Judging Freedom - COL. Douglas Macgregor : War Is Coming Soon

Episode Date: November 19, 2025

COL. Douglas Macgregor : War Is Coming SoonSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Thank you. Thank you. Hi, everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Wednesday, November 19th, 2000, 25. Colonel Douglas McGregor joins us now, Colonel. Welcome here. You're always welcome here, and we do appreciate your time and you're accommodating my schedule.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Colonel, how reckless is it, or would it be, I should say, it hasn't happened yet, for the United States to attack, invade, or attempt to decapitate the leadership of Venezuela. I think it's hard to imagine anything like this
Starting point is 00:01:08 happening easily or quickly. You know, I always go back to our intervention in Vietnam where people landed on the beach, the Marines went inland, the Army eventually came in and everyone asked immediately, what are we attacking?
Starting point is 00:01:24 What's our objective? And after much confusion, they came up with one. I look at Venezuela with a 1,700-mile coastline, 1,380-mile border with Brazil and a similar border of about roughly 1,379 miles with Colombia. And I asked the same question, what are we going to do?
Starting point is 00:01:44 What are these 17,000 troops in Puerto Rico going to do? How do they get there? Once they arrive, what do they do? I see nothing clear or unambiguous about the thinking or planning behind this thing they're calling Southern Spear. And what would war look like? I mean, would it be boots on the ground? You mentioned an extraordinary number of American troops in Puerto Rico.
Starting point is 00:02:11 I believe, correct me if my belief is wrong. There are also 10,000 Marines off the coast of Venezuela and these various ships. Well, I'd be surprised if they weren't, because the one thing that's easily seized is the International Airport, the Boulevard International Airport. right on the coast. A couple of thousand Marines should be able to secure that airport very, very easily. Now, what happens after you secure the airport? How do you bring in other troops? Where do they go? Caracas is a little further inland and it's surrounded by mountains and hills. There are some tunnels that go through the mountains and hills into Caracas. How do we get in there?
Starting point is 00:02:55 I guess we could fly. I guess you could also have airborne drops. I hear a lot of a lot from my friends on active duty about repeating Panama. You know, one of the things that we did in Panama was he had this airborne assault. You have all of these light infantry centric generals at the top of the army that just can't wait to launch another airborne assault. The problem is that Venezuela is not Panama judge. Venezuela is huge. You can get in, I think, fairly easily, particularly given the offshore presence that we've got. But then what do you do when you get there and how do you plan to get out? I mean, unless you can very rapidly install a new government that is friendly to you
Starting point is 00:03:42 that can maintain some level of order in the country, you face the possibility of total disintegration of public order. That means that you have no control over what goes on inside the country and everyone in their brother can possibly take a shot at you. they've got 30 million people how many of those will resist is anybody's guess but i just don't see how the panamanian experience really informs us in venezuela now there is also talk about getting into venezuela if for no other reason to stop the supply of oil to cuba which has been an important lifeline that would align with uh secretary of state rubio's long-term goals in the Caribbean basin. But again, we don't know where all the air and missile
Starting point is 00:04:31 defense capabilities are on the ground that the Russians have provided. And we're not even sure that what won't ensue is something similar to the proxy war. We've been waging in Ukraine against Russia that the Russians would turn around and effectively wage a similar proxy war against us in Venezuela, using Brazilian, Colombian, as well as Venezuela, paramilitaries to attack us. The whole thing is a disaster, in my judgment. Two comments from what you said. One is, good God, we've been starving the people of Cuba since 1962.
Starting point is 00:05:12 Now we're going to try and cut off their oil. Why? This doesn't change the regime. It just impoverishes the population. And Rubio must know that. Well, except that Rubio also knows. that Cuba is probably weaker today than it has ever been in its history. There's really nothing in Cuba anymore but poverty.
Starting point is 00:05:36 And he may regard this as a golden opportunity to knock off the regime in Cuba as well, especially once you've strangled the Maduro regime in Caracas. I mean, this is all speculative. You know, obviously neither you, Narine, or any of us are invited to participate. in any of these discussions or listen to any briefings, but looking at the numbers of forces involved, looking at Venezuela's relationship with Cuba, one has to conclude that there's a lot more going on here than simply regime change in Venezuela. But there has to be some, forgive me if I sound naive, colonel, moral or legal basis for what
Starting point is 00:06:20 the government does. What kind of threat does Cuba pose to the United States? of America. They can barely feed their people. Well, I certainly don't want to make us responsible for Cuba. I don't want to make the United States and the American people responsible for Venezuela. Now, again, we've discussed this before. Let's set aside any altruistic motives whatsoever. I mean, I think it was Reinhold Niebuhr, paraphrased Lincoln's comments when Lincoln said the challenge in U.S. foreign policy is to link the contingencies of power with the principles of justice. I don't think the principles of justice mean anything anymore in Washington, D.C.
