Israel-Hezbollah Ceasefire & Reacting To Threats On X
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Well I got one chance there.
I got a Molotov cocktail with a match to go.
I smoke my cigarette with Niles.
And I can tell you, honey, you can make my money tonight.
Wake up late, honey, put on your clothes and take a credit card to the liquor store.
Well, that's one for you and two for me.
But tonight, I'll be loaded like a freight train.
Flying like an aeroplane.
Feeling like a space brain one more time tonight.
I'm on the night train, follow the sun.
I'm on the night train, fill my car.
I'm on the night train, ready to crash and burn.
I never I'm on the night train.
I love that stuff.
I'm on the night train I'm on the night train Never to return Never to
return Never to
return Never to return I'm on the night train.
And I'm ridin'a crashin'fire Night train I'm on the night train Fill my car I'm on the night train
I'm on the night train I'm on the night train I'm on the night train Riding the night train I guess I I guess I guess I guess I'm on the night train Show me how I'm on the night train Riding the night train Never do it in time I'm on the night train
I'm on the night train I'm on the night train Dom Demonko.
Welcome to the stream, ninjas.
Welcome, welcome.
We are here.
We are lit.
Welcome to the stream, ninjas.
Dom Del Monco, Monco, Monco.
You guys just get me tonight.
And uh woo!
It is a very good night.
We got a lot of stuff to talk about, guys.
Between um the ceasefire going on.
In the Middle East.
Haters.
They'll wanna go ahead and uh come and kill your boy, which they never will, because I'm indestructible.
And uh yeah.
So how's the audio, guys?
How's the video?
Give me ones if everything is good to go.
Give me once.
We're live on all the platforms right now.
Shout out to all you ninjas watching.
From wherever you may be.
Um, I'm always happy to have you guys give me once.
Should be good.
I'm muted.
Hmm.
I'm getting ones in some places.
Some people are saying muted.
Hmm.
How's that muted?
Interesting.
Uh you guys are trolling.
All right.
All right.
Yeah.
I was gonna say, bro, there's no way my shit is messed up.
Alright.
Um for some of you guys that are wondering that song is uh called Night Train from Guns N' Roses.
If you guys aren't familiar, well I don't know what to tell you, man.
You need to get your music taste up a bit.
Because 80s classic rock is probably one of the best genres.
Uh let's see here.
Okay, so we're gonna get this thing going here in a second.
So Welcome guys to the show.
Welcome, sorry for the delay.
I had to run downstairs and get some uh some energy drinks, because I know that um we are definitely going to be uh we're gonna be gone for a while, guys.
This is gonna be a longer stream, probably gonna cover a bunch of different topics.
It's gonna be a good time.
I'm excited for it.
We're live on all the platforms, live on YouTube, Fed Reacts, for Fresh of Fit, um, Rumble, Castle Club.
So happy to have you guys here with me.
Um, let me see here.
So the first thing we'll do, guys, we're gonna cover this um this ceasefire.
As you guys know, I've talked a lot about the conflict uh going out there going on over there in the Middle East.
And uh, yeah, it's it's it's a crazy thing.
You know, obviously this has been going on for a while.
Um, we're gonna kind of go into the history of what was going down prior to uh this ceasefire.
So you guys kind of get brought up because I know a lot of you guys might not necessarily be familiar with Middle Eastern affairs.
And then we'll go into what's actually going on.
Uh we'll go the history and then we'll go into what's going on in the ceasefire.
Then what I'll probably do is uh we'll react to some of the the haters on X, which I'll be honest with Joe, probably have to go to Rumble for that shit.
Uh, but it's gonna be a good time.
It's gonna be a very good time.
So um and also, real quick, guys, just uh quick announcement.
Running a Black Friday sale right now, by the way, guys.
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All right, so let's get into the the conflict here.
So this is gonna be a history between Israel and Lebanon explained.
Okay, guys.
And I'm gonna pause it and give you guys commentary and stuff like that.
So it's gonna definitely be um it's gonna be a good time.
Israel's northern border with Lebanon has seen.
How's that audio?
Should be good.
You guys should be able to hear this no problem.
Let me know.
Um it's good.
Let's look back at the history between the two countries and how Hezbollah came about in 1948.
Lebanon and other Arab countries fought against the emerging state of Israel.
By the end of the war in 1949, Israel held about 40% of the area initially earmarked for the Palestinians by the UN partition plan of 1947.
Around a hundred thousand Palestinians who fled or were expelled from their homes in what had been British ruled Palestine, arrived in Lebanon as refugees in 1970.
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And as you guys know, I'm doing this thing solo, so I'm not as good with Bill as Bill's with uh a lot of the stuff.
Oh, also, guys, since it's me by myself as well, I want to interact with you guys.
So um, Castle Club Chats, Rumble Rants, FNF Super Chat.com.
If you guys want to donate to the show, which by the way, I have a chat right here from uh our no for rey as 10 bucks goes.
I'm a castle club member.
Shout out to you.
Um, and yep, and then on rants, we got five bucks from Murray 515.
Hey, Myron, I'm trying to get my bachelor's of public safety administration.
Is that a good degree for applying for border patrol?
I want to try to be a border agent.
I don't think you need a uh um a bachelor's degree to be a border patrol agent, but it never hurts to have more education.
Um, but I don't think you need it.
So just uh apply anyway, bro.
Um, and then we got from Castle Club chats.
Machaka says, just want to say thanks, Myron, for all the diverse information you give, really helping me open my mind to all the bullshit in the world.
Got you, bro.
And then fresh Bajit now niggas think you come again.
That's Adam Russell.
All right, shout out to you guys.
Jordan fought a brief but bloody war with Palestinian groups operating under the Palestinian Liberation Organization's umbrella that were launching cross-border attacks on Israel From Jordanian territory, provoking heavy Israeli responses.
These groups were defeated and expelled from Jordan in what became known as the Black September civil conflict.
PLO forces regrouped in Lebanon and made Beirut their new headquarters, leading to more cross-border flare-ups.
In the 1970s, Palestinian guerrilla raids into Israel and Israeli military retaliation on targets in Lebanon intensified.
This led many Lebanese to flee their country south, aggravating sectarian tensions in Lebanon, igniting the civil war in 1975 that killed an estimated 150,000 people.
The causes of the war were multifaceted and deeply rooted, but can be generalized as a growing insecurity crisis.
In 1975, part of the Christian militia group, the Falangists, attacked a bus taking Palestinians to a refugee camp at Talazatar in Lebanon.
The attack escalated what started an intermittent cycle of violence into a recurring conflict between the Falangists and the Lebanese national movement, whose coalition of Lebanese leftists and Muslims supported.
Hey, do we got something going on with YouTube?
Should be good.
Thank you.
Hold on.
Alright, we're fine on YouTube.
...the PLO's cause.
In 1978, Israel invaded South Lebanon and set up an occupation zone in an operation against Palestinian guerrillas after a militant attack near Tel Aviv.
So as you guys can see, this has been a very long-standing conflict, right?
Everyone wants to always start at October 7th, but it's been going on for way longer than that.
Is an important year.
Israel invaded Lebanon all the way to Beirut in an offensive that followed more border fire.
In that same year, hundreds of civilians in the Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila were massacred by phalangist militiamen allowed in by Israeli troops after Lebanon's newly elected Maronite Catholic president was killed by a bomb.
And Lebanon is a very diverse country, guys.
They have a lot of Christians and Catholics there.
It's not like, you know, just a Muslim country.
It's actually fairly diverse when it comes to religion.
Later found that the attack was led by then Defense Minister of the Israeli Forces, Ariel Sharon, who would go on to become Prime Minister.
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Big Will Minister to be personally responsible for allowing the massacre to happen.
And in that year, Hezbollah was established in Lebanon by Iran's revolutionary guards to counter the Israeli invasion.
Between 1980, there you go.
The creation of Hezbollah emerged from going conflicts with Israel.
In 1982 and 1986, a number of attacks against foreign militaries were executed, and Hezbollah waged guerrilla war against Israeli forces.
In 1983, Israel pulled back from Beirut, but retained forces in the south towards the Litani In 1992, when the civil war in Lebanon ended, Hezbollah entered parliamentary politics, winning eight seats in Lebanon's 128-seat assembly.
Fighting began again in 1993 in what is known as the Seven-Day War, after a series of attacks by both Israel and Hezbollah fighters near the border that killed civilians and soldiers on both sides.
Hezbollah continued attacking Israeli forces in the south and firing rockets into northern Israel in 1996.
And Israel launched a 17-day offensive that killed more than 200 people in Lebanon.
In 2000, Israel withdrew from South Lebanon territory in accordance with the UN Security Council's resolution, ending 22 years of occupation.
In July 2006, Hezbollah crossed the border into Israel.
And this was the last major conflict between these guys where they're actually out of war.
And we're going to talk about the 2006 war as well.
Israel kidnapped two Israeli soldiers and killed others.
It demanded the release of Palestinian detainees in return for the hostage soldiers.
Israel refused and launched a five-week war involving heavy Israeli airstrikes.
Both Israel and Hezbollah declared victory after a UN Security Council resolution.
This resolution, called 1701, was intended to resolve the war Which this 1701 resolution was also used to kind of get this new ceasefire going now.
Calling for a full end to hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon and Hezbollah's forces to withdraw north of the Latanya River.
And the disarmament of armed groups, including Hezbollah, something that remains elusive to this day.
Since 2006, there have been regular tit for tat attacks across Lebanon's southern border.
Things began to escalate after the 7th of October attack by Hamas on Israel.
Hezbollah launched a rocket campaign to Israel in support of Palestinians under Israeli.
And the reason why they did this, guys, right, and I'll kind of show this real quick on uh on a map for you guys.
Right.
So here's the Middle East, right?
So, you know, obviously you got Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Iran, etc.
But let's hone in right real quick into this area, right?
So here you have Israel, right?
Which is roughly the size of I'm not mistaken of New Jersey.
And what you have here is northern Israel and the Lebanon border.
Basically, what was happening was after October 7th, right, which went down in Gaza all the way down here, right?
Israel invaded Gaza, right?
And to support Gaza and Hamas, Hezbollah would launch rockets into northern Israel, right?
So why did they do this?
Because what it would do is it would put an enormous amount of pressure on the Israeli defense force, aka the IDF, right, to spread their forces because you can't put all of your guys down here into the Gaza Strip because you have to keep guys up here to secure the northern border, because Hezbollah says sending rockets.
Now, what these rockets have done, guys, is it displaced something like 30 to 60,000 Israelis that all live here in northern Israel, right?
So obviously, this caused a lot of problems for Netanyahu and his administration.
And a big part of them invading Lebanon was to kind of stop the rocket attacks that were coming from the north, right?
But these rocket attacks were coming so that the IDF weren't able to apply the full force of their military into the Gaza Strip.
Okay?
So that's why.
Because it's much harder to run a ground assault like they were doing in Gaza with less men, and more of those guys have to be up north here to secure the border.
So that was the strategy there.
Bombardment in the Gaza Strip, in which Israel responded with more fire.
On the 17th of September in 2024, thousands of handheld pages belonging to...
