Judging Freedom - COL. Lawrence Wilkerson : The Deadly Trump/Zionist Negotiation
Episode Date: September 10, 2025COL. Lawrence Wilkerson : The Deadly Trump/Zionist NegotiationSee 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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Hi, everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom.
Today is Wednesday, September 10th, 2025.
Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, my dear friend, joins us now.
Colonel Wilkerson, a pleasure.
Thank you.
Before we get to Trump and the Zionist negotiations and luring people into a
false sense of security and trying to kill the negotiators, before we get to the Israeli attack
with American support on Doha. In your view, is President Donald Trump seriously engaged in trying
to end the wars in Ukraine and Gaza? No decidedly on the first Ukraine. And no decidedly.
But with a caveat, he wants it to go on until BB's finish on the second.
Wow.
Why is he not trying to end the war in Ukraine?
A war he said he would end in 24 hours, within 24 hours of inauguration.
I think he found, particularly at the Alaska Summit, but before that, gradually,
that it was a far more difficult task than he envisioned.
And so even then, as he approached Alaska, he began to think about it, and as he came out of Alaska, he probably decided he was right in his thinking, getting away from it.
And the only way he knows to get away from it is to just push it away.
And I think that's what he thinks he's done, and he's pushed it to the Europeans.
Did any, was any progress made toward peace from the Alaska summit?
I think not. The one thing that I thought would come out of it that would adhere and be pursued
would be the renewal of new start in February when it expires. And by extension, a new regime
being discussed for nuclear weapons control in the world, bringing Xi Jinping and ultimately
the other seven nuclear powers in, if Iran goes. But I don't see that happening. And I detent
detect that Putin and Lovroff in particular have sort of soured on that. So their intent on
the war now, as they should be, but they don't see any prospect, at least from what I can
tell, of renewing these very critical talks about nuclear weapons.
You may have seen this morning that the Air Force told the Congress that, yes, we can
extend to 2050 our ballistic missiles. That's a hell of an admission on
planes. One, you can and save trillions of dollars. And on the other, well, is that really something
you should be doing if in fact you were going for a new family of missiles? Why did you suddenly
decide you can extend them all the way out to mid-century?
Does Trump's current attitude about ending or not ending the war in Ukraine reflect the
triumph of the neocons around him. Heggseth, Rubio, General Kellogg.
Well, if you consider Stasis and the war just rumbling on and the dollars still flowing into the
military industrial complex and so forth, yes, I don't think that's a very satisfactory
solution, and we're about to have governments topple in Europe. I mean, Macron is
now holding on by a hair spread. I don't think Starmer's situation is much better.
either he's probably the most hated person in england at least if not great britain as a whole
and i don't think merits is long for the for the journey so europe and nato are commensurately falling
apart uh i want to get back to your views on um the war in gaza i want to hear about your
caveat but before we do in reference to what you just said chris i don't know the number
but it's the Hungarian President Orban on the European Union.
I believe that the European Union has currently entered a state of fragmentation and disintegration.
And if this continues, which is, in fact, the more likely scenario,
then the history of the European Union will go down in history as the disappointing outcome of a noble experiment.
Pointing outcome of a noble experiment.
Do you agree, Colonel Wilkerson?
There are a lot of people at the inception, if you will,
even at the inception of the common market,
that smart people, smart people on both sides of the Atlantic
who said, this will never work, it'll never adhere.
It's Europe, after all.
Have you no knowledge of their history?
I think we're at another juncture like that.
Before we get to your views on Gaza and your views on Doha and whether Trump is serious about wanting to end the war in Gaza,
does President Trump follow a national security process of serious review by seasoned professionals of intelligence, political, economic, military,
data from foreign countries who then report it to him?
Not at all. As far as I can tell, there is no national security decision-making process
that comports even remotely with the 1947 National Security Act and the process that
has evolved out of that act very successfully, in many cases, Eisenhower, for example,
H.W. Bush, for example, they don't follow it. It began to fall apart with my president,
George W. Bush, in the first term, Dick Cheney.
commandeering the entire process.
