Judging Freedom - Prof. Jeffrey Sachs: CIA Running Killing Fields.
Episode Date: April 15, 2025Prof. Jeffrey Sachs: CIA Running Killing Fields.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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you Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom.
Today is Tuesday, April 15th, 2025.
Professor Jeffrey Sachs will be here with us in just a moment. But first this.
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Professor Sachs, welcome here, my dear friend.
Always a pleasure to be with you.
It's nice to have you to myself,
if you don't mind me putting that way,
since you have been all
over the world in the past week with comments that you've made, which I'll ask you to summarize
briefly right now.
Has the United States government used the CIA to concoct and commence wars against innocence
at the behest of Israeli prime ministers?
Of course. This is without any serious dispute, and there have been several of them.
We know that plans for many wars were concocted in 2001. In fact, General Wesley Clark, the supreme commander
of NATO in the 1990s, was shown a document actually
at the Pentagon the week after 9-11, which
said seven wars in five years. These were wars against states in the
Middle East that opposed Israel's domination of Palestine. And they include countries that we
know ended up on the other side of American wars. Iraq, of course, was on the list. Syria, Lebanon,
Libya, Sudan, Somalia, and the one that hasn't quite happened yet that Netanyahu has been begging for more than 20 years is a U.S. war against Iran. So, yes, this
has happened. I spoke about Syria because this was the topic of a discussion that I
was asked to participate in in a diplomatic forum. And with Syria, we know that President Barack Obama gave a presidential finding that the
CIA should work with other countries in the Middle East to overthrow the government of
Bashar al-Assad.
And I always thought from the first moment I heard about this, that this was a disaster in the making. It was
a war that in fact lasted 14 years, took about 600,000 lives. People can look up Operation Sycamore to learn more about this US-caused disaster.
And I happened to learn a lot about it over the years because of my work with the United
Nations as well.
The US blocked peace in Syria, peace that could have come as early as 2012, but the U.S. was engaged in what we call a regime
change operation.
It's a nice sounding phrase for an ugly part of American foreign policy, which is overthrowing
governments of other countries.
The U.S. has done this or tried to do this probably 100 times in the post-World War II period.
So this isn't something new or special.
It's a standard part of American foreign policy that has typically led to outright disaster,
to blood baths, to civil war, to prolonged violence.
And it did so in Syria.
So this was the point that I made and it's a very
sad story of American foreign policy. Israel has said go to war, the US has said yes, we do it at
your command, Bibi, and we've been involved in nonstop wars for a quarter century. Prime Minister Netanyahu, 20 years ago, claimed that the Iranians would have a nuclear bomb in
two weeks. Ten years ago, he said they would have a nuclear weapon in one week. A month ago,
the United States intelligence community concluded collectively that the Iranians have no nuclear
weapon. MI6 agreed. Wouldn't Mossad agree? Wouldn't Netanyahu be knowingly lying or rejecting
the intel of his own first-rate intelligence agency?
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Netanyahu's a fool because there could have been a decisive and definitive end to
Iran's even potential seeking of a nuclear weapon back in 2016-2017. Many countries, including the United of that was to end the U.S. and other desire
to isolate Iran through punitive economic sanctions and to impoverish Iran through those
sanctions.
So Obama negotiated that, and then Trump denounced it. A lot of Congress
denounced it because the Israel lobby denounced it. Just stupid as can be. And it's so typical,
by the way, instead of diplomacy, you say, no, no, we'll do it by force,
and you end up achieving nothing but absolute violence.
It reminds me of the attempt, not a very well-done one,
but still an attempt by President Clinton
at the end of the 1990s to negotiate an end to North Korea's quest
for a nuclear weapon.
We reached an agreement.
The US reneged even under Clinton or dragged its feet.
And then when Bush came in, Bolton said, no, we don't have to do any of that.
We don't have to agree with this tyrant and so forth.
And Bolton induced Bush Jr. to cancel the whole thing.
A lot of great stuff came out of that.
North Korea became a significant nuclear armed country
with missile systems, delivery systems, because
the United States said no, no to diplomacy.
Well, Israel's always said no to diplomacy with Iran, and Iran has tried to negotiate
repeatedly, and Israel instead has tried to egg the United States into what would be a
catastrophic war.
Iran is a big powerful country with big powerful allies.
And Israel, and I shouldn't say Israel, I'm talking about Netanyahu and his extremist
failed government has been at this for, as I've explained, really almost 30 years since he came into
power in 1996, to try to remake the Middle East through war in Israel's desire and image.