Starting point is 00:06:59 They haven't for a very long time. So you're looking at finding a way to collateralize all of these mineral resources, oil, gas, emeralds, gold, rare, earths, all that sort of thing. And people that are in the banking industry have privately told me, well, I guess if you can go in there and you could exert absolute authority over the country and you can explore. and you can exploit its resources without an eruption, that could conceivably lead to a massive reduction in our national sovereign debt because you could pull 19 trillion in wealth out of Venezuela, that would roughly cut our national sovereign debt in half. In other words, this is a good old exercise in pillaging and exploiting other people's resources. Are the same Zionist billionaires behind Trump's dalliances and threats of war against Iran behind this invasion of Venezuela? Well, I suspect so because they have a lot more at risk right now.
Starting point is 00:08:11 They're fighting tooth and nail to maintain the dollar's dominance. And that's a story that just doesn't reach the American public. We are in a state of decline in terms of economic strength, military power, prosperity, you name it across the board's internal cohesion. The Russians, the Chinese, Indians, and others are viewing us as a potentially dangerous and irrational actor on the world stage. I'm sure you've heard Jeffrey Sack say something similar. Right. And they're trying to manage us by managing, I mean, they want to. to manage their way through what they think is our decline by avoiding a war.
Starting point is 00:08:55 It becomes more and more difficult, but we failed in Russia. We wanted to go in there, break the country up, rape it for its resources. That's failed miserably. We have not destroyed the national cohesion or unity of Iran. We don't have control of its oil and gas resources. And now we have China, which imports roughly 80% of Iran's oil, very interested in ensuring the Straits of Hormuz stay open. So how far can you press this war with Iran? That leads you to new places, new locations where you can get at the resources that you need to boost the American economy and deal with this enormous sovereign national debt. So yes, I imagine some of the same billionaires who are involved in both the war with Russia and the war with Iran,
Starting point is 00:09:51 the Greater Israel Project, are also very interested in Venezuela, because it may be that the other two projects are going to fail. One can argue that it's already failed in Russia. Now the next one is, are we ever going to make any progress in the Middle East? Doesn't look very encouraging right now. So Venezuela then becomes an attractive goal or object in some people's minds. The Venezuelans have millions of members of militias. I don't know what kind of a central command they have or what these militias would do,
Starting point is 00:10:26 but let's say we're bogged down in a land war. Would that delay the Israeli-likely invasion of Iran? Well, first of all, the Israelis aren't going to invade Iran. The Israelis just want to destroy Iran. What they would like to do, though, is capture its oil resources. And in that sense, the Israelis are the beachhead for international finance in New York City in London.
Starting point is 00:10:53 They too want to capture those resources. But the possibility that you can do that seems less and less likely in the current environment. It's not necessarily impossible at this stage, but it's not very encouraging. That's why Venezuela seems like low-hanging fruit compared with everything else. The problem is, what if this does turn
Starting point is 00:11:14 into a long-term insurgent war that we frankly have no interest in fighting, especially if it's orchestrated at least partially and supported partially by the Russians. If you were a Russian looking at the damage we've been trying to inflict on Russia for the past three and a half plus years, would that not occur to you to exact some retribution against us? I think it probably does. Yeah, I think you're right. Before we jump over to Ukraine and Russia in some depth, should Japan host U.S. nuclear weapons, and should the Prime Minister of Japan be threatening to attack China if it exercises more dominion over Taiwan that she thinks is appropriate? Well, the Japanese have reined in the prime minister on this topic. Remember that in Japan, the government, its foreign and defense policy are really run by the imperial bureaucracy. Now, I'm saying imperial bureaucracy because the Japanese bureaucracy is staffed with lots of historic aristocrats, families that have controlled elite thinking and culture in Japan for hundreds of years.
