Judging Freedom - Scott Ritter: Is US War with Iran Imminent ?
Episode Date: April 7, 2025Scott Ritter: Is US War with Iran Imminent ?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 Scott, before we get to war, the eminence likelihood or not
of war between the United military and its improvements.
Now, I don't know what is to be gained by this.
Is there any basis for such a statement?
We'll run the clip for you in just a minute.
I mean, I watched it and I, uh, I've, I've watched his testimony.
Um, I, I think Kovoli, um, and I don't mean to denigrate him, but he is part of the pro-Ukraine
establishment, and he is committed to the cause of supporting Ukraine.
And right now, the most important thing for the Ukrainians is to have US support continue,
political support, financial support, military support.
In order to do that, you have to shape perceptions that Ukraine is a worthy recipient of this
support.
And so you need to reverse the narrative of Ukraine floundering, Ukraine losing, Ukraine being
defeated catastrophically, in Kursk, etc.
And so I think this is what Kowal's statements are.
He is cherry picking specific events and trying to create a unifying narrative that is positive in nature so that the Trump administration
cannot just willy-nilly dismiss the issue of Ukrainian support.
His hope is that the Trump administration, when confronted by General Kovolny's assessment,
will rethink any potential policy direction
that has the United States walking away from Ukraine
instead pivot back in support of Ukraine.
I think this is a very political statement
made by a general.
Chris, cut number 10, please.
Since then, you know the trajectory, sir.
They went from being basically minutemen with javelins stopping a Russian invasion to being
an organized force that is increasingly able to generate force in a reliable and predictable
fashion, very difficult to do, especially on the fly.
It's taken a couple of years to get it going.
And they've developed a defense industry that is
producing many of their own munitions right now. In fact, I would say they're the world leaders
in one way attack drone technology. Leaders in one way attack drone technology. What does that mean?
This is the FPV or first person viewpoint drones. These are the kamikaze drones that we see, the very inexpensive quad copters that have,
you know, an RPG warhead or some explosive device attached to it with an impact fuse
mechanism and a camera, and they fly out there and they're hunting down the people.
You know, if you look at the videos, these are the ones you see chasing people around. impact fuse mechanism and a camera and they fly out there and they're hunting down the
people.
If you look at the videos, these are the ones you see chasing people around.
I would challenge General Kovolian and say, oh, the Russians are pretty good at it too,
but I wouldn't, I'm not going to denigrate the Ukrainians.
There are many places on the Russian battlefield today, on the Ukrainian-Russian battlefield
where the Russians cannot advance because the Ukrainians have flooded it with
Hundreds of these drones. I mean there's videos out there that show, you know, Russian armored vehicles making a move forward and
literally in the span of
100 meters they're hit by 25 30 of these FPV drones
You know that the Ukrainians flood the. Now the Russians are coming up with tactics to counter that,
which focus on not so much shooting down the drone
as finding the drone operator.
And the Russians become more and more capable
of hunting down and killing
the Ukrainian drone operations team.
But Kibale has a point there.
The Ukrainians are definitely in the top five,
I'd say in the top two of this.
I will take Umbridge at his depiction of the Ukrainian army
of being Minutemen and today this.
I remind General Kovale, and he knows this very well,
that the United States and NATO took over
the training of the Ukrainian military back in 2015.
We established the big training facilities
in Western Ukraine from 2015 till 2022.
We brag ourselves that we trained a battalion of Ukrainians every 55 days to NATO standards
to go to movies to kill Russians.
We've been doing that since 2015.
So it's a little disingenuous for General Kovale to erase that history, to pretend that
the Ukrainians started from scratch at the beginning of war men
and men with javelins. No, they were NATO trained NATO equipped NATO standard military force then
which is one of the reasons why you know they were able to have the successes on the battlefield that
they did have. What is the status of the invasion in Kursk? And is the United States intelligence community still
targeting Russians and helping the Ukrainians aim at them?
I mean, the status is the Ukrainians are holding on to some, if you take a look at the map, you
you'll have, you know, a, and then you have this pocket.
And the Ukrainians are dug into that pocket now, and the Russians are in the business
of digging them out.
The Russians have also been instructed that you don't just stop at the border with Ukraine,
that you have to push on through and create a buffer zone.