And the U.S. has just walked into it time and time again. And the big question is whether President Trump extricates the U.S. from B.B.'s wars
or whether he just follows along as every president has done for nearly 30 years. Here's Colonel McGregor disagreeing
with another front of the show, Colonel Daniel Davis,
over the military strength of Iran.
I'm gonna guess you agree with Colonel McGregor,
but feel free to comment as you see fit.
Chris, cut number 15.
What nation on the planet can have their embassy destroyed in another country and to have an
assassination in their capital city on an inauguration and not go to war with somebody?
Yet that's exactly what Iran didn't do because they don't have the power to do it.
So that should tell you.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
That's a fundamentally false statement.
Which part?
False, false, false.
They don't have the power to go to war.
You haven't looked carefully at Iran.
Iran's arsenal of missiles is enormous.
It could flatten Israel in a day.
They have the power to go to war.
They have chosen repeatedly to avoid war.
And I've said this a thousand times. No one in the Middle East is interested in a war except Israel and the United States.
You know, what's a standard mistake of the United States is that when any other country
shows prudence, we say weakness.
And so if another country says, let's make peace,
the US approaches, oh, they're weak.
Let's make war.
This is actually a pretty repeated point of view.
The Iranians have been trying for peace repeatedly. They sent repeated messages to the Biden administration,
all batted away. They have sent repeated messages to the Trump administration. There was a first first meeting of Trump's negotiator, Steve Witkoff, and the foreign minister of Iran
last week that actually both sides portrayed as a positive encounter.
So there's some hope that Donald Trump is extricating himself from Bibi's grasp.
We're not seeing that in other areas.
The administration has given the green light to Israel to continue rampant, vicious slaughter
and war crimes in Gaza and in the West Bank.
But when it comes to Iran, there's at least a glimmer of hope. The United
States, my God, does not need another war. No Americans could want this. This would be
Bibi's war and yet more Bibi destruction. And he's ripping apart Israel and he's divided America as well because so much of the American political classes within the grasp of the Israel lobby. the chagrin of Prime Minister Netanyahu negotiating face to face with the foreign minister of
Iran, the Trump administration sent its neocon Zionist in chief over to my friends at Fox
to say this, cut number nine.
He's dead serious that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon.
He's said that for 20 years.
He's been consistent.
That is clear.
But he's also dead serious that if we can't figure this out at the negotiating table,
then there are other options to include my department to ensure that Iran never has a
nuclear bomb.
We hope we never get there.
We really do, Maria.
But what we're doing with the Houthis and what we're doing in the region, we've shown a capability to go far, to go deep, and to go big.
And again, we don't want to do that. But if we have to, we will to prevent the nuclear bomb
in Iran's hands. Does that affect negotiating to use my department to bring them to heal?
to bring them to heal. Look, this is Trump's approach to believe that you scare the wits out of the other side,
you make every threat, you claim you're going to bring them to their knees.
He thinks that this is the only way to negotiate. Well, the truth is whatever Hegseth said in that clip
doesn't really mean anything.
That's not influencing the Iranians.
What's influencing the Iranians is
if they can sit down with a real counterpart, a real negotiator,
and find a mutually beneficial way out
of the current situation.
I've spoken repeatedly with the Iranians
and with the diplomats throughout the Middle East
and have done so recently as well, it's obvious
that there's a mutual interest of the United States and Iran in ending the nuclear program and
ending the sanctions regime, ending the war threats, and actually moving to peace in the Middle East through a two-state solution of Palestine and
Israel. In other words, one could really solve what is right now Netanyahu's wreckage over the past
30 years. You see, all of this goes back to one basic fact, which is that Netanyahu and his extremist
ilk are trying to rule over 8 million Palestinian people and deny Palestine a state side by
side with Israel. This is the fundamental point. Now, because of that, there is slaughter by the
Israelis, there's ethnic cleansing, there's mass murder, and there is opposition to Israel
throughout the Middle East. Netanyahu's answer, again, since 1996, has been clear, cold-blooded,
and calculated, which is we will do what we want vis-a-vis
the Palestinians and if anyone else objects in the Middle East, we will overthrow them.
Of course, it's a lot of bravado. We will do what we want vis-a-vis the Palestinians and if
anyone objects, our friend the United States, which we control through our lobby,
will overthrow them. So Israel has implicated the United States in war after war. I've listed them.
