Judging Freedom - Scott Ritter: Ukraine and Death.
Episode Date: February 5, 2025Scott Ritter: Ukraine and Death.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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Save $80 with code SPACE80 at Talkspace.com. Thanks for watching! Hi, everyone. Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Wednesday,
February 5th, 2025. Scott Ritter joins us now. Earlier in the week, I read your research piece on the deaths
in Ukraine, and that's what I thought we'd be talking about, and maybe we'll get to it. But of
course, and the United States and the West materially misrepresenting human death and
the consequences of misrepresenting human death, even the history of misrepresenting human death.
But before we get to that, if we do, of course, we must talk about the announcement that President Trump made yesterday.
Excuse me. It's legal. It's political. It's moral. It its practical implications. I speak, of course, of this off-the-wall statement in the
presence of Prime Minister Netanyahu that the United States will acquire and own Gaza.
Now, I am sick and tired of watching the announcement, but if you want us to play it,
we will play it again for you. No, I'm intimately familiar with it.
Let's start with the practical and geopolitical
implications of what the President said.
Let me set the stage this way, Judge.
Please.
I'm not here to defend what Trump said at all.
My dogs aren't here to defend what Trump said either.
Hopefully they'll quiet down in just a second.
We're dealing with a situation in the world where there is a leadership vacuum. We're in an environment where the United
States is in decline and there is nobody to fill that vacuum. And what happens is
certain situations around the world tend to deteriorate without any control. One of those
situations is in the Middle East. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is one that has been dragging on forever without a solution. Trump is a different kind of
leader. A leadership abhors a vacuum. And when you see a vacuum, he will go into it. So what Trump,
I believe, is trying to do here is solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Now, there's nothing
finesse about him. He's not going to do business as usual. But I think we have to take his statements
with a very heavy grain of salt, meaning that we don't take it literally. The audience, I believe,
was standing right next to him, Benjamin Netanyahu. I believe that Trump was basically putting Netanyahu on
notice. You have failed. You have not solved the Gaza problem. Israel doesn't have a solution.
I do, and this is it. And it's an outrageous solution. It's something that makes no sense
morally, legally, ethically, you name it. There's not anything about it that makes any sense,
except he, on record, in the White House with Netanyahu
standing by his side shamed Netanyahu. Netanyahu's not happy about this. This is an embarrassing
moment. Gaza's Israel's problem to solve and Israel couldn't solve it and Israel can't solve
it. So what Trump did is said, I'm going to solve it. Why was Netanyahu beaming? Maybe he was
looking at Mrs. Adelson in the audience.
I don't think he was beaming.
I think he was grimacing.
I was watching his hands, white-knuckled.
I think this man was taken by surprise.
Go back and watch it.
Maybe you'll have a different take.
But I think as Trump is speaking, you just look at Netanyahu's eyes,
and he's just sitting there going, what the heck is going on?
All right, we're going to run it because Chris,
my executive producer,
zoomed in
on Netanyahu's face
and his hands. It's 82
seconds. We are
sick and tired of it, but let's watch it
and then you can comment on it.
The U.S. will take over the Gaza Strip
and we will do a job with it
too. We'll own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous unexploded bombs and
other weapons on the site, level the site and get rid of the destroyed buildings, level
it out, create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and
housing for the people of the area.
You were talking tonight about the United States taking over a sovereign territory.
What authority would allow you to do that?
Are you talking about a permanent occupation there, redevelopment?
I do see a long-term ownership position,
and I see it bringing great stability to that part of the Middle East and maybe the
entire Middle East. And everybody I've spoken to, this was not a decision made lightly. Everybody
I've spoken to loves the idea of the United States owning that piece of land, developing
and creating thousands of jobs with something that will be magnificent. And I don't want to be cute.
I don't want to be a wise guy. But the Riviera of the
Middle East, this could be something that could be so bad. This could be so magnificent.
If we can get a beautiful area to resettle people permanently in nice homes and where they can be
happy and not be shot, not be killed, not be knifed to death like what's happening in Gaza.
Why would they want to return? The place has been hell.
