4.8 • 6.3K Ratings
🗓️ 2 December 2023
⏱️ 71 minutes
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On Friday morning, Israel resumed its bombing campaign against Gaza, and the civilian death toll is once again rising. Both Hamas and Israel accused the other of violating the temporary truce. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has promised, “We will fight in the entire [Gaza] Strip.” Despite meekly worded suggestions from Secretary of State Antony Blinken that Israel make an effort to reduce civilian deaths, the U.S. position remains one of full-throttled support for a military campaign that has killed more than 15,000 Palestinians, the vast majority of them children and other civilians.
In this special episode of Intercepted, political analyst Mouin Rabbani, co-editor of the Arab Studies Institute’s ezine Jadaliyya, offers a provocative analysis of the current situation. In a discussion with Jeremy Scahill and Murtaza Hussain, Rabbani suggests that behind the belligerent rhetoric and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s proclamations he will eradicate Hamas, Israel may already be heading for a bloody quagmire it is unlikely to transform into an accomplishment of its stated goals. “We’re now well into the second month of this war, and the most Israel has been able to achieve is to raise the Israeli flag on a hospital. It’s not exactly Iwo Jima,” Rabbani says. The “Israeli military is a very effective killing machine when it’s dropping 2,000-pound bombs from the air, but a rather mediocre fighting force when it comes to ground operations.” Rabbani describes the evolution of Hamas’s strategy and tactics over the past decades and maps out several scenarios that might emerge in the coming period. “The idea that you can wipe [Hamas] out, even if you fully succeed in conquering every last square inch of the Gaza Strip, is an illusion,” he says. “It is effectively impossible to resume this war without regional escalation.”
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0:00.0 | Imagine sweeping through green fields, floating five feet above ground, sun on your face as you |
0:08.3 | slide by on track to your |
0:15.0 | there, |
0:20.0 | to care in the world as you simply lean back. |
0:17.0 | And before you know it, you're there. |
0:20.0 | This is how travels should feel, |
0:22.0 | and on our trains it does. |
0:25.0 | Avanti West Coast feel good travel. x x. This is intercepted. Welcome to Intercepted, I'm Jeremy Sgehill. |
1:07.0 | And I'm Mutaz de Hossain. |
1:10.0 | Maas, it seems like the hardliners in Israel are getting their way. On Friday morning, |
1:17.0 | the temporary truce was shattered. Israel claims that Hamas fired rockets. |
1:22.6 | Hamas is saying that Israel broke the truce. |
1:25.8 | Regardless of how it happened, we are now back to a situation |
1:30.3 | where Israel has resumed heavy bombardment. |
1:33.0 | Early indications are that they're increasing their campaign |
1:37.1 | in the south of Gaza. |
1:39.0 | And Israel began its military operations, literally as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinking was taking |
1:47.0 | off to depart Israel. |
1:49.0 | Well, good evening everyone, and thanks for bearing with us through a long day. So this is my fourth |
1:57.5 | trip to Israel since the Hamas terrorist attacks of October 7th. And it really seems like every time Blinken goes to the region or goes to Israel, it's then |
2:06.9 | followed by an intensification of Israeli military tactics. |
2:12.2 | And you know, Blinkin has been trying to publicly sell |
... |
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