Former Defense Minister YOAV GALLANT (Part 2) - The Hostage Dilemma
Last month we published the first in a series of interviews with former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, telling the story of the October 7th War from his unique vantage point. Our first interview, “Four Days in October,” focused on the intense deliberations that took place behind closed doors regarding the possibility of Israel responding to its stronger adversary first, Hezbollah in Lebanon, rather than Hamas in the Gaza Strip. If you have not heard or seen that interview, you can find it here.
For the second interview in our series with General Gallant, we focused on the most difficult aspect of this war - the hostages in Gaza and the efforts to bring them home.
Yoav Gallant served as Israel’s Defense Minister from 2022 until 2024. He was fired by Benjamin Netanyahu twice in those two years, first in 2023, when massive protests in Israel led Netanyahu to reverse his decision, then again in November of 2024. Gallant is a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party. His military career spans five decades, beginning in 1977 as a naval commando in Shayetet 13, and serving as chief of the IDF’s Southern Command during Operation Cast Lead, an early war with Hamas that lasted from late 2008 to early 2009.
Full Transcript
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YG: In the first order I gave to the IDF about this issue, is no one is messaging anything to Hamas. They will come to us. If you will message anything to them, you will consider as the weak side. So you need to take the assets, their tunnels, and especially their lives. If you do so, eventually they will come to you. And I said, put their heads under the water. Once they don't have enough air, they will come to breathe and they will talk to us. And that's what happened in the first deal, exactly that.
DS: It is 10:00 AM on Monday, March 3rd, here in New York City. It is 5:00 PM on Monday, March 3rd in Israel, as Israelis wind down their day. Last month, we released the first in a series of interviews with former defense minister General Yoav Gallant, telling the story of the October 7th war from his unique vantage point. That first interview, titled Four Days in October, focused on the drama that took place behind closed doors about the possibility of Israel focusing its efforts on Israel's stronger adversary, Hezbollah. If you have not heard or seen that interview, I highly recommend following the link in the show notes. In today's interview, we will focus on the most complicated and sadly polarizing aspect of this war, the hostages. What to do about the hostages, how to get the hostages home. Former defense minister, general Yoav Gallant, thanks for coming back to continue this conversation.
YG: Thank you very much, Dan.
DS: I'm looking forward to continuing the conversation. Last time we were together, you told me I can call you Yoav, lest our listeners and viewers think I'm not being sufficiently respectful or formal. I am following your lead.
YG: That's fine. And actually last time we were speaking about operations and battles and war. And this time, as you mentioned in the beginning, we're going to discuss something that is not less important. Values. And speaking about values, I think it should be very personal. So I'm with you.
DS: So I want to begin by going back to those first 48 hours immediately after October 7th when you and your team were assessing what Israel was actually contending with. And at that point, or pretty soon thereafter, you knew that the nature of the massacre, of the attack of the invasion was brutal and barbaric. Some 1200, uh, Israelis slaughtered. But you also learned of hostages taken. Now hostages being taken for Israel was nothing new and we'll get into that, but the scale of it, 251 hostages taken. This in American terms, just so our American audience understands in American terms proportionate to the US population would be the equivalent of 10,000 Americans being taken hostage. So I, I often try to remind American audiences, imagine if when 9/11 happened here in the United States, we would suffer devastating loss of life, and then at the same time, we're informed that 10,000 Americans have been taken hostage, which means 9/11 is not just one day, but it is this ongoing trauma with no real clear end in sight. So I want to take you, or I want you to take me back to when you were processing that information and what you and your team were assessing at the time. Like when you were told there are 251 Israelis taking hostage, how shocked were you? There's the sheer shock of it. And then there's also the reality that Israel, no western country, no country in the world has a playbook for how to deal with this large number of, of its citizenry being taken in captivity.
YG: Well, uh, the, the most, uh, important point in this event in the very first days was the proportions. First of all, the amount of casualties that accumulate every hour, and it turned to be dozens and later on, hundreds and eventually thousands. Uh, second the amount of hostages that we were in for in the beginning, about few and then dozens. And within a short period of time, it turned to be hundreds. And although I was very experienced with issue of hostages, including as a commander and a soldier, this was something different. And I understood that beside being so brutal, it is complicated because I knew Gaza very well, and in Gaza, everything was inside a populated area with millions of Palestinians that are part of the scenario. So I understood very well that it's going to be very, very complicated.
DS: What kind of, at that point, regardless, I said before there was no playbook, but like in real time, are you making any adjustments to how you would immediately think about a hostage situation? We'll get into specific hostage situations in Israel's history in a moment, but was anyone saying, well, this is what we do in hostage situations, but we have to do things differently? Like was there any kind of discussion about any kind of precedent for what to do with something like this?
YG: I'm fighting Hamas since it was established in ‘87, and I know them quite good, and I knew that they will not give you anything unless you have something that they really need, and this is not the prisoners. The prisoners in Israel-
DS: Meaning the Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons.
YG: The Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons was already given. They were speaking about Israel withdrawing from Judea and Samaria. They were speaking about how to divide Jerusalem in their thinking. So-
DS: Meaning in return for Israeli hostages.
YG: In return for, for a deal.
DS: Yeah.
YG: So that's what was running in their minds. If you want to get the hostages, you have to apply a serious military pressure. That means that after you kill 5,000 terrorists, if they see that they are going to continue, then what they will think about it. And the first order I gave to the IDF about this issue is no one is messaging anything to Hamas. They will come to us, if you will message anything to them, you will consider as the weak side. So you need to take the assets, their tunnels, and especially their lives. If you do so, eventually they will come to you. And I said, put their heads under the water. Once they don't have enough air, they will come to breathe and they will talk to us. And that's what happened in the first deal. Exactly that.