Starting point is 00:12:34 they are loyal to the emperor they tend to define what that foreign and defense policy is going to look like they also have a big impact on what happens internally she went a little too far uh the japanese have already sent delegations to china they're patching up the hurt feelings i think what we need to understand is that japan and china just like korea and china in my judgment will never be allied with each other. However, they're also well aware that a war between them would be singularly stupid and counterproductive. So her remarks have been walked back. The issue for Japan right now is as follows. They are waiting, like the Koreans, for us to leave. And that may seem strange to Americans, but people in Northeast Asia are nothing, if not extremely polite. They
Starting point is 00:13:29 would like us to get out. We have served their purpose long enough. Japan profited enormously from America's military shield against any potential adversary. But now Japan doesn't need that, doesn't want it. Japan can build its own nuclear capability. It's been able to do that now for many years. It could become a nuclear power overnight. And it has an interest in that, not because it wants to use any nuclear weapons against anyone, but it wants to be a free agent. It doesn't want to be dependent upon us. It wants to interact with Russia and China and other countries as it sees fit. I mean, remember when President Trump was over there, they made it very clear to him in private.
Starting point is 00:14:13 Yes, we like you very much and we'll support you, but we're not going to join your embargo on Russia. It's not going to happen. We're going to continue to purchase oil and gas from Russia. And a Japanese parliamentarian stood up and very bluntly stated in Parliament in public, we can't reach an arrangement with the Russians because the Russians are concerned that if they sign a peace treaty with us and they give us these islands back that they took at the end of the Second World War, it will turn around to the United States and let American military installations pop up on those islands. Well, that is a legitimate Russian fear. Of course it is. But it's also a legitimate
Starting point is 00:14:53 a legitimate interest in japan to not let that happen right so you've got to you know the japanese want to be independent free agents it's 80 years since the end of the second world war they want to be cut loose but again they're being polite they don't want to run us out of town they would prefer that we read the handwriting on the wall and simply left the same thing is true in korea the liberal nationalist government in korea that's taken over wants us to leave they know there will never be peace on that peninsula that they can depend upon as long as we are there. We are no longer a shield. We're now a catalyst for conflict with North Korea. And the Chinese want nothing to do with North Korea. They want to do business with South Korea. Think of the Koreas as similar to
Starting point is 00:15:40 East and West Germany at the end of the Cold War. Moscow had to make a choice. With whom do you want to do business? What's the long-term future for Germany? It's not the GDR. It was not the right german democratic republic was west germany right and that's happening in Beijing Beijing looks at the peninsula and says the future is the republic of korea the problem is we're still in the midst of all of this and we're always trying to pull people into a position of hostility to anybody we don't like and they don't want to be in a hostile position with russia or china so the prime minister has been severely reprimanded told to sit down and shut up. That's being patched up with China. There will be no more of that. But the Chinese,
Starting point is 00:16:29 you know, fear Japan. In fact, I, you know, I think we've talked about this before. When I wrote in margin of victory in the last concluding chapter, try to make it clear that the Chinese are a lot more afraid of Japan, frankly, than they are of us. Japan is right offshore and Japan is the sleeping superpower. Everybody keeps deriding the Japanese. Well, they haven't spent enough on defense. They need to do more of this. They need to do more of that. Their population is not growing enough. Stand by. Get out. And the Japanese will fill the requirement that we keep trying to fill ourselves at great expense to the American people of quote unquote containing China. Everything from the water's edge in Asia from the Chinese coast south or west or east will be
Starting point is 00:17:18 controlled by Japan. That doesn't mean the Japanese armies will be there or the Japanese. Japanese Navy necessarily needs to be everywhere. It's simply a fact that Japan is dominant at sea. China will be dominant on land. It's accepted. That's where things are headed. We are holding up the train because we want to live permanently in the afterglow of World War II. It's not possible.
Starting point is 00:17:42 We can't afford it. We don't need it. I want to jump to Ukraine, but before we do, I have to say that your analysis is so astute, so profound. I can't imagine Marco Rubio or Pete Hegseth speaking this way to the president of the United States. They just don't have the knowledge, understanding, analytical skills, or will to talk to him this way. But boy, if more people spoke as you do, be a lot safer and more free world. Okay, just my editorial, not because we're friends. I'm moved by what you said.
Starting point is 00:18:19 Yeah, but remember, Judge, there was a statement. and I think it was in the art of the deal. And President Trump had told the man that authored the book for him, you know, I've learned never hire anyone who is smarter than you. I mean, stop and consider that. That's catastrophic. Yes, yes, it is catastrophic. It should be, of course, the other way around.
