Israel Vows Repercussions For Iran, Veep Debate Takeaways, Flood Recovery - podcast episode cover

Israel Vows Repercussions For Iran, Veep Debate Takeaways, Flood Recovery

Oct 02, 202413 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:

Episode description

Israel has promised retaliation after the Iranian missile attack, launched after Israel invaded southern Lebanon. What went right and wrong for the VP candidates in last night's debate. In parts of eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina, efforts to clean up from flooding after Tropical Storm Helene are slow-going.

Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.

Today's episode of Up First was edited by Russell Lewis, Vincent Ni, Megan Pratz, Ally Schweitzer and Alice Woelfe. It was produced by Iman Maani, Paige Waterhouse, Nia Dumas and Ana Perez. We get engineering support from Neisha Heinis and our technical director is Carleigh Strange.


Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices

NPR Privacy Policy

Transcript

Israel promises retaliation for an Iranian missile attack. Missile defense is blocked most incoming fire, but the attack killed at least one person. It's a deadly cycle the world has seen before. The White House says Israel has its full support. I'm Steve Inskeep with Michelle Martin, and this is up first from NPR News. In the vice presidential debate, JD Vance seemed to deny Donald Trump's election denial.

Look, what President Trump has said is that there were problems in 2020, and my own belief is that we should fight about those issues, debate those issues. Tim Walls faced questions about how he's described his travels to China. And neighbors are helping neighbors recover from tropical storm Helene. I'm from Florida. I've been through a lot of these. These people over here have never been through something like this, so they don't understand what it takes, how long it's going to last.

Stay with us. This message comes from NPR sponsor, Saadva, maker of quality, handcrafted mattresses. Founder and CEO Ron Rutsen shares one of their core values. That Saadva we believe sleep does unlock a superpower. When you wake up and you're totally refreshed, you go after things more. And it all starts with being on the right mattress. And that's what Saadva has been inspired by from the day that we started. To learn more, go to sda.com slash NPR.

Support for NPR and the following message come from Betterment, the automated investing and savings app. CEO Sarah Levy shares how Betterment utilizes tech tools powered by human advice. And is here to help customers build wealth their way. And we provide powerful technology and complete human support where technology can deliver ease of use and affordability and the people behind that technology can provide advice and guidance. Learn more at betterment.com investing involves risk.

Performance, not guaranteed. This message comes from NPR sponsor Mint Mobile. From the gas pump to the grocery store, inflation is everywhere. So Mint Mobile is offering premium wireless starting at just $15 a month. To get your new phone plan for just $15, go to MintMobile.com slash switch. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to punish Iran for a missile assault on Israel last night.

Iran fired about 180 ballistic missiles according to the Israeli military, sending millions of people across Israel into bomb shelters. And the company has Hadeel El-Shawchi is with us now from Tel Aviv, Hadeel, good morning. Good morning. So what was it like last night? So it really all started around 5 p.m. local time. We heard through the news that the U.S. warned Israel about an imminent Iranian threat.

And then very quickly, after the Israeli military confirmed that news, the streets here in Tel Aviv felt eerily quiet. And then a couple of hours later, this is what it sounded like. Our aid sirens wailed across the country. And then we heard loud booms of a night sky lit up with orbs of light, many of which exploded into smoke. And that was, of course, the work of Israel's powerful air defense system blowing up the missiles before they hit the earth.

Luckily in Israel, we have many bomb shelters across the cities and inside homes now. So many people were able to take shelter. And while the Israeli occupied West Bank and Gaza weren't the targets of this attack, the vast majority of Palestinians in those areas don't have specialized shelters. And the one confirmed death was in the West Bank. So you know, in the last few weeks, we've been saying tensions are rising in the Middle East.

We keep saying that over and over again, but this sounds like a major escalation. Why don't you remind us of how we got here? For sure. So I'm going to take you all the way back to October 8th. That's really when it started. Hasbola began trading fire with Israel on the Israeli Lebanese border. But then it got really bad a couple of weeks ago. Israel unleashed a much larger campaign on Lebanon.

And that included a pager and Waki Taki explosion operation and then airstrikes on Beirut that killed more than 1,000 people, including the head of Hasbola, Hassan Nasrallah, which was a huge blow not only to the group, but also its funder Iran. So Iran claimed that yesterday's missile attack was in response to that assassination. And if you go even earlier this year in April and Israeli strike killed several leaders of Iran's military in Syria.