This is hell because of the mass murderer and war criminal seated next to you, funded by your predecessor and now funded by you. But before you respond to that, Carolyn Leavitt, the president's
press secretary, claimed a few minutes ago that President Trump told Prime Minister Netanyahu ahead of time what
he was going to say. I don't know if that's accurate. As you look at his hands and look at
the look on his face, it's like, oh yeah, yeah, I have to stand here and listen to this. But go
ahead, Scott, please. Again, I'm not here to defend Trump at all. I'm trying to put this in
perspective because otherwise you'd want to get this guy committed. There has to be a method to his madness. One has to search for that. And what I
will say is this, no one else has a solution. No one else has offered a solution. Everybody who
has said no to what Trump is saying, and that's the right answer, by the way, no, you can't do
that. No one's come up and said, no, but here's an
alternative. Here's something else. So I think what Trump has done is put something so outrageous
out there that it's going to compel people to have to come up with a solution, to have to come up
with, you know, well, if we don't want to do this, let's do this. And I'm talking about the Arab
world. I'm talking about Europe. I'm talking about Russia, China. I'm talking about everybody. Nobody has come up with a viable solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Well, how about this?
We're not giving you another nickel, Bibi.
Oh, no, no, that's not the option.
Trump took the $100 million.
So he's going to have to play the game of, you know.
Meaning Trump has been bribed to keep Bibi happy, bribed by Mrs. Eggleston.
Basically, he's been told to, you know, yeah, keep the Israelis happy.
But again, what Trump has done is come in there and said, you know, you can't solve the Gaza.
That's literally what he said.
He said, this man next to me can't solve this problem.
So I'm going to solve it. I'm the problem solver. America's the problem solver. Now,
we're not. We don't have a solution, but it's such an audacious, ridiculous proposition he's
put out there that it will, I think in his mind, look, Trump is a negotiator from a business
standpoint, not from a diplomatic standpoint.
And if you're sitting down in a business negotiation, a big real estate deal, and you're at the table and the other party says no, then they walk, they walk, they leave.
They're gone.
They're finished.
What Trump is looking for is the counteroffer.
That's the way the businessman thinks, the New York State realtor.
He's come in with an outrageous proposal,
but people still want that property. They still want to deal with it. So they're going to say,
no, but here's a counteroffer. Now they have something to work with. And I think that's what Trump is trying to do here because there's no way in God's earth does he follow through with any
aspect of this. Because it would just put America as one of the greatest war criminals
in modern history. And that's not something the American people want.
Can you imagine your fellow Marines knocking on people's doors with bayonets at the end of
their rifle saying, it's time for you to leave? The United States owns this property.
Yeah, well, of course they would. And we did it in Baghdad. We did it in Kabul. We did it in Afghanistan. We do it wherever we're told to do it because it's a
lawful order. Marines don't get to judge the constitutionality of the order given to them by
the commander in chief. That's the job of Congress. Now, if they're told to murder people, to bomb
innocent civilians and all that, they won't do that. That's an unlawful order. But to be given an order to occupy a piece of territory, take control of the territory and, you know, move a population. Look,
we did it in Vietnam. We would move South Vietnamese people out of villages in the safe
areas. Is it immoral? Yeah. Is it illegal? No. But I don't think the Marines want to do that.
And I would think, I would hope that the commandant of the Marine Corps and all the combat
commanders would tell the president, Mr. President, we don't, this is not a mission.
But that arch Christian nationalist Zionist that's now the secretary of state, he would love another crusade in the Middle East.
You mean secretary of defense?
Yeah, I'm sorry.
I meant to say defense.
The secretary of state, by the way, was in Latin America.
He wasn't even with Netanyahu and Trump yesterday.
No, he was.
And that was a way for another time.
But look, the Secretary of Defense isn't a combat commander.
He is the head of the Department of Defense.
But the people who lead the troops on the ground, who command the troops, who are responsible for the actions of the troops,
I would hope every single one of them, the blind-coast doors doors would say, Mr. President, this is not a mission that's suitable
for American troops. This is a mission, actually, if you look at it, every aspect of this mission
is setting us up to fail. Mr. President, we don't want to fail. We won't lose, Mr. President. We
will kill everybody on the ground. That's what we do. You don't want us to do that, Mr. President,
because it will not reflect back good on you or on the Corps or on the ground. That's what we do. You don't want us to do that, Mr. President, because it will not
reflect back good on you or on the Corps or on the country. Please don't make us do this, Mr.
