Judging Freedom - [SPECIAL] - LtCOL. (ret.) William J. Astore : US Is Failing and Flailing
Episode Date: August 12, 2025[SPECIAL] - LtCOL. (ret.) William J. Astore : US Is Failing and FlailingSee 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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Hi, everyone. Judge Andrew Napolitano here for judging freedom with my froggy voice today. Today is Tuesday, August 12, 2025. Colonel Bill Astor joins us now. The colonel is a veteran of the United States Army, has a degree in philosophy, a Ph.D. from Oxford University as a historian, a former professor of history, and a very serious critic of military.
excess. The colonel has written a spectacular piece about which those of you listening now may
have heard me speak called an ailing, flailing, failing empire lashes out at anti-war.com. And when I read
that piece, we decided to track the colonel down. And it turns out he's good friends with some
of our regulars, not the least of whom is Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson. So Colonel Astor, welcome
here. Welcome to the show. I'm looking forward to chatting with you.
Thanks so much, Judge.
Sure.
Does the United States possess moral authority?
Does it possess virtue when it goes around the world looking for monsters to slay?
Yeah.
That's a great question.
I think when I first went into the military in, well, 1985, kind of during the tail end of the Cold War, as a young second lieutenant,
I believe that we did have moral authority.
I knew my country wasn't perfect.
Obviously, I'd read a lot about the Vietnam War and the disasters there.
I was familiar with the Pentagon Papers and all the lies.
And yet, you know, I still thought our country was on the right side of history
in the sense that we faced the Soviet threat
and the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe that I thought, you know, had to be met.
And so, or at least very much contained.
But now I think when, you know, the passing of 40 years, when I look at what the United States is up to, you know, our global empire, what we're doing in enabling a genocide in Gaza is probably the worst example.
But all of our arms shipments around the world, you know, the fact that back in the 1930s, we used to call them the merchants of death,
The United States was proud to say that we weren't like these bad European countries exporting all these awful weapons.
Now we dominate that global trade.
You know, 40% of it is from the United States.
So unfortunately, sadly, I think we can no longer say that we have the moral authority, you know, that we had, say, 40 years ago or back during World War II.
is that absence of moral authority probably one of the reasons why these things aren't debated
anymore the the president bombs iran for two weeks he doesn't go to congress the cia is fomenting
some sort of a civil war revolution in georgia not the american georgia but the georgia
adjacent to uh to russia nobody says anything about moral virtue they just go ahead and do it they just go
ahead and start killing people.
Right, right.
And I think that's part of the spread of militarism in our country.
You know, this, when you become dominated by the military, you know, when you make the
military into a band of, of virtuous heroes, you put morality to the side.
And I think we've become a country, this is something I've been writing about for about
past 20 years.
You know, when we extoll the virtues of warriors and warfighters, and when we basically argue that the way to obtain peace is through military strength, all of a sudden, I think we've abandoned moral authority.
I was going to say that I really appreciate the way that your show starts, you know, your show starts with peace, that word.
So, you know, that is something that I deeply appreciate.
Well, you don't see that word in the Defense Department today.
In fact, my former Fox colleague who now runs the DOD told another colleague of ours,
former colleague of ours, Laura Ingraham, last night.
He wants to change the name of the Defense Department to the War Department.
he wants to glorify the warrior ethos he is ecstatic colonel that he has one trillion dollars to spend in a year
you know these numbers better than i by the way forgive me i said army before i didn't mean to
degrade you your air force now i i know you know i i worked in the army and the presidio at monterey
was my last assignment i know a lot of good army guys so no yes he's
My family has histories at both West Point and the Air Force Academy.
So I'm familiar with the collaboration between the two.
And our dear mutual friend, the great, brilliant Professor John Mearsheimer, is a graduate of West Point, but transferred to the Air Force.
But a trillion dollars a year, Colonel, you know this better than I, is more than the next 10 countries combined.
Right.
Russia probably has a better army.
China probably has a better Navy.
They don't waste the money that we do.
Why?
Well, you know, part of it is, well, as ex-CIA, you know, Ray McGovern always reminds us,
it's the Mickey Matt, right?
The military industrial complex combined with the intelligence world and the media,
academia, think tanks.
I mean, even sports in Hollywood now celebrate the military.
So we as a culture have come to embrace the military in a way in which we no longer
ask questions, you know, where the money is going and what we're getting for the money.
And this is, of course, what Eisenhower challenged us to do.
President Eisenhower in 1961 warned all of us that we, our country,
was increasingly falling under the control of the military industrial complex,
to which he added Congress as well,
although he kept that out of the speech to keep Congress on his side.
And he told us, you know, he said, look, we need to be alert and knowledgeable citizens.
It's the only way we can keep this complex in check.