Starting point is 00:18:43 Colonel, in the past week, the length and breadth of corruption and President Zelensky's government, has become a public conversation in Kiev and elsewhere. We know how bad it is. How is it, if at all, likely to affect what remains of the war? Well, I think it affects the war very much and has from the very beginning and continues to do so. I think our friend Zelensky is on very fragile ground,
Starting point is 00:19:15 as is his inner circle. They see the handwriting on the wall. What is stopping Putin and the Russian military establishment from launching straight to the Nieupper River and then ultimately crossing and seizing Kiev? Well, I can tell you what's stopping it, and it's President Putin. Putin from the very beginning has always wanted desperately to avoid a war with us or NATO. And what President Putin wanted as soon as we met with him and his team in Saudi Arabia, you'll recall that Secretary Rubio went over there. a whole host of people from the cabinet. And what the Russians wanted to do was restore relations with us, do business with us.
Starting point is 00:20:00 So that's always been in the forefront of his strategic thinking. Now, what does that mean? That means that he doesn't want to cross that river. He doesn't want to take responsibility for the disaster in Ukraine, at least not under the current circumstances. That may be why we're now in discussions with him. maybe someone's finally figured that out and walked away from the stupidity that Putin wants to conquer Ukraine. That's crazy.
Starting point is 00:20:26 No one in their right mind wants to place at this point. But the tragedy with corruption is so bad that, you know, for some time now, you've had people wounded on the battlefield, Ukrainian soldiers and officers who had to pay someone to take them to a hospital. I mean, stop and consider that. the widows and orphans of the Ukrainian soldiers that are being killed, they're not being paid anything. The checks that would have otherwise gone to them are being pocketed by battalion brigade commanders in the Ukrainian army. Everyone is involved in this giant grift. Now we've seen
Starting point is 00:21:07 these two people that are apparently accused of sort of taking hundreds of millions of dollars. And, of course, the funny thing is that my friends in Europe that are intimately familiar with this that operate out of Switzerland, they all laughed. And they said, well, Zelensky's got at least a billion in cash. Most people have stolen billions. These people are small fry. I think that's beginning to sink in in Europe. The problem is the globalists there can't admit that because then they have to admit that they've been wrong from the beginning, frankly. Russia doesn't present this threat.
Starting point is 00:21:41 And then how do they stay in power? because they are all about maintaining themselves in power. And the situation in Europe economically, socially, politically is catastrophic right now, as you know. So they're not going to take any chances. They're going to hold fast against anything we want to do to end that war. So recently, Reuters has reported on secret negotiations between Steve Whitkoff and Carol Demetriyev, sort of his opposite number in the Kremlin and outside, well-to-do businessman who happens to have been educated
Starting point is 00:22:20 at Stanford University about new and extensive United States, Russia, talks about peace in Ukraine and a reset of relations between the United States and Russia. This morning I was given the opportunity to question, Maria Zakarova, who's the official spokesperson for the Russian foreign ministry. And I posed this question to her and she flat out denied it.
Starting point is 00:22:50 I don't know if these conversations are so secret that she doesn't know about them, that our boss doesn't know about them, or she just didn't want to reveal it on international television. But again, President Trump bypassing Secretary of State Rubio to use Steve Whitkoff to try and solve one of the world's most intractable problems.
Starting point is 00:23:13 question, whatever it is, whatever the solution is, whatever Whitkoff has offered, it can't be less than what President Putin's demands have consistently been from day one. Am I right? Yeah, I think so. Again, first of all, you and I haven't seen the 28 points. We haven't been briefed on any of this. You and I know about as much as you've just discussed. Now, President Putin did make a remark saying that he was pleased at least at this point for the first time russian interests were being taken into account something along those lines that's encouraging but we've got to be careful you know we've been through all of these convulsive phases that they change from uh what is it euphoria to depression within the space of a few days
Starting point is 00:24:12 I am someone that would love to see peace come to Ukraine. I mean, that's the best thing that could happen for the people that live in that country. I think that it's appropriate that President Trump and President Putin sit down with their respective teams and draw a new map. That's the way wars have been ended in Europe for hundreds of years. You draw a new map. You change the borders to meet people's legitimate national. security concerns. Right.
