Julian Dorey Podcast - #382 - “Don’t Do It!” - Mossad in Iran, Trump Regime Change, Clinton Bribe & Nuke Deal | Trita Parsi

Episode Date: February 10, 2026

SPONSORS: 1) AMENTARA: Try Amentara's Blue Lotus Extract Gummies for a euphoric, relaxing experience—visit www.amentara.com/go/JULIAN and use code JD22 for 22% off your first order. 2) MIZZEN & MAIN...: Get 20% off your first purchase at https://mizzenandmain.com with promo code JULIAN20. JOIN PATREON FOR EARLY UNCENSORED EPISODE RELEASES: https://www.patreon.com/JulianDorey (***TIMESTAMPS in description below) ~ Trita Parsi is an Iranian-born geopolitical expert, author and Iran Freedom advocate. TRITA's LINKS: X: https://x.com/tparsi BOOK: https://www.amazon.com/Treacherous-Alliance-Secret-Dealings-Israel/dp/0300143117 FOLLOW JULIAN DOREY INSTAGRAM (Podcast): https://www.instagram.com/juliandoreypodcast/ INSTAGRAM (Personal): https://www.instagram.com/julianddorey/ X: https://twitter.com/julianddorey JULIAN YT CHANNELS - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Clips YT: https://www.youtube.com/@juliandoreyclips - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Daily YT: https://www.youtube.com/@JulianDoreyDaily - SUBSCRIBE to Best of JDP: https://www.youtube.com/@bestofJDP ****TIMESTAMPS**** 0:00 – Intro 01:44 - UN diplomacy, veto reform, Veto+1 proposal, reform vs collapse 11:44 - Iran revolution fears, civil war risk, MEK, Kurdish militias 22:44 - MEK cult tactics, US involvement, social media psyops, fog of war 35:56 - Shah coup history, 1979 revolution, Cold War politics 44:19 - Post-revolution repression, Guardian Council, middle-class collapse, sanctions 54:43 - Obama admin, Iran nuclear deal, secret negotiations 64:04 - Israel-Iran dynamics, regime change failures, Persian Gulf escalation 01:23:26 - Iranian negotiators, diplomacy value, Qatar mediation 01:34:37 - Hamas in Qatar, family split by revolution, exile stories 01:44:31 - Protest hijacking, foreign intervention, Mossad speculation 01:55:12 - Civil war realities, Saudi funding, China mediation, Israel strikes 02:06:37 - Saudi perspective, regional buffers, Iranian identity 02:19:17 - Swedish alienation, Khomeini rise, leftist betrayal 02:29:33 - Trump exits deal, mistrust, Axis of Evil legacy 02:38:30 - 2022 protests failure, middle-class revolt, intelligence penetration 02:47:52 - Mossad recruitment, espionage realities, geopolitics 02:57:26 - Regime legitimacy collapse, internal decay, unstable future 03:01:21 - Trita flight CREDITS: - Host, Editor & Producer: Julian Dorey - COO, Producer & Editor: Alessi Allaman - https://www.youtube.com/@UCyLKzv5fKxGmVQg3cMJJzyQ - In-Studio Producer: Joey Deef - https://www.instagram.com/joeydeef/ Julian Dorey Podcast Episode 382 - Trita Parsi Music by Artlist.io Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 It was a very bizarre origin story. The CIA described them as Saddam Hussein's foot soldiers. They were massacring Shia. They were massacring Kurds. They were on the 10thus. They killed six or seven Americans. These were highly religious Shia Muslims that at the same time were Marxists. I mean, you mentioned the MECA earlier on.
Starting point is 00:00:18 Things were bad. But in between something else also happened. My dad's name was put in the paper as one of the people that would be executed on the spot. I remember saying goodbye to him for the last time. They don't execute it as they had promised. Instead, they put him in jail. And guess who is sharing his jail cell? Wow.
Starting point is 00:00:34 There's another great tangent right here. We just had something happen down in Venezuela, where there was a regime change operation, required no boots on the ground afterwards and no civilians were dead. Does this create a good scenario? Or does it create a precedent for the U.S. to then try regime changes, which those regime changes could cause boot on the ground situations? Is it fair to say that that's kind of the V we're looking at potentially? It can, really, destroy Iran.
Starting point is 00:00:57 The question is, what is the cost to the U.S.? not just in terms of dollars, but the Iranians will strike back at the U.S. I'm worried that this can lead to something worse. But, Hey, guys, if you're not following me on Spotify, please hit that follow button and leave a five-star review. They're both a huge, huge help. Thank you. I had put out on my Instagram a story asking for some ideas on some Iran experts.
Starting point is 00:01:31 And there were a bunch of DMs that just said your name, Treeta Parsi. And then I got hit up by our mutual friend, Eric Zoologar. He's like, you got to talk to my guy, Treata. He's helping me so much right now. So I'm glad we could actually do it. Thanks for getting in here, Trita. Thank you so much for having me. So you're just, you're coming from the UN right now?
Starting point is 00:01:49 Yeah, I was spending two days doing meetings on UN Security Council reform. I'm sorry to hear that. What a mess, man. That place, it just feels like you, all you ever hear is just like people hitting their head against the wall when they leave there. It's, you know, I mean, look, it is a crucial institution. We won't understand how important it is until we, lose and hopefully we won't lose it, but it has just become next to impossible to get anything done. So reform and significant changes are going to be absolutely necessary. But it's important
Starting point is 00:02:19 not to abandon it because I think people get so tired thinking, okay, you know what, just do something else. Reality, anything we would create from scratch would end up being worse. I think you're right about that. I fully understand why people out there are like, you know, abolish the UN and all that. It's a reactionary thought because it has lost a lot of trust and made a lot of mistakes, especially over the past couple decades in particularly. But to me, it's like we saw what happened when we failed with the League of Nations experiment and what that led to when you don't have something where there's some semblance of making high-level decisions in some sort of transparent way.
Starting point is 00:02:55 And I don't want to see that happen. Exactly. Exactly. And, you know, this having a venue in which peace and security issues at the highest level in which there's like the standard diplomacy taking place, you don't have to pay this high political cost to get to diplomas. You actually have it automatically. Right. It's crucial. And you know, 30 years ago, the Secretary General was a much more important figure than he is today. Why do you say that? Because back then, whenever there was a conflict, the automatic first place to go to
Starting point is 00:03:25 find a mediator was the Secretary General. He automatically almost had the trust of the key parties. You didn't have to search for a mediator. You didn't have to wait for like some country to find itself in a comfortable political situation to be able to have the bandwidth and the political maneuverability to step up and offer to be a mediator, there was the Secretary General. So Ukraine happened. He would be in there right away. We don't see that any long.
Starting point is 00:03:51 And it's largely, not entirely, but it's largely because of also the great powers. They've kind of pushed the Secretary General out and diminished his role. And now we see the consequences of that. Are you allowed to talk about what we talked about just before camera? regarding like one of the ideas you have for reform? Sure, yeah. You are?
Starting point is 00:04:11 So specifically, because obviously you guys didn't hear that conversation we were having, but you were explaining to me that it sounds like a really reasonable compromise to me. One of the issues that we always hear about is the fact that five countries have a veto vote that can just totally shut something down regardless of what everyone else thinks. And you have an idea that like, I would say soften that a little bit and what does that look like? So you have a position by many countries saying there should not be any veto at all, that the veto really is unfair, that it's block progress, et cetera. And, you know, it's an understandable position.
Starting point is 00:04:45 Perhaps in an ideal world, there would not be a veto in the first place. But reality, the veto is there. And the veto holding countries are never going to give it up. It's just not going to happen. In fact, most of them will probably prefer to see no reform of it at all because they benefit from having it. But unless we have some reform of the UN, particularly the UN Security Council, which is not just the veto, it's composition and size. It is reflecting the world as it looked in 1945.
Starting point is 00:05:12 The world has changed tremendously. Even if it had been formed in 2010, sorry, in 2010, it would have already been outdated given how fast things are changing. But in 1945, we might as well have based it on the geopolitical realities of the time around the life of Jesus Christ, frankly. Outdated it is. So you need to change that. But within that, there's got to be some things.
Starting point is 00:05:35 also on the veto in our view. So one of our proposals, and we have a whole package of different proposals that are being quite seriously considered right now in this process of potentially getting some change, is what we call veto plus one, which is that each and every veto that is cast by any of the P-FIRE needs to be accompanied with one other negative vote by any other member, and it doesn't have to be a permanent member. It could be just one of these elected members that comes in there for two years. If it is, then it is insulated and it stands.
Starting point is 00:06:05 But if it isn't, if it's just that permanent member casting a veto and no one else casting a negative vote, then the matter goes to the General Assembly. And then two-thirds of the General Assembly can vote to overturn the veto, and that causes the original resolution to automatically pass. In the last couple of years, we have examples of eight vetoes. Six by the U.S. on Gaza, two by Russia on Ukraine. All of them were completely alone. all of them most likely would have been overturned if our reform had been in place.
Starting point is 00:06:39 And much of what we talk about right now that the UN is not working, et cetera, is precisely because of those eight vetoes. That's why, because those are the two major wars going on in the world that for obvious reasons, and correctly so, are incredibly controversial. Obviously, there's like a ceasefire in Gaza right now, but you know what I mean? And it's like, there's got to be what you're talking about is not to me a big ask. And I'll bet it's not really what you want, but you're compromising to at least get something moving, which I can appreciate instead of like trying to be zero or a hundred and sitting there to get nothing done and nothing changes.
Starting point is 00:07:17 Yeah. And look, even this, even though I agree with you, you know, it is a compromise at the end of the day, is still a huge ask because many of the permanent members don't want to see any change whatsoever. to the veto. That was my next question though. How would you get this change to happen if you need them on board and how does that work? So ultimately it then comes down to the fact that the situation is getting to a point in which you either have reform or collapse. I don't think that outside of a fear of collapse, the reform actually would take place, right? Because you have to be in a situation which everyone realizes, okay, we got to changes or we all lose. Some lose more.
Starting point is 00:07:59 than others. In our view, or in my view, personally, the United States and the other permanent members actually have the most to lose because they're the ones who would lose the very strong privilege of having a veto if there isn't a security council. Right. So I think we do have an incentive on our end making sure that the council stays alive and relevant. And if that then means some give on the veto that obviously is not as far as abolishing the veto, which frankly a majority of countries probably would have wanted, then I think ultimately when the moment of truth comes in which is either reform or collapse,
Starting point is 00:08:35 I think we'll make the right decision. But we also have to realize up until that point it's probably not going to happen. But we are getting very close to that moment in which either there is some form of reform or this is either going to collapse or just fade into irrelevance. You're involved with some pretty important shit.
Starting point is 00:08:55 It's very impressive. Like you, obviously, as an originally native Iranian, which will get to treat his whole story as well, did I definitely want to do that. But, you know, I'm sure that's the most passionate subject and drives a lot of what you do. But whether it be trying to make reform in the UN, which affects all these countries around the world, or working on M.E.K, which I guess is like Iran slash Albania. We'll get to that in a second. Or, you know, advocating for the voiceless who are still in Iran today. and trying to get rid of the regime there, you know, which is certainly,
Starting point is 00:09:32 you want to see that come from within. We can talk about that rather than regime change in that way. But, you know, how do you keep it all straight, man? I mean, these are all, a lot of these are very life and death type things at the end of the day. Yeah, no, I gotta tell you, I'll be very frank with you. I'm not doing this because I think it's fun. In fact, I have a problem with people who think this is a fun.
Starting point is 00:09:52 This is fun. Like, particularly with people who come to Washington, because they think it's like politics is fun. I must be out of your mind. I drive around DC when I have to like go that way, you know. That's the same thing to do, you know? Because bottom line, it's not fun. There are people who are attracted to it because they like to be close to power.
Starting point is 00:10:10 To me, it's actually the biggest problem. I have an easier time with people who are on the complete opposite side ideological of issue because at least I can respect that they believe in something. And they're there because they also want to see change. But those are just attracted to power and just want to go for the ride because it's I think it's fun. That's where I'm like, this is not working in my view. So I'm doing it because I believe that this change is necessary. Whether it is, I want to see an Iran that actually have the population itself being able to determine what kind of government they want to have.
Starting point is 00:10:41 That is not being bombed. It's not being, you know, the people oppressed in the matter that they currently are or the matter that they were with the previous regime. I mean, this is the sad story of the Iranian people that they went from one dictatorship, did a revolution, which is not. an easy thing to do. There's a reason why there's so few revolutions around the world in human history. And then ended up by and large in a worse regime than they were in before. And now we're at another moment. Again, there's obviously an attempt of doing so. I'm worried that this too can lead to something worse because I'm not a fan of the idea of revolution. The United States is one of the few countries in the world that actually had a successful revolution. Yeah, it was a long time ago now too.
Starting point is 00:11:22 Yeah, 250 years. Yeah. Yeah, it's, I mean, it's, it's, I mean, it's, fun to say, you know, Viva la revolution and all that. But there's a romanticism around it. But I think people forget that it is so disruptive. Like in the case of Iran, you could have a completely well-established position, a degree from university, very valuable. But now a revolution has happened. And suddenly, they don't even accept the previous degrees.
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Starting point is 00:13:06 And you can do that by going to www. www.mantara slash go slash Julian, link in my description below, and using code JD22 at checkout for 22% off. Once again, that's www.amintara.com slash go slash Julian. Link in my description below. Use code JD22 for 22% off your order and try Blue Lotus today. So there's a disruptiveness in it that I think is kind of lost on us because we learned about the American Revolution, which was a good revolution.
Starting point is 00:13:37 But it is an exception in the sense of being so successful. Our mutual friend Eric has some bars that I've quoted for years on this show since we first recorded back in episodes 163 and 164. But one of the things he always says is countries are just stories. And when you really think about it, you're like, oh, my God, that's true. And when you extrapolate that down from the top level, you realize everything around us, from the money we trade to the time that we agree it is in the morning or at night, based on what this 24 hour clock is. It's all a story that we've told ourselves societally and in different places come to different types of sets of agreements that this is what it is. But what you're pointing out is when you have a revolution, it can be a burn it all down kind of moment. And everything that may have involved effort or years of work or security that was insured, whatever it might be, before is gone overnight.
Starting point is 00:14:34 And that's a dangerous thing no matter how you crack it or how morally responsible. At times it might be necessary as well. I mean, sometimes those stories are prisons. Yeah. And something is needed to change. And I mean, you have that story of Rushab Havl who talks about communism, you know, the Czech Nobel Peace Prize winner who says that in that communist system, everyone had to put up that sign of the Soviet leader or whatever it was, you know, loyalty to the Communist Party. No one believed it. Right.
Starting point is 00:15:07 But they all had to do it because that was the story you had to say. You had to be part of that story in order to be safe. But at some point, someone decides to just take down the sign. And when someone is taking down the sign, the entire lie can fall apart. Entire story can fall apart. And in revolution, you know, it goes perhaps even deeper than that, but that's what happens. And it happens because people fundamentally want to get that change. The question always is, though, do you have a plan for how you build a new story?
Starting point is 00:15:37 Do you have a plan to make sure that this transitions in a peaceful manner that you actually get to better situation. Ivan's experience after 79 was change led to something worse. Right. The revolution in Tahrir Square in Egypt, 2011, same slogan. The only thing they focused on was that Mubarak had to go. Same slogan in Iran, 79, 78, Deshaal must go. What comes afterward, not well-defined. And then we saw that, you know, they had tremendous amount of turmoil. And now they're pretty much back to a different version of the same type of a dictatorship that they had before. And of course, even worse situations in Syria or elsewhere, and we have a complete civil war, ranging all for 15 years. A lot of Iranians, in my view, have a very unrealistic and high view of
Starting point is 00:16:28 Iran and thinking that, no, no, that could never happen in Iran. That, you know, for whatever reasons, the Iranians are different, better than the Syrians or the Iraqis, for whatever reason, you know, whether it's less sectarian strife or whatever. And as a result, they wouldn't have a civil war. I think that's absolute nonsense. You have civil wars in countries that don't have different ethnic groups or sectarian divisions. It's not dependent upon that. And what I see in Iran right now is all of the ingredients that very much could lead to a civil war,
Starting point is 00:16:59 if not handled and managed correctly. And again, what the regime is doing right now with the massive killings, these are things that just drive things actually further towards civil war. So when you say civil war specifically there, you are referring to a rise up of the part of the country that wants to get rid of the current regime rather than a civil war that would occur after said regime is already gone? No, both cases. You could have an effort in which there's a violent uprising and that can then lead to civil war because the existing government would fight back. They have monopoly on powers that they would strike back. could end up being more of an insurgency than a civil war
Starting point is 00:17:39 or a scenario in which the state collapses, there's no centrality of power, and then there is a massive power struggle of who takes over, who establishes order afterwards. And in that scenario, you can also have it. And Iran actually is a country with a tremendous amount of different minorities on the border areas.
Starting point is 00:17:57 There are also minorities that have a history of seeking independence or secessionists. Like the Kurds, for instance? The Baluchis towards the east. border of Pakistan, the curse towards the border of Iraq and Turkey. You have Azeri minorities. Historically, there has been,
Starting point is 00:18:12 but I don't think it's a very, I mean, this is roughly 25% of the population, and it's also very much part of the elite. I mean, the current Supreme Leader himself is in Azeri. So it's not comparable to the Kurdish minority. How do you spell that word? Osiray. Yeah, A-Z-E-R-I, from I-V-I-I-R-I,
Starting point is 00:18:32 from the Iranian part of Azerbaijan. So that risk. is there in fact in these last days of protest the some of the earliest and most significant clampdown and violence was in the Kurdish areas one of the Kurdish groups that was deeply involved which doesn't is not part of a democracy movement or so it's actually a Kurdish group that was trained by the United States in 2011 sorry in 2014 to fight ISIS no this is it's a group called P.A.K. Okay. They were trained by the US in 2014 to fight ISIS. ISIS. It's not clear whether the U.S. knew at the time that this is actually an Iranian Kurdish
Starting point is 00:19:10 group and not an Iraqi Kurdish group. I feel like they probably knew that. Actually, I'm not so sure. No? Yeah. I mean, look, at the time, they may have been part of a larger Iraqi Kurdish setting. If you knew a little bit about the leadership and you knew the names, you would immediately understand that they're actually Iranian, but nevertheless. Look, don't underestimate how little we know and how huge U.S. mistakes in Evalchor. A few of those. Few or 10 or 20 or 100 for sure. I'm with you there.
