Judging Freedom - [SPECIAL] COL Douglas Macgregor: US/Ukraine Mineral/Security Deal: Insane or Provocative?
Episode Date: May 1, 2025[SPECIAL] COL Douglas Macgregor: US/Ukraine Mineral/Security Deal: Insane or Provocative?See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/pri...vacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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you Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Welcome to this special
edition with Colonel Douglas MacGregor. Colonel MacGregor, thank you for joining us. You and I communicated late last night
when the government revealed
that it had signed a minerals agreement
with potentially a security guarantee with Ukraine.
And we decided we should be discussing that this morning.
The US is a co-belligerent against Russia.
The president is surrounded by neocons
who want the war to continue and by American
firsters who truly want the war to end. Why a mineral deal involving United States interest
in the dirt in the earth in Ukraine now while we're negotiating with the Russians?
I think on the one hand, you have this desperate need or perceived need to quote
unquote get a win for the president and the president who made lots of I would say in cautious
statements about the war in Ukraine had told everyone well I can end this in a day that of
course is gone by the wayside and now I can sit down and force these two people to negotiate with each other.
Well, that hasn't worked.
And he's been trying to get the Zelensky to sign on for a ceasefire.
And Zelensky of course has been unwilling to do so unless it meets his needs,
which is obviously to continue the war.
So I think they decided if we can get something on paper
that looks like Americans are going to benefit, in other words somehow or another Americans are
going to get a trillion dollars worth of mineral wealth out of Ukraine, well then the president
looks like a winner. This is the transactional mentality that he's adopted and everyone goes home happy.
In truth, they're never going to see anything remotely like that. And what's even more discouraging
is there is contained in this agreement, the promise of American military assistance as
part of the reciprocity involved with our first access to whatever mineral wealth is there.
And then secondly, most of this is really about oil, gas, and aluminum.
I'm not sure why we are desperate for any oil or gas that comes out of Ukraine.
I would think that would go probably to Europe.
As far as aluminum is concerned, I'm sure we can always use it.
But the real question is why would this president
put what started out as a very good attempt
to normalize relations with Moscow
and to bring this war to an end
has now suddenly changed horses, run back to Zelensky,
who is about as reliable as the wind at this point.
I mean, he is literally the captain of the Titanic,
and then presenting some agreement that he signed as evidence for
goodness and power and strength and glory for Trump. Makes no sense.
Lentzky isn't even the legitimate lawful head of state. I don't even know
if some new government wanted to come in and say, well, he wasn't the government,
he was pretending to be the government. You don't have access to these materials, President Trump
or President fill in the blank after Trump leaves office. But most troubling to me, and this is what
piqued my interest as I was about to go to sleep last night, is the US military assistance. I mean,
this has got to be dead in the water for Putin.
What does that mean?
US troops on the ground in Ukraine?
Well, obviously we don't know precisely what it means,
but the fact that we are going to tie ourselves
in any way, shape or form to this dying Ukrainian state
and regime presents a threat to Russia
for the reasons that you've outlined.
We are ultimately a belligerent in this war.
Ukraine is simply the facade for our war against Russia.
One would assume that the president Trump understands that.
And if he genuinely wants to end it, he's got to abandon it.
I think if you're sitting overseas right now, wherever you are,
you sort of see the United States
government like a teenager on TikTok who watches for a while, slides to a new video and then
says, oh, I've changed my mind.
I'm going to look at this now.
There doesn't seem to be any consistency.
We have a crisis of inconsistency in policy and behavior in Washington. Talk about it. I wasn't going to go there yet, but I have to now talk about a teenager on TikTok.
Chris put up the two full screens, one from the Iranian professor and one from
Pete Hegseth. This is the Secretary of Defense of the United States to an Iranian professor, not an official of
the government.
We see your lethal, incapped support of the Houthis.
We know exactly what you are doing.
You know very well what the US military is capable of and you were warned.
You will pay the consequence at the time and place of our choosing.
Is this the professor? We see your lethal support for the
Zionists, the child killers, the rapists. We know exactly what you are doing. You know very well
what the resistance is capable of and you were warned. You will be remembered as an accomplice
to the hashtag Gaza Holocaust. Hegsset's posting preceded the professor's.
Is this any way for the Secretary of Defense to behave
when the president has his personal emissary
negotiating with the foreign minister of Iran?
Well, of course not.
It's ridiculous.
These discussions, if you wanna call them
even a coherent discussion, I don't think this is.
But whatever you're going to talk about in terms of potential action that the United States government may take, that should be done in private. But then virtually everything that
we've witnessed with the Trump administration since the president took over is a sort of unending reality TV show. There's no sense of the value of closed door diplomacy
where you can talk frankly back and forth
and both sides can develop trust and confidence
that whatever they say will not be broadcast
across the airwaves.