So Iran attacked Israel then also with more than 300 drones and missiles, but almost all of those were intercepted. So what have we heard from Israeli and American officials so far? Right. So Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu came out and spoke last night and he had a stern warning for his neighbors. However, attacks, we will attack them, Netanyahu said. And then he went on to name Iran, Syria, Lebanon and the West Bank. He also thanked the U.S. for its support.

American naval destroyers had shot down missiles with Israel. And the President Biden also spoke later reiterating the U.S.'s commitment to its ally. Make no mistake. The United States is fully, fully, fully supportive of Israel. Biden's national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, also spoke and he said that the U.S. made it clear that, quote, there will be consequences, severe consequences for this attack. And he said that the U.S. will work with Israel to make that the case.

What might we expect next? So there's been a lot of rhetoric from all sides. Yesterday, Iranian mission to the United Nations said its action were, quote, duly carried out. He said that if Israel retaliated, there would be a, quote, quote, crushing response. And we seem to be in this spiral of escalation. And I don't want to speculate too much here, but it seems like we're getting closer to that wider regional war we've been talking about for about a year. That is NPR's Hadil al-Sawshi.

Hadil, thank you. Thank you. Last night, Ohio Senator J.D. Vance and Minnesota Governor Tim Walls had one of the most anticipated vice presidential debates in recent memory. Turned out to be a kind of a polite discussion. They were largely civil, noting some areas in which they agreed. They did clash over immigration, reproductive rights, and the economy. If Kamala Harris has such great plans for how to address middle-class problems, then she ought to do them now.

Not one asking for promotion, but in the job the American people gave her three and a half years ago. That's Republican J.D. Vance. Democrat Tim Walls painted Trump as dangerous to women's health. This issue is what's on everyone's mind. Donald Trump put this all into motion. He brags about how great it was that he put the judges in and overturned Roe vs. Wait, 52 years of personal autonomy. White House correspondent Franco Ardenas was watching and he's with us now today.

Give us his thoughts about all this. Good morning Franco. Good morning, Michelle. So this was the first introduction for many Americans who don't necessarily watch these campaigns so closely. These two candidates, what overall impression do you think they made? Well, I mean, it was a very substantive debate. I mean, there were really not that many personal attacks. I mean, to me, it was clear that Vance was the more polished candidate.

He was more comfortable in the spotlight, yet back being down, back questions and critiques. Walls, he started off a little rusty, but improved his time when on, especially when he was talking about that signature issue of their campaign reproductive rights. Perhaps though, the best moment for Walls was at the end though, in pressing Vance directly on Trump and the 2020 election. Did he lose the 2020 election? Tim, I'm focused on the future.

Did Kamala Harris censor Americans from speaking their mind and the wake of the 2020 COVID situation? That is a damning nonanswer. That is a damning nonanswer for you to not talk about censorship. So let's say that that moment was a win for the Walls Harris campaign. What about Vance? When did he succeed? Vance was most effective when he repeatedly reminded those watching that.

While Harris and Walls talk about all these changes, Harris has had some opportunities, ample opportunities to enact those policies, but hasn't. Who has been the vice president for the last three and a half years? And the answer is you're running me, not mine. You know, that was something actually that Vance did a lot more effectively than Trump did in his debate with Harris a few weeks ago, and it's something Trump's allies wish he did more.

So, you know, the way a lot of people watch these debates, they don't watch the whole thing, they watch the clips, are there specific moments that you think will be seen over and over? Yes. I mean, I think the one of Walls pressing Vance about the 2020 election is one that was positive for him, but another where he struggled was trying to explain previous claims that he had made about travel to Hong Kong and China during the Tina M. Square protests.

Governor, just to follow up on that, the question was, can you explain the discrepancy? No, just... All I said on this was is I got there that summer and mispoke on this. So I will just... That's what I've said. Yeah, it was really one of the most uncomfortable moments in the debate for him. And I'd say one for Vance was when his mic was cut off, he interrupted the moderators after they fact checked his false claims about Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio.

And just to clarify for our viewers, Springfield, Ohio does have a large number of Haitian migrants who have legal status, temporary, protected status. Well, more, more, but... Thank you, Senator. We have so much to get to. Morgan, I think it's important because... We're going to turn out of the economy thing. It was the only time that they muted the mic, I'll say. So before we let you go, Franco, in the end, how much do you think this debate really matters to voters?