Now, um, this was crazy that they pulled this off.
Um in September, right, mid-September, you guys remember this?
The blowing beepers, right?
The blowing up of the beepers, pagers, and older technology.
And what ended up happening, guys, was and I think it was the New York Times that reported this, which is fucking insane.
Gotta give Israel, I guess, their credit on this one.
They put explosives in these walkie-talkies, pagers, beepers, etc., that they knew Hezbollah fighters were going to have because they were using these older um communication devices to talk with each other because they were worried for fear of being intercepted by Unit 8200, Mossad and all these other um intelligence agencies that Israel has.
So Israel intercepted uh basically were able to get these pagers and all these other things destined for Lebanon, and they put bombs in them, and then they uh let them kind of walk.
The Hezbollah fighters got them, and then they detonated them almost 10 years later.
I think something like eight to nine years ago, they had put these explosives in, and then they simultaneously detonated them on two separate days.
crazy.
Hezbollah operatives in Lebanon exploded, which then left them on high alert.
10 days later, Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah's leader, was killed in an Israeli strike.
Yeah, and they killed them in an airstrike.
Um, not soon, not not long after that.
Since then, Israel has continued bombing Hezbollah targets even after the death of Hassan Nasrallah.
Yeah, they've killed a bunch of leaders.
FY, just so you guys know, they've killed, I would say they've killed three main guys, right?
Maybe four.
They killed Hassan Nasrallah, who is basically the head of Hezbollah.
They killed Yahya Sinwar, the head of Hamas, the military wing.
They killed Ishmael Haney, the head of the Hamas political wing, right?
Because there's two different elements.
And they killed him in Iran, which is even more embarrassing.
They killed him in Tehran, Iran when he was there visiting for an official trip, the president inauguration of Iran.
Right?
So imagine this.
You have your buddy come to your house, and your ops kill him at your house.
Incredibly embarrassing, right?
And then the fourth person they killed, uh, which was I think the number two guy was a dude named Fuad Shukar for Hezbollah.
So Israel literally eliminated all of the brass in their adversaries between Hamas and Hezbollah within the past year.
Um quick chats we got here.
Shout out to Captain Uh Bamalam.
He says, drawn by to support the political content, looking forward to banned documentary when you have time.
Please appreciate your time, bro.
Thank you so much, Captain Bamalam.
I I will definitely be reacting to Occupied by Stu Peters.
So thank you so much for that.
And you get it down to Mark.
Uh no one really says, hello from the gym, Al Faddi's L small hats, L degenerate behavior, WFNF Myron, you change your lives, thanks for all you do.
Got you known, Billy.
Alfonso says, Myron, when are you uh where in Laredo by chance did you learn some Spanish?
Like Ariba Las Manos Yo de tu puta madre.
I don't know where uh uh I didn't learn much Spanish when I was there, bro, Alfonso.
Uh Jabriel says, Angie said she's too old to have kids.
Uh and then we got some rumorance here.
Uh Bork Borghan says, keep up the great work, Myron.
So many minds to unplug to all men be brothers to each other, because we will need each other for what is to come.
Yeah, she's about to get crazy.
Uh Gold Aura says 23 truck driver right now, about to start making 70k.
Don't know whether to get in real estate, FHA or try to start a trucking business.
Some people are getting out of it right now in Atlanta.
Uh bro, the thing is with real estate is you're gonna need income, right?
You're gonna need income to be able to save so that you can invest in the real estate.
Because the thing with real estate is that it's a slow game, right?
So get a business, get a job, get something that brings you in money, then invest in the real estate to make the passive money.
But you need active income, my friend, right?
Uh this way it goes, guys, right?
And we talk about this more on Castle Club Premium.
Get in there, guys.
Castle Club Premium.
I'm gonna be screaming this all show.
Castle Club Premium, 65 bucks a month, zoom calls once per week.
We're going to this stuff.
I'm gonna do a whole real estate seminar on there for you guys, okay?
But active income, guys, right?
Or earned income as as many people like to call it.
You take your earned income, right?
From your job, your business, whatever it is.
This earned income, you take it, you save it.
Once you have it, then you obviously put six months to one year saved, stays here in the savings account, right?
That's liquid, right?
Make sure you have access to it.
You can get it into it any time.
Emergency situation happens, family member needs money, some shit pops off.
You have that money where you can always use it, right?
Make sure it's liquid, right?
Whether you you know, liqu uh crypto's a little bit volatile, but if you want to put in crypto, you want to put index funds, whatever it is, just make sure it's liquid and you could get out anytime.
Then, from there, once you have your six months to 12 months of savings, then you take that money that you've saved from the active income, active income, goes into savings.
Once the savings there, six months to one year, put away, then whatever is left, move that into the real estate.
Okay.
Once that's in the real estate, you go ahead and choose if you want to invest as an investor or you want to invest FHA loan.
But the point is is that you're taking this money from the earned income.
Earned income here, saved, real estate.
You can't do it where, oh, I'm just gonna buy real estate and expect this to become active income.
No, no, because you need to have a portfolio of multiple homes and multiple doors to actually make yourself enough money where it's sustainable.
Okay.
So if you want to make roughly 100,000 a year, right?
Six figures, you're gonna need to control Three to ten million dollars worth of real estate, roughly speaking.
You're gonna need to control to make you know uh almost 100,000 a year, eight to ten K a month.
You're gonna need to control somewhere between three to ten million dollars of real estate per year.
Well, not per year, but you're gonna need to control three to ten million dollars worth of real estate is my point.
Like total worth of the property.
Not the net worth, because that's I'm not talking about I'm talking about the total value of the homes.
Mortgage or not.
All right.
Yes, and I know that's a very wide range, and the reason why it's wide, guys, is because it depends on the market that you're in.
In some places, you're gonna have to control uh, you know, every market's different, right?
Significantly different.
And remember, I'm talking about the worth of the homes, guys, total.
Leaving more than one million people displaced in Lebanon, a population of 5.8 million.
All right, and then we got uh Nav Singdoor IRL streaming south beat because the Shiniko has been showing Matt Love to you.
Yeah, that's funny.
Um Rai says, I don't know, I need that either have experience in law enforcement or I need a bachelor's that for education requirement by only associate degree and currently taking Spanish courses as well.
Yeah, you're gonna need to know Spanish to be in a border patrol.
Umstein says, Myron, are CS majors cooked?
Not only is the job market exceptionally competitive, but it seems in the next five to ten years, uh AI will automate everything.
What uh what to would you do as a CS major?
Different job?
What do you mean, CS?
Myronstein, tell me what CS stands for.
All right.
So now that you guys know the history, long-standing history, let's get into the ceasefire.
Talk of a ceasefire.
I'm actually gonna put Suleiman on as well, guys.
I'm gonna bring him on so that he can uh talk about this as well.
This is uh you know, Middle Eastern Affairs is a specialty, so we'll talk about that.
um fire yet the sound was still of war As the Israeli security cabinet met to discuss an agreement to end the fighting.
The Israeli defense forces launched a massive wave of strikes right across Lebanon.
With more than 10 dead and the dust still settling, Israel's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu called in his cabinet to approve the ceasefire deal.
In a signature speaking this evening, he said Israel had set Hezbollah back decades.
And you know, obviously he did the speech, and here's a speech right here.
We'll listen to some of it actually, and then we'll go back to news thing.
It's translated here in to English.
In the South.
My friends in the north, I proud of you.
You're being able to withstand everything, and I'm absolutely committed to your last thing, Grape Rex says you've been off the goop lately, single-handedly putting the hard R back on the menu.
Chance of Nick doing the bay on FF in 2025.
Thanks for all you do, bro.
Uh I appreciate that, Grape Rex, and shout out to all the grapers out there.
Soon, my friend, very, very soon.
I'm in uh comms with Exodia right now.
Security to re rebuild your settlements, your towns and villages, and your security.
Up to now, thanks to our the IDF and the security apparatus in Israel, we were able to achieve tremendous tremendous achievements in the seven fronts.
The whole world is amazed by it.
And oh, and they showed that Israel is powerful in the Middle East, in Iran, especially.
We destroyed a very big part of their sick of the air defense.
It's their production of missiles in Iran and a significant push.
And an important factor in their nuclear facilities.
I will do everything necessary in order to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.
This is the fr in front of my eyes at all times, and all the more so today, when we hear the repeated declarations of the Iran leaders about their about their wanting to have nuclear weapons.
For me, to the removing this threat is the most important goal in order to assure the six the survival of Israel.
In Gaza, we destroyed about 20,000 terrorists.
We killed Def Sinoir, and many of their senior uh leaders and broke.
Which I described to you guys, they killed a bunch of them just in the past year.
Many of our hostages, the 101 hostages still there...
Yeah, this translator sucks.
I ain't gonna lie.
In Gaza, we are committed to bring them and also to alleviate the horrific horror their parent their families are going through and to destroy Hamas.
In Judea and Samaria, we are destroying hundreds of terrorists.
We discerned terrorist infrastructures, and we we there's no place we which we do not reach.
In Yemen, we attacked powerfully the Houthis, which the coalition, international coalition has not done.
In Iraq, we have we stopped m successfully.
Many um we still have uh we still have challenges, but we have done a great deal in Syria.
Methodically, we're destroying the uh the power of and guys, they've been attacking all of these different countries.
They've been bombing the Houthis down in Yemen.
They've been just so you guys see here from uh like a map.
These are all the countries that Israel beefs with, right?
You got Yemen right here, the Houthis, then you got Hezbollah with Lebanon to the north, and you got obviously Syria right here.
They've been bombing Damascus consistently.
Um Iraq, they don't like Iran, right?
So they're literally surrounded by enemies.
The only real ally they kinda have is like Jordan and Saudi Arabia.
And they're kind of neutral because they're neutral with the government, but the people obviously don't want them there.
Of the Hezbollah and Assad, uh he has to understand he's playing with fire here in the seventh, and now the seventh front in Lebanon, Khazal Hezbollah decided to attack us on the 8th of October, a year has passed.
It's not the same Hezbollah's back then.
We brought it back I dozen decades back.
This is the axis of the Axis.
We killed all the seniors of the organization, most of the terror, mo t most of the missiles, thousands of terrorists, and their underground terrorist infrastructure that over years they built, we destroyed.
We dis we attacked strategic targets in all of Israel in Lebanon, and in Dachia, the area in in Beirut, we've destroyed a great deal of their infrastructure.
Three months ago only, all this would have sounded uh science fiction, but it's not science fiction.
I will give this down give them them this.
They absolutely did eliminate a lot of their high-ranking enemies in within a year.
And obviously, this is because October 7th gave them the ability to kind of uh justify a lot of this um aggression, right?
Um, for those that are unaware, guys, Benjamin Netanyahu was um in the middle of of uh court proceedings for corruption and bribery.
So um they were going after him.
The Israeli government was actually going after him from uh a criminal liability standpoint.
And uh obviously October 7 happened, and they suspended that trial so that he can go ahead and kind of lead the country in the middle of a of a conflict, and uh that ended up uh that ended up allowing him to kind of wage war on all these enemies like I showed you guys before on the map.
