Lex Fridman Podcast - #478 – Scott Horton: The Case Against War and the Military Industrial Complex
Episode Date: August 24, 2025Scott Horton is the director of the Libertarian Institute, editorial director of Antiwar.com, host of The Scott Horton Show, co-host of Provoked, and for the past three decades a staunch critic of U.S.... military interventionism. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep478-sc See below for timestamps, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: Supplemental Notes & Corrections: https://lexfridman.com/scott-horton-links-and-notes/ Scott's X: https://x.com/scotthortonshow Scott Horton Show: https://youtube.com/@scotthortonshow Provoked Show: https://youtube.com/@Provoked_Show Scott's Substack: https://scotthortonshow.com/ Scott's Website: https://scotthorton.org/ Scott's Books: https://amzn.to/3T9Qg7y Libertarian Institute: https://libertarianinstitute.org/ Antiwar.com: https://antiwar.com/ SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: Allio Capital: AI-powered investment app that uses global macroeconomic trends. Go to https://alliocapital.com/ Hampton: Community for high-growth founders and CEOs. Go to https://joinhampton.com/lex BetterHelp: Online therapy and counseling. Go to https://betterhelp.com/lex NetSuite: Business management software. Go to http://netsuite.com/lex AG1: All-in-one daily nutrition drink. Go to https://drinkag1.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (00:35) - Sponsors, Comments, and Reflections (09:14) - From the Cold War to the War on Terror (1:02:13) - Iraq War 1 (1:30:17) - Bin Laden (2:29:39) - Afghanistan War (2:44:35) - Iraq War 2 (3:10:59) - Military Industrial Complex (3:50:25) - Scott's life story (4:20:15) - Iraq War 2 (continued) (5:11:43) - Syria (6:05:01) - Iraq War 3 (6:17:28) - Somalia (6:22:56) - Iran (7:12:41) - Israel-Palestine (9:02:19) - Cold War 2.0 PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
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The following is a conversation with Scott Horton.
He's the director of the Libertarian Institute,
editorial director of NTWore.com,
co-host of Provoked, and Host of the Scott Horton Show,
on which he has done over 6,000 interviews since 2003.
He's the author of Provoked, Enough Already,
and other books and articles that have,
over the past three decades,
criticized U.S. foreign policy,
especially in regard to
military interventionism and the military industrial complex.
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And now, dear friends, here's Scott Horton.
I think one of the darkest and most disturbing.
I think one of the darkest and most disturbing,
chapters of modern American history is everything that happened around conducting the so-called
wars on terror. I think to me it was a wake-up call. I think it was a wake-up call to a lot of
Americans in understanding and seeing the military-industrial complex and seeing what the
government's capacity is to mislead us into war and to continuously erode basic human freedoms.
If I can allow me to list some of the estimates from the cost of war project from Brown University,
just so we understand the costs of these wars.
The post-9-11 wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Pakistan, and Yemen led to an estimated
900,000 to 940,000 direct deaths, and 3.6 to 3.8 million indirect deaths.
And the cost, in terms of dollars, was $8 trillion, with $2.2 trillion on Afghanistan,
2.9 trillion on Iraq and Syria. And the result on every front, as we'll talk about, I think it's
fair to say that it did not accomplish this purpose. And in fact, if we even just look at the
human toll of the people of Afghanistan, I was also looking at the numbers before the war and
after the war. Percent of Afghans facing food insecurity went from 62% to 92%. Percent of children
under five, experiencing acute malnutrition, went from 9% to 50% of Afghans living in poverty,
went from 80% to 97%. So it was extremely costly for Americans, and it was extremely costly for
Afghans. As you do in your book enough already, can you lay out how the full history,
the full context of how it is that the American people were misled into this war on terror
that was so costly in so many ways? Yeah, first of all, thank you for having me again.
It's great to be with you on the show.
One important statistic that you could have mentioned from the Cost Award project as well is 37 million people displaced from their homes, right?
And the same group, it was, Lex, I'm telling me, it was at least five years ago.
God, it's the future.
Now, this may be seven, eight years ago that they did a study that determined that 30,000 American servicemen have blown their own brains out since then, well, one way or the other, deliberately crash in their motorcycle or whatever it is.
So, talk about the cost of war, that's far beyond, you know, the actual deaths in the war.
We had about 4,500 in Iraq and about 2,500 in Afghanistan of just official airmen, Marines, and soldiers on the ground killed, plus contractors and all that.
So that's speaking not just to the things that could be measured, but you can just imagine the scale of suffering that's going on in the veteran's minds.
Yeah.
And you know what, too?
Like, you would have guessed this probably, right?
You probably know more about this subject than me.
It was a New York Times headline, I think, yesterday was, oh, my God, look at, or maybe it was the Wall Street Journal.
Look at this insane list of the kinds of drugs that all these depressed soldiers get put on.
Here's 15 different psychoactive drugs all to temper the side effects of the others and whatever, where, you know, and then they say that this could lead to suicide.
Because, of course, we know that, right?
They even have to say that on TV sometimes.
that some of these drugs cause suicidal or homicidal obsessions and this kind of thing.
We know that's one of the side effects.
So some percentage of these guys might have made it if the government health care system
hadn't helped them in the end is another bitter irony, you know?
The whole thing is just, you know, you said we got nothing out of it.
I said half ingest, but it is serious, but it's also it shows by relief what a disaster
this is.
That the only thing we did get out of it, like literally, was advancements.
and prosthetic limbs for amputees,
whether they lost their limb in war or otherwise.
If you want to boil it down,
what did anyone get out of this other than,
you know, some people got a dividend check from Lockheed
or that kind of thing,
but that's not to the benefit of the society whatsoever,
so that does not count.
You don't talk about what society got out of it,
what America got out of it?
We have better Luke Skywalker hands than before.
That's it.
I don't think there's any more clear illustrations
of the complete failure of the military industrial cop
How do this begin? How do we get into this?
Yeah. Well, so I'll try to tell the somewhat fast version, although Lex, that's a kiss of death every time I say that.
Please. We'll go through.
Please go the slow version. Okay. So the slow version is, I'll start with the end of Vietnam. Okay. So one major aspect of the end of Vietnam was that Richard Nixon felt like he had to bribe the military industrial complex some other way. And so one of the things that he did was he turned to the Shah of Rezapalavi in Iraq.
Iran and asked him to increase arm sales.
I guess I could go back.
I think everybody knows that the CIA helped with the coup of 1953 to reinstall the Shah,
who was the son of the last dictator and had already been in for a while, and they put him back in.
And so now this is, and that was in 53.
So now this is in the early 70s, 20 years later.
And Nixon's saying, hey, you know, it really helped me would be if you would buy a bunch of fighter jets.
So I think it's kind of notorious, right, that Iran still has F4s and F14s.
That's what they got him from, was the Nixon and Ford administration in this push to do that.
And the Shah was apparently pretty obsessed with looking very first world with his very fancy first world army that he couldn't really afford and it helped to destabilize his regime somewhat.
And then I don't know the full extent of America turning on him before the revolution.
But I know that by the time of the revolution in 1979, he was sick with cancer and very sick.
And the American secretly knew that.
CIA knew that, you know, but it was not public knowledge.
It was whatever, stage four or whatever, he was doomed.
And so they knew the revolution was coming, and they were trying to figure out how to handle it.
And there was, the revolution was coming anyway, and it wasn't just, there's going to be a change of
leadership.
When we say revolution here, we mean mobs in the street demanding an end of the old regime
in huge numbers, right, a very large-scale popular revolution.
And they're trying to figure out how to get the handle on it.
Some of Carter's critics said, what he should have done was had the military his mask or all those
people, that'll shut them up.
Or like, you know what I mean?
They were trying to figure out what to do.
Well, the CIA and the State Department told Jimmy Carter, listen, this Ayatollah Khomeini, he's not so bad.
We know this guy.
He was part of a group of Shiite clergy who helped to agitate against Mossadegh in 1953.
And so we have at least some contact, and we think that we can deal with him.
Did they actually believe that?
I think so.
Is this incompetence or malevolence?
Like, how does this whole process happen that you go and, you go and, you know,
to this process of regime change and keep installing people that are creating more and more
instability and destruction in the world. And then you use that to then justify invading
and starting wars. How does this happen? Well, there's a lot of things. And the whole time
we're in our discussion here, we'll be talking about a massive conspiracy of interests at play
all the time. But this is, and I've never read a bunch of books about this. I probably should
at least interview these guys. You'd be interested in this if you don't already know the subject
is public choice theory. It's kind of a branch of libertarian political economy studies that says
that essentially one of its major aspects is that there really is no national interest the way you
and I might think of it sitting here, hatching it out across the table. Because what becomes
the national interest is the interest of the people in charge of making the decisions for the nation.
And so they all ultimately are private choices, aren't they? And then,
national interest become subsumed by what's good for me now. And so telling all my bosses,
they're all wrong, is not good for me now. And on the very basic level, you know, I've read quite a
few books just from former insiders like Daniel Ellsberg and other people like that. Ellsberg tells
a story of where he's the deputy undersecretary of state for making up nonsense or whatever it is,
or defense of the, no, no, state, I believe. And his whole job is making his boss look good,
whether he agrees with him or not. And then the hope is that next year he'll be in his
boss's position and his boss will move up one and then his job will be making his boss look good then
and how and he explains how the truth and reality just gets washed out of this right um another famous
one or should be famous is my friend david hardy who wrote the best book about the waco massacre
he is a great lawyer and he had been a former interior department cop and he said there's truth
and there's falsity like that's the world we live in but in government work there's our position
and our position takes place on an entirely different plane than truth and falsity.
Our position is the thing a bunch of people in a room agreed that they would say and do
as they can in committee come to a consensus.
And then a lot of times, once those decisions are made,
now to go back on that decision means that you are attempting to disgrace the people
who led the decision-making on that thing and say that they were wrong
and they shouldn't have done the thing they did.
Now they got to do this instead.
And so you see just an absolute unwillingness to make change.
And this is something that capitalism ultimately, like everybody's got ego problems.
But ultimately, the boss has to look at an accounting sheet and say, this isn't working.
So I'm going to have to swallow my pride or go out of business, right?
In government, it's not like that.
The worse they do, the better off they are.
This is why it was the soldiers in Vietnam called the military itself, the army itself,
the self-licking ice cream cone.
because it means that they cause chaos, but then chaos is their job, is to go and fix that.
And so, you know, and if you're a government bureaucrat getting paid way above the market,
then what do you want to do? Go get a job. A great example that I cite in the book is at the end of the
Afghan war. There are multiple military officers, like not too, too high, but like high enough to be
quoted by the news, saying, well, now that that's over, we're looking for other things to do.
so we're going to pivot to Africa and go find some Islamists there.
Because we are looking for ways to stay globally engaged.
Because, of course, that's their interest to do.
Whether that's good for Africa or good for the American people is just,
it's kind of a separate question that they're not really dealing with.
And so I think that's a huge part of it.
I mean, one of the things was William Sullivan said that, well, Khomeini,
he's like the Iranian Gandhi.
Well, first of all, he's not a pacifist.
But second of all, didn't Gandhi kick the British Empire out of
India? So what are you saying? You're deliberately putting in a guy who's going to limit your
influence there and it's going to declare independence from you. How are you going to handle that?
Like, they don't seem to think this through. And I have to say, one of the great disappointments
of growing up is you find out that the rest of the adults aren't so smart. They're just regular
dudes like you. And I think a lot of times, State Department people might have very advanced knowledge.
It doesn't mean they have very advanced wisdom. You know, there's something else Daniel Ellsberg talks
about is when you have access to classified information, then you don't pay any attention to
anybody who doesn't because what do they know? You know all these things that they couldn't
possibly be taking into account. So you immediately close your circle of people who you listen
to. And I'll tell you, great example of this from my own experience, was I interviewed a CIA
analyst, apparently a pretty important executive at one time in the terror war named Cynthia
Storer. And I asked her, I forget if it was in the interview or not. I hope I'm not like
speaking out of school. I believe it was in the interview that I asked her about, well,
I can't remember the exact context, but I asked her about, well, don't you read Patrick Coburn?
And she goes, who's Patrick Coburn? And I go, who's Patrick Coburn?
Patrick Coburn is the most important Anglo in Iraq. He's the one who understands all of this
stuff more and better than all of y'all. And he writes into independent. You can read it for
free just register with your email address for god's sake man i can't believe and she's like who even
is that so a lack of basic curiosity a rigor of research understanding the situation and she could know a lot
of secret things but without understanding what he understands she does not understand what she needs
to know i can promise you that much you know i think it's a basic lack of humility the ego grows the power
grows than you to self-preserve to maintain power you start deluding yourself in those closed rooms
you start shutting yourself all from the reality of the world and then as as your own delusion drifts
you're more incentivized to grow that delusion incentivized to hide to do secrecy and then it just goes off
and that's that's why i was hoping you could speak to uh more to daniel elseberg so the importance of
somebody like that. So it sounds like if we think about the machinery of how this happens,
it feels like heroic whistleblowers are essential to this process. If we talk about Snowden and Assange
and one of the OGs is Daniel Ellsberg, who just reading here was an American military analyst,
economist and renowned whistleblower best known for leaking the Pentagon papers in 1971. Can you tell
me about who he was and the importance of him? Oh, yeah. He's an absolute brilliant guy. I've been
proud to say. I was a friend, you know, for 10, 15 years there, I don't know, quite a while.
So he endorsed my first two books, I'm very proud to say, and he did not have a chance to
read Provoked, unfortunately. But I know I would have liked it, because we were email buddies,
and I know that he thought very much along the same lines as me and John Mearsheimer and others,
you know, as people are probably familiar. I think we'll get more to that. But on that issue,
he was great. But he was a brilliant genius, and he was a nuclear war planner. That was his second
book was called The Doomsday Machine, Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner. And he had liberated a bunch of
documents about nuclear war as well. But he had decided with his quote-unquote co-conspirator that
they should just focus on Vietnam first. That's the thing that it matters the most right now,
and that was the Pentagon Papers. And then all the papers that he had hidden away, he gave him to
his brother, and his brother lost him. And so then he decided later,
you know what, I remember enough of this stuff that I can go ahead and just write it from memory.
And he was so brilliant, dude.
I mean, I don't know what his IQ was, but I know his father built the first assembly line for the atom bomb.
And they asked him if he would do the same for the H bomb and he refused for moral reasons.
So that was his background in the first place.
And he's just such a great guy, man.
So he's a person who was able to see the situation.
Like you mentioned, like that room.
And in that room, understand that there's some shit.
that's wrong that's going on here and to be able to speak up and he was at rand right his job was
writing and this was when rand i guess was much more important and very closely tied to the pentagon
and their whole thing was like riding up game theory nuclear warfare plans one of the things he did
was he found out and and jack kennedy had to fight like mad they had to go back and forth
over and over and over to even get the war plan from the pentagon and they finally got the warf
plan from the pentagon and it said if we have a nuclear war with the soviet union we nuke
every single city in the Soviet Union and China.
So that would be, I don't know if that includes all the Warsaw Pact, but it includes all the
republics and China.
And the thinking was that if America and the Soviet Union destroy each other and Europe,
well, we'll be damned if we're going to leave Earth to those dirty chikoms.
So we're going to kill all them too.
And that was the thinking and thing.
And it was Ellsberg told Kennedy that.
And Kennedy told Ellsberg to make sure and force the Pentagon to rewrite the plan.
and narrow that thing down.
So that's part of the guy's background where he comes from.
I beg people to read.
It's called Secrets, a memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers,
and then also the Doomsday Machine.
And by the way, his first book Secrets begins with his first day on the job.
I was joking around earlier.
He's deputy undersecretary of state for whatever it was.
I can't remember for his state or defense.
Maybe it was defense.
It had to have been defense.
Forgive me for before.
And then the first thing that happens when he clocks in that day,
for his job is the thing starts coming across the teletype.
Ships attacked in the Tonkin Gulf.
And then he's reading, oh, never mind, that was a mistake.
And then he sees the president run with it anyway.
And now the historian Gareth Porter says that actually McNamara lied to L.B.J.
And he can't cite all the chapter in verse, but I trust Gareth.
He's great.
And he says it actually was McNamara lied to L.B.J.
When they knew that it was a mistake.
And the same thing happened again and again.
you take a little piece of information and run with them in order to justify war.
That's right.
That's going to be a theme.
What was important in the Pentagon Papers?
What are some key ideas?
Okay, so the Pentagon Papers, first of all, was, and he wrote this while he was working
at Rand, but he had full top secret clearance, and they were commissioned by Secretary
Defense McNamara to write a real secret, top secret history of the Vietnam War and the entire
history of our involvement in Indochina since the end of the Second World War.
And so that was what they did, was they wrote, like, Eyes Only for the Secretary of Defense type material.
So it had everything in there. And Ellsberg was in charge of writing it, along with Leslie Gelb, who shut his mouth and went along and later became the chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations and was a good dog, right?
But anyway, they were the ones who wrote it together. And Ellsberg was brave enough to liberate the thing.
And he tried to leak it to the Senate over and over and over again. Mike Ravel eventually started reading it into the record.
And then finally, the New York Times got the courage to start publishing the thing.
And it showed that they knew that they couldn't win all along.
They knew that the South Vietnamese government could not stand.
They did not have popular consent, that the insurgency in the South was not just based on support from the North,
but their own indigenous revolution against what they see, you know, as intolerable for an intervention and wanted to force this out.
And it's funny because McNameer later says that I guess he didn't read the Pentagon paper that, no, we were just sure that it was the capitalist versus the communists.
Like all this stuff about they didn't want to be ruled over foreign white devils.
And that never occurred to us.
You know, like, come on.
You know, as Chomsky said, come on, America invaded South Vietnam.
The government that was inviting us to stay was the government that we put in there, or at least after we overthrew the one we didn't like the one we put in there.
No different than, as we're going to talk about, Hamid Karzai inviting us to please stay in Afghanistan.
It's like, come on, who's Zoom and who here?
But so it showed, and that was the deal.
And that was why it was such a big deal in how he made Nixon's enemies list and all these things,
even though it didn't really expose Nixon.
It exposed LBJ and the predecessors.
But it was a huge shock that they had been lined us and lined us and lined to us deliberately, knowing that this has got to be somebody else.
else's problem, right? There's a phone call of LBJ saying to a Republican senator, friend of his
that I can't be the first president to lose a war. So, right, he's just going to retire first and
make it Nixon's problem, right? Same as George Debbie Bush said, oh, the end of Iraq, well,
that'll just have to be up to other presidents to decide. Not my responsibility. All I did was
do it. You know, and that's how they are. And they have, that's their, this is also part of the
economics of democracy, too, where they have such, and I'm not
arguing for the opposite, but I'm just saying the reality is you have such short terms of office,
you have a very high time preference, right? Instead of like working on long-term projects about
what's the future of mankind going to look like 100 years from now, you're looking at a much
shorter time horizon, you know, including who's going to finance your next election so that
you'll have any say-so whatsoever. And as Yoda and Palpatine agree that like all who have power
are afraid to lose it, because what if the other guy had it instead? It would be worse. Everybody
knows that, which is, of course, a huge part of the story of the American Empire here, you know.
Well, but fundamentally, that's cowardly, right? So what we want from leaders, from great leaders
is courage. And courage means making difficult decisions that are going to make the world a better
place long term, the country, a better country long term. And that means if you start a war,
that means understanding the full cost of that war and how it's going to have to end.
And then if you understand the full cost of war, you're not going to start it.
Yep.
Right.
So how does, how do we go from the CIA, 1979, the Shaw, Ayatollah, Nixon,
what is the thread that now starts inching towards the 90s and towards 9-11 in Iraq?
I know.
There's so much, but we're going to do it, man.
So here's what happens.
America goes ahead and allows the Itollah get on the plane in Paris, France, and go home.
Now, I remember even as a kid saying, but aren't the French our friends when they had checked with us before?
doing that. In fact, I just recently found the clip of Peter Jennings interviewing him,
and the smartest thing Peter Jennings can think up to say is,
so how do you feel on your triumphant return, Mr. Ayatollah, right? Which USA is just completely
aiding and abetting, right? These are shots they called and made happen, right? They sent him
home to inherit the thing. And then they did work with him. People forget, man, and I was just
very young at that time, but I was raised kind of in the atmosphere of all of this. And even back
Then, people conflated the revolution itself with the hostage crisis, as just one story
at all has spoken in one breath.
But in fact, the revolution was in February of 1979, and the hostage crisis didn't
break out until November.
So what was happening in the meantime?
Well, one of the things was the Americans were warning the new Iranian regime about threats
from the new dictator of Iraq, Saddam Hussein, who had just overthrown the government in a bloody
coup d'etat, no revolution there.
And you can watch the video of this.
Have you ever seen the video?
Saddam's overthrown Iraq,
and he's got a huge stadium of guys,
and he just starts calling names.
And everybody whose name he calls
has to go out back and get shot.
Like, it's gnarly, man.
I think that video is a dark study of human nature.
It's terrifying.
Oh, it is.
It's ugly, man.
Because everybody is afraid,
and there's a disgusting face
that's an almost Satan has.
Oh, I don't know.
I don't know if there's a sedent.
Sure. He was a psychopath, man. No question. He was a brute of a dictator, right? There's a lot of El
Presidents in the world. Not all of them like train their sons to torture people from the time
they're young and stuff. Oh, fuck. All the cowards in that room. But then you have to ask
yourself, what would you do if you were in that room? Yeah, you've already been bested at that point.
I mean, they could all rush the stage, but that ain't going to do them any good, you know?
But before you, how did you get to that room? Yeah. And then that's why you have to give
props to whistleblowers. You have to give props to people that stand up and risk their life
in situations like that, which in those parts of the world is even harder than it is in the
United States of America. And you know, by the way, I usually forget to mention this when I tell
this story takes another few seconds to mention that. Saddam Hussein had been groomed by the CIA since
the 1950s on and off, and he had been part of different dictator regimes on and off. He'd been in
exile in Cairo for a little while in this kind of thing. And then in the 70s leading up to the coup,
I think it was really closer to the Soviet Union.
And so we'll get to the, I guess I'll mention it now,
there's a huge irony of the fact that in the Iran-Iraq war,
it was America supporting Saddam Hussein and his Soviet military
versus Iran, and it's American one, right?
The absurdity of this is insane.
Well, I'm skipping ahead of step, but I just like that part.
But so, okay, so America supports the revolution
in 79 in February they're warning this guy hey you better look out for saddam hussein and his intentions and
we're going to get back to that in one moment here um and they were also warning them about the threat
from the soviet union now why is that well that's because skip over iran now we're talking about
afghanistan and zabidna prasinski's policy that let's support the mujadine in afghanistan in order to
try to provoke Soviet intervention there.
And so there's a memo,
and people could buy this at Scott Horton.org slash bear use.
If you want to look at it, it's from,
you want to go ahead, pull it up?
So, okay, if you allow me to read,
President Jimmy Carter's July 3rd, 1979, finding,
in quotes, authorizing covert support
for the Mujahideen in Afghanistan,
secret sensitive.
And the important part is provide,
unilaterally or through third countries as appropriate support to Afghan insurgents.
This is, now, a finding is an order from a president to the CIA to do something.
That's what a finding means.
So this is an order to CIA to do this.
Now, on that order, they did start pouring in support to the Mujahideen.
Now, I have to tell you that, my best experts on this, like Eric Margulies, and I got this also from reading
Andrei Sakharov, the famous Soviet nuclear physicist and dissident, that they both said
that it was an American support for the Mujahide.
Dean that really provoked the Russians into invading Afghanistan because what it was was the sock puppet dictator was a basket case and he had created so many enemies that he just couldn't hold it together. So the first thing the Soviets did when they invaded in December of 79 was take him out back and shoot him and replace him with a new guy. So that was really the cause of the Soviet intervention there. They had a commie sock puppet regime. It was not one of the Soviet republics, right? But they had a sock puppet regime there, but they wanted to.
maintain it and it was falling apart so they rushed to intervene. However, Lex, the point
still remains that the United States of America was trying to bait the Soviet Union into invading
Afghanistan. We're going to get back to why it's so relevant to the Iran thing in just one second,
but let's stop and talk about this for a second. Why would they do that? And they would do that
also because of Vietnam. Because at the end of Vietnam, Americans had what the government
considered to be a mental illness, Vietnam syndrome, that meant that America,
Americans didn't want to do this anymore.
Contained communism at this cost?
Who really cares if Vietnam goes commie?
We do business with them now.
And so people weren't into it anymore.
So this is where Zabigna Prasinski and his,
he was National Security Advisor under Jimmy Carter.
And his, I guess, counterpart at defense,
a guy named Walter Slocum,
they came up with this brilliant idea that what we'll do is
we will bait the Soviets into over-expansion.
Now, we don't want them to invade West Germany,
but the Afghans are expendable.
So if we can bait the Soviets into Afghanistan
and bog them down,
we will be adding straw to the camel's back.
This is a way to inflict,
because by then, think of it,
the word Vietnam, that's not even the name of a country over there somewhere anymore.
Vietnam at that time, that word means
some horrible, stupid, no-win, quagmire thing
that you shouldn't have done.
You shot yourself in the foot and the leg and lost your friend Jimmy down the street and everything.
And we don't want to do that, you know?
That was what Vietnam meant to America was like, God dang, what a mistake that was.
So now they're saying, let's do that to the Reds, okay?
We'll bog them down, bleed them to bankruptcy and force them out the hard way and hurt them and doing that.
So that's what they were trying to do.
That was the wisdom behind the operation in the first place.
And now if you go, click back one to Brzezinski.
You'll see where, and he later misparaphrases this a little bit, he's kind of cute, Bresensky, but
National Security Advisors, Big New Brasinski's memo to President Carter on December 26, 1979, regarding the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
And the important part here, I mean, there's a lot, it's a bit, but if you go down, you'll see where, oh, here, this could become a Soviet Vietnam, while it could become a Soviet Vietnam.
In other words, see, they're already talking about it in that context here, in writing, we see, and it's from Robert Gates.
his first memoir, by the way, where he says it was Brasinski and Slocum. By the way, that's my source
for that when I say that those two were the ones really innovating this policy. And he says,
the initial effects of the invention are likely to be adverse for us for the following reasons.
And then he says that it'll make the Hawks talk about how we better do something about Iran.
And he says this could bring us into a head-to-head confrontation with the Soviets. So this is very
interesting, Lex, because, well, one, this is why America's passing intelligence to the Ayatollah about
threats from the Soviets. We think that now that Iran is essentially destabilized because of the
revolution, and we just deliberately, or at least we're trying to and apparently succeeded in a sense
in baiting them into invading Afghanistan, now we're worried that they're too expansionists and that
they're going to roll into Persian next, and then they'd be right on the Persian Gulf. And we can't
have that. So that was when Jimmy Carter announced in his speech in 1980, the Carter doctrine
that said that the Persian Gulf is now an American lake. And we will take any move by any power,
read the USSR, to move into the Persian Gulf as an attack on the United States itself. Right.
We're like bringing the Gulf those waters into NATO, right, given a full war guarantee to keep
the Soviets. And by the way, a regime, oh, I'm sorry, I'm skipping one. See, go back. I'm
Forgive me for the, it's hard to stay in line here.
The hostage crisis breaks out in November 79 because David Rockefeller from, of course,
Standard Oil of New Jersey, aka Hexon and Aramco and all those things, the chairman of the Chase
Manhattan Bank at that time, he was very close with Jimmy Carter and he convinced Carter to let
the Shah into the United States for cancer treatment. That was what caused the riot at the
embassy and the seizure of the hostages. Now, I don't know, and I'm sure.
There are books about this that I just haven't read yet, you know, kind of thing that explain whether it really was the IRGC that took the lead in that or whether it was the students who did it or what. But obviously the government held the hostages and kept the thing going. So they bear responsibility for that. But the point being that America had been trying to work with the Ayatollah up until then. The idea was not that, oh, Shiite fundamentalist Islam says that all white Christians from North America must lay down dead right now because that's their religious belief. Look at them ranting. We're the
Great Satan and burning our flag.
And then, so when so many people, when the story begins with they're calling us great Satan
and burning our flag, then, well, they just hate us.
And so we're just going to have to do something about that.
And, you know, I remember meeting a guy one time who said, listen, Al-Qaeda hates us for
all these complicated reasons.
And he explained them.
And then he goes, but not Iran.
They just hate us.
I remember when I was a boy, they were burning our flag and calling us Satan.
So it's like, yeah, but, well, they had a reason too.
not that it justifies them doing anything sinful or criminal,
but I'm just saying they also had reasons
for reacting the way that they reacted.
America had launched a coup in 53 from that same embassy,
and by saying that they were going to cure the Shaw's cancer
seemed to be an indication of them
that we were going to try to reinstall them in power
and cancel their revolution.
And so they were preempting that.
Again, not a justification for everything that happened there or whatever,
but just to tell the whole story in a way that.
I've told that story of people,
I never knew that.
I always thought that it all happened in one,
big show, you know, and never do they admit, unless sometimes the Republicans accuse Carter of
this. They'll tell the part about that Carter was so naive as to send the Ayatollah home, although that's
usually always left out. But so now he announces the Carter Doctrine, giving a war guarantee to Iran
that he now officially hates and is holding our hostages and completely humiliating him, right?
And there's Operation Eagle Claw where they sent forces into Iran, and that was a, it was supposed to be a rescue mission that ended up in disaster where the planes and the helicopters crashed into each other.
They were already leaving anyway, because it was going to be botched, and then they crashed on the way out.
So that was a big humiliation for Carter as well.
And then, oh, and I should also tell you that Gareth just found this.
It was a classified document that he only found in the State Department records that show that.
just after the Carter Doctrine speech,
Prasinski, in a private meeting with the Saudi foreign minister
and also with his deputy, Warren Christopher,
who was later Clinton's Secretary of Defense,
he admitted that we don't think there's really a Soviet threat to Iran.
Prasinski himself admitted that.
So the pretext for the Carter Doctrine was fake,
and he admitted himself that they weren't really afraid of that,
even though they were pretending to be afraid of that
as a result of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
that they were trying to provoke.
And we should also give a shout out to Gareth Porter,
He has written about the Vietnam War, books including perils of dominance and balance of power and the road to war in Vietnam.
I have to say, I believe that he is the most important journalist of the War on Terrorism era.
I call him Gareth the Great. He's a good friend of mine.
I've interviewed him 300-something times on my show about essentially everything he's written since 2007.
He is the best of the best of the best.
It's not just the war in Vietnam.
He writes also about the continued wars.
Absolutely specialized in Iraq, Afghanistan, especially.
disposing the entire fraud of David Petraeus in his career.
He wrote the book, Manufactured Crisis on the Iranian Nuclear Program.
That is bar none of the very best book on that.
He is the best.
Vietnam, Cambodia, Syria, Iran, and the War on Terror, all the things he's written extensively about.
Gareth Porter the Great, man.
Absolutely.
I learned so much from him.
I couldn't begin to explain.
Fair enough.
So the story continues.
Yes.
Carter.
So another aspect of the Carter doctrine was,
that Carter gave the green light to Saddam Hussein
to invade Iran.
Now, first thing is, why Saddam Hussein want to invade Iran?
It ain't just because he likes doing what Jimmy Carter says.
He had his own reasons.
Now, picture your map over Iraq.
I know you got one in your head there.
Everything from Baghdad over east to Iran and down to Kuwait.
That is what you could call Shiaistan, predominantly Shiite, Iraq, right?
and then there's 60% of the population, supermajority.
In the north you have the Kurds who are Sunnis,
but they're Kurds as separate ethnicity than the Arabs.
And then you have the Sunni Arabs who are another 20%.
Well, Saddam Hussein was a secular Sunni Arab,
leading essentially like on the Simpsons,
the Kami Nazis, the Ba'ath Party,
who are like sort of both a little,
just a fascist state essentially, right,
with Arab characteristics or whatever.
And, but a,
And not an entirely sectarian one.
He had Christians and Kurds and Shiites in his government and things like that.
It was not, you know, like just a caricature or whatever.
It was a balance of power act.
But after the Iranian revolution, Saddam had a real reason to fear that the Shiite revolution was going to spread to Iraq.
And that Iraqi Shiites, at least the armed and convinced ones, would choose their religious sect and their alliance with Iran on that basis over their national.
and ethnic sect as Iraqis and Arabs, right, separate from the Persians.
So, and he had real reason to believe that, including that members of the Dawa Party and people loyal
to the Hakim family were Abdul Aziz al-Hakim and his people.
They left to go to Iran, and they chose Iran's side in the war.
So Saddam Hussein's solution to that was to conscript all these people and force them into
his army and march them east against Iran and use them in.
in that way. And this led to an absolutely brutal World War I, maybe Russia-Ukraine-style trench
warfare, tanks, artillery, and there's planes and ships. And it was a hell of a war for nine years
all through the 1980s, as the United States almost entirely backed Saddam Hussein.
Except for, when they backed the Ayatollah, remember Iran-Contra. And during Iran-Contra,
what did they do? They went to the Israelis, and they said, hey, you're still.
friends with the government in Iran, you guys don't mind the Ayatollah one bit and have maintained
your friendship there. We want to sell them some missiles and try to get the hostages out and then
take the rest of the proceeds from the missiles and give them to the Contras in Nicaragua.
And this is what became the great Iran-Contra scandal. And so we should also say,
and you highlight the importance of understanding Iran-Contra. So this here reading a major
political scandal in the United States during the mid-1980s senior officials and
And President Ronald Reagan's administration facilitated the secret sale of arms to Iran, which was under an arms embargo, with the proceeds being used to find contra rebels fighting the Sandinista's government in Nicaragua, despite Congress explicitly prohibiting such funding.
And this is, of course, supposedly a side story, but a huge part of the side story is it absolutely was true, as the great Gary Webb reported in the Dark Alliance series and in his great book, Dark Alliance, and many other great journalists as well, that the CIA had a massive operation to bring cocaine into the United States by the truckload and plane load to sell it to poor Americans, blacks especially in L.A., but also, yes, it's true. They even made a Tom Cruise movie after years of calling us conspiracy cooks in all.
all this. The movie's about a guy named Barry Seal, whose job it was to fly guns and money down there
and cocaine up here for the Contras for the CIA and into Bill Clinton's Arkansas, where he was
read in on this and the operation was run out of the vice president's office, George H.W. Bush.
And that much is true. And the same, they had the, I know less about, but they had, this is where all
the cocaine from Miami Vice was coming into Florida in the same way. And this is where the crack
epidemic came from in South L.A., and throughout the country, really, in many places. And they just
don't give a damn about us, man. Congress said, you can't have any money to fund the Contras.
And they said, yeah, but we want to anyway. So this is how they did it. So the CIA would help orchestrate
this kind of transport of drugs. Absolutely right. And then they completely destroyed the heroic
Gary Webb for exposing this. And they didn't murder him, but they drove him to suicide. And, you know,
his good friend, Robert Perry, the great journalist, verify that. No, it really was a suicide. People thought it was suspicious because he shot himself twice, but that does happen sometimes where people flinch on the first one. But it was his father's gun, and he was totally depressed, and he'd signed his house over to his wife, and somebody stole his motorcycle, and he was like at the, at the, but they had run him out of his job at the San Jose Mercury News. They first ran to the Hollywood beat, and then eventually he just quit and went to become an investigator for the California state legislator.
So the CIA doesn't have to kill you directly.
They can psychologically destroy it.
That's right.
Yeah, they put the gun in his mouth either way for doing the right thing.
But anyway, and didn't get any facts wrong.
The only thing that anyone had to attack him on was like the graphics editor put like a phrase out of context big on the page or something in the newspaper.
You know what I mean?
It was like something silly that made it sound like he was saying the purpose of the mission was to destroy the black community.
He never said that.
What he said was they didn't give a damn about those people.
I don't even know if he addressed that, right?
But he certainly wasn't saying that was what it was about.
It was about funding the Contras.
But anyway, so they found their separate ways of doing it.
And this is one of the things that made me like this is I don't even have any idea where I first learned this.
But I knew this while Reagan was still in office or at least by the time Bush Sr. was in office.
When I was still just like maybe a freshman in high school or younger than that, I knew that Ronald Reagan was a dope pusher.
The same guy with the Just Say No and the same guy with the massively increased penalties for people engaging in just simply the possession.
much less to sail and trade and drugs.
And so there are people who went to prison for decades for life, essentially and literally
for just possession of the same drugs that the government was bringing in.
And so how are you ever going to believe in a security force like that again?
I never have.
I don't know why you'd even need to see a Waco mask or any other or in a rock war or any other thing
to detest these people.
That's who they are.
You know, I had this, it's the only part I really remember about it,
but there's this great film producer named Kevin Booth.
he was Bill Hicks' best friend and producer.
And he did a documentary about the drug war
where they show this guy
and he goes, oh, they're all in prison
and they're filming him through the gate.
And they're all yelling and whatever.
He can't really make out much, right?
They're all like yelling over each other.
And one guy finally, like, makes everybody be quiet
and he looks at the camera and he goes,
listen, I'm doing 35 years
because I had a few rocks in my pocket.
Does that sound right to you?
I was like, dude, it was Ronald Reagan's cocaine
in his pocket.
it like that guarantees a full pardon, man, right?
What are we talking about?
That's not fair.
It's a dark aspect of human nature that the people that try to, if we talk about drugs,
to ban drugs and really anyone who tries to ban a thing are often secretly participating
in doing that thing.
Bootleggers and Baptist, you know?
Just on a small tangent.
Sure.
Have you ever, since you're a Texan, have you ever met Bill Hicks?
No, man.
I learned about Bill Hicks like a month.
after he died. And so they started playing insane man on the access channel all the time. And I was
like, oh, my God, who's this guy? And then they're like, oh, he just died. But he's a legend.
He has been a huge influence on me, you know, in a lot of ways. So I'm very much a Hixian.
I apologize for that. It's good to do a shout out. Back to the drug war. And that involvement
from Carter and on and Reagan and Iran. Well, yeah, let's go back to Iran. Because the cocaine is
really tied up in the contra end of the scandal.
Point being, America's back in Saddam,
except when they're helping Israel back Iran
and by selling them these missiles.
And there are even, I don't have my footnote anymore,
but it's findable, I'm sure,
where they did talk about, you know what we do is we support one side
until they start getting ahead a little bit,
then we support the other side a little bit more
and go, or we authorize the Israelis to increase support for Iran
and play them back and forth against each other.
So that's just not just, you know, offshore balancing in peacetime.
That's balancing in wartime.
encouraging them to keep killing each other, which is some pretty horrific policy to do.
Could you also comment during this stage and this thread will continue? What role does Israel
have to play in this part of the story with Iran? I don't know, yeah, I don't know much about
what they were saying about America's Iraq policy during that time, but I know that they
were still friends with the Ayatollah, and we're not going to get to them switching gears on the
Ayatoll until Rabin in 1993. So hold that thought. So the war's still going on. We have
to mention the chemical weapons, too.
Yes. America bought them. Taxpayers bought them. There's a huge Iraq gate scandal, it was called,
where people were put on trial for the money, but then their defense was, but the government
made me do it. What are you talking about? This was the whole thing to do. And they were,
it was German chemical weapons, I believe, and maybe some French, but that were bought with
supposed agricultural loans from the United States to Iraq. And they had a sophisticated biological
weapons program, too, with anthrax and the rest, and the Americans sent them the precursors
for the germs that he would need. During the Iran-Iraq war in 1980 to 1988, Saddam Hussein's regime
used chemical weapons extensively against Iranian forces and Kurdish civilians, most notably
in the 1988 halaljah attack that killed an estimated 5,000 people and injured 20,000 more.
There is substantial documentation that Western governments, especially the U.S., and some of its
allies, provided Iraq with dual-use technology, intelligence, and materials, which facilitated
Iraq's chemical weapons program.
Yeah.
And it goes on.
Let me drop two good footnotes for your people here.
The first one would be Shane Harris, who's now at the Washington Post, you know, very official
national security beat reporter.
He wrote a piece about this at foreign policy.com a few years back, where he goes into extensive
detail.
So as far as, like, authoritative sources, there you go, okay?
Nothing conspiratorial about this narrative at all.
Then you want to do a deeper dive onto it, then go to ffff.org, and this is the Future Freedom Foundation, and there they have a page, and I'm sorry, I always get the headline wrong, but it's something like, where did Saddam get his WMDs, or where did Saddam get his chemical weapons?
You know what you can do?
You can go site, colon, fff.org, and then that way you search just that site, and then you can do chemical weapons, Iraq, and I bet you'll find it.
Yeah, right there.
Where did Iraq get its weapons of mass destruction?
And I had mentioned this, I guess, on the Tucker show.
And so I actually talked with Hornberger, and I went back and I found and I made sure that all of those links are up to date and work for each of those stories.
So people can go through and take a very close look at those are just articles, never mind all the books about it and stuff, which there are plenty.
So this is a set of links assembled by Jacob Hornberger.
The title is, Where Did Iraq Get Its Weapons of Mass Destruction on FM?
FF.org that people should check out.
And then, oh, there's the, there's the Shane Harris and Matthew M.A. CIA files prove America
helped Saddam as he gassed Iran.
The U.S. knew Hussein was launching some of the worst chemical attacks in history and still
gave him a hand.
And now, by the official rules of confirmation bias, when Shane Harris admits something that I'm
accusing, that means it's definitely true.
If I ever disagree with him, well, he's a liar from the post.
Got that?
Okay, good to know.
That's how truth works.
Of course.
There's your authoritative source, everybody.
Shane Harris, from the Post.
And that's a special inside joke for fans of where the Buffalo Roams, too.
Remember Harris from the Post?
You ever seen that?
It's the original Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas with Bill Murray.
I didn't realize there was original Fear and Loathing,
Las Vegas with Bill Murray.
What?
Really?
Where the Buffalo roams.
I promise you will have a good time.
And there's a joke in there about, I'm Harris from the Post.
He's pretended to be Harris from the Post, and he's hanging out in the bathroom with Richard Nixon.
And I forgot the conversation.
It's funny as hell, though.
Similar type of wild journey of fear and loathing.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I got to admit, I don't remember the story that well.
It's very different than Fear and Loathing, but it's also very good.
Well, I know what I'm doing tonight.
Okay, cool.
Where the Buffalo Room.
It's good.
Everyone will like it, I promise.
Underrated Bill Murray.
He's forever underrated, actually.
Genius actor.
Okay, so back to the chemical weapons and Hussein, Saddam Hussein.
So, okay, the war finally comes to an end in 1989.
And at the same time, the Soviets were drawing in Afghanistan.
We're getting back to them in a minute.
But the war comes to an end.
And for the next couple of years, Saddam Hussein is in a struggle over war debts with his creditors,
Kuwait, Saudi, and UAE, or demanding all their money.
back that they gave him for the war, they loaned to him for the war. Now, of course, he feels like
he bought that war partially in their defense. And so, and also at this time, oil is trading at $12 a
barrel. So he has no ability to repay them, rebuild his country, or do any kind of thing. And they're
completely putting the screws to him. And on top of that, this is disputed whether they were literally
the Kuwaitis literally slant drilling under the border, or whether it's really, that's kind of
shorthand, I think, usually for they were overproducing from shared oil wells that straddled the
border. And when you have a contract where your property and my property butt up next to each other
and we got mineral rights, but we have a shared oil well down there, then we have a quota how much we
pump. And you're not allowed to cheat and pump more out of our shared well than me in any
given month or whatever as per the contract. That's kind of how that thing works. So in this case,
it's the same thing over an international border. And the Kuwaitis, at least they're also accused,
and I know less about this, but they're accused also of using slant drilling techniques
that they've been taught by Americans to drill that way and steal Iraqi oil, you know, from the margin.
So, Hussein's pissed about this at the same time they're putting the screws to him over calling in the war debts.
Now, I don't believe that this was a deliberate trap, but in effect it was.
I think what happened was it was a matter of, you know, the left hand didn't know what the right hand was doing.
there was no real unified policy that had been sent down from on high how to handle this,
evidently.
And so the CIA and CENTCOM were encouraging, which had been created as part of the Carter Doctrine,
were encouraging Kuwait to be intransigent against Saddam and tell him to go to hell.
Well, at the State Department, James A. Baker, through Ambassador Glasby and through Margaret
Tuttweiler and John Kelly, were sending signals that actually go ahead.
We don't really care.
And we just celebrated April Glassby Day the other day we do every year, July 25th, where she told Saddam Hussein, listen, it's the same thing as when I was the ambassador to Kuwait. The Iraq issue and your border dispute is not associated with America. And we have no position on this. You're going to have to settle it. And now we always had the Iraqi version of that story published in the New York Times. But then we got from Manning and Assange, we got the State Department's version of that document. And so it's a little less explicit.
as far as how it makes the Americans look, but it's essentially the same. And in there, she says,
now listen, George Bush wanted me to emphasize to you that he does not want a war in the
Gulf. And so Stephen Walt from Harvard University at foreign policy.com, he said, no, listen,
in diplomatic language, you know, these things are, you know, mathematical formulas. You've got to be
very careful how you say these things. Saddam Hussein wasn't anticipating a war. He knew he's going to
roll right into Kuwait. They couldn't stop him. He was counting on a coup domain. So when she says
the president doesn't want a war, it sounds like she's saying, the president won't go to war with you
if you do this, and that he very well could have read it that way. And that was at the very least
a flashing yellow light, if not a green light, to go right ahead. And we know that, again,
John Kelly and Margaret Tutweiler also made statements essentially downplaying American concerns
about what was happening.
I should give a quick shout-out since you mentioned him, Stephen Walt.
I had a few email exchanger with him.
He's a co-author with John Meersheimer on one of his books.
He's a prominent, just reading here,
prominent American political scientist,
and currently professor of international affairs
at the Harvard Kennedy School.
He's the best of him, man.
He's Meersheimer's partner in a lot of things.
They're basically considered like the co-deans
of the realist school of foreign policy in America.
So they're like, you know, Henry Kissinger,
realpolitik only without the bloody hands and the, you know, the hawkish instinct.
They're, you know, I think both would be relative hawks on China compared to me, for example.
They're not libertarian, non-interventionists, but they're very skeptical of a lot of this misuse.
You know, both of them oppose the Iraq War, for example, in the first place and that kind of thing.
If I may, I can never sing enough praises to John Mearsheimer.
Of course, his work is very important.
he was fearless as an academic as a writer as a historian but also as a human being i got a chance
to know him uh we had dinner we had many conversations we exchanged a lot of emails and he's a sweetheart
yeah he's a great guy i email back and forth them too i'm trying to get him on next week but and he just
killed it on tucker the other day too he was fantastic on there he's such a great example you know
it's just a good human being yeah yeah well like a real deep compassion yeah and sometimes when
you cover these topics and you just like you said you realize the adults in the room yeah and people
call him some kind of hater and it's like come on that's because that's all you got that's the only
reason you can call him that is because you got no other thing to say you know yeah a real heart of gold
like this is a really special guy anyway sorry yeah yeah no problem so um a rock war one so america gives like
a flash and yellow light to saddam hussein their client that to go ahead and take back the
Northern oil fields. And, oh, I left out one piece was, when I saw him out the left hand
and the right hand, Wolfowitz worked for Dick Cheney at the Pentagon at that time, and he was always
in Iraq Hawk. And he had warned, maybe not knowing that the CIA or that Carter was encouraging
it explicitly, but he had warned that Saddam was going to attack Iran back in 1980. So he was always
in Iraq hawk, and he was very worried that Iraq was going to invade Kuwait. And he convinced Dick Cheney that
we should make a statement telling Saddam not to do it. But then, oh, I'm going to think of
his name in just one moment, Pete Williams, who later became the NBC news reporter. He was the
Pentagon spokesman at that time. Isn't that funny how that works? If you go back in time,
that's how it worked. He was Pentagon spokesman. He made a statement where he seemed to walk back
their warning, which was probably just incompetence, right? He didn't know exactly what he's doing,
but the way that he phrased it was softer than the way they had phrased it. So then they were like,
oh man and they tried to get
George Bush to write a letter
I believe it was like this
that Bush sent a letter
but then they thought
I believe Cheney and Wolfowitz thought
it's too conciliatory
it's not clear enough
that we're saying don't you do it
so send another letter
but by then it was too late
and Hussein went ahead and rolled in
so this is from all very elite accounts
of the story from the inside
these different books and whatever I read
and all that
this version of the story
And then you can see if you check the timeline where for the first few days,
they weren't threatening to do anything about it.
Colin Powell chaired the National Security Council meeting.
He was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of staff.
And they announced the first day, well, they better just not move on Saudi Arabia.
You roll into Riyadh, you got trouble with us, Bob.
But they were essentially prepared to accept the invasion of Kuwait.
It's crazy that Cheney was involved with all this.
Because then the story continues.
So, yeah, he's Secretary of Defense at that time.
So, he, and he was the only one in the government at that time who was not from the Reagan administration.
He had been in the Congress.
All of the rest of these guys were Reagan's guys.
The vice president was now the president.
Colin Powell had been national security advisor for Reagan.
He's now chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
And then you have James Baker was Treasury Secretary, he's now Secretary of State.
Like this is Brent Scowcroft, I forgot.
Maybe he was Deputy National Security Advice.
under Reagan. Now he's National Security Advisor under H.W. Bush. So this is the third Reagan term
without Reagan, basically. And Cheney would have been the newer guy and tended to be more hawkish.
And in this case, it was like hawkish trying to stop the war from breaking out in the first place.
In that sense, was more concerned about the danger of the thing and whatever.
Sorry if this is a distracting question. But can we talk about the birth and the evolution
of the Niyocan movement? How does it connect to this?
Yeah, we can mention here that, you know, there are, when I go through and look like,
who were all the worst hawks on a rock war one, many of them were the neoconservatives.
So we probably didn't get into that whole like biography of a movement here or whatever,
but they certainly were very much in support of this intervention in Desert Storm or
Iraq War I, as I call it.
I'm trying to get that to catch on because we're a rock war three and a half or four now,
so like I'm going to have to keep these things straight somehow.
But some of the same characters that were responsible for Iraq War II.
That's right, because of course Clinton's in there for a while,
but then it's President Bush's son.
It's the next president.
He brings Cheney and Powell with him, and then all this other stuff.
But hold your words, and now I'll be patient.
So what happens is Margaret Thatcher comes to town.
And she gives, this is her people's term for it.
She gives Bush Sr. a backbone transplant.
And she says to him, don't you go wobbly on me now, Bush?
In other words, calling out his manhood, and she's a woman, and from a smaller, weaker country.
And so what's he going to do now?
And that's when he says, yeah, this will not stand just out of his own personal embarrassment.
Speaking of Bill Hicks, this was a Bill Hicks joke, that this was the wimp present.
It was a cover news week, Wimp present.
And apparently, that's stuck in this guy's crawl a little bit.
I'll show you who's a wimp.
And he had to go and really feel like he had to do something about that.
And when Margaret Thatcher called him out, instead of being prudent, as he would say, and patient and conservative, he went,
no, I'm tougher than you, lady.
I'll show you how tough I am.
I'll do a big tough thing.
But meanwhile, what did America care about Kuwait, right? They had, Britain had interests in Kuwaiti oil. And the Kuwaiti royal family, his highness al-Jabber, had investments in British debt. But what do I care about that? Lex Friedman, not one bit. You know what I mean? But that was a big part of how the war started. So after the first three days, they said, we're not going. They're not going to, they're not going to invade Saudi. We're warning them. They better not invade Saudi, whatever. And it was after that that they decided, okay, now we are going. And then
Once they decided that, they refused to negotiate in good faith for the rest of the time.
And Noam Chomsky did the best of documenting this, but what did he document?
He documented like 10 different sources from the summer of 1990 through January 91, where the Americans refused the Bush administration in Washington, D.C., refused time after time, after time, after time to negotiate in good faith with Saddam to get him out of there peacefully.
Because once the gauntlet was thrown down, now we have a big set piece bad.
now we're going to go in there and we're going to rock them. And I have the quote from Brent Skowcroft in there. This was long an accusation from some liberal types that you might dismiss, but it is true. It was literally an explicitly stated part of their thinking was, we have to defeat Vietnam syndrome. The reluctance of the American people to do things like this. We've got to give them one that we can do. That'll be short. That'd be sweet. That'd be fun. That'd be easy. And we can, that we can.
hold a big ass parade and be victorious again like the old days.
Rebuild that martial spirit and make that normalcy in America, not the post-Vietnam
anti-militarist malaise that you remember from the 70s and 80s.
Now it's time to get back to work, remake in the world, and give the American people something
to believe in again.
And Bush Sr. then after the fact, said, by God, we kicked Vietnam syndrome once and for all.
This is a huge part of it.
And if you think about Iraq War I to this day, people still think of it as like short and sweet,
and we use all this space age technology, and we whooped them good, right?
And Colonel McGregor and Daniel Davis and General McMaster, then of lower rank,
they went in there and won the big tank battle of 73 Easting and showed the superiority of American tanks versus Soviet tanks
and all of these things that were so much fun for them, such a big deal for them at that time,
that they want to do again for our nation's overall long-term interests or what was good for them.
Their donors, their benefactors, and essentially the psychological warfare campaign.
They wanted to wage against the American people that this is what we're here for.
We go and rescue helpless little countries like His Royal Highness Al Jobber's monarchy in Kuwait
so we can reinstall the monarchy because everybody knows.
how much superior they are to fascist dictatorships like the Iraqis have, that we've supported
for the last decade, by the way, including helping him gas people, not just while he gassed people
while he's gassing his own people, supposedly the Kurds and the endfall campaign, along with the
Iranians and the rest. But now he's Hitler. Now he's going to roll on Saudi. He's going to take over.
The next thing you know, he's going to take over all of the Middle East resources. He's going to
build up a thousand-year Reich and roll on Paris.
Huh?
Saddam Hussein is?
And that was the way that they put it.
And they absolutely lied us into war.
They claimed that he had lined up his massive armored tank divisions on the Saudi border
and was preparing to roll on Riyadh.
And that was a lie.
It was a St. Petersburg, Florida Times hired a Soviet company to, or maybe the Soviet government,
to provide the satellite photos and show that there's nothing but empty desert out there.
You know, they'd send a couple patrols near the border, whatever.
There's nothing like armored divisions preparing to expand the war into Saudi Arabia.
They knew they were lying about that.
And in fact, the St. Petersburg, Florida Times published that like a week and a half before the invasion.
And AP, Reuters, CS, CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, whatever, all refused to run it and just buried it.
Then the other thing was, a major part of this was, and it's amazing.
It sounds so silly now after everything going on, and that's gone on since then.
But it was a huge deal.
He did the Iraqi incubators hoax, where they brought in a girl who claimed to be a nurse,
who said that she was in the hospital in Kuwait City when the Iraqi soldiers came in there,
stole the incubators, threw the babies out of the incubators onto the cold floor to die,
and then ran off with the incubators, whether to just destroy them out of sadism
or to bring them back to Baghdad because they have a big incubator shorter in Baghdad.
She didn't say, but it turns she wasn't a nurse and she wasn't even in the country at the time of
the invasion. She was the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador. And the thing was a 100% hoax.
Zero percent of it ever happened. But Amnesty International vouched for it and said it was true.
And so that was all you needed. So George Bush repeatedly brought this up and said,
see, this shows that Iraq was determined to systematically dismantle Iraq.
that this isn't just an invasion. It's these horrible crimes against humanity. And what would we do if
they were doing it to us and, oh, we have to help the poor people. And that was a big part of what
they used to beat people over the head about that war. And the other one was, and they learned this
from the focus groups, was we have to threaten the American people with nukes. That even with
moral atrocities like the incubator hoax going on, that Americans are still like, I don't know.
you know um like richard prior said in 1986 he had a bit where he stops joking and he just says
isn't it weird like we stick on the germans and the soviets and now we're bombing libya
does that sound right like they can't fight back even like it's just weird seems weird so people
needed a real reason to go and that was atom bombs and the and so people forget this now because
iraq war two takes the place in their memory right but in iraq war one they also alleged repeatedly that
Saddam Hussein was working on nuclear weapons, or he very well could be.
They did.
And this was one of the reasons why we had to go.
Now, here's the screwed up part about that.
They were lying, but they turned out to be telling the truth accidentally.
Because in fact, what they found out in the aftermath of the war when they occupied southern Iraq,
was there was a bear, but a beginning, the beginnings of a nuclear weapons program there.
Very, very early.
We're talking 91, right?
Early 91, at their end of Iraq War I.
So what happened was, people always cite the Israeli strike on the Osirak reactor in
1981 and say what a great success it was. No, that was an IAEA safeguarded facility. That was not
producing weapons grade anything of any kind. And when they bombed it, all they did was drive
his program underground. Now it became a nuclear weapons program. And it was only a coincidence
that America, after launching Iraq War I, found his secret program that the CIA had no idea
about. And so this became a major consequence. And here's why. Because Dick Cheney would later cite
this and go, well, if the CIA can't find it, that doesn't mean it's not there. Remember that one time?
And so it became a big part of the Hawks talking points after that. If the CIA claim, like,
confirmation bias again, CIA agrees, then they're right. CIA disputes, then yeah, well, we don't
have to listen to them, right, even when they're the ones that they cite is the authoritative source
for every positive claim they're making. So the playbook, even with Iraq War I, is you try to look for
different stories, whether it's anecdotal stories with nurses or it's anecdotal.
or stories about nuclear weapons,
you're trying to find a way to justify war.
That's right.
And the same playbook was applied in the second Iraq War.
And back to Noam Chomsky for one second
about them refusing to accept Hussein's surrender
was that by the end of the thing,
like he had been demanding, come on,
let me keep these uninhabited islands
at the north of the Persian Gulf
where I could make like an oil shipping facility there
or something like that, you know?
he dropped all those demands here were his final demands right he wasn't just going to turn tail for
nothing he had to save some face so his final demands were promise that america will leave the
middle east and that israel will leave the occupied territories someday right in other words nothing
he's demanding nothing he's demanding please let me keep the skin on my face only is the only
face he's saving right and they wouldn't give it to him because
that would have stopped the war from happening, Lex.
I'm sorry, man, but that's the history of how that happened.
I mean, think about the relative power of the United States of America
with the entire U.N. Security Council on board, too.
Telling Iraq for six months, five months,
you better give in.
And they couldn't figure out a way to get him to give in, huh?
Yeah, they could, too.
They didn't want him to give in.
You know, they had all of these chances,
and there were reports in Newsday and the New York Times and whatever
and that had all the stories
where he kept making all these offers
and they would just reject them out of hand.
In fact, Norm Chomsky talked about
how it would be in the business press in England
that, oh, look,
oil prices fall
because they think there's a peace deal.
And the business press knows that this is happening.
Oh, it looks like they're going to have a peace deal.
And so the price of oil falls from the relaxed tension.
And then nope.
Right?
And then they cancel the thing and they go on anyway.
You mentioned the part, which I think is fascinating about defeating Vietnam syndrome
and reinvigorating martial spirit.
Can you just psychoanalyze the State Department of CIA, people in government?
Why did they want to reinvigorate the martial spirit?
Is it money? Is it power?
Is it just coming up with a narrative, age-old narrative of nationalism is good,
and one of the ways to achieve nationalism is to invade somebody?
What is the motivation in a room these folks sitting together?
Why do they want to reinvigorate the martial spirit?