Unfortunately, we failed to do that.
So we're now conducting policy in the public forum.
And apparently this man, Mr. Haegseth,
has decided that he's also in addition
to being the Secretary of State,
or excuse me, Secretary of Defense,
that he has a role in the State Department
and is virtually a Deputy President.
He's now talking about policies that may be implemented
when he is in no position
to do such a thing. He's the last man that should say anything about the use of military power.
And when he does speak, it is after careful deliberations by the president, the secretary
of state, and the rest of the national security team. There's no sense of it. And again, that's why
it reminds me of a teenager on TikTok.
Just go from one TikTok video to the next
with no current span of attention that makes sense.
To add to this absurdity,
here is General Kellogg yesterday on Fox News
boasting that the Ukrainians, not the Russians, the Ukrainians have agreed
to 22 of his points, none of which he elaborates on.
Watch this.
...about of London last week, where we sat down with the Ukrainian team, with the Europeans
as well, and we had 22 concrete terms that they've agreed to.
What they want to at the very first and what they have is a very comprehensive and permanent ceasefire that leads to a peace treaty.
I mean comprehensive sea, air, land infrastructure for at least 30 days.
Why is 30 days important? Because it can build to a permanent peace initiative.
And the reason why 30 days is important is it stops the killing.
That's what President Trump wants to do.
This is the man who proposed that NATO divide Ukraine into three parts for the Russians,
excuse me, for the British, the Americans, and the French. This is more absurdity, Colonel,
is it not? How can the Kremlin take this gentleman seriously?
Well I can tell you that the Kremlin does not.
And that's something that I would think President Trump
should be made aware of if he doesn't already understand it.
Kellogg is treated in Russia as a cartoon cutout,
as someone who is unworthy of any serious attention.
They know about his daughter's financial commitments in Ukraine and how she and his family has
enriched itself involved with what's going on in Ukraine and so-called non-governmental contacts.
They don't take him seriously at all. In fact, I thought they made it very clear they were to
send the man back. But again, this is the sort of thing that really ruins your national standing beyond the borders of the United States.
First of all, who is Kellogg speaking for?
He's not speaking for the president. He's speaking for the Ukrainian government.
He's essentially standing up and pitching for Zelensky.
I'm not sure that's what President Trump sent him to Kiev to do.
So that's the first question. Second question is,
are commitments are already questioned by people?
Normally, Americans keep commitments
for the length of one election cycle.
We're not even managing it to do that.
We were keeping commitments for a week.
Everything that Kellogg said is antithetical
to the interests of normalization with Moscow.
It has nothing to do with what President Trump and Rubio and others met the Russians to discuss.
In fact, it undermines all of that, just as Trump's own signature on this largely meaningless document
that promises a trillion in mineral wealth contributes to undermining our relationship
with the Russians.
I mean, why would you bother with any of this?
There are no rare earths to speak of in Ukraine.
I don't know what they think they're going to get.
And as I said, it's mostly about oil, gas, and aluminum.
And the Russians have already spoken up and said, we will sell you whatever you want in
terms of rare earths,
and we've ignored that out of hand.
None of this is in the national interest, Judge,
and I'm talking about American national interest.
We look like the keystone cops.
It's time for the president to put an end to it.
As if to make us look worse,
here is the most sophisticated and respected diplomat on the international scene, almost as if he's responding to General Kellogg.
Chris, cut number six.
If you want a ceasefire, just to continue supply arms to Ukraine, So what is your purpose? You know what what Kaya Callas and what's
his name, Mark Rute said about the the the Secretary General and the European Union.
They bluntly stated that they can support only the deal, which at the end of the day
will make Ukraine stronger, would make Ukraine a victor. So if this is the purpose of the ceasefire, I don't think this is what President Trump
wants.
This is what Europeans, together with Zelensky, want to make out of President Trump's initiative.
He sees right through all of this.
Of course.
You know, the sad part is that in his case with Putin, as is the case with all the Russian leadership.
It's the leadership in Moscow speaks with one voice.
Putin's policy positions, conditions for a ceasefire,
a conditions for the end of the war,
all of those things are spelled out.
They've been spelled out for months.
Everyone knows what they are.
And everyone stays on the text. In other words,
they're on the same sheet of music. President Trump needs to get control of his administration.
There are too many people that are pursuing policy goals that are completely divorced
from what President Trump has said repeatedly that he wants to achieve. And his number one objective was to end the war
and restore relations with Russia.
Now that's where everyone should be.
Obviously that's not the case.
Now he's apparently fired Mr. Walz from his position.
Perhaps that will help.
Since Mr. Walz is a strident advocate
for war with everyone, frankly, that could help, but I don't know. I think Mike Walts is a strident
aggressive war hawk.
I don't know where any of this is going to go, Colonel.