Starting point is 00:24:44 So that should happen. I don't know what the terms will be and so forth. But at the same time, who takes over in Ukraine? Remember, the Russians take the position, and I'm sympathetic to them because we felt this way, too, on more than one occasion in the history of the United States. They don't want to fight this war again. In other words, they don't want this peace to come about that doesn't fundamentally change Ukraine into a neutral state with a government that is completely divorced from Zelensky and
Starting point is 00:25:19 company. They want that. If they can't get that, quite frankly, it doesn't make any difference where they draw the lines and what promises are made. They'll end up going to war again in a few years. Right. So that's the crux of the thing. I don't know that this will work. I want to be optimistic. But as you said before we got on the program, you know, we've been down this road before and the war was going to end in 24 hours and we all know what's happened. Right, right, right. Back to President Zelensky. I mean, he really, really is in a bind between the nationalist bandarists who seem to control him and have apparently threatened him and the public that has got to be disgusted with the palpable corruption
Starting point is 00:26:09 and the fact that he's not even the legal head of state, which makes you wonder how he could agree to anything. But how can he possibly agree to surrender land, which historically has been Russian, and 90% of which is now dominated by, the Russian military due to the special military operation, but which the bandarists, the hardline nationalists around him, would never concede and would rather die before they concede. Well, that could be arranged for the bandarists. I think the Russians would be happy to arrange that.
Starting point is 00:26:53 The issue for Zelensky is, can he be given some sort of out? In other words, can And is someone from the CIA going to sit down with him with MI6 or both and say, game is up? You need to leave. This arrangement is going to be made in Washington and Moscow. You can express your hopes for it, but you don't necessarily have to be part of it. And we'll fly you out of here. And he can go where his two friends who have stolen hundreds of millions
Starting point is 00:27:30 of dollars have gone to Israel. He too is Jewish. He can go there. He will not be extradited. He will be safe from any prosecution in Netanyahu's Israel. And that may be the best solution for him. I mean, there was discussion when he went to Greece that he might just leave from Greece to Israel or somewhere else. I think the game is up for him. It's up to somebody to explain it to him and find an out for him. Then somebody else is going to step forward. Whether or not that person is acceptable to the Russians is open to debate, but somebody else will step forward,
Starting point is 00:28:08 and the Russians will probably tolerate that if it brings this travesty of a war to an end. The real problem here, then, is our European allies. And, you know, I think President Putin assumed that President Trump was the de facto leader of NATO. And that if President Trump said as a leader of NATO, we're going to do the following, that his allies would get into line and follow. I mean, that certainly was true 30 years ago.
Starting point is 00:28:36 It was true 40 years ago, 50 years ago. But that doesn't seem to be the case right now. So that's problematic. But Putin, I think, is willing to compartmentalize to the extent that he would like good relations with us. He wants to do business with us. So you could see an agreement emerge ultimately that gives Trump at least some, some optically pleasing moment where relations between Moscow and Washington are restored, while that may not necessarily be true for our so-called NATO allies, at least not initially. And remember that President Trump has to be seen as having crafted something good, and he has to have responsibility. in a historical sense for having done something good he needs the optics that's part of what he
Starting point is 00:29:31 demands i think the russians will accommodate that they accommodated him in alaska i mean they chuckled over all the aircraft that were out there on the tarmac and you know these displays of military power i mean i know that for a fact they kind of laughed and said okay fine uh they want an end of this so they'll accommodate him to the extent that they can provided he recognizes the facts as we've described them for Ukraine. But it's up to President Trump to drag the Europeans along. And that may be difficult, at least at the moment, at least until those governments go away. And they will go away, perhaps not as fast as we would all like, but they're on the path to extinction.
Starting point is 00:30:13 One of the things I said to Maria Zakharova this morning was, what will it take for me to be able to fly from JFK to Moscow in nine hours instead of through Istanbul, she roared Istanbul or Doha taking 20 hours. She looked to me and she goes, ask Mr. Trump, these are his sanctions, not ours. Yes, that's absolutely right. And, you know, this business of bullying everything. I think President Trump, again, wants to be seen as the strong guy who pushed this agreement, whatever it turns out to be, that President Putin is willing to sign. He has to be seen in those terms.
Starting point is 00:30:57 And I think the Russians will accommodate it because they're just sick of the whole thing. And they know that the Ukrainian people have had it. I mean, you talk to German journalists and others that have been to Western Ukraine and they report the population is ready to throw in the towel. In fact, Ukrainians living in the West, West of the Upper River, have actually said,
Starting point is 00:31:19 we don't want another war. and the best way to avoid another war is to make sure the government in Kiev is friendly to Moscow. They know that. They understand that. So there's hope, but we have to scale back our expectations or suppress them right now, Judge.