So they can enforce what they called the New World Order, which was, again, I borrowed this from Chomsky, but I found two original citations for it.
As George Bush Sr. himself said, what we say goes.
So this is what Biden and them call the liberal rules-based international order of global governance.
What it means is forget the UN Charter.
Forget the UN Security Council.
There's the U.S. National Security Council, and everybody's going to bow down and do what we say.
It's our unipolar moment, as Charles Crouthammer put it in foreign affairs, and we're going to take full advantage of it.
But don't worry, Lex.
Again, as Bush Sr. said, the world trusts us with this power because they know that we are good people and we know what we're doing.
And we only have their best interests at heart.
We care about them so much.
And so the world allows us to be the global police force, to enforce the law and make sure everything's fair.
Because, man, what if we stopped holding the world together?
Boy, they would all just fall apart.
So it was just clamoring for power.
It'd be Germany and Japan.
I don't know if you remember this, but when the Soviet Union fell apart,
they said, oh, my God, Germany and Japan are going to rise back up and take back over the world again.
Really?
Yeah.
And before the war on terrorism, they tried for a while.
They made Harrison Ford movies out of it and ever to try to build up the war against the Mexican drug cartels and the Peruvian drug cartels because we've got to have somebody to
fight in the 90s while we're trying to get something else going on here, basically,
you know, they don't want to have to get a job. And yet, like Bush Sr., you got to give
him credit for this. He absolutely slashed military spending, slash the bomber fleets,
slash the military, slash army divisions and ships and everything. We don't need an anti-Soviet
military for a world without the Soviet Union. And he really cut it way, way back. And
and especially on nuclear weapons.
In fact, I hate to say this because I never was an H.W. Bush guy,
and I'm so critical of all of his Middle East policy and all these things.
But in a way, you could say he's the most heroic guy who ever lived in the sense of working with the Russians, the Soviets, and then the Russians on these treaties to bring the global stockpile down from approximately 70,000 down to where we have about 7,000 each, which is way more than enough to do you.
but when the Soviets had 40,000 and we had 30, come on, somebody's got to do something.
And Bush Sr. is the man who did something about it. And as I show in the book, well,
we're skipping ahead of the other Cold War book here, but he did make unilateral cuts because he
didn't have time to do negotiations. So you say made massive unilateral cuts in hopes that
Gorbachev would respond in kind, or was it Yeltsin by then? And then I think it was Yeltsin
by then. And then Yeltsin did respond in kind and made these drastic cuts on his own
unilateral basis, just without even an agreement. But you know what? We'll get rid of our class
of those same kind of weapons, too. So I gotta give credit where it's due. He handled the end of the
Cold War, you know, a lot better than he might have, I guess you could say, you know. Yeah, anybody who's
trying to decrease the number of nuclear weapons in the world is, it requires some degree of heroism
to do that. Yeah. And he wasn't a neocon, right? He's an old waspy guy from the older establishment.
and he called the neoconservatives the crazies.
And he had told General Skowcroft to keep the crazies in the basement.
In other words, they're allowed to kill people down in Latin America,
but you keep them away from Middle East policy, right?
They're not allowed to mess around with what we're doing over there.
And I guess here's where let's start talking more about bringing Israel into our narrative here,
because, as I said, the Israelis had stayed friends with Iran through the Iran-Iraq war.
had no problem with fundamentalist Shiite Islam then, sold these guys weapons. In fact, Trita Parcy shows in his
absolutely excellent book, Tretcherous Alliance, which if you haven't read that, you'll absolutely love it.
I'm so good. You know, and pull that up. He's one of the co-founders of the Quincy Institute for
International Statecraft. Tretcherous Alliance is Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran, and the United States
by Trita Parcy. This work examines the complex, often contradictory relationship between Israel, Iran, and the U.S., countries whose alliances and rival
have repeatedly shifted since the mid-20th century.
Oh, it's just fascinating.
Of course, the poor Iraqis are stuck in the middle of this thing
is a big, like, subtext of the story, right?
But what's so great about that book is it's all,
there's no news cycle stuff in there anywhere.
It's all told from the point of view
of the highest-level military strategists in all three countries.
And it started out, I believe, as his PhD
and became this thing.
But it is just a masterpiece.
But anyway, he's the best guy to read about this
and the way that all this transpired,
that essentially when the Ayatollah, the mean old Ayatollah, Khomeini, who died in 89, when he would be threatening the Israelis, they're like, oh, we're going to destroy you one day or whatever, they would be shipping him missiles that day, right? So this was this covert relationship that was going on behind the scenes even when they were, you know, saying very malicious things about each other in public that was really cover for the extent of their covert relationship that was still ongoing at that time.
And so now it in, we got to put this off one second.
I'm sorry, I left out.
It's important to go back to the Shiite uprising of 1991.
Because in the aftermath of Iraq War I, Saddam Hussein crushed the Shiite uprising, which George Bush Sr. had encouraged.
And I'm not sure if you've ever seen the movie Three Kings.
I like to bring this up.
It's kind of a touchstone for people because a lot of people learn history just from movies, you know.
So the movie is Ice Cube.
and Markey Mark and George Clooney
and they're soldiers on a gold heist
but they're in southern Iraq occupying Iraq
in the aftermath of the first Iraq war
and in the background Saddam Hussein's forces
are murdering everybody crushing the Shiite uprising
and that's what's going on in the background
so people remember that movie that'd be probably the most
they ever learned about the crushed Shiite uprising
of 1991 that's fair you know that's how it is
they didn't make that big of a deal of it at the time
because it was a horrible Bay of Pigs type situation
where America told them to do it.
George Bush, his own voice on Voice of America,
encouraged them to rise up and finish Saddam Hussein,
the Air Force dropped leaflets over predominantly Shiite army divisions
and the rest of them, I guess, too,
and say, now's everybody's chance to rise up and overthrow this guy.
But, Lex, then they changed their mind.
And the reason they changed their mind was,
remember when I said in 1980,
why Saddam invaded Iran?
Because some Iraqis were choosing Iran's side in the war,
and he was afraid they all were,
and that the Iranian revolution was going to come for him, right? So he conscripted the army and
sent them to war against Iran instead. Well, now in the Shiite uprising, those very same Iraqis
who've been living in Iran for 10 years and fought on Iran side in the war, they're now coming
across the border to lead the uprising. Does that make sense? Okay, this is namely and most
importantly, the Bada Brigade, BADR, the Bada Brigade, the Bada Brigade is the militia of the Supreme
Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, which is run by at that time a guy named
Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, who's now dead, but he's a very important guy, and he's going to come back
up in our story here. So when the Bada Brigade started coming across the border was when George
Bush, Brent Scowcroft, and the boys all flinched and said, uh-oh, we, because again, this is the
third Reagan term essentially, right? So we just spent a decade supporting Saddam to contain the
Iranian revolution. Now we're the ones importing it into Iraq. That is a mistake. And so he
call it off. He was more cautious and said, let's not do that. But the problem with that was
100,000 Kurds and Shiites were killed. But also, that then became the excuse for America to stay
in Saudi Arabia. They have promised the king, you let us get rid of Saddam and drive him out of
Kuwait. And we have this on Dick Cheney's word himself. It's so funny. There's a podcast that of Bill
Crystal's podcast. Do you know Bill Crystal has a podcast? And he,
And he interviewed Dick Cheney.
Somebody put this on Archive.org before it's gone forever, man.
And it's great because they talk about everything except Iraq War II.
They don't say a word about it either of them the whole time.
So Dick Cheney explains in that interview to Bill Crystal that he was the one.
Never even mind James Baker, the Secretary of State, as Secretary of Defense,
he promised King Fod of Saudi Arabia that we promise we'll leave as soon as the war is over.
And now, I really screwed this up, man, I'm sorry.
When we talked about Afghanistan before, I should have dwelled a little longer on the fact that, as we all know, when we talked about bogging them down into their own Vietnam, the Soviets in the 1980s, that America supported not just the Mujahideen of Afghanistan, but what became the international Islamic brigades, meaning Arabs and other Muslims from all around the world, especially from Arab lands, to go to Afghanistan to fight on the sun.
side of the Mujahideen against the Soviets. And this included Egyptian Islamic
jihad and what was called then the Azam group, which was the main group that was
controlled by the Saudi intelligence services during the 1980s. And that was the thing that
United States wanted. Yes. So it's a big number of instance. We was trying to bait Russia into
invade Soviet Union into invading Afghanistan. And then they wanted to extend the war.
So America had a deal with Saudi Arabia. We would match them dollar for dollar.
and we would work with their intelligence services
and the Pakistanis to support
local Mujahideen
like Gubaldeen Hekmajah and
Jalalideen Hakkani, who later became
America's enemies in our Afghan war
but then
and various other Pashtun warlords
of different descriptions. So U.S. is
essentially helping train up these militia groups.
Yes, and including bringing them to the United States
and having our special forces train them in car bombs
and sabotage and assassinations and everything.
Yes. Full scale.
support for building up the bin Ladenite movement as long as they're killing soviets and those same
people then come back and become the enemies that's right so when we talk about al-Qaeda what we're talking
about is eventually the merger of Egyptian Islamic jihad and the azam group after azam was killed and
I don't think anybody really knows who killed him Osama bin Laden took over his group and Osama bin Laden
so then this is the main reason and there are many this is the main reason that al-Qaeda turned against
the United States was that Sambin Lama was outraged that the king had allowed the United States
to liberate Kuwait instead of him and his men, which not like they have a bunch of mountains to
hide out in Kuwait, but he wanted to try it to kick Saddam out. And then he was just driven
crazy by the fact that the king allowed white Christian combat forces to come and occupy the
holy land. It's not just their country, but their holy land where Mecca and Medina, the birthplace of
Muhammad and the birthplace of the religion of Islam are, and the two holy places bin Laden
called him, I guess they all do. And that then we didn't leave. This is the ultimate outrage,
right? And this is the main overriding reason for the bin Ladenite, well, at least for his
jihad, which was really based on the idea of trying to get all the disparate groups from around
the Middle East. These are more or less stateless groups. They're in some cases backed by Saudi,
you know, more or less at different times, but they're jihadists from all over the place. You know,
Egyptians and Saudis and Syrians and, you know, Azam himself was Palestinian, raised in a
refugee camp in Kuwait. But you had all these different people. And then so bin Laden's genius was to
figure out, the one thing we can agree on is let's attack the United States because America is at
the root of all of our problems. And just like we had helped them to bog the Soviets down in
Afghanistan, they wanted to do the same thing to us. And so this was the beginning, really,
of Al-Qaeda's war against the United States began at this time in reaction to the declaration
of this New World Order, the permanent stationing of troops in Saudi Arabia, and what became
the permanent, the unrelenting full global embargo, United Nations Security Council, full global
sanctions regime against the Iraqi state, which led to, at the very least, 300,000 excess
deaths, although a U.N. study later embellished that, and bin Laden would embellish the numbers
even higher than that to 600,000 or a million. But whatever, it was a ruthless economic war
of collective punishment against the entire people of the country, even though they had their
chance to overthrow him. USA encouraged it and then let Saddam keep his helicopters and tanks while
we were standing right there and let him crush the insurrection.
Now the Bush administration and later the Clinton administration's position was the
sanctions stay until Saddam is gone.
But he's still young and in pretty good health.
And no one in Iraq is in any position to do anything about this.
So it's just, this is the policy that Clinton inherited from Bush and ended up keeping.
Can we go to, can you linger on bin Laden?
So this gave enough fuel for.
for bin Laden to construct a narrative where America.
That's right.
The bad guys.
And this is such an important thing.
There's this great book by Michael Schoyer,
who was the former chief of the CIA's bin Laden unit.
It's called Imperial Hubris.
And I will say that he went a bit crazy in later years
and said really mean things like we ought to help all the Muslims kill each other.
And we ought to have a civil war over Russia Gate,
which I'm very, very opposed to Russian Gate, Lex.
But I wouldn't go that bar.
So he went a little nuts later on,
But he's a very bright guy and a very honest guy for what it's worth.
A very straightforward guy, I should say.
I don't know if he's ever told a lie or what.
Purely hubris why the West is losing the war on terror by Michael Scherer.
And I should also say echoing that statement that some of the smartest people I know
are walking the line between genius and madness.
It happens.
And when you study the dark aspects of human nature and geopolitics,
sometimes it's easy to lose yourself in the madness.
Yeah, it's totally true.
But so in this book, he makes it so clear.
There are six overriding reasons that bin Laden cited for why the United States should be attacked, okay?
And he compared this directly to the Ayatollah Khomeini, who would relentlessly criticize our culture and, you know, licentiousness and Hollywood R-ratedness and all of that kind of stuff as like the degenerate society.
But you can't recruit people for a war over that.
You know what I mean? Not that he's really trying to, but that only inspires, inspires so much resentment, you know, and conservatives don't like libertineism, right? Like, that's okay, but it only goes so far, right? Then Laden, on the other hand, said, they occupy the land of the two holy places. They help Israel kill Palestinians and Lebanese. They support the dictators, especially in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, but around the Middle East. They put pressure.
on those dictators to keep oil prices artificially low to subsidize our economy at their expense.
Just think of all the times you've heard presidents say, I'm telling the Saudis, they better ramp up
production and get the price of gas down for Election Day, right?
As blatant as can be. But what does that sound like to the poor person in those countries?
Not money's supposed to go to them? And then, as bin Laden would say, falsely, turning a blind eye to
Russia, India, Kazakhstan, and China in their persecution of Muslims. So they say they love us so
much, but they don't really, because they don't say anything when this group or that group are the
ones killing us. So these were the things. And look, let us stipulate, Lex, okay, that Osama bin Laden is a mass
murderer. And by tradition, I don't take the word of mass murderers for meaning very much. And I don't
expect you to, okay? That's not the point. The point is, what did he say that got anybody to listen to
him and do what he said? He was in charge of a government. He had no coercive apparatus. He had no coercive
apparatus at all. His organization is purely volunteer based. And he's asking people to blow
themselves up over something important enough to blow yourself up for it. It's not virgins. It's we have
a policy. I should stipulate virgins after you die. We have a policy. We're trying to provoke a war
with the United States of America and you're going to help us do it. Why? Because of these six reasons.
That's why. And that was what we're
to recruit people to attack the United States of America.
Okay, major important case in point.
And, well, whatever, the timeline jumps around here a bit,
but major case in point is in 1996 when Israel under Shimon Perez
re-invaded Lebanon and what was called Operation Grapes of Wrath.
And during that invasion, it's hard to believe this.
Wait, don't Google yet.
Search this part.
It was Naftali Bennett, called in the artillery strike on a U.N. shelter and killed 106 women and children in Kana. That's QANA in 1996.
Naftani Bennett, while serving as an Israeli army officer in 1996, commanded a commando unit during Operation Grapes of Wrath in southern Lebanon during this operation. His troops came under mortar fire near the village of Kana.
Bennett radioed for artillery support, so on, so on, so on,
killing 106 people and injured many others.
In a UN shelter.
This humanitarian tragedy is widely known as the Kana Massacre.
So, when Shimon Peres launched that war,
Mohamed Atta, the ringleader of September 11th plotters in the United States,
pilot of Flight 11, I believe,
he and his buddy Ramsey bin al-Shib,
They were Egyptian engineering students studying in Hamburg, Germany.
And when this invasion started, they both signed their last will and testament, which their friends and family and neighbors and whatever said was their expressed intent that like they're joining the army.
They're deciding, forget engineering, I want to join the Mujahideen and go fight the good fight somewhere, whatever.
Then, just a couple of months later, bin Laden put out his first declaration of war against the United States.
It's called Declaration of War
Against the Americans
occupying the land of the two holy places.
Pretty subtle, right?
And then on the first page,
he goes on and on about the Kana massacre
and says, we'll never forget
the severed heads and arms and legs
of the babies and the children in Kana.
He told Robert Fisk, I believe,
how come your blood is blood,
but our blood is water?
Well, we'll see about that.
That's a strong reminder
that there's a cost to kill.
killing people. Oh, yeah. So what happened was Muhammad Atta and Ramsey bin al-Shib, they read that
declaration of war, and that was when they decided to join al-Qaeda. It was based on the Kana mask or that
Israel had perpetrated in Lebanon. So again, we're skipping ahead in the story. We're going to do the
whole 90s here, but literally on September 11th, you had Egyptians volunteered for a Saudi
Sheik to slaughter Americans by the thousands as revenge for American support for Israel, killing people
in Lebanon. That, my friend, is why George Bush said they hate, the Taliban did it because they
hate your freedom, right? Because they couldn't tell you that.
106 people. It's a reminder that killing can cause immeasurable escalation, trillions of dollars,
all of it. And here's the other thing. Bill Clinton, I think foolishly, said something
about how he would like to normalize relations with Iraq or at least look into it
or something. And boy, he should not have said that because people got all upset and tried to
figure out how to stop it, including the Kuwaitis. And what happened was, I know you're familiar
with this, we all are, and virtually everyone gets this wrong. The myth that Saddam Hussein
tried to murder George H.W. Bush with a truck bomb assassination attempt in Kuwait in 1993.
total hoax, debunked by Seymour Hirsch by the end of the year in an article for the New Yorker called Case Not Closed.
He shows it was just a whiskey smuggling ring that they embellished into this plot against Bush.
And then it was Martin Indic, who was Bill Clinton's advisor, who was he?
He was an Australian who'd been working for Yitzhak Shamir, the Lekud Party, well, former terrorist murderer, and then Lekud Party,
of Israel. And Indic had gone from there to go work in, I don't know exactly the time off, a
year or so. He stopped and went to work for Clinton. In the meantime, he founded the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy, Winep, which was directly a spinoff of APAC. APAC put up the money.
That's the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the heart of the Israel lobby. They put
up the money for the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, which you have heard that
name a million times, and you're going to continue to hear it because they are always cited
as middle-of-the-road scientific experts on American foreign policy when they were, and this
is not the same about all neocom think tanks, but this one was literally created by the Israel
lobby in the United States. And then he became an advisor to Bill Clinton, and he was insisting on
this policy, essentially continuing the H.W. Bush policy of staying in Saudi Arabia in order
to patrol the so-called no-fly zones over Iraq to keep Saddam Hussein from killing the
the Iraqis and enforced the blockade, which was enforced by world law anyway, right?
Like, there's some smuggling going on or whatever, but no nation state is violating the embargo
against Iraq here. So it's completely unnecessary on both counts. But the Israelis, and this
is Rabin's government, Yitzhak Rabin's government, is, I guess, an agreement with this Lakud
guy in Dick on this. They're pushing for a policy that they called dual containment. And the point
was that Iraq, now that we beat them up so bad in Iraq War I, Desert Storm, First Gulf War,
now they're not powerful enough to balance against Iran. So now America has to stay in Saudi Arabia
to balance against them both. And Bill Clinton resisted this and resisted this until the big fake
assassination attempt against Bush Sr., which again, I don't have any reason believe the Israelis
were behind that. It was the Kuwaitis who rigged up. Oh, did I leave out that it was the girl
who pretended that she saw the babies thrown out of their incubators, it was her father was the one
who spun up this story. So in other words, the same guy who spun up that story was the same guy
spun up this story about the assassination attempt against Bush Sr., which everybody still believes
and which I'm sure Bush Jr. believed at the time that he launched that war probably. Was he
Seymour Hers? He doesn't know. And it was just conventional wisdom. And I was still just a teenager
in the 1990s, but I don't remember, wow, that assassination against Bush thing was debunked.
I don't remember that ever getting around.
You know what I mean?
I don't know who was reading Hirsch at that time.
It was pre-internet times by a year.
Right.
It just wasn't a hot enough topic.
You know what I mean?
How do you fight those false narratives that the military industrial complex
tries to produce in order to get us into war?
The same thing is speak up?
I think the most important thing is read anti-war.com every day
for a long period of time in a row,
and you will have a very good handle on what the hell is going on in the world.
is founded by Eric Garris and Justin Romando, who are both a couple of libertarians.
Romando was a student of Murray Rothbard's, or at least one of his mentees, you know,
learned a lot from error of his foreign policy thought.
Murray and Rothbard, the best libertarian.
And so that's where we come from is that tradition.
And, you know, Ron Paulian, non-interventionist types.
And but the news is, and, but our opinion pieces come from all of the spectrum as long as we're
anti-war.
We're not sectarians at all.
It's a one-issue thing.
And really, we just do the hard news.
more than anything. We have a lot of great editorials as well, but it's Eric Garris and Dave DeCamp
and Kyle Anzalone who get the lion's share of the credit for the actual work that goes into the
site every day. And there goes to every single war in the world. Everything. Every day, we have our
top news. We have a front line section. And then at the bottom, we have every region of the world
where there's conflict breaking out. Trump sends two nuclear subs towards Russia, so obviously
Russia. That's reassuring. God. And you see our spotlight article is by
by Bronco March Teach, and he's the leftist, but we love him.
He does absolutely fantastic work.
So it doesn't matter if you're left or right.
That's right.
And we're very close with the American Conservative magazine, for example.
Pat Buchanan is a good friend of ours, and we ran his articles for many years.
Ron Paul, of course, as well, the greatest American ever.
Ron Paul's amazing.
And you give love and respect to Ron Paul all the time.
He absolutely deserved it.
We spoke of heroes.
He's one of the legends.
That's how I knew anti-war.com was for me the first day I laid eyes on it.
My friend said, look, they run Ron Paul.
I would are. I like these guys. Can we take a quick pause for bathroom break? Sure.
So before we get too far into Bill Clinton, I should say, because I did say these words, no, the New World Order thing, that was a very popular conspiracy theory in the 90s and even before that, which was about building a one world government under the United Nations and subsuming the United States under it and all that. That's not what I'm talking about. And I actually was a New World Order kook in the 1990s, but I was a kid. It's fine. I grew out of it. But point being, Bush Sr. did use that phrase repeatedly.
And what he meant by it was, you know, in the guise of the United Nations, baby blue flag and all of that for like PR purposes more than the real agenda, he was saying American power is the guarantor of world peace and we will enforce it through war, right? And that's the deal of it. Nobody's allowed to fight or we will intervene.
Right. So it's just essentially it's the irony, right, that any government powerful enough to keep.
the peace between the 50 states is powerful enough to try it for the rest of the world as they
can. They do this. We're just extending our security umbrella. Everybody who joins up with us
is guaranteed. Nobody's going to ever mess with you or else they'd have to mess with us,
except for everyone on the outside who now are put in the position of having, you know, not just
the United States, but all of their allies lined up against them and feel that much, you know,
more threatened, namely, of course, Russia and China, the other,
major, you know, potential adversaries in nuclear weapon states.
And I think the lesson there is if you think you can run the world by threatening everybody
with military power, considering all the very cultures and peoples and histories of the world,
you're going to fuck things up.
You're going to create a lot of hate.
You're going to create a lot of increased war, increased terrorism, increased threats to America
versus decreased.
Yeah.
So more on the neocons here, too, before.
we get too far into Bill Clinton, is in 1992, a year after the end of Iraq War I, under
Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, his deputies, Scooter Libby and Salmea Khalilzad,
wrote what was called the Defense Planning Guidance for 1994, for fiscal year 1994. And it caused a
huge upset. It was late to the New York Times, and it became a really big deal, because what
it said was America is essentially world police. We're not going to tolerate the rise
of any near-peer competitor against us in the world.
Like, we'll fight them before we allow them to get powerful enough
to even be one.
We'll not let any nation or group of nations
become powerful enough to ever even be able to think
about challenging our military dominance on the planet.
And, of course, we're doing all this in the interests of world peace.
And that means that we have to have total military dominance
in the Middle East.
We have to expand NATO and have total military dominance
in Eastern Europe.
And, of course, we have to maintain our position with Japan and Korea and the rest in order to maintain total dominance in Asia as well.
And this is what Charles Crouthammer called our unipolar moment again and said we should stop short of nothing less than total world domination.
That was the quote.
And at that time, Jean Kirkpatrick, who had been a neo-conservative, she was a member of the Young People's Socialist League of the Social Democrats USA, which were the Trotskyites.
under Max Schockman, who was Trotsky's most important guy in the United States.
And this is something that Mark Dubowitz tried to deny and argue with me about whether she was a neoconservative or not.
Well, she was like James Woolsey, a Presbyterian.
Now, most neoconservatives are Jewish and or Catholic, although you have Pizalme Khalil Zod and Francis Fukuyama and others who are of other, you know, different, you know, cultural inheritance.
this you might say there. And so the defining characteristics, and he was saying, well, she didn't
believe in democracy as the single most important thing in the whole world. And of course,
she had written this article in the national interest that had gotten Reagan's attention in the
first place saying that it's okay to support authoritarian as long as they're right-wingers and
anti-communists, that anti-communism is more important than democracy. And so we should put, for example,
support people like Somoza in Nicaragua and things like that in order to keep the commies at bay,
that that's number one. And so some of the neocons disagreed with that. Dubowitz was trying to say,
that's what makes her not a neocon, but that's really not true. Because neocons, there's about
a hundred of them or something, and they disagree about all kinds of things. They sure to work
together on lots of things, but sure they disagree on things. I'll give another example on democracy,
where Robert Kagan said in 2013 that we should allow the Muslim Brotherhood to rule in Egypt because
they won barren square parliament and the presidency just barely they won in fair elections and
after all we've done in the name of democracy don't we have to allow them to have a chance well frank
gaffney was like are you kidding me like i'll go overthrowing myself right now are you crazy he's got
an h bomb going off over his head is he going to deny that frank gaffney is a neo-conservative
just because he differed with robert kagan on his order of importance in democracy in this or that
instance? Give me a break. Gene Kirkpatrick came from the neoconservative left. She wrote for
commentary magazine with Norman Podhorts and all the guys. And I don't mean, again, just a leftist.
She was with the Trotskyites, Max Schottman and the Young People Socialist League and the Social
Democrats USA. So she's like a card-carrying neoconservative. This is what it means to be a neocon.
And she wrote, and then she was Reagan's second ambassador to the United Nations. It was widely respected
by the Republicans as a conservative hawk and a very like American interest-oriented type.
And she would even rail against the UN itself in almost a bircher sounding kind of way that appeals to me,
although she didn't really mean it.
She was just mad that they would ever get in our way rather than that they really are a threat to our independence in any way.
But the point is this, man, that I'm trying to get to, is that the end of the Cold War,
a year before the Soviet Union was even gone in the fall of 1990s, so she must have written this in the summer of
1990. This is a year before the failed
commie coup and the final unraveling
where the Russians overthrew the last of the Soviet
Union government at that time at the end of
91. It's a year before that.
And she, importantly, right on the confirmation
bias trick again, it's
Jean Kirkpatrick, right? Not Susan
Sarandon. It's Jean Kirkpatrick
who wrote this piece
in the national interest
called a normal country in a normal
time. The only place you can find it is on my website,
Scott Horton.org slash fair use.
and I won't tell you where I got.
And it's, and don't ever sue me national interests.
I love you guys.
And the thing is, so it's, it's in there somewhere.
You have to page down.
I'm not, oh, there it is right there.
Normal country and a normal time.
March, oh, that's the date I published it.
Fall 1990.
A normal country and normal time, you published it on March 23rd, 2020,
is by Jinco Patrick, the National Interest, Fall 1990.
It's the first time since 1939 that there has been an opportunity.
for Americans to consider what we might do in a world less constrained by political and military
competition with a dangerous adversary. I'm pleased that the national interest has provided a forum
for this discussion. And it goes on. American purposes are mainly domestic. Our purpose in the
world are merely human, not transcendent. To be legitimate, the American government's purpose must be
ratified by popular majorities. Here's what she says in here. She says, we should eschew the burdens
of superpower status.
She sounds like George Washington.
She's saying, okay,
the commies are gone.
The Cold War is over.
The emergency is over.
So now we can go back
to being what we were supposed to be,
what we used to be before,
that we put on hold
because we had to wage the Cold War.
Now we can have a real
return to normalcy,
meaning 28.
Right?
But,
before the permanent world empire was built
for the purposes of destroying the Nazis
and then containing the commune.
So she was very anti-communist
and a neoconservative perspective.
She had a significant role in the Reagan administration.
And then after she've evolved in saying,
we need to let go.
That's right.
In other words, she is here.
She's aligned with Pat Buchanan.
Now, for people who aren't familiar,
Pat Buchanan, he's a Catholic, paleo-conservative.
He was Nixon's speech writer
and Reagan's speech writer
to this day he's retired sweet old guy now but uh he's lifelong cold warrior and doesn't regret it
the commie threat absolutely had to be contained vietnam had to be done he's a wonderful guy
he really is um and he's written just a grip of great books i mean i don't know uh eight or ten of
them so there's an evolution here there's some of the folks really saw russian the soviet union as a
major threat oh yeah and then they've evolved saying okay now that's
the Cold War is over.
We need to calm down.
And see, Pat is the perfect avatar for this.
Him and his buddies, you know, Scott McConnell and Jude Wieniski, Wyniski himself had been a former
neo-conservative.
But there's this whole group of paleo-conservatives who nobody can question their patriotism.
This is Ronald Reagan's guy.
This is the guy that puts words in Ronald Reagan's mouth, right?
And he's saying, okay, you guys promised the empire was a defensive.
measure, right? We don't want an empire. Chalmers Johnson is another one. Chalmers Johnson was a professor
at USC who was a hardcore ardent cold warrior. You're familiar with him. I'm sure he wrote the book
Blowback and then Sorrows of Empire and Nemesis or the trilogy that he wrote about the American
Empire then. And he was adamantly cold warrior until the Soviets were gone and then the
empire continued to expand. And then he went, wait a minute now. I taught a gentleman. I taught a
generation of students that we were holding the tide back. What's all this about we're the tide
now? That's not right. And in fact, I like to cite this because it's just so astonishing to people
that William F. Buckley, one of the major, not that he was a neoconservative, he wasn't, but he was one of
their main godfathers, basically, the founding editor of the National Review. He wrote an article in
1952 in Common Wheel magazine. Again, you can find this at Scott Horton.org slash fair use. It's
called the Party in the Deep Blue Sea.
It's about the Republican Party, I guess, is what it means.
Party in the Deep Blue Sea.
And in there, he says, we must accept a totalitarian bureaucracy on our shores for the duration
of the emergency, even with Truman at the reins of it all, because of the need to face
down the Soviet threat.
And you need a powerful domestic empire that's capable of forcing the American people.
to enforce a world empire to contain the threat of Stalinist Soviet communism.
That's horrible, right?
A totalitarian bureaucracy.
The same one we still got.
And see, Pat said, okay, look, I was buying it when the enemy was in Moscow.
But now that there's no enemy in Moscow and world communism, the threat of world revolution, is dead and gone,
well, I don't want to hear it about why we have to suffer this anymore.
We're supposed to be, and then, again, this is why I cite Gene Kirkpatrick.
I can just cite Ron Paul to you all day long here, right?
But everybody knows that Ron Paul is good on everything.
The point is here is these are people who are very hawkish when they feel like it needs to be.
You might even, your readers might, their listeners, viewers might think that Ron Paul is just too biased for peace.
Well, Pat ain't, okay?
Pat is willing to fight.
but not if there's not a good reason to and that's the big qualification why would a guy like pat be
anti-war we know he's not a hippie there must be another explanation and the other explanation is
he is learned he knows more about this than you and he knows why you shouldn't do this because
this is what's going to happen if you do and that's the kind of guy he is and that's why he and his
paleo conservative friends said okay enough we want to come home and so jinker patrick patrick she
didn't really join with the paleocons, but she was certainly aligning with him on this issue at this time
that now's our chance to go back to being a limited constitutional republic with a free
economy, a usually successful commercial republic, I believe she says, in the piece. And which had a
typo because it said unusually, but she couldn't have meant that. Go ahead. I don't know. I think
I lean towards Ron Paul a little bit. I don't think totalitarian bureaucracy is justified ever.
I mean, you can come up
with a really extreme case, but really
you're going to get into trouble. This is why the
Birchers turned against the Cold War
during Vietnam. Robert
Welch, I mean, you can't get more anti-communists
than that guy, the leader of the Burst Society.
But he goes, wait a minute, why are we turning
our country into a communist country
in the name of containing communism over there?
And he was being very liberal
with the use of the word there, but meaning why are we
building a total state here?
When that's everything that we're trying
to oppose in Vietnam, but
we're building it here at home is crazy. We need to save this money. We need to build our country
and lead the world by example, not by force. It was the obvious thing. If it was that obvious to
Robert Welch and Ron Paul during the Cold War, then after the Cold War, you got to make up a bunch
of crap about Saddam Hussein is Hitler and he's killing all the babies in their incubators and these
kinds of Belgian babies on bayonets and related hoaxes to keep the thing going. Because again, as Richard
prior said,
I don't make any sense to me, right?
Like if it doesn't just sound right to your average guy,
you tell me we had a face-down Hitler, all right.
We had a face-down Stalin and Mao?
That makes sense.
We got a bomb Kadopi?
There's not a better way that we, USA, number one, can handle that?
You know, same kind of thing going forward here.
And this is why, you know, these, and I like to emphasize this so much,
is that in the aftermath of Vietnam, people think that, oh,
piece is just hippies and leftists and anti-Americans of one striper or another, people who are just
no good in a fight anyway. So what do they know about security? Right, Jack Nicholson, I stand on that
wall. Even think about what a joke that was. He was down in Guantanamo Bay. Keeping Castro
a bay for me? Yeah, thanks a lot, dude. I can't handle that truth, whatever, you're burying down there.
A lot of torture later, but anyway. So you're saying, like, it's really people that were
hawks for a time woke up. That's right. The reality of.
of the ridiculousness, the absurdity of what a totalitarian bureaucracy does as it expands and creates
momentum, and then you're now become the thing you were fighting.
Right.
But Francis Fukuyama knew better.
He said, no, it's the end of history.
And America has proven that more or less democracy and more or less free market capitalism,
as like Bill Clinton would define them or something of that era, that that's the future of mankind.
We proved it.
They tried every other way of having a modern.
and successful society, and this is the one and only way to do that. And not only that then,
but that's obviously America's mandate. And all his neocon friends took it as America's mandate
that we're going to force the world to accept our ways in that same way. Of course, the British
justified there, obviously very self-interested empire in the very same way, that we're going to
teach you to have a separate independent judiciary at any cost, right? And it's all the,
you know, I hate to say it, but the white man's burden type of argument.
And they say this to this day. Look, if it wasn't us, it would be the Russians. If it wasn't us, it would be the Chinese. If it wasn't us, it would be somebody else and it would be worse. And so that's it. It was our responsibility. We're the most mature and adult and responsible stewards of global power. And so it has to be us to do this. And that was what it said in the defense planning guidance. And now it's true that Bush lost that election and the Clintonites came in. But as Paul Wolfowitz bragged again in the national interest by the end of the decade, that they all adopted the Wolfowitz doctrine anyway.
that, you know, like for example, Bill Clinton going right around NATO to do the war in Kosovo in 1999
because he wanted to. And Russia had a veto on the UN Security Council. And so, well, forget that.
We just go around that. That's straight out of the Wolfowitz doctrine, right? That it's what's good for us
and our predominance of power in those regions of the world is what matters the most. And these other
considerations will have to take a back seat to make sure that we can be the guarantors of our world order,
regardless of what the treaties everybody signed up for say.
And so that really is what they call the Wolfowitz Doctrine.
It's not just, hey, let's go to Iraq for Israel, although that's a huge part of it,
but it's let's America, our military power is always beneficial compared to the alternative.
And so we should be the ones to guarantee the peace or the war.
But in our case, if it's war, it's only because the alternative was worse, we promise.
And so that's the doctrine. And there is an ideology of American Empire here. I don't want to dismiss the corruption. It's a huge part. I mean, if hopefully we have time later and talk really about the new Cold War with Russia, we can talk a lot about the role that Lockheed and the other military industrial complex firms played in pushing all these policies for it. It is true with Iraq, too. The Committee on the Liberation of Iraq was sponsored by Bruce Jackson from Lockheed Martin. And he also financed the project for New American Century, a
Bill Crystal and Robert Kagan, he financed the weekly standard magazine. And the agenda was, like, let's sell NATO planes in Europe and let's push for war in the Middle East. And so there's a lot of self-interested reasons there. But I think overall, like you've got to take these people at their word when they say, we know we're heroes. We know we're doing the right thing. We know everybody's better off without us. We know that we have to. This is our morality-based foreign policy. We just can't allow that bad thing to happen any longer. We have to do something worse.
to stop it and this kind of thing is very like you could tie it back to like whatever i'm not this smart to
talk all about the influence of of the pilgrims and their glorious mission you know in ancient
massachusetts to create the new city on the hill to to be like the new zion and and ultimately
determine the fate of mankind but there's a lot of yankee busy bodyhood that is built into this
And, of course, the Scotch Irish like to get drunk and get into fist pies for fun.
And I take responsibility for that as a bit of my background, too.
I'm not being a racist bigot, but, like, that's part of our culture is like being a tough guy
and being able to get in a brawl and win one or even suffer a defeat and not cry about it.
You know what I mean?
And, like, yeah, some of that, which is the dual, it's a double-edged sword of human nature is the Scots-Irish.
I mean, they're so, and I had a great conversation with Saga and Jetty about this, are so foundational to the,
individualism that makes America great, but then you get into trouble when you start to believe
your... Tell them there's a bad guy out there. Yeah. And you start... And then you have the biggest
military in the world, and there's Lockheed Martin as the military duster complex, and now you think
you're better than everybody, and now you're creating wars all over the place. Yep.
Creating enemies all over the place. And see, of course, there's partisanship is all built into this.
It's everybody supports their guy, because the other guy is, we can't let them win, so we can't
undermine, even when we disagree with our own guy, we can't undermine him or we're helping the other
guys are going to get him in the midterms or they'll get him in the next election. So people
close ranks around things they even disagree with just because they consider, again, the
alternative worse. That's even from the point of view of voters a lot of times that, like,
you know, even Murray Rothbard endorsed George H.W. Bush, who had just done the Iraq war,
because Rothbar is like, well, at least he hates Yitzhak Shamir, and at least he's not bringing
Hillary Clinton and the leftist cultural revolution with him, right?
So, well, just, you know, people got to make these choices and make their comparisons
of, you know, what they favor or what they value at any given time and make those compromises,
you know?
And that's why you said anti-war.com is nonpartisan, right?
That's right.
Yeah, we're reaching out to everybody.
We're here to inform everybody again, as I was mentioned during the short break there,
that Hawks read our website too, because if you want really the best briefing of what's
going on in the country. Like, we do hear from them from time to time that, like, I got to admit,
those guys really do have the most comprehensive coverage of the stuff I'm interested in,
even if from their point of view, the wrong point of view.
Before we go to Iraq War II, if it's okay, take a brief aside, since you mentioned it,
we did an Iran debate a few weeks ago. Yes.
Where about, actually, 20 minutes was cut toward the end where it went a bit off the rails.
and you agreed with the description that I wrote on X.
I hope it's cool if I read it.
I try hard to avoid editing.
That's why I do four, five, six, seven, eight hour podcast.
I wonder how long we go today.
The part I cut in the Iran debate
was where it went off the rails after four hours,
not content-wise, but tone-wise, mockery, interruption, et cetera.
Both had very little sleep the night before
and were tired and not their best selves,
as they both said.
I cut not because of the content, but the style.
I try all I can to avoid having that kind of drama on the podcast.
Instead, I thought the first four hours had a lot of strong rants,
which you did, and you were continuing the rants very well today.
I'm enjoying it.
So you wanted to echo that description and that the edit made sense.
Maybe can you speak to that?
And then also, can you please?
It would be great.
Now that you're fresh full of Dr. Pepper,
say anything and everything you would like to say that went.
unresponded to maybe that is left to be said thank you yes so first of all i'll take my
responsibility for that part i literally had a long drive and a long flight and four hours sleep and
no food in my stomach whatsoever and i quite honestly absolutely despise mark dubowitz and i have
for a very long time and so it was i almost i really had thought about this beforehand i really
should have rejected your terms at the beginning where we're all friends here having a friendly
discussion. I had already kind of rehearsed in my mind what I wanted to say to you was actually
no, right? This is just business. I wish you did. And I know that I really do regret that. And I'm sorry to
you personally for that. Because what I should have said was this is just business. What's going to
happen here is he's going to lie the whole time because he has to. And so then I'm going to spend all
my time telling you why what he just said isn't actually true and how you can go verify that for
yourself, et cetera, which is what ended up happening. But it made it much more acrimonious because it was
And for you, it was more frustrating because you're trying to hold things in the conception that you had it where we're all just going to be friends here when that just was never going to really last. And part of that is, look, I'm just, I'm Luke from Empire. I'm not quite all the way grown up, Return of the Jedi, Skywalker here myself. So I get angry and say angry things. So as far as how bad it went, I take my responsibility for my part of that, except the reality.
was, it was just because I was up against
horrible foreign agent lying
his ass off trying to get my
fellow Americans killed and their dollars wasted
and I got a problem with that.
And now on the edit
though, this is where we had a problem
and I do accept from you that this
part was inadvert and I know that you didn't mean
to do it this way. What happened
was there were two instances
of him saying, oh Scott Horton thinks
the Jews control everything
and dictate everything and blah to blah
which I never said
at all. And he said twice. And yet my response was completely deleted. But him saying that
against me was still in there. And I thought, like on one hand, it's completely silly and stupid.
But on the other hand, that's also like a pretty ruthless and horrible thing to try to do to
somebody, not you, him, to try to put those words in my mouth and say, all those facts that you
just heard for four hours. Nah, this guy just hates Jews. So if you're on my side, you don't have to
listen to him. You don't have to believe him, anything like this. And then our discussion about
that's not true, dude, just because I was talking about the neoconservatives doesn't mean I was
talking about the Jews, because, for example, Janker Patrick and Jim Woolsey are Presbyterians,
and Michael Novak and, oh, what's his name, are Catholics? And Francis Fukuyama, I guess,
is a Buddhist, and Zameh Khalil Zad is a Muslim. And so I didn't say the Jews at all, did I? I was
talking about this and that. And my very good response,
to that went to the cutting room floor. And so I thought, well, that was kind of lame. And then I thought
I was going to come back sooner. And so I apologize for kind of putting you on blast in that interview
where I mentioned it. But I was waiting to hear back from you where we're going to make up for that by doing
this interview. And so I was like, yeah, I've kind of disappointed. Now it's nearly August. And I hadn't
heard from the dude. And I thought we were going to do that. And so, and because it is important that
And it goes to my overall point that I'm trying to make here is obviously the American Empire is very much against the interests of the American people, but also and most especially, our support for Israel, the great albatross around our neck.
You know, what they do, or millstone is maybe better, right?
Albatross was a symbol of good luck before you shot it down.
But Israel's interests are vastly different than America's interests.
And people try to lie even to themselves and say that.
that's not true. But they are very different, for example, when Israel killed those women and
children in Kana in 1996. That's what brought our towers down, right? So this is something very
important that we have to grapple with as a country, that we're not just talking about Israel being a
nice Jewish boy minding its own business over there, kind of like in some cliche or narrative.
We're talking about an absolutely ruthless state that is in the process of trying to get rid of
millions of people they wish they hadn't kidnapped back in 1967. We can do a whole bit on that,
but they put themselves in a very difficult position, and so they need our help to a very
great degree. Now, from all that we discussed here today, does it sound like I'm saying the Israelis
and their lobby are behind every single thing in American policy and what we're doing here?
Like, that's not all what I'm talking about. Zabigna Brazinski's not the Israel lobby at all.
He's Rockefeller's guy, and that's a separate group of guys, right?
Um, and so go ahead.
Just a, um, I'm really sorry for missing the two mentions that you're referring to,
you know, people can search in the transcript or a Jew, it appears, I guess, a couple
times and that's what you're referring to. Um, your back and forth argument actually came
about 15 minutes after that moment because you kind of were patiently waiting.
I had to get back to it kind of thing. Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, there's no disrespect,
man. And I really apologize if there's any, uh, hurt or any, you know,
anything like that caused because of that.
And it's true that the thing did really turn into an argument at that point.
I mean, he called Jim Loeb of all people, a vicious anti-Semite,
which is just completely hilarious considering how Jewish Jim Loeb is.
And what an extraordinarily sweet and kind and decent gentleman he is.
This is the most ridiculous thing in the world.
When we were on the curb outside arguing,
he said, J.J. Goldberg of the Jewish Daily Forward,
also is a vicious anti-Semite because he wrote,
something that explained the difference between Netanyahu and Ariel Sharon's positions on
Iraq and Iran. In other words, Mark Dubowitz is very dubious. He is not a serious man. He's,
in a sense, not really a man as much as just a foreign agent representing a position on behalf of a
foreign power. And as I said in that debate, do you think, and I mean this honestly, for anyone
listening, you don't have to answer, but does anyone think that Mark Dubowitz really regrets that
Americans died on September 11th because of what Israel was doing?
He would hide behind, no, they hate us because we're free.
No, maybe he'd say they were mad about our presence in Saudi Arabia, but he would never
say, yeah, but that's because Martin Indick said so.
And that's because, and the Kana massacre helped motivated Mohamed Atta.
He'd just elide that point, just like all Israel lobbyists would.
How could they justify, you know?
I wish I knew the animosity you have for Mark.
because I was part of my, I'm not very good at this, the moderator thing, but I was very confused by the animosity in the room.
Well, and it's the dishonesty, too, even if I just met him that day, like everything out of his mouth was some kind of twisted back.
Like, yes, there was a Cobar Tower attack, but you're going to blame that on the Ayatollah when it was Bin Laden that did that, and we all know that that's true.
So I'll sit here and try to give me some pro-Israel, you know, my truth.
There's only the truth, and Mark Dubowitz is not associated with it.
he has an agenda and but you're right that i should have made that clear that what this is is
a foreign lobbyist trying to get america to serve a foreign nation and i am the guy from
america and antiwar dot com trying to fend him off and look and i i accept to that i ain't so
mature for a 49 year old whatever 48 then i was a i was a very immature 48 at the time
but i lose my temper very quickly when people lie i just can't stand it i just can't stand it
I just don't have time to listen to people being willfully dishonest to me or in front of me, you know?
Yeah, and I'm glad we got a chance to clear that up.
We're going to go hard and for as long as needed.
Great.
And, yeah, no hard feelings at all, man.
I'm glad we worked it out to.
Do we go to Rock War first?
Well, let's do, wait, let's stay on Bill Clinton in the 90s for a minute because, you know, we were talking about the neocons got brought up in the sense that they did help to encourage a Rock War I, although I don't think they were the,
real, you know, kingpins behind it or whatever in the way that they were in Iraq War II.
And then the doctrine of global dominance that Wolfowitz developed, you know, in 92,
that became more or less the standard for foreign policy thought through the 90s.
And then, but during the Clinton years, it's really important to mention that Bill Clinton
backed the Mujahideen, even though they were already attacking us in the United States
and American targets overseas.
Bill Clinton kept backing them in Bosnia, Kosovo, and in Chechnya, and to a greater degree than I understood.
Now, mostly this means working with the Saudis and the Brits to support them, and including bin Laden himself, was seen by at least four credible journalists in Izibaghavich's office, the president of Bosnia and Sarajevo in 1990, I guess, four.
And his men fought there, and Bill Clinton knew it, and Richard Holbrook said, we could have known.
never won without their help and all these kinds of things. I got all the sources and the latest
book provoked. I go into much further detail about this, even than in the terror war book, enough
already. And the same was true in Chechnya, too. And essentially, and as we've seen, and you know this
from just your own recent memory, right, that as we've seen in Syria as well, that as long as the
bin Ladenites are killing Serbs or Russians or Shiites, then it's cool. And that's what America and
Britain and Saudi used them for. And so even though their first attack in the United States was
Rabbi Kahane in 1990, the leader of the Koch Party, who's a very right-wing Israeli rabbi who
advocated for the extermination or expulsion of all Palestinians from all of historic Palestine.
And his party had been banned by the Israeli Supreme Court for being fascist and was banned
from Israeli politics. But he was a radical rabbi, lived in New York, I believe, and he was
assassinated in 1990 by a guy who was part of Egyptian Islamic jihad. Now, this is, that was their
first hit. In 92, they hit us at a hotel in Aden, Yemen. Then in 93, they did the first World Trade
Center attack. Now, it's worth dwelling on this one for a second because Bill Clinton had just
been present for a month and a week. It was the end of February, February 26, 1993. And the truck
bomb, they parked it in the wrong place. It could have toppled one tower over into the other. It
could have just that truck bomb without another one. If they had put it in the wrong place,
it could have toppled one tower over into the other at five o'clock in the afternoon.
Right. And so, and then from there into more and more towers, who knows? Like, there could have
been tens and tens and tens of thousands of people killed. And it almost worked. And the thing is,
about that, a couple of things. First of all, the CIA had allowed these guys into the country
when INS wanted to keep them out because they said, we know these guys. They're friends from the Afghan
in war, we don't mind them, and let them in, so they're all living in Brooklyn,
and dangerous terrorists.
Then the second thing was that the FBI had a walk-in informant, a guy named Imad Salem,
who was an Egyptian Army intelligence officer or a former one, and he had been recruited
by them, and he allowed them to recruit him to be the bomb maker.
You can trust me, I'm a military guy, I can make the bomb, he said.
Then he went to the FBI, said, I've been recruited by some terrorists to make a bomb.
And there were two agents who believed him, Floyd and Antishev, Nancy Floyd and John Antishev, where the agents work in the case.
And the plan was they were going to use him to use an inert powder, make a fake bomb, and it would be a perfect sting.
But the thing is, their boss was a guy named Carson Dunbar, and he would not, he in fact demanded they cut his pay, the informants pay from $500 to $300 a week, and demanded he wear a wire on the floor of the mosque where, you know, while I stand.
sleeping on the floor of the mosque with these guys. He can't wear a wire, right? So he ends up
bugging out and says, I think the FBI's on to me and bugs out. Then they brought in Ramsey
Yusuf, the guy who built the bomb, the real bomb, the real terrorist who came in. And again,
almost topple one tower over the end of the other. Problem is a couple of things. Only six people
died. That's a lot of people, if you're one of the six or the survivors of the six, right? I'm
not saying that, but I'm just saying in the imagination of the American people, it was
kind of just not that big of a deal. And New York City's pretty far from here and just people
were not feeling it nearly as much as say, for example, both of them collapsing with 3,000 people
inside still, right? So then also two days later, the ATF raided the branch of Divideons and thus
began a six weeks long siege of this religious group 100 miles up the road from here who
ultimately the FBI and the Army Delta Force massacred on April the 19th, 93. So the American people's
attention was just completely diverted and Clinton's too. This is his whole first hundred days. It's all
bogged down in Waco and this kind of thing. So, and who wants to learn a bunch of ARAB names and all of
this stuff? It just, to the FBI agents, they didn't do a very good job of falling up and, and
preventing the same group from carrying out things. Now, they had, I think I don't really know enough
about this. I need to go back and reread about the Holland Tunnels plot, the UN building and all that.
I think that was the setup where they were trying to get the rest of these guys in a sting, basically.
on that part of the plot.
But in 1995,
the bin Laden Knights attacked and killed Americans training the Saudi National Guard.
And in 1996, they blew up the Kobar towers in Dharan, Saudi Arabia.
And that was a truck bombing that killed 19 American airmen
who were stationed there to bomb Iraq.
And that was who was the target.
But then what happened was the Saudi Kingdom in alliance with the corrupt criminal Louis Free,
of course, the director of the Federal Intelligence Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation,
they who were in charge, not CIA, they had the mandate to treat all these al-Qaeda taxes crimes,
as they are crimes under federal code.
So it was FBI took the lead at that time.
And Louis Free wanted to believe the story that somehow it was Iranian-backed,
Shiite Saudi Hezbollah that had done the attack because, of course, the Saudi monarchy hates
their Shiite majority and they just happen to live right on top of where all the oil is. And they
didn't want to blame it on bin Laden, who was, you know, adjacent to the royal family and who they
wanted to take care of themselves, et cetera. And so they blamed it on Iran. But it was bin Laden
who did it. And the FBI agent in charge, John O'Neill, knew that it was them who did it.
His enemy, Michael Schoyer from the CIA, also knew that it was bin Laden who did it,
and bin Laden himself bragged about it to Abdel Bari Atwan, the editor of Al-Quds al-Arabi in London,
and named the names of the martyrs and celebrated them and said, that's exactly right.
Are you listening now and all of these things about it?
It was Al-Qaeda that did that.
Then in 1998, they hit the African embassies, and in 2000, they hit the USS Cole.
They had bailed on an attack against the USS, the Sullivan's, the dinghy sank.
And then they hit the coal, killed 17 sailors in Aden in 2000.
So this is, these attacks are building up.
These are building up and building up in the run up to September 11th.
And then the whole time, they're saying exactly why they're doing this.
So we know their motive.
And they're also saying their strategy.
Their strategy is to provoke us into invading Afghanistan.
They're going to replicate.
They're going to give us our own Afghanistan the way we gave the Soviets, their own Vietnam, in Afghanistan.
And bin Laden said repeatedly, the point was to provoke us and to overreacting, to bog us down, bleed us to bankruptcy, break our empire on the rocks of Afghanistan the same way we had helped them do to the USSR.
And so then W. Bush, when he was elected, his son, a bin Laden's son, gave an interview to roll.
Rolling Stone in 2010, where he says, I was in Afghanistan with my father. And when Bush was
elected in 2000, my father was so happy. He said, this is the kind of president he needs, one who will
attack and spend money and break the country. He said, this is in 2010, so bin Laden's still
alive. He says, Bill Clinton sent missiles after my father and didn't get him. But now you've
spent 10 years in Afghanistan and you still haven't gotten him. America used to be smart.
not like the bull that runs after the red scarf.
Okay.
So that was the strategy,
was to get America to kill itself,
to get us to strap on the suicide vest.
Get the irony of the whole thing,
how is a group of 400 bandits hiding out in Nangahar province
supposed to bring down the empire?
The answer is, you give the empire an excuse.
to exploit. It's not that George Bush is stupid and innocent, it's that he's stupid and
guilty, right? You know, it's not that Bin Laden thought, oh, here's a guy who's such a
super patriot that he'll go the extra mile. He looked at Bush said, here's a guy who's a corrupt,
evil, narrow-minded, short-sighted idiot of a criminal who will exploit a crisis to the
nth degree if I give him one. And that's what I'm trying to do. And which, by the way, a
consider the collectivism of Osama bin Laden, who considers that there's no limit,
apparently, on the number of Afghans that he can get killed in his plan here.
When he ain't from there, right, he's trying to provoke a war with the superpower against a regime
that's allowed him to stay and against a people who did nothing to him or to us, right?
A people, I hate that, but some people, millions of people, who did nothing to us whatsoever.
And he put them in our crosshairs on what, the idea, well, God'll sort him out.
they'll go to paradise if they believe well and so who cares about them and which was something that
was a big problem with mullah omar where mullah omar despite the narrative actually hated and feared osama bin laden
and wanted rid of him and was trying to negotiate to get rid of him because as murray rothbard says
a radical becomes conservative the day he captures the capital city right and so mullah omar didn't
want a world revolution like you know uh osama bin lennan right he wasn't interested in
in that he was interested in holding down Afghanistan. He'd already won most of the country. He hadn't
finished winning it all yet. And he wasn't trying to get in a fight with America, which Bill Clinton
had supported the rise of the Taliban in 1996, had encouraged Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to encourage
the Taliban to go all the way to Kabul. And in fact, wanted them to not even settle with the
Northern Alliance, wanted to see an outright victory against the Northern Alliance because
they wanted the Taliban to have total control, a monopoly on the entire state so they could build
an oil pipeline from Tajikistan across Afghanistan to Pakistan. Now, they abandoned this project after
98, after the embassy bombings of 98. People sometimes say that's why Bush invaded in 01 or whatever.
No, that wasn't it. But that is why Bill Clinton supported the rise of the Taliban in 1996 in the first place.
And they said, well, we figured there will be an emir and no parliament and lots of Sharia law.
we can live with that. That was the Bill Clinton administration is what they said about that, right?
So in Ahmed Rashid's book, The Taliban has all that stuff in it. And I quote him at length in my books.
And so what was the point of that? Screwing the Russians, figuring out a way to get hydrocarbons out of the Caspian basin without having to go through Russia or Iran.
And so that was part of that whole game, which we'll have to talk about that later in the Cold War segment here.
But that's part where these stories overlap a bit. No.
So it's important to bring up, too, that during this time, the cliche in the Pentagon
among the joint staff, who are the most important policy planners for the Pentagon,
they had a cliche that said, terrorism is a small price to pay for being a superpower, right?
What are they going to do?
They're going to set off a truck bomb here or there.
They're going to kill a few hundred people here or there.
Look at the African embassies.
This is mostly Africans who died.
And so I don't think that they thought that losing a couple of towers full of a couple of thousand people would be a small price to pay.
I think they weren't not imagining that level of consequence.
But after all, they did have to hijack our airliners to have something to crash into anything.
We are talking about a stateless group of essentially penniless bandits, right, who have millions of dollars, not billions, much less trillions, right?
These were criminals, right?
outlaws, terrorists.
So they had no ability to truly bring us down.
They had to, and of course, the analogy to Pearl Harbor is perfect because
3,000 people died in a sneak attack.
What more do you need to know?
And I kind of like to harp on this, not that I ever really, like, studied psychology
more than a couple semesters in junior college, but it seems probably meaningful, right?
That in the images, the planes literally come out of the clear blue sky, right?
And so, geez, I guess I don't know what's behind this. Someone explain it. It's just like tabula rasa, man, go ahead and let me know what I'm supposed to think about this. I'm shocked and I'm completely surprised.
said, you know, of course, people
knew a lot about this were very
worried about it, of course, but for the average
American, and this was the meaning of the term
blowback, by the way, as Chalmers
Johnson explained, and it was
coined in Donald Wilbur, who was
a CIA historian, in his after
action report about
the coup in Iran. He said,
CIA officer's going to have to be very careful
about blowback coming down the line from operations
like this. And then, as
Johnson explained, what it really meant
was not just consequences, because you can just
have a funny term for consequences. But blowback meant the long-term consequences of secret foreign
policies so that when they come due, the American people don't understand what it means. Why are the
Iranians burning our flag? Why are the bin Ladenites crashing into our towers? Somebody tell us because
we don't know. And when the answer is, well, it's actually all our fault, then the security force,
our national government will not tell us that, in fact. They'll make up a lie and say,
Islam makes them hate us because we love our mamas and Jesus so much.
And then people go, oh, man, what a terrible psychopathic, I didn't realize Islam was that bad of a religion.
We better have to fight all of them now if that's what it does to you.
It's radical Islam.
See, once you believe in Islam hard enough, it turns you into a suicide bomber and makes you hate North Americans.
There is no other cause and effect that you guys need to be aware of.
And people might not remember this, but boy, did they push it that fall.
that the Taliban had done it.
Al-Qaeda was the Taliban, the Taliban was Al-Qaeda.
You mean 2001?
Yeah.
That they was Taliban and there were an al-Qaeda.
They conflated them together so powerfully that then this became a reason why people were just so doubtful about the entire narrative
because they're going, what do you mean a bunch of cavemen from the town of Bedrock
out there in Kandahar province, did this to us because they don't like that we have a bill of rights?
Like, that obviously is not true.