So what we're seeing right now is the Russians, you know, steadily
moving forward, slaughtering the Ukrainians. I mean, this is really, it's mass murder, what's
happening. You know, Ukrainians have shown a proclivity to defend in place until they die. And
unfortunately, that's what they're doing in these, you know, in these tree lines,
in these villages, in these, you know, fortified
positions, the Russians are just basically taking them down position by position in a
very methodical fashion, a meat grinder operation that's killing thousands of Ukrainians.
And the Russians are, you know, continue to press forward.
It's not cheap.
The Russians are losing people as well.
I mentioned the armored vehicles are getting sworn by these FPV drones and the Ukrainians
are mass producing these drones and they are getting these units out to the battlefield
and where they get these units out there, there is a period of time where the Russians,
their entire operation comes to a halt because you literally can't move
without having one of these FPV drones come at you.
And it's like a swarm of angry hornets
except these things kill.
Is the, are US Intel still targeting Russians
and telling the Ukrainians at whom and at what
to aim and shoot?
I don't know. To be honest, I don't know. What I can say is this.
The Ukrainians anticipated that the US would be cutting intelligence,
and the US intelligence providers anticipated that they wouldn't be able
to provide the good stuff.
And so what the US did with Ukraine leading up to this was to create workarounds, commercially
available imagery to replace American imagery, communication systems, analytical templates
that are now targeting to continue to a degree. So instead of, you know, let's say with the US, you get the 100% solution. It's never 100%. I'm just throwing that number out there arbitrarily. With the work around what you're getting is about the 88% solution, meaning it's still good. And I think that's what's happening right now is that the Ukrainians are employing a work around
developed with the intelligence,
US intelligence community that allows them to get
any percent of what they would normally get,
but they're not getting the real good stuff
from the United States,
but they've learned to work around that
and they're adapting to it.
Moving over towards Iran, what was gained militarily by bombing Yemen for two weeks?
Nothing. I mean, I can't really say that because I'm not on the targeting staff.
Clearly, the approach taken by US Central Command is that we are
in a campaign mode, meaning that we're not expecting to deliver the knockout blow every
day that we're bombing targets which are designed to be, you know, in their cumulative impact to be either a deterrent or disabling Hootie capabilities.
I don't think we understand the totality of the Hootie capabilities, just like during
the Gulf War, even though we diverted over 2,400 individual aircraft strike sorties into
Western Iraq, even though we deployed two
Delta Force squadrons, the British deployed two and a half SAS squadrons.
These are commandos on the ground.
Not a single launcher was destroyed, not a single missile was destroyed because we never
understood what the Iraqis were doing.
I would say that we have a similar lack of clarity about the Houthi.
And what backs me up is that the Houthi continue to launch, that what we're doing. I would say that we have a similar lack of clarity about the Hootie. And what backs me up is that the Hootie continue to launch,
that what we're doing is not having a debilitating impact on their ability to launch.
And so I think we're at the stage in the game where CENTCOM needs to reevaluate
what they're doing. We're running out of precision guided munitions.
You know, we're we're expending a whole bunch of munitions by some
counts over a billion dollars worth.
These are hard to produce. We're expending them quicker than we're replacing them. And more importantly, we're expanding them against a target set that in the grand scheme of things
shouldn't be absorbing this much precision guided munitions. We would need these, for instance, if we're going to have a big shooting war
with Iran, we would need these if we're going to be fighting the Chinese over Taiwan.
And we're depleting our stocks going after the hoodie in an unsuccessful so far effort.
Both Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Trump have some self-inflicted domestic wounds.
Netanyahu is a criminal, Trump's are economic.
I'm wondering if, I'm going to use the favorite line of our mutual friend, Gerald Salante,
when all else fails, they take you to war. I wonder if as we are taping this segment and as it's airing live,
while Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Trump are meeting in the Oval Office, if they're not
planning and plotting a war on Iran, how imminent do you believe a war on Iran, Israel plus the US against Iran is.
Well, there's no doubt in my mind that the Israelis are going to make a very forceful
case for accelerating a military strike against Iran, if for no other reason, to provide domestic
political diversion to trials and tribulations of Benjamin Netanyahu.
But the fact is the United States isn't looking for a fight with Iran. And we see the evidence
accumulating on a daily basis. The Trump administration has said upfront that it's
not looking for a broader conflict in the Middle East. Now, let's for a moment hold our nose at the hoodie issue
and also hold our nose over what's going on in Gaza.
