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cover of episode An Interview with President Trump's Ambassador to Israel

An Interview with President Trump's Ambassador to Israel

2025/5/21
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Mike Huckabee: 我认为Hamas是导致人质无法回家的主要原因,他们一直顽固地致力于僵局,并以此作为他们手中的最后一张牌。他们必须接受他们没有在加沙的未来,美国不会支持Hamas继续存在和统治加沙。如果他们认为他们能继续存在并看起来像赢家,那将是对10月7日遇害者和被劫持人质的侮辱。特朗普总统对Hamas感到更加沮丧,而非对内塔尼亚胡总理。我与总统、副总统和国务卿交谈过,如果真像媒体报道的那样对以色列总理感到沮丧,我应该已经听说了,但我没有。美国承认以色列的主权,他们遭受了极其恶劣的谋杀,其恶意程度甚至超过了纳粹大屠杀。Hamas的行为是野蛮的,他们还录像并以此为荣。他们本可以在10月8日停止这一切,但他们没有,所有人的长期痛苦都是Hamas造成的。我对英国、加拿大、法国谴责错误的罪魁祸首感到愤怒,他们需要开始向Hamas施加压力。这些国家现在愿意给予Hamas胜利,如果Hamas获胜,下一次袭击可能发生在法国、英国或加拿大。美国尊重以色列的主权,并尊重以色列以其认为能结束战争的方式进行战争的权利。以色列希望结束战争,没有人希望战争继续下去。 Mike Huckabee: 我认为Smotrich指的不是人民或风景,而是Hamas创造的文化,他们将收到的数十亿美元援助用于制造炸弹、子弹和隧道,并用它们来残杀人民。我不便告诉以色列人如何进行战争,我的家人没有被谋杀和残害。以色列会提前宣布他们要袭击的区域,并告知该区域的人们撤离。Hamas将自己的平民聚集在军事目标前。美国正在帮助加沙人道主义基金,并呼吁各方帮助将食物运入加沙。总统指示我们向人们提供食物,但不要让Hamas偷走它。Hamas偷窃人道主义食品,在黑市上出售,并将利润用于购买更多武器。总统明确表示,美国要专注于提供人道主义援助,但要防止这些援助落入Hamas手中。Hamas偷窃食物,使得食物难以送达。如果联合国真的致力于提供食物和人道主义援助,为什么他们不参与他们不理解或不喜欢的行动?我不后悔2008年说“巴勒斯坦人”这个词只是一个地理名词的评论,因为我指的是地理概念,而不是地缘政治或民族概念。在1964年之前,居住在该地区的人们,包括犹太人,都被称为巴勒斯坦人。1964年,亚西尔·阿拉法特创建了巴勒斯坦解放组织,并篡夺了“巴勒斯坦人”一词,将其定义为一个民族,但这在历史上是不准确的。巴勒斯坦人作为一个独特的、具有悠久历史传统的地缘政治民族群体,这种说法在历史上是不准确的。战争不是我们应该庆祝或祈祷的事情,但当邪恶崛起时,战争是必要的。在二战期间,当纳粹屠杀人民时,英国和法国并没有说不应该采取不成比例的行动。轰炸德国最终结束了二战,阻止了纳粹对整个欧洲的威胁,这在某种程度上是可以接受的。如果以色列在70年后试图自卫,免受生存威胁,我们不应该对他们感到愤怒,对他们实施制裁和谴责。一些欧洲国家忘记了自己的历史,他们的虚伪令人厌恶。

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This message comes from NPR sponsor Rosetta Stone, an expert in language learning for 30 years. Right now, NPR listeners can get Rosetta Stone's lifetime membership to 25 different languages for 50% off. Learn more at rosettastone.com slash NPR. Today on State of the World, an interview with President Trump's ambassador to Israel.

You're listening to State of the World from NPR. We bring you the day's most vital international stories up close where they're happening. It's Wednesday, May 21st. I'm Greg Dixon. The U.S. ambassador to Israel is outraged at the leaders of the U.K., France, and Canada for condemning Israel's new military offensive in Gaza. That's what Ambassador Mike Huckabee told NPR's Daniel Estrin.

On today's episode, we're going to hear that interview. And a warning, this episode contains some brief graphic descriptions of violence. The conversation with the new ambassador to Israel comes as pressure on Israel around the world is mounting, not just for its latest offensive in Gaza, but for restricting food and medicine entering the territory. And ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas, with participation of U.S. envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, have so far failed to make progress.

Daniel started by asking Ambassador Huckabee about those talks. The holdup in all of this has been Hamas. I know that there are people that want to blame the Israeli government. They want to blame either Witkoff or the Americans. But the truth is, the reason that the hostages aren't home is because Hamas has been stubborn. They have been absolutely just committed to a stalemate. And they know that that's the last card they've got.