So what is the truth? And then people come up with endless answers other than the obvious one,
which is America has a really bad Middle East policy and Israel is a real big part of that.
That's the answer is blowback. Again, Egyptians volunteering for a Saudi to kill Americans as revenge
for what Israel is doing to the Lebanese. It's a little bit complicated, but not that complicated,
if you want to be honest. But at the end, what is it? It's all George Bush's fathers and Bill Clinton's
fault, right? And so, what are they going to do? I remember being, I was sitting in Chicago
in 9-11 happened. I remember being really confused in the months after, in the hours and the days,
and the months after, with all the narratives that were coming out. It didn't quite make sense.
A lot of the things, it almost felt like they're improvising with different stories that
will convince the American people. And I remember being extremely confused, Iraq. Yeah, yeah,
Saddam Hussein. They're trying to see who can we create?
the evil guy out of al-Qaeda Taliban and then they just ran with it and can you can you just
can you break that down what the different lies that end up sticking that were used to
mislead us into the war yeah well so on Afghanistan it's clear that the CIA and Connolly's
arise and we know this not that Bob Woodward is really trustworthy
but he published supposedly verbatim
verbatim transcripts from the National Security Council meetings
in his book, Bush at War.
And so we know from those National Security Council meetings
that Connolly Zerice and the CIA
we're advising that we try our best to divide the Taliban from al-Qaeda
and let the Taliban know,
we don't have a fight with you
or just after these Arabs that hit us.
In fact, it's very important.
The Taliban tried to warn us that the attack was coming
and were essentially turned away.
They warned the U.N. in Pakistan, and they sent a guy to the United States,
and he was denied meeting at the State Department at all and went home.
And they only knew it was true because that an attack was coming,
because they had learned it from a Tajik jihadist or a, I believe,
a Tajik, who was one of their informants basically told them,
Bin Laden didn't tell Mullah Omar.
In the summer of 2001, Mullah Omar had told Arnaud DeBar Grav from the Washington Times.
He said, Bin Laden is like a chicken bone stuck in my throat.
I can neither swallow him nor spit him out.
And Milton Bearden, who had helped run the CIA covert war in the 1980s, told the Washington Post,
we've been negotiating with Mullah Omar over bin Laden since 98.
After the Africa embassy attack, Omar said, I got to get rid of this guy.
And he ordered bin Laden, don't you do any more attacks against the United States.
And bin Laden had promised him that he wouldn't and then kept attacking anyway.
And so Mullah Omar, this is the dictator of the Taliban ruling regime in,
in Afghanistan.
Milton Bearden said that
the Taliban would tell the CIA
oh bin Laden, geez, you know
we lost track of him today. He's out
falconing in the countryside somewhere. We don't know
where he is. And then the Americans would pound their fist
on the table and say, we said hand him over.
When that's what he just said was go ahead and kill him.
He's outside of our protection right now.
And if you were to murder him, it would not be our fault.
take your best drone strike take the best hint that's milton beard and talking about that's where i got
this from okay is the taliban hated this dude he was nothing but trouble and they wanted rid of him
and remember what bush said no negotiations hand him over they said well come on give us some evidence
and we'll hold a proceeding here and bush said no way give him over and cole and pow at one point
said we'll we'll come up with evidence we will accuse him of this we'll show you and then they're like
no no evidence um they the talban said well take them
you what, let us give them over to any Muslim country in the world, which, of course, you know,
could be Malaysia or Indonesia, or Jordan or Egypt, who are going to do exactly what they're told
by the United States. He's going to land on the tarmac, and he's going to go straight to Virginia.
Give me a break, right?
Nope, not good enough. Then he started bombing on December the 8th, and the Taliban said,
okay, we have no more conditions. We're willing to give him up if you'll just stop the bombing.
and Bush said too little, too late, no, and kept the war going then.
Why? Why? Why? Why?
The Occam's razor answers, you can't read the guy's mind. There's so much circumstantial evidence about the thinking at the time.
And this was going to what I was saying about. CIA and Rice said we should just bomb al-Qaeda and not the Taliban.
Donald Rumsfeld overruled him. Said, no, we need to take the fight to the Taliban. We need to keep the Afghan war going on because we want the American people to understand.
And he actually proposed that we should bomb Baghdad now so that the American people understand
the war on terrorism is not over if we kill bin Laden.
And it ain't lost if we don't.
The war is much bigger than him and it is going to take place over a vast space and a vast period of time.
And we want the American people to know that this is not ending anytime soon.
We're going to Baghdad.
It's going to take a while to build up the force in Kuwait.
and they hoped Turkey, which didn't work out, but in order to go.
And so if we kill bin Laden now, or even if we do, we want to make sure the American people
know that the war is not over yet.
And I believe, and I make the case in both books, probably better in the second one, fools
there and enough already, that they let bin Laden go.
The CIA and the Delta Force on the ground were begging for reinforcements, and reinforcements
were available. There were tens of thousands of rangers, or at least what, 10,000 Rangers or something
at Bogram Air Base north of Kabul. The Green Berets were fighting the Taliban up in Mazzari-Sharif.
The 75th Airborne Rangers, who are top-tier special operations forces, considered right with
Delta and Navy SEALs, were available in Kandahar province. And General Mattis was there with
10,000 marching Marines. And he could have told them, 10-Hoot, go now. And they had helicopters,
but even then they were like 40 miles away yeah it's mountains so what right and they were not allowed
to go and to seal the border and the CIA and the delta force are like man we got them cornered on
three sides the fourth side is the Pakistani border they're going to get away we need more men
in the military they did a congressional investigation they just said they had a plan it's called
block and sweep and make sure you get everybody in between here and here right and that's exactly
how you do it and the delta force guys in the CIA
guys, namely Thomas Greer, aka Dalton Fury in his book, Kill bin Laden, and Gary
Bernson in his book, Jawbreaker, talk about how they just could not understand why they
could not get the support that they wanted. And, and, um, and, um, Bernson talks about how his
boss at CIA went and laid out the desk in, uh, the map on the desk. Oh, and Ron Suskin
writes about this too, that they showed Bush the map and said,
need more men for this, and they were denied the men that they needed. And then what? And think about
this, your whole life ever since then. Talk about confusing narratives from that time. How about this
one, dude? How about as soon as bin Laden and his friends crossed the border into Pakistan on
December the 17th, Delta Force is not allowed to chase them? Why? They always say the same thing. I bet you
do like a Lexis nexus thing from back then and fine. How many times they use a term,
bin Laden and his men slipped across the border.
And then once that happened, it's like they jumped into hyperspace and got away.
Once that happened, they crossed the semi-permeable membrane that only terrorists can cross,
but that the Delta Force, top-tier Army Special Operations Forces, cannot cross into a friendly, allied country of ours.
Pakistan, and where we know from Robert Grenier, the CIA Station Chief in Islamabad,
in his book, 88 Days to Kandahar, he had already made arrangements with the Pakistani Army and Frontier Corps
that we expect the bin Ladenites
to come fleeing across the border
and we expect Americans
to be hot on their tail in pursuit
and so they set up deconfliction
so that the Pakistanis
would not accidentally kill the Americans
because they were expected to come
they were not allowed
to cross the border and give chase
and Dalton Fury is man this is amazing too
and maybe someone in your audience
can find the full thing
but I went on a deep dive trying to find
the full 60 minutes episode
with Dalton Fury and I can only find
severely edited once. But his name is Thomas Greer is his real name. And he's wearing a disguise
and everything. And he does a thing with Scott Pelly. And man, they edit it because the important
part that I'm looking for is where he says we had all these plans to follow them into Pakistan.
We have Chinook helicopters. We were going to go over them and then meet them coming back the other
way. We were going to drop landmines. And there were only three valleys out of there that they
could have taken. We were going to drop mines. That was going to slow them down.
So they knew exactly how to kill Bin Laden.
And they were told to stand up.
And they were not allowed by Donald Rumsfeld in the military to go further.
And even we have W. Bush and Dick Cheney both implicating this too in that Suskin book where
and Bernson, I believe, talks about this in his book too, where Thomas Greer is the guy
who wrote Kilbin Laden and was on 60 Minutes.
He was the lieutenant colonel in the Delta Force in charge there.
And then Gary Bernson was the guy on the scene who wrote the book, Jawbreaker.
And then his boss was Henry Crumpton.
and he was the guy who had laid the map out onto Bush's desk and said,
we need more men and was denied by Bush himself.
So it might be nice to blame just Rumsfeld,
but it was the president himself who refused to commit the forces necessary to get bin Laden.
And it is just a circumstantial case.
I don't have a direct quote of any of these people saying this,
but it seems pretty clear to me that they decided that they would prefer that bin Laden go,
so that like in the book 1984, they would have Emmanuel Goldstein,
the enemy, the wrecker, the saboteur out there,
the danger who could still kill you.
He's not gone yet.
Dumbie Bush used to love to say,
imagine Saddam Hussein
giving bin Laden's hijackers
chemical weapons.
Imagine September 11th,
only this time armed by Saddam Hussein.
Well, bin Laden's already dead.
And the American people by and large
believe that that's what you get
for messing with us, pal.
We win, you lose, and it's over by Christmas.
Well, then how the hell are we going to go to Baghdad?
Let's then take us a year and a half to build up the forces and to make people's mom and dad scared enough to think that we need to do this.
We have a massive propaganda campaign to wage here.
And here's where we get right back into the neo-conservatives.
Again, in March of 2002, Justin Romando wrote a piece at anti-war.com.
And it's called Our Hijacked Foreign Policy.
Neocons take Washington.
Baghdad is next.
And Justin was a brilliant gene.
And because he was a libertarian, he had a long-time ideological axe-to-grind
and personal enemy relationship with these neocons.
You know, us libertarians, we really are, they're polar opposite on so many things.
And he called it the axis of crystal there, the little Lenin of the neoconservative movement.
And he's here citing benevolent global hegemony is the actual quote.
He kind of got that little wrong.
is Bill Crystal and Robert Kagan wrote this article in foreign affairs in 1996
toward a neo-Raganite foreign policy where they say we have to have benevolent global hegemony.
And that's what he's talking about there.
And he's talking about the few people.
And I have to tell you, man, I was really interested in foreign policy politics and all these things for many years leading up to this.
But if you just ask me, what's a Republican?
I would have said Houston, right?
James Baker the Third, right?
Dark Lord of the Sith.
Lawyer for Exxon.
That's what conservatism is.
It's big business, right?
It's, you know, I don't know what else.
What?
I knew who Bill Crystal was, but I didn't know who he was, right?
I knew there was the weekly standard.
I knew they were crazy after Saddam Hussein.
I didn't know why, and I didn't look enough into it leading up to then.
It's so interesting to, sorry to interrupt, but sort of the lens of this analysis in 2020.
I need to go back and read some of this.
You need to go back and read all of Justin from 1999 all the way through.
Through the whole thing.
Get yourself a rainy day.
You can stop about halfway through Obama probably.
But, man, at this time, he was the most important writer for America, as neglected as he was.
There was nobody better at what was happening to this country at that time.
Even from just a brief glances, I could see the cutting wit and the brilliance and the humor.
You know what he was?
He was a big gay, Pat Buchanan.
His big gay Archie Bunker from San Francisco, right?
he was he he was a right winger and a paleo libertarian but like buchananite leaning he gave pat buchanan's
nomination speech for the reform party in 1999 and and he's you know a right wing libertarian
but he is what he is he's at where he's at and so it sounds kind of ironical or whatever why would a gay
guy like pat buchanan so much and it's because pat buchanan at that time his reputation was
very much the culture war and very much like gay people should still stay in the
closet and things like that. And so Justin was like, I don't care about that. What matters is the
world empire. And then even here, he's a right winger too. It's not that he's a liberal and he
found a right winger that he likes. It's that Patrick Buchanan is like a perfect kindred spirit,
even though you might think not. But Justin was from Queens. And he was from that era,
you know, raised in the 1950s and 60s. He was a crusty old paleo con in his way. And that was
why he was so good. And when I first started reading him, I remember saying even to my friends,
how does this guy know all this stuff. It's just unbelievable how plugged in he is. And he lives
out in San Francisco. But he knows everything happening at every important think tank in Washington.
And he knows the difference between them all. He knows who all these guys are and what their role is and
who is whose mentor and student. And all of these things in a way is just unbelievable. And he had
the neocons number of men. And yes, a rock war two was their war. And it was mostly
for Israel.
I'm severely distracted by
how hilarious his writing is
because I'm glancing.
No, it's all right, it's all right.
I won't, it'll be a rabbit hole that we'll go in it,
but he goes hard against the neoconservatives.
Oh, so bad.
And look, his first article was about the Kosovo War in 1999,
and he goes after the neo-conservatives
right then and there from the very get-go.
He used to love to quote this guy,
I believe David Tall in the Weekly Standard
said about Slobodomelosovich,
that he better do what we say or he knows we'll kick their skulls in.
And he's like, yeah, this is who the neoconservatives are, dude.
They're barbarians, essentially, Bill Crystal's men.
Quick pause.
I'm sorry, I need another bathroom break.
And then maybe you can get back to military industrial complex.
Oh, yeah.
Okay, so before we get too far into Iraq War II and the neoconservatives,
we need to decide whether we want to talk about the Afghanistan war now
or whether we want to come back and talk more about Afghanistan later
or maybe not even at all or whatever.
you've got to make that call because there's plenty to talk about there as a hugely important
thing on the other hand of course and this is the same dilemma i face when i was writing enough already
it's like how much can i tell you about afghanistan before i got to bring you to iraq which is
the heart of the story that everybody's so interested in where most of the action takes place it's on
the other side of iran from afghanistan and afghanistan remained on the margin throughout the whole
thing, even though it's in itself, it was its own huge thing.
So, but I leave that to you to, like, how far you want to get into that and win.
I think Iraq specifically is the deepest, the most thorough case study of the military
industrial complex and the abuse of power.
So as much as we can explore that, it's great.
And I think it was really insightful we described that right there in Afghanistan,
who could have gotten bitten on.
There's a lot of places where this did not have to go as long as it did.
And that highlights one clear moment.
Yeah.
It's a real tragedy.
It really is.
They could have negotiated and they could have killed them.
And the whole thing really could have been over by Christmas.
And by the way, Gary Bernson said that.
He said that to the reporter Michael Hirsch in 2016.
He said, it's really sad when you think about it, how this thing could have all been over by Christmas.
So that ain't just me.
That's them.
That's him.
That's the guy who was the second CIA officer on scene in charge who wrote, and you read his book.
You know how editors do this sometimes when a CIA guy writes a book?
They'll lead the redaction marks in the big black boxes because it's like good salesmanship to do that, right?
So when you read Gary Bernson's book, he goes, and there I was.
And me and my fellow CIA officers were talking about how frustrated we were that we could not understand why they wouldn't give us the reinforcements while he's getting away.
and then the next four sentences are blacked out.
It's like...
And then same thing for Dalton Fury, Thomas Greer.
So how do we get to Iraq?
Let's do Iraq.
Here's where we're going to start Iraq.
First of all, Wolfowitz and all them wanted to go all the way to Baghdad in 1990, one.
And Senior told them no and stopped short of that.
Also let Saddam crush the Iraqi, the Shiite and Kurdish uprising.
Then, of course, we have the status quo of Bill Clinton's containment policy.
dual containment policy from Saudi Arabia against Iraq and Iran through the 1990s,
sanctions, no-fly zone bombings, and all of that. So, and by the way, there were two failed CIA
coups in 1995 and 1996 against Saddam. One of them was the one that got Robert Baer in so much
trouble because he was working with Ahmed Chalabi, the Iraqi exile, to try to overthrow Saddam,
and it all went to hell because Chalabi was basically selling them. Chalabi was basically making a bunch of
promises to them about how it would go that, of course, did not work out at all. And so this is
where the CI first put their burn notice on him. So Amid Chalbi is this important Iraqi exile. He was a
banker in Jordan who then fled the country because he was wanted for embezzling money. And here
he was selling the CIA on all of his promises about what he could do in Iraq, and then he was
not coming through. And so that was sort of a minor part of the story. But then in 1996,
David Wormser, who's an important neoconservative
in alliance with the more important neoconservative,
Richard Pearl, and also Douglas Fythe, their fellow traveler.
And I think there were two more people signed it.
It may have been Charles Fairbanks, Jr.,
and one other guy signed it, too, I think.
It was really Wormser and Pearl talking, okay?
And it's called A Clean Break,
a new strategy for securing the realm.
Oh, man, you know what, hell.
As long as we're doing this, we want to do this, right?
Hell yeah.
So we want to talk about our Rockward 2 legs.
What we've got to do is let's go back to the early 1990s in Yitzhak Rabin.
Now, Israel had a strategy, as I said, being friends with Iran.
At the same time, they're friends with Turkey and friends with Ethiopia.
Why?
This was called the strategy of the periphery in Israel.
It meant if you picture the map, okay, from Israel's perspective,
want to support Turkey to divide Syria's attention. We want to support Iran to divide Iraq's
attention. And we want to support Ethiopia to divide Egypt's attention. Does that make sense?
Geographically speaking? Yes. So Rabin says, no, we're going to turn that upside down.
And what we're going to do instead is we're going to negotiate with the Arabs, the closer states.
And we're going to even make a deal with the Osir-Arafat. And this is the Oslo peace process that Rabin started.
Now, they weren't really going to give them an independent state.
They were going to give them something like a Shiningya-on-sudo-sort-a-kind independent state,
which actually probably would have been the best solution, right?
It would be you have your local police forces, but we are in one country together kind of a thing.
There are lots of states that have kind of complicated arrangements like that and pull it off.
But anyway, this was Rabin's plan.
But then a Netanyahu fan murdered him in 1995.
This was when Shimon Perez took over.
Now, Shimon Perez had been the president.
He's now promoted to prime minister, and he continues the same policy.
This is why, oh, I'm sorry, I should have mentioned.
In the reversal of the periphery doctrine and negotiating with the Arabs,
part of that was now turning on Iran and demonizing Iran,
because just for domestic political reasons in Israel,
Rabin had to be tough against somebody.
So now it's Iran that's the problem.
and that's why we need to negotiate with the Arabs even, right? So, um, he makes that change
in 1993. And in fact, there's a funny anecdote and treacherous alliance by Trita Parsi
again, where the Clinton people were surprised and even laughed because what do you mean?
You hate Iran now. Last week, you were demanding that we like Iran along with you. Now you've
changed your mind. But what happened? And all that happened was Israel changed their mind. They just
had a different policy now. It wasn't any particular thing that Iran had done at that point to
cross their line. And so they just decided that this is important to do now. And so somebody's got to
be the enemy. So now the enemy is going to be Shiite fundamentalist Islam, revolutionary, Iranian
threat. And in fact, it's one importantist strategist told Parsi, we needed new glue for the alliance
with the United States. Now that we don't have the Soviet Union anymore, why does America need us?
answer is radical Islam. And of course, that's great because you could be anybody, as long as you're
Muslim, you can be called radical Islam. And it doesn't matter how radical or which sect or whose side
you're on or anything, right? You could just do anything with that, right? For you apply that to
Palestinians or anybody else. So that's a great one, like for propaganda-wise from the Israeli
point of view. And so then when Shimon Peres took over after Rabin was assassinated, he launched
Operation Grapes of Rath, re-invading Lebanon, as part of that same doctrine. See, we're going after the Shiites now.
And that was, again, the operation that motivated the lead hijacker of September 11th to join the
jihad against us right there. That was why he did that, was part of that same strategy, right?
But then Simone Perez's rule was short-lived, and Benjamin Netanyahu first came in and became
the Prime Minister of Israel for the first time in 1996. Okay. Now, David Wormser and Richard
Pearl write this study for him.
It's called A Clean Break, a New Strategy for Securing the Realm.
Again, you can find that at Scotthorton.org slash fair use.
And, in fact, I'm sure there are archived.org versions of it.
You can find it was the, this Israeli think tank published it.
It wasn't an American think tank.
It was the Israeli Center for Strategic Study or something like that.
Posted it there.
Yes, it's posted on Scotthorn.org slash fair use.
A Clean Break, a New Strategy of Securing the Realm by David Warnsler, 1996.
And the companion piece, as it says there, is called Coping with Crumbling States.
Coping with Crumbling States, a Western and Israeli balance of power strategy for the Levant by David Warrens in 1986.
And both of these, well, certainly the first one is officially signed off on by Richard Pearl.
And then I should have hot links on those.
I'm not sure why I don't.
But there are three related articles here by Lohenberg, Wormser and Pearl, promoting the same agenda in the newspapers there.
in the Washington Times and the Wall Street Journal.
Okay, and they're called the Ultimate Peace Process Prize.
Justice Saddam's power is under assault, balance of power, all three pieces.
Yeah.
And now, there's even a book.
It's called Tyranny's Ally by David Wormsert with a foreword by Richard Pearl.
They all say the same thing.
Okay?
What they say is that we're Israeli agents and Ahmed Chalabi sold us a bunch of crap and we bought it.
And it's this magic theory about how overthrowing Saddam is going to be good for Israel.
Now, oh, don't let me leave out.
That as part of Israel's secret relationship with Iran through the 1980s,
their friendship continuing through the 1980s and into the 1990s,
they had a secret oil pipeline from the port of Akaba, which I never say that right.
I forget how to pronounce it right, but it's, we're talking about the Sinai Peninsula
in the red sea.
Now, on the western side of the Sinai Peninsula is the Suez Canal on the gate to the Mediterranean Sea.
On the eastern side of the Sinai Peninsula is the port of Akaba there, okay?
And there was a secret oil pipeline that was run by Mark Rich's company, the guy that Bill Clinton
pardoned on his last day in office, who was this corrupt financier and oil industry guy.
and his company had this secret pipeline
where Iranian ships would come and drop off oil
and it would then go through this pipeline to Israel, right?
Well, once Rabin turned on Iran,
when he turned the periphery strategy upside down,
then the Iranians quit sending oil.
In fact, it may not have been until 95 that they quit sending the oil
because Trita Parsi explains that Iran didn't start backing
Hamas until 95, or at least maybe they had given them a little bit or something. They had given
them very little until then. And so it was provocations by Rabin against Iran had finally, after a
year and a half of this or more, I believe, if I'm remembering it right, I don't think it was
93. I don't, I think it wasn't until 95 that Iran finally said, fine then, if you guys are going to
be that way, and stopped shipping the oil in. So now this becomes a major interest of the
neoconservatives and the Lakud Party, and Ahmed Chalabi understands very quickly that this is what
these guys want to hear, is that if America will put him and his friends in power in Iraq, they'll be
friends with Israel. Now, in the original clean break, they say they want to use the cousin of the
king of Jordan, and they're going to put a Hashemite kingdom in their legs to rule Iraq. Now, the magic
theory here is that, let's do a very, very elementary divide of the Sunnis and the Shiites here
history lesson. Okay, the Shiites went off with Muhammad's family after he died. The Sunnis picked
their own imams, right? So there's like kind of one hierarchy. It's a very, very, very inapt,
but very crude comparison between the Protestants and the Catholics. There's one Shiite church
basically, right, under the Ayatollahs and their system. And they, their inherited power through
the bloodline and all of that. On the Sunni side, they pick their own ministers, right, like the
Protestants, they have their own and do their many more sects and different kinds of Sunnis and
that sort of deal. If that makes sense on the most basic level here, okay? So, not that I'm saying
the Shiites claim to be priests or anything like more analogous with the Catholic Church. I'm not
saying that. I'm just saying there's this order of Ayatollahs the same way there are of the
cardinals and whatever, if you understand. So the deal is this. Yes,
the Shiites do revere their clergy leadership who are descended from Muhammad and evidently can
prove it, I don't know, apparently, right? And wear their black turbans, and that means that they
share his bloodline and all that, okay? Well, the Hashemites also declare themselves to be his descendants,
whether that's true or not, whatever, fine, take it for face granted, and it is, but they're Sunnis.
So the thing is about the Shiites revering people with the blood of the prophet, their Shiite clergy,
it doesn't mean that they consider them to be infallible dictators
whose will is their law and all of these things.
Like even the Pope says some things are my opinion,
some things I'm speaking for the Lord,
but sometimes I'm just saying I think this is how it should be your way.
You know what I mean?
So the Ayatollahs do not exercise like a spell-binding power
over these people through mysticism
and like irrational demands of religious fealty to their every,
order or whatever, right? Like, there's a much more consensual relationship than that or whatever.
You know what I mean? It's not completely top-down sort of thing like that. And like where they
have this magic spell of their bloodline, then is like acts as hypnosis or whatever, or
demands total obedience. That's just never been the implication of the thing. So Chalabee's just
telling these guys whatever they need to hear that if we put a Hashemite king in there, then he will
be able to tell the Shiite clergy that they better stop being friends with Iran and that
they better tell Hezbollah to stop being friends with Iran. And then Hezbollah will be friends
with Israel. And then the Israelis can finish stealing Palestine without having to worry about
Hezbollah causing them problems on their northern flank. That's the clean break. Now, here's
a thing about this, man. Picture
the region in your head a little bit
or pull up the map again if you need to.
You got, here's
David Wormser's argument, okay?
He's saying Iran backs
Hezbollah in southern Lebanon
by way of Syria.
So what we want to do
is get rid of Saddam Hussein,
the secular
Sunni, who's the roadblock
to all this.
Right?
Huh?
Well, again, Magic Witt.
What's going to happen is our Sunni king will just enslave the will of the Shiite supermajority.
And they'll be our cat's paws and do whatever we want and will lord them over Iran?
David Wormsler said, Chalibi assures us that a democratic Shiite Iraq will be a nightmare for Iran.
Because the Iranians will want to live like the Iraqis in their wonderful new awesome supermajority Shiite democracy.
and so under the rule of their benevolent king or however
because they end up changing it a little bit I guess
and emphasizing the democracy part more later
but still it would be a nightmare for Iran
because what happened was I think the king of Jordan died
and was replaced and they said okay forget that
we'll just put Chalaby in power himself
he'll be the guy that we put in now
they also promised Chalabi promised
the neoconservatives will build
the oil pipeline from northern Iraq to Haifa Israel
to make up for the
pipeline that they just lost with the Iranians. Netanyahu bought this, and David Wormser and
Richard Pearl bought this. This is one of the reasons, one of the major reasons that 4,500 Americans
and a million Iraqis died in Iraq War II was so Israel could save a nickel, a barrel on Iraqi oil,
because their own policies had cost them their access to Iranian oil, and so they were paying
this extra premium
after losing that source
and this oil pipeline to Haifa
was a big deal and you'll want to pull
this up because you'll want to read it later and laugh
and weep. It's called
How Ahmed Chalabi conned
the neocons.
Okay, now, for
your audience, they need to know,
disclaimer. A long time ago
salon.com did journalism.
I know, it sounds absurd. And you probably
don't believe me, even though I know you
kind of like me and trust me, but this guy, John Dezart, is from the Financial Times. He is a solid
guy. I have a very brief acquaintance with him, emailing back and forth, and he is no slouch,
and this is not some woke, ridiculous propaganda. This article is very good stuff. Go ahead.
May 4, 2004, John Dezart, How Ahmed Chalabi Khan, the Neokans. The Hawks who launched the Iraq War
believed the deal-making exile when he promised to build a secular democracy with close ties to
Israel. Now the Israel deal is dead. He's closing up to Iran, and his patrons look like they're on the way
out. Yeah. So in this article, man, it's brutal. In there, he quotes Douglas Fythe. Douglas Fythe was,
again, the third signatory on the clean break, although I believe he now disowns it and says,
well, I never agreed with that part in this kind of thing, but whatever. And he helped run the,
he was the Deputy Secretary of Defense for Policy in the first Bush term and ran the office as
special plans with Abram Shulski that lied us in war using lies funneled into the intelligence
stream by Ahmed Chalaby. It's a huge part of how they lied us into war. I'm kind of skipping ahead.
I'm going to come back to that in a minute, okay? But in this article, they quote Douglas Fythe's
law partner Mark Zell. And people might follow him on Twitter. The guy's a riot, dude, and meaning he's
completely insane and a lot of fun if you're into insane Zionist, Warhawk, genocidal lunatics.
But anyway, so he has these quotes in here, okay?
like, this is not me talking. I'm very careful with my words. I'm a libertarian. I'm an
individualist. I'm not a collectivist. And I don't go around categorizing people by their
religion and ethnicity and all this crap. I just don't. I want to raise that way. It's just
it is what it is. This is Desard talking to Chalabi's friends. Okay? I'm quoting a guy,
quoting a guy, quoting a guy, okay? Forgive me. I said to Ahmed, what are you doing
running around with all these Jews.
And he said, I just need them
until I can get my war.
And then I'm going to stab them in the back,
and we're going to get what we want.
So in other words,
Richard Pearl is as stupid as he is evil.
And David Wormser and Richard Pearl
and Paul Wolfowitz and the neo-conservative group,
Douglas Fyth, Scooter Libby,
Hadley, and Joseph,
and Edelman and all of these guys who lie at road,
I say Hannah and Edelman and Abrams, Shulski.
That's what these idiots believed.
These are all neocons?
These are the neocons in the W. Bush administration,
in the vice president's office,
in the state department, in the Defense Department,
that lied us into war.
Colin Powell called them the,
the Jinsa crowd.
Jinsa is the Jewish Institute
for National Security Affairs,
which at that time, I believe,
was run by David Wurmser.
He was one of the most powerful guys there.
And they were part and parcel
with the American Enterprise Institute,
the project for a new American century,
the Center for Security Policy,
and the other of the major
neo-conservative think tanks
that pushed for that war at that time.
And they had power that influence?
They had all the power and influence they needed
because they got it from Dick Cheney
and George W. Bush.
And what Powell said was this was a separate government
inside the government that was run, like a cell
that was run by Dick Cheney.
Wormser was known as Cheney's agent,
his plant at state,
where his job, he and John Bolton,
who is not a neoconservative,
because he's never any kind of leftist.
He's just a conservative nationalist type,
but one of their fellow travelers,
very close with them.
Bolton and Wormser's job was preventing,
preventing Powell and Armitage, his guy, from preventing the war, to keep a leash on them in whatever ways that they could obstruct their efforts.
And then, so in the vice president's office, he had Scooter Libby and Eric Edelman and Elliot Abrams.
No, no, no, pardon me.
Elliot Abrams was on the National Security Council with Zalny Khaled, the same guy who was the primary author of the 1992 defense planning guidance along with Libby.
and Stephen Hadley, who was the Deputy National Security Advisor.
Then you had on the Defense Policy Board, he had Gene Kirkpatrick, who again was from the Social Democrats USA and the Young People's Socialist League before she converted to Commentary Magazine and Reaganism, making her a classical definition, oh, and as a hardcore Zionist, of course, a classical definition, neo-conservative, along with Kenneth Edelman, and Richard Pearl was the chair of the Defense Policy Board, which is,
very important position, an advisory board, and he was really the power of behind the scenes,
majoring leader of the group there. Then Newt Gingrich was another fellow traveler,
the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Republican, who you could consider him
sort of like John Bolton in a way where he's like more or less one of them, but not exactly.
But for example, he may have heard the stories about how Dick Cheney and Scooter Libby made
14 trips to CIA headquarters to beat them over the head and say, we need more against
Iraq come up with it. And they wouldn't come up with it enough. Well, Newt Gingrich did the same thing,
went to CIA headquarters over and over and over again, saying, give us the goods. We don't have
enough. We need more. That's really dark. Yeah. So then under Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary
Defense was Douglas Fythe, who was Deputy Secretary of Defense for Policy, and under him was Abraham
Shulski. And Shulski was a guy who ran the Office of Special Plans, which sounds innocuous enough,
But this was the core of the neo-conservative plot to launder lies from Ahmed Chalabi's exile group, the Iraqi National Congress, into the intelligence stream, along with whatever they could dig out of the CIA's trash that the CIA had decided already to ignore. And they had Michael Rubin and Michael Ledeen and a whole group of, I used to know all of their names. The guy said, the office special plan, there's six or eight of them. And across the hall was the policy counterterrorism evaluation group.
which was led by David Wormser.
Again, he's traveling around.
He's vice president's office.
He's state.
He's defense, wherever they need him.
And that's Wormser and a guy named Michael Maloof.
And their job was to dig through the CIA's trash and the exiles' lies
and try to come up with anything to connect Saddam to Al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden.
And these guys all had this agenda.
And man, it was Zionism is at the core of it all.
And there's really just no denying that.
And in many cases, they admitted it.
And there are very authoritative sources on this.
For example, Thomas L. Friedman of the New York Times.
It's for a very long time a reporter and is now, of course, the famous columnist,
wrote the Lexus and the Olive Tree and the world is flat.
Bill Clinton said he's the most important public intellectual in America.
He is a somewhat conservative Jewish Zionist, New York Times writer, and Iraq War supporter.
Okay?
But he gave an interview.
He is not a neo-conservative and not really.
a fellow traveler of theirs. He's a guy who just lives in the same world as them. But he knows a hell
of a lot. He's extremely plugged in, okay? For people who don't know, look him up, okay? Thomas L. Friedman.
Thomas L. Friedman gave an interview to Harretz, where he goes, let me tell you something, okay?
There's nine guys within Amila here, and they're the ones who did it. I'm sorry, I'm getting the
quote wrong. I think the nine guys was Seymour Hurst said it was nine guys. But Friedman said something
very close to that, to Hararets, that it was the neoconservatives. It was a very small group of guys. This was their war. They plotted it. They planned it. They made the advertising push to make it acceptable. It was their war and they got it. That's what it was. Philip Zelikow, who was not a neoconservative. He was more of a Council on Foreign Relations type with Connoisseza Rice and Robert Blackwell and some of those other guys who were not.
part of the neoconservative set in the same government.
Zellikau, you might remember, was the principal author of the 9-11 commission report.
A lot of people don't like him for that, for whatever reasons, good and bad, probably.
But Zellikau said, let me tell you something, okay, about the motivation for the Iraq war,
and this is not something that you'll hear very much, okay?
But Saddam Hussein paid the families of Palestinian suicide bombers.
Saddam Hussein would pay any family who lost anybody into Israeli violence, no matter what, or no matter what.
So that meant if the Israelis bulldozed some old lady in her home and murdered her, then Saddam Hussein would pay a bounty to her survivors.
But it also meant if some guy went and did a suicide attack and blew up a pizzeria full of kids on a Friday night, Saddam Hussein would pay a bounty to his survivors too.
So this was quite clearly incentivizing terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians, right?
So that is a real security problem for Israel.
And as Philip Zelikow said, this was a real hard motivating factor for the neo-conservatives to want to launch this war.
So how does the military industrial complex not start stepping into this whole picture?
Great place for this question.
So Andrew Coburn is a great author.
His brother Patrick Coburn, I mentioned previously, is the most important, or at least in our era, has been the most important Western journalist, especially in Iraq, I would argue.
Alexander Coburn is the leftist agitator, founder of Counterpunch, who died of cancer years ago.
And Andrew is the author who writes the books and his wife, Leslie Coburn, wrote the great book out of control about the Iran-Contra scandal.
And then Andrew wrote Rumsfeld, his rise, fall and catastrophic legacy and kill chain about the terror wars, especially the drone wars and all that stuff.
Brilliant guy.
So he told me years ago, he goes, listen, here's the best way to understand the neo-conservative movement.
They're the cross between the Israel lobby and the military industrial complex, right?
So we already have banking and oil.
And banking and oil already has the Council on Foreign Relations since the end of the First World War.
That's their center of gravity, right?
Well, the neocons weren't all that welcome there, right?
So they said, well, screw you guys.
We'll make our own think tanks.
And they made their alliance with the military industrial complex
who had a lot of money at stake,
but not so many eggheads to write the studies
about why their products needed to be purchased
by their captive audience, the Pentagon.
So this is where the neoconservatives come in very handy
to the military industrial complex.
And, of course, what's the center of America?
America's relationship with Israel, military support and security guarantees, right? That's what it all comes down to is America guaranteeing Israel's security militarily. So how do we do that? We do that by making Lockheed Ridge making Israel armed. And so you have this perfect alliance between these factions. So in the 1980s, it was really with this money is how they took over and the organization it provided was how they took over the Olin and Mellon and Skaif Foundation.
They took over the American Enterprise Institute and Heritage.
Then they created their own forest of all the new ones.
Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
I think the committee on the present danger was previous to this.
But I guess they recreated the committee on the present danger.
They had PNAC and the Center for Security Policy.
Again, that's Frank Gaffney and his guys and whatever,
a handful of others there that helped to boost that hole
and created that echo chamber.
and, of course, along very importantly with, again, the Weekly Standard Magazine,
and Bruce Jackson from Lockheed is really the exemplar of this,
because he came in in the 1990s,
and he put up all the money for the Committee on NATO Expansion
and the Committee for the Liberation of Iraq.
And they focused mostly on humanitarian excuses for going in and helping the Iraqi people,
but they were working hand-in-glove with Bill Crystal as, you know, one of the agents of the axis of Crystal,
as Justin called it, the guys lying us into war with the weakly.
standard leading the charge, and Jonah Goldberg and the National Review right behind him,
doing everything they could to push us into that war. Michael Adine would write, and Jonah Goldberg
would publish over and over and over again, Michael Ledin demanding faster pleas. We have to
keep going to the rest of the terror masters, especially Tehran as soon as possible, as Jonah Goldberg
wrote Baghdad Delenda Est, meaning must be destroyed, right? Like Carthage must be destroyed.
and Baghdad Delinda Est, part two, where he says, it's the Ledean doctrine.
He approvingly quotes, the Lidine doctrine, is that America, every 10 years or so,
we have to take some small country and throw them up against the wall just to show the world that we mean business.
That's conservatism in the hands of these essentially bastard children of Leon Trotsky,
the founder of the Red Army.
Right?
And Justin, when you read, when you get into Justin, Romando, and you read Trotsky, Strauss and the Neocons and all this, you can see where he's talking about, there were arguments in the pages of the National Review about Trotsky and his legacy from some of these neocons at that time.
And Justin talks about, like, how baffled must the readership of the National Review be right now?
These are your leaders.
They're Trotskyites.
This is who controls the Republican Party and American Foreign.
policy, the world won't be safe till the revolution is complete. And by the way, we got
to start with all Israel's enemies first. It's nuts. So underpinning this kind of ever-growing
bureaucracy that's connected to the military industrial complex is this kind of collectivism
thinking. And money. You know, it's a captive market. It's so much money. And, you know,
as I show, we'll talk about this more in the Cold War section when we get to it later, but
there was a real crisis at the end of the Cold War for the military industrial complex. And
they were open about it.
Like, what's going to happen to us now?
Lockheed tried to get into administering welfare payments and stuff.
They're like, they're not a free market operation.
They're a government-connected regime completely.
Are they trying to pivot, you're saying?
Yeah, they're trying to figure out.
Yeah, what are we going to do in the world?
Right?
And then, but the idea is clear that, look, if we control the think tanks and the think tanks
decide the policy, then we can decide what kind of weapons we need to develop to have for
sale. So are we building jungle gear or are we building desert gear? What kind of tanks? What kind
of helicopters? If we set the policy, then we get to save money by developing the, by making
good guesses about what kind of weapons the Pentagon is going to need because we're the ones
deciding. It's so... I just remembered a great footnote for this. Your guys will love it. Lockheed stock
and two smoking barrels by Richard Cummings. And it's at my site, again,
Scott Horton.orgon.org slash fair use, and you can also find it at Corp Watch as well. It was
originally written for Playboy.com. And I interviewed the guy about it was one of the first
interviews I did when I started the show full time in January of 2007. And he says,
guess what? All those neocons who were such lacutniks and who are paling around with Net
and Yahoo and talking about oil pipelines to Haifa, they were all on Lockheed's payroll.
The only one who wasn't was Hadley, but Hadley worked for a law firm that had represented
of them, but the rest of them had had, or not all the rest of them, many of, and I don't just
mean the think tank guys, but like the guys in the W. Bush administration had some direct
connection of Lockheed, including Dick Cheney's wife sat on the board of directors, not that
he's a neoconservative, you understand, but. Can you actually speak to that? I'm sorry to zoom
out again on human nature. No, you should. Do you think, so I should actually mention, I don't
know much about Lockheed, but to the degree I've interacted with folks that are a lot of
We're engineers, and there's some incredible engineering that's going on there.
Sure.
And I wonder, like, do they all believe in what they're doing?
They have a narrower problem set that they're solving.
It's just no different than a soldier.
I mean, if you ask them, I know what they'll tell you.
That ain't my job.
My job is making sure this gizmo works.
But does anyone at any place in Lockheed,
think like it is their job to think about the big picture ethics of health this.
Yes, but their customers, the U.S. government.
And the U.S. government is a democracy that represents the will of the consensus of the
majority adult population of this great free land.
And so, always outsourcing the ethics.
Yes.
And listen, I got to tell you, man, this is so important.
I'm so glad that you mentioned this because you do have, in fact, like direct quotes from,
for example, Raytheon is one coming straight to mind, where they say, listen, I mean, these
policies are decided by the government. Our job is to make sure that they have what they need.
And that's to be decided by other people, right? But then, no, Raytheon will directly intervene
in policy to make sure that the policy is what they want. For example, Barack Obama started
a genocidal war against the people of Yemen in 2015, which Donald Trump continued. I'm jumping
way ahead in our narrative here. But the House, and only because of peace activists, there's no
Houthi lobby in America, believe me. It was only Quakers and hippies and libertarians said,
please stop this and got Congress to pass the war powers resolution twice to try to force Trump
to end the war, but they passed the wimpy kind that he's allowed to veto instead of the other
kind that he can't. And so he vetoed it twice, but then guess what? Pete Navarro, his trade representative,
we're talking Trump one term here. Pete Navarro, his trade representative, told the New York Times
that the reason that they kept the war going and vetoed and refused to end the war was to pay Raytheon
because Raytheon wanted the Yemen war because it was making them a bunch of money.
And the Trump people, since they had done these tariffs that were frustrating big manufacturing firms in America,
they said, we had to find a way to put, talk about collectivism, we have to find a way to put manufacturing on welfare.
So what we'll do is we'll commit genocide against the people of Yemen because that's what Saudi and UAE want,
because of anything that has anything to do with America's national interest.
The Houthis were helping us kill Al-Qaeda guys a month before that.
But we're going to do this for them and because industry wants free money
because they're mad that we put these tariffs on China and disrupted some of their supplies
and whatever.
So they're going to put this one big company on the dole and that's going to make somehow all
of manufacturing in America happy.
And that was their reasoning for doing it.
because Raytheon was demanding it.
And then Raytheon will turn right around and go,
hey, listen, Lex, don't come crying to me.
It was the democratically elected people of this country
who demanded that we make these wares
to provide your security, pal.
I don't know what you want to say.
And they pretend that they're not dealing with the devil,
but they are.
Somehow they know it.
Somewhere they know it.
Somewhere this department knows that that's that department's job.
Like, we do hire lobbyists to advocate for policy.
These don't we? Yeah, of course. We do. But it's very uncomfortable to think about that.
You know what gets me, man, is this is how the H-bomb lobby works, too. It's no different
Honeywell makes in Lockheed. They make hydrogen bombs. And they will send a salesman to Capitol Hill
talking about, Senator, Senator, let me tell you, I got to get rid of some H-bombs here.
What kind of deal can I cut? What do I got to do to get this H-bomb in your driveway by tonight?
they are like supply side you might have some you probably didn't think it all the way through right but somewhere in the back of your mind is this like half articulated fantasy that nuclear weapons are a demand side business in this country where the military comes to the Congress and says we need exactly this many and then the Congress says to industry we need exactly this many what do you mean the industry is trying to put
H-bombs because of their awesome profit margins
and that we run the H-bomb supply business
the same way you would expect with M-4 rifles
or combat boots?
Yep, that's exactly right.
And that's exactly what's meant
by the military industrial complex.
So there's a real strong case to be made
that it's a supply side.
War is a supply-side entity.
In our era, it sure as hell is.
isn't it? It's the era of the phony wars, man. What do I got to do to do this war in your
driveway today, Lex? I tell you that they hate Islam. I tell you that the Islams hate your
religion. They hate your mama. They hate freedom. They did this. Did I ever tell you about the
Beirut bombing in 1980? What do I got to do to get you mad enough to do this with me? Right?
That's why it's a constant bombardment of propaganda. They don't have a real case to make.
They got to try to scare you and lie to you. And that's from their perspective, from the industry
perspective, the Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Pakistan, Yemen, wars are success, $8 trillion.
It's the self-licking ice cream cone. It's the military industrial complex. Hey, you know what?
Don't you criticize it, Lex. It's called now the defense industrial base. And if you ask the
Democrats, they'll tell you it's the number one best and most important reason for the Ukraine
war is because it's a good subsidy for our defense industrial base.
They ran out of arguments, and they settled on that, and they did not know how absolutely demonic they sounded.
That that's why we want to have a war is just literally, like in your crazy conspiracy theory, you're crazy when you say it and you call it the MIC.
But now it's the defense industrial base, and it's awesome.
It's spectacular, and you better get on board for it's the best reason to have these wars, in fact, and we're not embarrassed to tell you.
You can go read it in Politico.
I don't know what else to say.
This is straight out of the Democrats' mouths on the last war in the last presidential term there.
How do the American people fight this?
Well, the first thing would be to get used to the idea that they're lying to you next time too, right?
They've done nothing but take advantage this whole time.
There's no reason to give your government the benefit of the doubt, that they care what's true or that they want you to understand the truth.
That's not what they're about.
They're trying to get you.
I mean, just think about how they operate.
Always.
They're trying to get you upset so that then you'll let them do something, right?
Like, I'm detecting a pattern here.
And it doesn't mean that everything is a false flag or anything like that,
but it's just they do nothing but create crises and then exploit them.
It's a monopoly on security services.
So when George W. Bush is on the job for eight months before September 11th,
his approval rating goes up to 90%
because we can't fire the national government
and replace it with another one.
We're not having another election
for another three years.
And so this is the security force we got.
And so we better support it
because what?
We're trying to send a signal to the world
that you better know that we're all one for all
and you better not mess with us or whatever.
But what are we really doing?
We're telling George Bush
that he has a mandate to do anything
he thinks he can get away with
and that we do nothing but support him
after the greatest failure of
any president in all of American history for that to be allowed to happen on his watch. And when
we all know, of course, that they knew it was coming and that at least parts of the CIA were
warning and trying desperately to get the White House to pay attention to the fact that this
attack was coming and that Bush refused to pay attention. I think because he didn't want to be
distracted with going after Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan when he was trying to go to Iraq.
which is another important point to bring up back to the debate with Dubowitz there
where, oh, the Jews this, the Jews, that, and the neo-conservatives and whatever.
Well, to be perfectly clear, as everyone knows, George W. Bush is a Methodist, right?
He's a son of Episcopalian wasps from Connecticut.
And Dick Cheney is some kind of redneck from out in Wyoming.
And I mean that in a complimentary way.
Yeah, no, I appreciate working class folk. I've done plenty of that kind of work myself.
But he climbed electric poles and stuff like that. He's from out west and as a cowboy and a conservative and a right winger and a nationalist and a tough guy. That's his problem. Donald Rumsfeld was previously the Secretary of Defense and had his own plans for, there was this whole debate back during that era of the transformation of the military. Everybody knows. Now the Soviet Union,
gone and it's the whole new order. What order is it and what should the military look
like? What sort of weapon systems should we focus on this and that? And Rumsfeld had his own
ideas. Like generically speaking, he wanted to stick it to big army and give their money to the
Air Force and the Special Operations Forces instead. Again, the Lockheed promo video where what we do
is we send in special operations forces in air power to whoop anybody in a few weeks and then move
on to the next one. We want to stay light and fast and not get bogged down. That was one of their
excuses for letting bin Laden go. Well, we didn't want to get bowed down. Oh, what? Killing bin Laden
Zawahari, the two most important guys that you could possibly target in the thing who were both
there. You know, come on, but that was part of their excuse. Light and fast, keep it going.
W. Bush, I think, wanted to prove he was tougher than his father, in a sense, probably wanted to
avenge his father and from the fake assassination plot, but also the humiliation. Again, Bill
Hicks was so wise about this that the humiliation of H. W. Bush being voted out of office
while Saddam Hussein was still in the chair. And he says they had to wait a couple of days for
Saddam Hussein to quit gut laugh and to get his quote. And then he goes, we have nothing
against America. We just want to see George Bush beheaded and his head kicked down the road
like a soccer ball. And then Bill goes, wow, me and Saddam Hussein, we're like this. Who would
thunk it. So some of it is personal too, right? And in fact, Crystal said, I remember seeing
Crystal on TV say, well, of course, and see, wait, wait, before a crystal, I said this to my
math teacher in 11th grade. You, Scott Horton? Yes. To your math teacher. In, in 1994,
when the day that they announced, or the next day after they announced that W. Bush was going to
also run for governor, just like his brother Jeb is running for governor in Florida. I said to my math
teacher. Oh, you see what they're doing, which I was 17. I said, you see what they're doing.
They're making sure that one or the other, at least of these guys, will be a second term governor
in the year 2000. Then they can run for president and go back to Iraq, which means the Democrats are
going to, I mean, which means the Republicans are going to run a weakling in 96 and throw the election
for bill and let him win again so that they can run a fresh Bush in 2000. Nail the
dude and why because of the humiliation that was my high school thinking at that because of the
humiliation that saddam's still there but bush is gone bush lost after only one term and then so
that's got to be avenged and that's clearly what they're doing here and then bill crystal said the
same thing now bill crystal is bullying w bush right bill crystal ain't me he's him up there and he's saying
well i just can't imagine that w bush would risk being unelected after only one term with
Saddam Hussein still in charge over there. So I think that it's just an obvious matter, of course,
that he will have to invade Iraq in his first term. And I encourage that and think it's great and he should.
And I saw Crystal say that probably during the campaign before he was even elected president, somewhere around there.
And again, I wasn't quite sure who Crystal was. And I surely didn't know who his father was in the neo-conservative movement yet.
But I knew that this is the guy from the weekly standard that's always on about Saddam Hussein.
And so that was the way that he was trying to frame it to W. Bush himself, that, of course, you can't take the risk of running for re-election in 2004 with Saddam Hussein still sitting there.
What have you lost just like your dad?
Your family could never live that down.
Saddam's still in the chair after two Bushes got unelected after only one term?
Perished the thought.
That makes me realize that when you're in the seat of the president, it takes real courage.
to basically resist the military industry complex.
And W. Bush had no courage, or insight or depth or humanity.
And so there's something about our political system
that doesn't make it easy for truly courageous, singular figures
to win the presidency, right?
And you'd probably be terrified of them if they did.
You know what I mean?
Because you've got people like that,
or they're going to use that courage.
Again, this is sort of the irony of the neo-conservatives.
is they say, you know, Henry Kissinger's a monster, his amoral foreign policy that says, well,
if the Indonesians feel like killing all the Timorese, I guess they have to or whatever,
that not like us, we're a morality-based foreign policy.
That's why we have to invade Iraq, because Saddam Hussein is so immoral,
and we have to go and bring light and goodness to the world by doing the right thing,
by starting another war.
And so that's, right, those are your two choices.
You have amoral and immoral in the name of morality, you know, and using that excuse, and as they would always put it, the Straussians, because he was one of the former Trotskyites that then a lot of these guys studied under, and he would say, oh, no, we're all philosopher kings, see, and unlike Lockheon or Jeffersonian-type American principles, our principles are that elites, you know, like David Wormser and Richard Pearl, who are so smart that...
Only they can understand the real truth and the subtext of the truth. And everybody else is some idiot who has to be lied to with noble lies by their philosopher kings because they won't do the right thing for the right reasons. They have to be told false reasons to make them do the right thing and all these things. And they got to justify all their lies by wrapping it up in all those justifications that they know what they're doing. When of course these people are just clowns, there's no different. And I know, look, at the time I was driving a cab in this town, on this, up,
down this street, okay? And the average idiot around here knew better than all of this,
right? And it wasn't because they had special knowledge, but they just knew you don't start a
war. God knows what could happen. You have no idea, dude, how many just regular people told me,
I don't think Saddam Hussein is friends with Osama bin Laden, you know? Yeah, there's a deep
wisdom in that common sense. That's of course. And that's what makes America great is
for the longest time
the people had power
and so to the degree
that the people have power
and that wisdom can speak
through its representatives
then we'll be all right
but the more and more
the bureaucracy grows
the more the military
industrial complex gains power
then that common sense
wisdom of the people is silenced
well and I like telling this story too
so I'll go ahead and read on the guy to YouTube
I had a guy in my cab
who was like a Mr. Fancy Pants Man
About Town
I dropped them off at some very swanky
bachelor pat apartments off of south mopeck there he was a real nice guy and we had a long conversation
because i wouldn't let the poros obi go and i'm beating him over the head and i'm telling him damn it
i swear to god that this is true okay george w bush connolyza rice colin powell george tenet none of them
have said that saddam did 9-11 now dick cheney did but he's a damn liar but there's a real
important reason why bush and powell are not saying that okay they're perfectly
happy to leave you with that impression that that must be what they were trying to imply, and that's
what you thought you heard them say, but you didn't. And you promise me, you go inside and you Google,
you look hard, you will not find them directly saying that. And he says to me, ah, but come on, man,
I mean, if Saddam Hussein didn't do 9-11, then why are we attacking him then? Right? Which is a good
question, but to him, the answer was built into the thing, that actually the cab driver could
possibly be right. Because the people in Washington would not lead me to believe that this has
anything at all to do with avenging that innocent, dead Americans slaughtered on September 11th,
airplanes full of little kids on their way on vacation, that what do you mean? This has nothing to do
with that. What's more likely your cab driver knows better? Or that no, you are right to disbelieve
and believe in authority that squares that they're doing this to protect you from the enemy that
attacked you. And so that's the kind of cognitive dissonance that is always baked into these kinds
of things. It's the same thing with Israel now. Well, if this is the most barbarian society on the
planet, how come we're their best friends? Yeah, again, a very good question. But it's not answered
by they must not be. They must be really great. Otherwise, we wouldn't be, which is what the cognitive
dissonance would try to have you explain to yourself, I guess. Yeah, by the way, the everyday people,
like just like we said often have a deep wisdom
that the government lacks
and more than almost any other career
I think cab drivers
really have that wisdom
I don't know what it is about cab drivers
but they really get it because they get to talk to a lot of people
they get to think through a lot of it
you get to like think through it
hey I think all the time about
I mean there's a lot of cab rides I don't remember
but there are a few that I do
where it was I got something wrong
and the guy goes no no no it's not like that it's like this
And he was right and I was wrong.
And I went, ah, you know, I really picked up something there.
You know what I mean?
Like, one of the good ones, I said, I was kind of a New World Order Cook back then.
And one of the good ones, I still remember where I was on Mopac, where the guy said to me that, like, listen, man, it ain't conspiracy.
It's just politics, okay?
It's the game over who controls the power.
You don't need secret societies.
You just need oak tables, man.
This is business.
And that's how it goes.
And if you take...
And that click with you.
Even, yeah, and even the most conspiratorist,
I'm saying. If you just leave out the secret society crap and just focus on Lockheed and the Israel lobby and the Republican Party and oil interests and whatever where all these things come together, it's all very clear. You know what I mean? And you don't have to be a Chomskyite leftist to see it that way at all. Like, I'm a libertarian. And we're pure free market types, which means we find it morally criminal for any company to get a government contract for anything, right? Like we want no public-private partnerships.
of any kind. When we say privatization, we don't mean government contracts. We mean
privatization, get government out of it and let free people figure it out. Any corporation on
welfare deserves to be destroyed to a libertarian. So it's, you don't have to like identify somehow
as like, well, only an anarcho syndicalist in the Chomskyite mold would think that we have this
problem with these crony corporations. No, indeed we do. And in fact, again, not again, but
go back. Who coined the term?
military industrial complex. This is Dwight David Eisenhower, the five-star Army General, who was the
commander of all United Nations forces in Europe in World War II, and then came home and was the
two-term Republican president of the United States of America, who is the one who did the coup in 53
in Iran, who's the one who built as many nuclear missiles as he possibly could, but why?
To try to hold the army at bay. Eisenhower said, God help, the next president of this country,
who doesn't have the experience with the army that I do
to try to keep these men from their demands
where they were constantly demanding more divisions,
more divisions, more divisions, more divisions.
And he said, no, I'm going to build more missiles instead.
You guys get away from me.
And only he had the power to do it at the time.
I'm not taking a stance on this,
but widely believed that these same forces
blew the head off of his successor
for getting in their way,
you know, which is at least possible,
not likely, right? That that was what happened in Dallas. By these force and we don't really
know the full. Meaning the military and the intelligence agencies, right, was the idea. It's like a
network of people that work together. Yeah, but black access program, special access program
in the military, it goes Fletcher Proudy and them, uh, their argument about the thing, which,
whatever, um, where that's true or not, it's believable enough because, and, and what,
Eisenhower said that on his last day in office. Sorry, Charles.
Charlie, I did the best I could. Maybe this is half my fault. Good luck to you. And then quit and was out the door. And then, but have we ever had a major reckoning since then? Where what? Oh, after Vietnam and Nixon was impeached, that was when we destroyed the military industrial complex? No. Right. That never happened. After the end of the Cold War, is that what happened? No, we went to Bosnia and then we went to Iraq. We went to Bosnia and stayed in the Middle East and expand wherever we can. As in how our speeches are haunting.
Yeah, there's the other one is the cross of iron speech where he calculates the cost of battleships compared to schools and grocery stores and things. It's not all public goods or, you know, so-called public goods like public schools, but he talks about like private investment and the comparisons. That every bit of money that we spend on this is, well, that comes from the American people that the government then denies to us, takes from us and destroys. Lexa, if you ever read 1984 in the part of the book. Have I read it many times, of course.
And there's part of the book where Winston Smith is being brought under the wing of his future torturer, O'Brien.
And O'Brien gives him the manual for how we do it, right?
And he holds up in his bedroom and reads the book, how we do it.
And it says in there that, listen, we keep them in a permanent state of war at all times to keep them on edge,
to keep them insecure, to take any excess wealth that the people would otherwise spend improving their own lives,
and we sink it into the ocean in the form of the floating fortress, or we blasts.
it off in space in the form of these missiles and rockets that we're building so that the people
can't have it so that we cannot build up our society to protect our own needs and interests.
Now, of course, anyone leaning left listening to this would prefer that the government spend this
money on public school and health care and infrastructure. Anybody right leaning listening to this
says that's my money. Stop printing money and inflating the money supply. Stop taxing me. Leave me alone.
me and my buddies will invest in private businesses and we will produce the wealth society needs fine what we all have to agree is that this has to all come to an end where we let them take trillions and trillions of our dollars what they can't tax they borrow and what they can't borrow they inflate and with the inflation this is the absolute crisis of confidence again bin laden invited our government to do this quote self-inflicted wound meaning really our government wounding all of us and this is
is the absolute crisis of our era is price inflation. It's why people can't pay the rent. It's why they
can't afford to feed their family. It's why they're forced to send their children to government
school like a German or a Russian. It's why they are are brooks, why young men and women can't
start families and buy homes. It's because of price inflation, which is the result of monetary
expansion. The expansion, especially of bank credit, although in our very current era, because of Donald
Trump and Joe Biden's massive stimulus bills that they signed during COVID.
And you can trace that back to wars.