And unfortunately, to a certain extent, you know,
the use of propaganda and all that to suppress our knowledge of the military
industrial complex. And then just the fact that we've all been encouraged no longer to be
citizens, right? I mean, most of us, I mean, at least if you live in America, you sort of
encouraged to be a passive consumer rather than exercising, you know, your rights to free speech
and dissent and all the rest. Right, right. The president of the United States is meeting
with his Russian counterpart in Alaska on Friday. We all know this. I don't know what's going to come
of it. It's an odd meeting, I think, because as you may know from your studies of history,
normally the agreements are made well in advance, and these meetings are just the public
ratification of them and the padding on the back and the taking of credit. I don't think any
agreements have been made, but maybe we'll be surprised. But while Donald Trump was meeting
with Vladimir Putin, the United States continues to wage a proxy war against Russia. American
intelligence assets in Ukraine and in Russia are aiming American military equipment fired
by Ukrainian personnel at Russian personnel. As I mentioned earlier, the CIA is fermenting some
sort of a disturbance, a coup, a revolution, whatever you want to call it, a civil war in the
country of Georgia in order to deflect the attention of Vladimir Putin from the special
military operation in in ukraine what conceivable benefit to the united states is there for this one last
part of this and you can run with the ball as long as you want carlin you're you're a historian and you
explain these things beautifully two weeks ago president trump signed an order declaring russia
a national security threat to the United States.
I would argue that Russia is not a national security threat to the United States,
and if anything, it's the other way around.
Watch Colonel Christopher Donahue,
who commands 100,000 American troops in Europe and Africa,
threatening a land invasion of this exclave,
Kalininginandgrad,
as much a part of Russia as Moscow is, it's just not contiguous to the mainland.
Chris, the Colonel Donahue side.
If you look at Klanigrad, you can argue back and forth, but it's about 47 miles wide,
surrounded by NATO on all sides, there's absolutely no reason why that A280 bubble to deter Russia,
we cannot take that down from the ground in a time frame that is unheard of and faster than we've ever been able to do.
We've already planned that.
We've already developed it.
Conceivable benefit to the United States of America is there to saying that,
to planning to do it, and even ultimately doing it.
Well, he's a real warrior, right?
He talks a good game about war.
And this is part of the problem that our country faces today.
Yeah, I mean, the Russia-Ukraine war, I've always been concerned from the very beginning
about mission creep, right? I mean, when Russia invaded, obviously, there was, I think,
justification for the United States to provide defensive weaponry to Ukraine. But the way in which,
you know, the Russia-Ukraine war has escalated over the last three-plus years. And in each time,
it seems as if, you know, there's a new offensive weapon instead of defensive that we need to send
to Ukraine in its struggle.
You know, I remember back in
2003, I mean, there was a lot of confidence,
a lot of hype, way too much hype,
about how all these American wonder weapons,
you know, Abrams tanks and leopard tanks from Germany and so on,
that Ukraine was going to launch a decisive offensive
and defeat Russia.
And I was like, I don't think this is going to happen.
You know, I think Russia is,
formidable on the ground. They have superiority in numbers. You know, it looks like a much more like
a stalemate, but a stalemate that could escalate into a wider war. And so my writing, when I write
about the Russia-Ukraine war, that's what I've been worried about. I've been worried about
the rhetoric of that officer when he says, oh, yeah, you know, we can invade Russia. We can do that.
I mean, this is escalatory rhetoric against a country, Russia, that has just as many, if not a few more nuclear missiles and bombs than the United States has.
So I'm hopeful, you know, I'm hopeful that this meeting between Putin and Trump this week, if nothing else, can help de-escalate some of the rhetoric and some of the dangers of a potential nuclear war.
Think about what General Donahue said by you spent 20 years in the Air Force.
the generals in the army.
Could he have made a statement like that
without General Kane,
the chairman of the Joint Pete Chiefs of Staff
or Secretary Heggseth
or even President Trump knowing about it?
I don't know.
But none of the three of them corrected him
and two months ago,
Pete Hegeseth was in Japan
looking towards China and threatening them.
So why do these people do these things?
Yeah. Yeah. No, I mean, I think part of it is posturing. You know, part of it is this, an expression they like to use is, you know, putting on the big boy pants, right? You know, they like to come across as forceful. They like to come across as tough. But then I look at the last major wars that the United States has fought, whether it be Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, or other military misadventures. I mean, these are,
these have been disasters, right? And there have been disasters. There's been no accountability
for these disasters, no accountability for the lies, whether it be the Pentagon papers, WMD in
Iraq, the Afghan war papers. I mean, the military has been lying to us consistently.
And yet, you know, here they are posturing for a possible invasion of Russia. It's a sort of
craziness that definitely is more than a bit concerning.
Does the United States even have the capability of invading Russia?
I mean, they're there. We would have to send troops 10,000 miles from here.
And the same thing with China. How could we possibly defend Taiwan and expect to prevail?