Starting point is 00:19:40 But sometimes it feels like, you know, not even to put on a tinfoil hat, it feels like there were just so many other, almost like sinister motives on the United States part as it related to what they really wanted to do in Iraq after getting there, that, you know, they would be willing to make, quote-unquote unholy alliances or things like that.
Starting point is 00:20:04 No? Certainly. I mean, you mentioned the M.E.K. early on. M.E.K. is an organization that was founded in Iran in 1963. It was a very bizarre origin story or bizarre creation in the sense that these were highly religious, Shia Muslims that at the same time were Marxist. So they became actually a rather popular group in Iran. during the 60s and 70s because they were the most radical.
Starting point is 00:20:34 They fought the Shah. They were the ones who started to use violence against the Shah's regime. And the Shah's regime was very, very unpopular. Would they do like political assassinations? They did. They tried to assassinate the Shah. They killed, I believe, six or seven Americans in the 1970s. Because the US, of course, was behind the Shah.
Starting point is 00:20:54 So they became a target of this group. Then later on, they were part of the revolution. They were in an alliance with Ayatollah Khomeini. But it was an uneasy alliance. And as soon as the revolution was completed in the sense that the Shah was out, infighting between them started. It was a very violent struggle between the M.EK and what is now the actual regime. And they fled and they fled to Iraq.
Starting point is 00:21:20 And Saddam Hussein had invaded Iran. So they ended up siding with the country that was invading the country. That was okay, even though Saddam was a Sunni. He accepted them. So these different things are not that important to be frank with you. You know, this I think from a U.S. standpoint, because of how we messed up Iraq, we've kind of overstudied, you know, the sectarian element. And the sectarian element, I'm not saying that it's irrelevant.
Starting point is 00:21:43 But it became much more relevant later on than it was back then. The fact that they were an Iranian group was much more of a problem for Saddam. But he needed that Iranian group against the Iranian government at the time. But this also meant that the MECA then started to dramatically lose credibility. support because, I mean, imagine an American that would have fought with Al-Qaeda on 9-11. I mean, it's seen as completely treacherous. And they landed on the U.S. terrorist list because of the terrorist activities they had engaged in, particularly for Saddam Hussein. They were massacring Shias in the south. They were massacring
Starting point is 00:22:21 Kurds. The CIA described them as Saddam Hussein's essentially enforcers and foot soldiers, when it came to clamping down on the Kurds and the Shias in the north and the south of the country. But then when the US invaded Iraq, despite the fact that they were on the US's terrorist list, the US started using the MEK for keeping control in certain parts of Iraq because the US didn't have enough troops because Donald Rumsfeld was adamant about making sure
Starting point is 00:22:51 that it wasn't too big of an occupation, that he could do this with a much more limited number of troops, and then he ended up actually using some of them. How big was there, let's even start like when they first allied with Saddam post-revolution. How big of an organization were there? Are we talking a million people? I don't know what the size of the actual membership or no, but this was a major group. I mean, this was one of the major groups that did the revolution.
Starting point is 00:23:17 And they were not insignificant in any way, shape, or form, but they always had an element of cultishness. Cultishness. Cultishness in a sense that they were a cultishness. that, you know, they were completely undemocratic and that they weren't the type of freedoms inside the organization itself. They had elements of that.
Starting point is 00:23:38 By the time of the 1980s, the more they became unpopular in Iran, then more the leadership needed to turn the organization into a cult in order to retain the membership. Because otherwise, they would lose all of these people. So they did all of these crazy things, forced divorce. No one was allowed to actually have a wife or a husband. They were all supposed to do it.
Starting point is 00:23:59 just have their love only for the leader okay they took children from m e k families and placed them with other m yk families this and ensured that m yk members could not defect because if they defected they would lose access to their own children oh my this is all documented it was happening in europe because there were a lot of iranian diaspora there of course many of them supported them mk and more many of them stuck in that type of a scenario and this was documented by save the children in some European countries, et cetera. So, you know, you had this really sad thing that the more they kind of lost credibility and the more it was obvious for people who wanted to leave the organization, the more the
Starting point is 00:24:43 organization turned into a cult in order to prevent them from being able to leave. It's always crazy to me and all the cults that I've looked at or talk with people or former members or whatever over the years, that of course they almost always exist within some society with a standard of laws and then they just kind of hide away their people from all those laws and create their own set of laws and say nothing to see here.
Starting point is 00:25:09 And it's never not sinister. I mean, that's hard. They're taking children from the parents as collateral. Some of those children are now adults and have come out and spoken out about it, et cetera. Good for them. Yeah, but I mean, look, they're damage for life.
Starting point is 00:25:27 Of course. their damage for life. This is a terrible. And unfortunately, also, this is not unique to them. Other organizations have done the same thing. You mentioned the Peshmerga, the PKK, which the Turks view as a terrorist organization. The M.EK is viewed as terrorists by the Iranian government, as well as used to be by the U.S. government. But then they ran a huge lobbying campaign in Washington, 2010 and 2011, the MECA, which frankly was illegal. They can challenge the legal designation as being a terrorist organization, but they were essentially bribing politicians to make their case. And they gave money to folks on the left, folks on the right,
Starting point is 00:26:09 and eventually managed to get Hillary Clinton to take them off the terrorist list. Oh, my God. I mean, it is such, I mean, already back then was just clear. The U.S. terrorist list had just become a complete joke because you can essentially buy your way off of it. Yeah, or become the president of Syria. Yeah. Another pathway. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:26:28 So, but is that a type of situation if they're actually in D.C. lobbying and paying people? Is this something where they were registered on the forest still? They were on the terrorist list and they had an office in the National Press Building. And to make it worse, their spokesperson also got a gig at Fox News as a terrorist commentator. Oh, my God. Their spokesperson. Their spokesperson. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:54 So, I mean, it's, this is part of, this is part of, I'm, this is part of, I said, like, you know, why would you be in D.C.? Because you think this is fun. No. I'll skip those steak dinners. Those are some dirty-ass steaks. But, yeah, I really didn't know anything about this. And what Eric was telling me is a lot of it, you mentioned they obviously fled to Iraq
Starting point is 00:27:14 and then had a, years later, had a role in the Iraq war and all that. So they have a presence there for sure. But you also mentioned, and this is what Eric was telling me about, that there is a big presence in Europe. And specifically, there's like. I think he said it was like a conclave or something in Albania. Yeah. Where Eric is, what's going on there?
Starting point is 00:27:34 Is it like Scientology? During the Iran-Iraq war, they had a couple of bases in Iraq. That was just the M-EK bases, right? And that's, they kept them deliberately there. Both the Iraqi government didn't want them to be anywhere else, nor did the M-EK leadership wants them to be able to roam around for you, because again, it was a cult. One of those bases is Camp Ashraf.
Starting point is 00:27:57 Once the U.S. took them off the terrorist list, the Iraqi government said, we don't want this group here any longer. In fact, there was a lot of concerns when Saddam Hussein fell that ordinary Iraqis would go and attack the base because they hated the M.E.K. so much because they had been essentially the thugs of Saddam's regime creeping down against dissent inside of Iraq.
Starting point is 00:28:21 So the U.S. government then engaged in this really elaborate and based on the people who were involved in it, extremely gruesome and unsatisfying negotiating campaign in which they needed to get the M.E.K. out of Iraq and get some other country to agree to host them. Otherwise, there was a risk that either the Iraqi government would attack it or that the Iranian government would attack it and just get rid of them. And part of the problem was the U.S. government, of course, knew
Starting point is 00:28:50 a lot of the people who were there were completely innocent. They had been born into that camp. They had been kidnapped and brought there as collateral against their family. They had, you know, for all kinds of different reasons, simply couldn't leave. And so the US government didn't want to stand there and see them get slaughtered either. But then they committed a mistake in my view, because it was one thing to save them from either an attack. But it's another thing to save them from that attack while ensuring that they will continue to be in the grip of a cult that doesn't allow them the freedom to leave. So they managed to get a deal with the Albanian government, for whatever reason.
Starting point is 00:29:29 I don't really know exactly what the Albanians got for this. But they moved all of them to Albania. And now that's where they're sitting right now. But you still have the same problem as before. Many of them want to leave, but they can't leave. So the U.S. didn't do anything. I mean, it had an opportunity. If you really wanted to protect the innocent people there,
Starting point is 00:29:47 it would have actually made sure that people who wanted to leave would be given the right and the opportunity to do so. that's not what happened instead. The whole cult was removed from Evok and transplanted into Albania. That's where they're sitting right now. And there was a, I just have to say this, because you're probably going to see it in some of the comments on the YouTube later on.
Starting point is 00:30:05 There's going to be a lot of attacks for me criticizing them. But there was a great BBC story in which they actually had managed to get some of the defectors to speak on record, including footage of these bot armies that they have in Albania. And it was like all of these self-execers. cell phones that were connected to each other so that they you know so they have all of that in albania
Starting point is 00:30:27 and they're uh using it to essentially wage some sort of a digital war whatever it is that they're doing 80% of any conflicts that are occurring in the world be it literal war or ideology war or things like that and i'm just throwing out a number right there people don't quote me but it's literally what you just described there's a bunch of fucking screens and you know bots doing it Unbelievable how much social media is, not central, but nevertheless, an extremely critical element of any major conflict right now. It's also, it desensitizes us to so much. It does. Because you, I mean, I constantly go on there.
Starting point is 00:31:06 It's like, oh, you know, there's fucking four people who just had their heads blown off. And then you got to worry about, you know, first you see that and you're like, oh, my God. Yeah. That's real. And then the next question is, is it? Because we got AI, you know? and it's so the fog of war now with technology, a whole different level than in the past.
Starting point is 00:31:27 And I'm not saying that in the past, they couldn't hide things behind closed doors with a bunch of dudes in suit. They did. But like, you weren't seeing all this stuff all the time or seeing fake stuff all the time. Yeah, yeah. No, you're absolutely right
Starting point is 00:31:40 that you constantly now have to question whether what you're seeing is true. And even when it comes to, you know, how many images of protests from whatever country did we not see, and then later on, turn out, well, actually wasn't that country. That was Argentina 10 years earlier. I mean, so it's, that fog really ends up pacifying people
Starting point is 00:32:01 because you don't want to constantly be proven wrong by, you know, going with your first reaction all the time. So you kind of take a step back and then you become paralyzed because you don't know what to trust any longer. Right. Now, MECA is one example of an organization that obviously has a different opinion than the current regime in Iran. But like you said, there's an enormous diaspora of Iranians around the world who all have
Starting point is 00:32:24 different political ideas. Many of them at least united on the idea of like they would love to see the current regime not there. So, you know, sometimes we kind of group that all into one thing and that's not fair to do because there's a lot of different people that could be potentially, I don't know, competing for power if a vacuum were created. You know that moment when you're running out the door and you need a shirt and press Preferably one that you don't have to set up the iron to get all the wrinkles out.
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Starting point is 00:34:02 that link is in my description below, where you can use promo code Julian 20 at checkout. That's Mizn spelled M-I-Z-Z-E-N and Maine, M-A-I-N-N-com, promo code Julian 20 for 20%. sent off. Mizimmain.com promo code Julian 20 link in description and if you'd like to buy them in person, you can find Miz and Maine stores in select states, but please use the link and support the show down there. That's the best way to do it. That said, you know, we do have in this current country right now in the United States, we've had the exiled former royal family of the Shah living here since 1979. Obviously, Reza Palavi is someone who's been in discussions as like if something happened, he would suddenly move back to the country and take over. What I think would be really
Starting point is 00:34:50 helpful for people, though, treated, just to start this off before we get to your personal side with this. So I was talking with Eric about some of that. You have some very personal things going on on both sides of conflict. But, you know, for people who want, who don't understand where this started, which is frankly 25 years before the revolution happened in 1979, what you know whether you're going to go through the whole kermit roosevelt thing or whatever happened there like how did the shah come into power and the shah's i guess the shah's father and then later the son was deposed like how did that happen and what politically did that look like in the country of iran yeah so um the former shaw his father result of hall he was a soldier that essentially did a coup
Starting point is 00:35:37 and got rid of the previous dynasty, that was the Qajar dynasty, and established the Pathavi dynasty. He was quite brutal, but he's also been credited for keeping the country together, setting his stage for a significant modernization that took place back during his era. But he also was very, very on the wrong side of the Russians and the Brits. For a variety of reasons, you know, the Brits had not colonized Iran. It was never a colony. It was almost as if it wasn't worth colonizing,
Starting point is 00:36:10 but they were absolutely extracting resources from Iran in a significant way. And Iran and Russia has had so many different wars. Iran has lost a lot of territory to the Russian republics in Central Asia. So he had German sympathies during the Second World War. Oh, yeah. But it wasn't because I don't think there's clear evidence that he had some sort of affinity with Nazism or anything like that.
Starting point is 00:36:40 It was mainly that that was a European country that had not tried to colonize Iran. Ah. You know. So the Russians and the Brits occupy Iran during the Second World War, depose of Rezapalavi. He goes into, I think they send him off to South Africa. And they install his son, who at the time was no more than 21, I think.
Starting point is 00:37:04 Muhammad Rezapalavi, who becomes a Shah, a very young guy, continues to rule. At the time, there were also 1906, there had been a revolution, a constitutional revolution in Iran, and Iran had sought to establish a constitution. Within that, there was a parliament. The parliament elected a prime minister.
Starting point is 00:37:23 There was a division of duty between the Shah and the prime minister. It was very much of an imperfect system, but it was an embryotic democracy. Okay. But the Iran Iranians wanted something that the Brits thought was absolutely unacceptable, which was this guy, the Prime Minister Mossadegh,
Starting point is 00:37:45 who actually himself was part of the previous dynasty, the Rajar family, an aristocratic family. They wanted to make sure that Iran would keep 50% of the oil revenue of its own oil. Because at the time, 100% of what the Brits were pumping out of Iranian oil wells went to the British coffins. Oh, 100% were going on. not keep a dime. Wow. The Iranians wanted 50%. The Brits, I think, did not want to offer more than 5 to 10%. So the Brits tried several different ways of getting rid of Mossadegh and try to convince the United States,
Starting point is 00:38:22 not successful until they figured out what's the winning card within the context of the Cold War, which is they couldn't point to any evidence that Mossadegh was a communist. So instead, the argument was, he might become a communist. And eventually the United States, under the John Foster Dulles, goes along with it. The U.S. does a coup that apparently costs no more than $10,000. They get rid of Mossadegh and install the Shah as the only ruler of the country. $10,000? $10,000.
Starting point is 00:38:59 That's a good bang for your buck coup. I mean, even $10,000 of that time is still a small amount of money when it comes to do. a coup. And, but this is the moment in which the United States kind of loses its innocence in Iran. But it's oftentimes not known is that prior to that, the United States was seen as a tremendously positive force globally in the Iranian view because the U.S. actually was one of the main anti-colonial forces. This is the area in which you have major decolonization taking place in the world. A lot of countries gained their own independence from European, colonialist powers.
Starting point is 00:39:38 And the United States was actually a major force in favor of that. The United States itself had been a colony, had done in revolution. So it was very sympathetic to this. There was a gentleman whose statue is still in northern Iran by the name of Basquirul who actually fought and died with the Iranians for the 1906 constitutional revolution.
Starting point is 00:39:57 What was his name? Basketroll. Can we put that up thief? Give him some love. So he died. He was killed in the trenches, fighting with the Iranians for the constitutional revolution. But now suddenly the United States actually acts to get rid of not only the prime minister, democratically elected through the parliament, but get rid of that system as a whole.
Starting point is 00:40:22 And installed the Shah as the only trusted dictator of the country that would be squarely on the U.S. side against the Soviet Union, a close ally, trustable ally. And the Shah's reign ended up becoming more and more despond. and more and more repressive as time went by as well. From 54 to 79? From 53 to 79, yes. Right, okay. And eventually that leads to a revolution.
Starting point is 00:40:48 And that revolution in 79 was, in the minds of the revolution, there's also a revolution against the United States because they believed that the only reason why the Shah was still in power was because of the United States. Whether that's entirely true or not, nevertheless, let's set that aside. But that was the perception. And the revolution eventually, not initially, also end up becoming anti-American.
Starting point is 00:41:11 You had these leftist students who take the American embassy, hold 52 American diplomats hostage for 444 days, which becomes one of the biggest traumas in America's recent memory. Because this was not just, I'm not trying to be little 9-11 anyway, should have performed, but that was one major attack. Oh, yeah. This was going on for 444 days. every night the news was what is happening with the American hostages at the embassy.
Starting point is 00:41:40 And it was in some ways, according to, at least some American historians, more humiliating for the United States than what the Vietnam War was. Even though 50,000 Americans died in Vietnam, and it was a loss, but this idea that this former ally of the United States would have taken the embassy
Starting point is 00:41:55 and the hostages. And then, of course, there was this failed attempt to win their release by having these helicopters flying into Iran that crashed in the desert etc. And that has just set this tone of U.S.-Iran relations since then in a very, very bad direction. Yeah. In those critical years, though, leading up to that, leading up to 79 in the 70s, like you mentioned the Shah obviously was a dictator and, you know, ruled in certain ways
Starting point is 00:42:22 with an iron fist. But, you know, at the same time, this is a low bar, but you look at pictures of Iran from the 70s and you see women walking on college campuses. and stuff like that without, you know, being covered head to toe. You see some freedoms. I guess what I'm trying to ask is not to say he was good, not to say there weren't serious issues, not to say there weren't human rights abuses, but was part of the revolution,
Starting point is 00:42:51 the idea that people were basically saying they were just kind of fed up with him and assumed it couldn't get worse, and then it just got way worse. You know what I mean? Like almost like death by a thousand cuts. So look, there wasn't the type of realization or the type of imagination that things could really get worse. And when you look back at it, you see, look, things were bad.