The Iraq war, the Libyan war, the Syrian war, the war in Lebanon, the actually, strangely enough, the wars in Sudan and Somalia all have their roots
in this idea. Israel will do what it wants vis-à-vis the Palestinian people. Israel
will have its reach and influence and even occupation in other countries in the region,
not just Palestine, because now Israel is in Lebanon,
Israel is in Syria, and so forth, and the U.S. will clean up the dirty work when other countries
in the region object. Well, there could be peace with Iran, and there could be peace throughout the
whole region if there was actually a settlement to the Israel-Palestine crisis because that's
at the root of where all of this instability comes from.
Instead, we have a battlefield throughout the Middle East caused by this stretching
from Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and as we're discussing right now, Netanyahu's great
hope that it reaches Iran.
It's mind boggling the damage that's been done and it's absolutely straightforward
to end the fighting in the Middle East.
By the way, there's an occasion coming up, which isn't reported in the United
States, but the UN is having a high-level summit, essentially, on Palestine to implement
the two-state solution on June 17 to June 20, just in a couple of months. And the simple point is more than 180 countries of the world
are saying, two states, come on, end the violence, end the wars. And Israel, of course, forget
it. Their whole purpose is to reject any Palestinian state.
Okay, put that aside.
They don't really have a veto over this.
But the United States is the only holdout of any country of scale significance and literally
the United States has a veto in the UN Security Council.
So the US is the blockage to peace in
the Middle East. Trump, if he wants to, if he gets it, can actually make peace in the Middle East.
He can do it. It's one vote. It's to change one US vote so that Palestine becomes the 194th
so that Palestine becomes the 194th state of the United Nations on the borders of the 4th of June 1967, according to international law, according to endless resolutions of the UN Security Council
and the UN General Assembly, and vetoed by one country, by the United States under Biden.
And one more point if I may, and sorry to ramble, but President Trump said something
quite interesting about Ukraine.
He said, I want the war to stop.
This is Biden's war.
This isn't my war.
I don't need this. Well, President Trump should realize exactly
the same thing in the Middle East. He doesn't have to fight Bibi's wars and he doesn't have
to fight Biden's wars in the Middle East. If he applies the same logic in the Middle East that he is rightly applying in Ukraine,
he will make peace in the Middle East for the first time,
basically, at least you could count it for 58 years
since the 1967 war, but I would count it all the way back to 1948.
Donald Trump would make peace where no other president has.
And all he has to do is use the same logic.
This is not his war.
This is wars that previous presidents have been pulled into
by the Israel lobby by Bibi.
And Trump does not have to fall prey in the same way.
You've told us many times both wars could be stopped in 24 hours
with a phone call from the President of the United States. Hey, Pete, stop sending arms to
Kiev right now. Hey, BB, nothing's coming your way. So stop. And very importantly, you know, I've said that the war could stop.
And it's interesting in Ukraine, we're getting to an end of that war.
We are.
But why doesn't it stop in one day?
Because they're still not saying publicly the truth.
What Trump is right, he's trying to get peace there.
He says, this is Biden's war. This is absolutely right, he's trying to get peace there. He says this is Biden's
war. This is absolutely right. He's trying to end it. But instead of saying the clear things,
NATO will not enlarge. There will be a territorial adjustment given the history of all of this,
and there will be security guarantees through the United Nations. The focus has been on a ceasefire
without a kind of honest accounting of the underlying reality. I think Steve Witcoff,
the negotiator, heard that clearly and gets that clearly and reportedly told President Trump this.
But the reason why the war isn't stopping yet,
isn't that Trump is trying to prolong the war, he's not.
But he's using the wrong approach and tactic.
He's saying ceasefire, ceasefire.
But the point is not a ceasefire,
the point is a peace agreement
based on certain underlying principles.
Ceasefire is pretty meaningless. We saw there was a ceasefire in Gaza and it broke down because
it wasn't based on underlying principles. The underlying principle in Ukraine is no NATO
enlargement. The underlying principle in the Middle East is simple. It is the state of Palestine as the 194th UN member state,
no more, no less.
Professor Sachs, thank you very much.
Thank you for letting me take you across the board
in all these subjects.
My pleasure.
We deeply appreciate it.
I know it's the middle of the night where you are, not withstanding the bright room you're in,
but we deeply appreciate your time
and all your expertise.
See you again soon.
Thank you. Bye-bye.
Wow.
Fascinating, fascinating conversations
with Colonel McGregor and Professor Sacks.
Coming up tomorrow at two in the afternoon,
Aaron Mate and at three in the afternoon, Phil Giraldi,
Judge Napolitano for Judging Freedom. MUSIC