We did that, we performed it.
And I'm I'm gonna tell you at any given moment in conducting this campaign.
I look at all the all the fronts at the same time.
That's how decided that first I wanted to focus on Gaza and not to open another front.
That's how we acted several months ago when things have uh started cooking up in in the north, and then I attacked in Khazra, and that's how I act about the missiles in Iran.
We very particularly chosen when we'll attack, how we will attack in Iran, and that's how I act today as well.
I look at at all the fronts at the same parallel fashion and see the All right.
so we get the point here with the speech.
We'll go back to the um kind of bragging about all the damage they've done.
And that a ceasefire now means they can focus on the Iranian threats.
There had been a marked ra and I have a theory as to why they went ahead and did the ceasefire deal, but I'll talk about that more when Suleiman's here.
And he's in the back waiting, so we'll uh bring him in here in a second.
We'll keep watching this thing.
With more than 30 killed in Lebanon from Israeli strikes on Monday.
And yet this could be the last of the devastation and destruction.
at least for now, and at least in this pocket of the Middle East.
Hezbollah began firing into Israel following Hamas'attack of October 7th and Israel's subsequent assault of Gaza, a show of solidarity among the two Iran-backed groups.
The tit for tat exchange of missiles lasted nearly a year and led to around 60,000 Israeli citizens having to leave their homes in the north.
It was this that Israel gave as its reason for escalating.
In September, they assassinated Hezbollah's leader Hassan Nasralah in a massive strike in Beirut.
And days later launched a ground invasion of southern Lebanon.
Israel says it's now killed more than 2,000 members of Hezbollah.
but the war has displaced 1.2 uh the beeper operation that i told you guys about got got killed a lot of them million lebanese citizens and the death toll stands at more than 3 700 Many of them civilians.
Now, after 13 months, a deal.
Reports suggest that the ceasefire is roughly based on UN Security Council resolution 1701, which brought to an end the last conflict between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006.
The first stage of the agreement will see the withdrawal of all Israeli forces from southern Lebanon within 60 days.
At the same time, Hezbollah will pull back its armed presence north of the Latani River.
That's about 16 miles from the Israel-Lebanon border.
The Lebanese army, along with existing UN peacekeepers, will then provide security in the buffer zone, with the US chairing a five-country committee to monitor any infringements of the agreement.
The US has also agreed to give Israel a letter of assurance that they will retain the freedom to strike Hezbollah if it poses a threat.
Something vital in trying to sell this ceasefire deal to those displaced by the conflict.
Most of them have spent months living in hotels like here in Haifa.
and they do not believe the threat of Hezbollah has gone.
We don't feel safe, and if we finish now, the weapon will stay there for the future Hezbollah people.
This is southern Lebanon today.
Israel's assault has left a wasteland where once there were villages.
For Netanyahu, he has successfully ravaged Hezbollah's military capabilities.
Hey, Suleiman, I know you're there.
Can you see my screen right now or nah?
On the Zoom call.
I can't see you, but I can see the...
Oh, okay, awesome.
You can see the screen.
You can see the screen then?
Yeah, yeah, I can see the play.
If you got commentary, bro, uh, then okay, great.
Uh the chat, can you guys hear Suleiman?
Good.
Uh I got him in on a zoom call.
Shout out to you Suleiman Joy.
Thank you for joining the show.
I know you've had a long long day, so I won't hold you on here too long.
Um we're watching this video right now.
But any comments you want to give to the to the people as far as like um what's going on here with this conflict.
Guys, give me ones if you guys can hear uh Suleiman.
Uh he's here on the show right now.
You guys can see him on audio.
Let me see if I can get his uh screen on here.
Uh but um but yeah, give me ones if y'all can hear him.
Okay, they can hear you, bro.
Go ahead, brother.
So uh you want to give come uh kind of your uh commentary on what's going on here?
Yeah, shots.
Do you want to like hear commentary of the like the reasoning behind the ceasefire deal?
Um yeah, we could we could yeah, we go in that I mean we're watching this this news thing right here, but uh if you want, I could keep playing it, or if you want to kind of give commentary off what you've heard already.
No, no, I don't mind either way.
Sorry, I wasn't concentrated before this.
Uh okay, I'll play this a little bit and then just tell me to pause if uh if something comes up that you want to talk about.
Who sounds great.
And killed its top leaders.
I'm gonna try to get you on screen too.
I don't have bills here, so I'm not as fancy with this thing, but I'm gonna try to get you as well so they can see you.
But at what cost to the Lebanese people stuck in the middle with any ceasefire potentially just a pause in a cold war, always on the edge of heating up and what of the source of this war?
Gaza.
Okay, they can see you now, Suleiman.
Where fresh rubble lies atop more than a year's worth of constant bombardment.
Talks of a ceasefire here are long forgotten.
And yet the need for an end to the war is as great as the desperate clamor for food in Han Ulysses.
Well, joining me now from Beirut is Lebanese MP and former Deputy Prime Minister.
Thanks so much for coming back on the program.
Go ahead.
That's an important point.
Because what they've said is talks of a ceasefire in Gaza are long forgotten.
And yet Israel agreed to a ceasefire in Lebanon.
And I'm gonna obviously develop this point a lot later.
But the point is now if you want.
You can go into you can go into it now.
Because they covered basically a lot of stuff now.
They're bringing in this guy to give his commentary.
So you can go ahead and cook, bro.
Go ahead.
Yeah, yeah.
So the point, the point here is what the what what the guy just mentioned is about a ceasefire in Palestine.
Now, what we know, and he said the ceasefire is long forgotten.
So what it means is that that's not something that they're even thinking about.
It's not something they're contemplating.
Yet we know, as me and you did that show on uh uh the five and a half hour show, that Hamas offered a ceasefire on October the 10th.
We also know that Hamas offered a ceasefire in a number of times throughout the year, I including a reported by Israeli news in June and in uh September, and yet those ceasefire talks were rejected.
Whereas on the other hand, with the Huzbollah, Hezbollah's always offered ceasefire talks as well because both the aims of both parties is peace uh in the region.
But the difference is this time Israel accepted it.
So the question becomes why did they accept this ceasefire and not the other one?
Because in both of them they've not achieved their objectives.
In Gaza, the objective was dismantle Hamas, return the hostages.
Not succeeded.
In Lebanon, the objective was to dismantle Hezbollah and to return the Israelis to the north.
They've not succeeded in those objectives, and yet they've agreed to a ceasefire.
So what's the reason why they've agreed to that ceasefire and not the other?
Obviously, I'm gonna develop this a lot later when when we speak, but the reason for it is for me, in my view, is that they've been losing significantly on the ground.
I came on your show at least a couple of times, I believe, maybe even more, where I said that Israel is suffering significant losses on the ground.
They've not been able to take the ground, they've not been able to take territory, and you saw it in terms of in the southeast and the southwest, they basically were losing.
They weren't able to gain territory.
Hundreds of sorry, hundreds upon hundreds, in my view, between 500 to a thousand Israeli soldiers have lost their lives.
Remember, in 2006 in Lebanon, it was about 120.
Tens of thousands of Israelis are injured in uh um in 2006, it was just a fraction of that.
And they gave up that war in about 33, 34 days.
And yet this time the same situation's occurred.
And if you see, over the last few weeks, not much has been heard or said about attempts by Israel to advance.
So they've been kept on the outs outskirts of the border, not being able to advance, losing significantly.
And so that's why I believe that they agreed to the ceasefire.
Now I have a map here.
Um, where are some of the areas?
I don't know if you can see my screen here.
Uh you can.
So where are some of the areas you uh that a lot of the can you see where it says Maroon al-Ras?
But yeah, exactly that.
So that's one of the main areas that they try to get into.
Do you remember when there was a video that came out and they said that um that they they said, oh, we've uh planted an Israeli flag.
Yes.
And then we exposed the fact that they hadn't actually gone into Maroon al-Ras.
they just on the edge.
Can you see where your pointer is, where your uh pointer is there?
Just the edge.
They basically had just managed to get to the edge behind the unified soldiers and planted the flag, but they hadn't got in gone into the center of Maroon al Ras.
So they lost a lot in Maroon al Ras, a bit more towards the right.
So if you go more towards that, yeah, more towards the right, there is other areas such as Yarun there, not too far away, they failed in that area.
Right here.
They failed in a number of areas in that in this region that your pointers in right now.
Okay.
Yarun.
And then if you go to completely to the left.
Okay.
A bit a bit more.
Okay, brilliant.
Can you see where it says Shalomi?
Yes.
Just go above that.
So just a bit more higher up.
So more north, more north, more north.
And then can you see where it says Nakura?
Yes.
So that's where they also went.
Do you remember when there was like three or four helicopters that came in to rescue them?
Yes.
That was there.
So that is um that is uh was a southwest.
So that was another region where they lost at least a hundred soldiers.
Wow, in casualties, not injury but injuries and casualties all in one in one day in one attempt at Nakura.
So you can see they tried in the northwestern region, they tried in the uh sorry, southwestern region, they tried in the southeastern regions, and they just failed, and they always went back.
So you can see the border, you can see you're right next to the border there, they've never been able to transplant past the border in a significant manner or hold any form of territory.
So they were losing really badly in uh in South Lebanon.
So let me ask you this.
Um, and I'm glad to have you here so I can ask this detailed question.
Did they launch simultaneous attacks into these three areas that we talked about were Nokura, um, and uh where was the other one?
Maroon al Ras and Yarun.
Maroon al Ras and then the other place that you that you had uh pointed out.
Did they try to go like some?
Can you see it on your just that there we go?
Yeah, that that's Yarun, that's the other place that they attempted and lost.
So Yaroun, I know it doesn't look like that on the map, but Yaroon is very mountainous.
Okay, and so remember, we always said like they're never gonna be they're gonna struggle to take that, and they did striggle, struggle to take it.
Very mountainous, very hilly, you know.
Basically, imagine you know the region really well.
Yeah, you have the mountains uh behind you, you're able to basically have a bit, you know, direct your attacks based on that.
You're not it's gonna be very hard for you.
You have to be some level of next level army, and even then I think you struggle.
Yeah, so they did they try to do each of these areas independently simultaneously at the same time, or did they like go uh you know put other people through, get fucked up, then try another place?
How did they do it?
Oh, it's a very good question.
So um it they were different uh regiments, so it wasn't the same battalions who tried the same different regions, okay, but it wasn't simultaneous, like they didn't try at the same time.
Although some days they did try and do Yarun and Maroon al Ras at the same time.
Gotcha.
Um, but yeah, it wasn't always the same.
But yeah, they just um they struggled.
And so if you saw in the last couple of weeks, we didn't even hear hardly any reports of them even attempting to go in.
Yeah, yeah.
So you think that they kind of have had been pulling out their troops for the past few weeks in in preparation of the ceasefire.
Well, I think what happened was they were put stopped their troops from going in because they were struggling and maybe trying to re-plan, re-strategize, and I think that's when they decided to basically agree to the ceasefire.