Switching gears a little bit, if we could, you and I watched a Japanese member of
parliament on the floor of their house of representatives address the
Japanese foreign minister.
And he was quite critical.
And perhaps this is the Japanese perception of president Trump's tariffs.
We'll run the clip, of course, with an English translation in just a minute.
But it appears as though the unthinkable is already an impossible task.
The theory is already a mess and there is no consistency whatsoever.
However, if Japan were to negotiate about what they have been saying, to put it bluntly,
it would be like a delinquent kid extorting someone.
If Japan listens to the and bends the other way in response to the impossible demands
of bargaining and deals, it will set a bad example as a customary and historical precedent.
If you get mugged and put money in their hands, the will come back to mug us again.
He's not a straight partner, so he won't listen to our straight talk.
Anyway, I hope that you will never give in to the American extortionists.
I know it's harsh to say, but they are extortionists. That's the way the Trump tariffs are being perceived by our
closest Asian outlie and our second greatest after China, Asian trade partner.
Well remember Judge, we have roughly 120 installations, military installations in
Japan. Wow, 120? Yes, now they're not all giant,
but there are that many installations. You're talking about intelligence installations, offices,
as well as shipyards, airfields, and so forth. We have an enormous stake. How many troops are there?
I'm sorry, what? I'm sorry, Colonel, how many troops are there? I'm sorry what? I'm sorry Colonel, how many troops
are there approximately? You know I hesitate to say but you're probably 30 or 40 thousand spread
across these installations. A significant number. Yeah well the other thing is and this is something
that you know I've said repeatedly for several years now that no one in the United States is
hearing from anyone in Washington and that is no one in the United States is hearing from anyone in Washington.
And that is no one in Asia is interested
in going to war except us.
In other words, if you go to Japan or go to Vietnam
or go to the Philippines or somewhere else
and preach war against China,
they'll be polite to you, they'll listen to you,
but they think you're out of your mind
and they have no interest in it.
Everyone in Asia wants access to the same thing,
the Chinese market.
And China's market is vitally important
to everyone over there.
So you've asked them now in the context of these tariffs
to choose and they've chosen the Chinese market
because they can sell into it and they can buy out of it.
And they can do it all in their own currency
without using dollars.
So the only thing we've done with this tariff
is offended people that were formerly friendly to us
and proven ourselves to be fools
because of our complete lack of consistency.
I loved his statement about a delinquent child
extorting someone.
I think the teenager with a TikTok
is probably closer because I don't think
that President Trump thinks in terms of extorting anything.
I think he thinks he's legitimate
and justified in what he's doing.
And he's done this in a blanket way.
That was the problem from the very beginning.
And what this man goes on to talk about,
which you can hear from people like Luke Groban
or James Ricards or any number of other people, Jeffrey Gundlach, Demartino Booth, all of them
have talked about the ridiculous mathematics behind the decision on what the tariffs should look like
because that's not how you arrange these kinds of things. Unfortunately, the whole administration
looks like a clown show.
And that's what this Japanese is saying.
Let's not hitch our wagon to this crazy clown show.
Let's stick with consistency.
And I think that's what Americans need to understand right now.
I think this is something that President Trump
needs to understand and get away from all of this nonsense. Firing
people is a good way to do it, but it also depends very heavily on him and what he says.
He says an awful lot. And one day it sounds, you know, attracted to some people. The next
day it's horrifying. That has to end.
This is very serious stuff, Colonel. Pepe Escobar, who's a regular on this show,
just finished a week in Shanghai interviewing government officials,
industrialists, and academics.
The Chinese are firm in their determination that they can survive,
thrive, and prosper without the United States,
and that they will not kowtow to a 245 percent, absurd the number, tariff.
President Xi won't even call President Trump to ask for relief from this because that's out of the Chinese character.
Well, you know, it's a matter of politeness. We haven't been very polite to any of these people.
President Trump has never called to talk with President Xi and explain his position and
what he's trying to achieve.
These people are not stupid and contrary to popular belief, they're not evil.
They're not all determined to see the death and destruction of the United States.
That's a lot of nonsense.
So you pick up the phone and say, I'd like my representatives to meet with yours and iron out some concerns that we have regarding trade.
As you know, we have this big trade deficit. You talk to people, people listen to you and they
respond to you and you work things out. We don't seem to have understood any of that. This bullying
tactic of threatening people is a failure in the international system. It's a bigger failure
now than at any point in our history because we are no longer the indispensable nation in economic
terms and we need to stop talking about the use of military power all over the Middle East against
everyone that doesn't like Israel or doesn't support Israel or is prepared to fight against Israel.