DS: We're taking a short break to tell you about the sponsor of this episode. We'll only be doing this selectively, but I wanted to take a moment to discuss Sapir, which is a quarterly publication edited by Brett Stevens. Each issue is built around a theme. The new one is around diversity. Not in the DEI sense. Some of the articles include Mijal Bitton, on Why am I not a Jew of Color?. Rabbi Meir Soloveichik on Jewish Identity vs. Identity Politics. Israel's president bougie Herzog on Zionism as a Method of Diversity. And there's always a terrific essay by Brett Stevens. You can have a hard copy of this print publication arrive in your mailbox every quarter, which is especially good for Shabbos reading. I'm a religious reader. My view is they should be charging for it, but it is free. All you have to do is subscribe. So go to sapirjournal.org/callmeback. You can find the link to the publication in the show notes. Now, back to our conversation. Okay, so I wanna look at previous hostage situations. That Israel, because it's not the first time Israel, as I said, has had to deal with a hostage situation. It just had never had to deal with something on this scale. So I wanna look at previous hostage situations and I just wanna read them off because I don't think our audience appreciates how far back Israel has been dealing with hostage situations. So, just to name a few, and this is not a, a complete list. There was the 1972 Munich Olympics, 1974, the Ma’alot Massacre in which a lot of school children were slaughtered in Northern Israel by the PLO. There was 1976, the Entebbe hostage crisis, 1984, Nachson Waxman was taken hostage. In 1986, Ron Arrad was taken hostage. 2000 Goldvasser and Regev taken hostage, which ultimately was a precursor to the um, 2006 Lebanon War. 2006 Gilad Shalit, in which he was held hostage for five years, ultimately exchanged in 2011 for over a thousand Palestinian prisoners. What had been Israel's policy and, and dare I say, best practice in dealing with these hostage situations. And what, if any of that experience was applicable to what you were facing on October 7th, 2023?
YG: Well, when I was 14 years old, the Munich Olympics took place, and I was collecting every front page of the paper that was speaking about the Israeli achievements in the Olympics. Weightlifters, uh, wrestling, uh, running, everything. One day the headline was that there are Israeli hostages in Munich. And that the Germans went to, you know, to release them. And the massacre that happened there. For me, it was, I think, the first personal contact with such an event. This was dramatic, first of all, because it happened on Munich. And, you know, we are the son and the daughter of Holocaust survivors. And Munich is something very symbolic. And this is after the six day war. Before the ‘73 war. So the, the mood in Israel was that we can achieve anything.
DS: Triumphant.
YG: Triumphant. Altogether, it was a shock. I think this event paved my way to join Special Forces in the future. Two years later, it was the, the event of, uh, Ma’alot. And, uh, later on, two years later, just before I was drafted, was the event of Entebbe. My instructors, uh, in the Boy Scouts who were soldiers in these events. So I knew everything from speaking to, to them before going to the military. So everything was very personal. We knew everything. And I'll give you one short example. In October ‘86, I was in the Navy Seals as a young commander. I was less than 28. And uh, all of a sudden my commander in the unit, who was at the same time, the Navy captain called me and say, come immediately to the office. I came to the office and he said, an Israeli pilot fall in Lebanon. We need to rescue him. His name, by, by the way, later on we learned that his name was Ron Arad. And prepare all the forces that are possible. Every, everybody that you have in hand with one hour, two helicopters, Sikorsky are going to land in, in the base. And we are going to rescue him.
DS: Taken hostage by?
YG: We didn't know that he was taking hostages, but we knew he was missing. He's, he was missing in action. We knew the, the general area and the location, and we want to rescue him. So I'm giving you this example to show how much we were devoted to the mission of rescue one Israeli pilot. We started to prepare ourself. We didn't know much about the location, about the mission, about the conditions, about the enemy, but we knew one thing. If an Israeli soldier is in a possibility to fall in the hands of the enemy, we are going to rescue him. So we were thinking that this is the right thing to do. We were willing to sacrifice our life, to risk our soldiers to do whatever is necessary in order to rescue one Israeli soldier. This is the spirit of the Jewish people. This is the spirit of the IDF because you never leave wounded soldiers or anyone in the battlefield. If someone is wounded, you rescue him. If someone unfortunately has died, you bring him and bury. And if someone is in the hands of the enemy, you do whatever is necessary, no matter what it is in order to release him. If you need, you go and you rescue you him in a special operation. And if you need, you negotiate it. And by the way, you mentioned ‘72 as the first day. But you know, in ‘56, just after the establishment of the state of Israel, we were, uh, winning the, the Sinai Desert War, uh, against Egypt. We had, I think, five, uh, hostages, five prisoners in the hands of the Egyptian. We pay hundreds as an exchange to bring these five people. There was a pilot or two and three others. We released hundreds of Egyptian soldiers. So the proportions are there for the beginning of the state of Israel.
DS: What was the underlying policy then what's, what's Israeli policy or Israeli doctrine in, or the Israeli protocol in dealing with these kinds of situations?
YG: First of all, there are values and principles that you don't bend, and this is the goal. This is the target. You bring your own people, and this is the reason that they're willing to participate in the next operation.
DS: The reason the Israelis are willing to participate in the next operation is because they know the reason that-
YG: The Israeli soldiers and their mothers and their families are willing to do anything that is risky, is because they know that the state of Israel is behind them. This is a legacy and you cannot do it if someone knows that, if he volunteers, and something happened, you are not backing him. He need to know that the simple, very simple issue, one for all and all for one, is the basic. Now as you speak about policy, first of all, you do any effort to release them in an operation, but in, uh, battlefield condition, sometimes you don't have this option, first of all, because not all the time and including the last war, you'd know where is everybody.
