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Leland Vittert’s War Notes: It’s Really That Simple

This picture taken on April 10, 2024 from Israel's southern border with the Gaza Strip shows buildings which have been destroyed during six months of fighting and relentless bombardment of the Palestinian territory, amid continuing battles between Israel and Hamas. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP)

NewsNation Chief Washington Anchor and On Balance host Leland Vittert was a foreign correspondent for four years in Jerusalem. He gives you an early look at tonight’s 7 p.m. ET show. Subscribe to War Notes here.  

“Peace” with Hamas Is Impossible 

An Israeli airstrike killed three sons and other family members of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh. A video shows him responding to the news from luxury in Qatar, saying, “I thank Allah for the honor that my children and grandchildren have been martyred.”


Hamas’ charter calls for a second holocaust of the Jewish people and to continue the fight from there. There is nothing in the Hamas charter about living in “peace.” 

This is very different than grieving Gold Star mothers or Americans who regret they have but one life to give for their country. America seeks peace, while Hamas seeks destruction, death, rape and power — that is the political side of militant Islam.

“Peace” with such people is impossible.

During my four years in the Middle East and decade since I have returned, the common question centers around “peace,” how to get it, why we don’t have it and if it’s possible. 

When I first arrived and even for years covering the conflicts there — not just between Palestinians and Israelis but between Sunni and Shia Muslims too — I would have some thoughtful answers, especially about the Palestinians and Israelis, including the trades of land in the West Bank and more.

I now know that what Golda Meir said, the former Israeli prime minister Biden loves to quote, is the only explanation: “Peace will come when the Arabs will love their children more than they hate us.”

It’s really that simple.

Zoom out: Israel understands who it is fighting against and the rules of militant Islam warfare. 

US President Joe Biden speaks during an event in Madison, Wisconsin, US, on Monday, April 8, 2024. Biden’s alternative student-debt relief plan could forgive loans for as many as 26 million Americans, a far-reaching initiative that will be tested by the same challenges that beset his original program struck down by the Supreme Court. Photographer: Daniel Steinle/Bloomberg via Getty Images

2024: Abortion Versus the Economy

Over 20% of Americans skip meals to pay for housing, yet your tax dollars now underwrite the European vacations of college grads thanks to student loan forgiveness … welcome to 2024. 

That sentence alone should make any fair-minded American’s blood boil. Not to mention, today’s stubbornly high inflation numbers show there are no free lunches for a president who fancies himself “Scranton Joe.”

YET, Democrats might win in major swing states thanks to Republicans’ continued political malpractice on the abortion issue. 

Welcome to 2024. 

We’ll get to Republicans in a minute. 

BUT FIRST: Geraldo Rivera will discuss tonight what Democrats will do about the craziest among them.  

Politico’s Playbook newsletter quotes longtime Biden aide and former chief of staff Ron Klain caught on a recording saying, “‘He does two or three events a week where he’s cutting a ribbon on a bridge. … You go to the grocery store and, you know, eggs and milk are expensive, the fact that there’s a f***ing bridge is not [inaudible].’” 

Fact check: Biden’s policies do spend a lot of money, but they do nothing to bring down grocery prices — in fact, they increase a lot of prices. 

Be careful what you wish for: Grocery prices aren’t what Biden wants to be talking about. 

Ready-made attack ads: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., went on Stephen Colbert’s “Late Show” to extol the virtues of Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan that mostly helps progressive entitled (and by definition) college-educated folks.

Watch tonight: “Dirty Jobs” host Mike Rowe joins Cuomo for an hour-long special “Trading Up” at 8 p.m. E.T. only on NewsNation. The special event features a live studio audience … along with the blue-collar millionaires who found success without a college degree. 

Wake-up call: While seemingly disconnected, the economy and crime are issues that come down to how people feel.

Where we are: California’s 99 Cents Only stores are all closing. They cite inflation and crime as the reasons why. 

PALM BEACH, FLORIDA – APRIL 6: Republican presidential candidate, former US President Donald Trump, arrives at the home of billionaire investor John Paulson, with former first lady Melania Trump, on April 6, 2024 in Palm Beach, Florida. Donald Trump’s campaign is expecting to raise more than 40 million dollars when major donors gather for his biggest fundraiser yet. The event is billed as the “Inaugural Leadership Dinner”. (Photo by Alon Skuy/Getty Images)

By His Side?

Former President Donald Trump goes on trial Monday, but will his wife be there? 

Ground truth: John Paulson’s $110 million estate is a little different than a New York courtroom. 

Barefoot Canoodling

As if flying these days isn’t bad enough, check out this picture of a barefoot couple canoodling across a row of seats. I don’t recognize the airline.

Thought bubble: When was the last time you were on a plane with an empty middle seat for this even to be possible? 

We are a long way from how flying was in our parents’ day. 

A migrant cuts through the concertina wire after crossing the US-Mexico border through the Rio Grande in El Paso, Texas, US, on Wednesday, April 3, 2024. The Texas immigration-enforcement law, known as SB4, is back in federal appeals court on Wednesday. SB4 grants state officials the power to arrest, detain and deport people who enter the country illegally. Photographer: Justin Hamel/Bloomberg

Closing the Gates

Going into summer, President Biden will reportedly bring back some of the Trump-era policies designed to slow the flow at the border.

OK. Now what? 

Border crossing numbers are like economic numbers — they can “get better,” but people will still feel the same way. 

Ground truth: The border crisis isn’t just at the border. It’s in every American city, town and hamlet.

Tune into “On Balance with Leland Vittert” weeknights at 7/6C on NewsNation. Find your channel here

The views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily of NewsNation.