Well, I mean, anyone who knows military history, I mean,
the first thing you remember is never get involved in a land war in Asia. And the second lesson,
if not even before that, is never invade Russia, right? I mean, whether it be just asked Napoleon or
Hitler. Right. Ask Charles the 12th, Napoleon, Hitler, anyone else who's tried to invade
Russia, except for the Mongols. And even then, the Russians eventually threw off the Mongol yoke
after 250 years or so.
One of the whispers, and I don't want to drag you too much into politics,
you can say what you want about this gentleman,
but one of the regular whisperers in the president's ear,
usually in a golf cart that play golf together,
is Senator Lindsey Graham, who really is over the top beating the drums for war.
Here he is two days ago.
Chris, cut number three.
No, I'm very okay with President Trump, meeting with President Putin in Alaska.
I think everybody knows that how this war ends can be a good thing or a bad thing.
If it ends in a way, it looks like that Putin's overly rewarded, there goes Taiwan.
You can't end a war without talking.
I do hope that Zelensky can be part of the process.
I'll leave that up to the White House, but I have every confidence in the world that the president is
going to go to meet Putin from a position of strength, that he's going to look out for Europe
and Ukrainian needs to end this war honorably, and it's time to end this war honorably. But how we do
it will be historical. How we do it, President Putin has been consistent in his demands.
Crimea and the four oblasts, which have been Russian since the time of Catherine the Great,
will return to Russia
and NATO will not be
in the remainder of Ukraine.
That's it.
What else could Trump possibly negotiate?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I mean, you know,
Lindsey Graham is interesting.
He was, I think he was a jag in the Air Force.
I think he became a colonel, actually.
But he's sort of like the new John McCain
never met a war he didn't like.
Right.
And so, you know, I think there's a lot, obviously, the president can talk to Putin about, right?
I mean, Trump, as we know, the United States has been using economic sanctions against Russia,
depressing the Russian economy.
I'm sure there's some leverage there.
You know, I'm not an expert on sanctions.
But certainly, I think you're right.
if there's going to be any kind of a peace between Russia and Ukraine that the United States
is going to be involved in one way or another, it's going to involve some kind of exchange
of territory, some kind of, I know that Ukraine is very reluctant to do this, but I don't
see Putin saying that, well, we're just going to withdraw and give back all this land that
we've captured with all the lives expended, you know, over the last three plus years.
Colonel, why is there so little outrage in the United States over the genocide and slaughter
by starvation in Gaza, funded almost exclusively by the American taxpayer?
Right, right. I think, as you know, Judge, I think there is outrage. But the outrage tends to be
expressed on shows like this, or, you know, I write on substack, you know, I see a lot of people
who are upset. I think most Americans are upset. But sadly, we've been rendered, you know,
powerless, whether it was under the Biden administration or right now under the Trump administration.
I mean, unfortunately, even though I think Americans, most Americans, I think, want to stop the flow
of arms from the United States to Israel. I mean, we want food to get in. We don't want women and
children and everyone else starving to death in Gaza. We don't want a genocide there. And yet,
unfortunately, our government just doesn't listen to us. And meanwhile, I think all you listeners
know, you know, the power of Israel, the APAC as a lobby, the way in which Congress is basically
subordinate almost to the whims of B.B. Netanyahu. As I said in my piece,
you know, my wife and I, this is kind of like dark humor. But when we Americans can't get
health care or we can't get our roads fixed, you know, my wife and I joke to each other,
well, that's because Bibi needs bombs. And that's a sad commentary. You know what, Colonel,
that is not a joke. Well, it is a, it's a dark humor, but it's also true.
I mean, the American government never says no to him, never.
And he's a war criminal.
In fact, he's a monster in terms of what he is doing and what he is permitting to happen to the poor people next door to him.
Senator Bernie Sanders, left-wing Jewish member of the United States Senate,
is Netanyahu a disgusting liar.
I mean, and I'm sorry to say, that's true.
Sanders is right.
Right.
And yet, as you know, our Congress stands and applauds him almost as one.
You know, 30, 40, 50 times during the last time he gave a speech to a joint session of Congress.
I mean, it's obscene.
Well, Colonel, I've enjoyed this conversation.
I hope you'll come back and visit with us again soon.
And you have my producer's email.
If there's something you want to tell us, please do so.
And the next time you read another fantastic piece like this one,
I read at anti-war.com, please send it to us right away.
Right.
Thanks so much, Judge.
Thank you, Colonel.
All the best.
Wow.
Great guy.
Terrific, terrific, fearless, courageous guy with a sense of humor.
Coming up later today at 2 o'clock this afternoon on all these topics,
Aaron Mote, at 3 o'clock, a copy.
colleague of Colonel S. Stores, Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwekowski, Justice of Paletano for judging freedom.
Thank you.