You know, and and that's kind of what I was thinking of myself too, because you know, me and you were discussing this earlier, but uh, you know, they were saying all the time, oh yeah, we're not gonna have a ceasefire with Gaza, fuck that, we're not gonna do it, we're not gonna stop.
Um, and this is with like this is with them being able to potentially get the the hostages back, but they said, No, we're not gonna stop doing what we're doing.
So I find it interesting that they're willing to come to the table and have a ceasefire with Lebanon, but they didn't want to have a ceasefire whatsoever with with um with with Hamas.
I mean, I know they had it.
There was a small period of time where they took a couple days where they didn't attack each other and they did a prisoner exchange, but um, you know, this tells me the fact that they were willing to come to the table and so quickly too, within two months, uh, that they were getting their asses kicked on the ground.
And and for those that are unaware, uh, the IDF is a very small military, man.
They cannot sustain the same level of casualty um as other more refined militaries.
You want to talk a little about that a little bit?
Yeah, um, so Not they're a very small military, and look, we like I uh well, we're honest about our assessment.
Like I think that in Gaza they have been able to dominate, hence they took certain areas.
I know there's certain people who claim that they're losing in Gaza as well.
Yeah, and also they definitely won in Gaza.
Sorry?
I was gonna say they definitely won in Gaza.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, one in the sense of on the ground, they've not been losing, yeah, but then they've not won in the sense of they've not achieved their objectives.
Yeah, so they've managed to like take certain land for sure, uh, but then not achieve their objectives, which was return the hostages and dismantle Hamas.
Still missing like 100, right?
From that mistake.
There's still at least 100 hostages, yeah.
Probably less because some of them have been killed by Israel, but yeah, the round about 100.
Yeah, and so what you're saying is really important because you basically have a scenario where Israel's army isn't that great when it comes to the actual soldiers.
I'm not talking about Mossad, I'm not talking about the intelligence agency.
I'm specifically talking about the army.
Yeah, even the US military when they analyze uh the conduct of, and I mentioned this on your show before, but when they analyze the conduct uh and ability of the Israeli army, it makes a number of significant flaws.
So not just based on the size, but just based on the competency.
In the 2006 war, they assessed their uh competency as very low, the decision making wasn't great, and they lost a lot of uh tanks and men based on certain bad decisions they made, such as scouting and you know uh bombing from the air.
They made the same mistakes in Gaza, but then Hamas weren't able to cast capitalize as much.
But obviously, Hezbollah were able to capitalize.
Now, so you've got a small army, and just think about it like where you zoomed out, you can see the red line, right, between them and uh uh northern Israel.
Yeah, so this people from northern Israel who basically left, but about around 60,000 people.
And Israel's aim was to return those people.
Now to return those people, well, you can see your pointer, they needed to take at a minimum, according to every single military analyst, they had to take about 25 kilometers in up until the Litani River, which is uh shit.
Where is the Latani River?
Is it is this right here?
No, it'll be where um so it's about 25 kilometers in no uh yeah.
I remember people talking about uh the uh Alma uh Al-Shab.
Did a lot of conflict come uh come around here as well?
There was some, but not much because again, um the main focuses were the towns and areas that I said.
Uh but there was there was obviously they did try and take some of the regions, but not um not all of them.
So the Litani River is like about 25 kilometers in.
Let me I'm trying to find it somewhere here.
But basically, to secure northern Israel the way that they wanted, they wouldn't need to take that river.
Yeah, they would have to take up to that river up to the Litani River, which is about 25 kilometers in.
And then some military analysts said that they need to take open till the uh Awali River, which is about 60 kilometers in.
So here here, okay.
So here's the Otani River.
I don't know why it won't.
Where the hell doesn't I'm trying to find it here, but it's basically can you see where it um so oh okay, right here.
It looks okay.
So let's go back to the next.
I was using my point about flipping, it's not working here.
But yeah, so it's just the basically that one there, the blue line.
You can look at it.
Yeah, and so they they said that they need to take up to that region, and obviously they clearly weren't able to take up to that region of 25 kilometers in, but then that's just at a minimum.
Actually, most military analys analysts said that maybe they need to even take up to the Awali River, which is even more further in, it's about 60 kilometers in.
And some even said that they need to take up until Beiru.
So Beirut is um yeah, way up.
So that's yeah, yeah, way up.
So this blue, so can you see this?
Yeah, that's Beirut.
Yeah, and then the Litani River is um so can you see where um so that can you see where it says uh Bedetin Palace, that's roughly where the Awali River is, and the uh uh um and the other river is just there, which is where where you showed where it's just near the border, then it goes up.
Yeah, so you can see it even goes uh past Marjoon and a few other places.
Yeah, and this is basically right here.
Yeah, so that map's a better one to show the viewers.
That one, and then if you go roughly about the same mountain up, is where the Awali River is.
Okay, so they would have had to at least take up to here, you would say my curse is pointing.
Okay, they would have had to take all this land of southern Lebanon uh and control it to actually secure the northern area of of Israel, because I'm assuming they what they evacuated all did they evacuate Haifa too or no?
They didn't they evacuated all of the north, and uh they didn't evacuate completely all of Haifa, there's still personnel people there, there's still civilians there as well as military bases.
Okay, but all this uh Shlomi.
Oh, yeah, nobody's in Shalomi now.
And I mean that Shalomi was basically um even before October, the October, even before the invasion, they'd already dismantled uh Shalomi.
That's the point.
So even before the invasion happened, Hezbollah were giving him so many problems that they'd already basically left uh um certain areas in Shalomi was one of them.
So where would you say here uh like uh does the ghost town begin?
Is it here Yorka?
Um uh Acri, uh like where would you say um pretty much it's it's gone?
Like the civil the the people aren't aren't there anymore?
So Fed.
Oh, yeah.
So I think with Akrate, if there still is uh uh some civilians still there, it's definitely Nahria, Shalomi, Kabri, uh um that whole region, that whole area, even including Yerka, and then from the other side, you've got Kiryat Chermona.
There's not many civilians there, it's merely military personnel.
You always see remember you see on the reports where they say oh Hezbollah's bombed Kiryas Romana, you can see there in the top top right.
Okay, um so um a bit more higher up uh near where above Maroon al Raso if you go 45 degrees um from where your pointer is.
Okay, you'll see you'll see it.
So it's here somewhere.
Oh, yeah, because there's all this as well.
Okay, so all this you would say, all this area here is pr probably fairly desolate.
Oh, yeah, it is for sure, yeah.
And so you basically got a scenario where they've left those regions, and so just like think about it from a military perspective, you need to take control over what's in Lebanon that has the border to that to be able to secure it to let your people in.
At a minimum up to the Litani River, but likely up to the Awali River, and possibly they said Beiru, but we even though they were like we're gonna take up to Baruch we we all knew that was not possible, it's just it was just not physically possible.
Remember, I called it very early on that they wouldn't get up to Beirut, they wouldn't even get up to um the Awali River, but never mind that they didn't even get to the Litani River.
Now, the point here is that they've not been able to secure it.
So that region now, according to the alleged agreement, which we don't know if there's the final agreement, but it is that region is not gonna be controlled by the Israelis, and nor is it gonna be controlled by Hezbollah.
So in reality, that region hasn't been secured, and you basically have a scenario where there's not gonna be safety, so it means the Israelis aren't gonna return home because why would they?
The risk is still there.
Yeah, yeah.
And and was a mer uh from what I understand, was one of the agreements on the ceasefire is that they would stop shooting rockets into these areas, right?
Yeah, yeah, both both sides, it's a complete ceasefire.
So it means Hezbollah no longer fire rockets, Israel no longer bomb and kill people in Beirut, which they've been doing consistently, Beirut and other cities, so all of that will be included in the ceasefire.
Now, the important question is this that why would Hezbollah agree to?
I think that's one of the questions a lot of people have asked.
Yeah, yeah, because Nasralla obviously, you know, he always said, Hey, until there's until you guys get out of Gaza, we're gonna keep bombing you.
Yeah, yeah.
And so the question becomes like, why did they agree?
So you just think I don't know I was thinking about this, and I was thinking about it from like a strategic perspective, and it makes too much sense that they made this decision, because you have to see, like, based on the map that you're showing your viewers, Lebanon is not directly linked or connected physically to Gaza.
Yeah, right.
So it means, or even on the West Bank, but Gaza's the important point here.
And so it means like if you was wanted to support the people of Gaza, you physically wouldn't be able to send troops there, right?
It's not like they've got air abil ability in the air to basically drop off soldiers, and we know what the logistical nightmare that would be.
And so physically you can't go into Gaza.
So if you physically can't go into Gaza, you know when you're using rockets, essentially a lot of them rockets are being stopped by the Iron Dome, and you're not wanting to harm civilians.
And then Israel at the same time is bombing your civilians and killing civilians in Beirut, leveling residential buildings, and then you have it where you're destroying them on the ground.
So if you're destroying them on the ground, but now they're not they're no longer coming forward.
So they're not doing an offensive against you because you need them to do the offensive to basically beat them, destroy them, and and take them out.
You basically can't go in the offensive.
Because I explained this on your show many a times and many other places.
My position is this that when you're the offensive army, it's very difficult for you to win under modern warfare warfare.
For sure.
So just like how I predicted that his bullah would dominate, if it was the other way around and his bullah was to invade into Israel, I think Israel Huzbullah would also struggle.
It wouldn't be easy.
Yep.
Right?
And so they can't go into Israel because you're gonna get dominated.
The whole point is you made them come in and you'd basically dominate them and destroy them.
Yeah.
And so you're left with you can't no longer take them out on the ground because they're not willing to come forward.
You can't go into Gaza because physically you can't basically go there because you're not connected to Gaza.
You can't um you can bomb Israel in terms of send rockets, but then they're literally killing your civilians in Beiru.
And so you're basically in a situation where it also makes sense to do a ceasefire, so they stop killing your civilians in Beiru.
Because what this achieves is the stopping of the bombardment of Beiru and various cities in Lebanon and people and Lebanese people dying.
So it seems like that's the reason for it because the other things are not achievable and they're not something that they could achieve, and therefore, by agreeing to the ceasefire, you're kind of ensuring that that doesn't happen if that makes sense.
No, no, it does.
It does.
I mean, uh, realistically speaking, right?
Yeah, they can't they can't go into Israel and actually help.
And you know, at this point, what would you say as far as like um where's where does Hamas stand right now?
Um, do you think that they're uh significantly destabilized at this point?
I mean, I'm under the impression that they're pretty much gone with a lot of their leadership, you know, pretty much dead now at this point.
Um, do you think they're still alive?
Uh one on uh you know, on life support?
What what what do you say?
Uh Hamas.
I'm talking about Hamas now.
Uh so Hamas um and that's what I'm saying.
Like, is it worth it to support and have people die in Lebanon on behalf of an organization that's pretty much the you know crippled and destabilized now?
Yeah, I don't think Hamas is crippled or destabilized.
I think Hamas in on the ground is actually functioning, and hence why Israel's not been able to take the hostages back.
What Israel obviously did was because they kill Yahya Sinwap.
You have to remember, like when they kill Yahya Sinwa, don't think of it as him them killing Yahya Sinwa.