And it's almost entirely like, well, big government overall relies on inflationary money.
But then, yes, this is a massive part of our budget is the annual militarism for the global empire.
And so like to turn it around, Jonah Goldberg from the National Review, Mr. Ledeen Doctrine, he says, well, we can't have a gold standard because what if there's a war?
Right? But then that's Ron Paul's point. That's why we should have a gold standard. So Jonah Goldberg can't have a war, right? Because they have to print the money. If they had to raise your taxes to go stop Tojo, maybe even then they had to print money and borrow money. But people sure as hell took Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan seriously enough to fight. And they still had to conscript millions of people to do it. But whatever. At least you got a credible threat there. But you're going to tell the American people, hey,
we're going to have to raise everybody's income tax in every bracket by 6% so that we can launch
an aggressive war against Iraq so that Israel can save a nickel a barrel, hopefully if they can get
their silly pipeline they want built. And maybe people say, hell no. But when they print the money,
remember this, George Bush sent people, anyone who paid income taxes, got a refund check
of an extra $300 or $400, depending on your bracket, in 2003 and 4. This was meant to look like,
Well, I infer this.
It was meant to look like your dividend.
It was meant to fool you into thinking that the rock war is profitable, that America is making money off of this, like in the cliché that you would hear from people in the neighborhood.
Well, war is good for the economy.
And look, we're all directly benefiting from this, apparently.
We all get an extra $3 or $400.
But, of course, they just printed that money.
And all that inflation during the W. Bush years is what led to the giant housing bubble and the crash of O.A.
and the absolute decimation that came after that.
And then what Obama do came and printed even more money,
built up an even bigger bubble to try to deal with that.
Then, of course, the COVID lockdowns
essentially played the role of high interest rates
and just crushing the economy
and forcing a massive recession on people.
But then what they do?
They didn't just have the Fed, like lower interest rates
and lower reserve ratios
so that they could expand money even more.
They literally just mailed everybody checks,
a brand new money from the Treasury,
all brand new money.
And by some measures, they create two-thirds of all U.S. dollars that were ever created were created since 2020.
And so that's Trump's fault and Biden's fault for doing those giant monetary expansion acts.
That's what has led to the giant inflationary crisis today is this absolutely incompetent managers of our economy.
And this is the thing where if people aren't libertarians at all, if people lean any degree left or right from me and from Austrian school libertarian things, is totally fine.
me on whatever you want, warfare, welfare,
anything. But it's just
true, man. It's just true.
The Austrians are correct
about the cause of the
business cycle, the boom
and bust. Now, of course,
if the frost
wipes out all the oranges, then
that's going to cause disruptions in that one
market or whatever. But what caused
what Ludwig Bammis is called, the cluster
of errors, where all
these businessmen are making
all these bad bets, all
at the same time, that then leads to these terrible crashes and resets and corrections.
And the answer is it's inflationary money and artificially low interest rates, because
what it does is it's manipulating the price of money, artificially valuing money with
government control and leading producers to follow false price signals and to mistakenly believe
that there are more resources available in the economy for use than there really are.
if you had free market interest rates, then the more capital you use to invest,
the more it costs to borrow more capital, right? And when savings are low and capital is low
to invest in new things, then interest rates would naturally go up. But when the Federal Reserve Bank
holds interest rates low, then that doesn't happen. And so you have, especially in the higher
order goods like mining and quarries and machine tools and the kinds of things that are then used to
the other businesses to make other things,
and these kinds of things,
they make long-term farmers, or in other ones,
they make long-term loans
at artificially low interest rates
that then they end up getting screwed later
because they're not able to produce
to keep up when the crash comes.
Now, let's say you own a quarry
and you're an Austrian school guy
and you see what's going on here.
Well, Island Greenspan is just printing a bunch of money.
And so all my competitors are hiring new workforces
and they're buying new money.
machine tools. And they're getting way ahead of me in their productive capacity. But I know that
they're screwed because they're going deep into debt for all this stuff. And the music's going
to stop. However, if I don't, if you, the chore owner, if you don't play the same game,
you're also, you're going to lose sooner than them. You're going to lose before they have a chance
to get screwed. So even if you know better, you still have to expand beyond what you really
know that you do. So like one example that Austrians like to use, I think is like if the circus
comes to town for a month or whatever and this the local dairy queen is really busy and then the
guy builds a giant extension onto the thing thinking that like this is how it's going to be now but no this is
just temporary this is a boom followed by a bust right well so this is the the artificial value of
those customers in that time induced by the traveling circus but in our case we're talking about
money artificially inflating the value of certain firms and certain banks' investments and these
kinds of things. This is what leads to the cluster of errors that leads to the collapses. And people
can read, of course, the brilliant Ludwig von Mises in his theory of money and credit from 100 years
ago. Then, of course, there's Murray Rothbard, what has government done to our money in the case
against the Fed. And then there's all of the brilliant guys of the Austrian school, especially
Robert Murphy and Tom Woods and all the guys at the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
And imperialism and militarism are at the heart of this.
David Stockman, Ronald Reagan's former budget advisor, calls this the great deformation.
He says all these little bubbles, like 87 and 92 and 99 and 08, these are the little bubbles on top of the big bubble of America's overall inflationary monetary policy since the end of the Second World War in order to make the militarism seem artificially cheap to make it seem more.
imagine how to see people would have to be to think that war is good for the economy because they notice the Russian spending and the immediate stimulative effect when this is the difference between the scene and the unseen. Where's all that wealth coming from? And now where's it going? It's going to make tools of death and destruction, net losses and property values all the way around. And a lot of times goods that can never be reused again. The plane can fly again, but the bomb sure can't. F-35s fall out of the sky all the time in the headlines.
lines again today.
And so this is all a net loss
in terms of all of this capacity
being directed into militarism
and then going away.
But people get fooled into thinking
that this is what's good
and this is what's necessary.
And of course, Lockhe does things
and the rest of them too, Boeing and the rest.
They have explicit
gerrymandering type policies
where they will have one small part
of every weapon system made
in as many factories as possible
all across the country, so that if Congress ever wants to roll back anything, they will have
an army of lobbyists to threaten them that we're talking about 600 jobs in your district,
Congressman, is that what you're willing to do? And then they all just snap right into line.
You know, again, what they say, hey, we're just supplying the weapons that the Congress demands.
No, they're not. They're rigging the whole game. So we have no choice but to give into them,
essentially. If I can just take an aside, you mentioned you,
used to be a cab driver.
I would love to understand the story
of somebody that was a cab driver
that eventually became
one of the most prolific libertarians
anti-war intellects of the modern era.
Who are you?
I'm just a wrongful guy, man.
I mean, look at this.
Look at this, right?
The number of citations here breaks...
7,000.
7,000.
Look, I mean, how?
and why were you driving a cab and how did you come to be this person well i mean i'm a
skateboarder type and i'm just anti-government type like i say i learned about ronald regan being a dope
pusher when i was a child bill clinton burned the branch of idiots to death in front of my eyes
and called it a suicide when i was 16 covered up the oklahoma bombing blamed it on one guy two
years later which there's still they're no longer getting away with that there's a brand new book out
call blowback and I haven't read it yet but I know the fact checker and I know that it's right
that McVeigh had friends they were undercover FBI informants at least two of them
Roger Moore and Andre Straussmeyer were agent provocateurs and they covered it up because it was
their own guys who did it. I'm not saying the government did it on purpose but I'm saying the
FBI was essentially a sting that they were meant to stop it and they didn't stop it and they
cover that up and they got the whole media to go along with that and then you know as a big fan
like, see, it's kind of funny, but I'm kind of angry at them, so I'll put them on blasting
way, I don't care. When I was young, I read Reason Magazine, and I thought, I hate these guys.
That's what a libertarian is, that they think their job is debunking Gulf War illness.
They think their job is debunking the number of Iraqis starving to death under Bill Clinton's
sanctions. And they don't give a damn about the branch of the Indians. They don't give a damn
about any of this, right? I don't know what they're good for, lower taxes and maybe guns,
not that they're doing anything important about it. And so I shied away from the libertarian
movement for a long time because that's what I thought the libertarian movement was. And I would
rather pal around with a bunch of right-wing militia guys because at least they care about
the branch of idiots. And in Austin at that time, there's kind of a thriving, what they call the
patriot movement, which is like the civilian side of the militia movement, basically. And it's all
like, yeah, right-wing conspiracy guys who were right about everything then, about who started
at fire in Waco, about who helped blow up Oklahoma City, about the sanctions in Iraq, killing
kids, about the Gulf War illness that they were covering up. Illness says, I should say, that they
were covering up and saying, oh, drink a beer, chin up, and don't be a whim, and all this,
these guys were dying of cancers and other diseases that they got from what the Pentagon did to them
and expose them to in Iraq War I. And so, you know, the, the conspiracy cooks,
were batting a hundred,
batting a thousand,
I'm not a baseball guy,
I'm a skateboarder.
They're batting a thousand,
you know, during that era,
they're really right about a lot of things,
and I would have rather hung around them,
even though I wasn't culturally right-wing like them,
but William Norman Grigg at the New American Magazine
was really a great,
and of course, Ron Paul came back to Congress in 97.
Was Ron Paul the person that sort of convinced you
that libertarianism could be a powerful movement?
Yes.
Ron Paul convinced me at a lot of things, man.
And he's really been a North star to me this whole time ever since then. I was so excited from the, I'll tell you, the first time I ever saw Ron Paul was 10 years before everybody else got their big Giuliani moment when Ron whipped Rudy Giuliani in that debate in March, pardon me, May of 2007, where they fought over the motivation of Osama bin Laden to attack us on 9-11. Ron says, because we're bomb in Iraq from bases in Saudi for 10 years. Everybody knows that. And Giuliani flipped his lid, and Ron was, of course, heroic and right. But my Giuliani moment was a decade.
before. I saw Ron in the middle of night on C-SPAN, Dr. Paul, on C-SPAN, the milled night speaking
to an empty Congress, except whoever was filling in in the speaker chair. Mr. Speaker, I have
here in my hands reports from the British press today about how George Bush was selling chemical
weapons to Saddam Hussein leading right up to the invasion of Kuwait. What's up with that?
And now, and we still have all these sanctions and doing all these things. And we're so
responsible for this guy's evil in the first place after we had backed him all that
time and all these things. And this is not wise foreign policy, Mr. Speaker. We ought to come home.
And I'm like, wow, that any congressman would say anything that honest, on the record, inside the
Capitol building like that, I couldn't believe it. And I looked at the bottom of the screen and
says, Ron Paul are Texas. And I'm like, no way. Because, you know, Bush Sr. himself is nominally
from here, right? He's from Connecticut, really. But he made his fortune here in oil and lived here
for a very long time and, you know,
he's raised his family in West Texas for
much of the time and that kind of thing.
So he's an extremely important
guy in Texas politics. So for
this congressman, to dare to
say that, he's essentially
accusing Bush of treason.
Okay.
I'm interested in this guy. And then I'm reading the
New American magazine, which is the John Birchers magazine.
They have a very bad rap as racist and stuff
which is totally not true. They're conspiratorial
and I don't agree with them on everything.
and they're more conservative than me.
They're good people.
They're George Washington's Constitution guys
and mostly Protestant and Catholic Christians
and American patriotic folk.
They're good people.
And the editor of their magazine at that time
was the great William Norman Grigg.
And he would run Ron Paul stuff constantly.
He would cover Ron.
And then I used to be a pirate radio guy.
So I would call his weekly update.
I don't know if he still does this.
It was 888-3-22-14-14.
for. And then I would just play the Ron Paul Weekly Update and put that out over the air. And it was always just killer stuff, dude, financial, you know, monetary policy and boom and bust and the evils of war. I would drive around to my cab and I would have printed out Ron Paul speeches. And there was one that was called a Republic, if you can keep it. And then, which is the famous a Benjamin Franklin quote to the baker lady about what do we have a monarchy or a republic, a republic if you can keep it. And then the sequel was called, I'm sorry, Mr. Franklin.
We are all Democrats now.
And it was just so good.
And I would give this to people in the cab.
Hey, did you know there's one good congressman?
One.
And he's not good.
He's better than Thomas Jefferson.
Read this and read this and read this.
And this is the light and the way.
And the thing is, all I'm selling you is a peaceful foreign policy.
I'm not saying like, well, and freedom overall as this is what Ron Paul emphasizes.
If he's asking for your trust or your faith in anything, it's just that you trust in freedom,
that it does work.
It's why we have all this stuff
is because of liberty
in the first place.
And so you can count on that,
you know?
But otherwise,
he's not selling you anything.
He delivered like a third
of the population of his district
when he was a baby doctor,
right?
He's not going anywhere.
He didn't have,
he wasn't soliciting donations.
He wasn't asking you
to join his cult
or his sect of Protestant Christianity.
He was just saying,
we don't have to do this stuff.
We don't have to believe in this.
They say these things,
but geez, that doesn't seem right, because what about this thing?
And he's just so wise and so good.
And his aides, by the way, his right-hand men all that time were also really great guys, too,
especially Jeff Dice and Daniel McAdams, has been his right-hand man and his great, you know, advisor this whole time.
And another just really good human being.
Yeah.
Well, yes, and he's a doctor, not a lawyer.
He delivered 4,000 babies.
And, you know, I met his sister-in-law who married his older brother, Wayne.
And she says to me, yeah, well, when you guys say that Ron Paul delivered 4,000 babies, well, I did too, because I'm his head nurse and I delivered everyone on myself, too, along with him and all of that thing.
So that's where he comes from me.
He's a decent, sweet old country doctor.
He's married to his high school sweetheart since her sweet 16 party, okay, no scandals, not a hint of it.
He's got, I don't know, 150 grandchildren or whatever he is.
This is the American dream.
It's perfect, dude.
And nobody's got nothing on him, right?
He's just, he's the best.
I wish we lived in a country where a guy like that can have a chance of being president.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
It could have been, dude.
Listen, the Republicans of the United States of America nominated John McCain and Mitt Romney instead of him.
You explained that to me when we got George Washington himself only without the slaves and without the bloody hands.
The only vet in the race, but he was a doctor in the Air Force.
the only one he got up on stage and quoted jesus and they booed him he's the guy that's supposed
to be president that's you mean you say george washington one of the greatest americans ever that's
the guy that's the guy dude could have been hey and if you doubt me just go to antivore.com
and read the last 30 years of everything he's had to say about everything what can i tell you
man, but the aspect, the, the rigor, you talked about the motivation, like, where you
discovered, like, how the hell did you do this? Okay, I could think of an answer to that, which
is that, like, unlike all your, your Harvard professors and all of this stuff, like, the burden
of proof is really on me, right? Like, it's because I'm just a skater, cab driver from Austin
who didn't go to your fancy pants college. I don't have, there's no reason that you're supposed
to defer to me. And that book is about how everybody's wrong except me.
So if I'm going to tell you that, then I better be able to really demonstrate it.
And I want you to go, oh, yeah, well, but what about that?
Coo and Montenegro in 2016.
Well, turn the page.
I got a whole section on that.
I didn't leave out nothing.
And I wrote it in that kind of defensive posture.
People are going to not like this.
They're going to say, I don't know what I'm talking about.
Now, when I wrote enough already, the war was over.
Enough already came out in January 21.
And I was in a race to get it done because Joe Biden's going to be inaugurated.
on January 20 and the era's over the Bush Obama era capstone with Trump one is just at an end on
and after all it's the true beginning of the decade is January 21 right and so I knew that this
book has to come out now but this is really about the terror wars that are over mostly not that
we're completely done in the Middle East you understand but like that's a bit after the fact
This is written, provoked is written in the middle of the war.
Yeah.
And I'm trying to change people's mind and really get them, not just to regret the stupid things they believed in a minute ago, but to change their mind and get on board and let's see if we can bring this thing to a more reasonable conclusion sooner than later and get it done.
It'd be like if I wrote enough already in 2005 or six.
And so I knew I wanted it to be as bulletproof as it just possibly can be because I don't have argumentation from authority.
I don't have like, oh, yeah, I'm from here, and I can tell you that.
I'm a reporter.
I'm a linguist, and I've read 10,000 Russian newspapers going back to whatever, whatever.
I don't have any of those things.
What I do have is I've been working for anti-war.com this whole time.
I've done 6,000 interviews with the best experts.
We covered the Orange Revolution when it happened.
We covered the Mindan Revolution when it happened and everything in between and all of these things.
So just like with the book about Afghanistan and the book about the Middle East,
I was already ready to write the book before I started writing it.
I already know the whole story.
I obviously had to do a lot of research and fill in a lot of information and correct myself on things I had wrong or oversimplified or whatever and learned a lot while I was writing it.
But I already knew the story overall because I've been working on it for a very long time.
What are the main things that Bush, Clinton, Bush, Obama, Trump, and Biden did to cause the new Cold War with Russia and the war in Ukraine?
I already know those things.
I already have the bullet points.
That book started as a speech I gave in 2020.
In fact, it was Leap Day 2020, Carol Paul's birthday, and the day that Donald Trump signed the peace deal with the Taliban to get us out of Afghanistan, I gave a speech to the Libertarian Party of King County in Seattle, Washington, called The New Cold War with Russia is All-America's fault.
And that's published at anti-war.com. And then two years later, I stayed up all night doubling the length of the speech and gave it again.
And this is, it's a four-hour speech I gave in Utah on, I think, March the 2nd, 2022, right after the war started, explaining all the same stuff.
And then that became the nucleus of that book, basically.
And then it's just a matter of filling it out.
And sorry to ask a silly detailed question, but this is a gigantic book, extremely detailed, extremely well-sighted.
What's your writing process like?
How do you go through it?
So it started a speech, and now you have this...
this manifesto, this tomb. Yeah, well, as you can see, the chapters are just H.W. Bush,
Clinton, W. Bush, Obama. And, you know, if you ever get the chance to read the thing,
you'll see that this is really just a giant collection of citations. I don't do too much writing
in the book, much unlike Justin Romando. I'm really not that smart and have a lot to say.
I'm great on names and dates, and I hold a grudge real well. But Justin could write a thousand words
just of like wisdom and understanding and opinions about things that I'm just not really like that.
So this book, in a way, is 7,000 note cards arranged by your maestro here to be, hopefully, to tell the story in a way that everybody can understand.
And, you know, whatever, there's pros in there. I'm writing to you, but I'm, I'm, mostly I'm marshaling evidence is the point of the whole thing, that this is what these guys did.
here's what the war party says and i don't straw man my arguments i link when i say seven thousand
citations a third of them are to the bad guys and this is their point of view and i'm telling you
here's what they admit that they're lying you know that's basically how it's written and i cite very
little ron paul and very little pat buchanan in there because as much as i revere them i don't need them
i can quote the apparatchiks in charge themselves explaining how stupid the things that they
are doing are and then show why they did them anyway and all the consequences and whatever.
So I don't need to cite the good guys. I can cite the involved. So basically go to the primary
sources versus citing the quote unquote experts. Yeah. And just spending a hell of a lot of time
going through the archives. And I am an obsessive type of like I, there are absolutely times where I
spent four days hunting one footnote that I know exists. And I want to make this claim and I can't
make it without my citation. I'm going to find this thing. And I have gone to the ends of the earth
in some cases for these, especially like about the Balkan Wars and stuff. Some of those articles are so
hard to hunt down. But then, you know, I'm reading all these books and then all those books got all
their own citations. And a lot of, you know, I learned this a long time ago, but this was reinforced
in this book. And this is no slam against them. It's just against everybody. It's a lot of times
the people that I agree with are wrong and they will cite something and then I go and read that
something and it does not say what they said it says. And I can see why they misunderstood it even
that they're not lying and not exaggerating. But that's not really the implication there. It's really
something different. So I double, triple, quadruple check every goddamn thing I can until I'm like,
I'm terrified of being caught out being wrong on a fact. And I have, um, the book is 477,000
words, and I, it's, if, if it was six by nine, and if the font was regular size, it would
be 1,200 pages long. That's how long the book is. Um, and it's, but it's not, well, first
all, a major portion of that is, like literally hundreds and hundreds of pages of that is
footnotes, although I keep them all at the bottom of the page where you can see them, and damn
anyone who doesn't do that. That's exactly how a book like this should be. Um, but then,
so a lot of that space really is citations, but then also, um,
I don't dwell too long on any one topic, I don't think.
The only two exceptions to that are in, when we talk about the NATO promises against expansion
and the Nazis in Ukraine, because these, I believe, are the two most controversial subjects or, you know, stances or whatever in the book.
And so I go absolutely to the ends of their to beat the dead horse all the way to death to prove the absolute fact of the position that I'm taken there.
And then there's still probably a lot of overkill and a lot of things.
But as far as like the writing goes, when I mentioned the Montenegro coup of 2016,
it's just a short little thing.
It's called the vaudeville coup, and it's kind of funny, and it's a little mysterious.
And then the different poisonings by the Russians, or at least alleged ones, I have, you know, Litvinenko and the scribbles and whoever.
And I just, I was thinking it from the point of view of my accusers.
Like, oh, yeah, well, what about this?
Well, what about this?
Well, what about that?
I bet you left that out.
And like, no, I didn't, dude, I have it all in there.
And I tried to write it in a way to satisfy my worst critics as best as I could,
as the Declaration of Independence says, with a decent respect to the opinions of mankind.
So I should assume that you don't agree with me in good faith.
And so, how in the hell am I going to fix that?
Like, I'm going to have to make you accept that I'm not lying to you when I put these things together.
When you read that, you feel like I'm trying to get away with something,
you're going to put it down.
I said, I didn't write it for you to put it down.
I think I wrote a thousand page book for you to put it down.
I want you to get through all the way to the end going,
God dang, man, I didn't really realize it was as bad as all of that.
So you convinced the critics.
That's what is for it.
As opposed to enough already, which I really wrote enough already for my people,
my fans to give to their brother-in-law and their dad and whoever.
It's a little bit after the fact, as I said,
I was in a real rush to get it done, so I don't have the citations.
I do have the citations in Fools Air and about Afghanistan, and actually we're working on now, me and one of my guys at the Institute, we're working on putting the footnotes back into enough already and doing like the ultimate scholar edition with the overkill on the citations there.
But I actually, I had footnotes on most of it.
I turned them off and I just raced to the end because I was out of money and I was out of time and I had to go.
And so friends of mine rationalize it like, well, I think Bill O'Reilly has footnotes in his books, you know, get that.
thing out there, man. And so I did. But I did try to write it in a way where I either cite my
citations in the prose or at least I wrote it in a way where it's a very specific claim.
On November the 9th, they held a meeting and these five people were there and this is what they
decided. So you can go and Google that. You know what I mean? It's not, it should be specific
enough that people can double check me. But but then, yeah, so why I'm like this, I'm just a Ron Paul
guy. I can't stand being lied to and I can't stand all this violence. And I want to live in a free
society and the empire's ruining it and then and then so why do i write why am i like that
meticulous about it all is i don't want to be caught being wrong i'll tell you one funny story
and then we'll stop one time i lost an argument about waco it was these three people in my cab
and the one of them was this real jerk and the other two were on his side because it was his
friends and i was arguing with him about everything but the thing was he was like the son of a federal
cop and he knew their side of the story like down pat he really knew his stuff and so even though i was
right and he was wrong he won and they got out of the car going to screw you branch of video boy and
whatever and oh man that never happened to me again you know why because i read like six books about waco
i already knew more than enough about it and then i decided that yeah no actually no one's gonna ever
beat me in an argument about that ever again. So you can have really thoroughly articulate the
evidence for your claims. And you're just like me too, dude. When you read a 300-page book,
it tastes as well. Like if you want to read this thing, it's not like a chore, but like, oh, I want
to read that. You're done a day and a half or two. Like, it's easy to do. Once you set that
precedent a few times, it's pretty easy to read a thing and jot down some notes and learn something
from it and then teach it to somebody else and whatever. Well, yeah. Welcome to adulthood
of what we do. So, like, that's all it is. It's just, that's my only job, is compiling
reasons to resent these liars and why to know better than all their false promises.
Yeah, but also I'd be able to articulate it. And see, also I'm a talk radio guy, man.
I grew up in the radio of Rush Limbaugh. I'm driving for a living in the air of Rush Limbaugh and
G. Gordon Liddy and all the local guys. And, I mean, I'll go ahead and say this on the record, too.
The local hosts on K.O.B.J. AM and Austin all suck and always have all of them.
since Raleigh James in 1996, love her.
Everybody since then, I mean, I don't know who listens to K.B.J.A.M.
at all.
How they even stay in business at all.
Their hosts suck.
The content of their awards are the actual raw skill of how they talk and what they talk.
All of it.
And mostly how stupid and wrong and horrible they are about everything,
but also just how, like, meaningless their drivel is, right?
You'd be in the middle of the world's worst crisis,
and they're like, the liberals are trying to take God out of the Pledge of Allegiance.
Like, dude, I'd prefer that you just shoot me in.
the face to listen to this for the love of god please anyway but i i love the potential there
and in that era before the internet was what it is today this is the real town square where you can
have a host who knows something you can have a guest who knows something and you can have callers
who know a lot more than you think they would dude and i remember listening to them talk about like
the texas homesteading act that said you weren't allowed to take out a second mortgage on your house
and whatever because it was to protect the little lays and they're debating over whether they should
have that law or not. And I remember thinking, wow, all these people know so much about this
topic that I've never heard of before. And all of these callers are just so deep on their
knowledge of what they know. And whether on that issue or so many other things, that first real time
I heard, real AM radio in Austin, I was 16. I was, wait, no, I might have been all. I might have
been 18. No, no, I was 16. It was, yeah, it was the same year that the Dividians were killed.
I was driving my first car down 183, and I said, you know, I've lived in Austin my whole life,
and I've never listened to the AM band. I wonder what it is.
And the first thing I hit was K-O-BJ AM, and it was Johnny Walker, the great Johnny Walker,
the FM, rock and roll DJ, was sub-hosting.
And his whole thing, he was a great guy, by the way, ripped Johnny Walker.
But he goes, look, I don't know anything.
I'm literally just hosting this show.
The guest is this guy, a surviving Branch Devidian, and we're taking your calls.
And this hit me like, what?
There's even a Branch Division alive, and they have a point of view, and you can hear it.
And he's live right now and he's talking, and people can call in and they can, what?
Because in my world that I lived in, what you know about the Branch Civilians is what you read in Austin America Statesman,
or what you're told by Ted Cople and Dan Rather, and that's all you get.
what do you mean i can interact with one yeah and then the callers are brilliant the callers know
all they're not cooks they know exactly what they're talking about and they'll be like i'll tell you
what happened was on march the 19th blah blah blah oh okay so this is why i'm like this this is talk
radio to me is it's like if you believe in the idea of like any kind of like so-called popular
government like if we have to settle for any sort of statism at all you want the people to be able to
have one big ass conversation with each other right that's why your show is so important
so you get hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of thousands of views and listens maybe millions
if you include all the podcast and so for a guy like me it's like yeah it's a chance to talk to a
whole bunch of people to get a bunch of people having the same conversation together instead of
everybody just all spread out having their own little separate arguments and not interacting with each
other. So to me, that was the brilliance of talk radio. And then where Rush Limbaugh and G. G. Gordon Liddy
were all polished and had their little programs. The guys on 5.50 a.m. and San Antonio,
especially Carl Wigglesworth, was my favorite. But him and all those guys, even Ricky Ware, who was
the John Hageeite lunatic, but he was still such a sweet guy. And their talk radio, their version of
talk radio was, all right, it's Carl Woodsworth Show. Everybody, we're talking about Bill Clinton
selling cocaine down there with Dan Lasseter and me, to Arkansas.
And we got Terry Reid on the phone. Tell us about your book. Compromise Clinton Bush and the CIA, Terry. But everybody's kicking back. Yeah. Everybody's got this front porch attitude. And they got all the time in the world. We're here every day for three hours a day. Ain't no thing. We're talking about. And they're just the nicest guys. Come back from commercial and go, it's Carl. We're talking with Terry about the thing. And no bumper music. No fanfare. No last name. You just jumped in the middle of a conversation, tune in.
and figure it out. And it's just beautiful. It's perfect. And then I modeled myself and the way I do my show
on beginning on Free Radio Austin in 98 and 99. And then on Chaos Radio, Austin from 2002 through
2010, I guess. I was on Chaos. Although it wasn't, yeah, it was 2010 before they seized our last
transmitted from Chaos, wasn't it? I think it was. So, yeah, I did Chaos for like, yeah, a long time.
And then so that was my whole attitude was, look, I am a regular guy. I ain't got to fake that. I didn't
to college, I dropped that at ACC, and my message ain't for elite policymakers. My message is for
my peers. Look at what they're doing. That's it. And this is why the Rothbard-style libertarian
populism really always appealed to me is because that's who it's geared toward. The Cato Institute
wants an audience with the Senate. The Mises Institute and the Libertarian Institute and anti-war.com,
we want an audience with the population of this country, right? That's who we're trying to talk to. That's
who we are. That's where we come from. We're not Washington, D.C. folk. We're from
out here and we're speaking in the third person about them, you know, rather trying to be
part of the regime. I just want to say briefly that the, you said the people that call in are
usually brilliant, and that's the experience I've had. I've recorded a few conversations just
on the street. I went to the West Bank and I interviewed a bunch of people on the street.
And I really want to do that a lot more because I didn't meet a single person who
not brilliant in their own way.
It's like, it's remarkable.
It's remarkable the brilliance that comes from people.
You ever listen to sports radio?
Not as much as I probably should.
Yeah, well, look, you know what?
Well, I don't know if this counts anymore,
but I spent a little bit of time in Denver,
listening to sports radio in Denver.
And these people are fanatics, man.
But the point being that, you know,
Jimmy, the air conditioner repair man,
is smarter than you, dude.
And he knows everything that every baseball team
ever achieved and when and who and everyone on the teams all their stats all their everything and
why it mattered and it mattered a lot to them and the level of expertise there is no different
than in your highest applied sciences or history or any other thing you know what i mean it all
just depends on what you're interested in and what you want to know that much about and this is
norm chomsky's thing that he talked about where look if you're a primate that's intelligent enough
to speak, then you are a genius, right?
Then you are absolute miracle, unbelievable, impossible, you know, circumstance, situation of
your very existence.
And so we all ought to be taken like at that very level.
You know what I mean?
Like, no matter who you're dealing with, there's something special in there, you know?
Yeah.
And usually it comes with humility because people with PhDs and Harvard and so on,
they usually have this overinflated ego that comes from authority.
But sports radio, people on the street, everyday folks, they don't have that.
And so they could just speak their expertise without the ego.
Yeah.
Well, and that's my thing, too, is I don't have nothing to sell you other than, I mean,
my coffee sponsor and whatever, but, like, my sincerity is like all I got.
I don't have any other argument from authority that I can invoke other than people listen
to me, they know I'm not lying, and they can tell what my biases are.
I'm absolutely on my sleeve.
You know what I mean?
Every day I only try to quantify
whether I hate Bill Clinton
or George W. Bush more.
And that's where I'm coming from,
and everybody understands that,
and they know that I'd never deliberately
try to make them think one thing instead of another.
And if I did,
they would obviously catch on to that,
and then I'd be completely ruined
and have to just go get a job delivering auto parts
or something, which would be fine.
In fact, I like delivering auto parts.
I've had that job before, although I'd rather drive at night if I got a drive.
I'd rather, I guess, drive an Uber at night.
But if you still have energy.
Oh, I'm not even halfway done.
What about you?
All right, got all the energy in the world.
Maybe a quick bathroom break.
A good place to pick up our story here would be John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt's book.
We've talked about Mearsheimer and Walt previously.
Now, their book is called The Israel Lobby and American Born Policy.
It came out in 2007.
It started out as an essay that they wrote.
first for the Atlantic Monthly
that commissioned the story
and then refused to run it
and they ended up running it
in the London Review of Books.
We also ran it at antirewar.com.
People can find it there.
It's called the Israel Lobby
and American Foreign Policy.
It's a fantastic article.
And then they made it into a book.
And now, these guys are, again,
the co-deans, basically,
of the realist school of foreign policy.
One from the University of Chicago,
the other from Harvard,
both highly respected.
Neither of them,
haters or ideologues or any of these things. They were ruthlessly attacked as anti-Semites for this,
which is completely preposterous. And what they did, though, is say that, look, man, Israel's
interests are very different than ours. And that's why they spend so much money and effort
lobbying in the United States to try to obfuscate that fact that what's good for them
ain't necessarily good for us at all. Well, they have to make sure it's at least good for the
people in charge here, if not for the country itself. And that's their object. And as Walt Miersheimer
say in the essay and in the book, that you can't blame the whole Iraq war on them. George W. Bush
was the one sitting in the chair behind that desk calling that shot. He could have changed
his mind at the very last moment. It was on him. And now it's the Congress's responsibility,
but they passed that responsibility to him with their unconstitutional authorization that they
passed in October of 2002. But like ultimately, who pulled that trigger, George W. Bush did
and in conspiracy with his vice president and his secretary of defense and the rest of them.
So the neocons, yes, they were the deputy secretary of defense and the deputy secretary of defense
for policy and the staff in the vice president's office, the staff of the national security
Council. They were there operating, really, as I said, as Colin Powell called it, that separate
government and operating mostly for Benjamin Netanyahu's goals. This is part of what we argued about
me and Mark Dubowitz on your show last time, was he insisted somewhat partially correctly
here that Ariel Sharon wanted Bush to hit Iran, not Iraq, and Ariel Sharon, not Netanyahu,
was the prime minister. And that was the occasion of
him accusing J.J. Goldberg of being an anti-Semite because he had written in the Jewish Daily
Forward about how Netanyahu wants to hit Iraq. Sharon would rather hit Iran. And J.J. Goldberg,
as long as I'm citing him, let me tell you, he says in there very clearly that he is not saying
that the neocons bear even the lion's share of the responsibility for the war. Of course he blames
George W. Bush for launching the war. And of course, he's not peddling in some anti-Semitic conspiracy
theory in the pages of the foreword for God's sake, right? He's, he's extremely conservative in
his statements and in his accusations. But what he's saying is that the Lekudniks in America are
closer to Netanyahu than Sharon. And of course, George W. Bush wants to go to Iraq. He wants to
Baghdad, not Tehran. And so it, and Wolfowitz, of course, always especially was,
an Iraq hawk. And so the confluence of interest here was to go to Iraq. Now, Sharon was smart enough
to see that Iran, you know, the clean break wasn't him. That was Netanyahu and his buddies.
Sharon, I think, was skeptical about what's going to happen when we overthrow Saddam Hussein and the
Shiites takeover. And this is where he tried to insist. And John Bolton did echo him in this and promise
him that, yes, and then we'll go to Iran and Syria and Lebanon and everywhere else next. Because we can't just
get rid of Saddam, that's going to change the balance of power in a way that's going to
benefit Iran in a way that Sharon did not prefer. However, Sharon absolutely did go along
with the program and help lie us into war. And he had his own office of special plans
that he created in the prime minister's office in Israel, where they manufactured fake
intelligence in English to stove pipe into the intelligence stream to help lie us into war.
And here's three authoritative sources on that.
Julian Borgier, in The Guardian, the spies who pushed for war.
And it's not the spies.
It's the neoconservatives, is who he's talking about, not CIA officers.
The spies who pushed for war by Julian Borgier.
Then there's more missing intelligence by Robert Dreyfus in the nation.
Then is a pretext for war.
9-11, Iraq and the abuse of America's intelligence agencies by James Bamford.
The great book by the great James Bamford, the guy that wrote The Puzzle Palace and Body of Secrets.
and the Shadow Factory about the National Security Agency.
Best author on the NSA.
Pretext for war focuses on the neocons and the CIA
and how the neocons lied us into war for Netanyahu and Israel.
I don't remember.
Oh, and the whole first part is about 9-11,
and how 9-11 happened and how the government failed to stop it.
And the shadow factory is really insightful on those lines
because we often hear about the infighting between the FBI and the CIA.
But the NSA also hoarded all their information
who would not share with the FBI or CIA.
And the CIA at one point, and Michael Schroyer also tells the story,
CIA had to create their own listening station on Madagascar
to try to spy on al-Qaeda hiding out in Yemen,
the switchboard house in Yemen,
because the NSA would not give them the intercepts.
They had to get their own,
but they could only get half the conversation
and not the other half talking to the terrorists in Afghanistan.
And as Schoyer put it to me on my show, I don't know, 15 years ago or something,
he said, yeah, because George Tenet didn't have the moral courage
to just walk down there and demand the defense.
damn intercepts. Because at that time, the head of the CIA was also the director of central
intelligence, which meant the boss like the DNI is supposed to be over all the other
intelligence agencies. So George Tenet had the authority to command NSA to do what he said. He didn't
have to ask nicely. But according to Shoyer, he didn't have the courage to just go down there
and say, give me the damn intercepts. Why not? Scombeck. You know, he came from staff in the
Senate, I think, just wanted to please the real spies, you know, like he was kind of the new
kind didn't really fit in and was trying to like be cool or whatever and i don't know who knows
these people but um so importantly you know the ariel sharon government did help to push this thing
even though dubowitz is right that sharon first said no bush you should go to tehran first
because that was his problem it was i guess i don't know if i'd have to go back and and see if anybody
ever wrote about this but i never saw like sharon's opinion of the clean break but it's easy to see
how anyone could see through how stupid the plan was. We're going to weaken the Shiites by getting
rid of the most powerful Sunni standing in their way. That's pretty dumb, right? And especially if you
really know about, for example, the history of the Iran-Iraq War, the history of the post-Iraq War I
Shiite uprising, you might have real reason to worry. Justin Romando at anti-war.com wrote in 2002,
he said, hey, look everybody. The Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, the CIA tried to
give them money, and they said, piss off, we don't need you. We got Iran. And Justin said,
better watch out. Here's who's coming to power when we invade Iraq a year from now.
And then that's exactly what happened is, again, the Bada Brigade was the militia of the Supreme
Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq. And that was exactly who George W. Bush took all the way
to power in Baghdad. So for the guys who fought in that war, who were listening to this,
who still don't know why they fought in that war, ultimately they fought. They fought
on the Shiite side of a massive civil war against the minority Sunni ruling regime
and to replace them with a new essentially Islamist theocracy sort of pseudo-republic like in Iran
and that that's what it was for is not for freedom was for one faction over the other and in this
case it was the Shiites and then of course the most powerful facts worth explaining not of course
that the most powerful Shiite groups that came together to form the new Iraqi government
was the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq, Skiri,
which is now called Iski because we won their revolution for them.
So now it's just the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq.
The Dawah Party and Mottada al-Sauder and his Madi army.
Now, Dawa and Skiri have been living in Iran,
and they were kind of more higher class types,
whereas Maktad al-Sauder is like the son of important guys.
It was much more like a street ruffian type.
and the ghetto, the Shiite ghetto in eastern Baghdad was called Saddam City.
As soon as America invaded, they renamed it Sautar City after his father.
But he inherited a lot of that street credibility as like the most legitimate of the Shiite leaders on the ground there.
So these three groups, under the guidance of the Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who lived down in Najaf.
Under his leadership, or guidance or whatever, they formed what was called the United Iraqi Alliance.
That was the group that wrote the Constitution in the fall of 2004.
That was the group that won the elections, the big purple-fingered elections of 2005, and that's
what kicked off the real civil war started after that.
Now, there was already a predominantly Sunni-based insurgency at that time.
Well, it was not exclusively Sunni.
It started out much more nationalist and mixed, but very quickly, it was the Sunni tribal leaders
and former Baathist and military leaders realizing that they have everything to lose now
and that they have the super majority of the country backed by the United States is now taking power.
And then, so this pushed the Sunnis into the arms, the Sunni insurgency, into the arms of the bin Ladenites,
who were coming from all over the place, just like it was Afghanistan or Bosnia or Chechnya again,
or Kosovo, coming to all chip in to fight the holy jihad this time against us instead of with our help,
although still backed by our friends, the Saudis.
and they came in there
and America and the Shiites
pushed the Sunni insurgency
into the arms of the bin Ladenites
and in fact
I'll tell you an anecdote about how that happened
and so much
of this is tied up in what's happening in Israel
at this time as well
in January of 2004
Sheikh Yassin who was the founder of
Hamas which was a breakoff
of the Muslim Brotherhood. It was originally like a charitable type organization that ended up growing into this militia with the aid and comfort of the Israelis. And there's some really great articles that you might like to peruse about this, including by Richard Sale in UPI. If you just type in Richard Sale, UPI, Hamas. I'm sure it'll just come straight up there. Israel gave major aid to Hamas. This is an in-depth study. It's based on CIA.
as well as
Shinbet and Mossad sources.
Richard Sale, if people aren't familiar,
UPI is the news agency
most closely tied to the Washington Times,
which would be the Reaganite conservative
newspaper in Washington.
It's funny because it's the Washington Post
and the New York Times are the liberal papers
and the New York Post
and the Washington Times are the conservative papers,
if you got that right.
So basically this article details
how Tel Aviv, Israel gave direct and indirect financial aid to Hamas over a period of many years.
And the purpose was to build them up to divide and conquer the Palestinians,
to create a religious right-wing alternative to the secular nationalist sort of pseudocami PLO under
Yasser Arafat.
They wanted to divide and conquer the Palestinians.
And so what they would do is they would finance, directly finance Hamas,
while at the same time arresting all of their competitors and holding them in prison,
disarming them, weakening them, while bolstering the Hamas government.
They did not create Hamas, but they did very deliberately bolster its rise.
Now, Hezbollah is a different story where Hasbala just really grew up in reaction to their invasion of Lebanon in 82,
without any direct support from them in that sense.
Although, maybe I don't know enough about that.
But certainly in this case, with Amas, that's true.
And you can also read Andrew Higgins in the Wall Street Journal, wrote a great piece along the same lines.
I'm going to pull that up for us here.
How Israel Help to Spawn Hamas, Andrew Higgins, 2009.
So I can also recommend Robert Dreyfus' book, Devil's Game, How the United States Helped to Unleash Fundamentalist Islam Masterpiece.
Also, again, Trita Parsi's Tretcherous Alliance, cannot recommend that book highly enough.
That thing might go into its third printing just because of me.
I'm telling you, everybody's got to read that book.
And then Obstacle to Peace by Libertarian Institute fellow Jeremy R. Hammond
wrote a masterpiece about Israel and Palestine and the fight over the occupied territories
in America's role and making it all worse than the rest.
Fantastic book goes in deep study about this.
Now, back to our anecdote.
In January 2004, old Sheikh Yassine with big Santa Claus beard and his wheelchair says,
give up. I give in. We need to go ahead and negotiate with the Israelis and settle for our measly
stinking 22% of historic Palestine, just as Arafat had done in 1988. Two months later, the Israelis
killed him in a missile strike, just so they could lie to you, Lex, and say we have no partner
for peace. Somehow a missile blew up his car. And they're the ones who killed him. And when they
killed him in March of 2004. That's what touched off the riot in Fallujah, where the four black
water guards were murdered and burned and their bodies hanged from the bridge outside of town. And they had
a giant parade Dar Jamal, the great war journalist, was there and saw. They had pictures of Yassin
in their windshields. They called themselves the Al Yassin brigades. And it was this impromptu protest
against Israel's murder of the leader of Hamas. And that's what caused that riot. That
killed those black water guards, and then George W. Bush sent General James Madison there with
his Marines, including now a couple of friends of mine who had to go in there and bite that thing
and declared the thing a free fire zone like Vietnam and killed hundreds, if not thousands of innocent
civilians, in the first Battle of Fallujah, which they claimed that Zarqawi, the bin Laden,
who wasn't even really bin Laden yet, he didn't declare his loyalty to bin Laden until the end of 2004,
a year and a half into the war. But they pretended, so,
months later, but they pretended that he was already tied to bin Laden. He was one of the lies
in Colin Powell's U.N. speech, that there's this guy named Zarqa, and he's tied to bin Laden, and he's
tied to Saddam. Well, he wasn't tied to bin Laden. He had told bin Laden, no, I don't want to join
your group, and he wasn't tied to Saddam, unlike the lies of Ahmed Chalabi and the exiles. He was not
operated on by Saddam Hussein and given a peg leg in the Baghdad hospital. That was a hoax,
perpetrated by the weekly standard in the neoconservative set to tie those two together.
In fact, he wasn't tied to either. And then only after the war, an America made him famous and
claimed that he was bin Ladenite did Zarqawi race in stature. And Sarkawi was like more
apocalyptic and revolutionary and even nihilistic and destructive than bin Laden's doctrines
ever were. And he was notoriously sectarian against the Shiites where bin Laden, you know,
I don't think, and I have not read everything the guy ever wrote, but I have read a lot of his stuff.
And I never saw where he really seems to focus on problems against the Shiites.
Again, Muhammad Atta and Ramsey bin al-Shib, they were mad because of Shimon Peres and Naftali Bennett killing Shiite Palestinians in Lebanon.
The fact that they were Shiites didn't make them less valuable as far as wanting to avenge their deaths, as far as that goes.
Sarkawi, on the other hand, thought, no, the only good shit.
Shiite is a dead Shiite. God says so. And this kind of like, Craig, bring on the apocalypse kind of deal
and went for, you know, madness, suicide bombing, Shiite pilgrims and doing like just absolute
atrocities against civilians, which of course, like the guy may be good at making bomb vests,
but he's not good at math because there's just way too many Shiites. And so by boycotting
the election, refusing to participate in the new order, which they got the American super
power occupying the country with 300,000 troops, or at that point, maybe 200,000, but still,
and in alliance with the supermajority, those Sunni chiefs should have figured out a way to deal,
saying, no way, let's fight was a huge mistake from them.
And then entering into alliance with the bin Ladenites only made it worse because, and this is,
it is directly because of Israel, Kila and Yassin, and then the Battle of Volta,
that helped drive a bunch of refugees out of Fallujah, who then went to Baghdad, who drove people out of their areas.
And then you had a lot of tit and tit for tat back and forth as refugees from the different cities are being cleansed out.
So in the predominantly Shiite cities, they're kicking all the Sunnis out.
And in the predominantly Shi'i areas, they're kicking all the Shiites out, and people are being displaced.
Dar Jamil, I swear, I looked and looked, and maybe I still could find it somewhere.
I think the last time I tried to find it, I couldn't find it anymore.
But it was Darjimael had this most brilliant article where he traced the cause and effect through the wars from the beginning of the, you know, the war began in 2003, of course, but like the real worsening of the insurgency in 2004 and the chain of events from this city to this city to this city where these different refugees are displacing other people and causing these worst consequences to go through and were more and more than the Sunnis, especially being cleansed from Baghdad and they're being pushed into the arms of the bin Ladenites.
all touched off by Israel,
assassinating their own pseudo-sockpuppet,
you know, terrorist frontman,
excuse for an imperialist policy
that they had supported,
when he was finally ready to completely capitulate to them,
they killed them so he couldn't.
And that was what caused all this problem for America,
you know, not caused,
but contributed significantly to the problems during the war.
Also during that same time,
This was the first time that Moktada al-Sauder and his Maudi army fought against the Americans.
And he even sent Shiites and pickup trucks to Fallujah to go help in the name of Iraqi nationalism to help the Sunnis at that time.
And they had a whole separate little war with him in Sauter City in eastern Baghdad at that time, which is a real problem because, as I said, Sauter had so much street credibility there among the people.
and where to this day he is still one of the most important and powerful kingmakers in Shiite politics in that country right now.
And so they were essentially blowing up and sabotaging their own ability to use diplomacy to work with this guy.
And he became the most intransigent part of the Sunni insurgency.
There's so many different parts of this, but one of the things that's really important I think to talk about is that David Petraeus,
His first job was up in Mosul trying to train up a militia to be our guys.
And they just took the money and guns and joined the insurgency against us.
It was an absolute catastrophe.
He gave him a bunch of weapons and money and then was humiliated and kicked right the hell out of there.
His next job, right, after empowering the Sunni insurgency up in Mosul, was to go to Baghdad
and to turn the Bada Brigade of the Supreme Islamic Council.
The same guys who Saddam feared in 1980, which is why he started the war, the same guys who George H.W.
W. Bush beard in 1991, which is why he betrayed their uprising.
Same guys that W. Bush is now taking all the way to Baghdad.
David Petraeus is now in charge of building them into the Iraqi army.
And that's who was going around torturing everybody to death.
And I don't know if you saw the movie American Sniper about Chris Kyle, directed by Clint Eastwood.
And I'm a real big Clean Eastwood fan.
I'm really disappointed in this fact.
It was really bad what he did in that movie was he portrayed
the Sunni insurgents
torturing people
to death with power drills
and portrayed Chris Kyle
saving them
but that's not true
it was America's guys
the Bada Brigade
of the Supreme Islamic Council
they were the ones
torturing people
to death with power drills
through the shoulder
through the heart
through the eyeball
through the ear
through the temple
So at that time
America was supporting
the Bada Brigade
at that time America
is building the Bada Brigade
into the Iraqi
army as we know it
today. And David Petraeus, this is where we have what's called the El Salvador option,
which what does that sound like? Paying right-wing desksuas to go around killing commies in the case
of El Salvador, preventing it from becoming a Nicaragua, right? In the 1980s, it was John Negroponte
who had worked for Ronald Reagan in El Salvador as the ambassador then on this covert action,
killing all these people, who was then brought in to be ambassador to run what they call the El Salvador
door option of empowering the Shiite militias to finally finish crushing the Sunni insurgency,
which of course they absolutely failed to do. They simply radicalized them and made it that much
worse and worse and worse. And this was all on David Petraeus. He was the one in charge of this thing.
So that made the Civil War just absolutely horrific through 2005, 6, and then coming into 7.
Now in 06, James Baker says, we got to get out of there. Old Guard brought in to say, we need to figure
out a way out. That's embarrassing for Bush. Bush decides, no, he wants to double down instead. He's
going to do the surge at David Petraeus's recommendation. He fired Rumsfeld, who now wanted out,
said, I told you light and fast. Let's get out. He said, we got to take the training wheels off.
Let the Iraqi democracy figure out a way to work on its own without us now, which was, you know what,
hell, take it, right? Cut and run. This ain't working. And he's really right. They're like,
If they're going to figure this out, for good or for ill, through blood or through handshakes and bribes or what?
It has to be up to them, ultimately.
And so, yeah, so what did Bush do?
Kick him right out the door.
It's the first time he said something reasonable.
And he brought in Robert Gates, who's supposed to be like an old James Spaker type, his father's guy who had been the head of the CIA, whose fault it was that the CIA didn't know that the Soviet Union was falling apart, right?
Because they were too busy pretending that the Soviet Union was 12 feet tall at the time.
Same guy.
Bush Jr. brings him in and he oversees the surge. And this is where they do the massive escalation in the beginning of 2007. And it's funny because they dropped all the propaganda about Iran's nuclear program for a little bit because they had a new line. And the new line was that whenever a Shiite sets off a bomb in Iraq, it's an Iranian bomb. And this is where you and your audience have heard 100 times a thousand that Iran killed 600 of our guys in Iraq. That's what they say. Well,
here's the truth of that.
It was 500 guys, not six, and it wasn't Iran.
Those bombs, they were a new and improved kind of IED, improvised explosive device.
Our guys call them explosively formed penetrators, EFPs, and they were shaped charge,
and they had a copper core.
And that copper core, when the explosive went off, would melt.
And that molten copper would then slice right through our,
And that was what made it the new and improved bomb.
Now, the propaganda at the time was, even though it was David Petraeus, who at this time decided to attack
Maktata al-Sauder, in the name of claiming that he was an Iranian agent.
In fact, Mktata al-Sauder, I think I talked about this a little bit on a tangent I shouldn't
have taken on the last time I was here, Macta al-Sauder was the least Iranian puppet of the major
Shiite faction leaders.
Because where Dawa and Skiy had lived in Iran for 20 years at this point, he hadn't.
He'd stayed.
And he was insisting that Iran and the United States butt out and leave Iraq to Iraqis.
So you see the problem there.
Even though he wants Iran to leave and wants to limit their influence, he also wants to limit ours.
The Bush administration's idea is, no, we're going to bet that the government of Iraq,
mostly made of Dawa and Skiri, that they will need our money and our weapons,
more than they need Iran next door.
So if we stick it out and even compromise repeatedly with Iran on who should be the prime
minister, like Ibrahim Jafari and Nuri al-Mal-Maliki from the Dawa Party, and we come to,
this is the only time we talk to Iran at all.
It's sort of secretly, quietly agreeing on who the Iraqi prime minister should be as we're doing this, right?
So Mott al-Sauder, even though he is trying to limit Iranian authority,
He also wants to limit hours.
So the Americans decide they want to target him.
So it wasn't Slaughter that picked that bite.
It was David Petraeus in the service of Dick Cheney working to try,
and in conspiracy with Michael Gordon of the New York Times,
to try to lie the American people into war with Iran then in the name of these bombs.
And they made a massive propaganda campaign in the spring of 2007.
Every time a bomb goes off in Shiite territory, that was Iran that did it.
they claimed over and over. I said the point is and the problem is, and I cite in the book
by names of the journalists and their affiliations, at least eight or ten different
American and other foreign reporters there. Nobody with a, you know, Iranian dog in the
I'm not citing press TV here. I'm citing the New York Times. Michael Gordon, he's now
at the Wall Street Journal, but he was at the New York Times. He's the, he's the guy
who bylined with Judy Miller. Every story where they lied that Saddam Hussein is seeking
a bomb parts and Saddam Hussein is making nuclear weapons and wants germs and chemicals and all these
things. Judy Miller took the rap for the whole media. But her co-author, Michael Gordon,
lived to still light us to this day in the Wall Street Journal, but he was the one in charge of
this essentially just this conspiracy to lie the American people into war through the pages
in New York Times. But I show that his colleague Alyssa Rubin proved that he's a damned liar.
because she was there with soldiers, printed it in his same newspaper.
She was there with American soldiers when they found an EFP factory in Sauter City.
I'm pretty sure that there was a bunch, wherever it was, it was in Shiite territory in Iraq.
And it was Iraqis working in a machine shop making these bombs.
And now they go, okay, well, but the parts all came from Iran.
Oh, yeah.
No, they had it.
The Iranians thought, you know what we'll do, we'll ship the parts into Iraq for them to make bombs out of
instead of just sending them bombs like whatever man it was obviously just a bunch of propaganda and i cite in there
the christian science monitor was there when they did operation eagle claw found another factory making effps
and then i cite also wired magazine the brilliant andrew coburn and a bunch of other great sources
that just showed these bombs were made in iraq by iraqis i don't care what you say and i i just proved this
over and over again on the blog at antivore.com in 2007 over and over and over again so if in fact if you just
search my name, anti-war.com, especially if you search anti-war.com slash blog and
EFPs, you will get a bunch of hits because we went over this all at the time, making me feel
extra old right now.
Yeah, that's, it was 18 years ago.
Holy shit.
EFPs are made in Iraq by Iraqis.
Scott Horton, August 12th, 2007.
And there's a bunch of them.
That's just one of many that I did during that era.
and, again, sighting solid proof.
For those who listen to and to War Radio,
you know I refute this lie every single day.
Siding Reuters and this Christian Science Monitor.
Operation Black Eagle.
I'm sorry I got the name of the Eagle thing wrong.
I said Eagle Claw, didn't I?
Operation Black Eagle was where the Christian Science Monitor was tagging along.
But there's a bunch of these.
And so now Dubowitz said, oh, yeah, well, Iran taught him how to do it then.
No, Gareth Porter showed that it was the IRA, the Irish Republican Army that taught Lebanese Hezbollah,
and it was Lebanese Hezbollah that taught the Shiite Iraqis how to do it.
So when I said it was Lebanese Hezbollah, Dubowitz goes, aha, Iran, nope, they got it from the Irish.
So, sorry, Charlie, nice little propaganda campaign you got there, but then what happened was
they did a big press conference
where they laid out all the EFP bombs
and the parts
and the reporters started milling around
and they go well that's funny
that one says made in Haditha on it
which is the city in Iraq
and that one says made in UAE
and all this and then so what do we have here
do we have any evidence that any of this stuff
came from Iran? No
and then what did they do Lex
they canceled the press conference
closed it down embarrassed
and Stephen Hadley
the national security advisor
himself admitted we didn't have the proof that we needed to make the case.
Just promising, oh, we're going to prove it, we're going to prove it, we're going to prove it,
and kicking that can down the road for months until I think it must have been May or June
when they finally did this press conference that fell apart and started to back down.
Was that the major justification for the escalation?
It was not the justification for the escalation of the surge overall.
The rationalization there was we are going to send an extra 30 or 40,000 troops to Baghdad,
and we are going to secure the capital city.
And once we have peace in the capital city, the peace of desolation,
where we kill every last Sunni who resist by putting a power drill through his eyeball,
then we'll be able to negotiate peacefully in the setting of our new Democratic Republic that we've built here.
That was the justification there.
And at the same time, David Betrayus,
And this is the only victory that David Petraeus ever won in his entire stupid, stinking failure of a pathetic lying life.
And that is when he convinced George W. Bush to surrender to the Sunni insurgency.
Mr. President, you're not going to defeat the Sunni insurgency.
Read me loud and clear.
All this victory you've been promising all these years?
All the people that you've killed trying to bring it, sending the desert ox Ray Odierno in there to kill every last living, fighting age male in the end.
Ambar province. We've lost, Mr. President. And so what we're going to do is we're going to bribe the
Sunni insurgency. Right now, they have, well, okay, I overstay that. We didn't lose. We failed to
beat them. But they did lose much territory to the Shiites. So they were licking their wounds at
that time. The Sunni insurgency, the Iraqi Sunnis, had too many enemies. They were fighting the
Shiites. They were fighting the Americans. And they had to deal with the bin Ladenites. And they hated
the bin Ladenites. They didn't want to live like Saudis and a bunch of Egyptian weirdo
suicide bombers trying to outlaw women from buying cucumbers at the market because it's
some kind of sexual innuendo and what are these people like get these people out of my face
and I show in the book. There are plenty of reporting about plenty. There was plenty of reporting
about this that beginning at least in early 2005, it was the local Sunni population. This is two
years before David Petraeus runs to try to get to the head of this parade.
Eight. Two years previously, in the beginning of O'5, was when the local Sunnis started killing the bin Ladenites themselves and saying, you can't tell us what to do. You're more harm than good. You're making our insurgency into a counterproductive war by killing all these Shiite civilians and generating all new support for our crushing at their hands and all of that. So they were isolating and killing these guys off. And you've got to figure, dude.
I mean, this is like a magic wish come true, okay?
George W. Bush comes, and he turns all of Western Iraq, right?
Fallujah, to Crete, much of Ramadi, and, obviously, Mosul, into bin Ladenistan,
into Jihadi University, bigger and better and worse than Afghanistan, Bosnia, Chechnya.
This is all those combined, and it's in Western Iraq, right, on the border of the Levantz,
in Mesopotamia, not Nangar province out there in no man's land between Afghanistan and
Pakistan. This is what made America, as Michael Schorier said, bin Laden's only indispensable
ally, right? That you could do like a reverse 9-11 trutherism where all the Americans are
actually al-Qaeda agents all this time, because all they're doing is exactly what bin Laden wants
them to do. Michael Schoyer said that, oh, of course, Afghanistan was the plan, but it
Iraq, that was the hoped-for, but unexpected gift to bin Laden.
