Judging Freedom - Larry Johnson: The Middle East One year after October 7th 2023.

Episode Date: October 7, 2024

Larry Johnson: The Middle East One year after October 7th 2023.See 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. Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Monday, October 7th, 2024. Larry Johnson will be here in just a moment on how the Middle East has changed in the past year. But first this. A divisive presidential election is upon us and the winner is gold. Let me tell you what I mean. Since 2016, our national debt has grown a staggering 70% and gold has increased by 60%. Do you own gold?
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Starting point is 00:02:06 in the middle east changed from october 6th 2023 uh israel has solidified its status as the country that engages in the most terrorism in the world it It has become more isolated. It has become less respected. It has managed to make itself a pariah. You know, and none of this had happened. Regardless of how you interpret the Hamas attacks on October 7, you know, Israel describes it as this horrific terrorist incident. Hamas describes it as, hey, we were attacking military targets and we were taking hostages with the intent to trade them out for all the Palestinians that are being held illegally in Israeli prisons. That at that point, Israel had a choice. It would have, I believe, been in a very strong position to have gone to other countries, and particularly with the United States, and even countries like Russia, to have intervened and come up with a negotiated settlement.
Starting point is 00:03:16 Because initially, Hamas, churches, Christian churches. They've killed elderly. They've killed the very, very young. They always claim that, oh, we're, you know, these Hamas terrorists are hiding behind civilians. But, you know, I wonder if Israel will accept that excuse from Iran if Iran blows up a Mossad headquarters, which sits in the middle of a neighborhood, of a civilian neighborhood. Well, you know what you know what the answer that is it'll be going screaming bloody murder oh terrorism so i'm just saying there's there's no consistency in this how about the strength and stability of the israeli state is it as an economic, cultural, geographic, political entity, is it stronger and more stable or weaker and less stable than a year ago? Well, ask that question like it was a presidential election.
Starting point is 00:04:37 To the average Israeli. Are you better off today than you were two years ago? Good way to put it, Larry. Yeah. Well, the answer to that's no. No, they're not. Moody's has downgraded their bond rating. One more downgrade, they're junk bonds,
Starting point is 00:04:51 which means your choice is either investing in Israel or going to the casino and playing blackjack. You probably have better luck with blackjack, okay? The Israeli army is the number of mental psychological casualties that they're suffering is going way up. Because, you know, the average the average soldier when they're out there, and they end up shooting and killing civilians, it takes them it takes an emotional toll. And it's
Starting point is 00:05:22 something that the Israeli soldiers are not immune to. And so on top of that, they're enduring actual casualties. At least 800, close to 800 have been killed in the last year. And the number of wounded is far greater than that. So no, this isn't serving Israel's interest. And it's not like it's become stronger in the Middle East. If anything, over the course of this last year, we've seen that Saudi Arabia and Iran, who used to be at odds, reestablished diplomatic relationships and are working more closely together. That doesn't help Israel. And Saudi Arabia and Israel, which were on the verge of establishing diplomatic relationships saudi arabia now says no way without a two-state solution which is correct over the horizon of over an inevitable and on uh endless horizon right yeah i was the the uh what what's happened is uh netanyahu's major
Starting point is 00:06:28 achievement is bringing more countries around the world into a position of supporting a palestinian state and and not just giving lip service to it but actually insisting that there must be a palestinian state before you know know, there was that talk about it, but there was never any real firm movement towards it. But now, you know, Israel's managed to, with the Bibi Netanyahu charm offensive at the United Nations two weeks ago, where he, you know, insulted everybody and questioned everybody's mother's sexual history.
Starting point is 00:07:05 He has managed to leave Israel quite isolated. Is it more and more apparent that the ferocity of the Israeli response was intended to retain Netanyahu in office, cement his legacy as the man under whose watch Israel expanded its borders, rather than return the hostages and achieve a lasting peace. The latter were never on the table. You know, the the zionist mentality and i i've had direct uh interaction with the person i can tell you off there who it was right um but the the it's
Starting point is 00:07:56 frightening because the the they really they come at it this way god God gave us this land. This land is ours. It was given to us 3,000 years ago. And we're just taking back what is ours. And, you know, these Palestinians need to go elsewhere. These are interlopers. These are people. These are outsiders. They genuinely believe this judge and and it's not just it's not just one or two it's not just the ben gevirs and uh the smotrich uh even netanyahu is is is paint and bought into that and so with with that is the mentality there's no room for compromise with pal or Lebanese or Syrians or Egyptians or Jordanians none whatsoever this land is ours God gave this land to me that's the song that's the belief and there's no gray area in there they can't say okay well we'll give some of it to the Palestinians.
