It’s no secret that Mike Huckabee’s got some industrial-strength support for the State of Israel.

Not out of a genuine interest in the long-term wellbeing of the nation-state, mind you; he’s waiting for all of the Jews to go back to their homeland and bring on the End Times so that he can finally meet Jesus.

And in case the consequences of that position are somehow unclear, that would mean a dramatic shift in American foreign policy under a Huckabee presidency.

While attending Israel Day in Central Park on Sunday, Huckabee gave an interview to Arutz Sheva TV that outlined where he breaks from our last few presidents when it comes to Israeli-Palestinian relations. Here’s the video:

There’s a lot to unpack, so let’s review:

1. Mike Huckabee has been to a lot of countries in the Middle East, but feels that there is a “unique kind of spirit that exists in Israel. I know what that spirit is. I believe it’s God. There’s no other explanation for Israel.” Apparently none of the other countries in the Middle East have a godly spirit about them, even the ones that claim to be led by the same Abrahamic traditions that inform Huckabee’s deeply-held religious beliefs.

2. Huckabee is genuinely perplexed by the

…harsh anti-Israel sentiment that exists within this administration and in parts of Europe. if anything Europe should feel an extraordinary sense of responsibility [for the Holocaust] and they bear a lot of that guilt for having just allowed that to happen without intervention.

Apparently responding to anything other than applause when the leader of a foreign nation makes a secret, unconstitutional deal with the Speaker of the House to deliver a cynical, counterproductive speech that cuts directly against American security interests is the marker of a “harsh anti-Israel sentiment.” What’s more, Germany is going above and beyond right now to prosecute aging Nazis for war crimes, so it might not be appropriate to throw around Holocaust invocations…

3. Too late:

So any of us who have studied history should know that we’ve seen this movie before, and it does not end well. So before it gets there, some of us who understand that standing with Israel is, I believe, tantamount to standing with what God wants us to do, we have to take an unapologetic commitment to saying we will stand with Israel for their right to a secure and a safe homeland.

4. With Godwin’s Law now fully invoked, Huckabee is free to go further off the rails: “If the Israelis were under attack I’m not sure what this President would do.” I would guess, given our overt and covert commitments, interests and relationships, that if Israel were ever presented with a threat it could not handle on its own our President (and any potential next president — even Bernie Sanders) would bomb the living daylights out of it. President Obama’s position on Israel is exactly the same as his predecessors’: a two-state solution based on the 1967 borders. Speaking of which…

5. Mike Huckabee seems genuinely confused as to what is meant by the term “two state solution,” arguing that:

…the two state solution — if we mean two governments holding the same piece of real estate — is irrational and unworkable. And I think it’s time for us to quit playing this pretentious game that there’s going to be a two state solution where both sides share the same country and real estate and streets, because they’re not…If there is a two state solution, the Palestinian state needs to be outside the boundaries of the nation of Israel.

The problem there is what by “two state solution” we don’t mean “two governments holding the same piece of real estate…[sharing] the same country and real estate and streets.” That would absolutely be irrational and unworkable, and absolutely zero people are proposing it. Yes, a two state solution implies a state outside of Israel’s boundaries in that Israel gives up some land (starting with land it’s in violation of International Law for settling) and lets the Palestinians have it, going back to the 1967 borders and…wait, hold on, that’s what Obama said so it won’t do at all.

Throughout the entire interview, Huckabee’s position is clear: Palestinians do not and should not have the same rights as Israelis, and they’re more than welcome to move out if they don’t like it. In fact, better that they do, so they can clear the way for the Jews. After all, he’s got some Rapturing to get on with.

To be clear, that places Mike Huckabee to the right of even Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who only briefly ruled out the possibility of a Palestinian state in a late election appeal to Israel’s far right before (officially) endorsing a two state solution after he had secured victory. If your position on Israel is farther to the right than the leader of what The Washington Post has described as the most right-wing government in Israel’s history, it’s time to pause and reflect.

And you can start by learning the definitions of basic terms relating to the issue.

(h/t BuzzFeed)