Bin Laden said on the eve of the invasion, rise up Iraqis, kill the socialist infidels,
Saddam Hussein, and then resist the Americans when they arrive.
Okay, one guy's got a beret and a mustache.
The other guy's got a beard and is all wearing a funny robe like Obi-1 Canobi.
and they clearly are extremely different men with extremely different sets of priorities, right?
Couldn't be more different.
And of course, Saddam Hussein was terrified of Osama bin Laden and had no connection to his regime whatsoever.
And in fact, we know now that he had kicked himself upstairs and was semi-retired writing a romance novel at the time of the invasion.
That's how determined Saddam Hussein was to attack inside the United States.
to paraphrase the CIA warning George Bush about al-Qaeda on August the 6th, 2001,
when he told Michael Morel, his briefer, the guy who later helped frame Donald Trump for treason
with Russia and everything, he told Michael Morrell, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, you've covered your ass.
Can you clarify, I say I was writing a romance now at the time of the invasion?
Yes, I'm afraid so. Is that real? Yes. That's real. Yes.
No harm to whatsoever. What they could have done, let me ask you to stretch your engineers
imagination here to like wild metaphysical type concepts outside of your usual reach you know you're
maybe more of a right brain guy or something but like trip out lex friedman the secretary of state
was colin powell the four-star general former chairman of the joint chiefs of staff you think he might
have been tough enough to just send over there and tell saddam hussein here's the riot act i'm gonna read it to you
and then you're going to sign on the dotted line, buddy boy.
And if you think that Colin Powell wasn't man enough for that,
don't you think that mean old Donald Rumsfeld, his old friend from 1983,
when Ronald Reagan sent him to be special emissary over there,
when he offered Saddam Hussein support for his military campaign against Iran,
and browbeat him and tried to get him to build a pipeline to the port of Akaba for Israel,
that's what, that famous picture of Rumsfeld's shaken hands,
with Hussein. That's what that meeting was about. One will give you weapons, too. We want you to
build a pipeline for the Israelis. You think you could have sent gruff old Donald Rumsfeld over there
to tell Saddam Hussein one thing. Your job is keeping bin Ladenites down. Read me? Okay. We have a
new priority in our foreign policy in the Middle East. We don't want anyone to be friends with
Osama bin Laden or his men. That sound reasonable to you.
And then Saddam Hussein, of course, would have said, of course. And in fact, Saddam Hussein, and you can read this only months later into the war, maybe a year into the war, James Reisen wrote it in the New York Times, that Saddam Hussein sent an emissary to meet with Richard Pearl in London and surrendered to him and say, if this is about democracy, we'll hold elections. If this is about Israel, we'll stop funding Hamas. If this is about oil, we'll give you the mineral rights.
If this is about weapons of mass destruction, you can send your army
and FBI wherever you want to look.
I give up, please don't kill me.
And Richard Pearl told the emissary,
you tell them we'll see them in Baghdad.
They refuse, and Seymour Hirsch had another story just like that,
where Hussein sent a Lebanese businessman to again surrender
to say we're willing to negotiate on any and every turn.
that you could possibly name for us, and America refused, and went to war anyway. By the way,
when they did in 2003, first of all, in 2001, they held a million-man candlelight vigil in
Tehran on September the 12th. And the Ayatollah said, now's our chance to make friends with the United
States. They hate Saddam Hussein, and they hate the Taliban. Great, us too. So they said,
now's our chance to again try to reach out to the United States. Did I skip and forget to
mention that in 1993, oh, this was going to be part of our Cold War story, but it overlaps.
In 1993, Zabigna Brazinski, the right-wing sort of hawkish, realist national security
visor for Jimmy Carter, and Alexander Haig, who had been Kissinger's right-hand man and was
Ronald Reagan's secretary of state. They both wanted to build oil pipelines across Iran to the
Persian Gulf, one, to make money and for American companies, but also, too, to bring
in Iran from the cold and open up an opportunity to normalize relations between our country
and their country. The oil business is a great way to do that. Later in the 1990s, the CEO of
Halliburton, Dick Cheney, said the same thing, that Bill Clinton's sanctions are irresponsible.
We should lift the sanctions against Iran and we should do business with Iran because, after all,
God didn't see fit to leave all the oil under wonderful Western allied democracies. And so we have to
deal with who we have to deal with. And that was in the interest of his company, and quite frankly,
was in the interest of the United States of America at the time. Cause a little mini scandal
because one of the times that Cheney repeated himself in these criticisms was in Australia. And that's
supposed to be a cardinal sin to criticize your own country from the soil of another country. And he
had been the former Secretary of Defense. So that was a kind of a, you know, social, you know,
error or whatever that got him a little more controversy about those.
statements than probably they would have got any uh probably more attention than they would
have got otherwise for the substance of them um but so we had every opportunity to deal with
iran in the 1990s and then lex guess why clinton didn't do that was because the israel lobby said no
that was in the washington post they did this great series dan ottaway and dan morgan i think well
whatever morgan ottawa i forget their first names they did a multi-part series all about the oil
politics of the Caspian Basin. And it was APEC and the Israel lobby that said, no, you cannot
normalize relations with Iran. Vito. And so, Brazinski and Hague backed down from their plans
on the companies that they were representing in doing that and went the other way. And the
Cold War with Iran remained all through the rest of the century, again, waged from bases in
Saudi, getting our towers knocked down. Now it's the new era. We go to war with the Taliban and
Afghanistan. Iran says, we'll do anything that we can to help you with that. Then,
You guys want to get rid of Saddam Hussein, not only will we help you with that, guess what?
Ahmed Chalibis, Iraqi National Congress's headquarters was in Tehran.
Guess who sponsored the Iraqi Shiite exile to tell the neo-conservatives that the new Shiite
supermajority regime will build an oil pipeline to Haifa and tell Hezbollah to stop being friends with Iran and be nice to Israel.
And so they said, we have these common interests.
And yet there was a terrorist attack in 2004, and the neocons just lied inside Saudi Arabia.
And the neocons lied and said bin Laden and his men had planned it from inside Iran, which was a total lie.
It had nothing to do with Iran.
But that was enough for idiot W. Bush, who doesn't know anything to go along with, oh, okay, then.
And so now Iran is back on the enemy side of the ledger of the war on terror, where, of course, they have no alliance with bin Laden.
The only time they backed bin Laden was as a favor to Bill Clinton.
in Bosnia in the 1990s.
And so they had no love for the bin Ladenites whatsoever.
And despite all the lies, bin Laden was hiding in Pakistan, not in Iran.
And the bin Ladenites who did make it to Iran were under house arrest.
And the Iranians were trying to negotiate with the Americans to hand them over,
or at least hand them over to their home countries wherever they were from.
And they were offering to negotiate what was then called.
They submitted this through the Swiss ambassador in the spring of 03,
either right before the war or right after the war.
I think it must have been right after the invasion of Iraq.
It was called the Golden Offer.
And not only did Bush and his men reject it,
but they even gave, I think John Bolton,
gave a big dressing down to the Swiss ambassador
for daring to even bring the proposal to them.
And again, it, just like with Saddam Hussein,
the Ayatoll was showing his willingness to negotiate essentially anything
of controversy, including support for Hamas and Hasbala, including their nuclear program, which at that
point was just, you could barely even call it nascent at all. They had not begun spinning a single
centrifuge at that point. And they wanted to negotiate over these bin Ladenites if we would
exchange them for members of the M.E.K., the Mujahideen-E.K., communist terrorist cult,
which was like some Jonestown, total kukery type of a cult that, um,
that level of kukry like heaven's gate you know just comet chasing lunatics and they had helped
with the iranian revolution but then they had betrayed it and had been kicked out of iran by the
ayatollah but then they went to work for saddam hussein they helped saddam hussein during the shite
and kurdish uprising in 1991 they helped crush the kurds with their tanks in that as special
agents of saddam during that and then they and then the u.s inherited them when we invaded iraq in
2003, and Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld took control of them.
Again, the M.E.K., they're called the Mujahideenic. And the Iranians are saying,
look, let's trade. We got bin Ladenites, including bin Laden's son, and including this guy,
Hamza, who was extremely dangerous, al-Qaeda terrorist. And we could have traded them, but
the American, the neoconservatives, and I guess, you know, Rumsfeld and Cheney themselves,
said, nope, we would rather keep the MECA so that we can use them for operations inside
Iran, which they did. In fact, my now wife wrote a story, breaking that story for Ross story back
then, that Rumsfeld was using the MECA for intelligence inside Iran. And a lot of times,
usually working as cutouts for the Israelis nowadays, you will hear rumors about Iran that come
from the MECA. Now, sometimes it's true. It's also known as the NCR, the National Council for
Resistance in Iran is their front. And they'll, in fact, right before the current war in the last
few months, like in June, probably in May, they put out a picture of some buildings and said,
this is a secret Iranian nuclear weapons site. We just found it. Of course, it was total propaganda.
They do that all the time. At one point, they put out a stock photo of a vault door from a vault
door company or a vault company. And they said, behind this vault door, that's where the secret
nuclear weapons program is. And they do that kind of thing all the time. And so,
kept the MEK when they could have traded them with the Iranians. So just one more thing about that
is on the NSC, or were two people who were now a married couple, Flint Leverett and Hillary Mann
Leverett. And I've interviewed both of them at length and they had talked all about how willing
the Iranians were to negotiate with the Americans on essentially anything at that time and how
essentially the Bush administration just refused to work for them. And now think about
You know, we're fighting for them in Afghanistan, putting in power a coalition government
that includes the Hazaras, who are Shiites and friends with Iran.
And in Iraq, we're putting their sock puppets from Dawah and Skiri in power.
We bought an eight-year civil war for Iran's guys, but refused to talk to them the whole time.
Refuse to negotiate with them in good faith when George Bush is the Ayatollah's Aaron boy in this thing
and refuses to acknowledge it, likes to pretend he's the emperor of the world or whatever.
when he's serving their interests and putting their guys in power.
And so that's why at the end of his presidency,
they made him sign the deal to get out by the end of 2011.
And he said, well, can I have 64 bases?
And they said, no.
And so can I have 24 bases?
And he said, no.
So can I have any bases?
And Nuri al-Maliki said, well, let me go talk to the guys.
I'm not real sure.
Sorry, I talked to the guys.
They said, beat it, scum.
Don't let the door hitching the ass on the way.
Didn't even say thank you for fighting a gigantic eight-year civil war for them to exterminate their Sunni enemies and put them in power. It's constantly in power there.
And so that was the sofa that Bush had to agree to in his last year in office in 2008, was that we had to withdraw because he had bought the war for his adversaries, not our enemies, but America's regional rivals in the Middle East, the Iranians, and their Shiite Axis, now including Baghdad, and also, of course, then.
Damascus and Hezbollah and southern Lebanon.
This is when the King of Jordan coined the term,
the Shiite crescent.
It was America who made it.
And in fact, in, I think January of 2006,
the Sunni king of Saudi Arabia would have been King Abdullah,
read the Riot Act as al-May Khalilzad and said,
listen, this is in the WikiLeaks.
He said, listen, it was always us and you and Saddam against Iran.
Now you've given Iraq to Iran on a golden platter.
So what are you going to do about it?
And Khalilzad says, oh, I know your royal majesty.
I'm so sorry about that.
We're going to do everything that we can to try to fix it.
This is the birth of the policy called the Redirection,
where America under Bush, before Obama ever came to town,
where Bush accepted that he had screwed up.
that he had scored, like in soccer, an own goal for the other side of the ledger, the Shiite
crescent dominated by Tehran, and that now he had to make up for that by tilting toward the Sunnis.
You'd be nice to sort of linger and understand, to what degree is the Iranian regime in the Ayatollah are
good and bad for the Iranian people? And then to what degree could the, just so we sort of
clarify that and to what degree could they have been actual good collaborators with the
United States in fighting bin Ladenites yeah good questions so I would not allow with anybody
to kill anybody the time of September 11th there were only 400 bin Ladenites hiding out in
Afghanistan any of the rest of their associates around the Middle East could be arrested by
police forces.
Again, we could have negotiated over them in the first place, and again, the CIA and
Delta Force could have finished annihilating bin Laden Zawahiri and their few hundred men
in the White Mountains in Nangar province at the Lions Den Hideout in December of 2001.
There's your whole actual terror war.
So do we really need Iran to help us other than what, hand over a few prisoners that they
had captured who were trying to hide out in their country that they had put on house arrest?
Yeah. But that's all the help we needed, right? We didn't have to have a new alliance with them. And we didn't have to try to pretend that the Ayatollah is a saint or that his republic is a republic at all. Right? If it's a republic, then how come he's the supreme leader since 1989? It doesn't sound like a republic to me. But at the same time, you want to talk about flawed republics. We're sitting in one. And so, you know, in this case, lying us into aggressive war after aggressive war.
war. You can't say the same for him unless you want to again blame him for sending Ahmed Chalabi
to lie to Richard Pearl, to lie to George W. Bush, you know, and so we can, and in fact, I'm skipping
ahead, but in Iraq War III, we fought with them again against the bin Ladenite caliphate.
And so here we fought really three wars for Iran against the Taliban and against Sunni Saddam and
against Baghdaddy the bin Ladenite Caliph in 14 through 17 there. So why do we hate
him, Lex? So much. We keep fighting wars for them. You know, like I used to joke with Patrick
Coburn that like, man, they better sign this nuclear deal with Obama. They owe us a favor.
After all that we've done for them lately, you know, despite all of the hatred and vitriol,
when you listen to the Lakudniks, what you end up doing is empowering the Ayatoll and his men.
Well, what do you think about the attack of the United States on Iran that, as I mentioned, had me so nervous there would be another escalation into another forever war?
Yeah.
What do you think about that situation?
Wait, let's hold that because let's do Syria first and the redirection.
Then we'll do the Iran war, okay?
Can you talk about the redirection?
Okay, so the redirection was from, the policy was really, I think, invented in late 2005 and then sort of discussed and implemented in beginning in 2006.
And the article is called The Redirection by Seymour Hirsch in the New Yorker magazine.
So, Hersh, uh, pardon me, yes, Hirsch has an incredible series from this whole year long.
It includes the coming wars, preparing the battlefield, the redirection, and I forget the fourth one,
maybe the fifth one, had a bunch of great ones this time.
So I might be combining these articles a little bit here, but it's along the same lines.
Here's what you need to understand about the redirection, okay?
Oops, we screwed up, and we fought.
Iraq War II for the Shiites. Now to make up for that, we're tilting back toward the Sunnis.
But what does that mean? That means we're tilting back toward Osama bin Laden and the suicide bomber
brigades. Saudis don't have an army. We don't trust them with one, probably. We're their army
for the most part. And so how are we going to make it up to the Israelis that we took their stupid
idiot advice and launched this war, but empowered their regional rivals. And how are we going to make it up
to the Saudis who tried to warn us for the most part, I think, against it, but we ignored their
advice and did it anyway, and empowered their regional rivals, the Iranians. And so how are we going to
fix this? And how we're going to fix this is, since we put Tehran up two peg in Baghdad,
we're going to take them down a peg in Damascus. And so they started
in Lebanon backing a group called Fatah al-Islam, bin Ladenite,
suicide bomber, headchopper, a lunatic terrorist to fight against Hezbollah.
In Syria, Elizabeth Cheney, who was then working in the State Department,
later known as Liz Cheney, Dick Cheney's daughter,
she had the job of working with the Muslim Brotherhood
to create the first major government in exile
to try to use to overthrow Bashar,
Al-Assad. And I got to tell you, man, we used to joke on my show going back to, I think, 2004 or 2005, would have been probably the first time that I had asked Eric Margilees. Hey, Eric, if they do, because Eric Margaris was there, just like Patrick Coburn, he was there when Bashar al-Assad's father, Hafezal Assad had crushed the Muslim Brotherhood uprising in Hama in 1984, or was it 82. And he crushed him and he killed like 20,000 people in this horrific thing to crush the Muslim Brotherhood.
Margles was there, knew all about it, told me that story.
And I says to him, I says, well, if the neocons get their way and they overthrow Bashar al-Assad,
then what organized force is there in the country after the Baptist that could possibly take over
authored than maybe the Muslim Brotherhood, if you're lucky?
And Marguerleys says, yeah, exactly, or it could be the bin Ladenites could take over.
Now back to David Wormser, in a clean break and coping with crumbling states,
In coping with crumbling states,
Wormser says,
we have to expedite the chaotic collapse to Syria.
Expedite the chaotic collapse to Syria
so that we will control the outcome,
which will be more to our liking.
And he says, and he's acknowledging bin Ladenite terrorism
is what he's referring to here,
with the recent history at the time he's writing this in 96.
And he's saying,
now, there's a lot of talk about the dangers of fundamentalism.
meaning, okay, we're going to get rid of these secular botist regimes.
There are fundamentalist terrorist wackos running around right now.
He acknowledges that, and he says,
but America will just have to find better allies against fundamentalism than the botstists.
So, now maybe some idiot could write that as policy advice for the Lekud in 1996,
Maybe before the Cobar Towers, but then they kill our airmen at Cobar Towers.
And then they bomb the embassies.
And then they bomb the coal.
And then they hit us on September 11th.
And then they lead as the vanguard of the Sunni insurgency that killed 4,000 of our guys in Iraq War II.
And now you're telling me that we still better find better allies against the bin Ladenites than the Balthas?
that Bashar al-Assad is worse than Osama bin Laden?
Yes, that's what they're telling you,
because Assad is friends with Ayatollah,
and Assad helps the Ayatollah arm Hezbollah,
and Israel, as per the clean break.
What's the clean break?
Is the clean break from Oslo?
Forget Rabin and Perez.
We are going to steal all that's left of the West Bank and Gaza Strip,
sooner or later,
but we don't want to have to worry about Hezbollah on our northern flank.
We need to neutralize them somehow.
So Syria, Wormser wrote, was the keystone in that arc of Iranian power, which was true,
but of course he was the one who added Saddam Hussein to that same arc.
Now they're saying, oops, we have to fix this.
And it was the neoconservatives, Elliot Abrams and Zalmea Khalilzad,
who came to W. Bush and said, sir, we really screwed up here.
we have to turn this thing around now.
And Bush understood.
And it's funny, we read the article,
and it's all Connoisse and her people
trying to explain that,
oh, you know what?
It's not really about Sunnis and Shiites' legs.
It's about moderates and extremists.
Uh-huh.
And the Baothists are the extremists in this.
You're saying, right?
Uh-huh.
The multi-ethnic, secular dictatorship in Syria,
the last country in the Middle East where you can get a drink.
Those are the extremists.
And we've got to support the bin Ladenite insurgency against them.
Now, this is the reason that Barack Obama supported al-Qaeda in Syria.
It's not because he was a secret Muslim terrorist with an allegiance to bin Laden's goals.
It's that he was a secret George W. Bush with allegiance to the American foreign policy establishment's goals, including the neoconial.
conservatives and the Israel lobby in this country,
Lekud interests in this country.
And at that time, you know, in Iraq War II,
for the average person,
they'd have had to read Mearsheimer in 07
to know or read Justin Romando at anti-war.com,
to even know what is a neocan?
What's the difference between them and the rest of the Republicans?
And what do they have against Iraq so bad?
And what is that agenda about?
And what does that have to do with the Lakud party in Israel?
You didn't think that.
If you ask, you know, like Dave Chappelle and his skit, it's all like he tried to kill my daddy kind of stuff, right?
Because people just don't know this deeper layer to it.
Well, in Syria, it was just as obvious as it could be.
The war party in America is the Israel lobby, right?
It is all Zionists led by the Lakutenics and the neo-conservatives.
But on the so-called liberal side, too, people like Jamie Rubin, who had worked for Bill Clinton, wrote a giant thing.
First, it was a secret memo that he wrote to Hillary Clinton, and they later published it as an essay in Foreign Policy Magazine.
You can pull it up right now if you want.
Jamie Rubin, I'm pretty sure it's 2011.
If it's 12, I'm sorry, but I'm pretty sure it's 11 in Foreign Policy Magazine.
And I don't know, type in Syria, Assad, and Israel.
the reason we have to do this is for Israel, the real reason to intervene in Syria.
There was a funny anecdote about this one too, Lex, because I just happened to be screwing
around on Twitter that morning that Assange published the State Department cables.
Maybe it was that morning or soon after that.
And I'm virtually certain it was David Rothkopp, who was then the editor of foreign policy.
And I can't remember who else.
one of his right-hand men at foreign policy.com,
the journal of, uh, well, it's a journal,
the foreign policy journal.
I forgot if there's a specific think tank behind them.
Anyway.
And they freaked out and they attacked Julian Assange.
And they said, aha, we caught WikiLeaks posting a fake document.
Because this is not a State Department document.
This is an article that we ran at Foreign Policy.
And you, you obviously copied and pasted it.
are running it at WikiLeaks. And not only that, but you've changed it. And then Assange says,
no, you cooks. This is a memo that somebody wrote to Hillary Clinton. And apparently it was
Jamie Rubin who wrote it. And then he submitted the same essay to you to run it foreign policy.
That's what happened. And the article is about, Madam Secretary, we got to support bin Ladenite
head shopper's suicide bombers in the greatest act of treason that you could possibly imagine because Israel
matters more than the United States of America and the 3,000 killed on September 11th. That's
why I'm paraphrasing roughly. The real reason to intervene in Syria, cutting Iran's link to the
Mediterranean, is a strategic price worth the risk. And why? Because Israel's foreign policy interests,
not those of the United States of America. Now, what's the true history of that war? They called it
an uprising. They called it a revolution. We're skipping Libya here, but they supported the
bin Ladenites in Libya. Then this was Hillary Clinton's bank shot.
to take the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group and Ansar al-Sharia, the same guys that did the Benghazi attack of September 11, 2012, and send them on to Syria for the next jihad.
Now, in Libya, Gaddafi wasn't a Shiite, and this wasn't about that, although the Israelis did hate him and want him gone.
But in Syria, it was all about this redirection policy and continuing the redirection policy of trying to weaken Assad as essentially a consolation prize after America screwed up so bad by putting the Shiites in power in Baghdad.
And so this is why we have to do this. And there was a whole chorus around that time. And if you remember the first major fake seren attack of August 2013 in Guta, which the war party tried to claim that Assad did it in order to launch a war there. And they were trying to get us to do it. At that time, you know, first of all, Barack Obama is the commander in chief at this point. It's not the same as George W. Bush. And, you know,
escalating the Afghan war that was already going on and we have to win it and that's the consensus or
whatever, that's kind of one thing. But Obama wants to start a new war in Syria now, the American
right said, I don't think so. And in fact, on this point, all hail Stephen Bannon because it was
Bannon and Breitbart that led the campaign that said, at that time, Breitbart was an incredible,
like, much more important, I think, than it probably is now. But whatever, I don't, I don't know how
to measure that, but at that time they were extremely influential. And they led the charge. We do
not want to fight this war. And you might remember this, Lex. You had army soldiers and Marines and
Navy sailors would be holding up pieces of paper in still shots and in short video clips that said,
I didn't join the Marines to fight a civil war for al-Qaeda in Syria. Remember that? And those were going
viral. It was a bunch of them. What was this 13? This is August of 13. And at this
point, Barack Obama reaches out to APEC in the Israel lobby and asks them to please do everything
you can to push this. Now, I have to say, I don't know what was going on there, but I actually
thought that he was being kind of sarcastic there. So at that point, there was nobody pushing for
war with Syria except the Israel lobby. And Obama seemed to be saying, hey, guys, if you want this,
you need to really stick your neck out for it. But the thing is, they stuck their neck out.
It's almost like a member in that Will Ferrell movie where he goes to college and he's running naked down the street and he thinks everybody's behind him, but he's just wasted.
Old school.
Yeah.
Yeah. It's like that.
They're like, come on, everybody, we're going to Syria, running drunk down the street.
And then they look, and nobody else is coming with him.
It's just the Israel lobby.
It's just as plain as day.
Whose interest is this in?
Nobody else cares.
Nobody else wants to do this.
Nobody else believes the lies that, oh, the day that the chemical weapons inspectors arrived.
Assad, gassed a bunch of people, huh?
Give me a break.
This whole thing is so stupid.
And then, so they couldn't do it.
The Israel lobby basically failed.
And then, importantly, this is the one good thing I'll ever say in my life about James Clapper.
And by the way, this was a secret.
They didn't tell us this.
We only found this out later from Jeffrey Goldberg in the Atlantic,
Commissar Goldberg, the former prison guard and ruthless abuser of Palestinian captives.
he wrote in the Atlantic
that James Clapper told Barack Obama
it's not a slam dunk
that Bashar al-Assad was behind the gas attack
and Dempsey who was then the chairman
Admiral, is it General or Admiral?
General Dempsey, who was then the chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also gave a public statement
who said, I don't know why we have to do this right now.
And so at that point, his own staff was telling him, Mr. President,
like, hey, if anybody asks me, I'm going to tell
them that I told you that I can't even prove that this is true.
Yeah, James Clapper was the Director of National Intelligence, DNI from August 2010 to 2017,
acting as a principal intelligence advisor to President Barack Obama and overseeing all U.S.
intelligence agencies.
He also is the guy who planned Operation Storm, where they cleansed the Krogyna and
Eastern Slavonia in 1995 of Croatian Serbs.
He's also the guy who lied that Saddam Hussein had weapon.
of mass destruction, he could prove it from the satellite pictures. He's also the guy that lied
that Vladimir Putin helped Saddam Hussein move those chemical weapons to Syria is why we can't find
them. He's also the guy that lied that the NSA is not all up in your phone, seizing all of your
data, which is what motivated the hero Edward Snowden to leak and tell the truth. And he's also the guy
that lied that Donald Trump was a blackmailed suborn agent of Vladimir Putin, who helped.
to usurp Hillary Clinton's rightful throne in a coup d'etan take over this country.
And, of course, he's a paid analyst at CNN.
And if Donald Trump doesn't give him life in prison, I'm going to really regret it a lot.
He deserves to suffer horribly.
But you did say a positive thing about it.
I did say a positive thing about him, which was he told Barack Obama, I'm not going to vouch for this chemical weapons lie here, buddy.
No slam dunk.
And that was a reference to George Tenet telling George Bush, it's a slam dunk, sir.
And you know what else want to know what's funny about that?
is that George Tenet said, oh, that's not fair. They're throwing me under the bus.
I didn't say that Iraq's possession of chemical weapons was a slam dunk.
What I said was, you can convince the American people with this story.
That's the slam dunk.
In other words, I wasn't lying.
I was saying, Mr. President, you'll be able to get away with this lie.
That's George Tenet's defense of that statement.
Anyway, so Clapper was saying, well, this ain't a slam dunk.
I won't stand by it.
By the way, as long as we're talking about Jeffrey Goldberg in the Atlantic, it may be the same article.
If you type in James Clapper and slam dunk in Syria there, let me see if I got this right.
The Obama Doctrine, that's the article, okay?
Not a slam dunk.
Okay, I'm glad we clarify this.
It's a different article.
The article is called, as president, I do.
don't bluff. It's another interview of Obama by Jeffrey Goldberg. And in this article is where
Jeffrey Goldberg, well, I'll tell you what. No, no, no, get the, this is just the political. Do the
Atlantic, yeah. Obama to Iran and Israel, as president of the United States, I don't bluff by
Jeffrey Goldberg March 2nd, 2012. Okay, just so people understand. The headline there is he is
telling Jeffrey Goldberg to please tell the Israelis that they can trust me, that you trust me,
that I promise that I really, really, really, really, really mean it, that if the Ayatollah breaks
out for a nuclear bomb, I will go to war. I will not let him get one. Jeffrey, please tell them,
I'm not lying about this. Okay, that's where that comes from. That's what he's doing there.
But now, will they show you the whole thing or your paywalled here? Maybe if you put it in
Archive.is. Can you copy and paste that and put it in Archive.com. Oh, you've got to just sign in.
So now, see if you can control F for classified or clearance. Can we talk about Syria as a strategic issue?
Talk about it as a humanitarian issue as well, but it would seem to me that one way to weaken
and further isolate Iran is to remove or help remove Iran's only Arab ally. Obama, absolutely.
okay this is why we want to weaken Syria is a easier way to weaken Iran and as they continue to talk
about here he's saying that we are intervening there and this is a way to weaken Iran in this way
and then Goldberg says is there anything you could do to move it faster and Obama on a less
funny version of the joke about I could tell you but I'd have to kill you he says well nothing
that I can tell you because your classified clearance isn't good enough. In other words,
and check my date on this again. Was it 12 or 11? I forget. No, no, this would have been 12.
This is 12. Yeah, March 12. Um, and so he's saying it's already on, Jeffrey. We're doing it,
buddy. What's he doing? He's working with Britain and France, Turkey, Israel, Saudi, and Qatar to back
Osama bin Laden's suicide bomber brigades. In fact, worse. Aboum,
Saab al-Zarkawi's suicide bomber brigades.
Remember, we talked about how the local Iraqi Sunnis had turned on al-Qaeda.
It wasn't America and the Shiites that defeated al-Qaeda in Iraq.
It was the local Iraqi Sunnis that did so, and they're the ones even who turned in
Zarkawi to the Americans to kill.
I know the interrogator.
I interviewed the interrogator who, without torture, but by being a nice guy, got the information.
Tell us where Zarqawi is.
We'll get him, and the guy told him, and they got him.
This is in the summer of 2006. They killed him. And at that time, al-Qaeda in Iraq then renamed itself
the Islamic State of Iraq. And we all got a good chuckle out of it because you guys don't control
a single county anywhere in Iraq. There is no state. But at the same time, we said,
aha, though, look at what they're talking about. Bin Laden's policy always was. Just keep fighting.
There's no point in creating a caliphate as long as the American Empire is here to erase it again.
So we fight the far enemy, we fight a long-term strategy to bog the empire down, bleed him to bankruptcy, force them all the way out.
Only then can we have our perfect Islamic state we want to create.
Zarqawi says, no, I want that now.
This is his doctrine.
And they called their group, Islamic State of Iraq, just about, I forget it was just before he died.
I believe it was just after he died.
They started calling themselves that.
But very clearly, you know, betraying their intentions.
if they were to have the ability to take over anything, that's their goal.
And they have that level of ambition.
Now, it's very important to note that in Iraq War II,
when I say America bought that war as a civil war for the Shiite side against the Sunnis,
they didn't want the whole country.
They only wanted Shiasan.
They only wanted the land basically from Baghdad over to Iran and down to Kuwait,
down to Najaf, right, down to the Saudi border.
border. They didn't so much worry about the Sunni Iraqis of Fallujah and Tikrit and Mosul.
Let them burn in the sun, man. Screw them. Oh, I should have said. This was a big part of why the
Sunnis fought so hard in the first place. It was because, remember, they're losing control of the
national government. Well, all the oil is down in the south near Basra, and it's up in the north
near Kirkuk, where it's going to be controlled either by the Shiites or by the Kurds, now by the
Shiites. And so what does that mean for the Sunnis? They have some oil, but it's virtually all
undeveloped oil and much less of it in the predominantly Sunni areas of the country. So when they
lose control of the national government, they lose control over all the spoils, right? And so they get
nothing. And so the Shiites idea is, by the Shiites, I mean the Supreme Islamic Council of
Abdulaziz al-Hakim, the Dao Party of Nurya al-Maliki, and their murderous forces. Their idea
They're just as chauvinistic as the bin Ladenites.
Screw you guys, man.
You can just burn in the sun.
We'll do nothing for you.
We got nothing for you.
But what do that mean in practice?
And again, the heroic Patrick Coburn.
It meant that all Western Iraq was wide open.
No man's land.
No consolidated political authority anywhere.
Ongoing low-level Sunni insurgency led by bin Ladenites.
Even when the Americans leave by the end of 2011,
they still leave a few CIA guys and drones there.
And as we joked on the show in real time, Lex,
me and Jason Ditts from anti-war.com would joke
that we're still doing drone strikes in Iraq after the withdrawal,
but we still got spies there and we're still doing drone strikes.
Why?
Not that we're killing the Bin Ladenites.
We're aiming at their heels because we're trying to chase them west into Syria
where they're heroes.
In Syria, they're the moderate rebels.
In Syria, they're just trying to fight for freedom
against the forces of evil botus tyranny.
These are Bin Laden's guys.
These are Zarqawi's guys.
It's Bin Laden's agent in, his main agent in Iraq was a guy named Abu Mohammed al-Jolani.
And then later, you know, his boss was this guy, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who was apparently the second leader after Zarqawi.
Some say that the first leader after Zarqawi was actually made up, that there was no leader and they just sort of put this persona out there.
Well, Abu Bakr, all Baghdadi sure existed.
These guys had all been locked up in Kambuqa together and had, you know, kind of reorganized al-Qaeda in Iraq.
And when America left, they sprung them all loose.
They're ready to go.
So Baghdadi tells Jolani, go to Syria.
Jalani, you know as Al-Shara, the self-appointed president of Syria right now.
That's Abu Mohammed al-Jalani.
Let's he join the jihad because he was inspired by September 11th.
He told Frontline.
that you damn right, he fought and killed Americans in Mosul and Ramadi in Iraq War II.
Then he went to Syria to help lead the so-called uprising, revolution, civil war?
In Syria, no.
Again, we have from 2011 that Prince Bandar bin Sultan was emptying Saudi jails
and sending all the jihadists off to Syria to fight.
And they were on the record.
I have the quotes where they say,
It's, is it Bandar?
Bandar says, we're sick and tired of the Shiites,
and they're going to find out whatever,
I forgot the exact, it's in there.
And then the other quote was from a guy named Prince Turkey who said,
Dash, that is ISIS, that is al-Qaeda in Iraq.
Dash is our answer to your support for the Dawah.
Get it?
Why does Saudi Arabia in conspiracy with Barack Obama and Benjamin Netanyahu,
Reciberdogan, and all these guys?
Why are they backing the bin Ladenites in Syria?
Because we put the Dawa Party in power in Baghdad.
This is their answer to that.
So this is, again, the redirection.
We empowered the Shiites so much now we got to move to limit them again,
mostly because that's what our allies want so badly.
especially the Israelis and the Saudis.
And so from 2011, we knew this is not a revolution.
This is not an uprising.
I don't care if there's footage of protesters on TV
or even if Bashar al-Assad's forces are shooting them, which they were.
I would note, although it's proven by Sharmine Al-Narwani
and the great journalist William Van Wagon
and whose book on Syria I'm going to publish any day now
at the Libertarian Institute,
who's written these massive long-form studies
on the origins of the Syria War
for the Libertarian Institute
and shows how, yes, you would have peaceful protests
but then the bin Ladenites would be there
and would snite cops.
Of course, for the direct purpose of provoking a reaction.
It's exactly how they started the Kosovo War.
They'd assassinate police officers,
forcing the military to intervene
to radicalize and increase the whole situation.
It was the same thing.
that they were doing there is how they got the whole thing started. And again, it's literally
al-Qaeda in Iraq, thus taking the lead at that time. Now, remember hours ago when we talked about
truth, falsity, and our position? Well, our position was, we're supporting moderate rebels. We're not
supporting bin Ladenites. And in fact, the bin Ladenites, if they're not backed by Assad just to make
the protesters look bad, then at least they're only benefiting because we just won't give enough
support to the moderates. That was our position, but that was not true. From the very beginning,
it was clear. These guys are lunatics, man. There was a boy in 2000, early 13. A boy had a fruit
stand. And one of the bin Ladenites, or just some guy, said, hey, give me a discount.
on this orange. And the kid said, 13-year-old boy, I believe. He said, I'm sorry, I can't give discounts.
I wouldn't even give a discount to Muhammad himself. And bin Ladenite standing within earshot.
What did you just say? Boom, and shot the 13-year-old boy right in the face to death.
That's one of the moderate rebels. That's the moderate rebels. And what were the moderate rebels
the ones who were
quote unquote moderate, the free Syrian army,
the guys with shorter beards
who would come and talk to the Americans
who, they're famous pictures of them
in tents that say USAID
on them. And their job was just
receiving the money and the guns
and delivering to the bin Ladenites.
Just like with the war in Afghanistan
in the 80s or something.
You know, Bandark
and empties jails and whatever, but for the most
part, like these guys are volunteers.
There's not an organized state,
army on the ground that's like conscripted them and controls them to that degree. So who's out
there fighting? The guys who are fighting are the ones who don't mind dying. The ones who are
absolutely the most committed to this revolution. And we know who they are. There are bin Laden
and Zawahari and Zarkawi's guys. Al-Qaeda in Iraq, in Syria, going at that time by the
name Jabhat al-Nusra, which I'm told roughly translates from Association of a
assistance or helpers. And then they're al-Qaeda in Iraq, in Syria. The same guys that were the
vanguard of the Sunni insurgency in Iraq War II are now the vanguard of the Sunni insurgency in
Syria. And while there's just one line on a map between them, we're still on the side of the Shiites in
Iraq, but we're on the side of the Sunnis in Syria. Now, this goes on for two years, and you have
bin Ladenites from all over the place, including Chechens and Chinese Uyghurs and people from all
over everywhere coming to join the jihad just like in iraq war two egyptians and libyans and whoever come to join
the thing and by um the late spring early summer of 2013 you now have a split between baghdaddy who's now
also come to syria sorry from your point of view this way into syria and now baghadi and jalani
the leaders of al-Qaeda in Iraq and Syria split and it's a fight over control and over
really over oil wealth and who controls the their gangster spoils or a bunch of terrorists but also
over doctrine too Baghdaddy is more like a Zarqawiite and Baghdaddy is saying I want my caliphate
now against the advice of Iman al-Zawahari who is now the surviving leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq
after bin Laden was killed in May of 2011.
So Wahari is the one who said,
no, we should fight the far enemy.
Don't create a state now
because he won't be able to hold on to it.
Just keep fighting.
And he sent an emissary
who had been an original veteran
of the Afghan war named Alsuri
to come and negotiate between Baghdadi
and Jolani.
Baghdadi killed the guy
and declared a state in eastern Syria.
Now, at this time,
Assad,
has to pull his forces back from the east and consolidate all the population centers other
than raka all the other big population centers are in the west of the country hamahams alepo
and damascus when he has to try to protect these areas and so he ends up being forced to leave
eastern syria basically wide open so by june of 2013 bagdadi splits from jolani and creates
ISIS, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or the Iraq and the Levant, or, you know, whatever they called it. In Arabic, the acronym is pronounced dash, D-A-E-S-H, E-S-H. And so when we say ISIS, ISIL, the Islamic State, the Caliphate, or Dash, that's all the same thing. That's al-Qaeda in Iraq, went to Syria, consolidated Eastern Syria. Now, that's
in June of 13.
Six months later,
they hoist the black flag
over Fallujah.
And at anti-war.com,
we're freaking out. And I've been saying
on my show this whole time,
Western Iraq is wide open.
Patrick Coburn says Western
Iraq is wide open.
Red alert, man.
This is a problem here. We're back in these guys.
There's nobody seems to think about the next stage of this conflict.
I remember even Michael Schoyer said on my show,
I think the big problem right now is Boko Haram.
And I'm like, excuse me, we're backing the bin Laden night caliphate in eastern Syria
and Western Iraq is wide open for the taking.
And you can go back and check my archives from especially the first half of 2014 where I'm interviewing
even the despicable Jonathan Landay and all kinds of anyone that I know who knows anything
about the bin Laden nights.
I'm interviewing them mostly so I can browbeat them and tell them.
eye on the ball, everybody. This is what matters, right? This is the most important crisis that could possibly be going on. And we know now that Mike Flynn was the head of the DIA at the time. And he, we know from Seymour Hearst, there's an article called Military to Military in the London Review of Books about how Mike Flynn was heroically insubordinate and was giving secret intelligence to the Germans to give to Assad to use to kill the bin Ladenites, to kill the CIA's terrorists on the ground there.
And that's what got him fired from the DIA.
And now, Mike Flynn is a Iran hawk.
He hates the Ayatollah and the Shiites.
And that whole thing is an absolutely pro-Israel Zionist guy 100%.
But his point of view was, well, let's just bomb Tehran.
Just because I hate the Shiites doesn't mean I want to back Osama bin Laden's suicide bomber head shopper brigades against their friend in Syria.
What the hell is this?
It's crazy.
Same thing for Tulsi Gabbard, by the way.
The most controversial thing about this woman, supposedly, her entire career somehow,
she was a toady of Assad is what Bari Weiss told Joe Rogan.
And he asked her, what's a toady?
And she said, I don't know.
And he said, how do you spell it?
And she said, with a why, and had no idea even to spell the word that she was trying to smear
Tulsi Gabbard as some kind of agent of Bashar al-Assad.
Tulsi Gabbard, who at that time was a major, later promoted to captain in the
Army National Guard, who I believe only left the National Guard to become Director of National
Intelligence. This American military officer, right? Oh, yeah, I'm so sure she's such a traitor to
this country. Give me a break. They keep promoting her. She may even still be in the National Guard.
I'm not sure how that works when you're the DNI. But anyway, Tulsi Gabbard never said that
Bashar Assad is a good man. She never said he's a hero. She never said America should a lie with him.
she never said anything like that what she said was Assad is less worse than his enemies
America is backing al-Qaeda now if you know anything about Tulsi Gabbard she has never been
is not and has never been against the war on terrorism in fact when she was running for president
she put out statements defining al-Qaeda so broadly she said hundreds of groups are linked to
Al-Qaeda in the world and that she's willing to fight them. Okay? She is a over-the-line to
unreason hawk on killing bin Ladenites. Okay. But she, and by the way, why, Lex? Because she
fought in Iraq War II, not fought, but she was in Iraq War II in a medical unit at Balad Air Base
north of Baghdad for like a year. And I've never heard her talk about this part of it, but it is clear.
there's no question it's impossible otherwise she saw our guys screaming and dying in front of her
right over and over and over again okay so that's why she has that gray streak in her hair like nancy
from nightmare on elm street is because of that so now the democrats are saying forget what you
know about the shirts and skins lady we're on the skin side now we like al qaeda now now now
Lex, quite frankly, like every other idiot in Washington, D.C., apparently could not have told you the
difference. But Tulsi Gabbard could. Tulsi Gabbard knew who was who, and she knew that Assad's
enemies are al-Qaeda in Iraq in Syria, and you couldn't have tortured her into switching sides in that war,
right? It doesn't mean that she's soft on Iran, but it means that she wants bin Ladenites dead, dead, dead,
And she's supposed to be siding with them now.
And we're all supposed to be encouraging them to overthrow this secular dictator who is,
who protects and backs the Christians, the Shiites, the Druze.
And even, and somebody argued with me the other day in a YouTube comment somewhere I saw about,
because I had said the majority of Sunnis backed him to.
I think that that's true.
And certainly it was true of the middle class in Aleppo.
And it was certainly the fact that the Syrian Arab army was always.
majority Sunni Arab serving that secular government. Just because they were Sunnis didn't mean that
they were bin Ladenites, these, you know, crazy tech theory, solofi, whatever ideology. And especially,
I call them bin Ladenites because it ain't just that they're solopies, because there are
innumerable, I don't know, hundreds of thousands or millions even of solopies and Wahhabis in this
world who are quietists. They don't have politics. Their politics are, your king is your king,
because God made it that way. You're not questioning that, are you?
didn't think so. We used to have that tradition in the West, the divine right of kings and that kind of
thing. If you're a good Muslim to a great many Muslim people, never mind their leadership, but I mean
people out in the world. And it depends on the sect and the region and everything. But the super
majority of them, quite apparently, are quietists. Their job is not to question the civil authority.
Their job is to do what civil authority says. That's why they're the civil authority. That's how most
people feel about their governments anyway, right? For what's the bin Laden's problem was he was
political and he had these political goals for this earthly realm where we exist today. And so he really
was Loretta Napoleon, the great Italian journalist, compared him very much to like a Leninist,
where he's trying to overthrow this world and have things the way that he wants it to be
in a way that even, again, radical and fundamentalist Muslims usually don't believe in. And usually,
in fact, the studies have shown it's amateurs who are actually kind of new at Islam and don't
know that much about it, who tend to be the more fanatical and the more violent, whereas people
who actually know more about it will say, actually, as Muhammad says, you better not do that,
and that kind of thing, right? And I cite all the studies in fools there, and I have the footnotes in
Bulls Aaron showing that directly and including some of the 9-11 hijackers, including the bulk of
the fighters for the Islamic State Caliphate. They're just regular Iraqis who were conscripted
in things fighting for ISIS, but that didn't make them even necessarily that political, much
less motivated by simply theology to behave in these ways. You know what I mean? Sure.
If just briefly, because you brought Tulsi up, why do you think I had a chance to have
multiple conversation with her, why do you think she was smeared so much on this topic and other
topics? Why does she piss off? The first thing was this. She absolutely just knew better and was
immovable like Stonewall Jackson on this issue. You're not going to be able to convince her
these are moderate rebels. Those lies don't work here. So now that put her severely on the outside
of the consensus. And with authority, she actually knew what she was talking about. That was
her problem and that was their problem with her they couldn't fix that and then of course she even though
they loved her oh man they groomed her people forget when she first came in she's pretty she's intelligent
she's in the military she fought in iraq or you know is a quote unquote combat vet because even though
she wasn't pulling triggers there she was shelled while at camp belad so she's earned her stripes as an
official combat veteran in that sense and she's a woman and she's a democrat and
This is everything that they wanted.
But then she endorsed Bernie Sanders.
And then they went for full jihad and never forgive her for that.
And so that was her.
Hillary Clinton went after her.
Is that what happened?
Yeah.
And Hillary Clinton tried to smear her with Russia Gate.
The pathetic diseased dying windbag, Robert Windram from NBC News attempted to smear her,
as well as he attempted to smear my colleague and editor and friend Hunter Durencis
as part of the Russia Gate hoax.
This is absolutely ludicrous reporting.
Have you ever heard of anything that Robert Windram ever reported in your life?
Can you think of anything where you go, oh, Robert Windrum, he's the guy that did this.
No, he will only be known when he dies, which will be soon, as a disgrace to humanity and to his profession for his disgusting and despicable lies against Tulsi Gabbard, against Jill Stein, and against Hunter Durences.
May he burn in hell.
So anyway, and his entire NBC news organization too, and that's why they hated her because she told the truth.
Yeah, it's sad. It's sad that people like that, like we spoke about this with Ron Paul. This is different, obviously, different humans, different walks of life and so on. But there's like, there's certain people that just have this authenticity. And agree with them or disagree. It's like, this is like a strong, this is a really interesting person. And actually for a long time, Bernie Sanders was that also. And it's like, and there's something about the system that wants to destroy those kinds of folks, or at least suffocate the authenticity in that person. And to make them conform.
I wouldn't give him as much credit as the two of them, but Ron is in a class by himself, of course.
I guess you could say that they're comparable, because I disagree with her and pretty severely
enough on enough things that.
But on the other hand, I think Bernie Sanders is sometimes disingenuous in a way that I don't
find her to be without getting too far into that.
But anyway, you're right, though, that, you know, you can see the people who are outside the
norm, usually are treated as the outcasts up there, if they're anywhere near the halls of power
up there. They're the ones usually who are telling the truth about things and are getting things
right. Okay, so now let's fast forward now. So, as I said, in January of 14, they hoist the black
flag over Fallujah. And we at anti-war.com, et cetera, are freaking out over this. Oh, and I
was going to say about Mike Flynn. Mike Flynn was the head of the DIA that put out a report,
a secret report that's now published Judicial Watch got it, and the great Brad Hoff wrote about
it at his great blog, Levant Report. People can find it. And what happened was the DIA put out
a report saying, our allies are backing bin Ladenite terrorists in Syria. Their goal is to create
a solifist principality in eastern Syria. And there's a real danger that this could blow
back into Western Iraq. And al-Qaeda in Iraq could return to their old haunts in Mosul and Ramadi.
he warned that in the summer of 2012
okay then they
just short of a year later they consolidate a state
in eastern Syria just as he said just as I said
again you can check the records all my all 6,100
and something of my interviews are at scottorton.org
if anyone ever wants to see whether I was good on this
back when I claimed I was
and then
Obama was asked
Mr. President, what about the black flag being hoisted over Fallujah?
And Obama, this is Vanity Fair magazine.
And he tells him, listen, just because the junior varsity puts on a Kobe Bryant jersey doesn't make him the Lakers.
Right?
So, this idiot, I'm sorry, excuse me for a moment, but don't you like to somehow take the slightest comfort in the fact that, like, at least Barack Obama can read?
At least he's like the slightest bit maybe interested in what he's doing compared to W. Bush or Trump, who are clearly just winging it. And W. Bush just, oh, forget it. Bill Clinton, of course, they would say he would know more about any subject than his briefers. And they better be on topic because he read six books about it. And he's a horrible child killer. But that's still true about him, that he's a brilliant guy or at least a brilliant consumer of data in trying to form his policies. He wanted to be in charge and know as much as he could.
But how could Barack Obama, Lex, not know who al-Qaeda in Iraq is?
How could he think that ISIS is the junior varsity?
These guys are the vanguard of the Sunni insurgency that killed 4,000 out of the 4,500 of our guys that died in Iraq War II.
These are the Zarqawiites.
They're worse than bin Laden.
They are...
Patrick Coburn said,
they're the Islamist Kamir Rouge, right, like Pol Pot and the communists, the most insane lunatics to
ever be armed with weapons before, right? Nutcases, berserkers. This is the junior varsity,
the suicide bomber brigade, the most dangerous one that's ever been created in history.
And six months later, they rolled right into Mosul. And this is the picture you still have in
your head of that long train of Toyota Helix pickup trucks rolling into Mosul with their
headlights on and all the jihadis in the back of the trucks with their rifles. And just as Patrick
Coburn and I had predicted the Shiite Iraqi army that had hardly any interest whatsoever in ruling
Mosul or Tecrete or Fallujah turned tail and ran. And the Islamic State Caliphate then conquered
all of Western Iraq. From 2014, they took Mosul to Crete. It took them a little while, but they took Ramadi in 15. They took Fallujah right away. And they created an area of landmass the size of Great Britain with a standing army of its highest, about 250 to 300,000 men if you take, if you look at their troop strength in various places during that time. And then what did Obama do? This is in, oh man, you know what? We should watch this clip, dude.
Let's pipe this in here.
Speaking of Jonah Goldberg, type in Orin, O-R-E-N, O-R-N, Sunnis.
And it's going to come right up as your first YouTube link.
It's going to automatically launch right there.
There it is, right there.
Sunnis versus Shiites in the lesser of two evils.
And I actually met the guy who asked the question here, came up to me at a thing and said,
hey, I'm the guy that asked the question at that thing.
So kudos to you, buddy.
Thank you.
Lex Friedman, let's watch this clip and trip out.
It doesn't stay in there for another couple more weeks.
What do you think your country is doing in order to protect your interests?
Pause one sec.
Did I mention now?
This is in the middle of June 2014.
Okay?
They sacked Mosul and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi got up there at the Mosul Grand Mosque,
like a cross between Benito Mussolini and Osama bin Laden,
and declared himself the divinely appointed Caliph-Eyazadegh,
Abraham, ruler of the Islamic State Caliphate.
This is two weeks later.
Okay, hit the button.
How are you working in align with other partners?
All right, keep in mind, I don't speak for the government anymore.
It's speaking for me.
Not true.
Wait, pause it again.
He gave an interview to the Jerusalem Post where he said these exact same things
while he was still Netanyahu's ambassador to the United States.
And this is treason.
This man was born in the United States of America.
Okay, go ahead.
And what I'm going to say is harsh.
Perhaps a little 18.
but if we have to choose the lesser of evils here the lesser evil is the sunnis over the
shit for the reason i'm not speaking for me okay it's a lesser evil it's an evil believe it's
terribly again they've just taken out seven to nine hundred former iraqi soldiers and shot them in
the field but who are they who are they fighting against the fighting against the proxy with
iran that's complicit in the murder of 160,000 people in syrian you just you know do the math
And again, one side is armed with suicide bombers and rockets, the other side has access to military nuclear capabilities.
So from Israel's perspective, you know, if someone's got to, if there's got to be an evil that's going to prevail, you know, let the city evil prevail.
And I, again, I'm speaking entirely for myself.
No, he just said from Israel's perspective, from the Netanyahu regime's perspective is exactly what he meant.
And it's fine because we have plenty of Mossad and military officers echoing those exact same.
same statements. Even Thomas L. Friedman says we shouldn't defeat the Islamic State yet. They're
taxing the Shiites. Okay. There's no question of what he meant there. And by the way, is he talking
about the mythical moderates, the Free Syrian Army? No, he's not. How do we know that? Because he did just
say Sunnis. But he also said, we just saw them take 1700 Iraqi, he says, soldiers, but it was
Air Force cadets at Camp Speicher and massacred them in the field.
Iraqi Shi'is, that was ISIS that did that, just a week ago when he's saying this.
He's not talking about the mythical moderates.
He's saying the Sunni evil, let the Sunni evil prevail.
He's talking about Baghdaddy's bin Ladenite caliphate.
Because, and what are his two excuses, that Assad is responsible for every single death in the war
when all he's doing is defending his state from foreign invasion by foreign backed,
superpower backed, bin Ladenite suicide bomber.
He just said, suicide.
bomber mercenaries, right? But no, Assad's responsible for every single one of the deaths. And then
he lies again outright and says, and Iran has military nuclear technology, implying that somehow
the Ayatollah has a bomb and he's going to give one to Assad or to Hezbollah. And so that's why
we need to back al-Qaeda in Syria, both of which are, of course, complete and total hoaxes. And again,
he admitted in the middle of that, after lying and saying he's,
only speaking for himself, he accidentally said from Israel's perspective. He also said the same thing
again, in an interview with the Jerusalem Post, either right before he left or right after he left,
being the ambassador, said the exact same thing. And he's clearly reflecting Benjamin Netanyahu's
view here. There's no question about that. And I have in enough already, I have an entire section
called Israel's role that showed how they were giving direct aid and comfort to the bin Ladenites
by way of the Golan Heights.
And there was even at one point, quite famously,
there was an attack by local Druze
on the Golan Heights,
kidnapped prisoners of the Israelis, basically,
who attacked an Israeli ambulance
that was shipping bin Ladenites back to the front
because the bin Ladenites had been killing Syrian Druze,
their brethren.
And so they attacked this ambulance,
and it became kind of a controversy.
It also was a controversy.
controversy in ISIS, not even
Nusra, or Jashal Islam, or Aral al-Shahm, or one of these other groups,
but actually ISIS accidentally hit Israel with a rocket and immediately apologized.
Very sorry about that. We like you guys. No offense. Forget that.
You can read, let's look at this. As long as we're on this, I'm having so much fun.
Type in foreign affairs and accepting al-Qaeda.
There you go.
enemy of the United States enemy, and just in case you're confused, with a nice big picture
of Osama bin Laden and Iman al-Zawahiri on the top. And the article is about how we're
supposed to hate the Shiites more now, because that's what our allies want, regardless of who
killed all those Americans in New York City. They ran another one, type it in, the good and bad
of Arar al-Sham.
This is from Brookings, the good and bad of Sirius.
I'll show him.
Yep, it's by that traitor, Michael Duran, and Clint Watts.
Who's Clint Watts?
He's the guy, the former FBI agent who was behind Hamilton 68, that lied and said that you
and all your friends are all Russian bots and that you ought to be censored right off
at Twitter.
That's who Clint Watts is.
He's a damned liar.
And he later admitted to BuzzFeed, oh, I don't really know about that whole bot thing.
He was the guy who did.
it working for Bill Crystal. They created the alliance for securing democracy. And it was Clint Watts
who lied that whole. And there were hundreds and hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of stories
claiming that Russian bots were behind it every time anything good ever happened on Twitter during
that era. That's who Clint Watts is. And then they say, what's, did you click the thing? Pitch up just a
second. What's the byline here? The good and bad of Arar al-Sham? Oh, they deleted it. In the
foreign affairs version, the subhead is an al-Qaeda linked group.
worth defending.
Yeah, I mean, it also says the al-Qaeda of yesterday is gone, so it's changing the story.
They're good guys now, man.
They kill Shiites for us now.
Yeah.
They killed Serbs for us.
We really liked it when they were helping kick in Serb skulls.
Well, just to wrap that up, Obama launched a war.
He waited a couple of months to try to push out Maliki, and then he launched Iraq War III to destroy the caliphate again.
In this time, in this case, directly on the side of the side of the war.
the Iranians. You had Iranians on the ground,
Kud's force on the ground running
the Iraqi Shiite militias fighting
for Tikrit, liberating
to Kreet from the bin Ladenites with America
flying air cover for them. At this time,
John McCain complained,
we're flying as Iran's air force
in Iraq.
But we're flying as Iran's air force
against the bin Ladenite caliphate
that McCain had helped build up
to spite Iran for accepting
our Christmas gift of fighting Iraq War II
for them. So it was all
John McCain's fault when he complained that. And then there's a guy named Michael Horton, no relation to me,
but who is from the Jamestown Foundation and a terrorism expert, says, yeah, John McCain complains
that we're flying as Iran's Air Force in Iraq. Well, we're flying as al-Qaeda's Air Force in Yemen
because this was at the time that Obama switched sides in the Yemen War, where America was giving
intelligence to the Houthis, Wall Street Journal January 2015, 2015, and Al Monitor by Barbara Slavin from the
Atlantic Council, January 2015. America's passing intelligence, Lloyd Austin, Obama's, I mean,
pardon me, Biden's later Secretary of Defense was the head of Central Command. He's passing intelligence
to the Shiite Houthis to use to kill al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Our enemies, the ones who
tried to blow up the plane over Detroit on Christmas Day 2009 with the underpants bomb, the guys who
did the horrific attacks in Nice and in Paris, France, the Charlie Hebdo and the Eagles of Death
metal concert. They attacked a kosher grocery store in France and a Jewish museum in Brussels. This was the
first, I think, ISIS in Syria attack was at a Holocaust museum in Brussels. So that blowback was coming
all right away. But anyway, AQAP in Yemen, they were like real ass al-Qaeda guys and they were coming
for us. They weren't just like, oh, al-Shabaab in Syria, right? These guys were
real enemies. And Obama's willing to turn right around. And because the new deputy crown prince
of Saudi Arabia, Muhammad bin Salman, wanted a promotion. He was the defense minister. He's a brand new,
29 years old, defense minister and deputy crown prince. He wants to make a political move. So he
launches a war in Yemen against the new Houthi regime with Obama's support so that he can use that
as a power play inside the royal family. This is when he arrests the crown prince.
Muhammad bin Nayef and Talal and all of those Saudi billionaires that got marginalized and arrested in there,
all their property stolen at that time in a big move by MBS to make himself crown prince and de facto king,
which he is right now. And he did that in alliance with Mohammed bin Zayat from UAE.
And they convinced Obama to do it. And it was an absolutely genocidal war against the civilian population of Yemen that whole time.
I'd hate to leave that out. I guess we have to skip Somalia for, let me say about Somalia real quick.
that's the longest war in American history.
George W. Bush sent J. Sock there in December and CIA, in December of 01, and they never left.
We've been killing people in Somalia ever since then.
And the first thing that they did was they took the bad guy warlord from Black Hawk down in 93.
And they tried to put his son in power.
They built up his son.
You bring us the scalps of jihadis.
