HERSH: And more. I mean, there's been a lot of trouble in Syria recently. There's been a lot of disturbances among the Kurdish populations of Syria. Syrians have about 2 million Kurds among the 17 million population, and there's been a lot of trouble. There was riots at a soccer match.
BLITZER: So what are you suggesting, the Israelis are involved in this?
HERSH: Well, the Israelis certainly, to a degree, not on the ground there, but certainly supporting the idea that the Syrians have a lot of trouble with their own population.
This is all keeping people off balance. This you have to understand in the context for Israel of a major strategic defeat for the United States in Iraq.
BLITZER: Let's talk about another quote you have in the new issue of The New Yorker. A former Israeli intelligence officer quoted as saying this about what you call Plan B: "It's over, not militarily -- the United States cannot be defeated militarily in Iraq -- but politically."
The Israelis very pessimistic about what's happening in Iraq right now.
HERSH: They've been pessimistic for six months. I write about the fact that, beginning last summer, late last summer, they started worrying about, as I say, the Iranian infusion.
But more than that, even people like Ehud Barak, the former prime minister, who's very straightforward, I write about a meeting he had with our vice president, Mr. Cheney, in which he, said according to a witness, he told Cheney, "Your only issue now is how much humiliation will you collect."
BLITZER: Let me read you exactly what you wrote. You said, "Israel had learned that there's no way to win an occupation. The only issue, Barak told Cheney, was choosing the size of your humiliation."
What Barak saying to Cheney, what, get out, or stop, or move on? What was his bottom line?
Saddam was, you know, killing his the way through the Baath Party to get control. The vice president then -- all during the '70s he was seizing control, but he finally got it officially in '79.
And for five or six or seven years, Allawi was his guy, one of his people in Europe. And what they would do is they would basically, the only other word for it is murder the opposition anywhere in Europe. And he was certainly involved with those people. He was a thug. I've talked to people who have read his internal CIA file. On the other hand, he also became later a very big asset.
BLITZER: Well, they tried to kill him. They axed him almost to death. He spent a year in a hospital because Saddam Hussein tried to kill him?
What's important is that it's totally, completely clear that he was involved with what the Russians call wet-ops, blood. And he was involved in a lot of very bloody things. And I quote a former CIA official using that word.
BLITZER: Let me talk briefly about the prison abuse scandal, since you were so directly involved in breaking this news in The New Yorker over so many weeks.
Is there anything new that you have uncovered in recent weeks you'd like to share with our viewers in the United States and around the world right now?
HERSH: I'm glad you asked the last part. Yes and no. I mean, yes, there's more stuff. I work for The New Yorker magazine, and I really have an obligation to report there.
So it went higher than everybody wants to say it did.
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