Because Yaya Sinwa was basically acting as a soldier himself, he was on the front lines.
So just like you can kill any soldier on the front lines, that's basically what happened.
They didn't even know it was him, and they took a while to take him out.
So in reality, the Hamas is still functioning really well on the ground, hence why uh Israel has not been able to take the entirety of it.
Has Hamas has not been taken out.
That was one of the objectives, and they've and they've failed in that.
What they've been able to do is take certain areas where there is a huge number of civilians and starve those civilians, the remove uh food uh and uh humanitarian aid from them, take certain areas where there's civilians, but actually Hamas they're not being able to dismantle them.
And I don't believe that they'll be able to succeed in actually dismantling Hamas.
What they may be able to succeed in doing is obviously completely ethnic cleansing and genociding everyone, but not in terms of dismantling Hamas because Hamas is like an ideology which you just continue to grow.
Ah, okay, all right.
I I meant more as in like uh the the physical military personnel because Israel claims that they've killed between 16 and 20,000 of them, is what they're claiming.
They came up with that number because what happened was if you remember early on, they'd fail to kill hardly any Hamas members, and then we start exposing the fact that they'd killed 200 civilians for every one Hamas member.
Yep.
And when that when we start open exposing them for it, sorry.
No, no, no.
I remember that when people were um doing the math and figuring out.
I think it was you know some big names that put that out.
Uh you, Muhammad Hijab, etc.
That uh, you know, yeah, for every one Hamas fry, they were kidding killing 200 innocent people.
Exactly.
And so when that got exposed, that's when they basically said, Oh no, we've killed 10,000, 12,000.
What's the evidence?
Like, trust us, zero evidence to suggest that that had happened.
How are they able to know who's Hamas and who's a civilian?
So that's always been fake in terms of the numbers of Hamas.
You know what's funny?
Even Pierce Morgan asked one of the um Israeli spokespeople that said, We've killed 16,000 Hamas fighters, and he said, Okay, how many is some innocent people have you killed?
And they're like, and then he just like avoided the question, he didn't want to answer.
And Pierce was like, Well, if you know how many Hamas fighters fighters you've killed, by definition, you should know how many civilians you've killed, too.
And the guy that the spokesperson didn't want to answer the question for obvious reasons.
Yeah, 100%.
That was even they don't know either of them.
So even the like my position's always been the same.
Like, I don't even believe the Hamas ministry, you know, the number uh the Ministry of Health, which they call the Hamas Ministry of Health, their numbers, they say it's like what 45,000.
I don't think it's 45,000.
Lancet said 200,000.
I think it's probably higher than that now.
It's probably 300,000, 400,000 people being killed.
So how many Hamas members are being killed?
A very small proportion of them, if you look at it in terms of what it in terms of what happened.
And real quick, can you explain to my audience how you came to that 300,000 number?
Uh you know, they might say, Oh, this guy's crazy.
Like, how did you come to that number?
If you can explain to that, yeah, sure.
So Lancet did a study, uh, it's a basically an academic peer-reviewed journal.
It's called what Lance did was they basically said it's called Lancer?
Lancet.
Lancet, okay.
All right.
Yeah, yeah.
And they did an academic peer-reviewed uh study.
Now, don't worry, get me wrong, I'm not someone who says just because it's academic peer reviewed, I mean you should have to agree to it, but it gives some significance, much more significance than the statements of Israel, or even the Ministry of Health, because again, the Ministry of Health might want to minimize the numbers, and I think that this is what they're doing.
They're minimizing the numbers to not make people uh you know lose hope.
Now, when it comes to Lancet, they put certain mathematical models in place based on the level of bombing and bombardment that Israel has done, based on the fact that it's a dense populated area, based on the fact that the number of people they are, where they are located, where people were bombed, put all of those factors into place and said looking at everything that's happened, looking at all the people that are missing, likely at that point, this was a few months ago, there's at least 200,000 people who have been killed.
Now, since then, we've had months and months of even more bombardment, even more killing.
Every day there's 50 to 100 new people who've been killed.
So it would not be uh out there to suggest that actually that number is likely grown with the more significant bombardment to at least 300,000.
Wow.
Yeah, and I think it's uh like you said, it's very important to note that also there they have a bunch of missing people that they can't even confirm.
There'll be so many people who are missing who will be dead under the rubble who people weren't able to save.
There'll be so many people who are basically have lost their lives, who've not been registered.
It's it's it's it's I mean, we witnessed the biggest uh most worst genocide in our lifetimes.
Um, let me ask you this then, uh Suleiman.
Um, the international criminal court, the ICC, um uh Khan, if I'm not mistaken, the attorney, uh the prosecutor, he issued an arrest warrant for for Netanyahu.
Can you talk to uh my audience a little bit about how that arrest warrant came about, what grounds of evidence are they gonna use?
What are the actual charges that they're gonna use?
Um, if you're I don't know if you've done a space on it yet on Twitter, but I know you've been covering it.
Yeah, look, Karim Khan is from the UK, it's somebody who I don't like.
Okay, it's somebody who after October the 7th visited Israel.
Okay, and when he visited Israel, many people said, now wait a second, what are you doing in Israel?
This is a this was after questions of genocide had been stated, after what statements of war crimes had been stated.
Yeah, and so the question became why Kareem Khan, when you're meant to be an impartial observer, why are you going to Israel?
But with Netanyahu looking at what's happened in terms of October the 7th?
When you're meant to be impartial, that is those are crime scenes.
Why are you polluting?
Why are you showing non-biased?
Why are you showing non-objectivity?
He made some lame excuse, like, oh, he was just observing.
And then you saw throughout that he there were many questions raised like why is the ICC not asking for an arrest warrant?
They did it for Putin.
Why are they not doing it?
And this goes to my point that Netanyahu was always meant to be the fall guy.
And I think Karim Khan is doing their bidding.
That in reality, when all this is said and done, Netanyahu and Galant are likely gonna be the fall guys for all of this to wash Israel of all the crimes that they've condemned.
I think that too, man.
I'm just saying that for me.
They're gonna be the when this is all said and done, they're gonna need to hang somebody for this.
It's gonna be Netanyahu and Galan.
Yeah.
Which Kalan, he's not even the defense minister anymore, right?
Did he get fired?
He did get fired, yeah.
So he's not the defense minister.
But there is there is ICC arrest warrants against them.
So what that means is so uh it's someone I don't like Kareem Kant for that reason.
Okay, but just to show you.
So he's not biased, guys.
He's telling you guys, but he doesn't even like this guy, so he's gonna uh whatever he says, you could you know, obviously take it see uh tickets of the bed, probably.
And so despite that being the case, then we find out that there's some sexual assault allegations against him after he basically says that he's gonna do an arrest warrant against Netanyahu and come on.
I heard about that, yeah.
So this just shows you like the Zionist and the whole uh Epstein ring, and now I'm not saying this is part of the Epstein ring, but it shows how they do blackmail, how they accuse people of sexual assault, these are the ways they do it to manipulate control people and send people to trial.
Yep.
And so then the ICC arrest warrant was issued.
Now, what's interesting about the ICC arrest warrant is that it's only countries that are, and I'm not sure we did talk about it.
We had the Hamas uh lawyer on on our show who explained it.
Um, and so it's only countries that are signatories to the um Rome statute that have to arrest Netanyahu when he goes to the country.
Now USA isn't part of the Rome Statute, but UK is, and yet UK have said that they're not gonna arrest him.
Yeah, many countries have come out and said they will.
Um Italy said they would, I think, right?
Yeah, Italy, Spain, even Netherlands, even though Guess Wilder is a Jewish Zionist, even he said even their country said they will because they're forced to because they're part of the Rome statute.
And it's interesting that someone the America it's called the Rome Statute, you said, yeah, Rome.
Okay.
Sorry, I don't mean go ahead.
Yeah, and and it's interesting that America used this ICC arrest warrant against Putin.
People like Lindsay Graham who said, How great is the ICC for they are the arbiters of truth and justice for stopping someone like Netanyahu?
I mean, someone like Putin.
Yeah, and then immediately when this charge came on, then they were like, we need to sanction the ICC.
Yeah, they saw that he disbanded.
We've also had people for Romlands from the Trump administration that also say that that they might sanction the ICC.
And again, it demd that if it is the case, it again indicates that actually the deep state controls Trump.
So this whole idea, what's happened is look, if you look at it just from an average human person uh perspective, because we are obviously all of us are politically savvy, but the average person sees America or used to see America as someone who kind of fought for truth and justice, fought for morality, they went to war, but sometimes they'd be in the wrong or right.
What they've and they saw like other countries such as role um, such as Russia as the bad guy, China in terms of China and Taiwan, Taiwan as the bad guys.
Now America has lost all form of superiority when it comes to morality, when it comes to ethics, and so what they've done is destroyed America's credibility throughout the world.
Next time, if China wants to invade Taiwan, they can't say China is the bad guy, because people are gonna say, wait a second, you guys supported a genocide in Israel, you guys went against the ICC arrest warrants, you guys vetoed all of these situations that would have stopped the genocide.
So America's lost all credibility when it comes to the world.
And and and this is kind of the problem is that you know, us constantly running cover For Israel has absolutely hurt our credibility.
Absolutely.
You know, we you know, we're supposed to be looked at as the leaders of the free world, and how the hell can we call ourselves the leaders of the free world when we're constantly vetoing um you know the uh uh Palestinian state because Israel doesn't want it to happen, you know, at the at all these UN meetings.
So um, yeah, uh it's um if I'm not mistaken, the charges on the arrest warrant, what is it?
It's like um uh because they blew up their water sources, not bringing them food, obviously the indiscriminate bombing.
These are some of the charges that they're tr alleging in the uh in the in the for the arrest warrant, right?
Yeah, war crimes, starvation, um basically ethnic cleansing.
They basically have been charged for many for many of those things they said.
They did the Israelis did do an appeal, but the the court threw the appeal out because they appealed uh too early.
You have to appeal after the charge is in place, but then to appeal, then either Netanyahu needs to go to the Hague and make the appeal, or he needs to send a representative to the Hague to make the appeal, and then obviously that representative is representing him, and so there is some form of connection, and even he could get in trouble or arrested or something could happen.
So there is a bit of complexities to that, but yeah, the good I mean, what it means is Netanyahu isn't allowed in the vast majority of the of the free world.
Yeah, if I'm not mistaken, what 126 countries recognize the ICC, something like that.
126 countries said that they would arrest uh yeah, that's right, you're right.
126 countries and then maybe some outliers like you know, the U and the United Kingdom that you know they said that they wouldn't do it.
I mean, Keir Starmer is a very big um how the hell did he win, by the way?
I I he's like wildly unpopular.
How the hell did he win?
So I mean, I did come on your show and say, so I mean, I don't want to say I'm always right, but I'm always right.
So K Starmer was the Zionist choice, right?
He is a Zionist himself, yeah.
He's married to a Jewish Zionist, yeah, his children are Jewish Zionists, yeah, right.
He was someone who was just random, he was part of the uh he was a human humanitarian human rights lawyer, but he was chosen to be the leader of the uh uh of the labor party, and he was chosen to become the leader of the UK.