So it's been a breakdown every time because Hamas has refused to accept some of the realities that are going to have to be accepted, such as they have no future in Gaza. They're not going to govern there. They're not going to be armed. President Trump has been adamantly clear that the U.S. will not support something in which Hamas survives, living there, running the place. That isn't going to happen.

And so as long as they think they're going to remain and end up looking like they've won something, what an insult that would be to every one of the people who were murdered on October the 7th and to the many hostages, the 250 hostages, many of whom died in that hellhole and others who have been tortured relentlessly and viciously for now almost 600 days. So you've laid out the position the U.S. has on Hamas. Yes.

Is President Trump frustrated with Prime Minister Netanyahu? I think he's more frustrated with Hamas. I don't see the frustration with the prime minister. And I've talked to the president. I've talked to the vice president. I've talked to the secretary of state. I think if there was this frustration that I keep reading about in certain media outlets or social media, I think I would have heard it by now. And I'm not hearing that, not directly from the principals. What I'm hearing is they're frustrated. They want the hostages out.

But they're not blaming the Israelis for it. They're not blaming the prime minister for it. They're blaming Hamas for it, which we all ought to be doing. That's where the fault is. Three major allies of the U.S. and Israel are frustrated, as you know, the U.K., France, and Canada. They have said that Israel's new offensive must stop. Does the U.S. believe that this new offensive must stop? I think we recognize the sovereignty of Israel.

Israel had people murdered in the most vicious, horrible way that we've seen. And I wanted to say since the Holocaust, but in all candor, as awful as the crimes were in the Holocaust, they weren't worse. And in some cases, they weren't as malicious. It was not about just intentionally inflicting a level of mutilation, massacre, and humiliation on the victims.

And then they chose victims for the highest level of pain and suffering to their families, raping women in front of their children, cutting off the heads of babies, putting babies in ovens.

viciously mutilating elderly people while they sat in a wheelchair. A quick editorial note here. The ambassador's claims of babies being killed in that manner on October 7th, 2023, have been debunked in numerous media reports. The Israeli government's account says two infants were killed that day, including one that did not survive an emergency delivery after his mother was murdered. Okay, here's the rest of the interview with Ambassador Huckabee.

That's uncivilized behavior. That's not just attacking people. It's not even attacking civilians. That's not collateral damage. That's intentional harm going to the most vulnerable and then worse, or if anything could be worse, videotaping their actions and being proud of it. But these allies are saying that Israel's response today is disproportionate, is intolerable.

You've seen the pictures of dead children every day. Sure. Do you agree with that? No, what I agree with is that Hamas could have stopped this on October the 8th and they didn't. The prolonged suffering for everybody is on Hamas. And I'm outraged that the UK, Canada, France, they're blaming the wrong perpetrator. They need to start putting the pressure on Hamas. Right now, they're willing to give Hamas a victory.

Why? Why would you possibly give Hamas a victory? Because I tell you what you get with that. The next attack may be on France or the UK, Canada or one of these countries. And then they're not going to sit around and say, well, we're going to be very careful about how we respond. So the U.S. does support this current Israeli offensive? Well, I'm saying to you that the U.S. has respected the fact that Israel is a sovereign nation and has a right to prosecute the war the way that they believe will ultimately happen.

end it, but not just end it with Hamas claiming a victory. Hamas has to recognize they have no future there. So the president has made that clear. Does the president want the war to end? Of course. So do the Israelis. The Israelis have people. I met a young man on Friday night. I was at a Shabbat dinner in a frat and he was walking down the sidewalk as I was going into the home where I was going to have the dinner. His left arm is missing from here. Three weeks ago in Gaza, his arm was shot off.

Now, he at least came home, but without an arm. And there have been, what is it now, 800 IDF soldiers that have died in Gaza. Nobody wants this war to keep going. I mean, you'd have to be insane to think somehow that there was some desire to keep it going. I want to read to you a quote from Finance Minister Batella Smotrich, who said just the other day, we are destroying what remains of the Strip. Does the U.S. support that?

I'm not sure how he intended for that to come. I don't know. I saw him. In fact, I saw him last night. I think he's not talking about the people. He's not talking about even the landscape. He's talking about the culture that was created by Hamas when the billions and billions of dollars that they received in aid that was supposed to

Feed people, build an economy, create jobs. Instead, all they did was build bombs and bullets and tunnels, and then they used it to murder people viciously and savagely. If that's what we're talking about being destroyed, I hope it is destroyed. There's nothing that Israel is doing now that you would advise that they stop or change? I'm not in a position to tell the Israelis how to conduct their war. My family members weren't murdered and massacred, mutilated.

My children haven't been in a war zone fighting these people that put their civilians and even children in front of military targets. People forget that the Israelis announce in advance where they're going to hit. They tell the people in an area, this is an area, we're going to hit it, get out. You do know there have been many strikes that come without warning. I'm sure there are some.