And get this, according to the CIA talking to the Washington.
and post, this is their version. There were three. Not 13, not 30, not 3,000, not 3,
nothing, three. Al-Qaeda members, suspects wanted for questioning by the FBI for their potential
involvement in the USS Coal attack and the Africa Embassy's attack. That was the excuse for this
intervention, the potential that there were three bin Ladenites in Somalia. So America started
backing the warlords against them. More people started and whoever their other enemies were,
right, whatever they want to do. The more that they fight, the more they keep coming back to the
CIA and saying, oh man, you wouldn't believe how many enemies there are out there. And they make matters
worse and worse. And this is at a time where people mock libertarians for noticing that without a
government, Somalia was thriving. They had come from communism. Then they had a civil war of 50 warlords
versus each other. But everyone was spent and nobody won. And, and,
And so they had essentially a stateless country, but it was more or less at peace.
And no one was powerful enough to gangsterize everybody else.
And so the ports at Kismayo and Mogadishu were open with no tariffs.
And they had massive trade.
And one of the best ways to measure economic growth at that time was in the expansion
of the cell phone industry, which was more extensive in Somalia at that time than any other
place in Eastern Africa.
And this was under de facto accidental libertarian.
capitalist anarchism, right, with no one in charge. And libertarians notice that. And to this day,
freaks and cooks and especially liberal Democrats like to say, oh, if you like freedom so much,
why don't you move to Somalia? Well, excuse me, but George W. Bush, you know, freedom himself has been
destroying Somalia with the power of the most powerful regime in the history of the solar system
this whole time since then. So only,
an American who knows nothing about America's responsibility for destroying that society
could possibly be ignorant and idiot enough to blame libertarianism and freedom and liberty
and capitalism and free trade among property owners for what ails Somalia? USA. The regime is what
ruins Somalia, our military, our CIA. And so by 2005, they formed their own little
pseudo-government in response to American intervention and aggression called the Islamic
Court's Union. W. Bush then hired the Ethiopians to invade to crush them. Their historical
Christian enemies against this Muslim society and hired Ethiopia to invade and they did complete
with mass rapes and torture and want and murder and just absolute war crimes. And that was what
led to the rise of al-Shabaab. Al-Shabaab means the youth, or I've been told, more accurately,
the boys. And under the Islamic Court's Union, it was a group of 13 different groupings that came
together. That's why it was a union. And, but who was in charge? The elders, the uncles,
the imams, the grandfathers, the old men of the village were the ones who were in charge of
dispute resolution going on, right? But now once George Bush had Ethiopia invade,
at Christmastime, 2006, well, guess who leads the insurgency?
The boys.
And that's why we've been fighting al-Shabaab in Somalia since 2006
because George W. Bush invented them
with his horrific, satanic, demonic, murderous war
that he waged there from 2001 through 2006.
Then, self-licking ice cream cone,
oh, look, we have a terrorist enemy, we have to fight.
In 2012, America kicked them out of Kismayo,
or the Kenyans did
with American support
kicked them out
of the port city of Kismaya
where they had
a black market
charcoal operation
going financing
their efforts
and when they did that
it was only then
that they turned to the Saudis
and accepted a sack of gold coins
to declare themselves al-Qaeda.
2012
11 years after
George Bush
came to Somalia
he succeeded
he and his successor
Obama succeeded in
turning them into bin Ladenites
only then
the Americans killed the worst leader of the bin Ladenite faction, a guy named Godain.
They killed him in 2012 or 13.
Oh, I should have mentioned that the guys they overthrew in Bush's last year in power,
Connoisse's last year in power, Connoisseur made a deal with them, that they can actually be
the government of Somalia after all.
Never mind our giant war against your Islamic courts union.
You can be the president, a guy named Sharif.
You can be the president after all, but it has to be in the form of our transitional federal
government that we've built for you.
So once those guys, their original enemies that they waged this whole war to thwart, once they went
ahead and accepted them and empowered them, Al-Shabaab said, you guys are traitors and sellouts and
kept fighting.
And by the way, Obama murdered men, women, and children with drones.
He had our nuclear submarines firing cruise missiles at that batched huts full of women and their
daughters, okay?
That's what Barack Obama did, made that thing nothing but worse and worse and worse the whole
time he was in there. When Donald Trump came in, this is according to James Mattis. He complained to
James Mattis, his secretary of defense, and said, I want out of Somalia. Why are we in Somalia? Where's
Somalia? What do I care about Somalia? Get me out of there. And Mattis said, two things.
One, we're trying to prevent a Times Square attack type attack. Well, the thing about that is,
The Times Square attack was committed by a Pakistani American named Faisal Shazad,
who was living the dream, man.
He had an advanced degree.
He had a nice house and a wife and a kid and a car and was doing fine.
And then he went home to Pakistan on vacation,
and he saw the results of one of Barack Obama's drone strikes that killed a family there.
And he volunteered to sign up for the Pakistani Taliban that had never done anything to us.
They had not targeted us at all.
There's the first time that they did.
They recruited him, taught him how to make a bomb, and then he went to Times Square and tried to kill a bunch of innocent people on, I think it was a Friday night or a Thursday night there.
And luckily, his bomb was just a dud and didn't kill people.
So James Mattis is causing Times Square attacks.
He's not preventing them.
And then secondly, again, this is Mattis told the post that he told Trump, you have no choice.
And that Trump said, okay.
And then not only that, because this was his post.
policy was. You know the myth that America only lost Vietnam because Lyndon Johnson tied one arm
behind the military's back and wouldn't let the generals do the job because he's pouring over
the maps all day and and a penny pinching and micromanaging the war effort? Well, that's been a big
myth. H.W. Bush said, I ain't doing that. General Schwarzkopf, you do what you got to do. I'm not,
right? Donald Trump said the same thing. Nobody's ever going to accuse me of micromanaging the military
and preventing them from accomplishing their goals. So to that end, from the moment he
took power in 17. He devolved decision-making authority as low down the chain of command as he
possibly could, cut out all of Obama's lawyers and whatever who were in the way and second-guessing.
And so he devolved command responsibility. Oh, and then he also changed the rules of engagement
to make, to recategorize these sort of pseudo-war zones like Somalia and Yemen into full-scale
active war zones where now the rules are less. And essentially, he told James Mattis, you do everything
that you can and want to do within the law. That's it. You go as far as you possibly can on everything.
He empowered the military. He empowered the military greatly, especially when it came to fighting bin Ladenites.
I don't ever want to hear somebody say that I didn't kill enough people in Somalia, and that's why it
didn't work. I told James Mattis, you do whatever you got to do in Somalia. If they couldn't make it
work. It still ain't my fault, right? That was the way that he played it. That was the way he did
the same thing in Afghanistan. He wanted out of Afghanistan from the moment he came in. Instead,
he escalated the war for four years while he was negotiating with the Taliban, killed another
extra couple of tens or hundreds of thousands of people even in a massive air in drone war,
especially in Nangahar and in Helmand for, you know, almost his entire four years in power during
that. Can we take that tangent and talk about his second term, how that chance?
And first, maybe a bathroom break.
Yeah, sure.
All right, we absolutely today must talk about Israel, Palestine, and the Iran War.
But before that, can we wrap up Somalia and Iraq War III?
Right.
So, yeah, we'll get those out of the way real quick.
Just to say about Somalia, it's been the status quo.
I have no new information for you other than it's been the sock puppet government
failing to quell the al-Shabaab-based insurgency this whole time.
Bush bomb them.
then Obama for eight each, then Trump for four, then Biden for four,
and now Trump in his second term now has vastly increased that strikes.
His counterterrorism guy is Sebastian Gorka, who's an idiot and a hawk,
and couldn't tell you the difference between this or that, but he knows he wants to kill them all.
And he's one of these, you know, Fox News, blow hard, no-nothing idiots that Trump has hired
and put in charge over there, and he's massively escalated the war against al-Shabaab,
But, of course, that means blasting men, women, and children to tiny pieces with high explosives and that kind of thing.
And in fact, at one point, Trump even sent regular troops there for training and then pull them back out again, I believe, in his first term.
But this is something that Dave DeCamp does a really good job of covering this every day at anti-war.com, the ongoing war.
It literally is America's longest war is against Somali since December 2001, without stopping.
him. And then on Iraq War III, again, Obama finally launched it after using the pressure
and the threat of ISIS to force Maliqi out temporarily. He's still not all the way gone. They replaced
him with a guy named Dalmadi, who was from the Supreme Islamic Council. So again, take your
pick, Dawa or Skiri. And then he launched the war in 2014. There's a brutal war. Special
Operations Forces on the ground, mostly guiding air power to targets.
They absolutely just decimated the cities that they liberated, including to Crete Mosul, Ramadi, Fallujah, especially Mosul, killed, you know, another many tens of thousands of people to destroy the caliphate that they had built.
And when I say Iraq War III, that includes Eastern Syria as well because they ended up going to Raqa, which was the capital.
We call it Eastern Syria.
It's really sort of north-central Syria, but it's relatively east, and where most of the rest of the
eastest empty desert out there.
Can you actually break down Iraq War I,
2, 3, 3.5? Exactly
where you're dealing in it.
So, Iraq War I is
Operation Yellow Ribbon,
Desert Storm, the first Gulf War,
1991, January
through February, 1991.
Iraq War I and a half
is from the end of that, all the way
through W. Bush. That's Bill Clinton
bombing them on average every other
day for eight years straight.
That's Iraq War one and a half.
Then W. Bush comes in and he and the neoconservatives lie us into Iraq War II.
And that's the war that we fought through 2008-11.
The worst of the fighting was over by the end of 08.
We'd won the war for our adversaries by then and then stayed and finally left by the end of 2011.
Then we're gone for about two years, although, as I said, CIA was still doing drone strikes there.
So we really hadn't stopped bomb in Iraq that whole whole.
time. And then they build up the caliphate and launch Iraq War III in August of 2014, which
ends at the end essentially of Trump's first year in power, 2017, maybe into the beginning of
2018, is when they wrap up Iraq War III. And now is what I would call Iraq War III, which is
America, again embedded with the Shiite army, hunting down and killing the last of the bin Laden
Sunni insurgency, which still pops its head up from time to time here and there.
But of course, it puts us our guys right in range of Shiite militias that operate sometimes
independently and sometimes under the control, although maybe deniable control, of Iran and
groups like Khatib al-Hzbollah, which is very closely linked to the Bada Brigade.
I say al, it's just Khadib Hezbollah.
But they're very similar to the Bada Brigade, essentially adjuncts of the official army, Shiite militias, they call them the PMUs, the popular mobilization units.
Once ISIS came to Western Iraq, the Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani called on all Shiites to rise up and defend, you know, the new Iraqi Shia stand from them and all that.
So that's where the PMUs, you know, really came into existence.
And then, of course, they have their own incentive structures going on and are probably pretty close and relative power to the official Iraqi army itself at this point and are very much under, I don't know, complete control, but are very close to the Iranian Quds Force Revolutionary Guard.
So I think you would say that Iraq War III and a half is what continues to this day.
The worry is that it'll turn into Iraq War IV and we're going to end up turning around again and fighting.
against the Shiites that we fought Iraq War II and three, four.
In connection to what's going on?
In alliance with Israel against Iran and their friends.
Right.
That's the danger.
That's what, if we get to Iraq War IV, it would be that.
We started talking about Iran, and then you went to Somalia
because we had to cover Somalia.
And then, I guess, because we were both just focusing a little bit exhausted,
forgot to talk about Iran.
So, Scott, one of the amazing things about you is that you said,
why don't we just continue today?
And you came back, let's do this.
Let's talk about the war in Iran.
Yeah.
What's the right way to punch it in?
We'll punch it in.
Yeah.
So here's the question that you asked me that I never answered, which was,
well, so what is with Israel's hyper focus on Iran then anyway,
like this obsession at this point?
So as we talked about, it's kind of a distraction for Rabin in the first place.
And then, you know, the Lakud took Rabin's same demonization of Iran, but without the compromise with the Palestinians part, right? And that was the Netanyahu doctrine. And I always thought, well, not always, but, you know, it was an issue that potentially it seemed to make more sense for Netanyahu to not really seek regime change in Iran, to hawk it up against them, you know, at all times, keep tensions high. But isn't Iran the basis of trying to rally all the Gulf?
States to come and be partners with Israel now, that like, come on, we have to have a united
front against the Persians, especially since Netanyahu's men in America convinced George
W. Bush to go to Baghdad and put Iran's best friends in power there. And in fact, we didn't
talk all about the mechanics of the thing, but we did talk a little bit about the Yemen War.
It was blowback from Obama's CIA anti-Alcada war that, through a few complicated steps, as I
outline in the book led to the rise of the Houthis coming and taking over the Houthi
group from the north of Yemen coming and taking over the capital city of Sana'a in 2015. As I said,
America was backing them for a little while against Al-Qaeda before Obama stabbed them in the
back and took Saudi and al-Qaeda's side against the Houthis. But this is another example of the
increase supposedly of Iranian power, although the Houthis are not nearly as close to Iran as,
say, for example, Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, who you could, I think, fairly characterize as Iran's
51st state, right? Where in the case of the Houthis in Yemen, that's pretty exaggerated most
at the time. And they were under total blockade. So all the propaganda about Iran shipping them all
these weapons was exaggerated. But anyway, so the Iranian Shiite crescent has been empowered by
American foreign policy. And by the way, until last December, we talked about the caliphate and the war
with Iran against the caliphate, right, Iraq War III, to destroy it again. But then in Syria,
That left Assad far more dependent on Iran than ever before and more dependent on Hezbollah than ever before.
So you could fairly characterize the dirty war of the Obama years in Syria as having fully backpired and not really accomplished anything.
That is up until last November, December, when al-Qaeda broke out of the Idlib province and sacked Damascus.
That was a major score for the Sunni side against the Shiites.
By the Sunni side, I mean America and Al-Qaeda in Israel and Turkey and Saudi.
friends, right? So, as I say, it made sense for Netanyahu to have an enemy in Iran to rally
the Sunni Arab states against. On the other hand, hey man, we're getting rid of the palat from the point
view of Lakut here. We're getting rid of the Palestinians at least of the Gaza Strip. West Bank is
next. We got Hezbollah completely crippled. Their charismatic leader Nasrallah dead. We got Assad
overthrown and replaced with friendly bin Ladenites in Syria.
Of course, the Shiyes still control Baghdad. There ain't no reverse in that. But Israel is essentially, you know, winning in many ways in the war over there, at least in the short term. And so just like I was saying about Netanyahu's speech before the UN, that this is the new Middle East. Basically, I won. The Netanyahu doctrine is we get everything we want and without compromising with the Palestinians. And then the last major enemy player on the board is Iran.
And apparently they thought, you know what?
Like having an incentive for these Sunni kings to be friends of ours is one thing.
But actually just going ahead and get rid of them and turning Iran into something like the chaos in Syria,
where there's no central state in Iran anymore at all.
And it's all just baluky jihadis blown up suicide bombs and, you know, Kurdish leftists and whatever going on, you know, tearing the country apart is, you know, like the Odad Dinan plan.
Which I guess I'll explain that.
There's a, it's really funny, man.
If you read this, it's, it's so ridiculous.
It's O-D-E-D-Y-N-O-N-O-N-O-D-E-N-O-D-N-N-N.
There you go, Yan-N plan.
So what it is,
The Yanon Plan is an article published in February 1988-2
in a Hebrew journal, Kivu Nym, entitled The Strategy for Israel in the 1980s.
This article was penned by Odid-Yanon.
reputedly a former advisor of Ariane Sharon, a former senior official with the Israeli foreign
ministry. So here's what the thing says. It says, oh no, the Soviet communists are sure to finish
conquering the entire world real soon. And poor little Israel will stand alone against the one
world communist state, which of course is exactly how it worked out, right? So the Soviets were
gone by the end of the decade. It didn't exist at all anymore. But that's like premise one.
The Soviets are going to conquer everything, and poor little Israel is going to be all alone.
So the only way we can secure our existence now will be to smash every Arab state into warring tribes,
where the worst armed enemy we have is a kook shaking a rifle over his head, right?
And warring tribes by religious and whatever ethnic sectarian divisions that they can help to engineer
to keep everybody else just completely divided and weak.
There's no point in being friends with anyone.
Let's just be way more powerful than everyone, because that's the darkness of the
world we face now, even though the premise is false, that, you know, still was the policy,
along the lines of the clean break, too, where it's a piece through overwhelming strength
rather than friendly and decent relations with the neighboring states. So anyway, like, what's going
on in Syria now? Is there even really any such thing as Syria now? The Turks have a big, you know,
chunk in the north. The Israelis are already taken a major chunk in the south, including Mount
Herman or Hernon. I always say it wrong, right outside of Damascus. And then you got bin Ladenites. Like,
what kind of real state can they make there? It's going to be, you know, just this guy,
Jolani has been to CIA finishing school, right? He clearly is like, or he's uncontrolled the Turks
to a degree and has stopped chopping off heads and doing suicide attacks and bad public relations
like that. But there's still a bunch of bin Ladenite coogs. And he's really that tame. His own men are
get rid of them soon enough anyway um so uh so you see like you know in in far eastern
northeastern Syria you have the Kurds under the protections sort of kind of of the Americans um but then so
are their enemies the turks uh and then you have you know the the um all the whites in the far west of
the country who've been you know masquer in the thousands and you have Christians who are at least
threatened that their civil status has changed under the new jihadi regime there's fighting
between the jihadis and the drus where people are being lined up and shot and all this so in other
words like there is no syria which is perfectly good with israel right that like if they could do the
same thing i guess jordan and egypt are tame enough but they if they could just wreck every state in the
region i think well that would be according to the oded yannan plan and i think that may have been their
plan for Iran. Now, Lex, they tweet out pictures, and I forget I'm sorry which official it was.
If it was the defense minister, I think it was the defense minister of Israel, tweet out a picture
of him with the son of the Shah Rezapalavi, or the grandson of the older Shah Rezapalavi,
senior there, as though like the plan was, we're going to parachute this guy in.
When we launched this war, it's going to be a regime-change war. And the Washington Post had a piece
It said the Israelis sent messages to all the leading generals and told them,
if you don't rise up and overthrow the Ayatollah right now, we're going to kill your families.
And then they are hitting all these regime targets, including police stations and all this kind of stuff,
command and control systems in the military, where the idea apparently was they hoped to get a regime change.
They hoped that it would be enough to weaken the government and that some force would come to power,
which shows that probably they're delusional and listening to Cooke's, you know, telling them,
that things like parachuting a monarch back into Persia could possibly work to be a full-scale regime
change. They knew, we know that they knew, of course, that they would need America to finish
the war against the nuclear program, which they actually didn't, but at least it would take America
to hit Natanz and Fordo, these deeply buried nuclear centrifuge facilities. So whether they really
hoped that they could get the United States to go all the way and follow through with a regime
change, hunt down and kill the Ayatollah. I mean, there was a new story that Donald Trump
told the Israelis, don't kill the Ayatollah. Like, we all know where he is, but don't do it.
They claimed that. I don't know that that's true, but that was one of the stories that they put
out anyway, was that America had made his explicit choice to preserve the regime.
Although, if you just kill the Ayatollah, that doesn't necessarily destroy the government,
right? Somebody killed our president. That doesn't mean the whole government falls, right? The Congress is
still going to convene and they're going to, whatever, have a new guy, whatever.
Well, didn't Trump explicitly post, don't kill the Ayatollah?
I think he said we know where he is.
Yeah, I think he threatened him,
but I think they also put out a story saying that he told the Israelis not to kill him.
But I think both things are right there.
So, but then the point being that to get a real regime change in Tehran means a real war in Iran.
And air dominance is one thing, but boots on the ground standing around in Tehran telling Mullahs that they cannot convene anymore or whatever is a whole different ballgame, right?
And it's a thing that for all the talk of war with Iran over all of these, you know, last two decades at least, nobody's talked about we're going to send in some kind of occupation force or do anything like that. But so that's always been a big part of the argument against the war is that you start the war. You don't really have a way to finish it, right? Because, in fact, as we've already seen, that contrary to Trump's claims, they did not completely obliterate their centrifuge capacity. Now, they seem to have inflicted some pretty heavy damage on Fordo and.
and or Natanz, although they're conflicting reports,
and some say that Natanz was less damaged than might have been,
they did destroy, importantly, the conversion facility at Isfahan.
And that's where you can take uranium metal after you refine the ore,
then you convert that to uranium hexafluoride gas.
That's what you spin in the centrifuge cascades.
Then you convert it back into metal.
So without that facility, you either have a bunch of gas
or you have a bunch of metal that you can't enrich to another state,
you know to a higher state so um or if you have a bunch of gas you can't convert it back into metal so
without that facility they have a setback but i don't think all their all their facilities are destroyed
and they've already announced that they're not and that they still reserve the right to enrich
uranium and that they're going to and that they're not even going to talk with us anymore until we
recognize their right to enrich uranium although they do and i'm not saying that this is true i don't know
that this is true but i'm saying it is true that they've said this that they are still bound by
the Ayatollahs Fatwa of 2003 that bans, you know, reiterating the previous Ayatollah's
fatwa, that bans the pursuit of weapons of mass destruction. So they are declaring that they have
not broken out to a nuke, are calling their bluff, which again, it was always an implied bluff.
They never explicitly said, don't you bomb us or we'll make nukes, but that seemed to be the
implied threat. They're a threshold state. They have a latent deterrent. Well, what happens
if you bomb them? Well, now we'll make nukes was always the implied threat. Well, now they're saying,
And that could be that just because America inflicted so much damage on their thing that it's going to take them a while to get up and running enough to even make a credible breakout.
I don't know.
It could also be that the Iatoll has just said, no, the principle of our sovereign right to enrich uranium and have a nuclear program for peaceful purposes is the only thing that we're insisting on.
And we really, just like we always said, don't want nukes anyway.
And but now that Trump, one more thing.
now that Trump has accepted Netanyahu's definition of any nuclear program is a nuclear weapons
program, well, then, if they keep enriching, then we keep bombing. And Trump has explicitly
threatened that, right? So we're just on this ladder. They're not going to give up enrichment,
and Trump is apparently so far never going to back down on enrichment, which W. Bush and Obama had
done. Like, what are you going to do? They're never going to give up enrichment. If we're going to be
reasonable and get a deal, we are going to have to recognize their right to enrich, which is
actually in the nonproliferation treaty, which they have signed, which is America's treaty.
Do you think the world is a more dangerous place if Iran gets a nuclear weapon?
Yeah.
I don't want anybody having a nuke, so I hate to see the proliferation.
I mean, in a way, nuclear weapons seem to make states more responsible a lot of times,
but you can't really count on that, right?
You can say, yeah, they keep the peace.
They do keep the peace.
Major powers don't want to fight with hydrogen bombs.
Come on, it's insane.
It's beyond insane.
It's unthinkable.
On the other hand, it's a great bluff until it fails.
And if it fails, then you're talking about devastation beyond imagination.
Is that surprising to you, sorry to once again zoom out on human nature,
that the mutual shared destruction has worked up to this point seemingly effectively?
It's just a blink of an eye, right?
And the Soviets got nukes in 46.
Yeah. So, meaning in the full arc of human history, it's a blink of a night.
That's right. Yeah, there's no, there's no like real base of statistics to measure from, right? It's been a few decades. Think of it like this. If I say to you, look, man, here's how international security is going to work for the next 275 years, okay? All the major powers are going to have hydrogen bombs, and they're all going to hold them at each other's capital city's heads in a Mexican standoff permanently. And it's going to be great. And that's how we're going to go forward.
For the next, I don't know, 10 generations.
No?
It couldn't possibly work, could it?
We're all going to die at some point if that's the setup.
And I'm not advocating for a global state here.
I'm perfectly against that better than anybody.
But I'm just saying there's got to be a better way the permanent H-bomb Mexican standoff.
And I'm not advocating for unilateral disarmament and surrender.
But I am advocating for multilateral disarmament.
and Ronald Reagan thought we could
not Walter Mondale
Ronald Reagan went to Rykavik in 86
and he was a hair away from making a deal
with Mikhail Gorbachev.
This is three years before the wall came down
in Berlin, okay?
They didn't know that the Soviet Union
was about to cease
and hell, the Soviet Union didn't cease to exist
again until the end of 91.
They didn't know.
Ronald Reagan didn't know this is the end of the Soviet Union.
He knew it was the end of the Cold War.
Him and Gorbachev were in the Cold War.
And Reagan believed at that point,
to some degree or another, I can't speak exactly, but they reportedly believed he was on a mission
from God that he had the, like, destiny granted to him, mandated to him to abolish nuclear weapons
from the face of the earth. And he was a hair away from making that deal with Mikhail Gorbachev.
And the tragedy of it is that the deal fell apart because of the completely fantastic and
ridiculous promise of the Star Wars Shield program, where they were going to have lasers in space
to shoot down all incoming ICBMs and all this.
And we're talking 1986 technology, right?
This is a joke.
There's no way in the world they're going to do that.
It would have cost, you know, however many trillions we didn't have and never worked anyway.
And Reagan said, well, I promised the American people that I would build one.
But the whole thing is, man, if we're getting rid of all the nuclear missiles, then you don't need one anyway.
So it's okay.
And then by the way, they were not counting on a magic wish to implement it either.
The plan always was going to be.
America and the Soviet Union would try to get our nuclear stockpiles down to roughly
rough parity with the other nuclear weapon states. At that time, France, Britain, Israel, and China,
Indian Pakistan didn't have nukes yet. South Africa only had a few before they gave them up.
And then once we got down to about two or three hundred each, then we see if we get down to
100 each, then we see if we get down to 50 each, then we see if we can get down to 10, right?
So it was not like, oh, Ronald Reagan turned into Jane Fonda, the commie hippie sellout trader
who wanted to just give away the store to the enemy. And all of a sudden,
sudden became, you know, a naive believer in, like, fantasies coming true. It was all like a
hardheaded realism that these machines are too dangerous to let politicians hold on to them
over the long term. It's the same conclusion that William Perry and Henry Kissinger, too,
at the end of their lives, they formed a group called Global Zero. George Schultz as well,
Reagan's Secretary of State, formed a group called Global Zero about saying, we have to, got to get
rid of these weapons. And William Perry, he had been Clinton's Secretary of Defense, who had
opposed NATO expansion, almost resigned over it and should have. But he wrote a book about
my life at the nuclear brink. And he wrote about, like, you just don't understand about these
machines, okay? Right? Talking about a hydrogen bomb. Like, you just can't imagine what it would be like
to have Dallas wiped off the face of the earth. That level of devastation and what that would mean
for the survivors and the rest. And having all of our cities wiped off the face of Earth in an afternoon
like that. Everything our ancestors have built for 3,000 years destroyed over nothing could
possibly be worth that nothing could be. There's so many difficult questions here. Do you think the
world is stable and smart enough to deal with a situation where somebody drops one nuclear weapon?
I don't. That's the worry, right? And from all the war games, once the nukes start going off,
they keep going off. We can't let them nuke us without nuking them back. We have to do something.
sir and then it just keeps going and going the americans claimed that the russians and i don't know the
truth of this could be true that the russians have a doctrine of escalate to deescalate i think they denied
it but in other words they'll go ahead and drop a nuke first and say see that's how angry we are
you guys better back down and the americans immediately ran a war game and publicly leaked it and said if the
russians ever try to do that escalate to de escalate stuff no we will nuke belarus and we'll say oh no we're
the ones who are loco, don't you mess with us. We are escalating to de-escalate. Now, you back down.
So you see, then we all die by 7.30. Right. Is there a number, again, a difficult question,
is there a number of warheads that's low enough to where, because you said, bring it down from
100 to 50 to 10? I don't know. I did have a fun conversation one time of Lyle Goldstein, who's this
brilliant, all kinds of nuclear war planner and defense analysts. He used to be at the Naval War
college. And I was saying, but come on, Lyle, like, what if we just got them down to like
a few low kiloton type bombs or whatever? And he's going, yeah, no, we don't want to do that
because that makes them really much more thinkable and usable. What you want to do is have at least
a certain minimum number of multi-megatone city killer bombs so that the capital cities
remain in jeopardy because that is the counter incentive to the politicians going that far.
You need, forget the tactical. You need the strategic. You need the strategic.
nukes to prevent war, right? And so all that makes sense if you're a certain kind of egghead,
but I'm just saying, man, I don't know, even that the bombs that they hit Japan with are
nothing compared to the super, as they called it then, the hydrogen fusion bombs, where you're talking
high kilotons or low megatons. I was wondering if you can comment on some of the interesting
interviews that there are in hotter than the sun, another one of your books,
Schaden than the Sun, time to abolish nuclear weapons.
It is a book by Scott Horton that features over a decade of interviews
with a wide array of experts on this very topic,
on the dangers posed by nuclear weapons,
the nuclear arms industrial complex,
and the history of politics and future risks surrounding nuclear proliferation.
Yeah.
Is there any some interesting interviews you remember, like insights?
Yeah, well, I mean, the funny story about that is a friend of mine just came to me and goes,
look what I did, and he sends me a PDF of transcript.
of all these interviews I've done about nuclear weapons over 20 years.
I didn't even ask him to do it or anything.
He just came to me.
And then so I was like, okay, well, I'm going to delete a couple of these,
and I want to add a couple more.
And then we just kind of ship-shaped it.
I stopped writing provoked for a minute to get this out in 22.
But when you, like, look that as a piece of work, the transcripts.
It's really.
Because sometimes it's like you might be so busy thinking about the current thing
and looking into the future that you forget to look back
at all the conversations you've had on the sky.
to the topic and to sort of start to extract some deeper wisdom from it, you know?
Well, the title of the book, you know, I had already done my first two books are time to end
the war in Afghanistan and time to end the war on terrorism. So this was called Time to Abolish
Nuclear Weapons, which I think really puts people off. It makes it sound like, oh, just, you know,
unilateral surrender to the Chikoms or whatever kind of thing, you know. But that's not really
what the book is about, right? The book is essentially about all aspects of nuclear weapons.
America and Russia's nuclear arsenals passed and present, North Korea, Israel, Iran, India, and Pakistan, and, you know, all their different nuclear weapons programs, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, all of the anti-nuclear activists, including, like, the nuns who break into naval bases and bang on ICBMs with a hammer and then go to prison for 10 years.
And there's a whole, like, very proud tradition of essentially, like, socialists, like the Catholic workers, who, the Berrigan family, you probably heard of Father Berrigan.
Berrigan and I forgot his brother's name and Frida's his daughter and McAllister as his wife,
the nun and these guys, they go to prison all the time. Daniel and Philip, that's right. They're
peace activist, you know, Frida is their daughter, she's a great one. And so I have, you know,
all that kind of stuff. As I say, Hiroshima Nagasaki, why North Korea's nuclear weapons program
is all George W. Bush's fault, which you don't want to get me on that topic, probably.
Although, I could do it pretty quick, but we should do Iran first at least before we forget.
I mean, on Iran and in general, what are the things in the American toolkit that should be used to minimize a chance that states like Iran get a nuclear weapon in your future?
Rapprochement.
Send whoever is the Secretary of State. Oh, God, Marco Rubio.
send somebody over there
and just be cool.
Diplomacy.
Yeah.
Look, as I said before,
Zabin and Brasinski
and Alexander Haig,
they wanted to normalize relations
with Iran in 1993.
He said, we'd do business with these people.
Dick Cheney said,
we'd do business with these people.
You know, it's just the attitude.
All you have to say is like,
this is a USA.
We're number one.
I ain't afraid to know Ayatola.
Like, we have all the power.
so you're telling me even though we have all the power we hold all the cards there's nothing we can do to work it out with these people come on we still hold a grudge over because they supported the groups that did the Beirut attack in 1983 get out here Ronald Reagan was selling missiles a year or two years after that through the Israelis so come on you know you can't you're not allowed to look we we help Saddam Hussein gas their cities our aircraft
shot down one of their civilian airliners with almost 300 people on board. So should they forgive
us for that? And so that we can move forward? Yes, they should. That was a stupid thing that some
idiots did, but that was a long time ago. And we have to live on this planet together. So what are we
going to do? You put those things behind us and you move on. This is business, man. And so that's
what you do. You just ignore the Israel lobby and you just put Trump on a plane to Tehran.
Look here, Ayatollah.
I was talking with my guys, and we figured out this is what we could probably agree on,
and here are the issue still outstanding, and let's figure it out.
And by the way, this is how Nixon and Kissinger did Mao.
They went over there, and they agreed to be friends first.
Then they worked on all the stipulations.
And we should say, so the idea here is basically talk to everyone, but trust no one.
That's right.
And so when we say friends, we mean basic courtesy and diplomacy.
That's exactly right.
But don't. It doesn't mean you trust the person.
Think about the phrase, Ronald Reagan's phrase, trust, but verify.
Well, what does that mean?
Don't mean anything. It means don't trust.
It means be polite and verify. That's what it means, right?
It means pretend like you're trusting because that's how you get along in the world.
But you verify. You send your inspectors to make sure. That's all.
And you have an agreement to do so and it's fine.
And so, and quite honestly, like, look, man, the Ayatoll, if he wanted to secretly try to break out and
enrich up to weapons grade and make a nuclear weapon, he could have.
you know i'm sure you've heard this propaganda numerous places on tv um marco rubia said this numerous
times uh mike baker is a regular podcast guest around here somewhere and was saying this kind
of thing uh a week ago or so that look iran had 60% enriched uranium get it like that's on its way
to weapons grade that would be easier to enrich to weapons grade
But you see, they don't go anywhere with it.
It's all just a non-secondary.
It doesn't mean anything.
Marco Rubio goes,
the only countries with 60% in rich uranium 235
are countries with nuclear weapons.
You see how that doesn't mean anything?
You can't make a nuclear weapon with 60% in rich uranium.
So what was the point of them making 60% in rich uranium?
It was so they had leverage in the negotiations that they were in the middle in
so they can negotiate it away.
They did the same thing in the Obama years when they were working on getting into the JCPOA.
And it was America that broke the deal, not them. And then it says in the deal that if America
starts breaking the deal, then Iran can stop abiding by some of the stipulations in it without actually
leaving the deal. And without being in violation of the deal, they'd just be stop abiding by some
the stipulations. Then in December of 2020, the Israelis killed the top nuclear scientist over
there, Fakhrazada in a machine gun ambush thing. And then in April of 21, they did a sabotage
attack at Natanz, which they took credit for. Okay. And it was in reaction to that was when the
Iranians started enriching up to 60%. Now, at this point in the story, Mike Baker goes,
something, something, yada, yada, yada. And can't finish the statement. What does it mean that they
have 60% uranium? What are they doing with it? Yes, it's true that if they turned it back into a gas
and enriched it all the way up to 90%,
then they would have enriched
weapons-grade uranium,
but they're not doing that,
and they weren't doing that.
And so why try to frame it as a dangerous threat?
The only reason they were enriching it up
is because, of course, it is closer to weapons grade.
They're demonstrating that like,
hey, guys, you keep assassinating our guys
and sabotaging our plants.
We keep, it's counterproductive for you, isn't it?
We keep enriching to a higher and higher degree.
If you want us to stop doing that,
you need to engage in diplomacy instead of murder and sabotage.
That was the message that they're sending.
And then, of course, they're just going to ship all the uranium to Russia or to France,
probably I guess the Russians, to dilute it down back into, you know, to a lower grade to burn in their civilian reactor.
And so this whole time, they have not broken out to make a nuclear weapon.
Now, the North Koreans did.
George Bush, well, I'll tell you real quick,
it was this quick little thing.
In 2002, George Bush put him in the axis of it.
Well, first of all, Bill Clinton had an agreement with them.
It's called the agreed framework of 1994 that said that if you leave your heavy water reactor off at Yongbian that the Soviets had built for them,
you leave it off, we will build you two light water reactors that cannot produce weapons-grade plutonium as waste.
And we'll give you a bunch of fuel oil and a bunch of welfare.
If you stay in the NPT, don't enrich to.
do, they didn't have an enrichment program involved. Stay in the MPT, keep the inspectors in the
country, leave your reactor off, and we'll do these things for you. Now, America never lived up
to their end of the deal. Newt Gingrich would let Bill Clinton live up to his end of the deal
in the 90s. It was actually Donald Rumsfeld's company that got the contract to build the
light water reactors and never delivered them. And then they delivered some of the fuel oil, but very
little of it. But still, the North Korean stayed in their side of the deal until W. Bush came to
town and W. Bush, first of all, put them in the axis of evil. And then in the fall of 2002,
John Bolton accused them of admitting, supposedly, although not on camera or on audio anywhere,
but supposedly a guy admitted at a cocktail party that they had a secret uranium enrichment program.
Well, if they did, that's not necessarily a violation of the NPT or their safeguards agreement or of the
agreed framework. Again, a civilian enrichment program is protected,
to the NPT as long as you're not making weapons out of it in violation of the deal, right?
So even if they were doing that, that's a cause to sit back down at a table.
That's not a cause to break the deal.
But what did Bush do?
Him and Bolton, they tore up the agreed framework, officially announced that it's dead.
Then they added new sanctions.
Then they announced something called the Proliferation Security Initiative, which was their claim
to have the right to seize any North Korean ship on the high seas in order to prevent proliferation,
which is nothing in international law allowing that.
But they just claimed it unilaterally.
And then in December of 2002, they put them in the nuclear posse to review on the short list for a potential nuclear first strike.
And it was only then that Kim Jong-il said, fine, screw you guys, and announced he was going to withdraw from the treaty, kick the inspectors out of the country, and they started making nuclear weapons.
Now, you might ask, what the hell were they doing?
And I think the answer is they thought they would have a chance to go to war with North Korea before they were able to complete their bombs.
Problem is, Iraq didn't go like Ahmed Chalaby promised it would go.
And so they were in no position whatsoever to go to North Korea.
So they forced them out of the deal, pushed Bush to nukes.
That was the last article that the great Gordon Prather wrote for us at anti-war.com
was called How Bush Pushed North Korea to Nukes.
And it tells this whole story.
Rest in peace, my friend Gordon.
He was a great one, man.
How Bush pushed North Korea to nukes by Gordon Prather.
So the Ayatollah said, no man, hands up.
Don't shoot.
Here's my books.
yes i'm enriching uranium and i know you don't want me to he bought some material some equipment to
do it off the black market but only because bill clinton denied the chinese the right to just sell
them a light water reactor prevented them from doing so when that would have been fine if you just let
the chinese sell them a light water reactor they would have never had a heavy water one you know um
well in fact one more thing about north korea donald trump proved that no that diplomacy works
he completely broke the ice with kim the last time he was the president it was john bolton that
sabotage a thing. He brought John Bolton with him to, I forgot if it was Vietnam or Singapore,
which meeting it was were Bolton sabotage thing. And the second meeting, he literally sent
Bolton to outer Mongolia to keep him out of the way, but it wasn't enough. But if he had let
Stephen Began, he was the guy who said, hey, we could take denuclearization off the table first
and just work on normalization first and denuclearization later. That was always obviously the
poison pill of the Bush and Obama people. First, give up all your nukes, then we'll begin to
talk to you. Yeah, right.
And so Stephen Began, who worked for Trump, was saying,
nah, we don't have to do it like that.
We can work with them.
He gave a speech like that.
But then if you look at the pictures, Began's in the chair in the back by the wall
and doesn't get to sit at the table, say nothing.
Or he's down further on the table, whatever it was, and didn't get to have his say.
And so it was Bolton help.
It was the same guy, John Bolton, who Sheldon Adelson picked to be Donald Trump's
National Security Advisor was the one who ruined that.
Anyway, on Iran, me and every other don't bomb Iran.
Iran activist in America for two decades have been saying, if we attack them, then they're more
likely to break out and make a nuke. So I have to stand on that, that yes, they are now more likely
to break out and make a nuke than they were before because of the completely foreseeable fact that we
can't pursue a regime change. We're only incentivizing them to arm themselves up worse.
So now we're counting on like the cool patient wisdom of the Ayatollahominee to not be that crazy.
When the whole point supposedly of this is that he's so crazy that you can't trust him with any nuclear technology at all, right?
You can't trust him with the ability to enrich uranium up to weapons grade, whether he is or not.
But now we've got to just rely on him and hope he doesn't because now he could.
You just dig a deeper hole under a bigger mountain and try again.
Do you think Trump should travel to Iran?
I do.
I absolutely think that Donald Trump could go straight to Tehran and then Moscow, Beijing and Pyongyang and come home and be Trump the government.
great said before i'll say it again and even with the russia situations we talked about before but
i don't want to spoil it but very difficult to solve that's right we're punching this in everybody
but it's very difficult to solve um it's funny but there's got to be a way and and even if that's the
hardest one i think we could absolutely put away our problems with iran and north korea no question
I don't really know exactly what we have outstanding with China other than the potential of conflict over Taiwan is they're not really threatening our allies in Korea, Japan, or Australia or anybody else.
I don't, you know, really worry about that.
That's not been their history.
They've got their own problems.
It's a very poor country in the West and all that.
So I'm not so worried about the rise of China as some are.
So go in and do diplomacy.
Go in and do diplomacy.
And that's Trump's whole thing.
And look, you know, they say only Nixon can go to China.
Well, why is that?
Because if a Democrat did it, Nixon would call him a commie, right?
Like, you can't.
It would be Nixon to stop it.
But if Nixon goes, well, you know it's not that he's a commie.
Here he's shaking hands with Mao-Saitong.
Why would Henry, I mean, why would Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon, of all people,
shake hands with Mao?
They did because they're smart, right?
Not because they're communist, but because they were making what they thought was a wise move
to benefit America's national.
interest at the expense of the Soviet Union.
And if that means shaking the bloodiest hand in the history of the world, then business is
business, right?
Same thing as Ronald Reagan can end the Cold War with Mikhail Gorbachev.
Imagine if Mondale had won in 84, and it was Walter Mondale that was trying to negotiate
the end of the Cold War in front of the Republicans.
You could imagine it going terribly, right, in a way totally different than having Reagan and
his successor Bush handling it from the GOP side.
And then same thing here, man.
If Donald Trump just gets up there and goes, as he always does, right,
I'm the tallest, richest, most handsome, most successful diplomat in the history of the world.
Watch me.
And then go out and make that the standard.
Being a good diplomat is the measure of a man.
I say so.
And then go out there and act that way, then it is what he says it is, right?
What the hell?
And do the thing where you meet and then you pull them in with that handshake.
Yeah, yeah, get that handshake.
You got to appreciate it.
the fact that the Republicans probably still, even though there's obviously a lot of resentment
and a lot of bad feelings over all these years. But it comes down to it, a Republican president
really says, come on, everybody, we got to go fight them radical Islams. He could probably
get a lot of Republicans to go ahead. Oh, man, terrorism's a problem again. Remember Islam
from before or the thing? And like, yeah, and go along with that. I think they could. And I think
Donald Trump could simply just run on, I kill Muslims dead and I'm a big tough right winger. But
He does not. He runs on, I'm the peace president. I'm the one he's trying to solve all this. I'm the one who's going to make all this go away for you. He knows that's what we want to hear. And I think it's his basic bias, except, of course, he has, you know, Israel, the devil on his shoulder making him, or, you know, strongly influencing him to choose the wrong thing a hell of a lot of the time. But I think that's his basic instinct is to want to do that kind of stuff, you know.
I don't think I've heard a politician talk about peace as much as him.
Like, legitimately, I mean, yeah, it's grounded in ego and narcissism and so on,
that I'm the best deal maker in the world.
Sure.
But fine.
Yeah, let him have it.
Yeah.
Call it victory.
I don't care.
Call it whatever you want, dude.
What it means to be a man is to go into the fire and make the best deals in the world.
That's right.
Yeah, fuck, yeah, that's America.
That should be, because America has a gigantic stick and gigantic carrot.
Yeah.
Fucking use it.
Yeah, and especially the carrot thing.
That's my thing with North Korea.
It's like, do we have everything to give?
And nothing to lose.
Like, even when I described the Bill Clinton deal,
we give them some fuel oil and some welfare.
You know what?
Like, I'm a libertarian.
I'm against all taxation.
But all other things being equal,
what's it to you, Lex?
We pay them a little bit of welfare to keep them
from turning their heavy water reactor back on
and harvesting plutonium out of the SOB, okay?
Now they're sitting on a couple of dozen nukes,
and it's all America's fault.
So, you know, could have tried
harder and better and not hire John Bolton to help. You know what I mean? These are decisions that
men made. They could have gone the other way and they still could. You know, if you remember when
Trump first came in, he was saying a lot of really cool stuff about, yeah, I'm going to
sign a big new new treaty. I want to slash the military budget. I want to have a new treaty with
Russia and China where we all slash our military budgets. He said, I don't want to pivot from the
Middle East to great power competition. I want to get along with everybody. Let's all just get
long and make money for the rest of the century.
Like, yeah, dude, that is, you know, the lack of special interests talking, right?
That's what Trump thinks before everybody gets to get in there and have their say about,
no, sir, we got to do this, that, and the other thing.
But why have major power competition at all?
Why have any of this stuff?
Maybe we can just be a world of people owning property and exchanging it freely to,
you know, greater enhance our standard of living.
You know, I wonder if you can comment, forget if we already did about the treatment of the Iranian people by the Iranian regime.
Oh, yeah. Yes, you did start to ask that, and I, this is where we went to Samoy.
Good question.
Yeah, that is a good question.
Hang on, let's do some money real quick.
Yeah.
No, I'm sure it would suck to live in Tehran.
You know what I mean?
Or in Iran.
I don't know.
I'm sure it's a police state.
It's on the face of it, it's an extremely flawed republic the same as ours, only different, and, you know, in different ways.
But, I mean, the very worst things you can say about them in international diplomacy or international, you know, action lately is they keep opening up America's Christmas gives, right?
they keep accepting i mean if you want to blame them for sending chalabi to lie to pearl you can but
i mean essentially they stay home and let america do their dirty work for them you know we fought
three wars for them to iraq wars in afghanistan um and and hell helped empower their friends in
iran accidentally um you know in in reaction form but still and so um you know they're not the
aggressive power that they're portrayed to be oftentimes.
You know, even, again, look at this current war where they fired all these rockets at an
empty corner of a base again in Qatar.
They called Donald Trump beforehand and let them know the rockets are coming.
They fired exactly as many rockets as bombs America dropped 14.
And remember Trump tweeted, thanks for the heads up that you're shooting the rockets
so we could shoot them all down.
In other words, even after America hit them with our biggest conventional bombs, they still
struck back only in a symbolic way, an absolutely significant.
know, they did not want to tangle with the USA at all. And this is after Trump warned them to
evacuate Tehran, right? Which could have been a threat of a nuclear strike, or at least a carpet
bombing campaign, or at least a very heavy bombing campaign against government targets,
you know, civilian government and military government targets in the country, in the city.
That, you know, is a pretty major threat. And the Ayatoll still is like, come on, man,
I don't want to fight you. And shoots his 14 little measly missiles as essentially a show only.
And so we're relying on that.
This thing could have escalated, right?
This war that Israel was dragging us into.
It could, what if they had shot 5,000 missiles at our bases in the Gulf?
We'd be in the middle of an ugly as hell war right now.
They'd have had to, quote unquote, had.
They'd have talked themselves into probably sending in ground troops to complete the regime change once it gets that bad.
So that is a risk that they were taken.
And thank goodness that cooler heads prevail.
but it's kind of nuts that America has to rely on the supposedly mad mullahs to be cool while we're bombing them, right, in a way where if they escalate at all, we could escalate and the thing could get way out of control very quickly, with America attempting to occupy a land three or four times the size of Iraq, with mountains and four times the population and the rest.
I was really worried. I think we got lucky, and I was really worried that this would be another forever war.
It ain't over yet, man.
That's the problem, is they're just, they didn't solve it.
They could have solved it at the table.
They probably still could, but they're going to have to recognize.
Just go there.
Just go to Ayatollah.
Speak with the Aettoll.
But you know, like, I talk with Trita Parcy, and he's a great expert on this
and has been preaching more or less the dove side of the case here for a very long time.
He told me on the show there, he's like, I fully expect them to break out and make a nuke now.
Hell, they kick the inspectors out.
Israel and America just gave them cause to kick the inspectors out of the country.
They think the inspectors were spies, passed intelligence to the planners for the war.
So they kicked the inspectors out.
So now we lost track of every last atom.
We had it where I could sit here and tell you, man, the IAEA for all their complaints about,
oh, we found this little thing, we found that little thing, explain this, explain that.
For all of their little nitpicking, they always continued to verify the non-diversion of nuclear material in Iran
to any new any military or other special purpose meaning they knew where it all was they had their
scales they had their sensors they had their seals and their cameras and they knew this much uranium is
here today it's there tomorrow and whatever they tracked it all around and they could verify the
non-diversion that's the iA's job now that chain of evidence is broken now like we don't know exactly
what they're enriching we don't know how much exactly they've been able to convert and where they
diverted it to and whatever and what is happening now essentially undercover
darkness. So if they invite the inspectors back in and say, see, our civilian program, at that point,
they very well could have a secret parallel weapons program that we don't know about. Now, that has
not been the case this whole time. It very well could be the case going forward from the summer of
2025. So from this point on, you still think carrot is more effective than stake. So diplomacy versus
threatening and military action. So here, diplomacy is the only way.
way out. Yeah. Well, and especially considering, like, I'm not saying that's like the magic trick of all
foreign policy or whatever, although I'm just a non-interventionist anyway, but I'm just saying as far as
like solving this problem, the Ayatollah wasn't making nukes. There wasn't an emergency that we had to
preempt. So, yeah, of course diplomacy is the answer when he's sitting there saying, look, man,
I have a civilian program and that's going to have to be good enough for you. Of course. Violence and
threats are what has made it far more likely that they're now going to make nukes, because
the Israelis say for them to have nuclear technology at all is equivalent to them having an
advanced weapons program, which is just really not true. And again, it's a problem that we can't
solve for them without committing to a serious war effort that no war planners have talked about
in this whole time. But again, that's on reality the whole thing. You can't solve it from the
air, so don't start it. You're going to make matters worse, but you can't fix it. You're going to make matters
worse, but you can't fix it with a B2.
Even if you kill the Ayatollah and 10 of his best guys,
you still didn't overthrow the government there.
They got 20 more guys.
What are you talking about?
They just make a new guy, the Ayatollah.
I pull the old president out of retirement, put him up there.
You know, so if you're insisting on regime change,
it's going to take the third infantry division.
Anybody's signing up for that?
And the thing I really, really deeply worry about is something you spoke about.
which is the, God forbid, the possibility of bin Ladenite-type character
doing a terrorist attack in the United States.
And then the machinery, the military industrial complex,
creating propaganda that says Iran, somehow connecting Iran to it.
And now we have to invade Iran.
We, the American people, have to put feet on the ground and regime change.
And all of a sudden, but I think the American people,
I mean, the wars in the Middle East have really taught the lesson, like, no.
depends on how quick it's forced on them, right, at this point.
See, it took Bush a year and a half to lies in a war with Iraq.
Obama just goes, yeah, we're going to war in Libya.
And everyone's like, okay, whatever.
Right, like...
But war with Iran is another to, I mean...
Trump, too.
Trump did barely even light us into it, right?
His own government was saying, they're not making nukes.
And he goes, I don't care what they say.
I don't want to do it anyway.
Israel says they are.
And they just did...
They barely even lied us into it.
They just did it anyway.
And then they go, well, see, that was over, short and sweet, time for peace.
And then call time out.
But again, it's not over yet.
And then we got lucky because Iran did not respond.
Yeah, exactly.
By escalating.
And Trump claimed that he completely obliterated their program and total victory, which is not true.
So where are we now?
We're at the second half, you know.
I mean, I was really worried because Iran was essentially humiliated.
And when states like that, especially regimes like Iran's, is humiliated.
they don't usually like to be sort of calm and de-escalate.
Right.
In fact, especially if it's true that they're so fragile in their power, right,
that this would make them even more desperate to show how tough they are.
That's how you create terrorists.
The fact the headline today is Iran demands full reparations for the war before talks.
In other words, just exactly what you said.
Give us our pride and then we'll talk to you.
Recognize enrichment and then we'll talk to you.
In other words, we're going nowhere with talks right now.
until Donald Trump climbs way down on the ladder.
And by the way, in diplomacy, in general,
on a basic human level,
letting people have their pride,
not humiliating them is essential.
You know, doing things like labeling somebody
as the access of evil,
you're signaling to your own people, maybe,
but you're humiliating,
you're deeply disrespecting the other side.
Sometimes you have to, like, soften the communication
in order to achieve,
not trusting anybody,
but in order to achieve ends right and that was their whole point was to escalate conflict right and also
think about the lie you talk about signaling to the americans how's this for a lie that saddam hussein
and the ayatola and osama bin laden and kim jung ill are all in a big alliance against you to kill you
right so saddam and the ayatollah both hate each other more than any two men in the world the
The Ayatollah probably doesn't think too much about Osama, but Saddam Hussein's clearly terrified of him.
And none of them had a damn thing to do with Iran, or with, pardon me, with North Korea, except that North Korea had shipped some missiles to Iran back in the day.
But they had no tight alliance at that time.
And they're mid-range missiles, not that big of a deal anyway.
So, Axis, nothing.
But the point was, these are all people we want to pick a fight with, basically.
What do you think? Do we cover Iran?
I think we got it.
I think we got it.
I forgot.
And I wanted to thank you for signing.
all the books
that you gave me
with Lex for peace
I think that's a beautiful way to sign it
and a beautiful goal to live by
hope you like it man
all right brother
and back to
now yesterday
again more
now let's
go back to Iran
in their nuclear program
in the recent war in a minute
but you want to do Israel Palestine
okay so
it's a huge long
complicated story
I really highly recommend Daryl Cooper's podcast, Fear and Loathing in the New Jerusalem.
I know people say a lot of terrible things about Daryl Cooper, but none of them are true.
I mean, he's my partner on my podcast, provoked our new show.
And the guy's a total sweetheart, man.
He's not a hater of anyone.
He's not a Holocaust denier.
What happened was people misunderstood him when he was on the Tucker Carlson show that day.
In fact, he was making the opposite point of what people think.
They thought that he was saying the Holocaust was just that the Nossack.
Nazis didn't have a good plan to feed all their prisoners.
That's not what he was saying.
What he was saying was that even if you were a Holocaust denier, you could not deny the fact
that the Nazis were taking possession of millions of people that they had no plan to care
for, and that, yes, in fact, a great many of them were starved to death and shot in this thing,
and that if you were the worst, even you would have to admit that.
That's what he was saying.
But what happened was a minute ago, he had just said he thought Churchill was worse than Hitler,
and it was kind of tongue-in-cheek, but he was saying for various reasons that Churchill
was the real villain of the war. And there's just a case to be made for the role that Churchill
played in escalating that whole thing. But that aside, when they heard him say the thing about
the feeding in Eastern Europe and the care for the prisoners on, they misunderstood. And they thought
that what he was doing is just spinning for the Third Reich at this point or whatever, when that
is absolutely not the case whatsoever, dude. He's a really great guy. And in fact, I'd ask anybody,
listen to even just the very first section of fear and loathing in the new Jerusalem.
And he demands that you put yourself, if you're going to listen to him, he doesn't just tell
it as objectively as he can, he demands subjectivity from you and that you, the listener,
put yourself in the shoes of the people that we're talking about here. Imagine if this was you.
And the first thing that he describes, it sounds like a bunch of Israeli settlers coming
to murder some Palestinians on the West Bank. But then you realize that, no, he's talking
about Russians doing pogroms against Jews in Russia in the dawn of the Zionist movement
in the early 20th century, late 18th century, and into the 20th century.
And he's talking about their victimhood and why they were so motivated to create this movement
and get the hell out of there. It was the era of nationalism, but they had no place for their
state of their own. So they wanted to move somewhere else and do it, whatever. He tells
from their point of view as much as he possibly can.
There's just no hatred or prejudice against choosing there at all.
And it bothers me.
Liars don't really bother me.
They just make for a good foil.
But it bothers me that good people would misunderstand and believe lies and think the worst
of the guy.
Because I think his 25-hour-long podcast, Fear and Loathing in the New Jerusalem,
leads up to the creation of the state.
That's where it ends.
It's the whole backstory to the creation of the thing.
And it's just brilliant, man, it is.
It's so good.
But in any case, so, look, the story is there was this radical Jewish nationalist movement called Zionism from Eastern Europe, where they wanted to find a homeland.
They thought maybe they go to Argentina or Madagascar and they settled on Palestine for obvious historical reasons and all of that kind of thing.
And the movement only had so much juice at the time.
the majority of religious and reformed Jews in the United States and in Europe, I don't know how many
reform Jews there were in Europe at that time. In the United States, it was a big movement. But they
mostly were against it. The consensus was against it for a variety of reasons. Then, of course,
after the Second World War, it really took off. And the argument was made that the Jews of Europe
needs somewhere else to go after the Holocaust. And so that was what led to, uh, uh,
by the Western powers to transport many more of them to Palestine and to help them to create
the state there. Now, obviously, there's only so much we can cover here, but to try, from my point
of view, I think, to try to, like, narrow in on, like, what is crucial to understand
about the thing is that in 1948, they launched what was called the Nakba by the Palestinians, the
catastrophe. And this is when they were all cleansed off of what's now what we call Israel proper,
that is less the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem. But they went as far as
West Jerusalem. And when they created the state, they cleansed that territory through terror
and murder and rape and pillage. They, and mostly through terror, they forced all those people
out of their homes. Now, when we say 750,000 people, X, we're talking about the population of
greater Austin, Texas, right? Including Flugerville and Round Rock and maybe Buda. Okay, we're talking
about a lot of people who are forced off of their property and into what, then the Gaza
strip in the West Bank, and then refugee camps all square in Kuwait and in Lebanon and Syria and the
rest. Now, when they did that, all morality aside, just strictly like, what I say, descriptive,
not normative, right? They're like, in this sense, it worked. In the aftermath, the Zionists had
created an 80-20 super-duper Jewish majority. So they could call themselves a Jewish democracy and have a
lot of the trappings of democracy and ingratiate themselves with the West to try to on that
basis. And there's like some of some truth to it, of course. But you know, and by the way, let me
recommend to you and to your listeners, but I really hope you that you read this. I'll bring you one.
I should have brought you one today. I didn't think of it. I have a stack them at my house.
It's called Coming to Palestine by my colleague Sheldon Richmond. And he is the co-founder with me of
the Libertarian Institute and a brilliant and longtime libertarian writer and activist. And he was, of
course, raised Jewish and Zionist in the United States in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. And this is a
collection of essays that he wrote over probably 30 years or something. And it's just about how he
learned the truth about all this and how that's why he ain't a Zionist no more. Man, what do you mean
the Darjean massacre? Which is like the Milai Massacre, right, this horror show. I don't
never heard of that. They told me it was a land without people, for a people without land.
That kind of sounds screwy, doesn't it? The eastern Mediterranean shore was devoid of life.
That's, I don't know. So that was a lie, right? And in fact, I mentioned Eric Margulies, my friend,
the journalist. His mother was sort of a Lois Lane character, an independent journalist of her own,
who went Trampton around the, um, Trampson around the region after World War II interviewing
sultans and kings and potentates and whatever, and she reported on the horrific conditions of the
poor Palestinian refugees, the Muslims and Christians, who had been cleansed from their land
and forced into the West Bank. And they threatened to murder her and they threatened to murder
my friend little baby Eric Margulies if she would dare to continue to tell the truth. At that time,
Lex, the Palestinian people's existence was a wild conspiracy theory by Koo.