The big war would be the war with Iran.
This would make the other two pale in comparison.
Trump, although having said that,
said that the Iranians have to make some changes.
He talks about the maximum pressure campaign
to get Iran to yield,
not just on the issue of nuclear capabilities,
but also on ballistic missiles and support to the Houthi,
support to other regional actors.
And then he sent a very aggressive letter
to the Iranian leadership
that was rejected by the Iranians.
Now, there's a couple couple ways to look at this.
One, this is just ham-fisted diplomacy.
Two, it's a very clever move, because I think Trump realizes
that direct negotiations between the United States
and Iran are impossible.
Trump likes to be in control of negotiations,
and the Iranians are just not going to allow him
to take control and to dictate the
pace, the content and the outcome. But Trump also realizes that void of negotiations, there will be
a war that he doesn't want to fight. And so what he did is he opened the door for
what they call third party negotiations. And the Iranians turned around and said,
we're open to that.
We're ready to meet with third parties,
but not the United States.
We won't meet with the United States directly
until it's time the United States softens its tune,
but the United States isn't gonna soften its tune
until there's a deal to be made.
And Trump further opened the door by saying,
all I'm interested in is nuclear.
You resolve the nuclear issue, and we can talk about lifting sanctions and getting Iran back into
the family of nations. And what has happened? This week, Russia and China are going to be
meeting with the Iranians to talk about the nuclear issue. Furthermore, the director general of
the nuclear issue. Furthermore, the Director General of the IAEA, Rafael Grossi, is going to be going to Iran to talk about the nuclear issue. The negotiations that Trump says had
to happen to satisfy the United States are taking place, but they're being done through
third parties, through Russia, through China, through the IAEA. I think we're actually on a path towards conflict avoidance, as opposed to simply being the
rubber stamp for further Israeli aggression.
Are you saying that Donald will tell Bibi, no, we're not going to help you attack Iran?
Well, he's told them that before, straight up And that's the official policy of the United States.
It's been that during the previous Trump administration, it's that during
the Biden administration and it's the, we're not here to, um, to go to war for
Israel, um, you know, the hoodie conflict, even though technically it's about
Israel, um, because it could be solved in Israel. It's about international shipping.
The, the, the justification for what we're doing against the hoodie can be
separated from, from the Israeli context.
Um, but the, the, with Iran, we have told the Israelis over and over and over
again, that we're not going to facilitate your attack against Israel, against,
against Iran, that if you want to bomb them attack against Israel, against Iran.
That if you want to bomb them, you're on your own.
But the Israelis know that they can't succeed without American involvement.
And Trump has said, we're not doing that unless there's a reason.
And that reason has been articulated now as Iran being a nuclear weapons threshold state.
And if Iran doesn't resolve that issue,
if Iran refuses to cooperate to find a way
to get rid of its 60% enriched uranium
in the advanced centrifuges that can turn that
into fissile material sufficient for three to five bombs
within a period of weeks.
Not my assessment.
It is my assessment.
But these are statements made by senior Iranian officials.
I mean, the Iranians have dug their own grave here by committing to being a
nuclear weapons threshold state.
That's unacceptable, both in terms of the, you know, the letter and the law of the
nuclear non-proliferation treaty, but also from what did the, um, American,
um, uh, intelligence assessment recently say about Iran and nuclear weapons that they haven't been working on once since 2007?
What the US intelligence community said says that Iran stopped its nuclear
program in 2003 is still valid. That means that whatever we thought we identified in 2003 as being
an organized effort to build a nuclear weapon, that was dismantled and it hasn't been brought
back together again.
That's the assessment.
The other part of the assessment is that the Iranian leadership has made a political decision
not to have a nuclear weapon.
Both these statements are true.
What I'm saying, which is also true, is that Iran is a nuclear threshold state because there are things that
you can do within the framework of the NPT that takes you right up to the cusp of being
a nuclear weapons state without being in violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
For instance, the accumulation of 60% enriched uranium, which is one enrichment cycle away
from being weapons-grade uranium, it's not prohibited under the NPT.
But Iran has no viable justification
under its identified peaceful nuclear energy program
for the existence of 60% enriched uranium.
There's no reason for it to exist other than being one step
away from weapons-grade, which the Iranians say we're
doing for its deterrent value.
