Judging Freedom - LtCOL. Tony Shaffer: Will Trump Pull the Plug on Ukraine?
Episode Date: January 9, 2025LtCOL. Tony Shaffer: Will Trump Pull the Plug on Ukraine?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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treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom.
Today is Thursday, January 9th, 2025.
Lieutenant Colonel Tony Schaefer joins us now.
Colonel Schaefer, thank you very much for all you did for us in 2024.
A happy new year to you.
Happy new year.
Thank you. I hope we can continue to prevail upon your expertise and your experience
in all these military and intelligence matters in 2025. Even though the public should know this,
I hope you don't mind me saying it, you have recently been elected to public office in North
Carolina. Yes, that's right. I'm one of the county commissioners, one of 2467 county commissioners
here in Chihuahua County. I've actually started serving in December. And I was mentioning in the
pre-discussion, this county is amazingly well run. I had no idea. This, to me, is an example of what happens when people are elected for the
right reasons, to serve the people, when they then internalize that trust that they've been given,
and they run it. I mean, everything is very efficient. People run things by the rules.
It's a Democrat.
I'm glad to hear that.
If you don't mind, I prefer to call you Colonel to Commissioner.
That's fine.
Ed Henry was having it the other night where he was calling me Commissioner,
but Colonel's fine.
Tony's fine.
Tony's better.
All right.
Okay.
So I basically want to ask you about whether or
not you think Donald Trump will pull the plug on Ukraine, and if so, how it will happen and what
will happen. But before we get there, a couple of other pressing matters that I would like your
views on. The president-elect said the other day, famously or infamously, that if Hamas does not return the Israeli hostages by Inauguration Day, there will be hell to pay.
And he wouldn't rule out military intervention.
Could you even foresee American soldiers and Marines fighting shoulder to shoulder with IDF? Could you even see that?
Would the Israelis even want that?
So
we have been way more
I think
integrated with
the IDF than people have acknowledged
over the years. Here's a picture
of
an Army general. I don't want to get into
this because i'll get in trouble if i get too far into this if there's a picture out there on the
internet people can track it down they're pretty smart of a an army general wearing uh active duty
army general as in like serving at the moment of the picture, basically in the Bekaa
Valley wearing an Israeli uniform. Oh boy, a U.S. army general wearing an Israeli uniform?
Yeah. Has he been prosecuted yet? Well, no, because the mission was essentially to observe.
He wasn't there to fight, but the idea was we had people observing what was going on.
So we weren't fighting with them.
Please don't take my words out of context.
I'm not saying we were there to fight.
But to the president-elect's comments, I can't ask you to get into his head.
You're not a shrink.
And he often says things just to stir the pot and to begin the conversation and the negotiation.
I get that. We both know him. We know what he's like. And of course, we have his history of four years in the White House already.
But I can you even foresee with all your military experience, soldiers or Marines on the ground in Gaza. No, no, no, because the same dilemma that he has to face regarding Ukraine,
I don't think he wants to create regarding Israel. He doesn't want to get us in so deep
we can't pull out. Right now, and I think this is why there were problems with he and Netanyahu.
Remember, Netanyahu was not a fan of Donald Trump. And the reason why is that Trump was actually focused on America first during his first four years,
which meant, hey, we're going to work with you when it meets our interest.
When it doesn't meet our interest, then you need to do your own thing.
Netanyahu didn't like that.
Now, right now, because our interests are very much aligned,
Trump's going to say yeah
uh i'm going to do this because americans are there remember he's focused on the americans as
much as we support the israelis no doubt uh i i know you and i don't agree on all the issues
regarding israel and that's fine but for regarding trump he's going to support them to the level necessary of what Trump's mind to facilitate getting our hostages back.
OK.
And secondarily, being able to go after Iran.
So that's a secondary target.
OK.
We'll get to Iran in a minute.
And then, of course, we'll get to Ukraine, which is what I really need to pick your brain on.