Starting point is 00:09:05 There's no sharing. It's all taken. Were Bill Burns, the head of the CIA and the chief American negotiator, Amos Hochstein, an American negotiator born in Israel and fought with the IDF in his youth, were they duped by Netanyahu into believing that he really was serious about negotiating for peace, or were they part of the group that was duping the West? Were they in on this game that there never was and never would be a serious Israeli effort toward a ceasefire? Resolve to earn your degree in the new year in the Bay with WGU. With courses available online 24-7 and monthly start dates,
Starting point is 00:09:52 WGU offers maximum flexibility so you can focus on your future. Learn more at wgu.edu. I think they went along completely with Israel on this. It wasn't, you know, it wasn't the United States calling these shots. This was Netanyahu calling the shots. And just the fact of the Israeli influence within America's, you know, domestic political scene is significant, you know, to, and pointing that out, you know, we we're not you get accused of being an anti-Semite. But the reality is that the between the money that's paid out by the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee, between the number of very prominent Americans who are Jewish, but who also share very deeply held beliefs about Zionism, they wield enormous influence in the American political scene. And so here you've got, you know, Burns, I mean, and it's not confined to just Israel,
Starting point is 00:10:57 because we've seen Burns do backflips as well with respect to Ukraine and Russia. You know, his viewpoints there have been diametrically reversed. Right. But it is this is this is something that they used it as a charade. And I think a very credible case can be made that the entire ceasefire ruse that was used to two weeks ago was a setup in order to try to kill in order to kill Nasrallah, the head, the secretary general of Hezbollah. When the Israelis go about very effectively, but, you know, using a bazooka to get a mosquito, to decapitate various organizations, whether it's Hamas or Hezbollah.
Starting point is 00:11:46 Does that serve any serious military purpose? Aren't the people that they kill just more likely than not to be replaced by someone even more aggressive? Well, it depends on how fragile the organization, the institution is. And what I mean by fragility is, is it really, you know, is it built around the personality, say, of Jim Jones, the cult leader that, you know, took his followers to Guyana and had them all drink the Kool-Aid? If he dies, then they lose, you know, that group loses its cohesion. But that's not Hezbollah yeah the Nasrallah was a prominent figure and there were other leaders that had been killed but Hezbollah is not uh it's not built on a hierarchy you know let's say like the Catholic church where you get all the way to the Pope and and then below the Pope, you've got the cardinals and the bishops, and you've got this whole elaborate structure.
Starting point is 00:12:49 But if you start taking out that upper level, maybe the structure becomes unwieldy. It's much more dynamic that they are able to operate in independent cones so yeah this you know all it did though was it it really united some sunnis or brought the sunni people around to uh the the cause of the shia because hezbollah is a shia movement and so what what you're looking at what you're looking at here is that the Shia and Hezbollah are getting more support around the world than they had a year ago. I mean, there was a time, Larry, you and I have been covering this stuff since George W. Bush was in the White House. I mean, there was a time when any sort of unity between Shia and Sunni was unthinkable. Has the Israeli response to October 7th succeeded in uniting these two groups that have been at odds for 600 years? Not entirely, but it certainly made some headway. So let's remember over the last, you know, eight years, you've had Hezbollah fighters up in northern Syria fighting against groups like al-Nusra, radical Sunni Islamists that have been funded by and had the backing of people like Turkey and the United States, mind you.
Starting point is 00:14:21 So the United States has actually been you know helping sponsor radical islamic terrorism just as long as it's directed against the syrians it's okay um and so when nasrallah for example was killed there you know there was wild cheering going around that sunni community up in idlib in syria however in places like like pakistan and and even Saudi Arabia, you've had the expressions of grief and concern. So we've really seen a growing unity between some key segments of the Sunnis, as well as with the Shia community. And that, again, that didn't happen a year ago. So using that as a metric, Israel's worse off. Do we know any more about the nature and extent of damage done and targets reached by the 200 or so projectiles, since they all have different names, that iran hurled uh at israel 10 days ago uh no uh beyond that yeah they did some damage but but again it goes back to what's
Starting point is 00:15:36 the assumption about the intent of that iranian strike i believe that ir Iran's effort was not designed to inflict specific damage and to cause casualties. Their goal, I believe, was to now tell Israel, we can hit you and you can't stop us. Because after the April attack, the messaging around the world was all Israel in the United States stopped the Iranians called it was a total failure. And so Iran said, Okay, we'll hit you now. Because I think if this escalates, if, if Israel decides to strike Iran and strikes an Iranian nuclear target, Iran will turn around and immediately hit an Israeli nuclear target. If Iran strikes,
Starting point is 00:16:35 if Israel strikes an Iranian oil facility, Iran, in turn, will start hitting energy facilities in Israel. It will be tit for tat, and it will be immediate. They're not going to be waiting two or three weeks to figure out what we're going to do. They'll realize at that point they are at war with Israel. That's where this is potentially headed. And I think that we've seen, we have not seen, but we can assume that there has been some pretty strenuous behind-the-scene activity involving particularly Russia and China, I believe, to try to prevent this
Starting point is 00:17:10 escalation from taking place. The problem is, is in Israel. It's the Israelis around the ultra Zionists that are around Netanyahu are not amenable to reason. They believe that they are fully entitled and justified to what they're doing and that God is on their side and that they will prevail. Our friend George Galloway is of the view that the Israelis do not have nukes and that it's all a deception. Is it certain that they have nukes, notwithstanding the absence of all the international approvals and the denials or obfuscations by the West?