DS: Mm-hmm.
YG: Second, the conditions, if you see six people under the ground as it was exposed to the public after this brutal action against the Israeli hostages, that they actually execute them under the ground. You see it.
DS: You mean, this is in August of 2024.
YG: In August ‘24. When the public was exposed to what happened under the ground to six Israeli hostages, two women and four men, you understand that these conditions are next to impossible to release someone in an operation. It's a tunnel, one entrance interest, uh, gate guards. And the, the, the, the width is less than one, uh, one meter.
DS; And as Eli Sharabi recently said in the, in the Uvda interview, which is the equivalent of 60 Minutes in Israel, the host of Uvda Ilana Dayan did an interview with Eli Sharabi a little over a week after he was out, after having been in captivity brutally, uh, for close to 15 months. So, Ilan, why don't you bring out the clip and I just want us to watch it for a moment. “Two are enough. Two soldiers that are load from a helicopter with a rope, they take out our guards in one second and take us up to the helicopter, a SWAT team is there. Sayeret Matcal or something. You play that scene in your head all the time. You pray for that. So you try to wave your hand from the window. Maybe someone will notice, maybe a drone will see me. Anything. But nothing happens. And when you're in the tunnel, you pray that it won't happen. Why? Because once a soldier steps foot in the tunnel, they'll shoot a bullet to your head. So anyone who fantasizes about rescue operations from tunnels, the chances of getting hostages alive from there is close to zero. That's why our legs were chained, so we can't move around, making it easy to shoot us. It was clear to all of us.”
YG: Eli Sharabi isa hero. Yarden Bibas is a hero. Because of what happened to them as hostages and because they were losing everything they had in the families and they are so obliged to the goal to bring the others. You see this hero, Eli Sharabi, what he is speaking of in the interview, and I spoke to him before the interview. I was sitting with him, with my, my wife and, uh, I couldn't believe that someone can behave like he's behaving after what happened to him and to his daughters and to his wife and to his brother. This is the demonstration of the strength of his character and his education and but also the, the state of Israel. It's unbelievable. This man who lost his family and, uh, was suffering so much in thinking about one issue, how to release his friends, and those who were with him under the ground. And what he is telling you is almost common sense. It's very difficult to operate in certain circumstances, especially under the ground when people are locked there with chains and with guards. So you see the conditions and you understand that this is next to impossible to bridge in a, an operation. But if you apply enough pressure, then you bring the ropes close enough and you need a political tie. You cannot make the tie in, uh, you know, military action. So you can release 1, 10, 20, but you cannot release 250 unless you have a deal. Once you don't have enough intel, all the operational conditions are not ripe, and time is running short because the life of hostages is under risk all the time. You need to make concessions. And those concessions to my understanding, are, uh, a sign of bravery and resilience of the state of Israel. It's not weakness. You are willing to pay in order to bring back your own people. This is essential. This is part of the education. This is part of the values. And believe me, fighting for your own values is the most important issue on a personal level and also in a national level. What is the difference between those Jews like my parents and others that were in the Holocaust and the situation right now? Israel has their ability, and of course, the right to defend itself by itself, and we are translating it. So for me, the commitment that was mentioned all the time, never again, it's not only, uh, a phrase, it's not only a commitment. This is a manual. Never again means that any Jew, anywhere, not only in Israel, all over the world, if he's under a risk, we will find a way to rescue him. And we did it many times all over the world. We sent special forces we cooperate with, with others to release one Israeli citizen or one Israeli soldier. And in many, many cases, even after they died. You know, we have done great operations with some countries in order to bring back the bonds or the bodies of our late soldiers that died in, in war much before that. So I think that this is a sign of bravery, a sign of resilience, and I'm willing to fight for my, uh, uh, my values and especially I'm willing to fight for the values of the state of Israel and the Jewish people.
DS: I think many people, and I, encounter this all the time when I talk about Israel's hostage dilemma. Many people, including many in the Jewish community outside of Israel, are genuinely torn about the asymmetrical nature of these dilemmas, these negotiations in terms of what Israel's willing to give up, what high price Israel's willing to give up. And obviously, so we don't talk in abstract terms. I mentioned it earlier, 2011, to get Gilad Shalit, one Israeli hostage back, Israel released 1,027 prisoners, Palestinian prisoners, some brutal terrorists from Israeli prisons. In fact, Ehud Olmert when he was Prime Minister, was presented with a comparable deal and he, we had Tzippi Livni on this podcast, former foreign minister at the time. They came away saying, this deal is way too generous to Hamas. We're not doing it. And then sometime after that, Netanyahu was prime Minister. He did the deal. And in the context of that deal, people like Yahya Sinwar were serving multiple life sentences. He was released from an Israeli prison to, he got a new lease on life, which included orchestrating the biggest massacre of Jews in a single day since the Holocaust. So you say to have a state of Israel means never again, here Israel released a modern day Hitler or, or modern day Osama Bin Laden, who didn't just do never again. It was again. It was, it was a real live war against Jews, a real life pogrom in the Jewish state, orchestrated by someone released from an Israeli prison in a lopsided deal. One thing you know, when Palestinian prisoners are released, Hamas members are released from Israeli prisons. You know that at some point, that release of, of Hamas terrorists from Israeli prisons will result in A, incentivizing future hostage takings, because enemies of Israel will know that taking hostages works. And they, it, you also know it'll likely result in more violence, right? Sinwar gets released. It's not like he goes to live a quiet life in retirement. He gets released and he begins plotting more violence against Jews. So it's a high price.