Starting point is 00:43:21 It was a very repressive regime, thousands of people in jails being tortured, etc. And it was politically very repressive, socially, extremely liberal. So you pointed a fact that, you know, women could dress more or less how they wanted, et cetera. And it looks very modern, right? Sure. But politically was very repressive. So the Shaw's model was closer to that of East Germany in which like one out of five in every town in every city was actually an informant to this secret service. And people couldn't trust each other.
Starting point is 00:43:58 So it was suffocating in that way, but not suffocating in the social way. After the revolution, you have a much more suffocating social reality with the enforced hijab, et cetera, which of course in the protest in 2022, it was very much centered on getting rid of that. But then politically, it's also repressive, suffocating, but different. You don't have the same type of, you know, one-fifthar informants or anything like that. There's actually a degree of freedom which people can criticize as long as they don't cross certain lines. So for instance, if you criticize the Supreme leaders, then that's the line. You don't do that.
Starting point is 00:44:39 But it's a very, very false political freedom. Because if you were to organize against the regime, then that, there's no freedom there whatsoever. But there's like this pressure valve in which, yeah, you can express certain things, et cetera. Perhaps nothing huge will happen to you. But if you actually start organizing your friends to actually do something, that is a completely different story. So these are different models for repression. They're both repressive.
Starting point is 00:45:05 We can have debates which one is worse, the other. To me, that's not interesting. Bottom line is, he went from a repressive system that looked in a certain way to a different repressive system that looked in a different way.
Starting point is 00:45:17 There are certain elements of democracy that has become stronger, but not in a impactful way. They actually have elections. They have municipal elections. They have parliamentary elections. Are they presidential? Well, the local ones are real.
Starting point is 00:45:33 The parliamentary elections used to be real. And the presidential elections at this point are more or less not a joke, but they're certainly not that real. Because you have this other very, very un-democratic element, which is called the Guardian Council, 12 jurists whose task is to vet candidates and make sure that they all fit whatever kind of mold for them to be permitted to run. So you had like a thousand people declared a candidacy for the president. presidential election, but only seven are approved. But increasingly, this vetting body extremely
Starting point is 00:46:08 un-democratic has become even more un-democratic. In the past, they had to justify if someone is rejected and it was an appeals process or something that was precious that could be put on. That's not even the case. You have sitting members of parliament who can't run again because now suddenly they've been deemed to be unfit without any motivation whatsoever. So instead of of seeing the political space in the last 20 years actually expand, there's been a massive contraction. And this is part of the reason why you have more and more protests. Previously, there was an attempt to try to open up the space through reform. It failed. We can go into why it failed. But now it is much more restrictive than it was just 20 years ago. Can we take that tangent real quick,
Starting point is 00:46:52 why those reform efforts failed? It's not a small tangent. It's a big one. We got all day, man. I think it's very, very important because, and I have a piece in foreign policy that was just published today about this, looking at the fact that now you suddenly have elements inside of Iran asking for the U.S. to take military intervention to save them, right? Just six, 12 months ago, this would have been treason for anyone to say, yes, come bomb my country. And it's not now? It is still for a lot of people, but this is a growing group. It's impossible to say, are they just the loudest minority? Is it a plural?
Starting point is 00:47:30 I don't think it's a majority, but it is clearly much larger than what is before. And the question is why? How could such a dramatic change happen? The obvious first answer is the repression of the regime that has just become worse and worse. And what we're talking about here is several thousand people being killed between January 8th and 10. That's just never happened before. As bad as this regime has been, it's never been killing. at that level before? Never. This is unprecedented and it's just shocked the entire nation.
Starting point is 00:48:02 So obviously that type of repression yields a counterreaction, undoubtedly. But you also have this scenario in which there is a belief or a perception that there are no other pathways at this point because all previous pathways have been tried and they failed. Up until 2017 or so, it was the reform project. You know, try to change it through elections and, getting less and less bad people elected who would slowly but surely open it up. That failed. Several reasons why. I would point to one that is very crucial. The reformed project knew that without improving the economic situation, you would not be able to have a middle class that would grow, and the middle class becoming more powerful is very crucial because it's the
Starting point is 00:48:49 backbone of a democratization process. You need to have a powerful, a powerful, middle class that can exert that type of the pressure on the state. To do that, you need to have a functioning economy. To have a functioning economy, you need to have a deal with the US that lifts economic sanctions. Those sanctions, yes, the government's own mismanagement, corruption, all of these things, huge factors. But even with all of that, you would not have an economy as bad as right now. Even with this incompetent government, you would have middle class that would have grown 17% absentee sanctions. Instead, the middle class has essentially been cut down one-third.
Starting point is 00:49:36 One-third of Iran's middle class has gone into poverty in the last 10 years as a direct result of Donald Trump's maximum pressure sanctions that have really been suffocating the economy. So you had a deal between the US and Iran and P5 on the nuclear issue. struck by the Obama administration. For those two years, the Iranian economy grew between 6% and 7%. But it only lasted two years because once Trump came in, he pulled out of the deal. Not only reimposed sanctions, imposed way tougher sanctions than the U.S. ever had imposed before. Crash the Iranian economy, crashed the currency, pushed one-third of Iran's middle class into poverty. So reform failed for many different reasons, including the calculations of the
Starting point is 00:50:23 I mean, the Iranian hardliners were never going to voluntarily accept reform. It was all about strengthening the middle class so that they can exert pressure so that the hardliners would have no choice but to have to acquiesce to those reforms. But that failed. Once that failed, in 2022, when you had protests, people were not asking for reform. They asked for regime change. And the pathway was no longer reform. The pathway was revolution.
Starting point is 00:50:49 Right. Okay. There's a lot on the bone here. Let's start with that nuclear deal. And for a minute, let's remove the 500-pound elephant in the room that rhymes with Schmiz Real for a second. But, you know, my friend Scott Horton would disagree with me on this a little bit because he really hates pretty much every president that has existed in the last 60 years. That said, one of the things about Obama, you know, he was very green in foreign policy and I think he made a fucking a ton of mistakes on foreign policy. But there is one thing that he was, there was like a little problem.
Starting point is 00:51:23 personal for him, which is he was one president who, when Israel would come to him, particularly Netanyahu, and propose ideas that he felt were not good for America, he was willing to say, please go fuck yourself. Thank you. There's the door. And they hated him for that. And so what I've always looked at, and this is a bit of a broad way to look at it, I'll admit, but, you know, the nuclear deal that Obama made felt like his personal kind of fuck you to Netanyahu. who because obviously and I understand this Israel is not a fan of Iran's regime I fully understand that that's fine but the issue with the deal is that they claim the IAEA would be able to have 24-7 access but they also didn't declare all the places where nuclear or covert testing could be done
Starting point is 00:52:14 on weapons that also could include like ballistic missiles and things that are slightly below nukes that could eventually go to that kind of thing and there were also sunset provision that basically said a lot of this would go away sometimes in 10 to 15 years. It didn't help that it was written in many cases by Ben Rhodes, who was a speechwriter, just for the optics, that didn't help either. And so I don't think it was a strong deal. I think Obama kind of took it personally. That said, here's the other side of it, and it's an important point you make.
Starting point is 00:52:45 I talk with my friend Joby Warwick about this as well, who, you know, he's like, damn, it's really tough. When you look at all these countries, whether it's Iran, Syria, you name it. When you put economic sanctions on them, you create some self-fulfilling prophecies because you are locking them off from the world. But if you don't, you might reward a regime that, you know, if we're looking at Iran, might fund places like Hezbollah or Hamas and these different organizations that are problematic for many reasons. So it's easy for me to sit here and criticize all this stuff. What I'm not going to do is be a hypocrite and tell you, hey, I got
Starting point is 00:53:23 the answer, this is what it is. So in a perfect world, if the answer is not go make the 2015 a RAND deal and the answer is also not, go sanction the fuck out of them into kingdom come, what is the answer here? All right, so let me also have them. And you can pull that mic with you by the way. So let me put my cards on this. So I was advising the Obama administration on this. So I probably have my biases. So take that. I appreciate that. A lot of things. that you said there. If we just go into some of the specifics of the deal, sunset clauses, which actually, they're not really sunset clauses, it's just certain aspects of the deal, certain aspects of the deal expire after X amount of
Starting point is 00:54:08 years. That is actually pretty standard in most nonproliferation or disarmament agreements. I mean, just these days, start agreement is expiring? And the question is, is the US and Russia going to renew it? And if it is, and we're going to be in a very, very bad situation. I haven't followed it at all to see whether they managed to figure out, but he actually expires any day now. That is, there's no such thing as permanent forever in which all aspects are there. Permanence is a strong word. Permanence is wrong. The most important aspect of the deal, however, actually is permanent, and that is the inspections regime. Now, you mentioned that they couldn't get access to certain places. First of all, they did have 24-7 access. And the access they had,
Starting point is 00:54:51 It's not the way they look back in Iraq where, you know, inspectors would run around with white helmets and trying to figure out if they're hiding a nuke under the sofa or anything like that. The IE had had instruments inside the Iranian nuclear program. Instruments. Instruments measuring things inside the program that would detect any deviation, any radiation, anything, and would send that immediately to the IEA headquarters in Vienna, way superior than to just having people running around and looking for WMDs under or even running around trying to measure things. The measuring of things are actually in the place.
Starting point is 00:55:26 And it's in all four aspects of the program from, you know, beginning of uranium mines all the way down to the final facilities. So that aspect is super strong. There are elements of it that expire. And there was a big fight about that. The position that ultimately prevailed. And the thing was the position was never that, oh, this has to be permanent. The U.S. wanted certain things to be 25 years or even 40 years.
Starting point is 00:55:53 The Iranians wanted to be five years, and obviously they ended up without some sort of a compromise. The idea that it would expire at some point, however, was not really in dispute because the U.S. and Iran agree that this whole negotiation would take place within the legal framework of the non-proliferation treaty. So the U.S. is not coming there and saying, you cannot have a nuclear weapon or enrichment above 3.67. because we say so. U.S. comes and says that you have signed the non-proliferation treaty. You are bound to not build a nuclear weapon. You have violated certain aspects of this. And as a result, you have lost the trust of the international community.
Starting point is 00:56:38 And as a result, there needs to be measures, punishments, et cetera, to make sure that you don't build a nuclear weapon. But that needs to be coupled with a process in which you rebuild the trust. and at the end of that tunnel, you then become, once you've earned a trust, re-earned a trust, you become a normal state. To say that, no, this is a deal in which you permanently will be a non-normal state.
Starting point is 00:57:05 It was just not in the cards, right? You couldn't, perhaps if you had a war and defeated them completely in battle, something like that could be imposed, but this is a negotiation. and they had not built a nuclear weapon. They had done things that were illegal. They had experimented.
Starting point is 00:57:23 What were those things? Well, they had certain aspects of triggers for a nuclear weapon. They had enriched uranium at higher levels than they were supposed to. There was a fight as to whether they had told the IEA within the 180 days of a specific nuclear site and things of that nature. And some things that were much, much more severe than that. And they clearly had at some point experimented with some. sort of a nuclear weapons program. But the U.S. intelligence itself came out in 2007 and said,
Starting point is 00:57:53 that stopped in 2003. And the Iranians had not restarted the nuclear weapons program. And Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's DNI said exactly a year ago, the same thing, that the U.S. intelligence assessment, which was the same as the European intelligence assessment, was that they had not restarted an actual nuclear weapons program. Oh, Gabbard said that. Gabbard said that in February of last year.
Starting point is 00:58:12 Yeah. You know what, Thief, maybe to help out here, just because it's also been a while, Can we just Google just for basics, 30,000 feet in the air, like outline of the terms of the 2015 nuclear deal, just so that some of the things you're referring to as well. Sure. People can have transparency with that.
Starting point is 00:58:31 Now, within that, I can still say, look, yeah, you can make a position that, you know, perhaps this should have been 25 years or when it comes to the sites, there is a mechanism there that was put in place, which is that if there are any suspicion emerges, that there is another secret sites that they're using and that they haven't given IAA access to, there was a voting structure that was set in its place
Starting point is 00:58:55 that would ensure that as long as the U.S. and Europe are on the same side, the Iranians would be forced to accept IEA inspections in those sites. Okay. Now, that was tried by the Trump administration during the first term. It was. But the Europeans were not on board
Starting point is 00:59:14 because the intelligence was not there. There was flimsy intelligence, and this is important. If you abuse this mechanism, then you lose credibility. Absolutely. So the Europeans were not on board going just on a loose goose chase in Iran and then seeing the IAA lose credibility because then suddenly the Iranians would start saying no to everything. And perhaps there would be a case that actually was legitimate.
Starting point is 00:59:37 And then we didn't have the IA go in there. So there were these mechanisms. But reality is that those who were dead set against the deal, such as the Israeli prime minister, they were dead set against any deal. That's what I'm saying. The problem was they didn't want a deal. They wanted the United States to take on Iran militarily,
Starting point is 00:59:55 change the balance in the region in favor of Israel, and that necessitated sanctions and no agreement, regardless of what the details of those agreements were. That can't be argued with. You're right about that. And I don't think Obama did it to screw over Netanyahu. What really happened, I can give you the details. Please.
Starting point is 01:00:16 In January 2012, the U.S. assessment of Iran's what is called breakout time is the amount of time it would take for the Iranians to enrich enough uranium to have for one bomb. It's not to have a bomb, but to have the material for a bomb. It would take them 12 months. Okay. Okay. This is January 2012. By January 2013, that breakout time had shrunk to about. six to eight weeks. And this is at a time when Obama was actually imposing really, really strong
Starting point is 01:00:50 sanctions on Iran. And the calculation was that the sanctions will cripple the economy and force the Iranian to come and offer a compromise. I'm sorry, what year did you just say that was in now? January, 2013. So this is also, correct me if I'm wrong here, this is starting to get in the area to where Obama's NSA was hacking the centrifuges with the zero day in Iran, right? happening a couple of years earlier together with the Israelis. So simultaneously with all of this, the U.S. is through Stuxnet, et cetera, is trying to sabotage the program. Right. But it became clear then that the sanctions bid did not cripple the Iranian economy faster than Iran could build its nuclear program. And if nothing changed, then the Iranians would become a de facto
Starting point is 01:01:43 nuclear power within weeks, and then Obama would be faced with only two options, accept Iran as a de facto nuclear state, or go to war, unless he changed the parameters. And what he did then is in secret negotiations in the country of Oman, talks that had started, but without a change in the U.S. position, Obama changed the position, accepted enrichment on Iranian soil under very, very strict requirements. for major restrictions on the program and sanctions relief. And that then gave the basis for the deal. So what really happened is that Obama realized
Starting point is 01:02:25 the sanctions path is not going anywhere. If I don't take on a more realistic position in the negotiations, I will either have to go to war or I'm going to become the president in which Iran essentially becomes a nuclear power on my term. Right. And he changed that. And of course, Netanyahu did everything he could to destroy it.
Starting point is 01:02:42 He failed. But then once Trump came into power, he succeeded by convincing, or at least in his narrative, he's the reason he's the one who convinced Trump to walk out of the deal. Right. Okay. A lot of directions here. So I think one of the mistakes we make and social media does not help with this because we all, me, Joe, you, everyone who's outside of these situations has a voice to put their opinion out there, which I think is great, but it creates a lot of noise on stuff. I think something we fail at all the time is as much as painful as it is to do
Starting point is 01:03:16 putting ourselves in the skin or in the shoes of people we don't like, which is something you obviously have an ability to do for better or worse because you don't like this regime at all. Your family's been gone from Iran for years because of them. So it's personal for you. And yet there seems to be some demonstration, a lot of demonstration. throughout your career that as much as you may hate them, you also are trying to be realistic with what progress might look like. So I appreciate that. But, you know, part of the problem with this is like, I get it. If I'm looking at it from Israel's perspective for a second. I get it. You got this regime right there that a part of their charters like get rid of Israel,
Starting point is 01:04:01 bomb them off the earth, and they're extremely in the opposite direction and they're in your region. Okay. So you don't want them to have a nuke. but at the same time if there's if regime change is going to cause massive reverberating effects around the world if it's done from the outside there has to be a way
Starting point is 01:04:22 that you maybe they don't get a nuke but you at least like contain the problem without trying to blow it up no look I think it's very important to try to understand the Israeli perspective because it is such a big factor in U.S. decision-making here. And it's also important to, of course, understand
Starting point is 01:04:46 there's not just one Israeli perspective. So, for instance, the Israeli Atomic Energy Agency, guess what they did? They endorsed Obama's nuclear deal. I actually didn't know that. They thought it was a good thing. When the IDF came out with their threat assessment, the year or a couple of months after the JCPO,
Starting point is 01:05:06 very interestingly iran was not even top five any longer but you have a political calculation that is also rooted in a different perspective on security matter which actually really isn't about the nuclear program at all i was at a track two meeting this is 2012 i'm i think 2012. Track two. Track two. So these are, actually it's track one and a half. Track two is a concept that came up a couple of decades ago during the Cold War. You know, when you have a scenario in which governments don't talk well to each other and if they do it, they just repeat talking points, but there isn't really any real dialogue. When you have that type of conflict, sometimes it's very valuable to have small conferences in which you have academics or others from both sides talking to
Starting point is 01:05:59 each other. They're not officials. They don't represent their government, but they understand their government's position. They can convey the reasoning behind it. And you can get a little bit more open conversations that are nevertheless, no one takes responsibility for it because no one is an elected official. Then you have track one and a half, which is you still have the track two, but within that group of perhaps a room of 25 people, there might be four actual officials there as well. Sometimes they mostly listen, sometimes they talk a little bit, but it's a little bit more official than a complete track two, but it's also not a complete track one. So this was one in which you had several people from the Israeli side, including former head of Mossad. You had several
Starting point is 01:06:43 Iranian diplomats, sitting diplomats, and former diplomats, and one of them was actually a member of the Iranian nuclear negotiating team. You had U.S. officials, including a four-star general, and you had representatives of other countries from the region, etc. In that, one of the Israelis, probably one of the smartest ones, I would say, frankly, very deep respect for this person and what he has done for his country, from his standpoint, said this was never about enrichment, essentially saying this was never about the nuclear issue from Israel's standpoint, which kind of shocks the room, because of course that's what everyone thought that this whole thing was about.