President. There's got to be a better solution. And what will happen when American troops come
home in body bags? Oh, hell, that's never bothered anybody. Or when American troops come home
morally broken, physically broken, mentally broken. I'm at the point right now where I'm convinced that most Americans don't care about American troops,
because if they did, they would never allow this to happen to begin with.
We put the yellow stickers on the back of the car and say, I support the troops,
but we don't visit them in the VA.
We don't visit them on the homeless line.
We don't visit them when they're drinking themselves to death or committing suicide at a rate of 27 a day.
If we want to increase that suicide rate, put Americans on the ground in Gaza and watch them have to live with the consequences
of that action. I mean, we don't want to do this. So Trump's proposal is unworkable, immoral,
unlawful, unconstitutional, and his own people have begun to backtrack a little bit.
Carolyn Leavitt said, well, it would be a temporary removal. I don't know what that
would constitute. The Palestinian people are not vacating Gaza when Netanyahu drops
American-supplied 2,000-pound bombs on their tents.
They're certainly not going to leave because Donald Trump says you have to go.
We own the real estate.
These people spent 15 months standing toe-to-toe with the IDF and fought the IDF to a standstill
and indeed compelled the IDF to withdraw from Gaza.
The IDF didn't win this war.
Hamas won this war. And the Palestinian
people showed they have the resilience and the right stuff to stick it out. They didn't do that
for 15 months just to fold like a house of cards because Donald Trump says that America wants to
turn Gaza into a golf course. So this is the stupidity. You know, the interesting thing in
all of the discussions that have been had,
not once did anybody say, well, what do the Palestinian people think about this?
What about their vote?
Nobody mentioned Hamas.
As if Hamas doesn't exist.
Hamas not only exists, it's stronger than it has ever been politically
because of the victory won over the Israelis.
And the Gazans of Palestine, they're not going to give up this land. You saw
a million of them lined up to go back into
northern Gaza, a wasteland.
They know that, but that's their home.
That's their land. And Donald Trump's
not going to take it from them.
I'm going to play a
clip from Carolyn
Levitt. This is just a couple of minutes ago
and one of the reporters,
it's a very snarky answer
that she gives, and I'd like her to comment on it, at least in my view it's snarky. It begins
with one of the reporters saying to her, who owns Gaza? Cut number 17, Chris.
Questions. One, the president yesterday used the word permanent for permanently resettled
Palestinians. I hear you saying temporarily today. Is that
a shift or a specific change that you want to highlight? And my second question is,
yesterday he spoke about the U.S. owning Gaza. Who owns Gaza now, and how would the U.S. acquire
ownership? Well, Gaza is currently run by Iranian-backed terrorists in the Middle East, Hamas, who we all agree, I think everybody in the region agrees, that can no longer stand.
Just look at the events of October 7th and the events since.
And the president, again, is committed to rebuilding the region for all people who want to return to it once it is no longer a demolition site.
And it's a place where people can actually live and thrive in harmony as he said last night his words not mine. Permanent versus temporarily
resettle? The president has made it clear that they need to be temporarily relocated out of
Gaza for the rebuilding of this effort again it's a demolition site right now it's not a livable
place for any human being and I think it's actually quite evil to suggest that people should live in such dire conditions.
I don't think she knows what she's talking about.
It's evil to suggest people should live in such dire conditions.
Honey, I'm sorry, I shouldn't call her that.
I apologize for that.
I'm not being.
She has to understand that the United States together with Israel created
this unlivable situation. And again, the Palestinians get the vote. They're the only
ones that get the vote. You don't get a vote. The president doesn't get a vote. The Israelis
tried to vote, but they lost. The only people that get a vote are the Palestinians. And right now
they voted with their feet, meaning they are pulling in their feet squarely on the ground. And, you know, you can throw labels around all
she wants, Iranian-backed this, that, and the other thing. They're the victors, and to the
victors go the spoils. Now, does the United States want to take Hamas on and fight them?