And Condi Rice, the National Security Advisor,
so interested in being Colin Powell's replacement after four years
that she concentrated on the president
rather than disciplining the decision-making process.
But right now, there is no one, none,
disciplining this decision process.
It is a process of impolitic remark after impolitic remark
that then becomes U.S. policy or faith,
leads away in the breeze and the wind.
Is there a true national security advisor with a staff of professionals to inform him?
I'm sure the staff is there, but how, and Henry Kissinger was a much more capable individual.
You may despise him, but he was a capable individual. Let me tell you.
And he couldn't manage both the State Department and the National Security staff,
which now can number as high as 200, 300 people, all of whom are buzzing away and generally
are experts in their field or their area.
You can't handle that.
You can't do Foggy Bottom and the White House and the National Security Council simultaneously.
It's just impossible.
And Marco Rubio is not Henry Kissinger.
Well, that's the understatement of the age, Colonel.
Well, where does Trump get his guidance from?
from his fertile brain, I think he really gives things some thought, not very cogent thought,
because he's not a very deep person and he's not a well-read person.
So he gives it thought.
He does like he did in his real estate deals.
He acts on instinct.
That produces the remark.
And then the remark, everyone else in the cabinet tries to conform their policy to.
And some don't even go that far.
They just conformed their policy in the absence of direction.
Wow.
You know this better than I.
You lived and worked there.
The National Security Advisors' offices right outside the Oval Office,
and he or she can walk right in and say,
you need to know this right now, Mr. President.
These are decisions we have to make right now.
This is Netanyahu's latest.
This is the Starmer's latest, whatever the case may be.
Rubio's not there.
No.
Now, Ronald Reagan tried to conform to the process, but he did it in a way that wouldn't
usurp his presidential power because he'd seen Zigginsky with Carter and he'd seen
Kissinger with Nixon.
He didn't want those.
He wanted to be president.
So count them.
He had six national security buyers and the first one he wouldn't even let into his
office.
But very, very quickly, he would.
realized that was a mistake.
And by the time you get to Carlucci and Powell, his ultimate and penultimate national
security advisors, he's seeing them.
He's seeing them and he's listening to them.
And they're forming and shaping policy for him.
So here you had a man that was very powerful personally.
I mean, and a pretty damn cogent decision maker and thinker who said, I don't need this
person who in a few years, not even a few years, why?
year really, decided, maybe I do. And by the time he's at the end, he's got two people who are
really helping him. What is the caveat that you entertain intellectually over whether Trump is
truly trying to end the war in Gaza, colonel? I keep coming back to my postulation, which I have
seen for all of my time in government, and my time in the military, too, for that matter.
It is not Israel that is leading the United States.
It's the United States that's pointing Israel at its perceived enemies.
That's one reason I think we're going to war with Iran.
And I think we're going to war with Iran before Christmas.
This is going to be a disaster, judge.
But it's us doing it using Israel as our willing and sometimes recalcitrant and dangerous tool in the process.
I'm going to ask you in a minute what your take is on the attack on Doha, but before I do that, here's Steve Bannon, good buddy of the president, managed this first campaign in 2016, making some statements that Benjamin Netanyahu doesn't want to hear. Chris, cut number 19.
The world's best ally. I don't want Tom Cotton and Lindsey Graham. You're going to tell me.
that again? You're the world's best. Here's what an ally
does. They're a protector.
They're not an ally. They never fought shoulder
to shoulder with us anywhere.
They get us into messes like in Iran where they tried to have
regime change and lied about it.
Netanyahu and his government
are destroying not only the state of Israel
and going to turn it into a Jewish
Pakistan. They are
hurting the Jewish community
throughout the world.
in turning the world against the Jewish community.
Full stop.
I suspect you agree with him, Colonel.
I agree with him, allheartedly.
I might be have different motivations, but I agree with him.
I think my rabbi in New York, who said the greatest cause of anti-Semitism in the world is Bibi Netanyahu.
Great.
What is your take on the attack on Doha?
There were, radar was down. Doha, defenses were down. We understand there may have been some disguised planes, jets in the air, American jets in the air, just to make sure there were no other jets there. The Israelis were refueled by the RAF. Give us your take on all this.