Starting point is 00:31:38 It's very iffy. Before we finish, and I appreciate you staying with us for so long, Colonel, you mentioned Germany. Is Germany going to leave NATO and the EU in order to become independent again? It will have to. It doesn't have any choice.
Starting point is 00:31:57 The globalists are a legacy of the Second World War. Remember the famous statement, everybody used to chuckle over it. NATO exists to keep the Russians out and the Germans down. You know, in the 1990s, when I would hear that crap, I was furious. Because here the Germans were probably the single most reliable and loyal component of the NATO. alliance. And people continue to recite that insulting nonsense. I think the Germans have had it. When this government goes, whatever government replaces them will be a nationalist government. And that will continue. It may be that you get the AFD, but they're not the final answer.
Starting point is 00:32:38 You're going to see a succession of governments in all of these countries, all of which are going to be nationalists. And when I say nationalists, they're all going to be France first, Britain first, Germany first. In fact, in Germany, the Germans may go one step further, and the population may say, how about Germany only? Because the Germans are sick to death of being treated as a cash cow. You go to Italy or you go to France,
Starting point is 00:33:05 and they blame everything that's wrong on the Germans. It's absurd. It's nonsense. But the Germans have been the cash cow. You know, Germans have walked into the room full of other Europeans, and they walk in with their heads down and bowed and very solemn. We know we're Germans. We know we're bad. We've done terrible things. How much money do you want? I mean, that's what it amounts to. I mean, the Austrians have escaped
Starting point is 00:33:32 a lot of this, you know, because the Austrians are famous for having convinced the world that Beethoven was Austrian and Hitler was German. In fact, the opposite is the case. The opposite is true. They've escaped all that, you know. So, oh, we are the nice Austrians. We never did bad things. Well, that's a lot of crap. Let me tell you, if I want to go back over it, because I spent my life studying that, 40% of all your concentration camp commanders were Austrians, a disproportionately large number compared with what should have been the case.
Starting point is 00:34:04 You start looking at all the SS formations and the names, and they're all South German and Austrian names. We can go on and on and on. My point, you know, I'm not saying the Austrians ought to be whipped and punished today either. that's all over with that's nonsense it needs to go away but i think that we have done this to the germans for so long that they've lived in kind of a stockholm syndrome you know where they they enjoy having the whip hand held over their heads and they have willingly pled guilty to every charge i think that's over the younger generation wants nothing to do with it
Starting point is 00:34:42 and they want they're tired of being exploited for the european union they have been effectively deindustrialized with uh plunging the country into near poverty because of the european union they're looking at nato and they're saying how is nato providing for our security you know back when there was a soviet union it was arguable but today no what have we done remember you're either NATO is either out of area or out of business. In other words, either NATO gets dragged into our imperial adventures, or we don't need it. Well, the Germans have never wanted to be involved in any of the imperial adventures that we were part of. And they have scrupulously avoided most of them.
Starting point is 00:35:26 And when they've gotten involved, as they did, for instance, in Afghanistan, they spent most of their time inside the wire in their little sort of garrison. and the best thing about Afghanistan for the Germans was all the great beer that was shipped in from Germany. They ran over to the German compound to drink beer. But the point is, it's over. Germany will leave NATO, Germany will leave the EU. And when it does that, it will not only regain its former position in Europe, it will restore its relations with Russia. Right.
Starting point is 00:36:01 Over the last 400 years, with the exception of two world wars that could have been avoided, and should have been avoided, we're very good. And we have always looked at any potential reconciliation or rapprochement between Germany and Russia as dangerous to us. It's not. It's not dangerous to us at all. What it does, though, in Europe is it diminishes France. It diminishes Britain.
Starting point is 00:36:28 They become largely irrelevant strategically, because that access between Germany and Russia economically is huge. and very, very powerful. And it's something the Russians would like to see restored. But right now, they don't think it's possible. And so they've turned all of their attention to Eurasia. All you have to do is listen to this man, Alexander Dugan and others. They talk about Russia's future in Eurasia.