Starting point is 01:07:24 He says, no. This is about the fact that Israel cannot allow the United States to become friends with a country that defines Israel as an enemy and does not recognize Israel's right to exist. We cannot allow that to happen. And the reason for that is, although he didn't explain this in those same terms, is there's something called the fear of abandonment on the Israeli side. Meaning, if the United States and Iran have negotiations, they strike a nuclear deal, what happens? Well, the U.S. and Iran don't become best friends. It's not going to be a love fest. But the United States is going to be like, well, we resolve this issue. And we're a superpower. We have global responsibilities.
Starting point is 01:08:08 We need to focus on Taiwan. We need to focus on X, Y, and Z in another planet. We cannot have 80% of our attention be given to Iran, particularly now where we have resolved this issue. So the Israelis then calculate that the United States will more or less leave the region. And Israel will then be stuck in the region, still facing in Iran, that in their view will not have a change its attitude towards Israel. But now without having the U.S. superpower on the Israeli side automatically to support them. So it wasn't, as he explained it, the nuclear issue per se. It's just that the nuclear issue is how you get the U.S.'s attention because it then feeds in to non-pliferation.
Starting point is 01:08:49 which is a very critical American interest. Had it not been for that, it would be something else. In fact, when Benjamin Netanyahu came to the White House on December 29th last year, meaning a month and a half ago, what was his key message? His key message was that the United States needs to take military action against Iran, not to destroy the nuclear program because Trump claims that he already had destroyed it,
Starting point is 01:09:11 but to take out Iran's missiles. So now we have a situation in which the U.S. has already bombed the nuclear program, But now the goalposts are shifting. Because now you have to take out the missile program. And then, I don't know, perhaps kitchen knives need to be taken out as well. It's not about, I'm not saying that the nuclear program is unimportant in any way, shape. I'm just saying ultimately what this comes down to is the balance in the region. Yes.
Starting point is 01:09:37 And that Iran was a growing power, a strong power, challenged Israel, reduced Israel's maneuverability in the region. The Israelis themselves cannot entirely shift that balance. In fact, they tried in 2000 and last year. The narrative here oftentimes is that, oh, there was a success. It wasn't. We can go into the details of it. Please. Yeah, the Israelis took huge hits.
Starting point is 01:09:59 I mean, the Israeli, okay, many tangents here, but I love this. That's what we do. Very few places you can just talk for three hours. The Israelis had three objectives without war. One was to get the U.S. into the war. That was the one that they were successful with. The second was to decapitate the regime, within the first 24 to 48 hours, as they had kind of done with Hezbollah and Lebanon with the
Starting point is 01:10:22 pager attacks. And they had successes in the sense that they took out about 30 top Iranian generals and scientists, as well as their families and neighbors, incidentally. Very exact strikes too. Exact strikes, but strikes that probably would never have been allowed by the U.S. to do itself because of the large number of collateral damage. Because families, neighbors, all of them were killed as well. But within 12 to 18 hours, Iran had replaced all those people and was now starting to shoot 200 missiles at Israel. And Israel has arrow 1, arrow 2, arrow 3, Patriots, David Sling, Iron Dome, and even the American THADD air defense systems. Thad.
Starting point is 01:11:10 TH-H-A-A-D is one of the most advanced ones. I think we have eight in total. two of them were put in Israel. Wow. Still, the Iranians managed to constantly get through these air defense systems, inflicting significant damage on Israel. The last day, the Iranians only shot 30 missiles. They got 19 of them through.
Starting point is 01:11:31 Through all that stuff. Through all that stuff. Whoa. And these interceptors are extremely expensive. The United States consumed 25% of all of its thad interceptors in those 12 days. for Israel. The United States in the year before covered one third of Israel's entire defense budget. Yeah, what kind of cost are we looking at? Oh, we're talking about billions of dollars. We're talking about billions of dollars. Yeah, just the bad thing alone. Yes. I mean,
Starting point is 01:12:00 in October 2004, when Biden was president and there was an exchange of missiles between Israel and Iran, that two-day operation cost the US about $1.5 billion. And that's not adding the other costs for the Israelis. Oftentimes, some of that also ends up being covered by the U.S. Yeah. So they didn't manage to take out the political leadership. And because the Iranians managed to inflict so much damage on Israel, they didn't achieve their key objective,
Starting point is 01:12:30 which is to reduce Iran's military power to the point in which it can become the same as Lebanon or Syria. Countries that Israel completely dominates. He can bomb them at any time with impunity without a moment. American involvement. This could not be achieved. This is part of reason why the Israelis came back six months later and wanted the United States to do it. Because the U.S. is in a completely different military position, of course. It can really destroy Iran. But the question is, what is the cost to the U.S.? Not just in terms of dollars, but the Iranians will strike back at the U.S.
Starting point is 01:13:05 As well. You know what? There's another great tangent right here because we just had something happen a couple days after Netanyahu was hanging with Trump, by the way, down in Venezuela, where there was a regime change operation. And one of the, I just want to give you context, you understand like how I'm looking at this and then I'll let you go off on this. But one of the things that, like always, kind of piss me off about this is everyone had to have an opinion right away, 100% this way or that way. And to me, if I'm looking at this objectively and removing the characters involved, I don't know that I can have an opinion on this for one to two years. Right away, just the first two strikes on this, one for one team and one for the other, is, yes, it's a broken
Starting point is 01:13:48 campaign promise for Trump because he went in and did a potential regime change here by extracting Maduro. And it was a brilliant military operation that required no boots on the ground afterwards and no civilians were dead. So that's score one for him, score one against. But something like this, all due respect to Venezuela, obviously there's a lot of oil there and they have the biggest reserves in the world. So of course, that has something to do with it. But, you know, it's more of a canary in the coal mine situation. What are the reverberating third, fourth, fifth, six and tenth order effects of this over the next two years? Does this create, you know, a good scenario where in one direction it's like peace through strength and other countries that are
Starting point is 01:14:28 problematic, be it Iran or whatever, kind of fall into line on certain things because they're like, don't fuck with the U.S. or does it create a precedent for the U.S. to then try regime changes that this same administration has said they're not going to do, which, which is a lot of those regime changes could cause boot on the ground situations because, just to use the Iran example, you is, as you know, this is a region filled with over a billion Arabs. There's a lot of cultural, religious, and holy war strife in that area as well that is outside the borders of Iran. You don't have that problem in Venezuela. So if you use the precedent to then do that, not only could that create a crazy East versus West type scenario, but you are also now opening the door to
Starting point is 01:15:11 vicious and, you know, in some cases, maybe fair propaganda from your enemies around the world, which you have to assume is everyone who are going to say the imperialist U.S. is now here, once again, with George Bush 3.0 saying, let's go find you, kill you, and take over a new fucking government. And now it's a total failure. Maybe you even have China go, you know what? Fuck it. We got to take Taiwan. Look what the U.S. did. You know what I mean? So all this is going to go very good or very bad. Like, I guess the first question is, as far as me looking at those scenarios, is it fair to say that that's kind of the V we're looking at potentially? I think you put your finger on a lot of important things. One, the idea that this can just be replicated anywhere regardless of the circumstances is a huge mistake.
Starting point is 01:16:01 And I do think that there has been a bit of sugar high because of that success and a belief then, well, we'll continue. do it in Venezuela and they told me I couldn't, I did, and it worked out really well. So, you know, whatever they're telling me that I can't do in Iran, I can probably try to do that. Right. In fact, about two weeks ago, now two and a half weeks ago, Trump was on the verge of attacking Iran. Oh, it was. Last minute, he called it off. I don't know this for certain, but my understanding is that he actually tried to get the Iranians
Starting point is 01:16:33 to agree to essentially an orchestrated exchange, meaning the U.S. would hit a lot of important places and he would say that he's enforced his red line when he said that the iranis cannot kill protesters and the iranians would respond symbolically by attacking an empty american base this is what happened in the summer yeah iranians here exactly and the iranians said no he said if you attack we attack and this then caused trump to back off and then get the entire armada to come there we have now more assets in the persian gulf and in the indian ocean that we've had i think for 30 years so he didn't back off and this is okay like i'm not going to do this he backed off and said give me a little give me two weeks i'm going to put the entire u.s navy on your doorstep and i'm going to retry this and that's where we
Starting point is 01:17:20 are right now and it's going to be talks tomorrow in oman see whether they work or whether this actually goes towards a military confrontation it's a mexican standoff it is it is and the standoff you know his calculation seemed to have been that he thought that the vanias would back off and they didn't. And they're still not. Whether this is necessary at all, it's a different question. I don't think it is. I think actually there's a diplomatic solution that can and should be pursued, and we can get into that. But other aspects of what you said, I think it's very important. On one level, you have to admit, give the credit to the administration that they learned a couple of things from Iraq, in Iraq. And of course, some people will be very upset at me saying this because they
Starting point is 01:18:03 wanted Trump to put Masjado, the Nobel Peace Prize winner in place. The Venezuelan opposition, and he didn't. Instead, he went for the number two under Maduro. So it's the same regime as before. It's not really a regime change. It's a change within the regime. Soft regime change. Very soft.
Starting point is 01:18:21 And he didn't want to put Machado in place because he was worried that it would create instability and he didn't want to see an Iraq type of a scenario. But keep one thing in mind. Iraq also looked like a success for the first five and a half months. Yes. It's not until August, 24. When there's that big UN press conference and the insurgents blow it up in the middle of the press conference and the insurgency really spreads, that things start to go down. Up until that point, mission accomplished, all of the type of arrogance of success was there, similar to what we say now.
Starting point is 01:18:52 I'm not saying that things are going to go in the same direction. I think they have learned a couple of things there and they're doing some things differently. But I would still be very cautious of thinking, oh, this is, look, it works. worked out for the first two weeks, clearly we're safe. That's, I think, a very charitable interpretation of what has happened. But then to take that attitude and then think, okay, as a result, now we can do this everywhere else. Very dangerous.
Starting point is 01:19:17 Yes. And the other thing that you mentioned, Trump, I think, does cherish the idea of being a norm breaker and a norm destroyer. But some norms actually do serve U.S. interest because if it is now completely okay to go and extract leaders you don't like if you have the military capability to do so then yes then you may end up seeing the Chinese try to do that in Taiwan or other places so we're setting precedents that I don't think are helpful I still don't understand the fundamental strategic necessity of doing what they did but we can that's a different
Starting point is 01:19:56 story the strategic necessity of in Venezuela because you know as you remember in the beginning was all about fentanyl. No one talks about fentanyl today. Oh, it was, listen. Yeah. I'm not saying Venezuela wasn't moving drugs.
Starting point is 01:20:10 They were moving three baggies in an apole compared to Mexico. It was, like, that was actually the one thing I appreciated about Trump. You had afterwards, you had Hegsef being like, this was about the drugs. And Trump's like,
Starting point is 01:20:21 it's about the oil. Yeah, of course, that's about the fucking oil. You know what I mean? Like, they removed that from the indictment in five seconds when they got him here. I completely agree.
Starting point is 01:20:31 Yes. So I think the other problem, like when we're looking at Iran, though, is that when you, and you raise a great point, by the way, I had held this off because you were going on a tear right there. But your point about the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission back in 2015 implicitly endorsing the deal, I pulled that up. That is real. So this was in opposition, obviously, of then Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the IAEC, which advises the government on nuclear policy, concluded the agreement contained sufficient limitations and the violations would be easily detected by international monitors. The commission's stance was at odds with Netanyahu and most of the political opposition, which viewed the deal as a significant historic mistake. So there were people on both sides of political aisle, at least in government, who did disagree with it. And I understand like their fear on this, by the way, but it's interesting that you had an organization that does this in the country.
Starting point is 01:21:33 These are the nuclear scientists of Israel. Right. These are the people that actually know the technicality of all of this and who are in a position to assess whether these inspections will work or not. I mean, just to give you an example, I didn't put this in my book. I wrote a book about the nuclear negotiations because throughout the talks, I could talk to the Obama administration. I could talk to the Iranians, I could talk to all of the Europeans, I.A., etc. And, you know, the last stretch of the talks was three weeks in Vienna, Austria. And it was an unbelievably hot summer.
Starting point is 01:22:11 And you don't build buildings there to keep your, you know, the apartment or the hotel cool because there's no necessity for that. And it was in the middle of the World Cup as well, the soccer World Cup. And at times, things were moving very slowly. I ended up scoring a lot of really good interviews with the Iranian negotiating team because they had a lot of time on their hand. And at the time, they told me it's because whenever the U.S. receives a new proposal from the Iranians or whatever, they have to take it back to get new instructions, and it takes
Starting point is 01:22:41 such a long time. We don't understand why. Well, afterwards, we understood why, because it was revealed, I think, in the New York Times. The United States had built a replica of the entire Iranian nuclear program of the facilities. every new proposal with a new constellation of how the century rules would be placed, et cetera, et cetera, they tested it to see, can they cheat or can they not cheat? Is this safe? Is this not safe?
Starting point is 01:23:05 And that's why it took such a long time before the Obama White House came new. So the idea that this was like rushed or that it wasn't really thought through, it was amazingly well thought through by nuclear scientists. Towards the end of the negotiations, it became so technical that the lead negotiators could no longer be John Kerry to Secretary of State of the U.S. or Jeval Zarif, which was the Ivarian foreign minister, because none of them had a technical know-how. So they had to bring in the head of the Yvanian IAEA,
Starting point is 01:23:34 atomic energy agency, Ali Akbar Salih, who is an MIT graduate in nuclear physics. And his counterpart was Ernest Monez, the energy secretary at the time, who was also not only a graduate of MIT, he was at the faculty there when Salehi graduated with his PhD from there.
Starting point is 01:23:57 And the two of them had to hash out the details because it got so goddamn technical that the politicians, they were incapable of doing it. And this is why I wanted to mention this. So when the Israeli nuclear scientists come out to say, actually, this deal holds up, it's got to count for something because these are the people actually know it.
Starting point is 01:24:19 And the people on the political side, they have other considerations which is totally legitimate. The nuclear scientist only has to think about X amount of things. A politician has to think about all kinds of things, but some of them may not be entirely legit. It's about his political credentials. It's about whether this is a political win for him or not. It's all of those different considerations that are more selfish rather than in the national interest of the country. God, you have such a calm way of looking at a lot of crazy moving pieces here. But also in the middle of that, you know, this three weeks in Vienna, you mentioned sitting down and scoring interviews with the Iranian negotiators.
Starting point is 01:24:58 What's that like for you to be in a room with someone who represents that regime that, you know, twer up your family's life in a lot of ways. And we'll get that story in a second. But like what's that like to sit with that person and be calm? So you have to understand that there's a whole spectrum of people, right? I don't think I've ever been in the room with someone who is a high-ranking IRGC official who's doing that, right? So I'm going to make that clear, so it doesn't sound like, oh, you know, that it wasn't anything. These are the diplomats of this country.
Starting point is 01:25:36 And I've dealt extensively, as we talked about, it's just spent two days at the UN with all of these different diplomats. So they're not necessarily responsible, and their job is to give the nicest face to their country, whatever that country is. That's the job of all diplomats. My attitude in all of this is one in which I want to find solutions to make things better to stop the killing, prevent a war.
Starting point is 01:26:02 I mean, I respect all of these human rights organizations that are going that extra mile to save one guy who should not be on death penalty because of his political opinions. And God bless him for doing that. I hope we have more of them. At the same time, I do think if we are capable of preventing a war that might have killed 50,000 people, that the human rights of those 50,000 people, the right to life, is also something
Starting point is 01:26:31 that is important. Yes. And not just the political rights. All of them are important. And that means you got to, I mean, look, I deal with Israelis, I deal with folks in the U.S. Senate. we may have profound disagreements, folks that in this specific regime in Iran, imprisoned my dad, has imprisoned other family members of mine, etc. You can make the choice of saying, because I don't like you or because I hate you,
Starting point is 01:26:59 I'm not going to deal with you. Or you can make the choice of saying, okay, how do we make this better? How do I make sure that my kids or their kids don't have to live through the same stories that I did, my family had to flee Iran, et cetera, et cetera. And if you have the ability, the patience, the willingness to do so, I think it's important. I see you have a necklace. On the front page of my book on the deal, there's called losing an enemy, Obama, Iran, and the triumph of diplomacy.
Starting point is 01:27:30 I'm quoting him, Jesus from Matthew, what is it, 214, whatever. Blessed are the policemakers because they will be, what is it, they will inherit the kingdom of God or something. My quotation of Bible is not as precise as they should be, but you guys can look it up. But it's a very famous quote, you know, of one of the things. And I see the world today, and I'm like, I just do not understand why there are not more people trying to do this,
Starting point is 01:27:58 which is just moving in terrible directions on almost all fronts. I grew up in Sweden. We haven't gone into my personal. I grew up in Sweden. Sweden back then, it is now today, unfortunately. But back then, was this small country up in the north that punched way above its way diplomatically? Was mediating peace in all different kinds of conflicts, including between Ivan and Ivok during the 1980s? Really?