That's a different issue altogether. It would be a war of choice. Hamas doesn't pose a threat to us at all. We're sticking our nose in somebody else's business.
That nose of the other side, Israel got broken badly. I don't think Hamas is going anywhere.
And in fact, the more we oppose them, the stronger they get. I've always said the best way to deal with Hamas, I said this back in the 1990s to senior Israelis, is sit down at the table and negotiate with them because
that instantly makes Hamas a responsible player that has to now take the negotiation seriously.
The best thing Donald Trump could do right now is send a special envoy to Gaza to meet with Hamas
to sit down and say, okay, you are the
leaders now. What is your solution? You know, if you don't have a solution, I'll come up with one.
What is your solution? And let's hear it. Because then that forces Hamas to stop being the resistance
movement and start being a political movement that is responsible to the needs and wants of
the people on the international stage. But nobody seems to want to go that route, not in the United States, not in Israel,
not around the world.
Do you think that the American media, the media in the West, American politicians,
whether they're Republicans or Democrats, don't take this seriously?
Or do you think that this is the Nixon madman routine?
Remember when he went to the bomb Cambodia, Kissinger said, they'll think you're crazy.
And Nixon said, I want them to think I'm crazy.
It would, except it's not.
I mean, the way he's laying it out, it's not, you know, it's not, you know, Nixon's was, you know, I'm going to blow the world up.
I'm going nuclear.
We're going to do this.
Trump is, I'm building a golf course. I'm building the new Riviera. I'm going to put in Trump up. I'm going nuclear. We're going to do this. Trump is, I'm building a golf course.
I'm building the new Riviera.
I'm going to put in Trump Palace, maybe some casinos, you know,
and it's going to be wonderful and great and all that stuff.
You know, it's a fantasy world that he's building, but it's not, you know,
the outcome is not insane.
It's the path to that is the insanity. I mean, physically relocating 1.8, 1.9 million people against their will. You're going to have to go in, Mr. Trump, and kill 20, 30,000 Hamas fighters who are underground. They're not giving up. Egypt's not taking them. Egypt already said, we're not taking resistance fighters. Jordan's not going to take them. The Hamas guys are there. You're going to have to kill them all, Mr. President. Are you ready to do that? You know, this will
be a battle like unlike anything the American military has fought in modern history. Think a
combination of Stalingrad and Iwo Jima, you know, hell above ground, hell below ground, tunnels
and ruins. And people who have been fighting there for 15 months know it inside and out.
Our troops go in and don't know anything. We're very aggressive. We'll pursue,
we'll close with and destroy, but they're going to kill a whole bunch of us in the process.
Switching over to your piece on Ukraine and death, why would Donald Trump either knowingly, grossly misstate the number of Russian
deaths in Ukraine or be susceptible to grossly inaccurate data upon which he relied when he said
things as absurd as a million Russian soldiers have been killed.
I'm going to do Russia a favor.
Their economy is failing.
This is a ridiculous war.
If President Putin, I'm paraphrasing, doesn't sit down and talk,
I'll have no choice but to increase the level of, now he doesn't know what he's talking
about, taxes, tariffs, sanctions on anything being sold by Russia to the United States.
What the hell is he talking about? It's Trump, you know, people talk about, you know,
Trump delusional syndrome or something of that nature. He's deluded himself.
This is a man who has put out a political outcome that he wants, an end to the war.
But it's also one that he can't accept reality, meaning he can't allow the war to end on Russia's terms because that, of course, doesn't exude the kind of strength that he's trying to exude. So he needs to dictate the
outcome, the solution. And to justify it, he has to buy into data that sustains and supports
the pathways he's chosen. You know, the Russians are winning. Everybody acknowledges that. But he has to make it appear that with a little bit of pressure from the United States know the Russians are winning everybody acknowledges that but he has to make
it appear that with a little bit of pressure from the United States the Russians could be losing I
mean his big thing right now is you know ruining the Russian economy dropping barrel you know oil
to 45 a barrel I would just ask them what that does to West Permian oil in West Texas uh it
destroys the U.S oil economy I will have'll have a 30% drop in oil production.
Now, we could go to Canada.
No, we can't because we just irritated the Canadians.