But I know that no nation on earth, including the United States, ever says, we're going to hit right here. And then Hamas congregates their own civilians in front of those targets. What kind of people do that? Let me ask you about aid, because I know the U.S. is supporting this new program. At the moment, Israel says that it is allowing only the basic quantities of food. Do civilians deserve more than the basic?

I think what's happening is that it's taking some time to get it stood up. We announced a couple of weeks ago at the embassy that we were helping to work with global, or rather Gaza Humanitarian Fund, GHF, and asking NGOs, governments, individuals, and nonprofit organizations to help be a part of getting food into Gaza for humanitarian purposes. The president's instructions to us was that

Get food to people, but don't let Hamas steal it, which has been happening over much of the relief effort. And when Gaza became this place where Hamas was stealing the food, they were selling it on the black market. They were taking the money that they were profiting from stealing humanitarian food and then buying more weaponry and using it for more mayhem and to murder people.

So one thing the president has made very clear that he wants for the U.S. to focus on is get humanitarian aid, but keep it out of the hands of these monsters. Is enough getting in today? So far, none has gotten into civilian hands, and Israel says it's only going to allow the bare minimum. There were trucks that went in as recently as Monday, and I think over the weekend, and

with food. There are other organizations who have been working in Gaza that are now going back in, World Central Kitchen, some others that are standing up operations to get people food. I guess my question is, sorry to interrupt, is it not cruel to only allow the bare minimum to babies, children? I think it's cruel that Hamas has made it very difficult to get that food in there by stealing it.

I totally understand where people are thinking, gosh, you got to get the food there. We all agree to that. But here's something I don't understand. If the United Nations is so committed to getting food and humanitarian aid, how come they said they wouldn't participate in an effort that they just didn't understand or didn't like? If you really care about the food getting to people more than you hate the people who are delivering it, the food ought to be more important. And it doesn't seem to be with some of these entities.

Two last quick questions because you have to go. In 2008, you said that there's really no such thing as Palestinians. I'm paraphrasing. Do you regret that comment? No, because what I was talking about was a geographical term. If people understood the full context, if they go back and listen to it, here's what I said. The term Palestinian is a geographical, not a geopolitical term. It's not an ethnic term.

If you talk to someone who lived in this part of the world prior to 1964, you would hear that a Jew was a Palestinian because it was connected to if you lived in this region. And people say, I don't think that's true. I can give you a simple way to prove it. The movie Exodus that was done back in 1962. Paul Newman starred in the movie. It's all about the Jews trying to come out of Europe and getting rebuffed coming into their ancient homeland.

But when they spoke about Jews, they called them Palestinians. Why? Because anyone who lived here was considered a Palestinian. In 1964, Yasser Arafat decided to create the PLO and he co-opted the term Palestinian and he created an ethnicity, a people that he took that term and made it as if it was a lineage of people that had had governments, connections, rulers, etc.

that's not the case. So that's what I'm talking about, is that have there been Arabs who have lived here all these years? Of course there have. Absolutely. Have there been people who are descendants of, if you want to go back to the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Ishmael, have there been descendants of both here? Absolutely. But to say that

The Palestinians are a people that are unique to a long-standing, centuries-old tradition, and a geopolitical ethnic group is simply historically inaccurate. You are an evangelical Christian. I've heard that. I want to ask how you look at the last 19 months of war.

Through the lens of your faith. Yeah. How does it fit into God's plan? It doesn't. War is not something that I think we should celebrate. It's not something we should ever pray as a part of our culture, but it is when evil rises up. I think about World War II.

When there was the Nazis who were slaughtering people, by the way, they were slaughtering them in Britain and France. And I don't remember Britain and France at that point saying we shouldn't have we shouldn't have a disproportional. When when the bombings were going on in Germany that killed a lot of innocent people, did did the did the French and did the Brits suddenly say, oh, this is horrible. This shouldn't be happening. Well, we all were sick over it because a lot of innocent people got killed.

But what a hypocrisy to say that those bombings that ultimately ended World War II and stopped the threat of the Nazis into all of Europe was somehow OK. But if the Israelis, you know, 70 years later, try to defend themselves from an existential threat, that we ought to be mad at them and put sanctions on them and condemn them for it.

I just find that so disgustingly hypocritical on the part of some of these European nations that forget their own history. And it wasn't that long ago. And they ought to just go back and maybe take 10th grade civics and refresh themselves. Thank you so much. Thank you. That was U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee speaking to NPR's Daniel Estrin.

His is one of a variety of perspectives we bring you on the conflict between Israel and Hamas. You can find an episode earlier this week with voices from Gaza in this podcast feed, and there's much more coverage at npr.org slash Mideast Updates. That's the state of the world from NPR. Thanks for listening.

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