This administration has shown, I think, and I can say this, I think, rather definitively, that it turns things over.
to the commander in the field that's not all bad but it's not all good either there are
circumstances where the president himself and certainly the secretary of defense should keep a
weather eye 24-7 on that commander circumstances are so strategic and so dangerous
that the president dare not leave it to the commander in the field that sounds nice it sounds like
what every american would do let that general do what he needs to do but we're doing that far too much
too much. And these people take leeway. They take leeway just like the commander in the
Pacific did in April 2001 and sent that EP3 too close to Hananga Island. And the EP3
hit a Chinese F8. The F8 crash killed the pilot. And the EP3 had to go down on
Honan Island with some of the most secure gear the U.S. has in its contents. Those are the
kinds of things that are overstretching your role, four-star general or admiral. And I have no
doubt that Central Command has become quite used to that.
Did the Trump White House give Netanyahu the go-ahead? Is it even conceivable that with all
the American assets and personnel who knew or must have known about this that the President
did not? I can conceive that he didn't. As I just said, that someone walked a little too
fast for the britches. I don't think that's the case because I'm looking back on Iran and I'm
looking back on the duplicity of that and the absolute war crime of that in actuality.
And I'm saying, okay, they're an ally, but they're Doha. They're Doha. And would Trump do that
and then try to deny it? And would Beebe say that he did it all on his own and Trump didn't know
about it? And the Israeli government say the opposite. They got their wires,
crossed. But yes, all of that could have happened, and Trump could have been absolutely knowledge.
Tell me, if you think this is credible, Colonel, Chris, cut number 16.
Well, I'm not thrilled. I'm not thrilled about it.
I don't have to do that. I'm just, I'm not thrilled about the whole situation. It's not
a good situation. But I will say this. We want the haze.
back, but we are not thrilled about the way that went down today.
You don't tell you advanced.
You were caught by surprise, sir?
I'm never surprised by anything, especially when it comes to the Middle East.
How did she worry about this up?
No.
I'll be giving a full statement tomorrow, but I would tell you this.
I was very unhappy about it, very unhappy about every aspect,
and we've got to get the hostages back.
But I was very unhappy about the way that went down.
The Vice President and Secretary of Defense get paid to do
besides standing like two goons smiling at the president's wisecracks.
Yeah.
You just can't read Trump.
I don't know whether he's being somewhat sincere there or he's just covering his river in,
covering it with the Emir as much as he's covering it with the American people.
But I go back to my previous remarks.
You bought this with regard to Iran.
Now, I know you think Iran is the number one enemy, and Qatar is an ostensible ally,
but still, you bought this in a way that was a war crime.
Why should I think now that you're really, you know, sorry that this happened?
What is the likely geopolitical effect of the United States allowing its own ally to be?
attacked a residential neighborhood in the capital of the country, an ally that gave a $400 million
gift ostensibly to the Defense Department, but really to the president himself, an ally that
houses the largest United States air base in the Middle East. What is the geopolitical
effect of allowing the Israelis to attack that ally? It will have.
have repercussions. There's no question about it all the way through Riyadh and through other
capitals, maybe even in Cairo or probably surely in Cairo. But I don't think it's going to
cause any fractures or breakups of current coalitions or alliances or relationships because it's
so important that for Qatar in particular that LUD stay there and that airfield be its principal
contribution to not just the GCC, which is kind of moribun, but to the general defense
of itself and the rest of the Arab countries in the region against, they think, Iran.
But I would back up and say something else, too. This is a little bit Machiavellian,
but I'm going to say it. There is angst about Qatar's role in everything that pertains to
what's happening now, that is one of the biggest war crimes the world has seen since
1943, 44, and 45, Gaza, and the West Bank as well.
Cutter has been duplicitous in a lot of this.
They have helped Netanyahu to stoke what happened on October the 7th.
