This Week In Palestine

TWIP-260607 Drowning Borders, Rising Questions

59 min · 7 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio TWIP-260607 Drowning Borders, Rising Questions

Descripción

Chaos in the Gulf did not appear out of thin air.  It did not rise like a sudden storm.  It is the result of choices, our choices, the architecture of a foreign policy that treated the region like a chessboard and assumed the pieces would never push back. Today, the Gulf is trembling because we helped build the conditions for that tremble.  We placed bases everywhere, promised protection to everyone, and then acted shocked when the region caught fire from sparks we helped scatter. And while the Gulf braces itself, the real blaze is still in the north, in Lebanon. Lebanon is holding the line in a way the world did not expect.  Hezbollah’s drones, missiles, and ground units have forced Israel into a defensive crouch.  Northern towns emptied.  Military bases struck.  Commanders admitting, reluctantly, that they misread the northern front. The videos describe Israel as “غارق,” drowning.  Not metaphorically.  Strategically.  Every day brings new losses, new failures, new panic inside the Israeli establishment. And yet, even as the region shakes, Israel continues to act as if it is above consequence, above accountability, above the law. Which brings us to Mahmoud Al Najjar. A young man arrested not because he posed a threat, not because he committed a crime, but because Israel has grown accustomed to doing whatever it wants, whenever it wants, to whomever it wants, without hesitation, without oversight, without the slightest consideration for human rights or international law. His arrest is not an isolated incident.  It is a symptom of a system that believes Palestinian lives are disposable, that Palestinian futures can be erased with a signature, that Palestinian voices can be silenced with a knock on the door at dawn. This is the reality we confront every week.  A reality shaped by power without restraint. And now, as the region shifts, as alliances wobble, as the world begins to question what it once accepted blindly, a new question rises: Will the United States and Israel attempt to merge their militaries into one? Because when influence fades, when support weakens, when the political winds change, the next move is always the same.  Bind the systems together so tightly that separation becomes impossible. That is the chapter unfolding now.  That is the story we step into today. If you have thoughts, I want to hear them.  Email me at TWIPpodcasts@gmail.com and tell me how you see it. This is This Week in Palestine.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de This Week In Palestine!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

73 episodios

Portada del episodio TWIP-260628 Where Does the World Go From Here?

TWIP-260628 Where Does the World Go From Here?

The war that was never supposed to end became the foundation of an entire political empire. A war stretched across decades, fueled by fear, sustained by ambition, and kept alive by leaders who understood that conflict can be the most profitable currency of all. Israel and Netanyahu built their power on that endless war — a war that pulled America into battles it never needed, never wanted, and never fully understood. But then came the deal that broke the alliance. A moment when Washington shifted, when diplomacy dared to challenge the machinery of escalation, when the promise of peace threatened the very structure that had kept certain leaders untouchable. And the reaction was immediate: outrage, betrayal, political knives drawn in every direction. Because peace, for some, is more dangerous than war. Then came the unmasking of Israeli officials. For the first time, the world watched them confronted on air, pressed by journalists who refused to bow, exposed in real time as their talking points collapsed under evidence. The shield of silence cracked, and the world saw what Palestinians have been saying for generations. And now we enter the media war — a battlefield where narratives collide, where truth fights for oxygen, where propaganda is no longer guaranteed victory. Anchors challenge. Audiences question. Officials stumble. The old script is failing. And in the middle of this chaos stands Donald Trump, spiraling into what many describe as political hallucinations. A man who once believed he controlled the board now realizes he was only a piece in someone else’s game. He is watching allies turn into enemies, watching donors vanish, watching the consequences of his own choices close in from every direction. So where is the world heading now? Toward accountability? Toward collapse? Toward a new order? Or toward a storm none of us are prepared for? The answer is not clear. And maybe that is the most honest place to begin. If you have thoughts, I want to hear them.  Email me at TWIPpodcasts@gmail.com and tell me how you see it. This is This Week in Palestine.