Starting point is 01:28:23 Had played a crucial role in the beginning of the establishment of the UN, etc. Sweden did. Sweden did. Sweden, yeah. So the former Prime Minister, Olof Palme, who was assassinated and Jan Eliasson, who later on became foreign minister, played key role in mediating these things. So I grew up in a country in which that was really respected. That was like that was the pride of the foreign policy, of the type of peacemakers they had and the role that they played internationally,
Starting point is 01:28:51 which really was the case back then. It isn't now. They've been completely, I mean, first of all, they don't even have the ambition at this point. The Norwegians have taken over that in Scandinavia, but you also have new, complete new, well, sorry, I shouldn't say new actors, but actors that have risen to unprecedented prominence,
Starting point is 01:29:08 which is primarily Turkey, Qatar, and Oman. I mean, the Qataris are mediating about 11 conflicts around the world, several of them for the United States, including Venezuela, by the way. And this is a very tiny country. I think the actual Qatari population is probably no more than 2,000, 3, 400,000. How did they get into that position? They got the best coffee? Like, what's the deal?
Starting point is 01:29:32 They invested very heavily in sending their smartest people to the best schools in the United States and in Europe and took it very seriously. They realize that they are squeezed in the Persian Gulf. They have Saudi Arabia to the south, which is a giant. They have Iran to the north that is a giant. They're sitting on a huge amount of gas. They're the richest country. They have the bandwidth and the ability to do things that others cannot, but also they have a geopolitical position in which they're going to be completely screwed if there's war, right? Because they don't have an army of their own that in any way shape or form can defend themselves they have to have stability in the region between the giants in order to have the circumstances for themselves to be able to flourish
Starting point is 01:30:18 and by noticing that the space for peacemakers had more more become vacant they very cleverly went in and filled it not entirely others are there as well but you know if we had a UN that was at on par with what it was 30 years ago if the Swedes were still doing what they were doing then the Qatarists probably wouldn't have the space to do so. Now they do, and they took it. And I personally think that we should be really grateful that they did because we do need it. And I give a example, we touched upon a little bit,
Starting point is 01:30:51 when Obama realized that he needed to negotiate or potentially go to war, they went to Muscat, Oman. And Omanis were the mediators. And something happened there, which was that Bill Burns who was the lead negotiator at the time for the U.S. who later on became the head of the CIA. He was given a written statement by the administration, which I still don't know the exact details of,
Starting point is 01:31:21 but the contours are that there was an acceptance by the United States for the first time ever that Iran could have enrichment of uranium on its own soul under specific restrictions. This is the thing the Iranians had waited for, the acceptance of their red line they were not going to show any flexibility regardless of how many sanctions were imposed on them until this was accepted this was accepted in omat but there was a problem this was conveyed orally and the iranians were like no we need this in writing otherwise we don't
Starting point is 01:31:51 trust it so a solution came uh was presented i think actually came from the umani's themselves the umanis wrote a letter to the supreme leader of iraam in which they said this is the American position. They put it in writing, but not from the US. Then the Sultan of Oman, the late Sultan, he has passed away now, in between his chemotherapy for his cancer, flew to Tehran and presented the letter in person to the Supreme Leader. That was a gesture to essentially say, if you say no to this, you're not saying no to it because you don't trust the US. You're saying no to it because you don't trust me. And the U.S. and Yvonne don't have any trust, but Yvonne and Oman have a tremendous amount of trust.
Starting point is 01:32:41 So even a superpower, the United States, needed a small, tiny country like Oman, to be able to get this breakthrough. And we should be grateful that there are all these small countries that are willing to play this mediating world, because they can do things that we cannot do despite our tremendous power. With the Qatar one, though, is it kind of a difficult political position for them to be like a mediator right now? considering that they, I'm not even saying that this is definitely the case, but the way the optics are, it's that they're very at odds with Israel. So therefore, like seeing it from the Israeli perspective, they might be like, well, they're not going to, they're totally biased. And, you know, they're also helping out Iran or whatever, which is going directly against our purposes. Therefore,
Starting point is 01:33:29 they shouldn't be at the table mediating this stuff. Do you think that that's fair criticism from them? The reason why they're mediating, and you're right, the Israelis, first of all, the Israelis wanted the Qataris there before. I mean, the Qataris, yeah, I mean, the Qataris are there because the US. So in 2006, Hamas wins the elections in Gaza. Shortly thereafter, the United States asks Qatar to host Hamas in Doha in order for the US to be able to have its indirect negotiations with Hamas since they're in charge. This whole thing started off with the U.S. requesting it. And the Israelis were on board as well because they needed that channel. And the Israelis asked the Qataris to the money that the Israelis would give,
Starting point is 01:34:19 or who exactly is given it, but bottom line is they wanted to make sure that the Qataris would pay Hamas to keep Gaza floating, not flourishing, but floating. In 2024 December, the Qataris, were like okay we're doing the mediation because he asked us but we're getting so much shit for it so you know what fine we'll kick out Hamas they won't have an office in doha any longer and we don't have to do the mediation guess we intervened and said no no no no keep them in doha in the United States because we need them in order to do this mediation at the time the hostages were still kept there I understand and and you needed this
Starting point is 01:35:01 so it on the surface it may look like oh well that this is a favor to Hamas or this is a favor to Iran, but bottom line is, you need these channels to be able to resolve these conflicts. And it is a position that, you know, you get a lot of flack for doing it. So there's plenty of countries that probably could, but they're like, you know what, we're fine. Solve your own problem. We know that you ask us for help, but then if we do it, then we get all of this bad PR and we're being accused of X, Y, Z, et cetera, we're good as someone else. Hmm. Now we keep on, or not we, I've kept on pushing off your actual story with this and you just kind of hinted it with the whole grown up in Sweden thing. But one of the things when I was talking to Eric about you, he was saying is that your family actually had history on both sides of the revolution, meaning like pre-revolution. I think he was saying your family like had some sort of disagreements with the Shah. And then post-revolution, obviously, like, like they imprison your father, as you mentioned, and I want to get into all that.
Starting point is 01:36:07 But like, before the revolution, what were, what was the history there with the Shah and his family as it relates to your family? So my uncle was a governor. So we had people in the family who actually were in prominent positions. But my dad was a university professor who was very left-leaning, was very critical of the Shah. And twice ended up in jail for criticizing the Shah. Well, actually, the first time he was actually. criticizing Islam and that ended up getting into jail even on the time of the Shah. That's interesting.
Starting point is 01:36:42 Yeah. The second time, and he was tortured by the Sabak, the secret police of the Shah, got out. And he had an offer to become a guest scholar in Sweden. He had an offer to do it in Marseille, in France as well. And situation was very uncertain at the time. late mid 78 i think okay and um it wasn't clear what was going to happen no one knew will there be a revolution will there be like massive clamped down my dad had just been twice in jail so decided to take the opportunity to go to sweden he chose sweden and he chose sweden probably mainly because he was
Starting point is 01:37:24 left leaning and sweden was like this left is heaven back then um so we went there because of the fact that it was too unclear what would happen. I was only four years old, so obviously I had no say in this decision. In 78? I think we arrived in October 78, if I'm okay, yeah, if I remember correctly. A couple of months later, February 20, 1979, the revolution is a reality. We're still in Sweden, following it from over there, but it's still very unclear exactly what's going to happen, chaotic. Eventually Khomeini completely takes power, but then you have that fight between him and the M.E.K. Then September in 1980, the Iraqis attack and invade. And they invade in the south of the country.
Starting point is 01:38:09 My family is from the south, from the Khuzestan area. But in between something else also happened. My dad's name was put in the paper as one of the people that would be executed on the spot if he returned to the country, accusing him of having been a collaborator with the Sub-Octa Secret Service, which was not true. My dad had been tortured by them. But we're in Sweden at this point when this happens.
Starting point is 01:38:37 Thank God. My dad decides to go back and clear his name. And he decides to go back and clear his name because at the time, if they didn't get a hold of you and you were wanted for whatever reason, and it's not as if you would get a fair trial in any way or you perform in first place anyways. But if they couldn't get a hold of you, they might just execute one of your relatives. And there's plenty of cases in which they executed a brother for a crime, the accused of someone else are doing right and because my family other family members had been in
Starting point is 01:39:08 prominent positions during the time of the Shah he goes back I remember saying goodbye to him for the last time I was about that time four and a half or something he goes back they don't execute him at the airport as they had promised instead they put him in jail again now he's in Khomeini's jail but guess what it's the same jail as before and guess who is sharing his jail cell with the same guy who is the head of that jail just months earlier when my dad was in that same jail. His former jail ward was now his jailmate. Oh my God.
Starting point is 01:39:40 The head of that prison, who ran the prison for the shop, was now in that prison, and sitting now sharing the cell with my dad. They did execute him. My dad, however, managed to get out or clear his name however you want to put it. And I've... How did he do that? So that's the question. And I oftentimes ask that when I'm at college campuses, et cetera, just to see if people
Starting point is 01:40:03 could guess it. And I think if I've told this story perhaps, I don't know, 30 times, I don't know, I think there's only one time someone guessed it right. Because immediately people think, oh, he fled or they think that, you know, he gave a bribe or whatever, all kinds of creative things. None of that is the case. The case is. And this goes to the core of what we talked about earlier on, what actually happens in the revolution. Guess who was running the prisons? The new regime. Who's the new regime? Who's the new? regime well it's the complete opposite of what they overthrew who are they not the leftists because they were allied with the leftists at the beginning and then kick them out yeah is that where
Starting point is 01:40:50 you're getting at it was left really but kind of closely perhaps the people running the jails now were a bunch of 20 year olds many of them my dad's former student oh my god who knew that he was not with the shah who had listened to him for get into jail because of his criticism against to Shaw. They whisk him out of prison, I think, after a month or so, put him on a plane, he's never been back. Wow. Did some of them get executed for that? Dad, I don't know. That's a good question that I need to ask my dad. He's still alive. That's a... And I'll tell you one thing. It is not a unique story. It's not... It's even a story with a relative good ending because my dad was not executed.
Starting point is 01:41:40 There's terrible stories. People who suffered far, far more than I did, for my family did. First, in the revolution itself, during the time of the show, we're after the revolution. This is, again, why I said earlier on, the American romanticized view of the revolution
Starting point is 01:41:58 is because the U.S. ended up having a good one. Right, right. The 1979 reason was a disaster in so many different ways. And people suffered tremendously. And my story is not even... top 50 in terms of how bad it many people suffered. Yeah, your dad was able to get out.
Starting point is 01:42:16 He's still alive today. It's amazing. What does your dad think today of what's going on in Iran? He spoke to him two days ago. Look, he is as most people right now just in a state of shock in the sense that the level of killings that the Iranian government engaged in in between January 8 and 10th in particular is just unprecedented now some numbers have been thrown out there that this would be like 30,000 40,000 I've not seen any evidence of that and I find it a bit difficult to believe because even
Starting point is 01:42:56 you have like these massive wars and it still doesn't get into those numbers you know even over the course of weeks I do definitely believe that somewhere between five and seven thousand is a very realistic number. And that is a huge number. That's an absolutely massive number of people. Right? I mean, just take folks that are looking at what's happening in Minnesota and being deeply, deeply upset over, what is it at this point?
Starting point is 01:43:20 Two or three people getting killed. Yeah. Right? Take that times 2,000 or 3,000. So people are just in a state of shock, mainly because of that. Then there's also another element of shock, which is that there were elements. I used to say part of the protest,
Starting point is 01:43:38 but I think it perhaps is more correct to say that were elements that took advantage of the protest to pursue a different agenda, who used a tremendous amount of violence, who burnt about 48 fire trucks in the first night, burnt banks, museums, etc. About 300 police or besiege members, which is part of this militia, were killed as well.
Starting point is 01:44:02 There's videos on YouTube or on Twitter you can see and, you know, they're putting them on fire alive. I spoke to one guy who was out in the protests. He'd been out in almost every protest since 2009, not a fan of the regime. And he said, back in 2009, if we saw someone start using violence, everyone intervened because we really kept
Starting point is 01:44:21 a very strong non-violent discipline. This time around, he said, I saw these folks, I don't know who they are, but they were all dressed in black. They seemed to be professional. They seemed to know what they're doing. They were acting very fast. And I didn't have,
Starting point is 01:44:34 And no one else had the guts to step in because frankly, we were as afraid of them as we were of the besiege. So there was something else going on. It doesn't in any way justify this massive killing by the government. Right, right. But something else was going on that we have not seen before. That led to a counterviolence that led to these 300 police being killed, et cetera. And, you know, why would you go burn fire trucks?
Starting point is 01:44:59 I mean, what are you aiming to do, right? particularly since you are at the same time putting a lot of buildings on fire. You're also given propaganda to the government to use? You are giving, so there's a suspicion where he's actually done by the government itself and what did discredit the protests, et cetera. So there's a lot of question marks.
Starting point is 01:45:16 And one of the things that happen, certainly by January 8, but had already started, is that in the beginning when those protests started, was in the middle of the day, and it was these currency and tradesmen that were out there protesting because the collapse of the currency. within the day.
Starting point is 01:45:33 By January 8, all the processors are at night. Night is much more difficult to see what's going on. It's difficult to see who's doing what. And it also makes it much more easy. If there is an element that wants to take advantage of massive protests to be able to pursue a different type of approach, which is, you know, and I assume that if they're completely homegrown, their belief is this regime is not going to be overthrown by peaceful protest.
Starting point is 01:45:56 There needs to be some sort of a response to them that is not. just peaceful, or if it is something that is supported by outside elements, and we know that the Mossad had a tremendous amount of presence in Iran in the summer war. So if it's that, then, you know, it's something about bottom line is this guy who went to all of these protests, were like, whoa, I've not seen this before. And he actually ended up going home because it was like, okay, this made me uncomfortable. I want to protest the government. I want to, you know, but anything that uses my presence in order to go towards something that could lead to a civil war, for instance, he didn't want to have a So this is there's this is also a major difference between like what happened in 2022.
Starting point is 01:46:35 Absolutely. Absolutely. Then you had massive violence from the government itself. You did not. I mean, look, the main elements of those protests were teenage kids. Yeah. And young women, right? So no, not a demographic that is prone to that type of violence, right? So, no, this is, this is new. And this is again, part of. of the shock. I mean, the biggest shock clearly is the massive killings by the government. Yeah. But also that there's something else. And it has scared a lot of people. And I think my dad is one of those who's very, he's not in favor of military intervention by the United States or anyone else. I'm certainly not either. I think it's, I'm against it from both sides, from the standpoint
Starting point is 01:47:16 of Iran, but also from the standpoint of the United States. After seeing what the U.S. have done and what has caused the U.S. itself, I'm not in favor of it. But the fear of civil war, I think, is also very tangible at this point. So what do you mean from the standpoint of Iran as as well as the sense that I don't believe that foreign intervention will ultimately lead to democracy. And I think democracy is where things should be going. And foreign intervention. And frankly, you mentioned the son of the Shah. If you look at the strategy that he's pursuing.
Starting point is 01:47:46 Razopalavi. Rezao Pallavi. It does not. Yeah. Does not leave me with the impression that he actually is seeking an internal overthrow. of the government. If you were to do that, you would build a big coalition.
Starting point is 01:48:03 He's not. You would be working, going the extra mile to get amnesty to people from within the IRGC in order to get defections. Because you have a massive security establishment and you need to get them to defect.
Starting point is 01:48:18 You cannot just beat them, particularly when you don't have an army, right? But he's not doing that either. He's talking about it, but his supporters, and you will see them in the comments sections on YouTube later on. are not building this thing and are not pursuing that type of an approach.
Starting point is 01:48:35 Instead, what they're pursuing is the same thing as Mashado did, which is Trump, make me the king. Right. Install me. And we started off with 1953. And now we're 2026. I don't think going that full circle is the right thing. Do you know him?
Starting point is 01:48:52 I've met him. Yeah. I've not had a lengthy conversation, but I met him, yeah. When? I think the first. time is the one that I do remember. He gave a briefing on Capitol Hill when I was working there. And I do, I do remember it well because I was not left impressed. And he looked very uncomfortable and uncertain and it was constantly leaning over to some of his handlers to see,
Starting point is 01:49:21 am I doing a good job or not. His handlers. Yeah, that's the way it looked like. And And that's not to question his motives, which at the time I don't think were what they are today. I mean, at this point, he's very clearly, explicitly pushing for U.S. and Israeli military intervention. I think that's absolutely wrong. But also because there was a moment which the congressman asked him, so how do, what do I call you? Do I say, Mr. Pallavi? And he responded saying, your majesty would work. That don't play well in America.
Starting point is 01:49:57 Yeah, it doesn't. But also it doesn't work well if you're saying, hey, I'm actually not going to try to take over the country. I'm just going to handle the transition. Right. To a democratic government. Then the title majesty should not be part of the mix. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:50:12 Power is a very, very strange thing. And in an ideal world, power goes to the people who actually at least want it. And that doesn't happen very often. Yeah, that's the way it should be. That's the way it should. be and it's a salmon Frodo at Mount Doom yes exactly that's a great way to put it and with him I don't even say this to be a cynic but like the guy has lived as a guest of the United States government since he was 19 years old that shit ain't free you know what I mean and I understand
Starting point is 01:50:51 like by the way like seeing it from my government's perspective they would love a world where not the current regime there. I'm with them. But I really appreciate your, even with your own history, like understanding the serious problems there could be if it's caused from outside. And you had said something early on in this conversation, then we got off it, but you were talking about, you know, the dangers of revolutions on the other side and how they often look. And it's not necessarily like the American one. And you're right about that. But like an example of one that the world kind of blue in addition to the country itself that could have been good was when the USSR was overthrown. Of course, there was intelligence involved there. That's just the nature of the world. I'm cool
Starting point is 01:51:39 with that. That's what they do. But roughly 15% of the population there over through that government. It wasn't 50. It wasn't 40. It was 15 largely peacefully. The aftermath, a lot of diplomacy was fucked up for sure and that United States deserves blame for that European countries deserve blame for that and everything and of course the new Russian government deserves blame for that and the way that they set up the country
Starting point is 01:52:08 was not smart and here we are 30 years later but to me like just cut it off when they took down the wall and took down USSR up to that point it's like all right if you're going to do it that internal way that's the way and that's
Starting point is 01:52:24 the way like something like Iran in an ideal world should happen. And then you just hope the world and the new people taking over Iran at that point will have learned the lessons of the past. They almost never do cynically. But like and realize, okay, let's not do the same things we did that we did with the USSR moving to Russia. And let's have some sort of like, you know, new democratic system in this country that actually works. That's self-sustaining and, you know, is like some sort of slow burn into the future. Is that fair to say?