So he designers put him in control.
Jeremy Corbyn, who is a socialist, was actually meant to win, and the media made sure that he didn't win and they made sure that Boris Johnson won.
They placed K-Starmer on purpose.
He is their choice, but then you could ask the question where is that K-Starmer is their choice?
And he won overwhelmingly, he won like 400 seats.
It wasn't like a close win, it was even bigger than the win that Donald Trump had.
Just how we should understand how big a win it was.
Okay, from the British perspective.
Yeah, yeah.
So Donald Trump had what 320 seats, I believe.
Yeah.
Um, three uh electoral votes, and which was proportionally about 50-60% of the proportional uh of the about 60% of the uh electoral votes.
K Starmer had almost 70% of the electoral votes.
That's wild.
He just dominated because the media made sure that he won.
And they did it in a few different ways.
Because they Zionists control it.
What they did was they first of all conservatives are blamed for the genocide.
The second thing is what they did was Nigel Farage, who is right wing Islamophobe, so meant to be more right wing than even uh the conservatives, they perpetuated him.
But what did he do?
He split the conservative vote.
So where, for example, in certain areas, conservatives wouldn't want to see their vote got split, and then Labor wouldn't that vote.
Does that make sense?
Gotcha, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's like um, it's as if like uh let's say we had like uh Aran DeSantis running alongside Trump, and it was those two, and then against uh like a Kamala Harris.
Yeah, Kamala would have won, right?
Because Santos and Trump would have split the vote.
Yeah, I see what you mean.
I see what you mean now.
So that's basically what happened.
So they did that on purpose.
Because Nigel Farad was his party was non-existent, and then within once um Risi Sunak stepped down, which is the conservative leader who was the prime minister, the election was within four to eight weeks.
And what they did was they just randomly made Nigel Farage in charge, they perpetuated him, put him on the mainstream media, and they essentially intentionally cause this to happen.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Wow.
So they make K Starmer win, and then what they do is what happens?
You make K-Starmer win.
K Stama is basically right wing, right?
Even though he's part of labor, which is really left wing.
And what happens is the media starts then attacking him, saying this left wing guy, this is like UK media as well as world media.
So this left wing guy is doing all these horrible things.
What that does is that angers the right wing.
Do you remember Malcolm X said the right wing and the left wing, they work together.
The only difference is the right, the right are on your face, but the left are like foxes.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, yep.
So it's really like that.
They really work together.
So the left wing in a in uh in UK, which is K Starmer, if people think he's left wing, even though we know he's not.
And so that what that does is that angers the right even more.
And then they start attacking him even more.
And even the Zionists caused that.
So if you look at Tommy Robinson through his Zionist control, were perpetuating most of the right, uh, right wing Islamophobes.
And so you basically had a scenario where even people like Elon Musk, right wing commentators were all attacking K-Starmer.
But K Stama's the Zionist guy, but they're doing it on purpose to create this division within the UK.
And so you had it where basically the right wing did the riots.
The right wing, when I mean the right wing, I mean the right wing.
I remember that there's some Islamophobes, Tommy Robinson's crew, they did the riots, and I said to Nyosho at that time, do you remember?
I said these riots are done on purpose.
And what's gonna happen from them is that they're gonna censor speech and they're gonna come after the pro-Palestinian movement.
And since then, they've arrested many journalists who are pro-Palestinian, such as Richard Medhurst, Chuchis Sarah Wilkinson, such as um a couple of uh slip Asa Wynn Stanley uh and Craig Morioada we had on the space earlier on today when you were on, he was also uh arrested earlier on, although that was before the riots, and they're coming after all of us as well, they're coming after all of us, they're gonna be arresting all of us.
So this is the reason for it.
So when you see when I when I see people like Elon Musk and these right wing accounts, like Rebel News, these Israeli controlled accounts, attacking K Starman.
You think, wait a second, they're both Zionists because it's part of the game.
They want to cause this kind of division in these countries as much as possible.
Make people more extreme right, make people more extreme left, and that causes a huge amount of division.
Now, didn't they also have a um they had a petition to have a general election because they're so unhappy with with Starmer, right?
From that mistake, yeah.
In England.
I mean, it's just stupid.
Like, who cares about the petition?
Like two million two million people voted on the petition.
Who cares?
Nine million people voted for him.
Man.
So even though he didn't get 50% of the vote because the way the UK split and the electoral vote, I think he got like 30, 40% of the vote.
So it's not like he got a huge amount of the vote, but it's just that's the way the electoral corrid uh electoral courage works.
And with the conservatives and the uh and Farage's party splitting the vote, that's actually how he managed to win.
If they didn't split the vote, it would have been very close.
Wow.
Man, um well, now we kind of see how uh UK politics go.
But Kier Starmer already said, if I'm not mistaken, that if Netanyahu comes to the United Kingdom, he will not be honoring that arrest warrant, right?
Yeah, that's what he said.
That was the latest point he said.
Um I don't know what the latest news is, but then there was a uh British lawyers who said that they're gonna they're they did a like a I think it's a million-pound fund to basically litigate if this didn't happen.
So he might have reversed the decision.
I've not really checked it recently because I've been traveling quite a bit, but that was the last thing I heard.
But why it's important is this, and this is what's linked to you guys in America.
Yeah, just like you guys have Zionist control, you guys through APAC and through various Israeli lobbies, we have the exact same thing as well.
But the only difference is our politicians are a lot cheaper, they don't cost as much, and they put them in power, and people like K-Starmer, who is a Zionist controlled.
This is why whenever the Zionists attack them, always think why is a Zionist attacking a Zionist pick?
Because it's all part of the game to destroy Western civilization.
Interesting.
Okay, yeah, I mean, uh it's crazy that they were able to get this arrest warrant here just so they know like that they um issued arrest warrants on Hanaya and Yaya Sinwar and all these guys as well.
Obviously, they got killed.
Um, but you know, it's not like the ICC is um uh how do I say this, being prejudiced towards uh Israel, they absolutely um went ahead and got arrest warrants for all the members of Hamas as well.
Uh the time.
I mean, I would say they've been prejudiced against uh Palestine because if you look at the arrest warrants that they did against Yahya Sinwa, yeah, and you look at the arrest warrants that they did against Ismail Haniya, the reasoning was that they intentionally wanted to rape and massacre on October the 7th.
And yet me and you on our show debunked most of the propaganda that occurred on October the 7th.
Therefore, their arrest warrants are not based on fact.
In addition to that, Yahya Sinwa and Ismail Hanyah, based on their own words, have been very um precise in the fact that they what was the reason for October the 7th, it was a military operation, it was never to harm civilians.
So if you look at the reason for their arrest warrants, I would say is based on fallacious reasons.
And I would say they were biased towards the Israelis to throw them a bone to basically issue arrest warrants against Yahya Sinwa and Ismail Haniya.
Yeah, and I mean I would say if anything, uh the fact that they were able to get arrest warrants on Netanyahu, despite the fact that they, you know, were far less um, I guess coddling towards uh the Palestinian guys shows you that there's probably some basis.
They they basically they had to put their work in, they had to cross their T's and dot their I's to go at Netanyahu.
Obviously, when they know that sanctions might be a thing, obviously United States fighting this would be a thing.
Um Alan Dershowitz, right, famous attorney, he's already the guy Epstein's friend, by the way, Epstein's friend, defendant Mike Tyson.
Um he's uh going ahead and he's already like gathering a team to go ahead and try to fight this.
I saw um, I don't even know if he's even been retained by Netanyahu, by the way.
I just know that he's already um figuring out a ways to litigate against this.
So um, you know, by no mistake, uh, I don't think that the ICC issued this arrest warrant thinking, oh yeah, uh let's just do this because it's gonna benefit us.
If anything, I see I don't really see any upside for them on this.
You know, besides international pressure, of course, but um from a diplomatic uh uh diplomacy perspective, this is only gonna hurt them.
For sure, it's gonna hurt them and it's gonna, and but then I think what you said earlier and what what we both uh have been saying for a while is the aim is to make Netanyahu the fall guy.
So I think Israel will probably agree to it to an extent, or they might say, look, he's being charged in Israel, we'll let us uh put him through the criminal justice system in Israel.
They'll put him through that, maybe give him life sentence, put him in a cushy place, and then that way he's like, look, he's in prison anyway, so there's no need for the ICC.
They might do something like that, but he's definitely gonna be the fall guy.
Yeah, yeah, I just don't see him in power uh uh in the next 10 years.
I just don't see it.
I I think for Israel has a really bad um optic uh uh right now internationally, and the only way they would salvage it is they would need to bring in a new leader that's gonna be 100% an uh 180 from Netanyahu that's gonna say, you know what, yeah, we need to have a Palestinian state, say all the things that everybody wants to hear.
Whether he actually sticks to it or not is a whole other thing, but he needs to at least, you know, come in with that mindset of I'm not Benjamin Netanyahu, I I want to make peace with the Palestinians, I'm working on a two-state solution.
That's the only way I think that um Israel can repair the image that uh that Netanyahu is kind of created for them, which is you know, put them in a very bad light.
And you know, I don't think a lot of people understand that there's a lot of fighting going on in Israel.
Uh Netanyahu is widely unliked in Israel.
What widely unliked.
You know, a lot of people are complaining and saying that they don't think that he's doing enough to get the um hostages back.
Everybody knows that he had an opportunity to get the hostages back, and he didn't take these opportunities because he kind of wanna wanted to wait.
He was more focused on Hamas than actually getting the hostages back.
Um he got rid of Yoav Ghallant, which I think made him even more unpopular.
Can you talk a little bit about that with uh because it's been a while since we've spoken, so we we've given you guys everything, by the way, on this part, and then I'll let you go because you've had a long day, Suleiman.
But um, can you tell him a little bit about who you have Ghana is?
I I would say it's probably like the maybe the functional equivalent of our like Secretary of Defense, um, yeah here in the United States, head of the military.
Can you talk about who he is and then how this came about?
Yeah, of course.
I'll talk about that and just talk about your point because I think you just uh raised a very important point, which was about Netanyahu being disliked.
But what's important is that even before October the 7th, the Israelis were protesting against Netanyahu.
So Netanyahu is someone who's always been disliked by the Israeli public.
I mean, three months before October the 7th, I believe it was in July from the top of my uh memory, where there was a huge amount of riots against Netanyahu.
And the argument against him was that what he'd done was he'd changed the constitution and removed a lot of the power from their own their Supreme Court.
And so the argument, the Israeli public's argument against him was that he'd basically made himself into a dictator in Israel.
And the reason for that move, many argue, was that basically he wanted to use that power to save himself from the criminal charges that had been uh levied against him in Israel.
So these riots against Netanyahu happened well before October the 7th.
The only difference is after October the 7th, they had an additional reason for it, which was as you said, that they want the hostages returned.
And so Galan is someone that Netanyahu has always had issue with, but has had to keep him as part of the government.
Same way Ben Gavia, someone else that he's at issues with, but has had to keep them as part of the government because his government was never based on the majority, and therefore he needed them as part of a coalition.