Ayer1 h 5 min
Portada del episodio TWIP-260621 When the Mask Falls: Israel, Influence, and the Turning Tide

TWIP-260621 When the Mask Falls: Israel, Influence, and the Turning Tide

Israel and Netanyahu spent years shaping Donald Trump’s worldview, nudging him step by step toward confrontation with Iran, convincing him that war was strategy, that escalation was strength, that their enemies must become America’s enemies too.  But the moment he shifted course, the moment he opened the door to a peace process, the same forces that once praised him turned against him without hesitation.  The donors, the influencers, the political allies, the lobbyists, the media voices in Tel Aviv, all recoiled as if peace itself were a threat to their power.  And while Trump tried to de‑escalate, Israel kept striking Lebanon, each bombing run a spark thrown toward Iran, each explosion an attempt to reignite a war the region cannot survive.  Meanwhile, Danny Danon walked into the United Nations expecting the old deference, only to be met with a wall of outrage, a global audience no longer willing to swallow the lies or excuse the brutality.  The world is changing, and Israel’s narrative is cracking under the weight of its own actions.  Danon could not charm his way out, could not shout his way out, could not spin his way out.  The room saw him clearly, and clarity is something Israel’s leadership has feared for decades.  And as we watch this shift unfold, we are left with a haunting truth.  The United States could have built real alliances, real trust, real partnerships across the world if it had simply stood for the values it claims to champion.  Freedom for all.  Justice for all.  Dignity for all.  Not selectively.  Not strategically.  But universally. If you have thoughts, I want to hear them.  Email me at TWIPpodcasts@gmail.com and tell me how you see it. This is This Week in Palestine.

21 de jun de 20261 h 1 min
Portada del episodio TWIP-260614 Born Into the Lie, Fighting for the Truth

TWIP-260614 Born Into the Lie, Fighting for the Truth

Some people are born into truth.  Others are born into stories, stories so powerful and so carefully constructed that they become a kind of inheritance.  And then there are those rare few who grow up inside the wrong environment, inside the wrong narrative, inside the wrong version of history, and still find the courage to walk out of it. This is the story of a man who did exactly that. Miko Peled was not raised on the margins.  He was not raised in resistance.  He was not raised in the shadow of occupation.  He was raised at the very heart of the Zionist project, the grandson of one of Israel's founding generals, the son of a decorated military officer, a child of privilege, power, and national mythology. He grew up in a world where the story was simple:  Israel was righteous.  Israel was threatened.  Israel was the victim.  And Palestinians were the problem. This was the air he breathed.  This was the language spoken at the dinner table.  This was the narrative etched into the family legacy. But sometimes, even in the most controlled environments, truth finds a crack. For Miko, that crack began with questions, small at first, then louder, then impossible to ignore.  Questions about the occupation.  Questions about the checkpoints.  Questions about the walls, the raids, the demolitions.  Questions about why a people who claimed to seek safety built their safety on the ruins of another people's homeland. And then came the moment that shattered the myth completely:  the killing of his niece in a suicide bombing, a tragedy that could have pushed him deeper into hatred, deeper into nationalism, deeper into the story he inherited. But instead, it pushed him toward truth. He began to see what so many inside the system never see:  that violence is not born in a vacuum,  that oppression breeds resistance,  that occupation is the root,  and that the story he was raised on was not history, it was propaganda. Miko Peled did what few with his background ever do.  He crossed the line.  He walked into Palestinian communities.  He listened to Palestinian families.  He studied the archives, the testimonies, the erased histories.  He confronted the lies he inherited and dismantled them piece by piece. And in that journey, he discovered a truth so powerful that it changed the course of his life: The project he was born into, the Zionist project, is collapsing. Not because of Palestinians alone.  Not because of resistance alone.  But because a state built on dispossession, segregation, and endless war cannot survive forever. When Miko Peled says, "This is the end of Israel," he is not speaking as an outsider.  He is speaking as someone who knows the system from within, its fears, its fractures, its illusions, its moral decay. He speaks of an Israel that cannot sustain its occupation.  An Israel that cannot justify its violence.  An Israel that cannot silence the truth anymore.  An Israel that is losing legitimacy, losing allies, losing its own moral center. He speaks of a society cracking under the weight of its own contradictions,  a society that claims democracy while ruling millions without rights,  a society that claims morality while bombing civilians,  a society that claims security while creating endless insecurity. And he speaks of a future where justice is no longer a dream,  where the myth collapses,  where the truth rises,  and where the land belongs to all who live on it, equally, freely, without walls or checkpoints or military rule. Miko Peled's journey is not just a personal transformation.  It is a symbol, a reminder that even those raised inside the machinery of oppression can break free from it.  A reminder that truth has a way of finding those willing to see it.  A reminder that the end of injustice often begins with the courage of a single voice. Today, we bring you that voice, not as a guest, not as a commentator, but as a witness.  A witness to a collapsing system.  A witness to a shifting reality.  A witness to the truth that was buried for decades. This is This Week in Palestine.  And this is the story of the man who walked out of the myth and into the fight for justice. If you have thoughts, I want to hear them.  Email me at TWIPpodcasts@gmail.com and tell me how you see it. This is This Week in Palestine.