Starting point is 01:52:56 It is, but I think we have to be clear, though. Look, countries have their interest, right? Yeah. If you have a vacuum created in Iran and some sort of a new formation may be formed, new government, new system, if you're sitting in Turkey, in Saudi, in Russia, in the U.S., in Israel, you're not going to sit there on the sidelines and we're like, well, let's just hope for the best. That's just not the way it works. Now, there's a spectrum.
Starting point is 01:53:28 There's countries that may interfere very aggressively, completely overdo it, others who may play a smaller role, but reality is it's going to affect them. So it's not illegitimate for them to be concerned. It may be illegitimate for them to intervene in a very problematic way, of course. And when it comes to like a country like Iran, has 15 land, 15 neighbors around. itself, very strategically positioned, in a position to control the waterways of the Strait of Hormuz, 40% of all of the world's energy flows through there. You're not going to have disinterested parties, just not going to be the case. But you can't help at a minimum by making sure that
Starting point is 01:54:15 you don't make it worse. And what we have seen in the region up until now, or in recent history, is that when you have Syria, for instance, the Iranians intervene, the Russians intervene, the Qataris, the Saudis, the Emirates, the Turks. And studies show that most civil wars actually cannot last for more than about a year for a very simple reason that you run out of weapons and ammunition. The cases in which they go on for longer
Starting point is 01:54:43 and the Syrian case went on for about 15 years is because of foreign military intervention. Right. There were like fucking 20 groups there. Exactly. Well, actually, at one point, was 1,400, 1,455 groups. 20 main ones, I'm sorry. That was a little off of my math. Point taken.
Starting point is 01:54:59 So you have all of these countries trying to, you know, starting to play their competition with each other inside of Syrian territory. Same thing happened in Yemen, the Saudis and the Iranians. And in Iraq, the Saudis, the U.S. and the Iranians again. And the Turks were involved there as well, of course. And it just ends up. It doesn't matter if any of them had good intentions. It does not matter.
Starting point is 01:55:28 It just ends up ruining those countries. And Syria is completely ruined to the point that they're welcoming a former al-Qaeda head as president because... Playing basketball with U.S. Congressmen. Better than what it was before, apparently. Okay, I'm not going to judge it. It's their call. I'm personally skeptical.
Starting point is 01:55:44 But if it ends up working out well for them, then fine. what I'm mostly taken aback by is the speed in which the U.S. went from having him $20 million on his head to not only playing basketball with U.S. military, but David Petraeus on the stage asking him, are you sleeping well at night? Was that the best? I mean, it's just whatever conspiracy existed in the region, and there's plenty of conspiracies in the region that says the U.S. was behind ISIS and Al-Qaeda, et cetera. I don't think there's any truth to him, just to be clear.
Starting point is 01:56:13 But rest assured, they got a huge boost after. you're seeing what Petraeus being that chummy with the guy. Yeah, that was one of the cringiest things. It's like just optically, Petraeus is a guy to be like, all right, someone else go on stage with him. He's already present. Just somebody else do it. Like, Jesus, gross.
Starting point is 01:56:31 There's got to be someone. It's got to be. Find some diplomat on K Street. They'll do it. But yeah, I think that's also like you raised the point about the Saudis here. I kind of forget that. That's a mistake on my part because there's been all. proxy wars in the Middle East where it's Iran versus Saudi and you mentioned one with Yemen
Starting point is 01:56:52 which is effectively that's what that's been so as it relates to the current protests like what you know we focus on the US Israel and Iran with this and I guess a little bit of Qatar are the Saudis playing some roles right now as to what's going on in Iran so so very interesting what has happened in the region now so you know the Saudis in the Iranians a long-standing competition. The Saudis always during the time of the Shah felt that the Iranians were, you know, very arrogant against them and treated them as, you know, quite inferior. And without, there's some justification for some of their criticisms. But then when the revolution happens, it actually becomes much worse because now the Shah viewed himself as the superpower of the region. And, you know,
Starting point is 01:57:44 he had convinced Richard Nixon to exit the region militarily and let Iran essentially take care of the security of the region of the Persian Gulf. And Saudi Arabia was like a junior partner in that. It was called a twin pillar policy, but was really just an Iranian pillar to it. By the time the Khomeini government comes in and during the Islamic Republic, they actually take on a very hostile position towards the Saudis. they want to overthrow all of the kingdoms. They had overthrown their monarchy. And it was Iran that was the regime change advocate back then. And they wanted to overthrow all of the kingdoms. And they particularly targeted Saudi Arabia because Saudi also was a U.S. ally.
Starting point is 01:58:26 And Saudi was the center of Islam because of that's where Mecca and Medina. So Khomeini goes on constant attack. He accuses the Saudis of practicing American Islam. So this was really the deepest. American Islamic. It's like the deepest insult, essentially saying, you're not legitimate. You're not the legitimate leader of the Islamic world. So things are really bad. And the Saudis were mayor of Minneapolis. And, you know, the Saudis, together with the Kuwaiters and others were funding all of Saddam's military expenses. So it was really most of the GCC and at war with Yvonne
Starting point is 01:59:03 indirectly during that war. But then they had their ups and downs. Now we're in one of their up since 2022, guess who, the Chinese mediated and got a normalization agreement between the two sides. A lot of legwork had been done by Oman and Iraq, but the last 10% of the distance was taken by the Chinese. And this is the first time the Chinese step into the mediation game in the Middle East. And it freaked out the U.S. Righteously so, actually. But now, given that, that has really reduced tensions between Iran and the South. Saudis, reduced tensions in Yemen, but something else has now happened that has actually pushed the Saudis,
Starting point is 01:59:44 not close to Iran, but in a way, they're actually very worried about the U.S. going to war with Iran and really want to avoid it, not just because of a fear of instability and retaliation and things like that, but because of something else. Give me two minutes to explain this one. You take your time, Trita. Just keep this pointed at you, if you don't mind. Sure. During the Biden administration, the U.S. really lifted almost all restrictions on Israel
Starting point is 02:00:17 and what Israel could do and not do, particularly with U.S. weapons, and almost all the weapons that use are American weapons. And this has led to a scenario in which what the Israelis allow themselves to do in terms of collateral damage, meaning innocent civilians getting killed is just completely out of whack. The U.S. would never follow those guidelines. We cannot do it. We're not allowed to. But we allow the Israelis to use American weapons in a way that we are not even allowed
Starting point is 02:00:51 to use ourselves. That's kind of strange. Well, the Biden administration was like, we have to give Israel whatever they ask for, essentially. And the Biden administration broke U.S. law on numerous occasions and even lied to Congress about what Israel was doing. They lied to Congress. They lied to Congress. Anthony Blinken lied to Congress about internal reports and State Department
Starting point is 02:01:12 of the assessment of what the Israelis were doing. And internally in the building, they knew what was going on. They had written the reports. Blinken and the leadership refused to publish them and then lie to Congress about what actually the report said. Now, why is that not being? Oh, it's out there. It's just that we live in a world.
Starting point is 02:01:29 It was like, there's five scandals a day. You know, 20 years ago, that would be the scandal of the entire year. and nobody to root for it. Yeah, this is hardly a weekend at this point. This then led to a scenario. Let me give you examples. Actually, I think it's quite helpful to see how much the U.S. has changed in terms of what it permits Israel to do or not.
Starting point is 02:01:52 In 2004, the Israelis assassinated the head of Hamas, the founder of Hamas, Sheikh Yassim. He was in a wheelchair. They struck the place that he was at and killed about the president. nine other family members. The Bush administration rebuked Israel publicly for this because of a high number of civilian casualties, collateral damage. Bush did. Bush did. Dick Cheney was in that White House, just one of them as a reminder. Was he aware that they did that? In 2006, also Bush, Israel and Hezbollah have this war. On two occasions, the Israelis tried to assassinate Hezbollah's leader, and they struck his bunker but couldn't get through not because they didn't have but because the
Starting point is 02:02:43 us would not allow them to use the weapons that could blow up the bunker not because they didn't want to stop the Israelis but because damage that would do to the entire neighborhood and all the collateral damage so twice they tried but with the limited amount they could but they failed Bush. 2024, the Israelis assassinate Nasrallah, blow up his bunker using 82,000-pound bombs,
Starting point is 02:03:11 killed probably another three to 500 people in that entire neighborhood. And they get a congratulatory note publicly from the Biden administration. So just see the distance, a rebuke for nine dead, to a congratulation for something around three to 500. You want to go kill someone who's listed as a terrorist and, you know, could be agreed upon by other countries as a terrorist.
Starting point is 02:03:37 Okay. That's where I run into the issue, though. How you do it. My buddy Brandon Buckingham, I don't know if you ever seen his channel. He does all kinds of documentaries. But he was supposed to go to India for, I don't even know what the fuck it was. For some documentary, this is late summer 2024, I want to say. And basically he's halfway.
Starting point is 02:03:58 he's on his leg flight there and then something goes wrong with the visa so he can't get into Israel or into India and so he's like well I'm already out here halfway around the world let me find a place to go goes to Lebanon happens to go the week where the bombing starts so so what year is this this is 2024 wow he doesn't follow the news or well he does but like he gets there and the bombing starts and you know his dad's like hitting him up like here your your girl is pregnant Like, you need to get home, like, the whole bit. But Brandon is about being on the ground. So he does this amazing, like, hour and 20 minute documentary.
Starting point is 02:04:37 Wow. Interviews all kinds of Lebanese civilians on the ground, just very nuanced and, you know, really like a great human piece. All of them are dead. All of them. They're all gone. Yeah. It's a relic already.
Starting point is 02:04:54 It's not even a year and a half old. Yeah. And that's where. And I don't care who it is. Like my country did it too. Yeah. And in Iraq, I don't care what country it is. I will always call it out.
Starting point is 02:05:05 Like the collateral damage that not the tip of the spear, but the suits in back rooms order to happen. This is how you create the next generation of, quote, a whole terrorist. Yeah. Absolutely. Again, and we have norms around this. What can, what is permitted and what is not permitted.
Starting point is 02:05:25 And the Biden administration completely, lifted all of those and allowed Israel. I mean, that's part of reason. I mean, like, bombing hospital. Doesn't matter if you think or if there even was a Hamas. There's still not a single piece of evidence that there was. That there was what? A Hamasel underneath the hospitals.
Starting point is 02:05:42 There's no evidence of that. There's no evidence of that. But even if it's still not permitted. I mean, there's international law. It's quite clear on these different things, right? But they lifted all of those restrictions. Now, that led to an Israel that just felt completely unrestricted. and unhinged. In the last two and a half years, they've bombed seven countries in the region.
Starting point is 02:06:04 One of those countries is a strong U.S. ally, Qatar, who hosted Hamas because the U.S. asked them to host Hamas. Did you see the picture of the phone call on the Oval Office when Trump made Netanyan? Made him, made him apologize. We'll get to that. Let's see what happened up until that point. Qatar's air defense systems are all American because the U.S. has one of his largest bases in Doha, right outside of Doha. Didn't even get activated. So now put yourself. Didn't even get activated.
Starting point is 02:06:37 Didn't even get activated. Israelis hits. They failed to kill the people that they were trying to kill, but they were there to negotiate the latest version of the release of the hostages and the Israeli strike. So you're sitting in the region. Let's say you're Saudi Arabia. Your entire security is in the hands of the United States, right? you put all of your security eggs in that basket.
Starting point is 02:07:04 And as much as you needed that because you had an enmity with Iran and you needed American protection from Iran, in the back of your head, it was also, it's always good to have that relationship with the United States because that is a protection against Israel, if anything ever goes wrong, right? But now the United States is like, well, Israel can do whatever he wants. It can even bomb a country that we formally are supposed to protect
Starting point is 02:07:28 or informant supposed to protect. we have our base there. And the system apparently doesn't even get activated when the Israelis do it. So what are you doing that scenario? Well, you start to realize you can't have all your security eggs in one basket. You need to diversify. You can't completely rely on the US. So a couple of weeks later, announcement that there's a pact between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan and Pakistan will provide Saudi Arabia with a nuclear umbrella. With a nuclear umbrella? because the Pakistanis have nuclear weapons. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 02:08:00 Right? At the same time, you start to think, well, if our alliance with the United States doesn't protect us against Israel, then we need to find some new constellation in the region that can balance against Israel. And now, as a result, now you see the Turks, the Saudis, to certain extent, perhaps even the Qataris and the Pakistanis, coming together. And it's not because they want to have an enmity with Israel, but they need to have their own security.
Starting point is 02:08:28 And they feel that Israel right now is unhinged. The U.S. is allowing it to do almost what he wants, even though you're right. After they did this, after they did this, the entire region went to Trump and complained. And as a result, they had that rebuke, and they even had Netanyahu called the Emir from the Oval Office reading from a written apology.
Starting point is 02:08:53 And in the back of that room, I don't know if you noticed, there's a Qatari diplomat. sitting in the Oval Office to also observe it from this side of the telephone. No other American president has ever done this to Israel, to the best of my knowledge. There's a huge difference between Trump and Biden in the sense that I think a lot of things that Trump is doing right now in terms of border peace, et cetera, is also highly, highly problematic. But we saw no pressure from Biden at all on Israel after October 7th, just nothing. Now, where does Iran fit in all of this?
Starting point is 02:09:29 Well, Iran is not part of that constellation formally between Saudi, Pakistan, Turkey. But informally, it is a buffer between Israel and these states. If there is a war and the United States completely defeats Iran, the Israelis bomb Iran, it's either chaos or a very weakened Iran, or perhaps even at a pre-year-old, pro-Israel puppets that is installed in Iran. From the standpoint of these countries who otherwise have no love for the Islamic Republic and have no reason to have love for Islamic Republic,
Starting point is 02:10:06 it's actually a very bad development because this then strengthens the Israeli position vis-a-vis them. They see Israel now. They explicitly say that Israel is seeking regional hegemony. And Iran is a buffer between them and the Israelis here. And this is part of the reason why these states have taken such a strong position
Starting point is 02:10:26 and trying to prevent the war that is being, that we're marching towards right now. It's not just because of the instability that's there. It's not just because of a risk of a civil war spilling over. That's there. It's not just because of the refugee flows, that's there. But that was always there at a moment when some of them even were in favor of a war. The reason why they're all now against the war is because of this new geopolitical scenario that has been created in which they need Ivan as a buffer, not as a partner, not an ally, but as a buffer.
Starting point is 02:10:56 Almost like the hostage negotiator in a way. You know, like in those old westerns where one side sends a guy to just sit with the other side while they're actually over here negotiating. And that guy is just like playing cards. But if it goes bad, he gets shot. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's kind of like Iran's that. That's interesting. Yeah, not to make light of it.
Starting point is 02:11:22 I know that is obviously extremely personal. But nonetheless, that's, that's, I didn't realize that scenario at all. That's why I bring in people like you. I learned this stuff. You got your finger on the pulse. But what, you know, I got off that there's, there's something I did want to go back to at at the initial history. You had said, you remember the conversation you had with your dad when you said goodbye to him
Starting point is 02:11:45 when he was going back. Yeah, we were out to the airport. Did you have, I mean, you're four and a half years old. Did you have any concept whatsoever of what he was doing? No, not then. Not at all. I mean, look, it's very important to make distinction between economic refugees and political refugees. If you're an economic refugee, or refugee might be the wrong word, but if you're migrating to another country for economic reasons, you're actually deliberately trying to start a new life in another country.
Starting point is 02:12:18 You're going there, you are consciously saying goodbye to the old country, and you're openly embracing the new country. Ellis Island. Exactly, exactly. I mean, they're coming in. They're Americans. They come up because they want to be Americans. When you're a political refugee, you're involuntarily leaving a place, and oftentimes, mentally, you're still there, and you're just waiting with a suitcase packed underneath your bed to go back, right? Because you didn't come to this place to actually stay. You didn't come here to make a new life. You came here temporarily because the situation is bad, and then you're planning your return. When you have that mentality, I think one of the things that comes with it is that both me and my brother who's two years older than me, you know, we weren't just, we weren't told, oh, we're going to be here forever. You know, we were told explicitly, you know, this is just something we have to do. We're going to go back to Iran. Because that was the plan. That was the intent. It didn't end up happening that way at all. And it's been 47 years now. But given that, you actually become much more.
Starting point is 02:13:24 more aware of what is going around. Add to that another aspect that is perhaps a bit unique to Sweden. So Sweden was extremely generous in terms of having a very open policy for refugees. So it was a very open country, took in a lot of refugees from countries that had wars. So the folks I grew up with in what was then essentially the immigrant ghettos of Sweden were from Chile who had fled 1973 because of the coup against Allende, which also incidentally, a CIA coup, that one too. Well, you know, one in Rome. In Rome, the West Romans.
Starting point is 02:14:05 Other refugees from other war zones. All of us had similar stories. So that was a normal thing. You know, so we were not like the different ones. And as a result, we kind of kept it below the the radar. Everyone had stories like this. Everyone had fled some sort of a war. So it was just a very natural thing. So it wasn't hush, hush. It wasn't something that was kept away from you because everyone else in your surrounding, whether they were Iranians or Chileans or from whatever other country they were, had the same story more or less. As you were growing up, did you, I mean, first of all, do you remember anything from Iran? I do. And it's interesting enough, I apparently remember more than my brother who's a year and a half, two years older than me. So I have a lot of
Starting point is 02:14:50 vivid memories from about two and a half. And I remember very vividly, my dad had left before us to just settle, make everything clear in Sweden before we came. And things got really bad in Iran. And we had to go to the embassy several times. And my mom had to bring me with them because couldn't get the documents unless I was present,
Starting point is 02:15:13 even though I was just four years old. And I remember, you know, the soldiers. I remember we were shot at at one point. and, you know, more in the air, I think, to disperse the crowd. And I got separated from my mother at one point, et cetera. I don't remember exactly how he got reunited. But yes, I remember because it was a lot of traumatic things that happened. Again, don't want to overplay it.