YG: Yes. You know, uh, this is not only arithmetical calculation. How many versus how many. This, uh, is, uh, much more complicated. One, because how do you recruit people to serve in the most difficult and, uh, severe situation, uh, as volunteers in special units or in the Mossad or the Shin Bet, and, uh, by telling them that you are by yourself. If something happened to you, we are not with you. I think that this is something that won't work. Second, you know, the obligation is not only to your state and to your people, state of Israel and the Jewish people. It's also to the close, uh, group that working with you, that know that one for all and all for one, this is the way you fight. If something happened to someone, you go and do whatever is necessary in order to, to secure it. And by the way, I was chasing Muhammad Sinwar and Muhammad Deif since ‘97. For 26-
DS: Muhammad Sinwar or Yahya Sinwar?
YG: Muhammad Sinwar and Muhammad Deif.
DS: Okay.
YG: Yahya Sinwar at the time wasn't that prominent.
DS: Yeah. So Muhammad Sinwar, Yahya Sinwar’s brother.
YG: Yes. The real one that running Hamas now, at least in inside the, inside Gaza. I was dealing with Muhammad Deif so many times and you know, maybe we'll find some time to discuss how many times we, we miss him. But if it's not Yahya Sinwar, it's somebody else. I mean, you cannot change values. You can change policy, but you don't change values. During the situation that we had, the things that, uh, were on the table were to bring back. The number that was spoken of was 33 hostages during April, may, June, July-
DS: Of ‘24.
YG: Of ‘24. And the price was less than we paid for Gilad Shalit. And the reason is that, uh, Hamas was under pressure.
DS: I want to go back to the days after the war started. My understanding was that in the days after October 7th, very senior officials within the security apparatus, I'm, I'll be careful here, to protect names and positions, let's just say very, very senior officials assessed that basically none of the hostages would come back alive. 251 hostages taken, and they argued that their working assumption was that none of them would come back alive. When you heard that assessment, what was your reaction?
YG: When these, uh, senior figures said that we won't release any hostages, I said, we have something, only one thing that is common, a common interest between us and Hamas, the hostages. We need them because of their lives, of their families, of our values. And because this is a declared goal of war, they need them as an asset to deal with it. So they won’t risk them. They will do anything necessary to preserve them because this is the so-called insurance policy that they think they have. And that's what happened. And uh, later on when some people presented similar things, I said to them, you don't know how Hamas. They will come to us when they will need us and they will need us to survive. To live. So if you kill a thousand and then another thousand, and then you intend-
DS: Of Hamas.
YG: Of Hamas, of Hamas terrorists. Eventually they will come to you to discuss the conditions. Don't approach them, they will approach us. And in the first weeks, we created an enormous pressure on Hamas. With the air force, with the maneuvering into the area, it wasn't easy to convince the cabinet to maneuver into the, the area. And eventually in the middle of, uh, November, there was a proposal that started from Hamas through the Qataris in order to achieve something. But it was very clear that they won't give all of them in this phase. So the compromise I, I was willing to, to make in this point was to bring all the kids and all the women. 100, exactly 40 kids and 60 women. And 13 out of these women were mothers of some of the kids among the 14 kids. And, uh, this is beginning of November, maybe middle of November, uh, later on, three of them were released. Three of the women. After this, I got a call after a few days, uh, from my sister. And my sister, who is younger than me is telling me that the mother is a lady that 50 years ago, her parents and my parents were friends and we were playing together. And, uh, at that time, her name was *inaudible* and I knew very well her parents, David, and, uh, Tami. David was the professor that taught, uh, literature to my father. My father never learn as a young kid because of the war. So, uh, when he was able to do it, he went to the university to learn, uh, Israeli and Russian, uh, literature because that was something that interested him. And, uh, he was his professor and they turned to be friends. And, uh, we turned to be friends with the kids. And, uh, we were playing, uh, together. And when I was 10 years old, I was playing chess with her father on the couch. Uh, so I called her afterwards and I said, you are, you are livy Etan. Yeah. She said, yes. That's, that's me. So we had a, a long conversation and she asked me if I remember her apartment. I said, sure. I remember the, the same couch that I was sitting when I played with your dad. And, uh, I even remember what move I, I made in the, in the beginning of the chess, at the chess games because we were playing in, in routine. I was a young kid. So this is Israel. So the obligation is also personal to everyone and you know, either him or his family or his relative or something. So if I close this event, we got a list and the list were 97 names. 40 kids, 57 women. We started to negotiate. We started with proportion of bringing 10 hostages versus one day of, uh, ceasefire or, uh, propose in the, in the military actions. And the one that was leading the delegation on the Israeli side made a mistake. And in one day, he said to the Qataris, well, let's start with 50. This wasn't approved by the, by the cabinet, the war cabinet. And the, all of a sudden the Qataris jumped on this idea and said, okay, 50. And it came to the war cabinet and prominent figures there said, let's go for 50. And I said, this is impossible. We have a list. And in the list there are 97 names. And it's not a theoretical issue and the number is not the most important issue. The category is important. All the women and all the kids. So I was alone in this situation and only three of us had the right to vote. Prime Minister, Gantz and myself, and Gantz was arguing me about this issue.
DS: Arguing against you?