14 de jun de 20261 h 17 min
Portada del episodio TWIP-260607 Drowning Borders, Rising Questions

TWIP-260607 Drowning Borders, Rising Questions

Chaos in the Gulf did not appear out of thin air.  It did not rise like a sudden storm.  It is the result of choices, our choices, the architecture of a foreign policy that treated the region like a chessboard and assumed the pieces would never push back. Today, the Gulf is trembling because we helped build the conditions for that tremble.  We placed bases everywhere, promised protection to everyone, and then acted shocked when the region caught fire from sparks we helped scatter. And while the Gulf braces itself, the real blaze is still in the north, in Lebanon. Lebanon is holding the line in a way the world did not expect.  Hezbollah’s drones, missiles, and ground units have forced Israel into a defensive crouch.  Northern towns emptied.  Military bases struck.  Commanders admitting, reluctantly, that they misread the northern front. The videos describe Israel as “غارق,” drowning.  Not metaphorically.  Strategically.  Every day brings new losses, new failures, new panic inside the Israeli establishment. And yet, even as the region shakes, Israel continues to act as if it is above consequence, above accountability, above the law. Which brings us to Mahmoud Al Najjar. A young man arrested not because he posed a threat, not because he committed a crime, but because Israel has grown accustomed to doing whatever it wants, whenever it wants, to whomever it wants, without hesitation, without oversight, without the slightest consideration for human rights or international law. His arrest is not an isolated incident.  It is a symptom of a system that believes Palestinian lives are disposable, that Palestinian futures can be erased with a signature, that Palestinian voices can be silenced with a knock on the door at dawn. This is the reality we confront every week.  A reality shaped by power without restraint. And now, as the region shifts, as alliances wobble, as the world begins to question what it once accepted blindly, a new question rises: Will the United States and Israel attempt to merge their militaries into one? Because when influence fades, when support weakens, when the political winds change, the next move is always the same.  Bind the systems together so tightly that separation becomes impossible. That is the chapter unfolding now.  That is the story we step into today. If you have thoughts, I want to hear them.  Email me at TWIPpodcasts@gmail.com and tell me how you see it. This is This Week in Palestine.

7 de jun de 202659 min
Portada del episodio TWIP-260531 Declarations and Reality: The Iran Reckoning

TWIP-260531 Declarations and Reality: The Iran Reckoning

The war on Iran is no longer a distant conflict unfolding on someone else’s horizon. It is reshaping America itself. It is bending our foreign policy, straining our alliances, and exposing the limits of a superpower that once believed it could dictate the direction of the Middle East with a single announcement. For decades, Washington operated under the assumption that its influence in the region was permanent. But this war has revealed something different. It has shown us that the Middle East is entering a new chapter, one where American decisions carry less weight, where American promises ring hollow, and where American credibility is questioned by allies who once stood firmly at our side. And at the center of this unraveling is the blind, unconditional support for Israel. Support so automatic, so unexamined, that it has pushed long‑standing partners away. Nations that once aligned with Washington are now charting their own paths, forming new alliances, and refusing to be pulled into a conflict they no longer believe the United States can manage responsibly. This is not just geopolitics. This is the cost of refusing to confront uncomfortable truths. And then there are the announcements. The declarations. The dramatic statements from President Trump about Iran that echo across the news cycle, only to be contradicted hours later by reality. Trump says, “We won the war.”  Iran replies, “We are stronger than ever.” Trump says, “Iran agreed to surrender uranium.”  Iran responds, “That is false.” Trump says, “We control the Strait of Hormuz.”  Iran answers, “Good luck.” Each announcement becomes a headline.  Each response becomes a reminder.  A reminder that the truth cannot be manufactured by press conferences or tweets.  A reminder that power is not measured by declarations, but by outcomes. And the outcome is clear:  America is losing influence in a region it once dominated.  Not because of weakness, but because of choices.  Choices that prioritize loyalty over logic.  Choices that elevate politics over principle.  Choices that ignore the suffering of millions while insisting the world look the other way. This is the moment we are living in.  A moment where the war on Iran is reshaping America’s role in the world.  A moment where blind support for Israel is costing the United States allies it cannot afford to lose.  A moment where truth and rhetoric are no longer aligned, and the gap between them grows wider every day. And that is where we begin. If you have thoughts, I want to hear them.  Email me at TWIPpodcasts@gmail.com and tell me how you see it. This is This Week in Palestine.

31 de may de 202659 min