Starting point is 02:15:36 People have had way worse stories than this, but I do remember it. As you were growing up, though, you know, because it's impossible for me to relate to a situation like this. So when I have conversations like this, it's another, like, important reminder. of like how happy I am to be born where I was born. It's like went in the lottery. You know, we didn't, we haven't had to deal with this kind of stuff here. And, and, you know, that's such a lucky thing. But as you're growing up and you only have limited memories and you were only in Iran for a short time and your reality is you're growing up in Sweden and you're growing up around a lot
Starting point is 02:16:13 of different people from a lot of different places as well. Was there, you know, did you naturally develop a real yearning and feeling about your Iranian roots? Or was that something also your parents kind of had to like ingrain in you and remind you of what that was because they understood it fully? So it goes back. I think it's a great question. I think it's also something that might be useful for your audience because the United States is truly very different in this sense than growing up in Europe. And I don't want to knock Sweden and had a fantastic upbringing. There's a great country. But it is very different. First of all, going to do. back to what I said, because we were not economic migrants, we were involuntarily leaving and
Starting point is 02:16:58 had no plans to stay. The Iranian identity was actually very strong because there was no active effort to become sweets. That wasn't the plan. There was no reason to do that. In fact, I don't think I even applied for Swedish citizenship until 15 years after having lived in Sweden, even though I probably could have after a couple of years. So that was partly, but there's also another aspect I think which is the difference between Europe and the United States. I came here as an exchange student in 1991 and I had visited the US several times, loved the US, had family members who lived there. And it was quite an eye-opener for me because you step in, you step off the plane. Not only do you feel like an American, you're treated like an American, right? Now I have Middle East and features
Starting point is 02:17:47 and I can tell you in Belmont County, Ohio, that was quite unusual. But still, it wasn't like, oh, it must be because you're a foreigner. I mean, you were not treated differently. But my features in blonde, blue-eye Sweden really stick out, right? And you were never really treated, at least not when I was growing up as a suite. You were always treated as if you were an outsider. Not necessarily in a hostile way, but nevertheless, it was always there. Things may have changed by I haven't been in Sweden or lived in Sweden for 25 years.
Starting point is 02:18:20 It may have changed. But it meant that for us who grew up there, at least in that generation, we kind of felt rejected by Swedish society. We were outside society, which then meant that we then kind of embraced our other identity even stronger as a result. And I noticed that when coming into the U.S. and meeting other Iranians here, et cetera, that I felt like, okay, they clearly had something different. They had a very strong American identity. You would not have found that in Sweden with a lot of people having, a lot of Iranians,
Starting point is 02:18:55 having a very strong Swedish identity, at least not back when I grew up. Maybe changed now because time has passed, et cetera. But there is something about this country that really embraces you, at least when I came here, I can't speak about recent folks that have arrived, and the sense that you're actually automatically assumed to be American in a way that never was the case.
Starting point is 02:19:15 And those are some of the facts that actually led to a stronger identity because you were rejected by that one so you double down on the other one. And that's also a great point because we take that for granted here. You know, outside the studio, I have a picture of Bill the Butcher
Starting point is 02:19:33 from gangs of New York. Yeah, yeah, yeah. See that movie? Yeah. So I think about that a lot because that takes place in like the Civil War years in America in New York City
Starting point is 02:19:44 where there was much more of like one kind of Anglo identity in America. It's just before the immigration surge starts. Yeah. And they would recognize the Irish as like outsiders. You're not from here. And it's just crazy to think about, especially in New York, like around zero for this. 20 years later, you have people from every country around the world coming in, which has created this melting pot, which I think is a beautiful thing in this country to the point that when people come here and are like excited to be here and become a part of society and all that. Like there's a lot of places that are like, oh, cool.
Starting point is 02:20:21 It's just normal because we don't have that. I'm not even blaming the sweet. It's like they know one identity. Yeah, exactly. To their defense, there were never any major refugee flows to that northern part of the world until about 50 years ago. Yeah. So the type of cultural traits that you develop when you are a melting pot or when you're
Starting point is 02:20:41 a country like Iran that had the Silk Road go through it and you had armies from 50 different directions coming in and out, just creates a different type of culture. But if you're kind of isolated up in the north, you can't blame them for not necessarily having that naturally. Can I ask you, are you Irish or Italian? Or both? Both. Both, okay. 50, 50, 50. 50, okay. You're in New Jersey. It's on brand, you know what I mean? Normal thing. Yeah, yeah, that's funny. You asked that. But what you... So I was kind of both right. Yes, absolutely. Another thing I've been thinking all day, I forgot to ask you, like, Since 1989, it's been Kamei, who's been the Supreme Leader.
Starting point is 02:21:18 I want to get to that in a minute. Komeni, the original Ayatollah until 1989, who came in and did the revolution. What made him so charismatic and drew people to him other than him, you know, yelling Shah bad? Well, because he yelled much more than that. Yeah. First of all, one thing that oftentimes is not understood in the United States, So it's understood, it's just not known, is that these Ayatollahs have written like 50 books.
Starting point is 02:21:50 You don't become an Ayatollah without having like huge, I mean, similar to like a pope, right? Are they good? I haven't read a single once, I won't judge. But they don't go up in ranks just random, right? I mean, same thing with the Pope. You have to have a tremendous amount of, frankly, scholarly work in order to be able to advance to that position.
Starting point is 02:22:13 And one of the things he had done is that he had developed a theory that is called Velayete Fari, a completely different political system in which you have a spiritual leader and Ayatollah at the top. And there were a lot of different lines of political thinking back in the 60s and 70s during, within the opposition. You had some people who also wanted to some sort of a return back to Islam, but it was more of a politicalist. or it's a different approach to it. Then you had the leftists who were more on the Marxist side, they didn't really give much space to religion, et cetera. But he emerges as someone who is extremely strong, principled, one of the first to really call out the Shah.
Starting point is 02:23:03 Several Ayatollahs were actually kind of collaborating with the Shah that had kind of been co-opted or bought. I mean, they were not naturally opposed, I mean, at the end of the day, so it's important to understand that. But he's just relentless in his criticism. When the U.S. signs the SOFA agreement with Iran-1963, the status of forces agreement,
Starting point is 02:23:21 which essentially puts U.S. personnel in Iran above Iranian law. That's what the SOFA agreements do. I mean, this is what the Obama administration wanted in Iraq, didn't manage to get it because the Iranians intervened and pushed Iraqis not to sign it. And that actually ultimately helped Obama withdraw troops from Iraq because if U.S. troops were going to be treated on the Iraqi law, you know, it doesn't make occupation that attractive any longer.
Starting point is 02:23:46 Right. Right. The Shah signed that thing, and he just went at the Shah, saying that, you know, this Shah is the American Shah. He's a servant of the Americans. This is not a nationalist Shah, et cetera. So he increasingly emerges, even though he had his huge critics
Starting point is 02:24:03 and a lot of different folks that were against him very much, as the one that just is this type of uncompromising, Ayatollah against the Shah that kind of exudes the type of strength people wanted. And by the way, it's also important to understand. He held his cards very tight. He did not reveal really what he was planning to do.
Starting point is 02:24:24 Look at some of those revolutionary demonstrations against the Shah. The women did not have the hijab on. In fact, it took another six months before he actually pushed that through. And there were massive protests against that. So what he promised would come is not at all what the Islamic Republic
Starting point is 02:24:39 became. the leftists in a lot of cases absolutely absolutely now what you said like six months right there as an example of when he after he came in and started now saying like oh by the way we're doing jobs and hardcore like Islamic law but when would you say the majority of society how long before the majority of society had quietly silently I might say turned against him was that within a year or two or did that take a decade? Look, the Islamic Republic had huge problems
Starting point is 02:25:17 from the beginning. You know, you had opposition groups that were pushed out. But then you also had Saddam Hussein invading the country. And in many ways, it ended up becoming a blessing. A blessing. Yes. Because the country completely rallies around the flag.
Starting point is 02:25:33 What's most important is to expel the invader. Common enemy. Common enemy. and in many ways it postponed a lot of the other internal contradictions of the Islamic Republic for a decade almost. It's not clear to me at all that the Islamic Republic would have survived by 1982 had it not been for Saddam's invasion. And so by the time the war ends, you both have a devastated country, a revolution that is a complete failure. because it's not delivered.
Starting point is 02:26:12 You know, I mean, Yvonne is in ruins after that war. But you also have people who now have invested so heavily in this. It's not just a revolution. Their children died defending the country, right? So amongst the supporters of the Islamic Republic, the war profoundly deepened their support because they had now sacrificed so much for it. it was just so much more difficult to walk away from something.
Starting point is 02:26:40 He had such a high sunk cost. By the end of that decade, something else had changed. First of all, Khomeini was not gone. So there was politics in Iran in a different way. Because Khomey did not replace Khomeini as that type of an unquestioned ruler. Oh, he didn't. He was actually quite weak. He didn't even have the religious credentials fully.
Starting point is 02:27:03 He wasn't an Ayatollah at the time that he was elevated to that position. Oh, I didn't know that. was a rank below. He was a compromise candidate at the end of the day. And the elements that were pushing for him did so because they thought that they could take advantage of him because he was weaker. Over time, it turned out to be the other way around. He actually grew, really consolidated his own power. But he was constantly challenged. And by the end of the 1990s, 1997, something happened that was really a shock. There was an election, the presidential elections. And this former head of the state library and a minister of culture of the rafsanjani government
Starting point is 02:27:44 decides that he's throwing his hat in the ring that guardian council that i mentioned allowed him to probably thinking that he won't win but it will give the air of legitimacy for the elections and perhaps even push up uh voter participation uh without obviously undermining the favored conservative but no instead you had i think 79 percent border participation and the guy overwhelmingly won in the first round and he was because he's a reformist and he was saying that you know the system has to reform has to change and that's the beginning of that reform movement that now essentially is more or less dead how did they kill it as we talked earlier on uh they failed in many different ways but Also, in my view, in my book, the Trump administration walking out of the JCPIA killed the one critical achievement they had that was the key to the other achievements.
Starting point is 02:28:50 Few people thought that, I mean, if you listen to the conventional wisdom in Washington, some of the criticism against the negotiation was like, the Iranians will never negotiate. Well, then the Iranians showed up and they were like, well, they will never negotiate honestly. Well, progress may was made. Well, they will never agree to a deal. just not possible for the Islamic Republic to agree to a deal. Then they agreed to a deal. They were like, well, they're never going to actually live up to the agreement. They will cheat. Well, 14 reports by the IEA, who was the body that was inspecting the adherence to the agreement to say that they were doing everything they had to do. Several reports by the U.S. State Department twice under the Trump administration itself certifying that the Iranians were living up to the agreement.
Starting point is 02:29:33 People thought this was impossible, but it was possible. But it was possible. But it was. was key to then unlocking the economic disaster that Iran was in and be able to, as I mentioned, strengthen the middle class, slowly but surely grow. And over time, Iran could have imperfectly in a way that is not perhaps in any way, should perform identical, but move kind of like China. China still has a communist party, but there's nothing communist about the Chinese economic system at all in any way, should perform. It's a complete market economy.
Starting point is 02:30:05 But the government controls all the government controls exactly. So you don't have that type of a political liberalization. So that is one path that some people wanted to go. And other elements from the reformists didn't believe that that was ever possible in Yvonne, that they could not be such a thing as economic liberalization without the political liberalization following suit. But as long as there's no economic liberalization, the options, the opportunities, the chances, the window for the political liberalization also just completely close. Yeah, I didn't realize the timeline was that long, by the way,
Starting point is 02:30:43 because when you said this reform election happened in 1997, I'm assuming that that was a different reform than you were talking about earlier, and you're saying it's the same thing. It's the same movement. And, you know, in 1998, a year after, or just months into his election, he gives his presidency, Khatami gives this historic interview to Christian Amonpur of CNN. herself half Iranian, grew up in Iran, half-Iranian,
Starting point is 02:31:09 in which he says that the wall of mistrust between the United States and Iran needs to be tear down. And he wants to have a dialogue. He quotes Alex de Tocqueville and knows a lot about US history, etc. And there was actually quite a lot of excitement in the Clinton administration at the time as well, that, okay, this is great, let's pursue this. And then because of problems on the Iranian side, they actually don't go down the path in the manner that they could have and should have,
Starting point is 02:31:39 they did some things. When the United States suffered from 9-11, not too far away from here, and it became clear that this was done by Al-Qaeda, and this was planned out of, well, it was partly planned out of Afghanistan with the Taliban government giving al-Qaeda space to be there.
Starting point is 02:32:02 the Iranians had already been in indirect war with the Taliban for about seven and eight years. The Iranians were the ones that were arming and training the Northern Alliance and standing up against the Taliban taking over the entire country. So the U.S. actually deals with Iran. And there's both during the war in which the Iranians were complaining to the U.S. that you're not bombing the right places in Afghanistan. While incidentally, Ayatollah Khomeini was giving Friday speeches, condemning the United States for bombing another Muslim country.
Starting point is 02:32:35 So the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, double games in politics, you know, you have to just understand that they're there. But then after the Taliban was defeated, the much tougher task came, which was, okay, how do we make sure that Afghanistan is stable and there has a new government and a new constitution? Then the Bush administration and the Iranian government completely coordinated the bond conference in Germany that got the Afghan government, Afghan groups together and got them to finally agree to a new constitution that established the Karzai government. And the US actually didn't have the relations or the trust with any of
Starting point is 02:33:13 the Afghan parties from the Northern Alliance. Yvonne had them. And according to Jim Dobbins, the late Jim Dobbins, who was Reagan's, sorry, who was George W. Bush's representative there and led the negotiations, none of this was possible had it not been for the help that the Iranians gave the United States at the time. And the Iranians did so as part of the reform project, the calculation being if Iran shows itself to be strategically useful to United States over here, then that can pave the way for an opening between the U.S. and Iran on other issues. What the Iranians didn't know was that the Bush administrations had made a decision. It was called Hadley Rule in the NSC, which was that within the war on terror, it was permissible
Starting point is 02:33:59 for the United States to collaborate with an enemy state tactically, but not allow that tactical collaboration translate into a strategic change in relations, meaning you work with them, but not with the intent of actually improving relations. You're not allowing this. So six weeks, six weeks, about six weeks after the Bonn Conference, five weeks. Bonn Conference was December 10, 2001, January, state of the union speech of George W. Bush, I think, was in last week of January. Remember what he said in that speech? He said there is an axis of evil. Iran, North Korea and Iran. So after all of that collaboration,
Starting point is 02:34:46 the Iranians got themselves into the axes of evil. And then he had another down. So look, there's been this dance up and down. There's been moments where the US actually have done tremendous outreach and the Iranis have not responded or they've betrayed their words. And there's been the opposite. The biggest one, though, the one that actually is a written negotiated agreement was the JCPI. Now, what is the balance of power? I don't know if you can put a percentage on it. Oh, yeah, Dave.
Starting point is 02:35:12 Can we get water? Sorry about that. Thanks, man. I don't know if you can put percentages on each part, but like what is the balance of power, you would say in the government, meaning you have the Supreme Leader, you have the president, and then I'm going to combine a lot of things. you have the legislative body. Like, you know, does the Supreme Leader have 70% say the president's got 20 and
Starting point is 02:35:35 legislators got 10 or does it vary? It varies with the individuals. The current president by design does not even want to have much. He's just want to work in tandem with the Supreme Leader. So he's really not a particularly important figure. The previous president was the one before him, unfortunately was as well. and that was Ahmadinejad, who did all kinds of crazy things. So, it worries.
Starting point is 02:36:00 It's not a very set system in the sense that the institutions are crucial. The institutions are there, not unimportant, but the personalities within the institutions are even more important. And we are now in a situation in which Chominee, the Supreme Leader, has managed to really wrap everything around his finger. Right. That's what it feels like. Yeah, and he is in a much, much stronger position than he was 10 years ago.
Starting point is 02:36:29 And this is part of the reason why, again, why there's a belief that the reform project failed. And if you're a young Iranian, right, like, if we weren't a 20-year-olds, I totally understand what they're like, we don't bother with reform. We saw it fail for 20 years. Why would we waste another 20 years on that? No, no, we want revolution and we want it now. We're going to do what our, not parents, but perhaps our grandparents,
Starting point is 02:36:52 They didn't just ask for revolution instead of asking for reform. Right. Totally understand that. If you have 60 years ahead of your life and this reform process hasn't gone anywhere, it's totally understandable. They were like, no, we don't have time for this. We need change right now. But it's interesting that like when even like Netanyahu will give a speech as it relates directly to Iran and there's all kinds obviously like blocks that they put on the internet and stuff.
Starting point is 02:37:16 But when I guess like the Israelis and Americans work to get speeches like that into the country that people can see it, you'll hear about numbers, like 20 million Iranians tune into this speech just because it's one issue, like, oh, well, he wants to overthrow the regime, and we want that too. So, like, you know the impetus for it is there, but I want to take a step back to the 2002 protests for a minute because I remember... 22. I'm sorry, 22. I remember, like, I was doing this show during that time. I was talking to some people about this, like, this feels a little different. And then it kind of died. off. So just starting there for a second. Why did that, why did that not go through? And how on the
Starting point is 02:37:58 ground was like CIA and Mossad at the time, I assume obviously not enough? So look, the first thing I think one has to remember when look, and I'm not an expert on revolutions. My brother actually is a researcher on this topic and knows much more than me. First thing you have to accept. Revolutions are extremely rare and they're extremely rare. for good reason. It is not enough just to be angry. It's not enough to have a huge amount of people being really, really angry. That in and of itself does not bring about a revolution.
Starting point is 02:38:36 It is oftentimes a necessary requirement, but it is not a sufficient requirement. You have a tremendous amount of anger, and you did have that in 2022. And it's perhaps important to go back. You had this Iranian woman who was visiting Tehran from her own hometown. gets called in by the morality police, accusing her of not having worn her hijab properly, and then ends up getting killed in custody.