An example is Ben Gavia threatening to basically separate from uh Netanyahu's government, and then him giving Ben Givia the National Guard, which is almost like a private army to basically oppress the Palestinian people.
So this happened well before October the 7th, and then this has continued after the October the 7th, where him and Galant have always been a log aheads, and many of the people writing have always been a lot more pro-Galant compared to Netanyahu.
Now, the argument is that there's different reports.
Some say that Galant wanted to be a lot more aggressive in terms of the return of the hostages.
Okay.
The other argument is that um what's his name again?
Netanyahu wanted to be a lot more aggressive in terms of militarily attacking Palestinian Gazans or according to him, Hamas.
So this was where the disagreement occurred.
Gotcha.
So Netanyahu was actually more uh wanted to be more aggressive, and Galant didn't want to be.
Yeah, Gilan wanted more focus on return of the hostages, more of an agreement on the return of the hostages.
That's not be Netanyahu's goal.
And so that was one of the reasons that um there were there was a huge disagreement about them.
That's why when you see the family of the hostages uh protesting against uh Netanyahu, a lot of times Galan, or at least once once or twice I remember Galan was actually with them on the protest.
Wow.
And that's that's that's huge.
Like that's the equivalent, like our Secretary of Defense is out there marching with protests against our president, guys.
That's a huge act of defiance.
Um so okay, so that that makes sense.
So Benjamin and Netanyahu wanted more militarization and more of an aggressive push and uh you know, on the basis of we're gonna attack Hamas versus Galant was look, let's focus on getting the hostages back.
If that involves a little bit of diplomacy and ceasefires, let's do that.
Versus, you know, we know Netanyahu, he never wanted a ceasefire ever.
Exactly, exactly.
And what the irony is that Galant's the military guy, so you would think that it would be easier.
I thought it'd be the other way around.
Yes.
But remember for Netanyahu, he's thinking about he's he's thinking I'm gonna go to prison anyway, and he's thinking actually, we know it's not it's gonna be a facade and he'll have something cushy, and he wants to leave a legacy, a legacy of a person who took Israel uh and made it into one state, removed Gaza, removed uh the West took the West Bank.
So he wants to leave that legacy.
He that's clearly what his objective is.
And so you're seeing that that he's enacting his uh goals in terms of what his personal goals are.
Wow.
Okay, shit.
Um, well, Sullivan, I don't want to hold you, man.
Uh, you've had I know you're tired, you've had a long day.
You guys are over there, it's probably like three or four uh four in the morning.
So yeah, it is, it's almost 3 a.m.
Yeah, and I live I just came back from Canada, so yeah.
So you're probably tired, man.
Thank you so much for coming on and uh giving us uh a great play by play between uh the conflict going on, the ground war in Lebanon uh with the IDF and then you know the ICC breaking down uh Yoav Ghulan getting fired, and then obviously the protests with the with the IDF guys.
I saw them marching in the streets uh from your tweets.
Guys, go check them out.
Where can the people find you, Suleiman?
Uh, you can find me on Twitter, which is uh Sheikh Sullivan S H A Y K H and Suleiman S-U-L-A-I-M-A-N.
And then I do a regular YouTube show, which uh I'm gonna start back up tomorrow.
I just had a bit of a break while I was uh traveling, which is called Suleiman, was it unfiltered on YouTube, which is Suleiman Unfiltered on YouTube, and we do it at 11 p.m.
UK, which is 6 p.m.
Eastern.
Yeah, and I'm gonna pull it up right now and show the people.
Uh are you mostly because you you stream everywhere, right?
When you do this, yeah, I stream on uh YouTube and Kick.
So I do like the first hour where I do a monologue on YouTube and speak to some of the uh, you know, Just go through the different issues.
And then when I go to kick, then I do the commentaries and you know whatever videos are going around and these type of things.
And guys, here's this channel right here, man.
Uh, let's help him get to 30,000 subscribers.
Uh, let me move my face out the way.
Uh my bad, because I'm sharing screen right now.
Here's this channel right here, guys.
Soliman on filter, check them out.
He's everywhere.
Uh you're on uh Twitch, Kick, YouTube.
Are you on Rumble too?
Yeah, I don't really use Rumble anymore.
Um this is mainly uh mainly YouTube and kick out there.
All right, just be careful, bro.
Because kickers uh they're trying to limit um speech on politics.
They don't Yeah, yeah.
I want to see how far I can go because I try and be precise with my word, uh verbiage and terminology.
So let's see, let's see what happens if they're gonna kick us off or not.
Yeah, all right.
Well, no, bro.
You take it easy, man.
Get uh get some rest, and I'll I'll talk with you.
Thank you so much for having me.
Peace.
Thanks a lot.
Bye-bye.
All right.
Um W Soleiman gonna give you Marco for coming on the show.
It's always great.
Uh, we'll finish watching this news thing here, guys, and then we will get into um the Twitter stuff, which I might have to switch over to Rumble for that.
I ain't gonna lie to y'all.
So the bombing is still going on in Lebanon, perhaps even in Beirut.
How does it feel to be bombed into a ceasefire?
Yeah, this is basically a ceasefire under fire.
Uh these are the last hours before any potential declaration uh in the early hours of the morning, uh, tomorrow morning of uh an agreement.
Uh this is pretty much an agreement predominantly between Hezbollah and Israel, uh, also covered by uh parts of the Lebanese government uh under uh a certain process uh and sponsored by uh the US and various other countries.
Uh hopefully that it would lead to a more permanent solution.
Also, guys, do me a quick favor, bro.
Um, we got what, 913 of you guys watching on YouTube?
Guys, do me a favor, like the video on YouTube.
We we um I I'm realizing that we need to focus more on getting our engagement up on YouTube.
So if you're watching right now on um on Fresh and Fit, like the video real quick.
Because as you guys know, we split our audience, which you know everyone says that's a very foolish thing to do, which it kind of is, I ain't gonna lie to y'all.
But you know, it is what it is.
It comes with uh the territory of being uh demonetized, which kind of sucks, but you know, it is what it is.
And quick, also, guys, once again, quick announcements.
Like the video on YouTube.
That's number one, right?
Number two, Black Friday sale going on this week, guys.
If you want to go ahead and get into Castle Club and get DMs on demand, now's your chance.
You can go ahead, you got three options.
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Now's your chance.
You can get a year of Castle Club and DMs on demand together.
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And or third tier is if you're already at Castle Club Premium, congratulations.
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So join Cal's Club Premium, guys.
Okay, join in.
Uh, I gotta put the link in there for you guys, so you guys go ahead.
I'll I'll put uh put in the description for you guys below.
But uh, let's keep reacting to this thing.
Uh later on, right.
So it gives you some breathing space.
Is it enough to allow Lebanon with all its incredible economic difficulties to rebuild to become a viable state again?
Well, the ceasefire for two months is more of a trial period to ensure the implementation of uh UN resolution 1701, practically, and this is basically what it practically is all about.
Definitely, as we've been hearing on the Lebanese side uh from the displaced people, as well as on the Israeli side, that people are still a bit cautious uh about returning home, about going back to normal life until this becomes a permanent situation.
So it's a very fragile ceasefire given the conditions that have been put in place, but nevertheless, it's a practical implementation of UN Resolution 1701 that was effectively uh voted on almost 18 years ago, uh, after the Israeli uh war in 2000.
Links are in the description right now, guys.
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2006.
Hezbollah has been severely weakened by uh the Israeli onslaught of recent months.
Do you welcome the fact that Hezbollah has been put into a box?
Well, we were actually hoping and we called for as the opposition uh parties in Lebanon uh for a uh peaceful implementation of uh UN resolutions, uh particularly 1701 and 1559 that called for the withdrawal from the south of the Litania River, dismantling the military capabilities and the handover of weapons to the legitimate and sovereign Lebanese armed forces to be all under the Lebanese government uh sovereign government umbrella.
Uh yet the these calls were were never met today.
Uh unfortunately, they had to be done uh in in such difficult circumstances with such huge losses to the Lebanese people, the Lebanese economy.
Um and we're going back to something that was agreed upon back in 2006.
So at least uh let's hope that something positive will come out of this with all the unfortunate uh losses of lives.
I gave you guys the premium link.
I just pinned it on uh fresh and fit.
Also, do it on um do it on the Fed reacts as well.
So, yeah.
And property and economic losses as well.
And finally, and briefly, you are going to live under the constant potential threat of Israeli bombardment, should Hezrah, Hezbollah try something on again, as the Prime Minister said just a few minutes ago.
How does that feel?
I mean, as a former deputy prime minister as a member of the parliament, how does it feel to have that constant Israeli threat hanging over you?
Well, this has always been the case to a large extent, except that uh the uh bombardment hasn't happened so frequently.
It uh it used to happen, you know, violations of airspace have happened uh most of the time uh in the past and many times in the past, but definitely this is uh an issue with with the sovereignty of the country.
We were hoping as a sovereign uh state would actually be able to implement you and resolution so that it would retain its sovereignty.
The sovereignty was breached by the existence of Hezbollah and the support of Iran uh militarily to Hezbollah for many many years as well on Lebanese territory, and so was the Israeli overflights and uh interference every now and then.
So if this period is only a temporary period to ensure that uh the agreement stands, this would eventually I'm gonna read uh read some of the chats here, guys.
Um we got here from FNF Super Chat goes uh for 18.
This is from ASAP MF goes for 1811 career and me being a recently graduated civil engineer, no Arabic and learning Russian and Chinese.
What is the best pass uh best pass uh best path I can follow?
One year PD after a year of my current ending job, also as my short uh ninja stature of five for an issue.
No, being 5'4, you'll be fine, you can still get a job.
Um, but knowing Arabic is great, that's gonna help you a lot, bro.
I would say obviously apply for every law enforcement job that you can.
Um, and here it's you know, just because I got you guys on here, I want to show you ninja some value.
This is what you do.
You're gonna go US jobs, right?gov or USA jobs that sorry, USA jobs.com, whatever, or dot gov, whatever.
You're gonna type in 1811.
Boom.
All the special agent jobs are right here.
Office of inspector general, IRS.
Let's go ahead and make this a little bit bigger for you, Ninja, so you can see what I'm seeing.
Right.
Um IRS, IRS, right?
And these are yeah, starting at yeah, so a GL7, boom.
So this is um, this is uh an entry level, right?
Uh you got IRS supervisory special agent, more IRS, IRS, DEA.
Boom.
Um starting at 47.
This entry level for the uh for DEA, right?
Uh DSS.
Right.
Um, US Marine Corps.
Crom investigator, hmm.
What the fuck position would this be?
Conduct physical evidence.
This is probably NCIS, is what I'm assuming.
It's gotta be NCIS.
US Marine Corps?
Yeah, probably NCIS.
Okay.
Um US Secret Service, boom.
Re employed and knew it and I see what the fuck I can't bother.
Okay, single retirees of the federal uh first or civil service to support our integrated mission and impartial uh and important knowledge and experience to the current workforce criminal investigator.
This game's position is perform critical protective investigative assignments.
Boom.
Okay.
So clarification of the vacancy.