YG: Yes. And I said, you suggest to release 50. And we knew that the 50 includes 22 kids and the rest are the women. What am I going to tell the 18 kids and their families that were unreleased after they are on the list? I'm not voting for that. And the Prime Minister as well was pushing me to compromise. And I said, you know, you have majority. I'm by myself. I will vote against it. No way. And I was blind in the cabinet and also in public that because I am, you know, looking only on the military side, which is absolutely false, I'm going to neglect these 50 hostages. And I said no the opposite. I'm insisting that we release all of them and then we came with the solution that for any extra day we will get another 10 hostages. And eventually we released 80 and uh, they didn't want Hamas, they didn't want to release the last 17. Two kids, Bibas family. And 15 ladies. And we knew at that time, I knew at that time that some of them, including the Bibas kids are not alive, unfortunately. It wasn't proved a hundred percent, but this was the, the, the current intel. Uh, but unless you don't, uh, unless you have, uh, evidence, you are doing anything like they're alive. And we knew that those ladies are not being released because of what happened to them by the Hamas terrorists. So they didn't want them to go in public and to say that.
DS: You mentioned the Bibas kids and Shiri Bibas. So this is in November of ‘23, Israel is negotiating, as you said, to get all the women and children back, including the Bibas family. Hamas is trying to hold back some of the women and children for different reasons. You say partly because they don't want these live women to come back and be able to tell the stories of what they have suffered and endured, and they also don't want to reveal that the Bibas kids were murdered. How did you know at that point, I know you said you didn't have perfect information, but why were you so confident that the Bibas, that the Siri Bibas and, and the two children were dead at that point?
YG: We had Intel where they were murdered by, uh, by Hamas. So the information was clear enough for Intel, but it wasn't clear enough to declare that they are dead as it happened, unfortunately with others.
DS: And when they, the Bibass were taken, Shiri and the two children, because I know Yarden was taken separately when they were taken hostage. Is it true that they were not actually taken by Hamas per se? They were taken during that second wave and all these quote unquote average Palestinian civilians came pouring over in that second wave on October 7th. They were taken in that wave?
YG: Well, uh, a lot of this, uh, information, uh, I learned from Yarden Bibas himself when I spoke to him. And he described everything including how he and uh, Shiri decided to, to fight. And he went outside with, uh, with his, uh, pistol and, uh, was falling in the hands of Hamas and what he learned later on. But, uh, they were captured by people that eventually brought them to the hands of a branch that is more radical than Hamas. It took another month or maybe a little bit more, uh, before we learned that, uh, they are not, uh, they are not alive. This was, of course, a, a tragic event because they are in the heart of any Israeli now, in my heart, up to up to now. You know, I had the, the, the picture on my, uh, table as I have all the others on my, my table. But kids are kids. I mean, to kill kids in intention. This is something that, you know, even animals don't behave this way.
DS: Were there any operations where, or you, or were there any possible operations that were seriously considered, seriously planned for, but then for one reason or the other, you pulled back and decided we're not gonna move forward with this operation, even though it seemed very doable?
YG: I'll tell you a story that I don't think was discussed in the past. Somewhere in the middle of November, we learned to know that a mother and four kids are being, uh, hauled as in hostages in a shelter, refugee camp, in an apartment above the ground. It was the Broducht family, three kids, and the mother and a that was with them and their parents were murdered in October 7th. And we knew where is the apartment And, uh, we sent special forces into the area, and they stayed there for a long period of the time. I'm not speaking about hours, days, long days, just hiding there.
DS: Mm-hmm.
YG: In some, some kind of, uh, cover, camouflage, whatever. And, uh, the conditions weren't good enough because they're in the second or third floor and next to them there is an apartment. And in the apartment there are terrorists. And the issue is can you get to them before the terrorists can surprise them? Plus you have terrorists in the apartment itself. And we were looking for many solutions. I'm not going to discuss all the details, uh, but we developed a special system to do something about it. Uh, but it was very dangerous. Dangerous to the life of the kids and the mother. So, uh, the chief of staff of the military, Hertzi and the head of Shin Bet, Ronen, then arrived to me and they presented the operation. I sent them for, do some homework, and then they came back and they said, we have the solution. Operationally, it could have been done, but very dangerous to the kids. And at the same time, the negotiation is ongoing about the first phase.
DS: This is, so this is the, the negotiation for the November deal?
YG: Yes.
DS: November of ‘23.
YG: Yes. This, we, we are speaking about November ‘23, the middle of November. And we are moving, we are moving forward. And uh, after they presented it to me again, I said to them, we are waiting because the deal is under progress, the deal that we are having, and eventually they will release the deal, and we didn't use this opportunity. But Israeli soldiers, including Yamam and Shin Bet were in the area ready to create an operation. Very risky operation. Risky for the kids, but also risky for them. But I didn't confirm it and I think that in this situation I was right. And the reasons are, are there, but, uh, you know, this is not something that is a hundred percent guarantee.
DS: We're taking a short break to tell you about the sponsor of this episode, Sapir, which is a quarterly publication edited by Brett Stevens. Each issue is built around a theme. The new one is around diversity, not in the DEI sense. You can have a hard copy of this print publication arrive in your mailbox every quarter, which is especially good for Shabbos reading. I'm a religious reader. My view is they should be charging for it, but it is free. All you have to do is subscribe. So go to sapirjournal.org/callmeback. You can find the link to the publication in the show notes. Now, back to our conversation. Going back to the early days of the war, a decision at some point was made to make the return of the hostages, one of the war's objectives at the same time that another one of the wars objectives was to destroy Hamas. And it seems that those two objectives are paradoxical. They contradict one another because hanging onto the hostages is ultimately the only way Hamas can try to preserve its path to take over Gaza again. So destroying Hamas and getting the hostages back sends a message to Hamas that hanging onto the hostages is the only way they can prevent their destruction. How was the decision, can you just talk a little bit about how the decision was made to make the return of the hostages one of the war's objectives? Because it seems to be in conflict with the destruction of Hamas.