Cooke's. Only Cooke's believe there's Palestinians. This was a land without people for a people without land. What a coincidence and what good fortune that they could come and just make an empty desert bloom at a cost to nobody and a cost of nobody's conscience here. And that was, of course, you know, people who really knew a lot about things would have known better than that, I guess. But that was essentially the mythology that the American people were told by popular
culture, and particularly in Hollywood movies and the way that they did the movie of Exodus
and all of those things in pushing this mythology. Now, the thing about that is, oh, and I was
going to say about Sheldon's book, Sheldon points out that the Israelis, Skoldomayir made a secret
deal with the King of Jordan, that he would take the West Bank, and Israel would not fight him
over it. They would encourage him and even to help him to take the West Bank. Why? To preclude the
possibility of the creation of a Palestinian state on what was left of Palestine. They wanted it all
at least someday. If they can't have it all now, they can at least prevent the Palestinians from
making their own state out of it. If we got to take it from the other side, the party on the
other side of the Jordan River later, that's easier. So they did that deliberately on purpose
to screw the Palestinians out of their own independent state from the first place. Okay. But now
here's getting to the meat of the thing. Go ahead. If I may just read.
A little bit more about the book, that it's a collection of essays written over 30 years that
critically examines the history of the Israelis' dispossession of Palestinians and challenges
the mainstream narrative often presented in the United States regarding Israel's founding.
Richmond, a noted libertarian author, argues for reason, freedom, peace, and toleration with
respect to both Palestinians and Israelis, turning conventional stories regarding the region on
their head.
In this volume, Richmond meticulously documents historically.
events and policies that led to the displacement of suffering and Palestinian people,
emphasizing their rights as individual human beings, and the injustices suffered when they were
made refugees dispossessed or killed. This book is recognized for being forthright and honest
in its depiction of the conflict, drawing on well-documented data and offering a perspective
that is often absent from mainstream discourse. Absolutely right. And Sheldon, again,
just like if we were talking about Mearsheimer
or these guys or Dr. Paul,
he's a saint, right?
Nobody's got nothing on Sheldon, man.
He is an exceptionally decent man,
and there's nothing that nobody can do about it.
Right?
So what's his motive here?
His motive here is decency.
His motive here is,
and he tells the story of his grandfather,
they would always say,
next year in Jerusalem,
and his grandfather would say,
next year in Philadelphia,
because he hated Zionism and he would say this, I'm quoting a quote of a Jewish guy quoting
his Jewish grandfather, okay, would say that Jews are responsible for all the problems over there,
not the Palestinians. And Sheldon says that he always regretted that he never had a chance to
really ask him what he meant by that and really talk with him about that. He was too young and
didn't never get around to it, but that his extremely Jewish grandfather who helped raise him
in Philadelphia had nothing but contempt for the Zionist.
project. And he shows how most religious and, again, reformed Jews were against it. So it's going to,
you know, cause Jews to divide their loyalties. It's going to cause Jews to be falsely accused of
dividing their loyalties. It's going to cause nothing but endless disruptions in the Middle East
and problems for the United States of America, which is actually their country. I mean, think how
insane it is to call American Jews the Israeli diaspora. When they're not from Israel, Israel's
created in 1948. American Jews came here in the 18th century, man, what the hell?
And in the 20, pardon me, the 19th, I meant to say a century in the 1800s.
And in the 1900s is when millions of Jews came to the United States, right?
How in the world are they the diaspora from Israel that came into existence after America became
their promised land, you know? And so this was a big part of why there was so much resistance
among Jewish communities against the creation of the Israeli state in the first place.
And Sheldon goes into that in great depth.
It's just fantastic book.
It's a little bitty book.
I mean, everybody get right through it, but it's really worth your time.
So where I'm going with this is the 67 war.
And what happened in 1967 is that Israel took possession of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
and all the Palestinians on it.
Now, they cleansed another 250,000 Palestinians.
They expanded their border a little bit in the West Bank.
and cleanse about another quarter of a million Palestinians off of their territory at that time.
That usually goes unnoted.
But the thing is, is they, quite literally, man, they de facto annexed.
I heard a report on my way here today.
I was listening to Dave DeKamp's anti-war news, and he was saying Israel is threatening to annex Gaza.
Well, Israel Gooden stole Gaza in 1967 and all the people on it too.
And the West Bank, too, and East Jerusalem, including East Jerusalem, as well as the Golan Heights that they stole from the Syrians.
Those poor Druze, and their occupation usually gets much less mentioned, but they were kidnapped along with the Palestinians as well.
And the thing is about it is that they wanted that land.
They didn't want the people, but they couldn't just get rid of them all.
They had cleansed their $750,000 to create the Israeli state.
they couldn't push the rest of them the rest of the way into Jordan. Now they have, I don't know what
the number was exactly then, or I forget what it was then. We're now talking about almost six
million Palestinians on the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, and including the one-fifth of the Palestinians
who are citizens of Israel, who don't live under occupation, but as sort of second-class
citizens of Israel like under Jim Crow type situation. Or they're not allowed to intermarry. They're not
allowed to live wherever they want around Jewish communities that don't want them. And with only
one slight exception, the tradition has always been that they can have a political party in the
Knesset, but no group of parties would form a majority with them. In other words, any group of
Israeli Jewish parties would rather let the other guys form a coalition than form a coalition with
the Arabs. And that only changed one time in our very recent history here, I believe,
Donald Trump's first term or maybe early Biden when Yarlapid needed to ally temporarily
with Arabs was a one time they've ever broken that tradition. So anyway, I'm off on a tangent,
but there are, as I said before, it's 80-20. So there's a one-fifth of the population of Israel proper
or whatever, Green Line Israel, 67 borders Israel, are Palestinian Arab Muslims and Christians.
So you combine their population with the occupied population of the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip, now you're talking about 50-50. Only the Israeli Jews have all the power
and the Palestinian Muslims and Christians have none. And in the occupied territories, they live as
utter slaves as though under communism, under not just martial law, but foreign government occupation
military law. In other words, and by the Israelis, no law at all. We're talking children brought
before military courts in a foreign language and sentenced to dungeons without any process.
We are talking about totalitarian slavery, like under the NKVD and the USSR.
They are not free, and Israel is not a democracy when half the people under the control of their state
have no rights at all. No civil liberties, no civil rights as far as like participation in
governmental process, no taxation without representation.
They have no representation whatsoever, okay?
And the thing is about it is what makes them not slaves is these Israelis don't want them, right?
They're not forcing them to work for free.
They're certainly depriving them of all of their rights and humiliating them every chance they get,
stealing all their water resources, murdering them, pillaging them, stealing their territory a little bit out of time,
and working toward a day when they can finish the job and just take it all.
And what's really messed up, man, is that they don't even really want the Gaza Strip.
that bad. I mean, sure they do. But what they really want is the West Bank, as their religious
zealots call it Judea and Samaria, and that they have a leftover religious edict from 3,000
years ago that says that you say whatever you want about the Palestinians and their natural
property rights under Lock-in theory and the Western conception of how one comes to own a thing. And they
will say, nope, we have supernatural property rights that says that we get to come and kill you and
move into your house and do whatever we want and recognize no rights of the Palestinians,
just like Justice Taney or Tani saying that the black men have no rights that a white man
is bound to respect, right, and Dred Scott.
That's the way that they treat the Palestinians.
They call them grasshoppers, right?
Not even mammals.
They're just insects to be eradicated because the Israelis covet their property.
It's as simple as that.
They want to covet it so they kill so they can steal.
And that's it.
And then they'll come up with every lie in the world that try to justify it all.
Now, David Ben-Gurion, the founding prime minister of Israel said, give it back, give it up.
Let them have it.
Yeah, we want the land, but we don't want all these people.
What are we going to do with them all?
Like, what's the end game here?
When we're taking possession of millions of people that we hate and don't want in our country.
And so it's not worth it to do this.
That's Ben-Gurion, the founding guy, said,
that. And they told him, yeah, yeah, yeah, we know what we're doing. And you're probably familiar
with this woman, Daniela Weiss. You'll see her in various documentaries and so forth. She's the
insane zealot saying we must occupy and settle all of Gaza and all of the West Bank.
And so she, there's a great new documentary called The Settlers. I forget, I never saw
part one of it, but the sequel, it just came out, is called The Settlers. It's really good. It includes
extensive interviews with her and there was a statement that she made recently in the last two years
where or a video that came out that someone some journalist had revealed this video I guess
of her in the 1970s explaining or maybe it's her in more recent times just talking about the 1970s
forgive me but people can find this I'm sure and what she's saying is from the moment they
took over the West Bank she worked with Ariel Sharon to
to create an archipelago of settlements across the West Bank in a way to preclude the possibility
of a Palestinian state as fast as they possibly could. That was absolutely their first object is
we've got to bisect them here and bisect them there so that they can never have a state of their
own. And that was their goal this whole time, this radical settler movement. Now, in, you know,
we talked about the 90s. We talked about the clean break when Netanyahu came in.
The clean break, again, is a clean break from Oslo.
And Yitzhakrabin and Shimon Peres' attempt to negotiate with the Arab states and the Palestinians.
And, of course, Netanyahu, if you're not familiar to this, we should maybe play this.
As long as we're taking our time here, Lex.
Let's see if we can find secret video of Netanyahu.
This is it.
This is it.
Yeah, so you just mute that and just read the caption there.
So let me set this up. Netanyahu in this video, he is no longer the prime minister.
He's at a settler's house in the living room. He tells the boy, turn off the video camera.
And the boy either fails to turn it off or he deliberately turns it right back on again.
It's a bit unclear. But the video keeps rolling and Netanyahu keeps blabbing.
And he's saying what you do is you just beat these Palestinians, you just hurt them and cripple them and kill them and weaken them and let them know that they'll never win.
crush him and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And she says, ah, geez, bea, well, aren't you going to drive the world crazy and make
them mad, especially America?
And Netanyahu then ridicules us and says, let me tell you something about America, okay?
America is a thing that is easily moved.
80% of them support us.
It's absurd.
I'm not afraid of Bill Clinton.
Let me tell you what I did to Bill Clinton.
Bill Clinton said, yada, yada, area C.
I said, no problem, Bill.
But then you know what I did?
I made it where Area C is this huge military area, two-thirds of the West Bank.
Ha, ha, ha, sexually assaulted old Bill right in the face and got away with murder.
And not because his spies were blackmailing Bill Clinton, tapping his bone and all of his excapades.
They used that blackmail to try to get him to pardon Jonathan Pollard.
That's different.
They were doing that.
But Netanyahu here is mocking Bill Clinton, and he's mocking the American people.
people for being essentially a bunch of grasshoppers that he can do whatever he wants with
us including lie our fathers into sending their sons to die in his wars if i may just comment
one of the things that troubles me a lot in these the geopolitical aspect of this is when the prime
minister of israel shows so much disrespect towards the president of my country no he never had any
respect at all. Don't let, don't let me sound sympathetic to old Bill Clinton, the child killer
here when I say this, but I can almost sympathize with him when they say after his first meeting
with Netanyahu in 1996, after half an hour, he came out and said, who the ebb does this guy
think he is? Oh my God, who's the superpower and who's the client state? Like he was out of breath,
exasperate, just stunned. Why, why is he able to?
talk like this to the United States president. I have no idea. He blackmail Bill. He told Bill Clinton,
you better let Jonathan Pollard out because I have you on tape with Monica Lewinsky, pal. And Bill Clinton
was going to do it, except that George Tenet said he would resign and that many leaders of the CIA
would resign in protest if he did it. Jonathan Pollard was one of the most destructive spies in American
history. He was spying for Israel, and they were turning over everything that he stole, I mean,
rooms full to the Soviet Union.
But it's not just Clinton.
Like, he shows, even just let's just take it to today.
Benjamin Netanyahu seems to show a lot of continued disrespect towards Donald Trump.
Like, this is the, this is the, this is the,
Donald Trump is the president of the most powerful country.
And the best friend he ever had.
Move the, move the embassy to Jerusalem, recognized Israel's seizure of the Golan Heights,
wrangled these bony Abraham Accords, which we're about to describe here in a
Senate did all of this for him, has only barely talked him out of annexation, but said,
we'll get to it though, buddy. It's cool. Just wait on full annexation of the West Bank last time
around. Clearly, it's the agenda this time. Clearly, Trump's wrapped around his little finger.
And still, he has nothing but contempt. And I wish that someone would tell Trump, listen,
pal, you might as well be a Palestinian to this guy. He doesn't care about you at all.
He doesn't care about our country at all. Back to my question about Mark Dubowitz, my hypothetical here,
which goes for all pro-Israel factions in the United States.
You think Benjamin Netanyahu cares that 3,000 Americans died on September 11th
because Mohammed Atta was taking revenge for what Israel had done in Lebanon?
No, and you know how I know that, Lex?
He told the New York Times, they didn't overhear this and report it.
He said to the New York Times in an interview on September 11th,
it's very good.
You want to pull that up?
September 12, 2001, New York Times, Netanyahu, very good.
That's how much respect Benjamin Netanyahu has for the enlistment age sons of the United States of America
and the dead civilians on those planes and in those towers.
New York Times, that's it.
A day of terror of the Israelis, spilled blood is seen as bond that draws two nations.
closer. Asked tonight what the attack meant for the relations between the United States and Israel,
Benjamin Netanyahu, the former prime minister, replied, it's very good. Then he edited himself,
well, it's not very good, but it will generate immediate sympathy. He predicted that the attack
would, quote, strengthen the bond between our two peoples because we've experienced terror over so many
decades, but the United States has now experienced a massive hemorrhaging of terror.
Yeah, man, and listen, on September 11th, Donald Trump says that there were Muslims in New Jersey
celebrating the attack. There was somebody in New Jersey celebrating the attack. They were Israeli
Mossad officers, and they were arrested, and they told the arresting officers, the problem is
us. The problem is the Palestinians. And the FBI released the pictures, and they're holding
lighters up like they're the ones burning the tower down and they're all laughing and celebrating.
Justin Romando called them the high fivers. The FBI arrested them and held them for months.
Carl Cameron of Fox News did a four-part investigative series, quoting FBI agents as saying
they had to have known what was happening. Massad was in the United States following the hijackers
around and they only gave the barest of warnings that August. They did not tell.
everything that they knew
about the September 11th attack
and then it hit and Netanyahu
said it's very good
and then his fifth column
lied us into war with Iraq
and he never got
his pipeline to Haifa by the way
but he did make a deal with the Kurds
to ship the
oil out of there through Syria
to Israel so they got their
nickel a barrel discount
at the cost of $10 trillion
of our wealth
and the ruining of the entire beginning of the third millennium, pardon me, but it just did not
have to be this way. It just did not at all. Is it worthwhile here before we talk about Gaza to draw
distinction between the Israeli government and the Israeli people? Just like we can draw the
distinction between Hamas and the Palestinian people? Yes, absolutely. Although I would say that
by the Israeli's argument about popular sovereignty and popular consent among the people,
Palestinians for Hamas, they are far more implicated in the actions of their government. There's
virtually unanimous political consent for Israel's government's actions in that country. Their
political spectrum is from Dick Cheney to Hitler, with Dick Cheney being the leftist progressive.
They are a national socialist regime at war under a theory of that they are a master race ruling over
the unter mention. It is a barbarian society. And does that implicate every last Israeli
individual civilian human being? Of course not, Lex. A bunch of the people who were killed at that
rave, they were actually there at a peace function. They were trying to figure out a way to help the
people of the Gaza Strip and even to someday recognize their independence and freedom and do something
four of them. Those people got caught up and murdered by Hamas that day, right? There are not just
liberals and leftists, but libertarians and different. There are plenty of army veterans and whatever.
You want to go with like the overall percentages. There is a resounding consensus for this
type of policy in that country, reminiscent of America circa 2002 in a way that we do not have.
After October 7th, you're saying.
No, even before that, even before that.
You know, the Palestinians are considered to be the barbarians.
They are the enemy.
They are the goyam.
They are the obstacle to what the Israeli government and the ideal is for the country to have.
Wouldn't it just be better if we could get rid of them all?
And that is the consensus.
And just get rid of them all, one way or the other.
And I think that, you know, whatever, I'm not saying, as Madeline Albright would say, the people of Iraq are all responsible for Saddam Hussein and I'll starve them all and grind their bones to make my bread as long as they won't overthrow Saddam for me, which is the same thing Osama bin Laden said, which is the American people are responsible for the actions of our government. After all, you're a democracy, aren't you? And you pay your taxes, he said. And so that was why he said it was okay to kill us. I would never agree with Madeline Albright.
or Osama bin Laden about why it's okay to kill innocent civilians at all.
As diametrically opposed to their philosophy as I could possibly be.
And that goes for absolutely when Palestinians kill innocent Israeli civilians.
And if people will say, well, they're settlers and colonists and all this too, fine.
If they're not holding a gun, they're not a combatant, then they're not holding the gun and they're not a combatant.
That's it.
That's, you know, I don't know what the Geneva Convention say.
That's what the Horton Convention say.
I don't care about any of that, you know.
And especially when it's children.
Yeah.
And so even if the population of the United States, say the population of Texas, broadly in, hell,
and you could measure the polls go back, I bet you it's better than 85% of Texans supported George Bush's invasion of Iraq.
Does that mean any of them deserve to be killed?
because they supported his evil premeditated plot to kill people?
No, that's politics, that's government.
That's the individual men who pulled the decisions,
the individual men who told the lies to convince the hapless to go along.
They're responsible.
People who cheer led for it, let's just concede much less so.
Okay, you know, if the people of America said absolutely not,
well, that would have been better.
and ultimately it was up to us
if we could get enough of us to be good on it all at once.
Like we talked about with Syria and stopping the war in 2013,
they just could not get past the population that wouldn't budge.
We should say that in such dire situations,
the propaganda machine turns on in every individual nation.
And so it's actually very difficult to be a citizen
that can see the reality of the world clearly
because you're swimming in information that is very consistent,
strained to a particular kind of narrative. And this is true for every single nation at war.
And have you ever seen the documentary defamation? It's really great. It's made by an Israeli
Jew who goes out in search of anti-Semitism. And the worst anti-Semite in the whole movie is his
grandma on the West Bank. I'm not going to quote her because she's a vicious anti-Semite.
But the thing is, he goes traveling all around the world, trying to find anybody who hates Jews
for being Jews, and he has no such luck. And he goes and he hangs out with Abe Boxman at the
anti-defamation league and he goes on a field trip to Auschwitz with some Israeli kids.
But at the beginning of the documentary, he shows how the propaganda campaign against the
Israeli people by their government is essentially like America 2002 forever with no let-up.
It's show of this, show of that, always.
And they really tell the people, they really do raise them to believe that every non-Jew in the world
wakes up in the morning with only one goal to kill all the Jews.
And that's all anyone else cares about or thinks about.
And they're all looking for the first opportunity.
And aren't you glad that Israel's here to protect you?
Otherwise, it would be another Holocaust immediately tomorrow.
Right.
That wasn't the result of the most insane fanatical,
cranked out lunatics to ever seize power
in a major industrial nation.
Nope, that's what all of humanity wants to do to us
and would do at any moment if they could.
That's what they're told all day, every day.
And to a great extent, then believe it.
And so then, and it's like an anti-fragile belief,
Daryl Cooper was talking about this on our show the other day,
that the more people say, my God, Israel,
what they're doing is so wrong and I disapprove
and I don't like them anymore.
the more they say, see, right?
He compared them to the branched of idiots, right?
When people turn against us, it's just like we predicted they would.
You see what they're doing?
It's just like before.
And so there's no room in there to say, hey, wait a minute, maybe we really are going too far here.
If all our friends are telling us that we're doing the wrong thing, what the hell?
Nope, you know how the anti-Semites are.
That's all they do is that's all they want to do.
is, and it's all they think about all day long is how they can harm us, all of them. And so
under that state of paranoid siege, then you shouldn't be too surprised that people are willing to
then go to the utmost lengths to destroy their enemies, you know, when they can. And of course,
Hamas did a very good job on October 7th of playing into that script. But now, we're taking
our time here today. So before we get to that, let's talk about Eroserone, one more minute here,
because I should mention briefly that this defamation movie looks excellent.
Oh, it's so good.
Israeli director and a lot of the Israeli press are praising it.
It looks fascinating.
Of course, this 2009 would be interesting to see how that evolves with social media
and all that kind of stuff.
But it's actually, it's fascinating when you confront the reality.
And how uncomfortable.
There's Mirshimer, right?
There's a, how uncomfortable people are.
when confronted with the fact that actually nobody hates you at all.
And then it's like, they feel so uncomfortable.
At one point when he goes on the field trip to Auschwitz with these high school kids.
And they meet this old man.
And he's like, hi, who are you?
And they're like, we're kids from Israel.
And we came to see Ashwis.
He's like, oh, that's interesting.
Why are you doing that?
And they're like, well, that's part of our history and the thing that we're doing.
He's like, oh, okay.
And then the next day, at one point, they're walking through this beautiful green field,
this like puffy clouds and blue sky.
guys and chirping birds and the Holocaust is long over now in Poland. And so it's a beautiful
scene and they have a Mossad bodyguard there to protect them from the anti-Semites who are going to
jump out of the woods and holocaust them all if he wasn't there to protect them. And then the
next day, the guy says them, so how was your trip to Poland? How have you liked it and everything?
And the one girl starts explaining, yeah, this old man, he came up to us and attacked us and
called us Jew donkeys and all these things.
And he says, no, he didn't.
I have it on film.
I'll show it to you right here.
He said, hi, who are you?
And what are you doing here?
Oh, that's interesting.
Why are you doing that?
That's what he said.
But the thing is, is they came all this way after being told that everybody's trying to murder them.
They're in the land of the Holocaust, and there is no Holocaust going along anywhere.
That was at that time, 70 years before.
And they don't need a Mossad bodyguard at all.
In fact, they don't even need Stanley Smith's security there at all.
Just their teacher would be fine.
And no one there is anti-Semitic and no one there means them any harm at all.
And these high school students then have a hard time coping with that and trying to figure out what this weird world is that they're living in where it can't be that they were lied to.
It's got to be that guy must have said something hateful to us under his breath.
I'm pretty sure he did.
Didn't he say something about how we're donkeys or something?
Right?
And they just have to come up with this in their own mind to ration.
the danger that they've been told by people that they trust that they're in when in fact
they're not right and when in fact when they are it's the direct result of american wars like
scaring a bunch of refugees into europe and then killing even more people and then they commit
terrorist attacks things like that which is again all israeli foreign policy that's getting
them killed but now anti-semitism is good for israel and they know it benjamin netanyahu is
cynical as can be about this if you remember when uh there was one of these at
tax, I believe, at the kosher grocery store in Paris. Netanyahu came to France and he said,
that's right. French Jews, you'll never be French. Your Jews. Come home to Israel. And they said,
damn you, screw you and get out. We are too French. And how dare you come here to this country
and tell everybody else that really we're your fifth column and not patriotic members of our civil
society, civic society that we are, in fact, part of and have lived here for centuries.
Screw you, dude.
But that's good for him.
He likes it when people hate Jews overseas because it's good for driving Jews overseas
to move to Israel.
And that's what's good for Israel.
And that's the only thing he cares about.
Again, September 11th, oh, man, this is great, is the only way that he can see it,
what he always wanted.
and just like the high-fibers.
Oh, good.
The Palestinians are the problem.
Now we can get you to do what we want.
Can we go to...
Oh, yeah, we got to do Aerochiron 2005 real quick.
Erosheron disengages from the Gaza Strip.
Now, why do you do that?
Well, there is two major reasons, okay?
The first one is, and you can pull this up if you want to
at scothorne.org slash fair use,
It's the guy's name is Arnon Sofer with two Fs, Arnon Sofer, and then type in Kill and Kill.
That should bring it up.
There you go.
In the interview with him from, as I say it here, the year is 2004.
It is a year before Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, quote, disengages from Gaza.
Two years before Hamas wins of plurality in the election George W. Bush forced them to hold.
three years before Elliot Abrams failed coup, which led to Hamas kicking the Palestinian authority out of Gaza and seizing so-called control under the strip, of the strip, under Israeli overlordship, of course, and the institution of the full-scale siege and the beginning of the, quote, mowing the grass campaigns, which began in 2008.
Sharon's advisor, Aron Safr explained to the Jerusalem Post that the problem is the Palestinian Muslims and Christians are having too many babies.
The Israelis don't want to let them have a state, but they do want to kick them, quote, out of Israel, at least virtually or figuratively, by so-called disengaging with them, so as to reduce the number of Palestinians officially occupied by Israel by a couple of million people. Does that make sense? So this guy is a demographer from Tel Aviv University. He comes to Ariel Sharon and says, Mr. Prime Minister.
You've got to look at my mathematics here. We have a problem. There are too many Palestinians, and they are out reproducing us. We are approaching a 50-50 split or worse, where we are going to be a literal dictionary definition, apartheid state, of a minority ruling the majority under this iron fist. And that could be very untenable for the future of the state and our support from the rest of the Western states, etc. So to solve this problem, what we want to do is just figuratively.
kick the Gazans out of Israel, even though Israel stole the Gaza Strip in 67, and they never did
literally disengage. They just put the thing under siege. If you listen to pro-Israel, you know,
propagandists now, they'll say, well, we gave them a Palestinian state. We gave them full
independence with the disengagement of 2005, and all we got in return is rockets. But that's not true.
It was the Israelis that broke the ceasefire originally, just as they always did ever since that time, until October the 7th of 23.
They broke the ceasefires every single time.
And then it was W. Bush who forced them to hold the election, where Hamas won, again, a plurality, not a majority in even any single district, anywhere in Palestine, did they win a majority of the popular vote.
then they formed a coalition government which w bush then secretly conspired and it's funny to read the article is called the gaza bombshell by david rose in vanity fair and in that article david warmser throws elliott abrams under the bus for this and says this was an idiotic scheme to help fatah overthrow hamas in the gaza strip which led to to hamas kicking their ass and pushing them out in
instead and Hamas then having more control over the Gaza Strip, which is what I think the Lakud
guys probably wanted.
And because, so first of all, now, again, I'll get right back to that in a second, but
Soffer again.
This article is from the Jerusalem Post, where he gives an interview to a lady named Sarah
something, and he explains the whole thing.
Now, I found this, I forget where I got it from, but it was, I found on the Jerusalem Post
where it used to be, like the URL is still there,
and you can see where other people have linked to it in the past,
but now that URL is dead and that kind of thing.
But if you search the Jerusalem Post website carefully for her name and his name,
you will find other articles about it where they refer back to this
and refer back to the most explosive quotes out of it, et cetera.
So this is verified and definitely a real interview,
even though I don't believe you can find the whole thing at the Jerusalem Post anymore.
But that's where it comes from.
So, by the way, yes, go ahead.
You've mentioned many times,
Scott Horton.org slash fair use,
so you're almost like creating an archive
of important documents
that if there are to be erased from the internet,
they're here to be found.
Right.
The stuff that's, like, most important,
especially if I need it and I need to link to it,
and I think, you know, whoever's got it now
is going to be unreliable in the near future.
Link rod is a real thing.
It's a real problem.
And so, yeah, on things like this,
where it's like, I can only find it in a pretty obscure place.
I'll go ahead and reprint it here.
So if that obscure place goes away, it'll still exist.
Because, man, I mean, I really am shocked and surprised and dismayed how many times
you'll have crucial information that there's only one version of it anywhere online.
And it could go away any day.
You know what I mean?
Like, there's a lot of things like that stresses me out.
So I try to do stuff like this.
So now, so he says,
listen, this is what we got to do. We have to
disengage from Gaza so that
just as a ruse, right, as an optical illusion.
We're going to make it seem as though we're kicking the
Palestinians of Gaza out of
Israeli control and jurisdiction. That way you can't
say it's an apartheid state anymore. Now we're back
more to majority rules over the minority, of course
ruthlessly, but still, it's less worse than having a
Jewish minority ruling over a Palestinian Arab Muslim and Christian majority. That would be
less tenable, right, was the idea. So he told Sharon this and said, you've got to do this.
And this is why. He explains this to Sarah, what's her name at? Oh, it was even called one-on-one.
It's the demography, stupid, was the original title of the thing. And he tells her, this is what we've got to do.
And then we'll have to put them under siege, of course, and lock them in.
this cage like animals, basically.
And she says, well, what do we expect the Palestinians to do, right?
They're going to freak out and fight.
And he goes, yeah, of course they are.
But then we will just have to kill and kill and kill.
We will have to just bomb them and bomb them and bomb them and bomb them
to just keep them weak and keep them from being able to resist.
That's it.
That's what that comes from.
Ariel Sharon's advisor,
Arnon Soffer by Ruthie Bloom.
I'm sorry I said her name wrong.
I thought it was Sarah something.
It's Ruthie Bloom.
and that's what he explains.
We will just have to kill and kill and kill.
Now, another important Ariel Sharon advisor was a guy named Davy Weiss Glass,
and he explained to Haaretz that the whole point of the disengagement from Gaza
is to put the peace process in formaldehyde.
Again, dividing and conquering the Palestinians.
We leave Hamas, at least ascendant at that time, in Gaza.
Then he says, we can say to the American Congress,
we have no partner for peace.
And he says, we have from the Congress a no one to talk to certificate
that says we have no one to talk to.
And it says, we'll have no one to talk to until Gaza is Norway.
See you then.
Shalom. Okay? So for Ben Shapiro and his minor birds and mindless parroting puppets out there who
believe him when he lies that this was the gifting to the Palestinians of independence. What it was
was it was a Lakud scheme to divide and conquer and destroy the Palestinian people so that one
day the Israelis could take the last of their property from them. That's what it was. And then when
they put them under siege, you know what they said, Lex? They said, the people, the people,
of the Gaza strip are hungry, but not starving. And I wonder if that rings a bell in your mind
where you've heard that before. That's what Walter Durante wrote in the New York Times about
the Holodomor, in the same article where he said, you have to break a few eggs to make an omelette.
They're hungry, but not starving, said Walter Durante and Ariel Sharon's men.
as they inflicted a holodomor on the people of the Gaza Strip.
And that's, again, you know, for the cognitive dissonance,
they're like, well, why are we doing this then?
Again, it's the lobby, the compromise of the American political system.
But if your dissonance is telling you it can't be that bad,
your dissonance is wrong.
Yes, it can too.
That's exactly how they are.
And because Americans, we're Westerners.
We have a different tradition.
I mean, we were all, even in government school, they teach us, that every man is born equal, not in every way, but in terms of our rights that we possess to own our own life and control our own destiny.
That's what we believe.
You know what?
Meyer Kahane, the rabbi that was Al-Qaeda's first target in New York City in 1990 in the United States, he gave an interview to Mike Wallace in the late 1970s, where he complains that America.
Jews believe in all this Thomas Jefferson crap. Well, we don't. It's us versus our enemies.
We will destroy them. Now, that was considered fascism by the Israeli Supreme Court then.
That is the Lakud Party doctrine now. Every Arab, Palestinian, Muslim, and Christian must be
killed and or forcibly removed from the last of the 22 percent of measly.
thinking what's left of historic Palestine there.
I think what's happening in Gaza is absolutely horrific.
And I think the U.S. government should not be supporting that in any way.
So how can we end it?
So on October 7, let's rewind from October 7th.
Why do we do the Abraham Accords under Trump's first term?
We did the Abraham Accords because Saudi Arabia especially and the other Sunni Arab kingdoms
had always promised that they would refuse to officially normalize relations with Israel
until the Palestinians got a deal, either an independent state of their own or equal rights
and citizenship in a single state.
Now, what Jared Kushner figured out was, well, we can just print money, so what's your price?
And so what he did was he bought F-16s for Bahrain, F-35s for UAE,
debt forgiveness for Sudan, and they made a deal with Morocco,
that they would recognize Morocco's illegal invasion and seizure of the northern half of the nation of Western Sahara.
And then that would be essentially these countries' bribes to normalize relations with Israel,
and they were working on Saudi Arabia.
Now, on September the 22nd, 2003, Benjamin Netanyahu gave a speech before the UN General Assembly.
He know like he likes to do with his visual aids.
This time he held up a map of the Middle East, the big red arrow across from Israel to the Sunni Arab states of the Gulf.
And he said, this is the new Middle East.
Well, that was an inside joke.
He was mocking Shimon Perez, because Shimon Perez said, we got to deal with Arafat and the PLO, Fatah,
and deal with a pseudo-Palestinian state at least,
then we can make peace with the Sunni Arab states and have a new Middle East.
So Netanyahu is up there crowing that under the Netanyahu doctrine,
he got the new Middle East without giving in to the Palestinians in any way.
Now, of course, he frames it like, oh, the Palestinians have been holding peace hostage
when what he's really saying to them is,
y'all are screwed now, boy, ain't nobody coming for you.
I got you.
You never get in a state of your own, an independence, and you're never get in citizenship.
You're going to live in those concentration camps of yours until you're dead and we're done taking them from you.
I win, you lose. That was his speech of September 22nd, 2003.
Two weeks later, Hamas broke out of their pen and launched the October 7th attack.
And they did kill probably a thousand people as the Israelis killed at least dozens, perhaps more than 100 of their own.
people by invoking the Hannibal
directive. Now, you might remember
the story of an Israeli
soldier named, I think
it's Eisencott, who
had been captured by Hamas
and taken into the Gaza Strip back years
ago. And the Israelis
ended up having to negotiate, like, and release
a thousand Palestinian
captives, not prisoners,
because the Israelis hold them without trial,
without any process whatsoever. They just kidnapped them and hold them.
So they're hostages to these Palestinians.
But they had to release a thousand
Palestinian hostages to get their one Israeli hostage back. And they said, never again, are we going
to do that? So they invented a new doctrine, which says, if one of their soldiers or two of their
soldiers getting successfully captured by Hamas and taken back into the strip, that they'll kill
their own soldiers as well as the captors in order to prevent that from happening. They called that
the Hannibal Directive. Well, on October the 7th, and this is all from, first of all, very astute
American observers like Max Blumenthal,
Abu Al-Ah, sorry, Ali Abu Nima, and
Brad Pierce at the Wayward Rabbler.
They all immediately noticed this, but then it was
double extra triple super verified by the Israeli press.
Haaretz, Wynet, the Jerusalem Post,
that's all you need to show that they introduced what they
called, and I think they probably made this up on the fly.
Mass Hannibal, which means not just kill a soldier, but even if it's a little old lady who's been kidnapped and is in the back of a car on the way, any car on their way back to the Gaza Strip. They bombed.
They also used a tank to hit and kill a house full of at least nine civilians in one case in one of the kibbutzis.
Now, I'm not playing down what Hamas did there. I am pointing out what Israel did.
This is a big part of why they had to embellish what Hamas did.
Because look at these houses are blown up.
What happened here?
Hamas only had grenades.
This is much more destruction than that.
All the cars at the rave that were destroyed, they were destroyed by helicopter fire, not by Hamas.
How could Hamas have destroyed all those cars?
They did not have the ability to do that.
And now, I'm not saying who all was in those cars when they were blasted at the rave and what all, every little thing that happened there.
But it's clear that Israel wait.
a bunch of the destruction on their own people,
and deliberately so.
And there's video testimony of this girl talking about.
They're shooting in a house,
and her officer's telling her to keep shooting
and all of these things.
I think she's even saying she defied one of these orders
at one point, and so she didn't want to keep doing it
because it didn't seem like it made sense to her
and that kind of thing.
And so this is part of why they embellished what Hamas did,
but of course, then they also wanted to do
the Belgian babies on bayonets.
That's from the First World War,
all the lurid stories of the...
the Huns, atrocities against the Belgians and why we have to go and stop them. And again,
Saddam Hussein and the Kuwaiti babies thrown out of their incubators, these are the kinds of
atrocities that jerk tears. These are the kinds of atrocities that get people to change their
mind and support a thing that they otherwise would not. And when, in fact, Hamas did kill unarmed
women and children, and particularly, I don't know how many children, but at least a few, and
many, many unarmed civilians, many, many women.
And so their atrocities were already scarlet.
They already were absolutely guilty of war crimes
and what they had done that day.
And in fact, it was so bad that people think,
I don't know, man, I'm not taking a stance on this.
But I tend to doubt it, I guess, would be my stance.
And I have simpler explanations.
But there are people who think that Netanyahu let the attack happen
because he wanted that kind of horror show to be inflicted on his own people so that he could get away with doing what he's doing now. Because why? Because what Hamas did is what's letting him get away with what he's doing now. He gave them this excuse, just like bin Laden gave George Bush one. Only Israel isn't going to be wrecked here. This is not working out for Hamas the way they hope. And I think their primary objective really was to take captive so they'd have them to trade for their own captives back, for their own hostages to get back. But they went wait.
too far. They killed way too many innocent people and then gave the Israelis the writ. Now, as far as
the attack being successful, it's worth pointing out, we call it October 7th because it was over
by suppertime. Okay? It wasn't the second week of October. It wasn't the autumn of 23. It was one
day that these captives were able to break out of their concentration camp and commit some
atrocities, right? This is not the nation next door. Again, Contra Ben Shapiro's explicit lies that
when he says, well, what would we do if Mexico was shooting rockets across the Rio Grande into Texas?
Well, Mexico is the name of the national government in Mexico City and its armed military force.
If they were firing rockets across the border into Texas, well, we would have some
negotiation to do, wouldn't we? Okay? Or worse. What we're talking about here is not Mexico.
We're talking about an Indian reservation. We're talking about people who were already
conquered and captured in 1967, who've been living under the totalitarian control of this foreign
occupying army ever since then. We're talking about the closer equivalent would be Nelson Rockefeller
sending the National Guard to put down the riot in Attica prison and killing all the guards
along with the prisoners. This would be imagine maybe in an earlier time, an Indian reservation,
where they break out and they commit some atrocities, scalp some Anglo heads, and then what do we do?
we go in there and bomb and kill 100,000 of them?
Or if, again, because this is Israeli territory, okay,
DeJure, no, de facto, absolutely.
This is a ghetto.
So how about if the Trump government decided to build a wall around South Chicago
and say, we can't tolerate the violence of the blacks of South Chicago anymore?
Everybody knows that's one of the highest crime rates in the country.
We're just going to bomb them.
Because occasionally they break out of the black part of town
and hurt other people, too.
So we're going to enclose their ghetto
and giant concrete and razor wire walls
and then we're going to bomb them all to death.
That's what Israel is doing.
Fish in a barrel.
A canned hunt.
You understand?
Like a father abusing his son.
A helpless captive.
Right?
A guard beating an inmate.
Jeffrey Goldberg
torturing some poor Palestinian in his cell.
not a sovereign nation defending itself from attack from another sovereign nation of any kind.
And Americans don't understand this because they're called Palestinians.
And so aren't they from a country called Palestine?
Everybody's got a country, right?
But no, Israel's on top of Palestine.
So no, they don't have a Palestine.
They don't have a country.
They don't have a government.
If Fatah, the PA on the West Bank, if they are trustees in an Israeli open-air prison,
then Hamas is just the strongest gang.
They're the Crips of the Bloods or the Latin Kings or the Aryan nations
have taken over the prison in the Gaza Strip.
They're not the duly elected government of the people of Palestine.
When George Shabee Bush forced those people to hold that election in 2005,
the majority of the population of Gaza were children,
were minors at least under 18, okay?
Could not vote. The majority of them were minors.
That was in 2005.
the last time they got a chance to vote.
Guess what?
The majority of them are minor still to this day.
They have popular sovereignty behind Hamas and bear collective responsibility for Hamas' crimes.
When, as we mentioned a previous era, it was Israel that helped to install Hamas in power in the Gaza Strip in the first place, help their rise.
Their botched coup, well, they did the disengagement to empower them again.
one to talk to certificate, bragging about it. Then they did the botched coup, which maybe was
deliberately botched or I don't know exactly what happened there, but that ended up with Hamas in
charge of the entire Gaza Strip. And then we have, as we know, and people can, you might want to
pull this up if you want to and show them. It's by me and one of my guys, Connor Freeman is his
name. And the article is called Netanyahu's support for Hamas backfired. Yeah, right there.
Second one. I'll tell you a funny story. I did the Pierce Morgan show,
other day. I debated Wesley Clark on Ukraine again. But while I was on hold, Pierce Morgan was
whooping the Israeli ambassador. And I'm not sure if it was the ambassador to Britain or the ambassador
to the United States. But he was going after him so hard. And at one point, it was so funny,
you could see his face twist a little bit because the guy realized what he said after he said it,
that like, oops, this undermines the narrative a little bit. But the ambassador railed to Pierce
Morgan. Nobody elected Hamas. They're not the literature.
legitimate power there, which is, yeah, that's right. He's railing against Hamas, right? But
what's he just did? What do you just do? He just told the truth and acquitted the Palestinian
people of responsibility for Hamas. And then what a Pierce Morgan do, heroically told the truth
that you know who did support Hamas? Benjamin Netanyahu and the Lakud. Oh, check that out.
You know who you get to kill? Anybody who's near somebody who years ago, supposed to
supposedly may have voted for Hamas
to win a plurality.
Well, you know who really
voted for Hamas, Benjamin Netanyahu
did? So who gets
the death penalty now?
They're willing to kill
20,000 children
or more so far
burying little babies. Imagine a little five-year-old baby
buried alive and rubble and has to
starve to death for five days in there.
That's what Benjamin Netanyahu
the actual
owner, controller,
creator of Hamas, foister of Hamas onto the hapless, helpless Palestinian people.
They supposedly have popular sovereignty and chose Hamas. Netanyahu chose Hamas for them.
And he said over and over, we control the height of the flame. Anyone who wants to thwart the
establishment of a Palestinian state must support.
Hamas in
Gaza so that we can
keep the Palestinians divided
and so that we can continue to
tell American, again, we're
talking about Netanyahu here, so American
idiots, absurd
fools, that we
have no partner for peace
because we
keep the terrorists in charge
in Gaza. And you know what's funny about
this? Netanyahu has been
quoted repeatedly
saying, we control the height of the flame
three different people said he said that to a group of Lekud ministers.
And then he denied it, and his friends denied it, and said he never said that.
Even though we got all his buddies here bragging about how smart he is for doing it that way, et cetera.
But anyway, there's a new documentary called The BB Files.
All the footage is Shin Bet, National Police Interrogation Videos of Benjamin Netanyahu
and his disgusting wife, Sarah, and all of their friends.
and including Sheldon Adelson and Miriam Adelson, who gave Donald Trump $600 million to do whatever Israel says.
And they're all interrogated in there because Sarah Netanyahu is a beast who demands that all of their friends give her jewelry and champagne and cars and whatever, I don't know, cars, all kinds of fancy things.
And this is illegal in Israel. This is absolutely against the letter of the law.
are not allowed to accept these gifts from wealthy people in this way.
They're totally compromised.
He is a guilty felon 100%.
There's probably a huge part of why he's keeping the war going as long as he can
because they won't put him in prison as long as he's keeping the war going.
But here's my point.
On Videolex, Shinbet asks Prime Minister Netanyahu, why do you support Hamas in Gaza?
Why are you leaning on Qatar to give them billions of dollars?
And Netanyahu says, this is how we keep the Palestinians divided.
But we control the height of the flame.
On video to the cops.
Okay?
So that means also that everyone who said that that quote was a lie
is either a liar or a damned fool.
Okay, I just had to make that point,
that's important. That this is absolutely true, okay? They say the Palestinians are responsible for
Hamas. No, Benjamin Netanyahu is responsible for Hamas. Benjamin Netanyahu owns the entire chess
board. Benjamin Netanyahu is backed by the unlimited budget and military power of the global
superpower in all of his myriad civilian and military intelligence services. Hamas and the Palestinians
are pawns on his board.
That's the fact.
And if it's okay to kill Palestinians,
because they are nearby Hamas,
then it's okay to kill Benjamin Netanyahu
because he is literally, not figuratively,
their greatest ally.
And in a direct sense,
not like, oh, America is Osama bin Laden's indispensable ally.
I mean, literally, he sent Mossad to Qatar
to demand that they give more money to Hamas.
over and over and over again, and his own men ratted him out for it. Okay? That's treason. He's the one
who should hang from the end of a rope, not the people of the Gaza Strip, who have been killed,
probably 100,000 of them have been killed now, including torn to shreds, including they
bomb their tents, they bury them alive, and they, quite literally, heard them in to a narrow yard,
after starving them almost to death
and bring them in to a narrow area
then they open the gate all at once
they don't bring them in through some kind of checkpoint
they make them, they just open the gate
and so that the people rush
in a mad mob rush to grab whatever food they can
and then these people are literally starving
so the spirit of friendship and cooperation falls aside
and now I will stab you so that I can feed my kid today dude
And so people, it's the hunger games out there or worse, whatever analogy that you have to.
Soviet communism is the equivalent.
It's the moral equivalent of Soviet communism is what it is, Lex.
It's the worst thing in the world.
It's the most barbarian regime in the world.
Far worse than the chikoms.
And they have to lie their ass off to try to pretend that Beijing treats the Uyghurs this way.
Give me a break.
The Uyghurs are kings compared to what's happening to the Palestinians right.
now. And the only thing that makes Israel the second worst government in the world is the United
States of America has the power to do this, to help them do this to the Palestinians, but also
do it to the Iraqis and the Syrians and the Yemenis and whoever else Israel says as well.
But this is pure barbarianism. And I strongly urge, I know that you've seen it. I strongly urge
your audience to go watch this interview of this man, Anthony Aguilera, who was a special
forces guy that's above the rangers but below delta but that's second tier special operations army
special operations forces the green berets been fighting in the terror wars all these years fought in iraq i
don't know how old the guy is if he fought in a rock war two he certainly fought in iraq war three
and in afghanistan and and had been deployed 12 times tucker said including to the stands in central
asia and vietnam i don't know who he's killing a vietnam maybe just training there i don't know
he also did an interview on breaking points with saga and crystal yeah i'm glad you
you mentioned that. So the story is that they demonized UNRWA, which was the UN Refugee Relief Agency.
Well, what refugees? Well, 80% of the population of the Gaza Strip are refugees from what we call
Israel proper. The Israeli Jews stole that land from them. That's their land. That's why they live in
Gaza. They're not from Gaza. 80% of them are not from Gaza, or they are, but their parents and
grandparents and great-grandparents were not. They were refugees there. So ever since then,
Unra has been there to provide humanitarian relief for these poor people who've been cut off from their country on the other side of the razor wire.
And so Unra was in charge of distributing the aid, but then they lied, of course, this ridiculous propaganda that Unra had been involved in the October 7th attack.
And there may have been one guy who had worked for them before, who said something or maybe even participated to some small degree, but it was a ridiculous charge against the entire organization.
And as this guy Aguilera explains, they had, I believe, I can't remember the number.
Do you remember if he said they had 40 sites around the gun?
I believe he said they had 40 sites around the strip where they were delivering aid to people.
When they closed that down, the Israelis replaced it with this new humanitarian relief foundation
or global humanitarian foundation, I think it's called GHF, right?
And they only have four stations.
and three of them are near the Egyptian border.
And only one of them is what they call in what they call the Narazim corridor,
I believe it's pronounced, that's like halfway through the strip.
The people of the north have nothing.
There's no aid coming into the people of the north at all.
They're starving to death up there.
And he says there's only these four places.
And then here's what we're talking about, Lex,
when we're talking about killing the starving people as they line up for aid.
What it is, and this has been explained in Haaretz, by the way, they have senior officials and army people talking to Haaretz about this.
This is the most important liberal daily in Israel, the Israeli New York Times, basically, has firsthand reporting from enlisted and officers, perpetrators saying that, yes, it's true, we do this, okay?
Then Aguilera tells the story the best and has some video and shows.
What it is is this, they open the food place early in the morning for the,
this riot where everybody's supposed to come and rush and grab the food.
So people come walking and they force them to walk through war zones to get to the places
where there's firing going on anyway.
Force them to walk for, I don't know how many miles this is, 12 kilometers.
So 10 miles.
It was just a hell of a walk, man.
I don't know.
Eight miles.
I'm still an incredible long walk for poor, hungry, starving people.
they get all the way there and then but from the IDF's point of view they're supposed to go this way
and then they're supposed to go that way they're supposed to go over this hill and then come around
this way and then you line up at the thing but there's no signs anywhere and there's no little
metal barricades like a Black Sabbath show or something for people to follow so how do they direct
the Palestinians foot traffic with machine guns with artillery and tanking
grounds. There's an invisible line. You'll know you cross it when I blow your head off. And when
the mob of Palestinians coming down for their food, when they can see that people on the edges of the
crowd are being shot and killed, they know that, oh, I guess that's where the line is. That's how
they're supposed to know where the invisible lines are drawn. Aguilera said, he asked him, why you just
put up a sign? This is, go this way. And they go, now that's too expensive. So instead, they
shoot at them not just with fully automatic rifles, but with artillery and with tank rounds.
They blast them to hell, man, in the name of crowd control.
And he says, they say, oh, no, we're just shooting over their heads and shooting at their feet
and shooting behind them to direct them.
Imagine directing civilian traffic that way with machine gun fire?
So what happens is they all die.
He says, they're coming down this thing.
They're shooting over the heads of these guys.
But behind them is a hillside.
where people are coming down there.
So then when the sun finishes coming up,
there's just roses, just dead bodies everywhere.
And then he says, then the Israelis go,
oh, Hamas did it.
Come on, man.
Like, yeah, you know,
would-be Hamas in Bosnia did some false flag attacks in 1995.
That's not what's happening here, okay?
These people are being slaughtered.
Starving people are being...
brought in and masquer'd, as Tucker Carlson rightly said,
men were hanged to death from the neck for this at Nuremberg,
murdering prisoners.
This is if you've seen Schindler's list.
There's a scene in there, which I don't even know if this really happened or not,
probably did, what the hell, or if this is just Spielberg,
shows one of the concentration camp guards shooting the juice for target practice.
That's what they do.
There's numerous reports coming in in just the last couple of weeks.
that there has clearly been, well, I don't know, I shouldn't say numerous. I saw there's a British
doctor saying this, and then there was someone who said that he confirmed it, although I wasn't
sure how serious he was or not. I shouldn't take that. But it seemed like a very credible report
in the first place. And in fact, the British doctor is at least claiming that he's passing on
reports for other doctors. And what are they seeing? They're seeing Palestinian children who all have the same
signature type of wound to the same body part. One day, they're all shot in the genitals, children.
The next day, they're all shot in the elbow. The next day, they're all shot in a knee or in the
heart. And what's happening here is the Israelis are shooting them for fun for target practice,
just like the Nazis and Schindler's list, killing the little girl in the red coat. That's what
they're doing. They're burying them alive. And they're starving them to death and then forcing them
into mobs and then machine gunning them, right? If this was a movie, you'd say it was too over
the top, it's too fake, it can't be true. If it was, if anybody leaned left and they heard this
about the communists, they'd say, no, it's right-wing propaganda. I'm like, no, dude, this is how they
are. This is exactly how they are. And it's exactly how they treat the Palestinians. They do not
recognize their humanity. They are N-words. They are gooks. They are goyum.
grasshoppers and that means it's okay to kill them all of them the prime minister gave a speech to
the officer corps where he said the enemy is amalek out of a three thousand-year-old bible story
where jehovah supposedly told the ancient hebrews to wipe out a tribe called the amalek and kill every last
man, woman, and child, and baby, and oxen, and wipe them off the face of the earth.
Now, Lex, nobody thinks that God has whispered to Benjamin Netanyahu and said the Palestinians are Amalek, right?
This is just a bunch of crap, even if you believe every single word of the Bible as the literal
inspired word of God from back then.
That ain't got a thing to do with this now other than a cynical, lying, thieving murderer.
invoking a God who says it's okay to kill children, that you must, that you are commanded to kill
them all. And this was his orders to the officer corps. And then I got to read Liz Wolf in Reason
magazine every morning telling me that Israel's goal is fighting Hamas. Benjamin Netanyahu said,
in May, we are destroying all of their homes. So they have no.
nowhere to go back to so that we can force them all to leave.
And I got to read Liz Wolfe in Reason magazine.
Telling me that Lacude means well and they're just trying to protect themselves from armed
terrorists when they are explicitly and deliberately slaughtering children,
shooting toddlers in the head, shooting pregnant women in the stomach,
bombing refugees' tents with 2,000-pound bombs,
it is a genocide.
They, it's not, and that doesn't just mean a giant massacre,
and it doesn't just mean ethnic cleansing.
They are attempting to destroy the Palestinian people as Palestinian people.
They have bombed all of their universities and schools,
all of their government offices that have any records of landownership or family histories.
They bombed every last.
hospital in the strip, Lex. Remember when we argued about whether or not they bombed the parking lot that one time at the start of the war, they destroyed them all. You want to talk about babies and incubators? There was a hospital in the Gaza Strip. This is an absolute guaranteed verified fact. If you want to stop and pause and look it up, we can do that. Otherwise, you know, your audience can surely find this. These Palestinian doctors were threatened and told, we are going to absolutely kill every single last one of you if you don't get out of that hospital.
right now, and they refused to leave and said, we are protecting a NICU full of premature babies in
their incubators, and we will not leave them. And the Israelis said, you have to leave or we're going
to blow the place up. But if you do leave, we promise that we will take possession of these
premature babies and protect them. And then you know what they did. They left them in their incubators
to die, all of them.
And the media went in there
and found a room full of
corpses. So under George
H.W. Bush's theory, America has
to launch a war against Israel now
and carpet bomb Tel Aviv.
Because this is proof
of Israel's intent to, quote,
systematically dismantle
Palestine.
That was the excuse for Iraq War I,
and it was a lie. This is true.
It's true.
And Lex, they like it.
it. They think it's funny. They don't give a damn. They don't give a damn to kill a premature baby.
That premature baby was going to grow up to be a Palestinian one day. Nits make lice.
Kill them all. That's the doctrine. Again, haretz, there are free fire zones. If anyone is between
here and here, you just kill them. There's no sign that says this is a free fire zone. If it's an
11-year-old boy walking with his little sister, you shoot and kill them both.
kill anything that moves, just like America and Vietnam.
This is like James Madison, Fallujah.
Worse, worse.
And in fact, as Aguilera says, he goes, man, I've been all over the terror wars.
I've never seen anything like this.
He told the BBC, he said, what's it like?
It's like Terminator 2.
Remember Terminator 2 where it's after the H-bombs have hit Los Angeles?
That's what it's like.
Right?
an absolute horror show. And man, it's America's fault. No less than the Yemeni War was the American
Saudi War. This is the American Israeli genocide. It's not a war. It's a slaughter. It is a canned
hunt against a helpless, captive, you know, a prisoner population. And just like happened on
September 11th, just like happened to that couple that were assassinated outside of the Israeli
embassy, just like what happened with the guy attacked with the makeshift lamthrower in Boulder, Colorado.
And I can't prove this yet, but you mark my words, and we'll see whether I'm right,
that the guy that attacked New Orleans on New Year's Day drove his truck down Bourbon Street,
killed 12 people, and injured another few dozen.
And then we're very lucky in the sense that when he finally crashed, he crashed into a backhoe
or a bulldozer at the end of Bourbon Street.
And there just happened to be a group of six cops.
I think it was standing right there.
So when he crashed and he got out of his truck with his gun, they blew him away.
Otherwise, he could have killed many, many more people.
Who was he?
He was an American Army veteran who had converted to Islam and signed up with the Islamic State.
And what are the chances, Lex, that on New Year's Eve, 2004, that this man is motivated to do this for any other reason than American support for Israel and the Gaza Strip?
There's a 99% chance that that was what.
he was ranting about to his parents in his video messages that he recorded on his way from
Houston to New Orleans.
And just the same as Omar Mateen complaining about Obama, killing the women and children in Syria
in the nightclub massacre of, I'm sorry, what year 2000.
I'm sorry, the Orlando Night Pulse Massacre.
This is blowback from American foreign policy.
And again, not for being a good friend to a good friend, but for being a loyal ally to a state
that doesn't give a damn about us
that celebrates when September 11th
happens to us because it means that
we will now be easier to manipulate
and put into the service of carrying out
their foreign policy goals
and spend our treasure that kill our men
that empower their enemies
requiring us to do even more
to fight for them and against them
back and forth over and over for decades.
And all we get out of it is
confiscated wealth and dead civilians.
and I'm terrified quite honestly.
I know there are a lot of people who kind of downplay this.
I am legitimately terrified of bin Ladenite terrorism.
I ain't afraid of the Shiites.
I don't think the Ayatollah wants to fight us.
And I don't think Hezbollah is going to do nothing to the United States of America without his say so.
And he ain't given it.
It's the bin Ladenites who tried to knock our towers down in 93 and who did in 103.
and who did in 2001, killing thousands of our people.
And they're still here.
They did San Bernardino.
They had a failed attack on the subway in New York.
They had a failed attack on a marathon in New York in New Jersey.
They had a successful attack in Boston at Fort Hood in Little Rock, Arkansas, Pensacola, Florida, and Corpus Christi, Texas.
These are all in our era.
Post-September 11 terrorist attacks against.
our people, because of our government serving Israel's interests primarily in the Middle East.
So there's a strong case to be made that what's happening in Gaza is going to lead to the growth of the increased number of bin Ladenites in the world.
And dead American civilians as a result of that.
So basically it makes United States less safe.
Absolutely.
And zooming up on the broader world, it makes the entire world less safe, including, you know,
Israel. That's right. It's the most cynical thing, man. You know, like, there's an interview,
you probably read this before. A lot of people are familiar with this. Zabina Bersinski was interviewed
by a French magazine in 1998, no Luel Observateur or some kind of thing. I don't speak French,
man. And they interviewed him, and they said, this is in 98 now, so this is after the Taliban have
come to power. I think it's before the embassy attack, but it's after Kobar, and it's after the
First World Trade Center bombing and the National Guard attack of 95 in Saudi.
And the reporter asks him, hey, man, so all our support for the Mujahideen in Afghanistan
in the 80s, that was your brilliant idea, this kind of helped lead to the rise of all this
terrorism.
So what do you think about that?
He says, are you kidding me?
What's a couple of stirred up Muslims?
versus the liberation of Eastern Europe on the destruction of Soviet communism.
We know what we're doing, and he says in that same interview,
that we were not necessarily, I love the way he says this,
you could apply this exactly to the Ukraine war.
We were not trying to provoke them into invading Afghanistan,
but we were knowingly increasing the probability that they would,
which is, of course, the exact same thing.
and so you know that's the attitude again terrorism is a small price to pay for being a superpower if you get to be the superpower that's how they look at us some people partying on bourbon street on new orleans like to you you might say that is a sacrifice i'm not willing to pay who could be more innocent than people partying on bourbon street what could be more american than have
fun with your friends and family on New Year's Eve. Why should they have to be crucified for
Israel's sins? It makes no sense at all for the American people to have to put up with this,
but where you would say no, enough, intolerable, they would say, well, who cares? A few expendable
civilians, they might as well be Afghans. They might as well be Palestinians, the people of New Orleans.
George Bush doesn't care about them, nor just Barack Obama, or not just Barack Obama or
or Joe Biden or Donald Trump for that matter.
The next time there's a terrorist attack,
you and I already know what's going to happen.
They're going to blame it on fundamentalist radical Islam,
which makes evil people hate good people and want to kill us.
Now we have no choice but to do whatever.