That means that Iran is admitting that it has it here because if need be, they can
convert it into weapons grade uranium.
That's unacceptable.
That's not something that the NPT can tolerate.
The United States won't tolerate it.
Israel won't tolerate it.
But I believe Trump is looking for a negotiated weight out of this mess.
And the important thing is Iran seems to be looking for one as well.
Didn't president Trump also demand that Iran get rid of or dismantle
certain long range missiles?
He did, but then he softened it.
This is what I was saying that one of the indicators that Trump seems to be looking
for a viable negotiated settlement is that he is backed off of every demand save the
nuclear.
He recently made a statement at a press conference where he said, no, all we're looking for is
the nuclear.
Well, if all we're looking for is the nuclear, it shouldn't be a problem.
But if Trump wants them to abandon the concept of sovereignty to the point where they can't defend themselves, and they have not far from them, a maniac who slaughtered 50,000 Palestinians and now wants to start slaughtering Iranians, why would they give up offensive ballistic missiles?
They're not going to.
And Trump understands that.
And that's why he's he's backed off on that.
The United States is no longer formally asking for as a as a condition to the end of this
crisis, Iran to dismantle its ballistic missile capabilities.
Trump has committed that his sole focus right now is the nuclear issue.
If Trump changes his mind and, uh, Netanyahu persuades Trump to aid an Israeli attack on Iran militarily.
Do you expect that to Beijing and Moscow would sit back and watch, or
they would do something
about it?
Well, again, I'm not here to speak on behalf of either Russia or China.
They're sovereign nations that get to make their own foreign policy.
I would say that both in terms of historic precedent and in terms of existing treaty
relationships, neither Russia nor China is
in a position to provide meaningful military assistance to Iran.
Neither one has the forces capable of being projected in a sustainable fashion into the
conflict.
China definitely doesn't have anything that they can bring to bear on this.
Russia is, of course, knee deep and chest deep in Ukraine, and literally doesn't have the ability or the desire
to divert resources to Iran.
This is why I think both Russia and China are meeting
with the Iranians, saying, look, there's nothing we can do here.
If you give the Uniteds, if you wave this red flag in front of the American bull, he is
going to gore you to death.
So what we need to do is get this red flag out of your hand.
And I think that's the direction we're heading.
If Trump listens to his golf buddy, Lindsey Graham, please Lord, don't, but it could happen. He's listened to him in the past and attacks Iranian oil refineries.
Won't that have a radically negative effect on China?
Absolutely.
This will be for China and India and Europe.
This will be devastating to global energy security.
The Chinese who are extremely dependent upon Saudi oil
and oil coming from the Middle East will be devastated.
Their economy will literally cease to function.
The same thing with India.
They desperately need this oil.
Europe would be in the entire world.
I think the two places that would probably walk away
relatively safe, even though there
would be some negative downside, would
be the United States and Russia, both of whom
are virtually self-sufficient when
it comes to energy production.
But the United States is more thoroughly integrated
into the global energy economy than Russia is.
And so we would pay a heavy price too with high energy prices,
at least until we found a way to separate ourselves from that.
And then there's just the cascading impact that has on just about every aspect of
the global economy.
So yeah, this would be horrible for China.
It's the last thing they want, which is, again, remember,
for the first time, the Chinese now
are actively involved in working with the Iranians
to resolve critical aspects of the nuclear standoff
between the United States and Iran.
China has been involved in the past.
Of course, they're part of the JCPOA.
But China always sort of took a supporting role, a backseat.
Here the China's taken a leading role.
Um, and I think that's reflective of the fact that they understand
the consequences of failure here.
Do you think that, um, Prime Minister Netanyahu is ruthless or desperate enough
to wage a major assault on Iran alone without the United States military
supporting him?
No, I think that would be suicidal for him.
As our good friend, or at least my good friend, Professor Morandi has pointed out, you know, Iran is sitting on, you know, three to 5000
rockets, ballistic missiles that can be used to, you know, destroy Israel, literally, and as well as, you know, regional bases,
regional oil production, American bases in the region, Israel lacks
the capacity to launch a decapitating blow and knockout
blow. They can't do any of this. And the other thing that happens is
if Israel attempts a strike against Iran's nuclear
infrastructure and they use conventional weapons,
they won't be able to destroy it.