That's not going to help matters. That's not going to help Israel, contrary to popular belief,
especially when you attack Houthi tribesmen in Yemen. It's incomprehensible. These people
have managed to shut down a $239 billion United States Navy that seems completely incapable of
doing a damn thing about them. Well, if you
can't do anything about them militarily, what are you going to do? Talk to them? Is that possible?
There's no sense of diplomacy, no strategy. Everything's impulse driven. President-
Larry Johnson reports that we have- That's time for me to do this.
Larry Johnson reports that the federal government has spent over $500 million in the past month and a half
on drones and missiles attacking the Houthis and they barely laid a glove on them.
$500 million down the drain.
I came across a clip from a retired Australian general. I wonder what you think of
it. He's warning of World War III. He believes it's already started. There may be some things in here
with which you disagree, but here's what he had to say. I don't know or know of this fellow. He
does work for one of those think tanks at Georgetown University, so you know who funds it.
Georgetown University so you know who funds it. But here's General Ryan, cut number 10. In many respects we're already there. I mean I think historians in a hundred years will look
back and go the third world war started in February 2022. You know there are many elements that are
still a phony war. I mean we saw that at the beginning of World War II right. That's what
we're seeing in the western pacific. You know the middle east has been at war for I mean, we saw that at beginning of World War II, right? That's what we're seeing in the Western Pacific.
The Middle East has been at war for some time.
It's going to be at war for a long time to come, I think.
Russia has made it very clear that it has aggressive designs in the Baltics and in
Scandinavia, as well as against Poland and Ukraine.
So we're kind of already there, but it's a mindset that we need to have.
And it's something that our western
politicians really have to contemplate hardly because they're going to have to have a different
balance of domestic and foreign investment in their budgets. Now, is this worth listening to?
The Defense Department budget is already a skosh below a trillion. Trump's new budget actually has it over a trillion.
And I've never heard Putin expressing designs on Poland.
The general Ryan suffers from the malady
that is common inside the Beltway
and across the Anglosphere.
He lives in the world of 1945.
We are not entering a so-called multipolar world,
judge in reality, what we're seeing happen now
is that the world that existed before the second world war
is roaring back healthy and strong into existence.
We're dealing with civilizational states
like China and Japan and Russia,
states that were destroyed, they've recovered.
And we're behaving as though they still have an obligation to do whatever we tell them to do.
And that's outrageous. At the same time, our position in the world, which was inevitably going to decline
in terms of our GDP participation and economic output, is at a point right now where we are no longer
the indispensable nation economically.
We're a great power and we're dependent upon trade, but we're no longer in a position to
dictate.
That's the problem with all the institutions that grew up under Bretton Woods that now
Bessemint says he wants to breathe new life into.
Well, it's a little late because other institutions are going to emerge.
People are going to do business in different ways. They are not necessarily
going to follow our line. The question is, do we adapt to this? Do we become a
good neighbor and cooperate where it makes sense to do so? Or do we remain
belligerent and bellicose and continue to complain and threaten whenever anybody does anything we don't approve
of. I think Ryan is stuck in that world. That's all he knows. That's all that most people
in Washington know. If you tell them that Iran is a civilizational state in its own
right, they scoff. They scoff at everyone in the world right now thinking that they are the center and they are innately superior.
And for some reason we are now hooked to Israel in ways that put us in severe risk,
certainly in the Middle East and other parts of the world because they take a very similar position.
If this were some gathering and you had just said that at the podium,
I would have stood up and led the standing applause, Colonel.
Brilliant analysis.
Last subject matter, are India and Pakistan on the verge of war?
Well, you know, that's an important question.
And I'm hearing lots of interesting things here.
But I turn to some people that are actually Indian and
know something about it.
And I asked them and they simply pointed out to a fact and that is that Modi and lots of
people in the United States don't like him because he's quote unquote a Hindu nationalist.
But Modi thus far has really followed the Putin model.
He's exercised enormous restraint.
Whenever there have been disagreements and there has been any exchange of gunfire,
it's always been very, very limited.
It's always been carefully targeted.
And every effort has been made to avoid the very thing
that everyone is worried about right now, which is open war.
And there's not much evidence that either the Pakistani government
or the Indian government really want to go to war
to the point
where it would destroy their countries.
And I think that's something that we should keep in mind.
So no, I don't think an all out war is likely.
I think we'll pass through this particular crisis phase
and Modi will behave as he has in the past
with great restraint.
I wish we would behave with more restraint.
Colonel McGregor, thank you very much for your time.
I know you've already spent a half an hour
with us earlier in the week,
but we wanted to have the benefit of your analysis
of this breaking news, deeply appreciated.
Have a great weekend.
Look forward to seeing you next week, sir.
Sure, thank you, Judge.
Of course.
And coming up later today at two o'clock on all of this, Colonel Larry Wilkerson and at
three o'clock on all of this, including China and Japan, Professor John Mearsheimer. MUSIC