YG: I was the one that declared on the first day in front of the generals and others in the IDF and other organizations that these are the goals of the war; to destroy Hamas, to decapitate their, uh, leadership, to have the ability to maneuver in the area, uh, in any given time later on, and to switch the regime and to bring the hostages. Now, the first thing is, uh, something that you can achieve in a military way. You can destroy and dismantle the infrastructure and also the formation of Hamas. You can decapitate the leadership, you can have the ability to maneuver, but defeating the enemy is only a phase in the victory. In order to gain a victory, you have to achieve the goals of war. And this is a political arrangement, a political system. Now, in order to achieve the, the last two goals, one to release the hostages and second to, uh, create an alternative for Hamas, you need also a political action. And, I also, uh, defined the wording about this goal. And I didn't say to bring the hostages. I said, the goal is to create the conditions to bring the hostages. And this is a difference because I was experienced, I've seen the second Lebanese war when it was declared that this is the goal. The goal is to create the conditions. Why? Because if you have 250 or more than that hostages, you need a political arrangement. And, uh, I think that this is possible, and it's even possible nowadays, today, but the order is very simple. First, you need to bring the hostages and then you need to continue to defeat Hamas. And, uh, the reason is very simple. If you will start with, you know, destruct the destruction of Hamas, by the end, you will finish it. You won't have hostages. So this is not only a value, but this is a goal of war. And believe me, I'm the last one that, you know, the last one in Israel, maybe the last one in the world that don't want to destroy Hamas. I was making living for 48 years from, you know, killing Hamas terrorists and Hezbollah terrorists and others. And I'm willing to continue with this sequence as much as needed. But let me remind you the simple facts. We take over Judea and Samaria in ‘67. We went to defensive Shields in 2002, and we are still fighting almost 25 years later. We are still fighting in the same places to, uh, in-
DS: In the West Bank. In Judea and Samaria.
YG: In Judea and Samaria. To kill terrorists every day in order to protect ourself. And this is after a very successful and vast operation. So dismantling the formation of the military force of Hamas was very successful. That doesn't mean that you don't have resistance, because if you take a Jabaliya refugee camp, or Jabaliya City, or Sajaiya or other places, let's say that in one of these neighborhoods you had a thousand terrorists, which is the average. 300 were killed, 300 were wounded. 200 escape to somewhere else, and 200 are fighting in a terror action. And this will last for a long period of time. They don't have the ability to maneuver into Israel with without formation. They don't have the ability to defend themselves efficiently as they behave, but the idea is still there. Therefore, we will fight them for a long period of time. That doesn't mean that we have to neglect the issue of the hostages. The priority and the order of preference is very simple. First of all, bring the hostages, especially the live hostages as soon as possible. And then the bodies, once you have them in, in your hand, we will continue to fight Hamas, and unfortunately they will give us the reasons to keep, to keep going. And the arrangement is a political one. You cannot bring all of them in operations. And even Eli Sharabi said it in the video, you know, and he was there. It's a big difference if you are above the ground, under the ground. I mean, this is, this is the, the, the given condition. So in order to fulfill all the goals of war, you have to negotiate and to find solutions for the hostages. And, uh, I think we could have done it, uh, almost a year ago and not, if not a year in April, in May, in June, in July. And in August ‘24, we could have achieved a deal. And basically the, the deal we achieved in January ‘25 is very similar to the deal that we had in May ‘24. And I'll tell you, uh, something that is also frustrating. The deal that we had then was much better because we had more hostages, live hostages under this category. Plus we, we decided on, uh, better conditions, at least 110 terrorists that were in prison for life sentences were released in the, in the new deal, and they should've been released on the ‘24.
DS: But let me, let me ask you about that, because some of the Biden administration officials who were involved in that negotiation are now saying publicly some of the things they had been saying privately or more discreetly, that that period, you're talking about spring, summer of ‘24, that Hamas ultimately was never going to do a deal then. Even if the deal could have, from your perspective, it would've been a better deal for Israel to take, to use the off-used cliche, it takes two to tango and Hamas ultimately wasn't gonna do a deal. And I wanna read a quote here from Brett McGirk, who I know you know and worked with who was the Senior Middle East policy coordinator for the Biden administration in the White House. He was the top official in the White House overseeing all the negotiations around the hostages and, uh, a ceasefire. He wrote recently in the Washington Post about that time, and I'm quoting here, he wrote, “though Hamas and its defenders claim, it accepted the framework in early July, that is not true. Hamas reinserted demands for a permanent truce. And in those negotiations, it never, not once, even when nearly every other details seemed locked down, agreed to a list of hostages that it would release if a ceasefire agreement was reached. Hamas had no serious intent to release hostages so long as Iran and Hezbollah backed its maximalist demands with ongoing attacks against Israel.” And then he goes on to say that his conclusion was until Hamas believed they could not rely on Iran and Hezbollah, there was no point in negotiating with Hamas. And he went back to President Biden and said, we need to stop pretending we're having a real negotiation with Hamas. Israel's not our problem, Hamas is. And he goes on to argue in this piece, it wasn't until Nasrallah was killed and Hezbollah was eviscerated and, and Iran was severely weakened. It was only then, which was late in ‘24 and early in ‘25, that Hamas was ready to negotiate so well.