But back to Gaza.
Don't tell me what you're not supposed to tell me.
Are there troops on the ground there now, American troops?
No.
No.
No.
All right.
There must be American intel on the ground.
No, you'd be surprised what we don't have there.
We have a series of leaders from Central Command and UCOM
who are kind of waltzing in and out
of theater. Basically, they've publicly acknowledged a couple of the guys who were
there on the ground at the beginning of hostilities, a couple of generals. No,
the Biden administration has been reluctant to actually do anything, even intelligence
collection, Judge, to be honest. I mean, that's part of my issues. Like, you want to at least be
doing your own
independent intelligence to tell you what's going on everything the bite administration relies on
is from third sources uh again you and i don't agree on everything regarding this but i don't
think you can trust uh not the ngos national non-governmental organizations to be your eyes
and ears on the ground if those eyes and ears
have a certain political slant. And that's what's been happening. So what is the level of,
and I'll use one of your technical phrases, signals intelligence that America has? In other words,
the internet and satellites and all that. What is that level of intelligence,
U.S. intel about what's happening
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Independent of Israeli intel.
Yeah, I think there's pretty good internals.
I mean, we have some very, as you know, and we criticize the government all the time for this.
We do have a level of effective signals and related intelligence, media, data intelligence, you know, internet stuff.
But I think the bad guys have been smart enough to understand we have that, Judge.
So the ultimate transfer of information, especially operational information, is done
by courier, by people, the old-fashioned way.
So, yeah, you get kind of an overall perspective, especially with the Iranians,
but you don't get tactical down-in-the-dirt details.
And that's why the Israelis have been so effective,
because they do have human intelligence networks, spies, basic spies,
which is what you need in a war like this.
Understood. Do you believe that Iran poses a threat to the national security of the United States?
I do, but not to the point of where we have to go to war.
I've said this consistently, and I'm going to say it again now.
Back when Barack Obama was president in 2009,
he was supporting the quote unquote Arab Spring,
which I don't think we should have done quite as much as we did because we upended governance.
I'm like you on this. I don't think we should be going in and telling people what government to
have. And yet we were doing that. But at the same time, there was a group of people, the Green Party
in Iran, who basically wanted to get rid of the molus
they wanted you know the persians they want to be like us right and we didn't do anything to
encourage them i'm not saying we should do it colin powell once said and i agree you break it
you own it so don't break it uh if the people want to break it and they want to seek their own future
then god bless them uh let's be a friend to them let's
not but the moment we involve ourselves we become the issue so i'm saying that the obama administration
missed an opportunity to encourage at least encourage uh the green movement to throw the
mullahs off in iran but the the obama didn't do it because the Democrats have been focused, obsessed, if you will, with the
Iranians and the Shia to become our partners on the ground there in the Middle East since
Zygmunt Brzezinski back in the Carter years. And the Democrats have consistently tried to support
this change of course. I'm not saying, I'm not here to judge choices made by previous administrations.
I'm simply saying the United States has always chosen to work with the Saudis
and the Sunni flavor of Islamic Arabs over working with the Shia Islamic Persians.
And that's part of why there's so much chaos
right now in the Middle East. All right. Let me bring you domestically,
Mike Waltz, whom you and I both know, Congressman Waltz, about to become a national security
advisor. Tony, if I may, a job that you should have, but President-elect is giving it to Mike,
made a startling statement the other day that the administration to be is concerned about
the expression of political opinions against Israel and in favor of Palestine, and it's going
to monitor them in the United States. That's not the business of the federal government. It's not the business of any government, is it? No, so it's not.
There's a fine line. And this is the issue that we always, you and I talk about, I've talked about
with our dear friend, Walter Jones. There is a line to be drawn that says, hey, freedom of speech, go protest, don't care, go do whatever
you want. And I don't care. But the moment you conceive of violence, when violent rhetoric
becomes violent action, that's the dividing line. That's where people will be debating this
a hundred years from now, should the republic stop.