Starting point is 00:17:58 Based on a conversation I had, oh my Lord, 30 years ago with a neighbor of mine who worked at the Naval Surface Warfare Labs in Maryland. Absolutely, they've had him. I mean, he was telling me what he knew back then about Israel's capabilities. So yeah, Israel absolutely has them. But again, crossing that nuclear, the nuclear weapons, really their only real utility up to this point, thank God has been in deterring of Asians. That's why North Korea has not that they're out trying to use them immediately on everybody else, but it hangs out there as something that one of these days someone's going to make a bad decision. And once that genie's out of the bottle, we are going to be into a very much changed world and a more dangerous world. What is the nature and extent of Russia's likely involvement if Israel attacks Iran and the United States joins in the attack?
Starting point is 00:19:08 I'm not talking about troops on the ground, but projectiles. Will Russia just provide the defensive equipment that it's provided, or will it provide more or get more actively involved? I mean, stated differently, do we know the nature and extent of the Russian-Iran defense pact that is about to be signed later this month? What we've seen is that the S-400 air defense system has been deployed in Iran, and that's been deployed, I believe, with Russian personnel to man it, to operate those systems. So in a sense, you actually do have Russian personnel on the ground. And I think that's been one of the messages conveyed to the Israelis by the Russians, saying, look, any attack on us, if you attack Iran and you start killing our personnel,, that's going to be you're attacking now Russia, you're
Starting point is 00:20:06 bringing us into it. And Russia has some other means of conveying that message, because I think it has been pointed out on your show before by Alistair, anywhere between 1.5 million 2.5 million Israeli citizens are actually citizens of Russia. So you have a significant Russian influence already in Israel. So there are ways to convey information to the government of Israel that even though it's intellectually inclined to ignore it, they get to a point where they actually have to take it into account. So Russia's playing, I think, a significant role there.
Starting point is 00:20:49 Do you think the United States will attack Iran in response to the egging on of neocons and both political parties in Congress and out of Congress? Not before the November 7th election. The Biden administration already is in a bit of disarray with their inability to handle the hurricane that hit Florida and North Carolina more than two weeks ago. So they're struggling to deal with that. They got another hurricane inbound now. And the last thing they want is to be seen stirring up a war because there's no popular demand for that in the United States, despite the rantings of people like John Bolton and Lindsey Graham. But the consensus among most people is we'd rather have a decent economy,
Starting point is 00:21:53 get rid of the inflation, and come restore power to our neighborhoods where we've lost power. If there's an October surprise, what form do you think it would take, Larry? The, you know, an attack on a nuclear power plant, say, in Russia. The, you know, a bombing inside Israel that would be seen as having been a terrorist attack carried out by Hezbollah that would then justify something like an attack against the U.S. Embassy
Starting point is 00:22:29 that would be used to try to justify a sterner response. You know, there are some, despite Israel's confidence following the use of the Pager attacks and the assassination of Nasrallah and killing several senior leadership, there still is, I think, a bit of an air of panic because the situation is spun out of their control. They're not able to really dictate and direct what's happening, that the enemy, Hezbollah and the Houthis have a role. I mean, just today we've had, you know, first you had the larger rockets fired into Haifa, and then a short time later,
Starting point is 00:23:16 Houthis followed up with another ballistic missile that's inbound. So the sirens are going off all the time now in Israel. That wasn't happening two years ago. Not at all. So the daily life of the Israelis is becoming more stressful. Is Israel using the United States to expand its borders? Or is the United States using Israel to kill Arabs, or is there some truth to both of these?
Starting point is 00:23:52 Israel's doing what Israel's going to do. Look, the United States is in a position to stop it. We won't, but the reason we won't is because of the political clout that Israel has achieved in the United States through the work of groups like AIPAC, as well as other prominent American citizens who are Jewish and strongly pro-Zionist. Israel's been doing its own thing. If you know, I remember having a discussion back in 2003, when I was teaching a senior crisis management seminar for the U.S. State Department anti-terrorism assistance training program and dealt. I dealt with eight different countries that year.