Which means now, as the Iranians have said,
you hit our nuclear sites, we will build the bomb.
Which means now Israel's in danger
of existential eradication if Iran were to deploy nuclear,
which means now what? Israel is going to use nuclear weapons? The whole concept of the Israeli
nuclear program is to be deniable, to say, we don't really have it, we're not really admitting to it.
To come out and use nuclear weapons would be a radical departure, would put the United States in
an extraordinarily difficult situation
where Israel is violating every law we have on the books,
every international law, they should become
the enemy of America, the enemy of the free world.
The political consequences of this,
and there's no guarantee that Israel will be able
to deliver these weapons the way they want to.
Israel would be foolish to engage Iran on its own because it would lead to the destruction
of Israel, which is why Israel needs the United States.
Only the United States has the capability or at least the potential to deliver a decapitation
blow, a blow that can eliminate Iran's nuclear infrastructure on day one, and a blow that could eat into
Iran's ballistic missile inventory by collapsing or destroying many of these underground missile
factories. We have sufficient weaponry designed for that purpose. But again, it would require
the United States to break the nuclear taboo that's been in place since Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
You said that Russia, I mean, I've said that Russia and China probably won't intervene militarily,
but what will happen is if the United States breaks
the nuclear taboo, Russia and China will take advantage
of that to maneuver the United States
into global isolation.
We will become by definition, the most evil nation
in the world today, because we will be guilty of, you know,
reintroducing weapons that the whole world decided
should never again be used.
And now if we use them or we allow the Israelis to use them,
we are the bad guys.
But I don't think Trump's thinking in those terms right now.
I think that, you know, Trump knows that if he is going
to strike Iran, and again, I hope that it doesn't happen,
but if he is going to, he has to take out nuclear facilities that can only be taken
out by using low-yield American nuclear weapons.
We have 90,000 troops in the Middle East.
How vulnerable are they?
If Iran were to launch a preemptive strike and get away with it, meaning that we didn't
detect it and preempt their preemption, depending on the force allocation, because remember
Iran wants to keep something in reserve, but if Iran does a preemptive strike, they could
do a tremendous amount of damage to Americans.
We could lose thousands of Americans.
It could be a death toll worse than Pearl Harbor, a death toll worse than 9-11.
And why do we have 90,000 troops there?
Because we have for many decades viewed the Middle East as one of the critical regions of the world.
You know, we maintain a naval presence in the Persian Gulf. We continue to maintain the ability
to project power into Iraq. So we have Ford basing in in Qatar. We have bases throughout Syria and Iraq
that we use as part of our anti-ISIS efforts.
We have these facilities in there
because we view the Middle East as our backyard.
We've done so, just so you know,
this isn't just a purely Trump thing.
This is something that, you know,
the Carter Doctrine initiated back in 1979
after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Jimmy Carter created what we called
then the Rapid Deployment Force
that later morphed into US Central Command.
But we basically said that we will become
the police force of this region.
This is one of the reasons why we ended up going to war against Iraq in 1991, because
when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, they threatened regional and global energy supplies.
It's not just Iraq, a major oil producer in its own right, suddenly took over Kuwait,
making it one of the largest producers.
They threatened the Eastern Saudi oil fields, or at least we created the perception of
an Iraqi threat. And initially, George Herbert Walker Bush said it's about the oil. And when
the American people went, no, we ain't going to war for oil. Then he changed it and said, well,
it's really because Saddam Hussein is the Middle East equivalent of Adolf Hitler. The Americans
went, oh, well, then we got to kill Hitler. But, you know, it was really all about oil. And that's
what it's been about for forever. This is about energy
security. This is about securing one of the major oil and gas
producing regions of the world, which is absolutely essential
for the functioning of the global economy. And this is why
we have American troops there.
Scott Renner, thank you, my dear friend.
I appreciate deeply your vast knowledge
and letting me take you all across the board
with the questions.
All the best, we look forward to seeing you again next week.
Okay, thanks for having me.
You're welcome.
Coming up tomorrow at eight in the morning,
Ambassador Charles Freeman.
At 1.30 in the afternoon, Professor Jeffrey Sachs.
At two o'clock in the afternoon, Aaron Mate.
At three in the afternoon tomorrow, Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski.
Judge Napolitano for Judging Freedom. MUSIC