YG: I was the one that argued to kill Nasrallah and to all the others and to, uh, use the walkie-talkies to kill Hezbollah terrorist on October 11. I knew why, why I'm doing that. I wanted to get rid of the most, uh, uh, prominent and, uh, and difficult enemy that we had, uh, which was Hezbollah. And this wasn't adopted. So under this given conditions, when we devote 60% of our power on land and on the air, uh, to the northern border, and we actually under, under this, this threat we are dealing with, with this situation. And I am the one that arguing every day, including with the Americans, every day, that we need to create much stronger efforts against Hezbollah. Otherwise they will hold us with, you know, Israeli formations on the border with, uh, evacuated communities on the border, and they will do it for nothing. So I said they, they need to pay price every day, and this is the reason that we increase those efforts every day. But putting Hezbollah on, uh, a side, let me tell you what happened with the sequence. It's very simple. After November, we were ready to try and to create another phase, and we knew that military pressure is the key because otherwise they won’t come to you. And we apply a serious military pressure after the second time that we have been to Shifa headquarter of Hamas under the hospital. We, uh, were out of, uh, ES. Hundreds of terrorists were captured and killed in this, in those places. And, uh, we came to the cabinet as the security establishment with all the ingredients, Shabak and Mossad and the IDF and, uh, all of them. And the idea was that we will, uh, restart the, the negotiation by pulling off Netzarim, creating proportions between hostages and prisoners that's supposed to be released. And this was adopted by the Israeli government in the late days of April, somewhere in Passover in the last days. I, I don't remember the, the, the exact day, and it was at 5:00 or 6:00 PM and the cabinet was meeting. And although this information was very confidential, and I will tell you what is the details that were recited on the war cabinet. The details were that we are moving towards a deal, withdrawal from Netzarim Corridor.
DS: So the corridor in the center, the corridor in the center. The center of Gaza, yeah.
YG: We will withdraw from this corridor. And the decision that the cabinet take in consensus, Bibi and Gantz and myself vote for it was that we start from. The number of 40 hostages, which was only an opening, uh, position. We will aim to 33, which is the right number, and the last line when you stop is 18 hostages. If you have 18, there is a deal. 17, no deal. Okay. This was part of the mandate and this was very confidential because if the enemy hear that you, you know- DS: You negotiate down.
YG: Yes, he will. He will play with us. Few hours later, after the world cabinet, the full cabinet is meeting and the full cabinet, Somtrich is entering into the cabinet.
DS: Bezalel Smotrich, so the finance minister.
YG: Finance minister, who is part of the full cabinet but is not part cabinet of the war cabinet, is entering into the room and said, we are going to leave the government because they are going to decide, the war cabinet, they are going to decide about the 18 hostages. How did they learn about it? I don't know, but no one in the cabinet, in the full cabinet understood what he's speaking about because they weren't exposed to the information. And at the same time, I got reports for the Shin Bet that they are having in Israel negotiation, a successful negotiation with the Egyptians. And it started on the right, on the right way. And there is, uh, you know, there is a room to maneuver and, uh, we are going forward. And, uh, few hours later, I, I got a call, uh, from the Prime Minister. It was close to midnight, maybe 11:00, and he said, did you see what's going on in the media? I said, no. What going on in the media. I don't, I don't have time to watch media. He said, we are being attacked by all the different players in the media for negotiated deal on 18 hostages. I said to him, if all the cabinet members and all the military and security establishment was in favor, how it got to the media. And, uh, he didn't answer me. He said, everything is on the media and I'm canceling the resolution that we had the same day at the, at noon. I, I said to the Prime Minister, with all the respect, first of all, you cannot cancel a resolution because it was taken by the war cabinet. And we have three of us in consensus. And if you change your mind, you should convince Gantz, because I'm not convinced. I think we should go forward. And later on, Hamas recognized that we are dealing about 40. But at the same time, the Israeli media is speaking about 18. So he said, why should I deal about 33 if they want 18? And basically the, the deal was collapsing and it was collapsing because of, uh, a leak that went from someone from the Israeli system to the Israeli media and eventually was exposed by Hamas. So, uh, this is something that I think shocked me, because this was a war or cabinet resolution and the goal was dear and important, and the conflict inside the cabinet was clear. The full cabinet Ben Gvir and Somtrich didn't want a deal for their own purposes. All the rest understood that this is a good deal, basically. And the deal collapsed. That's what happened. So this is the phase of April. Then the American president on, uh, May 28th, took the Israeli proposal, put it as his proposal, and said, we adopt this idea and went in, in public. Now the only difference was that he was speaking about one phase, and we were speaking about two phases. So during June, there was an ongoing conversation in different places in the world in order to shape the situation to two phases. And eventually on, uh, July 3rd, Hamas announced that they agreed to two phases, one humanitarian phase, and second one is the rest. And they, this was paragraph 8 and 14 in the agreement. And it, it was achieved, they breached to our, to our proposal. And this is the presidential announcement. So by the beginning of July, the conditions were ripe to start the, the detailing of the final agreement. And then it took us 25 days to answer. And I said to the Prime Minister, you are going to give them an answer that will be, they will not accept, because this is the negotiation. Do it today to save time. We gave the answer only on July 28th or 27th. We waste three and a half weeks for nothing. There wasn't anything on the table. And on July 28th, we came with a series of new conditions, and I have no expectations from Hamas. The only thing I want for from Hamas is to kill them. But I have expectations from the Israeli government and the expectations is to do anything possible to bring the hostages because these are Israeli citizens that were kidnapped from their beds or Israeli soldiers. And because this is a goal of war and the goals of war should be achieved, and the hostages is something that is there for a given period of time, this is a TST time sensitive target. If you don't achieve it on time, it can disappear. And we knew they are suffering.