Yeah, but if somebody on the Columbia University campus says,
I want Hamas to win, or I think Hamas are freedom fighters,
that is protected speech.
And the government cannot punish, silence, or deter that.
No, and I agree with you.
And this is where an institution like Columbia
or any of the other universities have to establish their own interpretation.
Because my issue is obviously some of that became violent to those who were Jewish or Israeli.
So, again, I have no problem with people shouting at each other.
But I have a problem the moment you pick up a stick pick up a weapon and
start hitting on people that's that's that line so i i'm all for i i i'm always for i always
err on the side of of protecting allowing speech i think i'm like elon musk and at least in this
respect i'm a purist everybody should say whatever the hell they want, whether it's right or wrong. I don't care. It's up to the individual to discern what I wish.
I wish the National Security Advisor Mike Walz and President Trump to accept that.
Now, I don't know if he was just speaking hypothetically.
I don't even know if he was speaking the president wants.
But the words he used were startling.
Another set of startling words, if I may, Colonel Schaefer, came from Lieutenant General Keith Kellogg,
whom the president-elect has designated as his emissary to endeavor to bring about peace between the Russians and the Ukrainians, General Kellogg basically said, I'm paraphrasing now,
if President Putin doesn't quickly come to the negotiation table and consider seriously
a ceasefire, we will increase the amount of weaponry and ammunitions that we send to Ukraine.
Could Donald Trump actually want to do that?
So I don't, I've not spoken to either man, but I don't believe General Kellogg reflects accurately
what President Trump would want done. I see some problems coming up on the road there pretty quick.
We don't, first off, Judge, we don't have more stuff to just kind of throw into it,
especially when we're talking about trying to inject ourselves back with vigor into the Pacific regarding China.
The one word that's necessary for deterrence is credible.
You need to have credible deterrence and so many of our adversaries
recognize we've been giving you know everything from attackums and all these other things to
the ukraine so there's a great gap of credibility and so keith kellogg saying that i don't think was
like i don't think that was a coordinated, a Donald Trump-approved comment.
I think Kellogg is out of the government right now.
They're not in yet.
And so I don't think he's fully aware of how bad things are.
He's old school.
And I'm not saying that is a bad thing.
Kellogg, if you watch this, don't be offended.
My job is to call balls and strikes.
And in this case, it's a ball because I don't think he fully understands how compromised our own military is.
Secondly, I Putin wants to come to the table, judges, not Putin. It's permeated even General Kellogg's point of view.
Putin's been talking about wanting to have a conversation.
So I don't think it's about Russia at this point.
I think it's about the fact that there are elements of our own government and the political left who have invested so much in continuing this war,
they will continue this war and expand it if at all possible just to fix Donald Trump, to fix his wagon, if you will, to get him stuck in this war, an expanded war.
That's what's going on.
Here is, okay, so at the tail end of his tenure as Secretary of State,
Antony Blinken is giving a series of interviews.
He gave a long interview, a video interview,
to a reporter for the New York Times.
Here's a clip, and as you watch it,
I want you to think of my question,
which is, has he learned anything from the past three years?
Cut number one.
Where the line is drawn on the map, at this point, I don't think is fundamentally going to change very much. The real question is,
can we make sure that Ukraine is in a position to move forward strongly? You mean that the areas
that Russia controls you feel will have to be ceded? Ceded is not the question. The question is, the line as a practical matter in the foreseeable future is unlikely to move very much.
Ukraine's claim on that territory will always be there.
And the question is, will they find ways, with the support of others, to regrange territory that's been lost?
I think the critical thing now going forward is this. If there is going to be a resolution or at least a near-term resolution, because
it's unlikely that Putin will give up on his ambitions. If there's a ceasefire, then in
Putin's mind, the ceasefire is likely to give him time to rest, to refit, to re-attack at some point
in the future. So what's going to be critical to make sure that any ceasefire that comes about is actually enduring is to make sure that Ukraine has
the capacity going forward to deter further aggression. And that can come in many forms.