Starting point is 02:39:10 Different stories, the police said there was an accident, but clearly she was beating up one way or another, and she was killed, died. And it just captured the country's imagination because she didn't die right away. she was hospitalized in a coma. And people were following that story and they were very upset about this happening
Starting point is 02:39:29 and then she passes. And then you have protests that are starting to bubble up in several different places, but it looks very different from 2009 and other protests. First of all, these ones were also more middle class, whereas in 2017, you had more of the poorer classes
Starting point is 02:39:48 really rising up. So this was not as economically driven at all. This was clearly more political. but this was the first time that the protest is really, well, not the first time, but at least from the middle class, to really come out protests and completely reject the reformists. They were not looking towards the reformist leaders as their options, as their candidates. They were like, no, no, no. We're saying no to all of you.
Starting point is 02:40:13 We don't care if you're reformist or if you are in the middle or if you are a hardliner. To us, you're all the same. Burn it down, kind of. Burn it down. Exactly. And we're not going to fall from their perspective, from the lie of thinking, oh, if we work with the reformers, that's how we get changed. We haven't seen that work out. So we just want the entire political structure to be overthrown.
Starting point is 02:40:34 But that then also meant that they didn't have political leaders. Because the political leaders that were still tolerated within the system were the ones who were on the reformers. I'm many of them in prison, but nevertheless, they were still within that framework somewhere somehow. But if you're saying no, we're actually going for people who don't want the system at all whatsoever. And they don't want it to reform, want it to replace. Then those leaders are not out in the open. And without leadership, it's very difficult to channel the immense energy that existed in the system, in the society, to pressure the government. And in these situations, you actually end up negotiating with the government to get rid of it, or what you're going to.
Starting point is 02:41:20 whatever the end result is. But they couldn't do that because they didn't have leadership. And there were justifications for us saying, you know, it's better not to have, we're going to have a leaderless revolution. There's no such thing. Because what happens is that there is a leadership vacuum. And that leadership vacuum ended up to a large extent being filled by elements on the outside. And those elements, most of them from the outset, pursued a different agenda.
Starting point is 02:41:48 Yes, they agreed on the core thing. No more reform. Just get rid of the system as a whole. But look what they were also calling for. They were calling for more sanctions on Iran. I didn't see a single protest back then asking for more sanctions. The population has suffered tremendously from sanctions. And you can hate the regime immensely.
Starting point is 02:42:08 Max, you still hate the sanctions. You're not seeing the sanctions helping you. But they were pushing for sanctions. They were pushing for Iran to get kicked out of the World Cup in soccer. one of the few elements of joy that the population still have. Again, I never saw anyone inside in a meaningful numbers
Starting point is 02:42:27 but I didn't frankly see anyone call for that. So you had elements on the outside exiled opposition groups. Many of them have being away from Iran for 40 years. Pushing, taking advantage of that leadership vacuum. In my view, and I'll get shit for it in your comment section, I don't think any of them frankly have shown themselves to be democratic.
Starting point is 02:42:50 And part of the reason why that is crucial is not just because you need to show your democratic behavior to win support from inside the country and get defections, but it's also something you need to do to build coalitions. There was an effort to build a coalition. They got six of them together at Georgetown University. Within five weeks, they were fighting each other at each other's throats. And it was an embarrassment. And it actually really disillusioned.
Starting point is 02:43:15 a lot of the people inside the country that were hoping that the diaspora would be able to do something useful. You've got to be able to agree. Yeah. But if you don't, if you're, if you've spent your 45 years in the United States and you haven't picked up any democratic line of thinking. Yeah. Then you're not an answer.
Starting point is 02:43:33 You're part of the problem in my view. I think you're right about that. I mean, it's one thing if you say that someone grew up in a terrible dictatorial, communist, whatever type of a system, and you're not surrounded with it. I'm not saying our democracy is perfect and sure as hell. It has a lot of issues right now and I'm very worried. But nevertheless, it's a democratic system with flaws like all of them do. And if you've been here for that long and not picked up from that,
Starting point is 02:43:59 then you must have almost actively tried to not become more democratic. And that's unfortunately the reality. And it's, you know, it's not an insult from my end. It's just an assessment because if it was, that coalition would have ended up working out. didn't. It didn't even last five weeks. And now you have all of the, I don't know if you've seen in some of these protests that are taking place outside the country with different opposition figures or groupings, actually fighting each other, et cetera. This is very demoralizing for people inside of Iran who are not in a democratic system. Right. And we're hoping that people who actually
Starting point is 02:44:32 have the maneuverability be able to take that with far greater responsibility than what we've seen. Now, obviously, so that, the one in 2020, that is a great explanation, by the way. of how that goes away. But we're now seeing some of those same patterns, unfortunately, outside of Iran not having solved themselves. But before we get to just these protests that are happening right now real quickly, obviously there was something very important that you alluded to earlier that happened in June where the United States got involved with hitting Florida
Starting point is 02:45:04 and some of these other facilities. But my understanding is that this was precipitated, the ability to do this and the initial strikes before that that Israel carried out is because Mossad was able to get a lot of assets on the ground. You know, I would think that Iran and the IRGC are, you know, almost like 1984 looking for any type of Israeli influence that could be happening in their society. How were they able to get so many different agents available to get them intelligence to pull off, you know, I have to say, it was very well executed strikes? So it's a very important question because the Israeli intelligence penetration of Iran is beyond anything anyone had envisioned or expected. It took, I think, everyone might by surprise.
Starting point is 02:45:57 It certainly must have taken the Iranian government by surprise. Because if they knew this, then it's even more incompetence. The first absolutely essential circumstance is that you have to have a very large, critical mass of people that are so upset and angry and pissed off at the government that they're willing to consider it because you need to have a huge number of people that have that sentiment to get a very small number of them to be willing to be flipped right right of those that huge amount probably not even 97% would you be even willing to consider it but to make sure that that 3 000 that 3% is large enough that you actually could make the connections and everything else
Starting point is 02:46:42 else, the original pool has to be very large. And that then comes back to the Iranian government. Their treatment of the people have just been so poor. They have produced people willing to be assets for a foreign government inside their own, including actually helping them militarily. So this is ultimately on the Iranian government itself. And in the meantime, incidentally, I have to say, I've not been able to go back to Iran. I can't go back.
Starting point is 02:47:12 They made it very clear I would be taken. I would be accused of being a CIA spy if I go to Iran. And you see all of these dual citizen Iranians who have been taken. So they go after them. Whereas in reality, there's just been this massive penetration. So there's the intelligence failure on the Iranian side is far beyond the Israeli intelligence failure on October 7th. And so the Israelis themselves have openly spoken about how they've done some of these things.
Starting point is 02:47:42 I'm just going to repeat to you what I've read. This is not my area of expertise. I'm not an intelligence person in any shape of form. And I'll also start off by saying, I don't know if this is what they're saying publicly because it's true or if it's actually part of the communications, sorry, the psychological warfare between them. But what is said there is that the Mossad has various different ways
Starting point is 02:48:04 of winning people over. And it's a long process. It starts off with small things that they asked them to do by offering them favors. The two most common ones, if I remember correctly, is someone has a family member that needs medical help. They offer to be able to take that person out of the country for treatment in Switzerland or whatever. That's one. The other one promise of making sure you get into a good Canadian or American or other Western University.
Starting point is 02:48:34 And that way you went over some young people. But even then, the success rate, I don't know what it is, but it's not so that everyone that they try, they succeed. was probably relatively low. But the pool has to be large. Yeah, they're throwing a lot of fish hooks out there. And a lot of them have their own motivation. They have been so mistreated by the Islamic Republic. This is revenge.
Starting point is 02:48:52 They think that they're doing, in their mind, they're doing something very patriotic. In my view, I understand that they think so. I don't think so because I think there's a larger geopolitical dimension in which these are rival states. And Israel is not looking out for Iran's best interest. And Iran is not looking out for any of the, you know, there's plenty of Israelis
Starting point is 02:49:11 that are also being caught spying for Iran in Israel. Really? Oh, yes, absolutely. Nowhere near what Israelis have managed to do in Iran. But there's a lot of that as well. And they may think that they're being patriarch. I have no idea what they're thinking. But bottom line, Iran is not looking for Israel's best interest,
Starting point is 02:49:29 nor is Israel looking for Iran's best. It's just not the way it's a game. Yeah, I mean, geopolitics is not a game of charity. Right. It's a game of competition. But anyways, they're so upset in their view, the only real enemy is Islamic Republic's they're willing going this direction. What the Israeli story is, is that they extracted a lot of
Starting point is 02:49:46 these people out of the country, trained them, and then three days before the attacked, they slipped them back in. How? Through border, Iran's borders are massive. Just the border with Iraq and Kurdistan is very, very long mountainous, tremendous amount of smuggling taking place, very, very difficult to keep safe. Same thing is true of the border to the east. They get them back, in and then as the war starts they have whatever orders etc but what we saw happening there is that a lot of the attacks actually were not done by Israeli F-35s or American F-30s flown by Israelis getting into Iranian airspace they were either outside of Iranian airspace and shooting their missiles or these cells had smuggled in
Starting point is 02:50:36 components of drones had spent the three days assembling them inside the country and the attacks actually took place from inside the country. We saw the Ukrainians pull that off in deep in Russia as well. Those drones did not fly from Ukraine to Russia deep in. They were smuggled in, assembled, and then flown a short distance from within Russia. Same thing was done, but probably on a much larger scale by Israelis inside of Iran using Iranian defectors. To get this many though and to be able to flip people, I mean, I'd say it's pretty safe to say, no pun intended, that means that Massad has been able to develop plenty of their own undercover people
Starting point is 02:51:19 within the country and have safe houses within Iran. Even before all of this, they did this. In fact, it's kind of interesting. The Israelis had the best intelligence in Iran back during the time of the Shah. Yeah, they knew what was happening. They knew what was happening. And the reason for this was the Shah was very untrusting of the United States, did not allow the CIA to roam around freely. It was a very limited number of people the CIA could be in touch with.
Starting point is 02:51:48 It's part of the reason why the U.S. actually was really taken by surprise by the depth of unhappiness and was taken by surprise by the revolution as a whole. The Israeli source of intelligence was not spies. It was at the time 110,000 strong Iranian Jewish community. who traveled extensively back and forth between Israel and Iran. And as a result, had a much better sense of what was going on inside the country. It's very interesting.
Starting point is 02:52:20 When the revolution happened, the Israelis knew this. They saw it coming. They warned the U.S. They didn't take it seriously. Didn't listen. And there is a scene I described in my first book on Iran and Israel.
Starting point is 02:52:34 The head of Mossad in Israel, in Iran. He was usually actually stationed in Iraq for an operation that the Iranians and the Israelis were conducting against Iraq at the time. His name is Eliezer Zafir. He just passed away 92 or 93 years old a couple of days ago, actually. He and the defense attache go out to Tehran at Ozzi Square
Starting point is 02:53:05 the day when homani returns to the country and you probably have two million people out in the streets they blend in they're i i don't know for certain but i think they're sephartic jews so i mean they're they're they're they're they're blend of middle east and background so they can blend in and uh they were just going there and you know trying to make sure that they didn't stick out in any way shape or form and at one point a revolutionary comes to them and asked them why don't you have any signs with the picture of Khomeini. And they're like, well, give us. So they get these signs with Khomeini's pictures,
Starting point is 02:53:42 and they're sitting there chanting, long live Khomeini and death to Israel. And this is done by the head of Mossad in Iran at the time. They have those cells. They clearly do. It would be malpractice for them not to. This is what states do. The degree of it, again, took everyone by surprise.
Starting point is 02:54:03 But this is also part of the reason why, when we see this element, violent element, amongst the protest in January 8, etc., yes, the Iranians always blame Israel or the US, and they say that Israel was behind every protest that have taken place, sure. So obviously cannot just go by that. But when you have a scenario in which the Israelis are openly admitting on Israeli TV, that they're there, that they train the people, et cetera, when you have the former head of the CIA, Mike Pompeii, Pao, tweet the same thing, say, good luck to every Iranian protester and every Mossad agent standing next to them. Now, we have to recognize two potential scenarios. Scenario one, it's true.
Starting point is 02:54:50 They're doing it, and because of the June operations, they don't even bother to try to hide it any longer, right? Or two, and it could be both. Two, this is exaggerated or perhaps even entirely false, but it's part of the psychological warfare between Iran and Israel. And as a result, they say that. But at a minimum as an analyst, it's probably both. Probably both, exactly. But at a minimum, as an analyst, you can't completely dismiss the likelihood that this is happening
Starting point is 02:55:19 just because the Iranian government is saying. Because now the Israeli government is saying it as well. So at least you have to entertain that that likelihood is probably not terribly small. It's actually interesting when you talk about going back to when the Shah was deposed you ever read ronanen bergman's book rising kill first he talks about that about they were like hey guys this is not going well the u.s is like everything's fine and then they're like oh shit whoops that's interesting and you know there were people at the u.s embassy that were sending warnings yeah and those cables were hidden they were not allowed they were stopped they were not allowed to get all the way to
Starting point is 02:55:58 the top and 144 you know there's a a new book um forgot what it's called called a historian he wrote it. Very important new information, a lot of in-depth interviews with some of those people at the embassy at the time. Oral history. If you get it after, send it to me. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I have the book.
Starting point is 02:56:18 I have in my Kindle. I'll find it for you. Cool. Well, where do we go from here, Trita, with what's currently happening? I have to head to the airport. That's what I'm saying. We're coming right to the end. Where do we go from here with the current 2026 protests?
Starting point is 02:56:33 like what kind of information are we even able to get out of the country to see what's real and what's not and like is this potentially a moment where there's enough cream rise into the top that you could see this thing explode from within i don't think there will be an explosion from within and now of course this is a scenario in which you don't have war and things like that taking place i do think however that the Islamic Republic is increasingly a dead man walking. There's obviously those who are, you know, supportive of the regime and there still are. But I think every time things like this happen, including 2022, by the way, in which a lot of conservatives were like, we want the hijab, but we don't want it to be mandatory.
Starting point is 02:57:22 Why on earth are we having a big fight over this? Weakening the country, opening it up for attack, all of these different things, for manipulation, by having the civil war over this issue. This is ridiculous. So I do think that every time this happens and what happened this time around is worse than anything else in terms of, you know, five to seven thousand deaths, perhaps more.
Starting point is 02:57:44 I mean, this is just unprecedented. And I think that further just kills amongst their own supporters and their own supporters are already very small. I mean, we're talking about a regime that probably is in place because roughly 15 to perhaps 20% of the population supported, not more. But then you have a plurality who want to see change, but not at any cost. They do not want to see a repeat of 1979.
Starting point is 02:58:10 And then you have a growing minority, perhaps a plurality at this point, but I think a growing minority who are of the view, no, this is intolerable at any cost. And this is the thing we've seen now lately. We didn't see it. Even in 2022, we didn't see that. We didn't see any calls for military intervention, for instance, in 2022, from inside the country. You do now. It's impossible for me in making an assessment how if that's a majority, polarity, whatever,
Starting point is 02:58:38 but you have that now in a way that was just simply not the case before. So I think over time, every time we do this, and this is the worst thing they've done, they actually erode the legitimacy, not amongst the larger population. They don't have much of that to begin with, but even amongst those who actually support it. And so this is not tenable in any way, shape, or form. But in my view, it's never been tenable. I never thought the Islamic Republic could survive. The question has always been, how does it fall?
Starting point is 02:59:05 And does it fall in a way that actually paves the way for democracy? Or does it fall in a way that paves away for another dictatorship, or even worse, the civil war, et cetera? That question is still unanswered. If you were a betting man, do you think in the next five years you'll set foot in Iran? I would put it this way. I think within the next five years, this could. current iteration of the regime will be gone.
Starting point is 02:59:33 But most likely, it will be replaced with another iteration of the same regime. Other elements of the regime will take power. I mean, remember, taking power means that you have control of the security establishment, et cetera. To get that to fall as happened in the Soviet Union, you have to have defections. You have to have, we're just not seeing that. In fact, another thing that the son of the former Shaw said that I thought was very clumsy if he actually wants to get an uprising from the bottom. In an interview with CBS, the anchor asked him, I was actually surprised that they said.
Starting point is 03:00:12 They asked him, you know, do you feel a degree of responsibility? You urge people to go out and protest and thousands got killed. What is your responsibility in all of this? You sitting in Maryland, right? I think it's a fair question. It is a fair question. You can also have a fair answer. He gave what I thought was a very unwise answer because he said, hey, this is of war
Starting point is 03:00:34 and in war you have casualties. Let's break that down. First of all, it was no expression of empathy and sympathy with the victims, right? But more importantly, your job in trying to get an entrenched system to collapse is to chip away at its legitimacy and delegitimize it. Now they have used an excessive amount of force.
Starting point is 03:00:58 You have to delegitimize the use of force. By you calling it a war and that war has casualties, you indirectly legitimize it. Because if it's a war for you, then it's a war for them. And if it's a war for them, then they're going to act as if it's a war. And in war, according to resapality, they're casualties. That's just such an unwise answer.
Starting point is 03:01:18 For someone who says that he's been preparing himself for this moment for 47 years, I expected a bit more. Shitty preparation. Treated Parsi, we got to get you to the airport, as you said. Otherwise, we'd keep going. But this has been an amazing education on a lot of things in the region today. Thank you. Thank you so much for giving me the opportunity.
Starting point is 03:01:37 Usually you get like three and a half minutes on CNN. So this is... Three and a half plus 257 right here. That's what we like. But thank you so much, sir. Thank you. Thank you so much for having me. We'll link your socials down below.
Starting point is 03:01:48 everything and I'm wishing the Iranian people all the best. Thank you so much. All right. Everybody else, you know what it is? Give it a thought. Get back to me. Thank you guys for watching the episode. If you haven't already, please hit that subscribe button and smash that like button on the video.
Starting point is 03:02:02 They're both a huge huge help. And if you would like to follow me on Instagram and X, those links are in my description below.

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