All-In PodcastJared Kushner: Israel-Hamas War, paths forward, macro picture, AI
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Jared Kushner on Gaza, Arab states, Trump, and AI’s future
- Jared Kushner joins the All-In Podcast to discuss the Israel–Hamas war, the historical and political context of the Palestinian issue, and how he sees potential pathways to a post-Hamas settlement. He argues that Hamas and entrenched Palestinian leadership—not Israel—are the primary obstacles to Palestinian prosperity, and outlines what he believes is required for viable self-governance and economic growth. The conversation broadens into U.S. domestic politics, Trump’s political instincts, the Russia–Ukraine war, macroeconomic conditions, and the rapid evolution of AI platforms like OpenAI, Grok, and Chinese open-source models. Throughout, Kushner emphasizes pragmatic, interest-driven diplomacy, economic integration, and technological productivity as levers for long-term stability and growth.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasEliminating Hamas must be paired with a credible plan for Palestinian governance and prosperity.
Kushner supports Israel’s objective of destroying Hamas militarily but stresses that unless a post-Hamas framework provides security guarantees for Israel and real economic opportunity for Palestinians, the cycle of radicalization and conflict will resume.
Palestinian hardship is driven more by leadership failures than by lack of aid.
He argues that decades of massive international funding have been squandered by corrupt and ineffective Palestinian institutions (PA, Hamas, UNRWA), making the territories effectively “uninvestable” despite high literacy and strong geographic advantages.
Arab states’ calculus on the Palestinian issue has fundamentally shifted.
Kushner describes a long arc from 1948 through Oslo to today in which Arab leaders once used the Palestinian cause as a diversion, but now—led by Gulf states like Saudi Arabia and the UAE—prioritize internal economic development and regional integration, seeing the unresolved conflict mainly as a tool for Iran.
A two-state outcome is only feasible if security and economic conditions are met, not as a slogan.
He and Sacks agree that some form of separation is ultimately necessary, but Kushner criticizes the rote “1967 lines with East Jerusalem as capital” formula as disconnected from security realities and from the need to build rule of law, institutions, and a functioning private sector.
Trump’s political success stems from defying party orthodoxy with strong instincts and flexibility.
Kushner and Sacks cite Trump’s breaks with GOP dogma on trade, foreign wars, entitlements, and even abortion messaging as examples where his gut and willingness to experiment (e.g., tariffs, bilateral trade) ultimately aligned better with voter sentiment than establishment views.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesYou can’t kill your way out of an ideology.
— Jared Kushner
The thing that’s been holding back the Palestinian people has not been Israel, it’s been their bad leadership.
— Jared Kushner
I don’t think countries really have friends, I think countries have interests.
— Jared Kushner
Whenever Trump has opposed Republican groupthink on an issue, he’s invariably been proven correct.
— David Sacks
There’s no point in history that we’ve had a productivity gain through technology that didn’t ultimately grow the economy.
— David Friedberg
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