
the scandal one of the biggest deceptions
in the history of Israel's government.
Jack.
I'm a little confused by this.
I want to ask you a question, David,
because to me, leaking questionable
[00:04:23]
intelligence is, I would say, Israel 101,
but really, any country, US 101,
whenever the government
wants to prove something,
you know, whenever it's something that's
against the government, America chases you
[00:04:38]
to the end of the earth.
Edward Snowden still in Russia because he
leaked things that were true and actually
helped us make the correct decisions.
But when government officials leaked,
there's no consequences at all.
And it's and questionable intelligence.
That's what IDF puts out every other day.
[00:04:55]
So what's going on here?
Why is there a rebellion here
within the Israeli government
over this particular document?
Well, it's being described
as remember before,
in the run up to the to the Gulf War,
when there was Condoleezza Rice
and Colin Powell and others talking about,
well, we don't want the smoking gun
to be in the form of a mushroom cloud.
[00:05:13]
And they, you know, they essentially
it was like the alley oop.
They cherry picked intelligence.
They put it out there on the Sunday shows.
And then that essentially helped
Dick Cheney and others slam it home
to take the United States to war in Iraq.
Well, in Israel,
the stakes are somewhat similar
in the sense that there's this effort
[00:05:29]
by the Prime Minister's office
allegedly to take some fake information
to sort of throw it up there and then say,
this is why we can never have
a hostage deal with Hamas,
because Hamas does not want it.
And while the issue, of course, in the
Gulf War was the US essentially invading
Iraq in Israel for the last several
months, ever since it was clear that
[00:05:48]
Israel had essentially dismantled Hamas.
The number one concern, the greatest
concern among Israelis has been.
Is there any way to get
the hostages returned safely?
And there has been this perception, and I
think it's legitimate to a certain extent,
that Netanyahu has not wanted
to prioritize the hostages return.
[00:06:05]
He has wanted to prioritize
totally eradicating
and pounding Hamas into dust, which, okay,
maybe that's his military strategy.
But these two things are sort
of at odds with each other.
And so you have Netanyahu, essentially
his office trying to say, look,
[00:06:21]
there's no way we can get the hostages
back because look at this intelligence
evidence that we have, even though now it
seems the intelligence evidence was false.
And it makes a lot of Israelis, and
particularly opposition leaders in Israel,
of which there are many wonder, well, has
Netanyahu been deliberately sandbagging?
[00:06:39]
The greatest concern that exists in Israel
is that polls overwhelmingly show
most Israelis they would take a deal now,
they would have taken a deal
six months ago to end the war.
If they can have the hostages back.
Netanyahu knows the polling
and what he's essentially been caught
[00:06:54]
doing is trying to essentially manipulate
the public to make it seem like,
oh, there was no possible way
that we could get the hostages back.
So let's just continue bombing Hamas
when some of the information he was using
was not only perhaps cherry picked,
but was simply wrong.
[00:07:10]
Yeah, I guess I'm surprised that people
in Israel don't already universally know
that Netanyahu has no interest
in getting the hostages back.
He's scuttled every peace deal himself.
The Hamas agreed to a peace deal back
in July 2nd,
[00:07:26]
and then Netanyahu changed the terms.
So, you know, there's tape from the IDF
entering Syria, over the weekend.
And so I'm wondering last thing on this,
is there a split
[00:07:41]
in the Israeli government now where the
real issue is get the hostages back,
do a cease fire, withdraw from Gaza
and Lebanon, and call it a day.
That's one camp, and the other camp is.
No, we don't care that we killed
every leader of Hamas and Hezbollah.
[00:07:58]
We want to take northern Gaza
and maybe southern Lebanon.
And so we're going to and we're going
to throw the hostages under the bus.
We're not doing any peace deal.
We're just going to keep going.
That to me is clearly the Netanyahu camp.
Is there a is there
that other camp is there?
[00:08:15]
And is there any chance
that that camp that says, let's wrap
this up and get the hostages back wins?
I don't even know how they would win.
There is a chance, Jack,
if the hostages, some of them come back
and based on, you know,
the the information that they provide
about where they were kept and what
[00:08:31]
conditions they were captained by whom.
If it turns out that it might have
been easier for Israel to get
the hostages back a few months ago
than it has seemed so far,
that would be devastating to to Netanyahu.
It would probably bring down
his government, his premiership.
Because if it comes if it if it does
turn out that Netanyahu could have
[00:08:49]
gotten more of these hostages back
and and took active steps to, to block it.
That would bring down his government.
Likewise, Netanyahu is also getting
pressure from the right
because there are some people who are even
more hard line than him, who, for example,
with Iran, are disappointed
that Netanyahu's military, that
[00:09:05]
the Israeli military didn't go and bomb
Iranian nuclear sites and oil facilities.
And Netanyahu's position of only attacking
some of the the missiles and the air
defense systems did not make them happy.
So in the weirdness of Israeli politics,
we have a variety of coalitions
that can also essentially gang up together
to bring down a government.
[00:09:23]
Netanyahu is getting
it from from both sides.
But I think the threat of from the left
and from the center of Netanyahu bypassing
opportunities to get the hostages,
that's the more serious threat
to bring down his government.
And look, I you know, I have my
own sort of criticism of Netanyahu,
[00:09:38]
and I would love to find out
if the hostages could somehow get out.
Okay. Exactly where were they kept?
What were the conditions?
What were the possibilities?
What are the hostages?
No, the people who are keeping them.
What? What kind of orders were they under?
Was it possible to get the hostages back
if certain steps had been taken?
[00:09:55]
And if it turns out that it was.
That is huge for Israeli society.
And a huge blow to Netanyahu politically.
Yeah.
Obviously the Israeli society is seeing
something different than we're seeing.
So if they were here, I would tell them.
Mystery solved.
He could have gotten the hostages back.
He chose not to.
[00:10:12]
That's super obvious to the entire planet,
except Israel, apparently.
So if this controversy makes it
more obvious to the Israeli people,
then it will have done a great service.
Thanks for watching The Young Turks
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