DS: I think early on, we all had, we all imagined how horrible it could be, certainly after the first release, but especially after the more recent releases, we don't have to imagine because it's actually, I think, worse than we had imagined. And I want to just go back to Eli Sharabi, who we talked about earlier in the Uvda interview. Ilan, if you could just bring that clip. I just wanna play one clip of what he describes what life was like in captivity. “Ilana, do you know what it means to open a fridge? It means the world. It means the world to open the fridge like a free man and grab a fruit or a vegetable, or an egg or water, a slice of bread. You dream about it every day. You don't care about the beatings. I got beat up. They broke my ribs. I didn't care. The hunger. Just give me half a pita.” Now, you have said to me, I, I'm less surprised by what he said than shocked. Meaning when I really think about it, it makes sense that things were that bad, and it's still shocking. You've said to me that you and the other decision makers knew about these conditions quite early on. What did you know? And how did you know it?
YG: It was exposed to the war cabinet in many, many, uh, occasions by the head of, uh, the services that they said, what's going to them and what happened with them, that they are starving and they, they, they are in under very poor conditions. And this is not something that is unique to me. This information was in the hands of, uh, the Prime Minister and the Defense Minister and the senior figures in the military establishment heads of the organizations. And, uh, it was, uh, emphasized time and again by Nitzan Alon and Ronen Bar and by the chief of staff and the head of Intel, all of them said that the conditions are, uh, very poor. So I think that the, all, the whole situation direct us to achieve a deal and you can learn from another issue. You know, the American president went with the Israeli position because he didn't want to have a daylight between Israel and America. This is fine, but what was the reason that eventually after Hamas agreed on July 3rd, we didn't adopt what they said. And, uh, I won't get into all the details, but I would say one very important issue, the first phase that was on the table in, uh, May, June, July and August is exactly the same arrangement that we made in January ‘25. So it could have been achieved much before that. And by the way, at that time, going back into the war was, was something that was much more natural. It was a ceasefire or a pause in the war, and then you continue after 42 days. But the whole sequence was ready to be, uh, deployed on July. The deal was there, and this is the same deal that we had six months later. When I met with, uh, some of the hostages, they lost 30 or 40 kilos in the, in the tunnels. And when you see it on the, the screens, you understand what happened to them because starvation is only one part. And, uh, after we, we heard what Eli Sharabi said, they were also, uh, torches and beaten. This is something that was well known in the cabinet, especially in the world cabinet.
DS: I want to, um, close by trying to ask you to try to put yourself in the mind of Hamas' current leaders, what's left of Hamas, or a future wannabe Hamas, how could their lesson from the last 18 months be anything but the key in any war with Israel is to steal its citizens. If you take Israeli hostages, it paralyzes Israeli society, if not shatters it. It introduces a level of dysfunctionality, understandable dysfunctionality, in Israeli society and in the decision-making of its leaders that give those who take Israelis hostage a massive advantage in a certain aspect of the war. And in other words, I agree with much of what you've said in this conversation of in terms of what Israel needs to do and and needed to do, on the one hand. On the other hand, I am terrified to think. That future enemies of Israel will learn from this last 18 months. If you get into a confrontation with Israel, if you, if you initiate a confrontation is with Israel, the first thing to make sure you do the highest priority is take Israeli's hostage.
YG: If I was one of Israel's enemies, Hamas or Hezbollah in Iran, the first lesson I would've learned is that it's not a good deal to create a war against Israel because you pay dear prices and you can ask those questions to, uh, Nasrallah or to Haniyeh or to Muhammad Deif, or to Sinwar, they all not with us. And this lesson is learned by those who replace them and they understand it very well. And if, if you will ask anyone in Lebanon or in Iran or in Gaza, was it a good idea to start a war against Israel? The answer is negative. It was a bad idea for them, and they know that they can pretend in a different way. But this is clear cut. One. So this is the first lesson. As to the issue of hostages for me, keeping your values, protecting your people and being able to deploy whatever is necessary in order to achieve it. This is a point of strength and resilience. This is, I would say, a center of gravity for the Israeli society. Kulam ba ehad, ehad ba kulam. All for one, one for all. This is strength. This is not a weakness. And what they should learn is that if you hit Israeli kids or kidnap or try to rape or rape Israeli women, you will pay dear price. You, your society, your supporters, everyone. We are not here to allow those issues to happen. For me, never again is not only a commitment, this is a manual I'm walking according. This means that if someone hit you, it's eye against eye. And it's not one eye because we have to defend ourself. We have to protect our kids, we have to protect our women, and we are willing to do whatever is necessary to preserve our values. Value is not a neglected issue. Value is almost everything. You are fighting for a lot of things that are more important than your life, your people, your nation, your country, your family and your unit, and you are willing to do whatever is necessary. And I think that we should be proud of the Israeli soldiers, of the Israeli civilians, of the Israeli women who fought to protect their kids. This is unbelievable behavior of the Israeli society, and I hope that what was shown in those dramatic days that were very, very difficult in those dramatic days, you have seen the unity and the willing to sacrifice of the Israeli society. People went bare hands into the fire. This is a point of strength and part of it is to release their friends, their families, everything that they are here to protect. You wake up in the morning, you drink coffee, or you went to sport in 6:00, or in 6:30 you hear the news. In 7:30 these people, reservists and just civilians are in the battlefield fighting for their life and other life. This is not somewhere on the other side of the globe. We are fighting to defend the only Jewish state, the state of Israel, and we are willing to do anything that is needed. Anything.
DS: Yoav, thank you again for a, um, illuminating conversation. I, uh, I look forward to picking back up for our next conversation.
YG: I'll be happy to. Thank you very much.
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