Yeah, I mean, I think both candidates did exactly what they intended. They found moments to relate to the audience, you know, but point out some differences between the bosses, the presidential candidates. But vice presidential candidates rarely move the needle in elections and it's unlikely this one will either. That is NPR Franco Ordenes. Franco, thank you.

Thank you. President Biden visits North Carolina today where recovery has been slow since the remnants of Hurricane Helene tour through the area last weekend, causing damaging flooding. The death toll is rising across the southeast. Tens of thousands of people remain without electricity or water or cell service and in some places all three. NPR's Jennifer Lutton is in nearby Eastern Tennessee. Good morning, Jennifer. Good morning. Can you just help us see the challenge here?

I'm thinking one reason is just to put it simply, this was just a massive storm. Exactly. It hit multiple states, you know, across hundreds of miles and we're talking mountainous terrain. They're winding rivers and they've stated high levels for days. Major highways are ripped up and it's just been hard for authorities to get places. Now, the Biden administration says there are several thousand federal responders on the ground, hundreds more on the way.

They are signing people up for aid and say that number is going to go up quickly. First responders are just pleading for people to be patient. But you know, there is frustration. Our residents don't know everything behind the scenes and feel that they've been left to cope with this unprecedented disaster on their own. And for people in that situation, how are they coping?

You know, there are a lot of food and water distribution sites, but I kind of say that the scale of regular people pitching into help is striking. I met Matthew Jackson, who'd set up a roadside tent in Newport, Tennessee. He'd shut down the pizza area he owns in Knoxville an hour away and spent two days grilling up hundreds of hot dogs, burgers and chicken sandwiches to give out. I'm from Florida. I've been through a lot of these. I've seen this a lot of times.

These people over here have never been through something like this so they don't understand what it takes, what it's going to be, how long it's going to last. And when neighborhood that was hit hard by flooding, residents told me strangers had come by to help haul out their furniture and scubber away the mud.

And one young man was using his fork lift to take people's furniture to the dump just across the state line, a search and rescue official in North Carolina yesterday urged everyone to do this kind of thing. He said, this disaster is just so big. Neighbors helping neighbors is the only way to get through it. It's just a hard thing to even sort of estimate. Jennifer, can you give us any sense of a timeline for getting back basic amenities that people have been doing without?

No one is really doing that. No. It does get a bit better every day. More people have power. Officials are working to repair cell phone towers, putting in temporary ones where it's going to take a while. But it could be weeks before even the water comes back. A lot of infrastructure was just destroyed.

Our colleagues at Blu-Rid public radio in Asheville, North Carolina report that a regional health center is urging later term pregnant women and also parents of newborns to evacuate this area because it says the water situation is just too unsafe. That is NPR Jennifer Ludden in Newport, Tennessee. Jennifer, thank you so much. Thank you. And that's up first for Wednesday, October 2nd.

I'm Michelle Martin. And I'm Steven Skepas, the conflict in the Middle East broadens NPR's continuing coverage and analysis. And you can hear more of it on NPR's Consider This, which you'll find anywhere you get your podcast. Today's episode of Up First was edited by Russell Lewis, Vincenny, Megan Pratt, Ali Schweitzer, and Alice Wolfley. It was produced by Iman Maani, Paige Waterhouse, Neadeumas, and Anna Perez.

We get engineering support from Nisha Heinis and our technical director is Carly Strange. We hope you'll join us again tomorrow. When voters talk during an elections season, we listen. We ask questions, we follow up, and we bring you along to hear what we learned. Get closer to the issues that people and your vote at the NPR elections have. Visit npr.org-slash-elections. This message comes from NPR Sponsor Mint Mobile. From the gas pump to the grocery store, inflation is everywhere.

So Mint Mobile is offering premium wireless starting at just $15 a month. To get your new phone plan for just $15, go to mintmobile.com-slash-switch. Support for NPR and the following message come from Rosetta Stone, the perfect app to achieve your language learning goals no matter how busy your schedule gets. It's designed to maximize study time with immersive 10-minute lessons and audio practice for your commute. Plus tailor your learning plan for specific objectives like travel.

Get Rosetta Stone's lifetime membership for 50% off and unlimited access to 25 language courses. And more at RosettaStone.com-slash-NPR.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.