So we can't get oil from them or the Mexicans or the Venezuelans.
So our economy is trashed because he's trying to play tough guy with a Russian oil-based economy that produces oil at $12 a barrel.
So even if you drop it to $45, they still are making money. They're
not making enough money to balance their budget. But hey, Russia could go into two years of
deficit spending. We, on the other hand, will collapse our oil economy. He doesn't know what
he's talking about. In Vietnam, General Westmoreland would go around and brief people
in 1967 about how we're killing all the Viet Cong, we're dropping their numbers down,
they're getting down to 200,000. Once we go below 200,000, it's an irreversible decline,
they can't get out of it. We're going to win the war in a year, send in more troops, Mr. President,
the American people, we are going to win, we are going to win, we are going to win.
And then in early 1968, the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong launched a Tet Offensive.
And why? They had 600,000 troops instead of instead of 200 000 our numbers were all wrong and
we lost the war the thing about it is mcnamara knew this back in may he knew that he was telling
lies about the numbers but he was stuck in a political trap of his own making and so he
continued to lie and lie and lie and thousands of americans die trump knows that the numbers he's
putting out there aren't true why because he changes the numbers all the numbers he's putting out there aren't true. Why? Because he changes the numbers all the time. He changes his numbers based upon who's whispering in your ear. But,
you know, he can't be ignorant enough not to actually have someone come in and say,
no, the real numbers are this, Mr. President. But the real numbers don't support the policies
he's trying to see. The real numbers show that Russia is not only winning, but winning decisively,
that her economy is sanctioned proof, that we can't touch their economy. And the last thing is, this is a man who claims, you know,
he says, I met with Vladimir Putin five times directly, and we had, I don't know, 12 phone
calls. Those numbers are rough. He claims to know Putin, but not very well. See, the one number he's
missing is 27 million. And the reason why I bring that up is that's the number of dead that the Soviet Union lost in World War II to fight and win a war of existential survival.
The Russians view this Ukrainian conflict as a war of existential survival.
They are going to pay whatever it takes to win this war.
They're not backing down.
They're not going to surrender.
They're not going to have the ceasefire.
They're going to win.
And if Trump doesn't want to help end the war sooner, this war will go on. And then there's
additional numbers. See, McNamara's lies cost America about another four or five thousand dead.
Trump's lies are going to cost Ukraine another hundred thousand dead, maybe more.
The blood that he says he doesn't want to be spilled will be on his hands because of his inability to grasp
reality he really needs someone to sit down and give him the hard talk i'm hoping that if
pulson gabbard is um is is finally you know brought in as the director of national intelligence that
she will do that that she will send keith kellogg out of the room and she will sit down and say mr
president these are the hard numbers these are the real numbers this is what really is going to happen. Here's our economic
expert on Russia. They're going to tell you what the economy is like, why it's resilient, why you
can't bust it. That's her job as the Director of National Intelligence. Why does Trump listen to
people like Sebastian Gorka and Keith Kellogg? Because Trump surrounds himself with yes-men.
Trump has a vision and he surrounds himself with people that will help make that vision reality. The problem with people who speak truth is that it means the vision that he wants isn't going to happen.
And Trump isn't inclined to change his vision.
Do we know if the Biden pipeline of aid to Ukraine is still
flowing the military aid never shut down um you know the the the what we have to realize though
this Congress hasn't passed new money so whatever's flowing in there right now is money is the the
tail end of the money that was passed under Biden, but there's not new
money, but we know it's passed because even when people were talking about being shut down,
Trump was authorizing Patriot missile batteries to be taken out of storage in Israel, sent to
Raytheon to be refurbished. That doesn't happen for free. And for 90 Patriot missiles to be flown
into Poland and onto Ukraine, that doesn't happen for free. And that's an accounting issue. That's American equipment being withdrawn from Israel. It's still ours. We're
transferring it over. That's money transferred. So you can't do that if there's a freeze on aid.
So I believe that while the cash and the civilian support programs from USAID have been terminated,
the military side is still going in.
So we're still giving Netanyahu arms with which to kill innocent Palestinians,
and we're still giving Zelensky arms with which to resist the inevitable Russian military triumph.