Starting point is 00:24:36 All several were from the Middle East and all were trying to figure out what the hell was our strategy and going into Iraq. And they were shocked to learn we didn't have a strategy. So the notion that the United States is being driven by some long-term vision of what it's trying to accomplish in the Middle East, no, we're just scrambling around trying to plug the holes in the dike that have sprung leaks. We're not this we didn't see and anticipate the attacks on October 7, with that took place by Hamas. And then in the immediate aftermath, we did everything we could to enable the Israelis to go out and kill Palestinians, instead of trying to find a genuine, peaceful path forward.
Starting point is 00:25:26 But, you know, who's driving that bus? I see Israel calling the shots, not the United States. It's true. The United States has the power to call the shots, has the power to intervene, but we don't use it because using it means creating political problems at home for the likes of, you know, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris. You know, the Israelis are quite willing to let Donald Trump come in and Stephen Walt wrote years ago, an event inconsistent with an earthquake, but of significant magnitude. Did the Iranians test a nuclear device? There's that possibility. It was a 4.6 on the Richter scale, if what I read was correct.
Starting point is 00:26:46 Look, you know, and I think I've said this before on your show. One of my CIA buddies, whose job was he was dealing with Iranian assets. He told me, good Lord, 20 years ago, he says, Iran's going to get the bomb. There's no doubt about it. Iran has the scientific capability. They've got the engineering capability. They've created missiles, ballistic missiles that could capable of carrying such a warhead. It's just a matter of doing it.
Starting point is 00:27:17 Up to this point, they haven't done it because of the religious dictates of the Ayatollah Khamenei, that it was seen as a violation of Islam to move forward with that. Now, in light of events over the last six months in particular, you know, you could see the potential that a change in religious doctrine, that Iran would come to the conclusion that the only way we can safeguard ourselves permanently is to actually have a nuke. And that if we have nuclear capability,
Starting point is 00:27:52 then the United States and Israel will leave us alone. I could see that happening. So they definitely have it in their ability to do it. The question is, have they done it? And we still don't have any solid evidence that that is the case. Larry, what is the interest of China in the conflagration in the Middle East? Oil. Keeping the oil flowing out of the Persian Gulf.
Starting point is 00:28:27 So starting five years ago, Russia and China got together with Iran and conducted joint military exercises. Now, I spent close to 23 years scripting military exercises like this. At least I know what the process is. And so this means you brought together high-level Chinese and Russian military officers with Iranian officers. And they would sit down and actually plan everything out. They would come up with what's called a master sequence of events list a measle which lists you start on day one and it takes you through whatever however long
Starting point is 00:29:12 you've scripted the exercise for 10 days uh 14 days uh and and in there you you create injects message traffic or you manufacture an event that's happened in the world that causes you to react and then see what the reaction is. And what's that reaction? How many ships? How long will it take Russian ships and Chinese ships to get to that area? Once they're to that area, how would they coordinate with the Iranian Navy? What kind of weapons systems should be brought into play?
Starting point is 00:29:42 How would they interact in and actually carrying out offensive operations? So they've been doing that for five years. So it's not like China just suddenly woke up and said, oh, do we have a problem in the Middle East? So extrapolate that out. If John Bolton and Lindsey Graham get their way and the United States aids Israel in attacking Iran, do China and Russia physically enter the fray?
Starting point is 00:30:09 Yes. I mean, you know, they haven't been doing those exercises just because they said, oh, we haven't had enough activity, so we want to get our heart rate up. Okay? I mean, they've done them for a reason. And part of that reason is a deterrence, which I think factors into, you know,
Starting point is 00:30:33 while Lindsey Graham and Bolton are, you know, oblivious to the reality, I think at least Lloyd Austin understands that, that it carries the risk of the United States getting embroiled in a direct conflict with now Russia and China. And we can't even handle our work with the Ukrainians. So the last thing the United States needs to do is so overextend itself that it's going to face certain defeat. Larry, thank you very much, my dear friend. Fascinating stuff.
Starting point is 00:31:09 I hope we can see you with Ray at the end of the week on Friday afternoon. Me too. Okay. Have a great week. All the best. Thanks, Judge. Sure.
Starting point is 00:31:20 Fascinating, fascinating conversation. Coming up at one o'clock this afternoon, Scott Ritter, Judge Napolitano for Judging Freedom. We'll see you next time. with WGU. WGU is an online accredited university that specializes in personalized learning. With courses available 24-7 and monthly start dates, you can earn your degree on your schedule. You may even be able to graduate sooner than you think by demonstrating mastery of the material you know. Make 2025 the year you focus on your future. Learn more at wgu.edu.

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