They have helped transfer money that made October the 7th possible
and investigations down the road, if they're honest and straightforward,
might wind up putting a lot of blame on Netanyahu and on Qatar
for providing that conduit, and they have not been in Netanyahu's face in terms the most
cooperative in handling Hamas as the negotiations took place. That doesn't mean they haven't tried
for a good solution. It means they've tried for solutions Netanyahu vehemently disagreed with
and was afraid we're going to be forced down his throat. All to say, maybe Qatar needed a lesson.
What is the conduit of which you just spoke, Colonel?
I'm sorry?
What is the conduit?
What is the October 7 Qatar conduit of what you spoke?
The fact that Netanyahu was shoveling money through Qatar and other places too, but I understand
that Qatar was the main one to Hamas because he wanted them to be ultimately politically and
otherwise victorious, if you will, with the Palestinians' allegiance, because he didn't want the
PA and the PLO by extension to be that because they both believe in a two-state solution.
Hamas doesn't.
So in that sense, the organization that Netanyahu is supposedly spending all his bullets
and bombs on right now to exterminate and won't, by the way, but the organization he's doing
that to was his ally in keeping the group of Palestinians that wanted a two-state solution
and had recognized the right to Israel to exist from being the predominant organization.
And he was doing that willingly and knowingly.
The New York Post reports just a few minutes ago,
an Israeli airstrike leveled the Taiba II tower in Gaza City on Wednesday
with the IDF claiming Hamas was using the high rise for intelligence.
operations. Almost everyone that comes on this show who speaks of military and intel matters
agrees with you that the Netanyahu regime will not succeed in eradicating Hamas, but they
are really going after them full force at this point. Well, what they're going after is the
Palestinians, Judge. That's what they're going after. They will get very few Hamas, and Hamas will get a lot
them. Hamas has learned how to make the most sophisticated IEDs, improvised explosive devices,
like gave us such hell in Iraq and in Afghanistan, and they're going to take their toll on the IDF.
That toll is going to be significant. That's another reason why I think we're going to war with Iran,
because Beebe is losing all of his other struggles, some of them quite badly. I understand Lebanon is getting ready to give him
some headache too. Whether it will be Hezbollah or the government or both in combination
remains to be seen, but they've got plenty of power left. And so he's going to have to
extract himself from this politically and personally jail time by continuing this war. And the
only way he can continue it with merit, quote unquote, is taking on Iran. Does Donald Trump
look out of touch when he expects the American government, the American
people to believe that he didn't know in advance about these attacks in Doha?
Even if it's true, my answer to that is yes.
Even if he didn't know, he totally did not know.
I don't think he's believed.
Wouldn't George H.W. Bush or Ronald Reagan or even W.
have fired a defense secretary that failed to tell him that.
Absolutely.
Yes.
even if it was Donald Rumsfeld with Dick Cheney protecting him.
I mean, he did in November 2006.
He fired Rumsfelds over Cheney's great objections.
All right, Colonel.
Thank you very much.
You know why he fired him, I think, really basically,
because he was tired of his lying.
Rumsfeld was a quintessential, polished, first-rate liar.
I know when I had my show on Fox, Rumsfeld called me up and he wanted to come on.
Now he had just left office.
I don't know if he was selling a book or whatever.
And he came on and the first thing we did was put up a huge full screen.
It was Rumsfeld shaking hands with Saddam Hussein.
That went over big.
Oh, God, when it was over, I thought he was going to take the head off.
this PR guy. Did you know that they were going to do that? Well, I thought the judge was my friend.
We were at Princeton together. We weren't at Princeton together. He's 30 years older than I.
One of my friends at the agency said, we knew that Sodomerset had chemical weapons.
Rumsfeld gave him to him. There you go. There you go. Colonel, thank you very much.
Thanks for a little bit of lightness at the end, because this is such dark.
Such dark things we're talking about is the White House in
confident is BB running the show?
Sure seems that way, but you know what I think.
I think the people behind Trump won't BB running the show.
Yes. Yes, nicely put, Colonel.
Thank you for your time, my dear friend. We'll look forward to seeing you next week.
Take care.
Thank you.
And coming up on all of this at 2.15 this afternoon, Aaron Mote,
and right behind him at 3 o'clock, Professor John Mearsheimer, Judge Napolitano for judging.
freedom.
Thank you.