Look, I'll show you the lunacy of what is happening here the patriot missiles we're
sending in are our old missiles they don't work they won't shoot down the modern russian missiles
the patriot batteries that are being refurbished will be destroyed the moment they enter this
battlefield so we're not helping the ukrainians do anything but fight and die how much longer can the war in Ukraine last or new Ukraine can last as long
as Russia wants it to last this will this world will end when Russia wants it to end Russia's
prepared they passed budgets and they're gearing up defense industry to have this war go on for
another two or three years um and after which time they would reassess and and you know reconfigure
but economically they're positioned for this war to go on two or three years.
Their military has built a plan to sustain manpower and equipment.
Russia's not running out of men.
Russia's not running out of equipment.
And Russia's economy is geared to sustain it.
And most importantly, they have political leadership that is dedicated to this task.
So this war can go on
for another two, three years. Ukraine can't last another two, three years. The Ukrainian head of
intelligence says they die this summer. That's not Scott Ritter. That's Budanov saying it's over.
We're finished this summer because we run out of everything.
Was there recently an assassination in Moscow of somebody close to President Putin?
A bomb being exploded in a suicide bomber in a luxury apartment building.
Circassian was the last name.
I don't know if the person died.
I think they were wounded.
I think there was an attack.
They believe a bomb was in the ceiling.
I don't know if they've identified the exact source of the bomb yet,
but there was an explosion triggered when this individual was walking through the lobby.
I believe it killed a civilian, wounded him and some others.
But I think the target of this assassination attempt survived the attack.
Okay.
The person was called Vladimir Putin's death squad chief.
He was killed in his $2 million luxury Moscow apartment.
Last name, Sergisian.
Yeah, I have to go and do research.
If he's dead, then that's news to me.
Right, right. In the Kremlin's mind, have they won the war already?
No, I don't.
I mean, I think the Kremlin believes that they're
on a path towards victory, but I don't think they're counting their chickens before they hatch.
I think they have a very patient approach, a very pragmatic approach, an approach that is
designed to maximize Ukrainian and Western losses and minimize Russian losses. Do we know if the Ukrainians are still using
ATAKOMs and Storm Shadows to attack inside Russia?
I believe that they're not.
Donald Trump authorizing what Joe Biden authorized.
I think the Ukrainians are still using ATAKOMs in the lower limit.
The Russians made it clear that they didn't want ATAKOMs in the lower limit. The Russians made it clear
that they didn't want ATAKOMs going beyond a certain range, but that ATAKOMs missiles fired
below that certain range wouldn't get the retaliation. My understanding is that the
Ukrainians have launched a few attacks using ATAKOMs missiles at the lower range, but they
haven't violated the red line that was set by Russia, which even the Biden
administration respected at the end. And how depleted are the Ukrainian troops in Kursk?
Well, I mean, they continue to die. Look, we have to hand it to these troops. These are
resilient, courageous troops. I i mean some of them are
criminals they're committing war crimes they're going in and raping women blowing people and it's
not manufactured that the russians have hard proof they have confessions they have videotapes they
have the whole thing um you know so they're they're these aren't good people but they're
hard to kill and um they're fighting very hard and And I guess today they just launched another attempt to send troops into Kursk.
The Russians were able to detect it and destroy it before it could go in.
But the Ukrainians aren't giving up on Kursk.
This is a long, hard fight that the Russians are continuing to be involved in.
Scott Ritter, always a pleasure, my dear friend, no matter what we're talking about or how unpleasant the facts on the ground may be.
Thank you so much for your insight.
You presented a very, and I'm not saying this because I'm your friend and collaborator and fan, but a unique and gifted view of what Trump said yesterday, and I thank you for it.
Well, thank you for having me.
Sure. We'll talk to you again soon, my dear friend.
Okay. Thank you.
Okay. Coming up tomorrow, Thursday, Aaron Maté at one in the afternoon, Colonel Larry Wilkerson
at two in the afternoon, and from midnight in Moscow at four in the afternoon, Eastern,
Pepe Escobar, coming up at five this afternoon, right here on our YouTube channel, the infamous press conference between Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu from yesterday.
Judge Napolitano, we're judging freedom. Tano for Judging Freedom. Thank you.