We're eligible for re-employment as federal uh in New It and previously work for United States Secret Service and Federal Interagency Career Program.
Okay.
So they want retirees here.
Interesting.
Okay.
Um investigator.
This Secret Service again.
U.S. Agency for International International Development.
Okay.
Department of Energy.
Uh U.S. agency.
Okay.
So look, there's a bunch of shit here.
Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Boom.
FBI, right?
They have always they're always um, you know, they always have openings, FBI.
Uh so healthcare medicine.
Yeah.
So this is depending on the background that you have, right?
So special agent education teaching background, accounting, finance background.
So yeah.
FBI's gotten quite a bit of a fucking black eye publicly, man.
But yeah.
So there you go, my friend.
Hey guys, go ahead and get your chats in.
You guys got any questions?
Fnf Super Chat.com.
Link is right down there below for you, ninjas.
So you guys can see.
Fnf Super Chat.com.
Right.
Uh and also, guys, do me a favor.
Uh, don't forget to follow me on all the social media platforms.
Myron Gaines X on Twitter and on Instagram.
Okay.
Twitter and Instagram.
That's where to find me.
are we going crazy on next i'm cooking need to a withdrawal of the israelis and a more permanent And let's hope we will get to that eventually.
Rats and Hasbani.
Thank you very much indeed.
Well, I'm now joined by Miri Isin, who's a retired colonel from the Israeli defense force.
She worked with Prime Minister Ehud Olmet during the last Lebanon board.
I put the link also in Castle Club for you guys as well for the Castle Club Ninjas.
I want you guys to upgrade to premium and get in there because you guys are gonna get a lot of value.
And matter of fact, uh, if you guys join and Castle Club, just send a picture of the receipt that you joined Castle Club Premium, and what you know, anything that you type for the rest of the show, I got y'all.
I'll I'll like read it and shit like that.
So you won't have to super chat.
Take that money and donate it uh or put it into premium.
Okay, we got here.
Uh let me look at some of these chats.
View tipped.
Okay.
Uh Whiskey says, hey Myron, I made a mistake on Casclub.
I've been member for a while now, since 17 a month.
I was trying to upgrade to premium for the crypto knowledge, but I accidentally paid for the regular Casal Club instead of the premium.
I tried to pay for the premium once.
I realized my mistake and it says no longer available by a message, noble, no response.
I'm trying to get into premium.
Uh bro, you should be able to get into premium, no problem.
Oh, you paid for the regular cows club instead of the premium.
Yeah, okay.
All right.
Damn.
Okay.
So just go ahead and um I'll take a picture of this chat for you, uh, whiskey, and tell Noble, but just pay for the premium now and uh, and I'll tell him uh to watch out for you.
I'm gonna send him a I'm gonna literally take a screenshot of this right now.
Whiskey.
But yeah, just get the premium now, bro.
That way you could take advantage because we only have this offer for this week.
All right.
Literally, I'm gonna tell him, hey, can you help this guy out?
Help whiskey.
He accidentally bought.
Look at this customer service right on the air.
Yeah, guys, we have two separate links.
What we got one for Cows Club, then we got one for premium.
Which I got the premium one uh pinned in the chats right now.
Let me go ahead and put it in here for rumble for you ninjas as well.
All right, uh, Jesus the kid says, just listen to the space we had with Tommy at Sam Parker.
When Sam called the name of his pre-americus, that shit had me dead.
Makes sense though.
No, and Billy says, just hit my PR squat, 430 pounds, W hitting the gym and finding your limits that need to be broken.
All right, good.
Uh no, Billy, make sure you're using good form, though, bro.
It doesn't matter if it's if it's uh because 430 is really good, but make sure it's good form.
Uh when you see a Zerka again, I'm bringing him on the pod.
Uh, I don't know.
I don't even think he's in a in the North America right now, Bro.
Be honest with you.
Yo, anything uh since this is a night train show, before I don't want to cut to Rumble just yet.
So guys, what do you guys want to see?
What do you guys want me to react to?
Tell me, and we'll uh we'll um I'll take a poll or something like that.
So yeah, go ahead and um let me know what y'all ninjas want to see.
Or and is now a fellow at the International Institute for Counterterrorism.
Thank you very much to you, Mary Ison for coming back on our program.
Let me start first of all with this.
Do you think the Israeli government agreed to this ceasefire because they were running out of ammunition as the Prime Minister indicated today, or because Jake Damola says WFNF News.
Appreciate that, bro, from Rumble.
The Americans were putting pressure on them.
And Jake Demullah became a monthly member.
Shout out to you, bro, on uh Rumble.
I don't think that the two actually contradict, and I'll add in that nobody here wants a war, Matt.
This isn't about something that we want it to go on forever.
It's a question of what you can continue to achieve both against Gizbala inside Lebanon right now without at the end really completely destroying this country called Lebanon that hosts them.
And listening to Mr. Khazbani before, it's really that challenge of Kizbala being in Lebanon.
They are Lebanese, they are Arabic, they are they speak they speak Arabic, and so for us, it's not about Lebanon.
Uh got a chat here from um Al B. Celeste says, Thank you for all you do, Myron.
You have given a voice to so many, and your love for your fellow man is brothers is as palpable.
Appreciate that.
Um you actually want to see men win.
Only gratitude for you.
I appreciate that, bro.
I really do.
Uh Myron, are computer science majors cooked?
Okay, this from Meyrenstein.
Not only is a job market exceptionally competitive, but it seems in the next five to ten years, um, AI will automate everything.
What would you do as a CS major today?
That means you just have to be um better than the AI, bro.
Doesn't mean that it's out of anything with all the AI, they're gonna need people to program it.
Uh Gold Aura says, No, I'm about to make 70k as a truck driver in a few, and I didn't know if FHA or a trucky business was the right route.
I have active income from that.
Yeah, no, bro.
Become the truck driver, make the money, and then you invest into the real estate, bro.
It's about and what you can achieve.
But the Prime Minister, next to you now, that is also just said that they will now focus more again on Hamas and also on Iran.
What does that mean?
Do you think focusing on Iran?
The Prime Minister has been very guys.
Super chat, what you guys want me to react to next, because they see a bunch of stuff here.
Put your money where your mouth is, FNF Super Chat.com.
Again, just a quick little announcement.
If you're watching the show on YouTube, FNF Super Chat.com, guys.
You guys know we're demonetized, so you want to go ahead and get your donations in, be involved in the show.
FNF Super Chat.com.
35 bucks, I think makes it text a speech if I'm not mistaken.
Uh Bill setup, so I don't know.
So that is how you um get involved in a show if you're watching on YouTube.
If you're watching on Rumble, Rumble rants in.
If you're watching a cast club, which is the best place to watch, by the way, um, send in a donation through Cass Club and tell me what you guys want me to react to.
Um keep in mind that we are gonna be on YouTube for a bit, so that's why I uh, you know, we can't go too crazy.
Um I might do uh a certain meeting with our boy Tommy later on.
That will have to be on Rumble though.
Um and we'll move everything over there.
Uh but let's see here.
What else?
Yo, Super Chat is offline.
We can't donate.
No, bro, it works.
What do you mean?
It works.
Guys have been donating uh here.
So you can fnf super chat.com absolutely works, my friend.
Yeah, FNF Super Chat.com.
Boom.
There you go.
Just literally link that and you're good.
Yeah, if I do a clan meeting, that's gonna have to be on uh Rumble chat.
Obviously can't do that on um, obviously can't do that on fucking um on on YouTube, bruh.
So we gotta have to wait a little bit.
So yeah, but send in your chats, guys uh for the next topic.
All right, clan meeting will be on Rumble.
Can you play your favorite song?
Manchaka.
I'm on YouTube.
Maybe on Rumble, I will.
Uh I tried upgrading a premium earlier, it denied me, but it charged me payment the less.
Uh Tad, uh the thing is if it denies you, then it's not gonna charge you.
That that might have been Noble has to accept you in.
Tad, give me your uh here.
Let me I'm gonna send Ted send put your like your email or some shit so I can see tell Noble to approve you.
Tad Berlin, Berline.
You can put your email.
Uh react to Russia-Ukraine war?
Yeah, we could.
Let's finish and see what uh you know this is Jack Gappin.
Let's see here.
Let's see what's the latest with this.
Alright, so let's see what Trump got to say.
The president-elect has been very concerned about the escalation and where it's on.
Yeah, I don't know what the hell Biden's trying to do here, man.
I don't know if he's trying to sabotage Trump's, you know, presidency or what?
But yeah.
All going.
Uh if if you know North Korea has made this move, we have made a move, Russia has now responded.
Iran is involved, South Korea's thinking about getting involved.
Uh our allies have now uh, you know, uh extended the range of their uh missiles as well.
So we need to we need to bring this to a responsible end.
All right, Donald Trump is very concerned about the escalation of the Russian Ukraine conflict according to his National Security Advisor pick Mike Waltz.
I believe I will be able to make a deal between President Putin and President Zelensky quite quickly.
Russia would have never attacked Ukraine.
Would have never done it.
Putin and I get along fine.
We get along very well.
That's a good thing.
No, that's the regular castle club between the sides.
Castle Club Premium, uh guys, I'll put the chat link is there.
Link is right there, guys, for you guys.
Castle Club Premium.
Put it in there at Cal's Club for you guys right now.
*music*
President Trump has been very clear about the need to end this conflict.
And so what we're uh need to be discussing is who's at that table, uh, whether it's an agreement, an armistice, uh, how to get both sides to the table, and then what's the framework of a deal?
Uh that's what we'll be uh working with this administration until January and and then beyond.
And I also want to be clear on one thing, uh, Jillian.
Uh Jake and I, Jake Sullivan and I have have had discussions, we've met.
Uh for our adversaries out there that think this is a a time of opportunity that they can play one administration off the other.
Uh they're wrong.
Uh and uh we are we are hand in glove.
We are we are one team uh with the United States in this transition.
All right, let me see if we can find a better one.
Sky News, y'all niggas trash.
Sky News, y'all niggas trash.
Warnings from across the world.
Ukraine's former military commander in chief says we can absolutely believe that the third world war has begun.
Poland's prime minister says the conflict is taking on dramatic proportions.
And guys, what we're gonna do is I'm gonna end the Fed React stream right now.
So come on over to uh Fresh and Fit if you guys are watching on Fed Reacts, because I know y'all ninjas love YouTube.
So uh I'm gonna go ahead and drop the fresh and fit link for you guys.
We're gonna end the Fed Reacts one since now we're going into the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
So um come on over.
Ninjas.
Fred React chat.
Link is there for you guys.
gonna end the Fed React stream right now.
Spamming it in there.
Join the Fresh and Fit one.
All right.
Join the Fresh and Fit one.
let's get that thing going Come on over, guys.
I'm gonna end the Fed React stream now.
Watching on Fed Reacts.
Love y'all ninjas.
We're gonna end it here.
Come on over to Fresh and Fit on YouTube.
Drop the link in the chat for you guys.
Three different times.
That makes four now.
Love you guys.
are going to end it there All right.
So now we're also live on uh an Xtreme counter.
Yeah, I I don't know how to do the Xtreme counter, guys.