It could come through NATO, and we put Ukraine on a path to NATO membership. It could come through
security assurances, commitments, guarantees by different countries to make sure that Russia
knows that if it re-attacks, it's going to have a big problem. That, I think, is going to be critical to making
sure that any deal that's negotiated actually endures and then allows Ukraine the space, the
time to grow strong as a country. And we put Ukraine on a path to NATO membership. Has he
learned anything in the past three years of this disaster? Now, Judge, there's some people who are so stupid they don't know they're stupid.
That's Tony Blinken, and he's like an academic moron.
From day one, and President Trump has said this, this is where I completely agree with President
Trump. President Trump said, look, there was an agreement made in the 90s that once Ukraine became independent, they would join NATO.
That's that's the deal. That's the deal that kind of what everybody signed up to back in about was it 92, 93, whenever we worked it all out.
That's kind of the operational agreement I've always operated from.
It's like, yeah, we made this agreement.
We're now breaking that.
And Trump said, I don't think it's completely accurate, but Biden continued to push for NATO.
I don't think Biden was the first guy to push for NATO.
Obviously, Blinken is all for this NATO thing.
Just stop the NATO nonsense.
This is what, if I were in the room room If I were Mike Walsh Stop it
Stop it
There's no benefit to anybody
To put Ukraine in the NATO
It should be
Like everybody agreed to
Kind of a neutral zone
Everybody does business there
Which they do, good or bad
Just saying, stop it
Just stop it
It's disruptive. The
Russians have the right of having their own political sphere of influence. Donald Trump's
kind of doing that with Greenland. I get it. It's time for people to understand that nations
based on culture and tradition and momentum will have spheres of influence. The Monroe
Doctrine, well, Trump's kind of bringing it back so the russians have the same right to have what they believe to be their sphere
of influence it is what it is knuckleheads like blinken somehow want to disrupt things because
they are part of this global government concept they want to break up Russia. They want to push Ukraine into the EU
because they want this Soros-backed, World Economic Forum-backed idea that we should be
one world government. That's what this is all about. It's not in the cards. And these people
are acting politically against the benefit and interest of the EU and the population, both
of Ukraine and Russia. It's nonsense. So I just hope, I think President Trump understands it.
I agree with everything you just said, but I don't think Mike Walz, Marco Rubio, Pete Hegseth, and Sebastian Gorka.
The people who will have Donald Trump's ear agree with that.
I think they are neocons at heart.
They need to be listening to what Trump says.
I'm listening to it.
And it's like, I get it.
I'm with you, Mr. President.
I understand what you're saying.
I'm with you so these other folks i i'd like to believe will be as attentive
to listen to the president of what he's saying because he's saying yeah we're we're out of the
neocon business uh i'm not a neocon we've talked i've said this a dozen different times i'm not a
neocon i do believe that we should look at how we can create conditions for global commerce and working
together. That is to say that, you know, everybody can be Canadian or Russian. We all understand the
language of commerce and working together to build a better world. A voluntary system of
interaction rather than a forced system is what the World Economic Forum and those knuckleheads
all want. And they are the ultimate expression of neocons. They want to find a way to force people
to do things. And so, yeah, I agree with President Trump. I think others need to get on board with
what President Trump is saying. Commissioner, you're getting more articulate with every tick of the clock. Congratulations on your new public office. Thank you for your time with us. I hope you'll
come again soon. Absolutely. Thanks for having me. Thank you, Tony. All the best. Coming up later
today at nine o'clock this morning, Professor Gilbert Doctorow at one o'clock, Ambassador Ian Proud at two o'clock,
Professor John Mearsheimer at three o'clock,
Colonel Larry Wilkerson.
Judge Napolitano for judging freedom. Thank you.