Starting point is 00:36:55 But that's misleading because Russia has real interests in Europe and those interests are largely with Germany. And can I add a footnote these dramatic changes, which would be for the betterment of everybody in Germany will probably not happen under Chancellor Mertz. No,
Starting point is 00:37:16 no. He has to be retired quickly from active duty on a permanent basis. Right. And he's had his run. He's the, you know, we go back to when Cole departed as Chancellor of Germany. Then you ended up with Schlesinger. He understood, you know, these dynamics
Starting point is 00:37:34 very well. He's succeeded by mackle who did understand them but was never willing to stand up and defend them you know mackle was the one that stood up in munich after trump's during trump's first term and said we can no longer depend on the united states europe must find its own way forward shortly thereafter you had mccrone talk about nato as being brain dead but what happened nothing in other words the europeans went back to sitting on their rear ends and doing nothing and the germans were equally complacent Those days are over. Everyone is going to have to get up in their corner and get to work
Starting point is 00:38:11 because Germany is in a lot of trouble economically and socially. All these countries are overrun with people from North Africa and the Middle East that they never asked for and don't want. They're dealing with incredible criminality that they're unaccustomed to. Germany used to be probably one of the safest countries in the world, as was Sweden, as was Norway and Denmark. all of a sudden that's gone that's not the case anymore the germans don't like it but they're afraid to do anything about it because they're part of this european community where they are
Starting point is 00:38:45 constantly told they're bad they're bad germans are bad germans are nazis and so forth they've had it it's like everything else eventually people do wake up and react and they're tired of being humiliated so manz manse i think is somebody who's going to culminate and go away And then all bets are off. It'll take Germany time to do all of these things, but it's not hard to see the handwriting on the wall. And we should welcome this. We should say, look, it's time for you to be on your own,
Starting point is 00:39:16 and we want to help you. The biggest mistake we can make is to insist, no, we want you to remain our vassal state. That would be catastrophic, and we need to not do that. Colonel, just to end on a lighter note, I wonder what you think the Russians, the Chinese, the Japanese, the South Koreans think of a president of the United States when he behaves like this. What did Jeffrey Epstein mean in his emails what he said you knew about the girls? I know nothing about that.
Starting point is 00:39:52 Jeffrey Epson and I had a very bad relationship for many years. Jennifer, go ahead, go ahead. Is there something discriminating in the fight, sir? Quiet, quiet, McGee. Mr. President, why wait for Congress to release the Epstein files? Why not just do it now? I think you are a terrible reporter. You're a terrible person and a terrible reporter.
Starting point is 00:40:13 What the Epstein is is a Democrat hoax. Your crappy company is one of the perpetrators. And I'll tell you something. Add to that that Muhammad bin Salman knew nothing. Salman knew nothing about the slaughter of Jamal Khashoggi, even though Trump's CIA said bin Salman planned and ordered it. And peace is broken out in Gaza. Right.
Starting point is 00:40:36 Everything is improving dramatically there. Palestinians are dying. Infrastructure is being destroyed. But we have peace in Gaza. I mean, one of the worst things that I've heard anybody say is that this current arrangement with Russia, this 28-point proposal, is modeled on the successful ceasefire. in Gaza. What successful ceasefire?
Starting point is 00:40:58 Well, for God's sakes, I mean, if that's the model, we can write this thing off now. He has a bad habit of shooting from the hip. He's guided too much by his emotions. But here's the rest of the story. When these Epstein files come out, what are we going to get? Are we going to get page after page after page that's just black? Sorry, we redacted. Probably.
Starting point is 00:41:21 We redacted, you know. if he had said well the epstein proves that yes i like girls okay if he'd said that a lot of people would have giggled and he might have gotten away with it uh at least temporarily but i think his reaction is condemnation it's tragic and someone said a long time ago to me and i was really skeptical of it this is you know months ago said epstein is going to bring down Donald Trump. And that may well turn out to be the case, tragically. Conan McGregor, thank you very much. This has been an extraordinary interview. The audience has been enormous. And shortly before we came on air, judging freedom reached 650,000
Starting point is 00:42:10 subscribers, a great milestone for us. We started out four years ago with 93. And of course, you are principally responsible for that, my dear friend. Thank you very very. very much for your time. Thanks for your analysis. Thanks for all the gifts you've shared with us. Next week's a short week, but I hope you can join us again. Right. See you next week. Thank you, Julie. Thank you for all the best. Wow. An absolutely marvelous man in a terrific interview. Coming up at three o'clock, another marvelous man, Phil Giraldi, Judge Napolitano for judging freedom. Thank you.

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