What do you want us to do next, BB?
Whatever he said is whatever we have to do next,
the next time that we have to pay the price for what Israel did the last time.
And I'm sick and I'm tired of it.
I think there's a really big, deeper human nature point
that you've spoken to over the last several hours,
which is trying to defeat terror with military force.
Over the past 30 years,
we've learned a lesson that that only creates more terror.
Yeah.
And which they don't mind again because it just gives them more to do.
And because, again, the bin Ladenites are over there, not over here.
and they like killing Serbs and Russians and Shiites, and so that's all cool.
But also with a proliferation of nuclear weapons.
I'm glad you mentioned that.
Guess what?
The L.E.T., which are the bin Ladenites of Pakistan.
There's a journalist named Steve Kahl, who wrote Ghost Wars about Afghanistan,
and he wrote Directorate S about the Pakistani ISI,
their Secret Intelligence Service, who backed the Taliban and backed the bin Ladenites.
Well, the L-E-T, Lashkar-I-Tiba, was one of their groups, and they seized, according to Steve Kahl,
they seized control of an Indian ship for a time before special operations troops were able to go in there and kill them all off.
Well, that ship had nuclear weapons on board.
Apparently, the jihadists didn't know that.
They probably would not have been able to access them or know how to use them, but still,
bin Ladenite jihadists
seized control of a ship
that had atomic bombs on it
that is not nothing
right it's just like bin Ladenites
almost toppled one tower
over into the other
let's start paying attention now
instead of later
which by the way Ramsey bin al-Shib
before he fled
he wrote letters to all the New York papers
saying he bombed the World Trade Center
as revenge for American support for Israel
and bombing Iraq from bases in Saudi,
just as his uncle, colleague Sheikh Mohammed,
would say years later after doing September 11th.
It was always about Israel, dude.
Always was.
Again, even the dual containment was always about Israel.
It's al-Shemir's guy that said we had to stay in Saudi.
So, you know, I know Dubowitz is watching this right now and saying,
see, see, he's blaming it all on the Jews,
but that's not what I'm saying.
What I'm saying is that Israel, which calls itself the Jewish state
and happens to be run by Jewish men
and that's what their thing is
that they have interests that are very different from ours
and that their lobbyists and their, as Justin would call it,
their Amen Corner in the United States
has their interests at heart
and those interests are opposite ours.
As Justin, I know would hasten to point out
that the majority of American Jews opposed Iraq War II
and you might say, well, yeah, but that's because they're liberal Democrats.
Okay, fine.
Well, they're not Ariel Sharon's men, are they?
more American Jews per capita opposed to Iraq War II than any other ethnic or religious group as they divided it up in the polls at that time, right?
So it's clearly not the lie that Mark Dubowitz would try to put in my mouth in order to discredit what I'm saying.
But what I am saying is some pretty ugly true things about the role of the Israel lobby in the United States.
And again, just as Mearsheimer says, they have to.
work this hard, they have to spend this much money, and they have to go around calling everybody
a Nazi, because that's what it takes to get Israel to keep doing what Israel wants.
The U.S. has different interests that we would pursue otherwise, and so it takes this extraordinary
effort to bend our empire to their will. And including, yes, even supporting the empire itself,
because as Irving Crystal and Norman Podhoritz,
probably the two most important neoconservative leaders of that generation,
both said in the 1970s that this is their words.
I'm not saying this, and I'm not saying people took their advice.
I'm saying this is what these two neocon nuts said was,
I'm virtually certain this is the Podhoritz quote,
is Jews don't like large defense budgets,
but we need to support them.
because we have to make sure that under whatever excuse, we keep America engaged in the world
so that it is available to help Israel. And this is a big part of why they're China Hawks,
why they're Russia Hawks, why they're anything Hawks, why they're Venezuela Hawks. Because to them,
this is what Brett Stevens said in the New York Times, the former editor of the Jerusalem Post,
who's now a regular writer at the New York Times. He said the very same thing about keeping
making America available to protect Israel.
And then he says in the same article,
but it's totally an anti-Semitic canard
that anybody who supports Israel
and supports these wars does so at America's expense
or in any way contrary to America's interests,
but then he's the one who's saying,
that's what we have to do,
has bend America to Israel's interests.
It couldn't be anything more anti-American that.
And I would encourage people to read
George Washington's farewell address.
I mean, the guy was a brilliant genius,
and he wrote the thing himself, and it's probably four or five thousand words on foreign policy,
where he says that we should always eschew entangling alliances with any portion of the foreign world
because we'll form unnatural passionate attachments to the interests of these other nations,
and then that will divide the people here.
It'll lead to all kinds of acrimony and accusations,
and eventually you'll have the partisans of foreign nations in charge,
and they will denounce as unpatriotic the Americans who don't want to share their allegiance with another power.
And all of these things, you couldn't have a 21st century author write it any more eloquently or convincingly than George Washington himself in his farewell.
What a truly great man, George Washington was.
Yeah, it was, but yeah.
Well, yes, yes, Jefferson, too, all of them, yeah.
But I'm grateful for this country and these men that founded the country on these set of principles that revolutionized human history.
Absolutely right.
And we have to make sure we carry the flag of those ideas forward.
I absolutely think that.
And this is why I'm a libertarian.
To me, libertarianism is real American distilled.
To me, the Declaration of Independence, that is the North Star.
Everybody's born free, and I don't even have to prove it to you because I'm armed.
I'm telling you, dude, I'm not giving up.
You understand?
Yeah.
That's what it says.
Me too.
Self-evident to me.
Yeah.
I don't have an argument.
I'm just saying.
And that's the American creed.
And that's what I believe in.
I believe that, especially all of liberalism and conservatism and socialism are all deviations
from the true American way, which is liberty and property.
And the individual's right to determine their own destiny.
That is what it's all about.
And if we lived that, I'm going to imagine being afraid Germany and Japan are going to rise back up again.
This whole time, we never needed to do any of this.
All we had to do was be free.
We could have done, as Gene Kirkpatrick said, abandoned the entire empire, been a normal country in a normal time.
This whole time stayed out of all the world's conflicts, perfected our republic to the best of our ability, made political and individual liberty, our highest political goal,
and shown the world how it's done. Y'all's bills are rights ain't good enough, not like ours is.
Y'all's independent judiciaries aren't independent enough, not like ours.
Y'all's rule of law is too subject to the will of men. You need to really encode this thing and
follow it like in the deal, right? We could have, I one time humiliated Neil Ferguson's wife,
Hursa Ali, if you know her, she's the atheist ex-Muslim little pet.
mascot of the war party there, that they trapes around and have her demonized Muslims and
whatever. And I humiliated her in a debate in front of a bunch of people at a freedom fest in
Las Vegas. And it was funny because at the end of the debate, the host of the debate said to me
that, wow, you made her case better than she did, and then you destroyed it. And my case that I was
making was about that there are real problems in the Muslim world. Like, for example,
The worst thing probably is the female genital mutilation, female circumcision, they call it, in Eastern Africa and in Kurdistan is where that seems to be the worst places where those traditions are still continued to this day.
And then you have, of course, the brutality and the corruption of the dictatorships of North Africa and of the Gulf.
You have just the absolute widespread accepted custom of child abuse among the posh tunes of Afghanistan and Pakistan, especially Afghanistan. I don't know as much about in Pakistan.
You have, of course, the absolute tyranny over women in almost all of these countries where they're made to wear the hijab or the veil or even a burqa, whether they want to or not, and these kinds of things.
Whatever. We could go on and on here, Lex, about the imperfections of these countries.
Guess what? You know, it's the worst thing about Somalia and Libya, Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, and Pakistan?
America is the worst thing about all those countries, the violence that our country has brought to them, the absolute destruction, the wholesale wanton and cruel violence against populations that never did anything to us.
Not one of these groups had the slightest thing to do with September 11th,
unless you want to say that Omar should have just slit bin Laden's throat in 99.
I guess I'd agree with you about that.
But, you know, the Axis of Evil, Iran, Iraq, and Syria,
none of them had anything to do with September 11th.
There wasn't a single Iraqi Syrian or Iranian on those planes or behind any of that at all.
Obviously, the only reason they put North Korea in the Axe of Evil is because if they put Syria and you know,
wait a minute. This speech was written in Tel Aviv, dude. What does this have to do with Osama bin Laden who killed our guys who Bush has already let get away? Oh, you want to do something? Let's end with this for this part of our section before we move on to the Cold War to show just how much our government cares about the American people's interests here. See if you can find George Bush from March 2002. And the quote would be, I'm truly not concerned.
about him, bin Laden.
During White House news conference on March 13, 2002,
President George W. Bush stated concerning Osama bin Laden
that he was not truly concerned about him.
That's a quote.
This statement generated controversy, particularly
when Senator John Kerry brought it up
during a presidential debate in 2004, according to this time.
Well, and screw John Kerry.
They're saying, got nothing to do with sticking up for him.
And, you know, in my book,
I quote the entire statement here
because I would not want anyone
to mistakenly believe that I quoted
any of this out of context.
It's one of those things we're like, nope, let's
go ahead and see everything
that he has to say. And to
our benefit, George W. Bush is
only so smart and only so good at
getting away with this.
He would like,
he clearly has had conversations
with his staff about how we're
worked, we have to change the subject, really,
from Osama to Saddam.
and it's a little clumsy and a little difficult to do,
but we're going to have to kind of figure out how to do that.
And so this is W. Bush sort of taking a stab at it,
except that he's just not up to the task, right?
So he can only be as smooth as he is in trying to make these statements.
And I would argue it does not work out too well for him.
But it makes it, I think, very clear to us,
just frankly like how much contempt they have for us you know george w bush it really meant a lot to
people lex when he climbed up on that fire truck and he said i hear you and we all hear you and the
rest of the world will hear you soon people really were like man we need a leader and we got one can
imagine bill clinton being even pretend macho enough to act like that when america needed a man
There was W. Bush, right?
And people believed so hard in him after that.
And then he ruthlessly exploited their goodwill and their faith in him
in order to manipulate them and lie to them,
to use their sons to go to a war for his own reasons
that he knew had nothing to do with protecting us from terrorism.
In fact, again, W. Bush is so bad at this.
he told Katie Couric on CBS News
one of the hardest parts of my job
is connecting Iraq to the war on terrorism
because he, right, that's all he can do.
He sputtered, oops, was I supposed to say it like that?
I guess probably not, right?
Because what's he saying?
He knows it is the most difficult part of his job
is trying to figure out how to get people to believe
that this aggressive war has anything to do
with defending ourselves from that other thing that happened that one.
time, you know, when he clearly
was just obfuscating
and
exclusive to have you.
Mr. President, in your speeches now, you rarely
talk or mention Osama bin Laden.
Wait, wait. Hit pause for a quick.
Forgive me for stipulating.
This is six months after the
September 11th attack.
Okay, sorry, go ahead.
Also, can you tell the American people
have any more information if you know
if he is dead or alive?
Mm-hmm.
Find a hard here.
Deep in your heart, don't you truly believe that
until you find out if he is better alive, you won't really eliminate the threat of the...
With deep in my heart, I know the man's on the run if he's alive at all.
And who knows if he's hiding in some cave or not?
We hadn't heard from him in a long time.
And the idea of focusing on one person really indicates to me people don't understand the scope of the mission.
Terror is bigger than one person.
And he's just, he's a person who's now been marginalized.
His network is, his host government has been destroyed.
He's the ultimate parasite who found weakness, exploited it.
And met his match.
He is, you know, as I mentioned in my speech,
I do mention the fact that this is a fellow who is willing to commit youngsters to their death,
and he himself tries to hide if, in fact, he's hiding at all.
So I don't know where he is.
Nor, you know, I just don't spend that much time on him.
I'll be honest with you.
I'm more worried about making sure that our soldiers are well-supplied,
that the strategy is clear, that the coalition is strong,
that when we find enemy bunched up like we did in Shari-Code Mountains,
that the military has all the support that needs to...
go in and do the job which they did. And there will be other battles in Afghanistan.
There's going to be other struggles like Sherry Code, and I'm just as confident about the
outcome of those future battles as I was about Sherry Coat, where our soldiers are performing
brilliantly. We're tough, we're strong, they're well-equipped. We have a good strategy. We are
showing the world. We know how to fight a guerrilla war with conventional means.
I don't you think the threat that the modern pose won't truly be eliminated until he has found either dead or alive?
Well, as I say, we hadn't heard much from him.
And I wouldn't necessarily say he's at the center of any command structure.
And, you know, again, I don't know where he is.
I repeat what I said.
I truly am not that concerned about him.
I know he is on the run.
I was concerned about him when he had taken over a country.
Yeah, and then, of course, we know, and we've talked about the events that followed.
Yeah, I've got to say again, I guess just to finish this segment up, to reiterate,
I think our highest priority, really, and in fact, as much as I like seeing Tulsi Gabbard
persecute the Russiagate felons who framed President Trump for treason
and deserved to be banished with their families from North America forever,
Um, I really wish that Tulsi Gabbard actually only had one priority in the entire world, which is protecting us from bin Ladenite terrorism.
I'm serious about that. These guys are coming back here. And now it's true, I should stipulate again, Israel loves al-Qaeda and ISIS.
As long as they're killing Shiites, they've got a pretty good relationship with al-Qaeda in Syria now.
Last December, Abu Muhammad al-Jolani, the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq and Syria broke out of his pen and sacked Damascus.
with the help of Turkey and Israel.
Benjamin Netanyahu went to the border, gave a press conference,
and took credit for it himself, okay?
And Ben Shapiro got on there and said,
yeah, it's Al-Qaeda taken over,
but that's good because at least they're pushing the Shiites out.
This is somehow the leader of American conservatism.
You tell me how that worked.
But yeah, anyway, so right now, overall,
Israel has a very close relationship with al-Qaeda.
But then again, so did Bill Clinton,
and they still attacked us, right?
Just because we're supporting them here doesn't mean they won't attack us there.
And we're still motivating them to come at the United States.
And especially when you're talking like lone wolf cooks where it can be just one jerk with a rifle can do a hell of a lot of damage,
whether anybody on the internet even recruited him to do it or not.
And especially with real ability to recruit there.
And again, just like always, man, just like with the FBI entrapments, there's almost 300.
more than 300 FBI entrapments on terrorism charges.
Trevor Aronson is the greatest journalist on that question.
He wrote a book called The Terror Factory about the FBI.
And every time they entrap some idiot into a bin Ladenite plot, what do they tell him?
Don't you hate freedom?
No.
They tell him, isn't it impossible to tolerate the violence that George Bush slash Barack Obama
slash Donald Trump slash Joe Biden are bringing to the people of the Middle East?
And don't you want to do something about it?
Here's $10,000.
Say you love Osama into the microphone kid, and he goes, yeah, I'm really angry about American foreign policy.
I love Osama. Give me $20,000. And off to the penitentiary, he goes.
And that's how they get them every time they cite American foreign policy.
Do you think that there's a six-figure salary paid FBI informant in this country anywhere that's going to try to recruit a terrorist by citing freedom?
You know what's really bad about Americans is they let three or four million Muslims live here and go to what?
whatever mosque they want and don't bother them at all.
And it's fine.
Ooh, that enrages us.
Oh, we hate that America for all their freedom of religion where a tiny Muslim
minority is able to practice in peace and security.
That ain't it.
And that's not how an FBI informant recruits dupe into a plot.
They cite American foreign policy 100% of the time.
So the FBI knows.
Same thing that I know.
Same thing that the FBI testified to the 9-11.
Commission. I think they identify with the Palestinian issue. And I think that's why they're taking
revenge against the United States of America. And so what do we get from Israel on all this?
Like maybe we need to invite Dubowitz back in here so he can tell us what is one thing that Israel has
ever done for us? They helped Obama back al-Qaeda in Syria. But that was Obama helping them back
Al-Qaeda in Syria. They helped Ronald Reagan sell missiles to the Ayatollah.
when he was back in Saddam at the very same time.
I guess we owe him big for that.
Otherwise, they steal our secrets and sell them to the Soviets or to the Chinese,
including like the Chinese supersonic sea skimming missiles.
They got those from American designs pilfered by the Israelis.
Jeff Stein from Spy Talk when he's not being an insane Russiagate lunatic.
Poor Jeff, I used to respect him, but Jeff Stein reported numerous times
that the FBI and CIA do a report. Actually, they made them stop doing this report because every year they said that after Russia and China, Israel is the worst country that spies on the United States of America and is the greatest security threat for the counterintelligence agents in the United States trying to hold them at bay.
Russia and China and Israel are the countries that spy on us the most, again, including Bill Clinton and they tried to blackmail him with their information.
about Bill Clinton, cheating on his wife.
They're just a security threat to the United States of America.
I'd defy anybody to make a coherent argument that's not based on just pure lies and sophistry.
Quick bathroom break once more.
And then let's do that Cold War, man.
I'm having fun.
So like we talked about Provoked, your book on Cold War 2.0.
Mm-hmm.
how Washington started the new Cold War with Russia
and the catastrophe in Ukraine.
So can you lay out the history and the mechanism
of how this went down?
Yes.
The book is divided by presidents.
Those are the chapters.
And then I go through, I start with H.W. Bush.
We have a few flashbacks to the fall of the Soviet,
or earlier days of the Cold War in the Reagan years.
But basically, we start with the end of the last Cold War.
And the overthrow of the Soviet Union by the Russian government, led by Boris Yeltsin at that time at the end of 1991, red flag came down on Christmas Day, 1991.
Never forget it.
And people can watch that on YouTube.
There's a great Ted Koppel special about it.
ABC News, really good thing.
And so that was the end of Soviet communism.
And then the question was, well, now what?
and the answer was America's got to stay.
If America leaves, and by the way, the Soviets, I think,
and Jeffrey Sachs said this the other day on Pierce Morgan, I think.
No, no, no.
Yeah, I think that's right.
But the Soviets actually agreed with that,
that as James Baker put it in his discussions with Gorbachev,
he's like, hey, would you prefer an independent,
potentially nuclear-armed Germany
with its own foreign policy?
Or wouldn't you prefer that we stay in Germany?
And the Soviets said,
actually, we like you guys better than the Germans.
So yes, we would even agree with that.
Now, the purpose of NATO in the first place,
according to his first general secretary, Lord Ismay, the Brit,
was to keep the Soviets out,
sorry, the Americans in, the Germans down, and the Soviets out.
So you're going to replace the Soviets with the Russians, right?
But then, so the idea is we're not leaving.
Again, this is the era of the defense planning guidance.
America will dominate the planet.
You can call it empire.
You can call it dominance.
You can call it preeminence or primacy.
Zabina Brizenski, like to call it.
Crystal and Kagan called it benevolent global hegemony.
This is the unipolar moment of Charles Crouthammer.
And in fact, in his rejoinder to Jean-Curt Patrick,
he said, we should stop at nothing short of global domination.
And so this was the idea.
And in the defense planning guidance,
just as in the famous study by the project for New American Century,
Bill Crystal and Robert Kagan's group,
that was called Rebuilding America's defenses,
that came out in 1998.
And by the way, you can find,
I'm pretty sure you can find both
at Scotthorton.org slash fair use.
The defense planning guidance for 1994,
again written in 1992,
and there are two different versions of it.
They made them rewrite it,
but it's essentially the same thing.
And then the project for New American centuries
rebuilding America's defenses.
And these are basic neocon doctrine
for the end of the 20th century.
and where they say, we have to stay in the Middle East to contain Saddam Hussein first and foremost,
freed Zacharias said in the 90s, Saddam Hussein is our lynch pit in the Middle East.
If he did not exist, we would have to invent him, get it as an enemy to have, so we have an excuse to stay.
So we have to expand in the Middle East, and this is the whole story, as we've told so far here,
but then also we have to expand NATO.
That's the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, America's military alliance with Britain, France, and the other Western democracies, including Western Germany and now Germany and the rest, as we've incorporated more and more in Eastern Europe as well, our military alliance, we have to expand it into Eastern Europe.
And there's a huge question at the time about, like, the obvious thing was, after our great, peaceful victory here, I mean, for people who are too young for this and don't understand,
something like if you were to ever believe in magic or God or miracles or something like that
kind of a thing, the Soviet Union essentially just fell away in peaceful revolutions and simple
withdrawals in almost every case. Now, the dictator in Romania and his wife were put up against
the wall a machine gun to death. Civil war broke out in Tajikistan, I think, and there was
fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and it was not perfect.
But, man, on the sliding scale of grading things on a curflex, it was perfect, man.
It was, you could not have had magic wishes come true in a way to make the Soviet Union just dissolve away the way they did.
That kind of peaceful victory was the kind of thing where I was like,
how best in deep senses of that term to take advantage of this.
we really have a huge responsibility for how we act now.
And so one of the things that occurred to them immediately was,
as so many of them put it,
them being the foreign policy establishment and including the administration,
Bush, Sr. and Bill Clinton, too.
We don't want to move the dividing lines in Europe further east.
We want to erase them completely.
We want a Europe that's whole and free,
does that or does that
not include the Russians
but at first the message was
yes it does
and George Bush Sr. said
we want to have
a single zone of peace
from Vancouver to Vladivostok
meaning the entire northern
hemisphere. Now this is why I was
such a New World Order kook in the 1990s
is because there were enough
threads of things like this
where part, one side of the argument was
essentially that, yes, we should bring Russia into NATO too.
Now, what's that?
To me, in my mind, that fit in with Giedreira Griffin's, John Bercher, Grand Design,
conspiracy, where take the two enemies, move them together,
and they're going to form basically like a single white world army of the north
to then lord it against Islamic South Asia and or China.
But it would essentially be the single one-world army of the one-world government
under the United Nations in this new alliance between the United States and Russia.
But that was not true at all. That was not right. And the woolly-headed one-worlders like
Strobe Talbot, that's his own word for himself, that idea that we're going to really
befriend Russia and bring them in from the cold all the way with us was never really on the
table for discussion. It was dismissed essentially immediately. And so, like, in
in 1997 when Bill Clinton
is throwing him scraps and giving them the
NATO Russia Council, I'm going
Oh my God, look, they're doing it. They're building
the NATO Russia Council when in fact
he's giving him the stiff arm and treating him like
crap. But I was a kid and I didn't
have the internet back then and it was different times.
But so
in fact, in a way, chapter
one and two of that book are me
grappling with
what was really going on at that time
when I thought it was something else back then.
I really thought that they were trying to
build this world federalism with Russia and then come to find out that this is Dick Cheney's
world, not Al Gore's. If that's, does that make sense? Right? That like this liberal Nambi
Pambi, baby blue U.N. flag, internationalism, that's just cover for the brute force of American
hegemony over the world. And of course, you got to get the liberals on board. So you tell them a
bunch of Nambi Pambi stuff to get them on board because they like that kind of thing. Oh, look,
it's all humanitarianism. And we're passing out food or, you know, it's world federalism. It's
multilateralism and all of these like little buzzwords that make them feel good about what we're
really doing is seeking essentially a Pax Americana over the world. And so that was what was going on.
Now, obviously, if instead of erasing dividing lines, we're just moving them further east,
what does that mean? It means we stop at Russia. You got to ask yourself, how does that look from
Russia's side? And how it looks from Russia's side is an explicit.
anti-Russian military alliance encroaching steadily toward their borders and obviously
regards that as a threat and when I say obviously I mean the George H.W. Bush administration
understood that that would be a result of NATO expansion. That's why they lied and said what we're
going to do is we're going to empower what was then called the CSCE, the conference on security and
cooperation in Europe, which is now called the OSCE for organization. We're going to empower
them, and we're going to have a security partnership. And so what's going to happen is NATO is
going to become irrelevant. We're going to marginalize NATO is essentially going to become a
political organization. So even if it expands, it doesn't really matter because what we're
really talking about is something that's sort of like the EU plus the United States. But it's
going to be relegated to a political organization and it's going to be replaced by the CSCE
because who needs an alliance? There's no enemy. And we want to be partners with you. And since Russia
and all the middle states in central and eastern Europe and far eastern Europe, if you want to
call it that, right? The Baltics and Ukraine and Belarus are all members of the CSCE already since the
Helsinki Accords of 1975, well, then cool. Presto, everybody's neutrality is baked in,
and we're all in it together. But they were lying, man. They never meant to do that.
The plan always was to expand NATO, of course, to keep it a military alliance and to keep it
the center of American power in Europe, and to use the CSEE, and then later the Clinton administration's
version of the same scam was called the Partnership for Peace, where Warren Christopher, knowingly,
the Secretary of State knowingly lied directly to Gorbachev's face and tried to make him believe
that we're doing the partnership for peace instead of NATO expansion and or again reiterating that
NATO's just going to be this political thing and it's not we're not really doing much with it
anyway right now at all when they knew that wasn't true they had already decided that they
were going to expand NATO for certain the decision had been made like in stone by then and they were
shining them on and trying to get them to go along with their further
agendas as much as they could get away with, as long as they could get away with it before breaking
the bad news to him that actually we are expanding NATO after all. Because, man, they knew
that this is going to destroy Yeltsin. This is going to cause such pressure against him.
In fact, when Clinton gave his speech announcing that he had been lying and that he really does
mean to expand NATO in 1994, Yeltsin freaked out because he mistaken. He must have.
misunderstood that Bill Clinton was saying that we're going to start doing it next year in 95,
which was Clinton had promised him that they definitely would not do that.
Yeltsin had to stand for re-election in 96, and this would absolutely destroy him,
and they all knew it, Lex.
Was that me?
That means that every pro-American moderate, English-speaking liberal in Moscow would be implicated, right?
that they said we were cool and we're doing what we promised we wouldn't while they were telling
everybody else don't worry about the Americans we can trust them it's all good and this and that
right so they knew this was going to destroy yeltsin politically so they promised that no boris no no man
don't worry we're not going to do it until after you're safely reelected in 96 so they absolutely
understood all of them understood the depth of how destructive that would be to him because
of how the entire consensus inside Russia at that time in their entire, you know, political
and foreign policy establishment was absolutely opposed to NATO expansion and were, of course,
terrified by it. And this is all before Putin or W. Bush ever come to town. This is just
H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton years and dealing with Mikhail Gorbachev and then Boris Yeltsin
in all of this. And I give credit to Joshua Schifrin,
and is the great academic. I believe he's now at Cato. He was at Texas A&M University, and I'm not sure
where else he has written, but he wrote a bunch of great journal articles that I learned a hell
of a lot from and cite in my book where he shows explicitly, it's beyond argument, that they
knew that they were lying. They were planning one thing, and they were doing something else.
And he's very polite and says that they were knowingly misleading, I think. But I call them damn
liars, and it's pretty clear that they were. And so that's a huge part of it, just to get us
started off here in the 1990s. What are we going to do? Oh, and I'm sorry, yes, we're going to expand
NATO. But first, it's important to emphasize that yes, in fact, they did promise not to. And people
keep trying to debunk this, but they can't. I have re-bunked it, and they cannot at all challenge the facts
as I'm Marshall in my book. And it's overkill. This is one of the two sections where I have
probably far more than I need to demonstrate my case, because I tried to simply on, I think I
already said this earlier in an interview, I'm sorry, on the case of the promises against NATO
expansion and on the subject of the Ukrainian Nazis, I went for absolute overkill on the citation
and the development of the idea and the story and the proof and what it all means, because I feel like
Those are the two most controversial stances that I'm taking in the book as being factually true.
And I want the skeptical reader to say, oh, boy, I didn't really realize it was like that when they're done.
So to be clear on the NATO expansion, saying that there was clear indication made official that NATO promises made by the United States that NATO will not expand.
And not just promises, but it was an agreement that we promised,
not to expand the NATO alliance if you'll allow the reunification of Germany.
And that was what convinced Gorbachev to say,
okay, fine, will agree to withdraw and allow Germany to reunify under NATO.
And then the deal is, and as I show in the book,
it's not just that James Baker said this one time on February the 9th, 1990.
He said it six times on February the 9th, 19th.
And on many other, in fact, on that same day, Robert Gates, who was then the deputy secretary of, pardon me, the deputy director of the CIA, told the same thing to the director of the KGB in a meeting on that same day in Moscow. And then the German foreign minister Hans Dietrich Genscher said this over and over and over again, including in public at public press conferences right in front of James Baker, who only nodded in assent and never said anything against it, that we promised.
not only not to expand NATO, but that includes, because here's the rub, and this is what makes it a little complicated, and maybe people's eyes glaze over or the war party tries to say, this is all anybody ever meant by that, was Baker said in a weird way that if you allow Germany to reunite, we won't spread NATO one inch inside Germany.
That's where the phrase not one inch comes from.
Well, that doesn't make any sense.
It's not like the East German government
is going to be the government of the new Germany, right?
Bonn is going to move to Berlin,
and West Germany is going to be the regime
that rules the new reunited Germany, right?
No question about that.
So how is it that only the western half of the country is in NATO?
That doesn't make sense.
So then they had to walk that back and go,
okay, well, you know what we'll do, though,
is, yes, obviously, the whole country will be in NATO,
but we promise not to move any substantial military forces
into the then-GDR, East Germany.
That was short for German Democratic Republic,
which was Kami enslaved East Germany.
We promised not to move our forces in there
or nuclear weapons into the eastern part.
So they're still respecting the promise.
They're kind of revising it because they have to because the first, in the first sense, the promise doesn't actually make rational sense, right?
You can't really bring, you can't reunite Germany, but only leave the first half inside the military alliance.
Okay.
But they said, okay, but we're not going to build new bases and station forces further east.
And we're not going to put nuclear weapons there.
Okay.
So they're still respecting that promise.
And that part ended up in the final treaty, final treaty that they signed.
Now, Hans Dietrich Genscher made the most of this, but so did the Chancellor Helmut Cole.
And this is the part, and Mary Elise Surrott wrote a whole book about this called Not One Inch, and she has a whole hell of a lot on this.
As her and Schiferson are probably the two best on it, although I think he's probably got the edge.
But she shows where Helmut Cole went and met with Gorbachev, and he knew.
that H.W. Bush wanted to reconsider this and thought that Baker was being too conciliatory.
But Helmut Cole went ahead and stuck with the day before yesterday's interpretation,
or was it just yesterday's interpretation, instead of the new one,
because he knew that that's what he wanted Gorbachev to hear,
that this is how it's going to be.
And it was based on that promise from Helmut Cole that Gorbachev said,
okay, fine, you can do it?
And Helmut Cole said, can I quote you on that right now?
And he goes, yeah.
and Helmut Cole went right outside and held the press conferences.
So Gorbachev just said that Germany can reunite.
Blam, got it.
Now, was that in a treaty?
Like right there, it was just a spoken word, but they moved to reunite right then based on it.
The treaty came later, right?
So the same kind of thing here.
They try to argue that words don't mean things, only when it's a treaty ratified by the Senate.
But that's not true.
And Schifferson especially goes through and shows some examples, and there are plenty of others,
but you have the entire arrangement around West Berlin, for example,
which your younger viewers may not know that West Berlin,
the western half of Berlin, was a free city wholly within Kami, East Germany,
was still occupied by the U.S. as a remnant of the Second World War.
And so it was a very complicated situation there.
But America's entire arrangement with the Soviets about how to treat West Berlin,
checkpoint Charlie, and all these things,
was purely handshake agreements.
They had no treaty at all.
And Roosevelt, in fact, when he was still alive,
they were already working on this
and said that the agreement that we were already working out
over Vienna, Austria, should also apply to Berlin,
and he did not want it on a piece of paper
because he wanted it specifically for a trust-building measure.
And if we don't put it in writing,
and both sides just have to live up to it
based on what's the right thing to do in the circumstance,
then that'll help build our relationship for the better.
And that's really because Roosevelt was a style
on his commie dictator himself,
but don't get me off on that tangent.
But anyway, speaking of one-world communism,
but so there was no formal arrangement over West Berlin.
Then same thing when Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon
split Mao-Sait-Tong off from the Soviet Union in the Cold War
made them really our allies in the war.
We didn't have a war guarantee,
but we had a deep relationship that they crafted at that time.
All handshake deals, nothing official, no treaties, is how they handled it.
When in the Cuban Missile Crisis, Kennedy negotiated with Khrushchev secretly with his brother,
the Attorney General, over the heads of and around the CIA and the State Department,
and made a secret deal with Khrushchev, that if you get your missiles out of Cuba,
we will remove our mid-range missiles from Turkey,
and they didn't even say this,
but just implicitly, also Italy,
where we had stationed these same Jupiter mid-range missiles.
And we promised never to invade Cuba again.
That informal, secret deal
that wasn't revealed until the end of the Cold War,
they said at the time, yeah,
Jack Kenny just faced him down.
No, he made this secret deal.
And it held, and it has held this whole time.
They kept the missiles.
They've never put missiles back in Turkey.
We do have air dropped and hydrogen bombs and airplane stationed at the Inserlick base there.
But we have not stationed missiles in Turkey ever since then or in Italy ever since then and lived up to that deal.
Nor have we invaded Cuba, although they did try to murder Castro more times after that.
But we haven't invaded.
So that was an informal deal.
It was not only a handshake deal.
It was a secret and completely deniable.
And yet they abided by it anyway because sometimes you've got to do that.
And that's the way these things go.
When it comes to this, you have Peter Baker in the New York Times saying,
nah, come on, if it's not in a treaty, then it's not anything at all.
But that's not true.
As Ted Snyder said, this wasn't just a promise.
This was an agreement.
We promised not to expand NATO, okay?
Can we reunite now?
Yes, you can.
Shake on it.
That's a deal.
And the Americans lied and broke it,
and they knew they're lying and breaking it.
And when the Russians started complaining to the Clinton people,
Warren Christopher launched the internal investigation at the State Department
to find out if it was true or not,
and they decided it was true.
But that, oh, well, screw them, we're going to go ahead anyway.
Can we, if it's okay, fast forward,
as you said, your book is called Provoke, Not Justified.
Yes.
I should say, for me, maybe you can,
speak from your perspective, that the reason the war in Ukraine in 22 started was because
Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine. And you could backtrack like what, why, what he did was he
escalated the war in Ukraine by about 100,000 percent, right? But the war had been going on
for a very long time, right? And that's very important. You know, it's not just the backstory,
but it really is the start of the war
was when John Brennan came to town
on April the 12th and 13th of 2014
and demanded that the acting president
Turch Niav launched the war
and he did on the 14th.
It was all John Brennan's fault, like a lot of things.
A drastic escalation
was committed by Vladimir Putin.
Absolutely right.
And there's, when we look at a responsibility,
and we talk about war mongers
and we talk about the military industrial complex.
Yeah.
I think it's really important to explore
from an American perspective,
but when you look at the region
and who started that escalation,
you have to put the chief responsibility
on Vladimir Putin.
Of course.
The guys are gangsters.
It's how he got a job in the first place.
He was part of the Eltsin family,
and he had been the deputy mayor
of St. Petersburg,
where he worked for a criminal named Sobchek,
who is part of the Yeltsin family.
And we say family like the Italian mob in New York, families.
That's exactly in the exact same meaning of that term.
That's what they called it at the time.
And that was where he came from in the first place.
And his first job really was protecting all the Yeltsin and his guys
and getting them out of the country with all their money safely
and then, you know, take and control the thing.
So we're ahead of the story a little bit.
But the guys in S-O-B, you know, people say,
Oh, he's a KGB and he's a kami. Well, he's not a commie. He's sided with the reformers against the coup plotters in August of 1991 when it counted. Right. And also, he wasn't a spy. He was a clerk. Like, he was, you know, he was a colonel, but like, I've never seen anything that said he's out, slit in throats and bribing people and blackmailing people and turning spies. He was an operations guy back at headquarters.
I know a lady named Susan Tennyson.
Have you ever heard of her?
She's an American who was doing outreach to the Soviet Union in the 1980s, spent her whole
lifetime.
I think she's still alive.
Little old lady, sweet old lady, spent her whole lifetime trying to make friends with Russia.
And she told me the story about meeting Putin when he was the deputy mayor of St. Petersburg
And how he wouldn't take a bribe.
He just wanted to get the job done.
Whatever the job was, she needs some bureaucratic hurdles taken.
He said, well, check this box and sign here and thank you very much and didn't want her money,
which she thought was a really big deal at the time, that, wow, like this guy has a sense of honor and duty and doing his job in a way that nobody else here does.
Everybody else here is a Mexican cop going kicked out, you know what I mean, everybody, and where he wasn't.
So now, I'm not saying that makes him a moral guy or whatever, but I'm saying that makes him very much like a business as business sort of a dude who has his priorities like in that way.
he's a head of state and a powerful state
and you have to be in practice a psychopath
to run a country like that.
That goes for Obama and the rest of them too, man.
All of these guys,
it's a psychopathic job to kill people
and especially in the kind of large numbers,
especially that the Americans do,
but Putin's been responsible for a bit of violence himself
up until even this time.
And I don't think anybody underestimates.
I don't, you know, there's some people, I guess, who kind of, they're so anti-American empire, they start seeing, or maybe too sympathetic instead of just empathetic with the other side, right, and sort of maybe rationalize a bit of the Russian point of view or whatever in a way that doesn't appeal to me.
I don't, I don't think you have to, like honestly, I don't see anything.
Well, look, I have in the book, it's a Bill Hicks quote, there's options.
He's talking about pro-life people ought to be blocking cemeteries.
preventing funerals. But he says, there's options. So I just, like, little, tiny little
Easter eggs like that. Putin could have done other things. Like, for example, he could have,
again, like in 2018, demanded only this time really seriously and loudly and with the world
paying close attention in a way that they weren't in 18, that I want baby blue helmet UN
peacekeepers from a third non-interested country.
to go stand on the border of the gray zone and the Donbass on what's supposed to be the ceasefire line in eastern Ukraine.
And I demand it, and I'm serious, and I'm going to come up with ways to force y'all to give into this.
In other words, to ratchet up the tension, not to start the war, but to find a creative way to force the West to implement the Minsk II deal that the West signed, along with Ukraine and Russia,
in 2015 and that Obama rubber stamped and that the UN Security Council rubber stamped and that
America and Kiev had always refused to implement. He also, and maybe as part of enforcing that,
he could have a vowed to obstruct all UN Security Council business. He's got veto power. He can vote
no on anything and just grind the UN Security Council to a halt. That's a hell of a lever,
a pressure. He could have also cut off all gas to Western Europe. Through the Nord Stream
he'd already shut off Nord Stream 1. I forgot exactly the offense that caused him to do that.
It's in the book. But he had already shut down Nord Stream 1. He could have shut down Nord Stream 2 and
he could have shut off all the gas pipelines running through Ukraine as well. This is in the winter of
21 we're talking about. In November, December, 21 into January, February 22, it's cold as hell.
Europe is up at Canada-type latitudes, man, where it's cold in the winter.
up there. And he could have played hardball like that. And as I complain in the book as well,
he also could have been just not so damn coy about the thing. And where he kept denying that he
was going to invade and saying, well, this is very coercive diplomacy essentially, but like,
come on, just give in, which I think he did offer treaties. And this is, we're jumping way ahead
in the story. I think Biden could have negotiated his way out of it if he'd been trying to. I think
he was not trying to. So when Biden was president, you were saying that he did not do enough.
Right, to negotiating good faith. In fact, this is why I thought there wouldn't be a war.
It's not because I didn't think Putin had it in him. I'd been warning for years. He had been
a warning for years and I noticed. He had told an Italian diplomat in 2014, you know I could be in
Kiev in two weeks. And so this was always the threat that this could get, you know, much worse.
But I thought it wouldn't happen because William Burns, who is the author of the Nyet Means Nietzsche memo, and I don't know if he was ever CIA, but he was stationed in the embassy over there since the 1990s, had been Bush's ambassador to Russia, and it was like, if there's one guy who can work this out with Sergei Lavrov, it's William Burns.
and I idiotically thought, and God, how stupid could I have been, that I thought that, of course, William Burns' mandate from Biden will be, see us through this.
Prevent this war from happening, and I knew the war was preventable, because the issues on the table were not just some front, some excuse.
The issues on the table were deadly serious issues of NATO expansion, the potential for missile emplacements in Ukraine, especially after Trump tore up the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987, which would have made it legal for America to station nuclear missiles in Europe again, and the ongoing war in the Donbass.
And if William Burns had the mandate to figure this out, dude, then he could have.
And I know that he could have.
And I know that they did not try to do that.
They never negotiated either of those proposed treaties.
One was for the U.S., one was for NATO.
And they were reasonable.
And Lex, I have in the book, not just Chos Freeman, the brilliant genius, you know, career diplomat
who went to China with Nixon and was the former ambassador to Saudi and all these things,
who told me personally that, like, absolutely, this is a reasonable treaty to negotiate.
Am I saying we should sign on the dotted line?
Hell, no.
We don't do that for anyone.
But is this reasonable to sit at a table and negotiate?
Absolutely.
And I show in the book, Joe Biden administration White House officials, possibly State Department,
but at least high-level officials, NSC, and or state, told the Post and the Times,
that we think these are reasonable treaties and that they should be negotiated,
but then they did not do that.
They refused to negotiate those treaties.
They refused to negotiate NATO expansion.
They refused to negotiate the emplacement of missiles of the potential emplacement of missiles in Ukraine,
and they refused to implement Minsk to do or do anything to end the civil war.
And in fact, helped to increase it.
According to the OSCE, Kiev was escalating artillery attacks on the other side of the line
into the third week of February of 2022.
And so, listen, there's a quote in there of Putin
where he says, you know, I think they're trying to provoke me into invading.
That's not the exact quote, forgive me.
But he acknowledges that this could be a trap,
but I really don't know what else to do.
And quite frankly, I think that's right, Lex, and I think,
and my excuse is I was too damn busy recording the audio book of the last
war enough already in the middle east i'm one of those generals always behind and so i was
outsourcing too much of my primary reading to my opinion pieces that i was reading from smart
people and people that i was interviewing at the time but i wasn't reading just enough of hate to say it
but just the post of the times in the journal that's who the u.s. government talks to so you got to read
the post of the Times in the Journal. And if you read the posts in the Times and the Journal very
carefully, and a lot of the rest of the media too, from the era of, especially December of 21 and
into January and February 22, you'll find a lot of references to Afghanistan. Not our recent
absolutely humiliating disgraceful failure and ultimate withdrawal after 20 years, just three months
before in the end of the summer of 2021, just three months later, they had the word Afghanistan
in their mouths. We want to replicate the Afghan war. You know Rambo 3, what we did to the Soviet
Union in the 1980s, not our Afghan war, their Afghan war, but we're going to do it this time
with the Ukrainian Nazi right as the Mujahideen, and we're going to lure the Russians in,
log them down and bleed them to bankruptcy, inflict on them a strategic defeat.
Nile Ferguson, whose wife I humiliated in front of all those people in Las Vegas at
time, he wrote an article in Bloomberg News where he says, look, everybody who's anybody
in Washington and London knows that the policy is to inflict a strategic defeat on Russia.
We're not trying to dissuade them from invading.
And you could just see where right after the start of the war,
Somebody asked Ned Price, the State Department spokesman.
Man, what are we doing to negotiate an end of this thing?
I mean, you would just think that the consensus of all eight billion of us would be,
you can't have a hot war on Russia's southern, western border.
This could go nuclear.
We have to cease fire immediately.
General strike, call it off.
Somebody go to Geneva and figure this out.
That's what everybody thought was happening.
And so the reporters asked Ned Price, man, what are we doing to do the thing to end?
the thing. And Ned Price goes, well, you know, there are larger principles at stake here
about independence and sovereignty and the right of a nation to direct its gaze in whichever
direction that it wishes to direct its gaze. In other words, this is sticking with what they
called the open door policy, which says that any country that wants to join NATO can join NATO
if we say so and no third country can say otherwise and no third country's security interests
will be taken into account. And you see how they do this in committee. They go, well,
Zimbi at the table here think that Russia ought to have veto power over who we allow into our
military lines. And of course, nobody raises their hand when you put it that way. So then that's
it. We dismiss that forever. Now we have an open door. Now, of course, there is no door. It's just
jargon it's just meaningless garbage basically thought up by a bunch of bureaucrats they could
change it just as easy but instead they say nope especially when the russians and this is pointed out
by stephen walt and by um samuel cherub at rand pointed out that yeah it's hard because once the russians
are demanding that we do these reasonable things well now doing them seems unreasonable because we don't want to
give in to their demands.
And so, like, no, we, and, man, this is the worst Joe Biden.
And Joe Biden has always been the worst since 1973, but this is him at his absolute
most dim-witted.
So he can't really think hard about any of these things.
He mostly would just speak in historical analogies about World War II.
He's Churchill facing down Hitler.
And so you're going to talk.
him out of that? You're going to tell him that he ought to be Neville Chamberlain and appease Hitler
at Munich? Of course not. You know what you got to do to a bully? You got to punch him in the nose.
And I'm sure you must have heard this a hundred times and lead up to this war. They'd all say this.
All these dorks. We talk about, yeah, you know how you face down a bully, you punch him in the nose.
Well, how would they know? They never punched a bully in the nose before, right? They're dorks.
and they now have all this power
and think that they know what they're doing
and the best thing they can do
is relive their third grade trauma
getting bullied by me
and my friends on the playground
you know
and they get to pretend like what
they're the star of the baseball team
that came and stuck up for the bullied kid
no uh no they're not
that's their little fantasy
that they're playing out and they would say things like that
over and over again
it's it's
chamberlain at Munich and the bully
on the playground, but nobody can just talk about
what about the ongoing war in the Donbass?
Can we get off of your analogies?
I got an argument again, for the third time,
I debated General Wesley Clark about Ukraine on the Pierce Morgan Show.
And again, he immediately retreats to World War II fantasies.
Well, that's like saying that Stalin should have given in to Hitler,
because he can't talk about the war.
They're losing Provostk right now.
The war is getting worse and worse for Ukraine.
all the time, so he has to say, oh, you know what, the Ukrainians believe hard, and you just
need to believe hard like them. That is the level of argument that I got out of General Wesley
Clark, the former four-star generals, Supreme Allied commander of NATO forces in Europe, who
served Bill Clinton launching the aggressive war against Kosovo based on lies in 1999, based on a false
claim that the Serbs had murdered 100,000 Kosovo, Albanians. When that was a lie in there
fighting for bin Laden, a bunch of heroin dealers and organ smugglers, and Ben, Ben,
Lodenite terrorists in that war of treason.
But anyway, that's General Wesley Clerk for you.
But that's basically all they got.
It's a bunch of Believe Hard and a bunch of World War II metaphors and playground metaphors
because they can't talk about the actual war themselves.
To be clear, if I may comment, you're referring to Americans or maybe Europeans.
Well, and the foreign policy establishment gots.
Right.
I do want to say that Ukrainians, people in Ukraine, and I know many of them are true heroes.
and they're fighting for their country.
And whether the geopolitics, if it makes any sense,
it doesn't take away from the human beings.
Yeah, of course.
Defending their land.
And in an absolute hellish war scape, man.
I mean, it's World War I plus drones, right?
Muddy trenches and tank rounds and artillery,
airdrop dumb bombs and drones hunting you.
It's an absolute nightmare out there, man.
anybody with telegram, it's going, Jesus Christ, looking through the thing. You know, it's not quite as bad as Gaza, because it, and look, they're conscripts. So it's very unfair, but in essence, they're wearing green and our fair game out there fighting on the field. Most of the civilians have been able to flee. The civilian deaths are counted in the single thousands, I believe, low thousands, which is absolutely horrific for those people, but at least that's like the silver lining is that it's essentially,
combatants fighting, but it's still absolute
horror show. And you're right that, look,
you know, I can't deny the
bravery of anybody out there risking their balls
for, you know, any of this stuff, but
the thing is there are different wars going on,
right? There's a war between the United States
and Russia going on with
a proxy war. Hell, there's a war with
America and China going on
with using Ukraine and Russia as our proxies.
Then there's
America and Russia using
their proxies in Ukraine.
Then you have Ukraine, you know,
Vosov versus Moscow, but then you also have
Laviv versus Doniesk, right?
And these nationalists from Mount West
trying to force their version of what Ukraine is supposed to be
on the people of the East, who of course are ethnically
and culturally Russian.
And I'm not saying that means everyone who is so
wants to join the Russian Federation, but I'm just saying
there's a severe culture war going on for dominance
in the country.
And all of these wars are planning out at the same time.
But then so anybody who says,
hey, I'm defending my land, my neighborhood, my community, give me a rifle, and I'll go do
brave things. Like, hey, that is what it is. Overall, what's really happened here is the United
States of America has gotten their weak friend in a fight with their stronger, tougher
neighbor when we had no ability or intention whatsoever to bail them out of it. When they said,
we're going to give you all the weapons it needs, as much as it takes, as long as it takes,
they knew they were lying.
Even Kamala Harris can tell you,
Russia is a bigger country.
By the way, that's a real quote.
I don't know if you know that.
She sounded like she's talking to a four-year-old.
And I'm sure she was simply parroting her own advisors
from what they told her.
Not even what they told her to say,
but what they told her.
Ukraine is a country in Europe.
Russia is a bigger country in Europe.
Russia is next door to Ukraine, and Russia has invaded Ukraine, and that's bad, and we are against
it. When I heard that, I thought it was fake, or I thought, come on, she was talking to elementary
school kids, and you guys are taken out of context. No, she said that on the Black Eye Morning
Show on the radio in Chicago, and they looked at her like, lady, we know that Russia and
Ukraine are in Europe. We know that Russia is a bigger country than all other countries.
Tell us something that we don't know.
And she didn't know anything that they didn't know, so she could not tell them.
But she could tell them that Russia is bigger than Ukraine.
She might have been able to extrapolate that they have a hell of a lot more available fighting-aged males to complete this war than Ukraine, and they always will, and there's nothing anybody can do about it, other than if Joe Biden would be willing to send the United States Army in there.
to fight them. Even the Germans and the French and the British and the Poles combined
couldn't do it without America to help them do it. Without America to run the whole thing
for them anyway, if you wanted to really whip the Russians and drive them out of the Donbass
and Zabroja and Gerson and Crimea, you need to send in the Marines. You need to send in the Air Force
and the Navy. And we're not going to do that, Lex. And Joe Biden said explicitly, we're not
doing that. That's World War III. We'll give the Ukrainians everything they need to fight.
As you said, zoom all the way in. Here's some hero making the ultimate sacrifice.
Zoom all the way out. Here's some damned fool using these people as cannon fodder on some
fool's errand. They can't possibly win to deliver a strategic defeat against the Russians that they have
completely failed to deliver. If anything, they've delivered a strategic victory to China by
kicking front kick, straight in the chest, Russia right out of Europe and into the arms of the
Chinese, when, of course, Russia is the eastern frontier of European civilization. And we're doing
everything we can to change that. Joe Biden himself said, no Russian leader in all history
has ever thrown in as hard with the West
as Vladimir Putin
as Joe Biden himself
who kicked him right back out again.
It really seemed
that Donald Trump
more than any recent president
wanted to make peace.
There's a strong will for peace.
Why do you think he has not been successful?
Okay, let me just emphasize here.
We're skipping a lot to the end
and I know it's late, so it's okay.
But there are a lot of other things
beside NATO expansion, including tearing up the treaties,
installing anti-ballistic missile systems in Romania and Poland,
but that are fired from dual-use launchers,
the MK-41 or Mark-41 missile launcher,
that can also hold Tomahawk cruise missiles,
and while refusing an inspection regime.
There's also, of course, overthrowing the government twice in 10 years in Ukraine,
all the other color code of revolutions in Georgia and in Kyrgyzstan and the rest,
and, of course, support for the Maidan Revolution of 14 and the war that broke out after that.
And as I said, I beat essentially every topic that I could think of outstanding between America and Ukraine that's happened this entire time.
I do not spin for the Russians the whole time.
I accuse them of plenty of things in there that they actually did, and I defend the truth from false accusations rather than defending the Russians because screw them and they don't need my help.
And this book is not for them, it's for us.
But I tried not to leave out anything.
I mentioned sort of the epitome,
the Montenegro weird, phony coup of 16.
But we tried to overthrow the government of Belarus three times,
01, 05, and 20.
We've been messing around a lot in building up this Cold War.
That's why that book is so long.
because it is 475,000, 477,000 words.
And I don't think wasted.
And that does include the footnotes,
which, by the way,
Lex, when I took the URLs out and the footnotes are font size 9, I believe.
When I took the URLs out, that saved me 77 pages.
That's how many articles are in there.
But if people go to Scotthorton.org slash provoked slash notes,
I have a PDF file there of all the notes with their links.
I only took the links out at the very last moment.
So there's a PDF file where you can take anything in here
and I'll have a working link to it at Scotthorden.org slash provoke slash notes
and people can download the whole PDF of the whole thing.
And it's 375 pages of notes in regular font.
How would you recommend one were,
so I've read parts of this that jumped around.
Yeah.
Unless I
My mental health goes to complete shit
I hope to travel back to Ukraine
and to Russia to interview the key figures there
And you said that I should definitely read the entirety of the book
And look I think it's written to be a page turner all the way through
And I am outraged and the book is written from this point of view
And it's engaging enough
And as I say
it's so long because there's so many sub-topics.
I do not belabor and beat the dead horse
and force you to read a bunch about things
that you're not interested anymore.
We do the Linenko chapter, then it's over.
We do the Belarus chapter, then we're done
and move on to the next subject.
As fast as I can take you through it,
it's the same way I wrote the previous books too.
This is what I need to tell you
before I let you off the hook and change the channel, right?
Just like in enough already,
give you four pages on Somalia. I know you're not going to read six. You might not get to
Libya if I try to make you read six on Somalia. So I only gave you four. You know what I mean?
I wrote it that way in the first place. I think I proved my point. And I give you, you know,
the ability to find the proof for yourself to track these things down further. If I say these people
essentially made this claim in this piece, you can track that down and double check and see if I'm
line or not or see if I understood right or whatever as you go through there. People will
falsely assume that I don't have Ukrainian and Russian sources in there, but I do. But the thing is I
just, I don't use Cyrillic at all because nobody can read that. So I use Google Translate on
the titles. So a lot of times you don't realize that it's, you know, unless you look closely,
you won't realize that these are, there are plenty of foreign sources that I cite in there,
but I just give them their English headlines through Google Translate or whatever.
so that people know what they're looking at.
But again, I have the links and even the links
to the translated versions of the stories and all of that.
But I'm not dodging your question about Trump, by the way.
I do want to talk about that.
But I wanted to make it clear that.
I'm not just saying Bill Clinton expanded NATO in the 90s.
W. Bush did too in the 2000s.
Obama did too in the 2000s.
And Trump did too.
Brought Montenegro and Northern Macedonia into NATO.
There's the color code of revolutions and the missiles
and all of these things.
And so it all came to a head, essentially, in the Biden years.
And it could have, Trump, I think, could have solved it if they hadn't affirmed him for
Rushgate.
By the way, I have 75 pages on Rushagate in there.
It's the most thorough take-down of Rushagay I think you can find anywhere.
Although, I don't take credit.
I give credit to the great Russiagate journalists who absolutely destroyed those lies.
People like Paul Sperry and Matt Taibi, Aaron Matei,
and uh and robert perry for that matter before he died a gareth porter of course and so many others
who did such great work on russia gate and it's just absolute one hair away from just blowing the
guy's head off in dallas i don't know what's the difference it's unbelievable to have the CIA
and the FBI come at the president of the united states this way coming a major party candidate
for president this way and then the president elect and then the sitting president of united states
talking about trying to overthrow him with the 25th Amendment, hire a special counsel to pretend to
investigate him for another two years. These people should have all of their property confiscated.
They and their family should be exiled from the United States forever. Everyone involved in that
plot. Everyone involved at Perkins Coy, everybody involved at the Georgia Tech team, everybody involved
in Glenn Simpson and his Fusion GPS, everyone at the FBI and CIA and NSA and any of the government
agencies who went along with that plot ought to all be kicked out of the United States forever
and their great grandchildren. As you write, it was the CIA and FBI, as well as the Clinton
campaign and their agents that did this to Trump, the frontrunner from major party candidates for
the U.S. president, later the Republican nominee, president-elect, and eventually sitting chief
executive, none of it was true. And you go on. And more of that's coming out all the time about
just how not true it was and just how not true they all
ready knew it was. And I have so much in there. And I beg your audience to read the Durham report.
There are new, uh, newly declassified, uh, appendixes, uh, to it that are just being released as
we record this. One came out yesterday. Um, and so we're going to get much, much more about the origins
of Russia get here. But Lex, the, the, at the bottom line, they go, okay, after it all falls away,
still Russia hacked the DNC and gave it to WikiLeaks. No, uh, has a lie. And,
And it was Crowdstrike that made up that lie in combination with the Georgia Tech team and DARPA at the Pentagon.
I have trouble keeping track of exactly at all.
People should follow Undead FOIA on Substack.
He's brilliant anonymous guy, brilliant analyst of this stuff.
The core allegation there, there's no proof of that whatsoever.
And now we know for a fact, we only just found this out.
Read Aaron Matei at Real Clear Investigations.
And we know for a fact now that the FBI and the NSA.
gave, no, pardon me, CIA and NSA, was it FBI and NSA?
FBI and NSA gave it only low to moderate confidence.
In other words, none of this information came from the National Security Agency.
They're the ones who would really know.
And the CIA and the FBI had both already debunk this stuff before they started to pretend to believe it again.
And part of it is because of compartmentalization inside the,
agencies. These analysts are in charge of looking at this. These analysts are in charge of looking
at that. But Brennan and Comey are in charge of ignoring all of the disputing information and cherry
picking out all the rest to try to make it look true. And man, what a fraud. I mean, we are talking
on the level of the branched of idiots killed themselves. On the level of Saddam Hussein is making
nuclear weapons to murder you with. Bashar al-Assad woke up one morning and decided to murder the
entire population of his country. So it's a good thing that you,
USA and al-Qaeda are here to protect the poor population of Syria from his wrath. And it's on that
level of lie. It is unbelievable what they did to him. And, you know, I have so many problems
with Donald Trump, but man, I hate his enemies. And I would love to see him ruthlessly, lawlessly
persecute these people. They deserve to suffer for what they did. To him and to this country,
putting us through that. Think of how many women bankrupted their husband.
with therapy bills because they were that convinced that the Russians had done a coup d'et
and installed the Nazi, fascist, white supremacists to overthrow us.
They heard it on national public radio.
They're freaking out, man.
I mean, you could come up if you wanted to.
You could have a conspiracy theory where it was the drug companies that did this just to sell
more Zoloft to these people.
They drove them up the wall like, see Lex, the problem is you know better, dude.
But pretend for a minute that you're one of these idiot women.
that listens to Mara Liason on national public radio, and she says the Russians did a coup
and put a maturing candidate in power.
You served Hillary Clinton's rightful throne, and he hates all the blacks and the trans.
He's going to murder them all and start and, you know, attack Canada or whatever.
They were terrified.
They were terrified.
It's no less cynical than what W. Bush did when he said, oh, yeah, be afraid.
Be very afraid.
You won't be safe until a year and a half from now when I get to invade.
Iraq. You know how many people on the edge of sanity went over? People did. I know for a fact
people did. I know stories of people who were driven crazy by that stress of believing that every
Arab they see is a murderer terrorist trying to kill them. People believe in that. People think that
they're leaders. They wouldn't lie to them. Willie Nelson said, they wouldn't lie to me. Not on my own
damn TV. Yeah, they would too. The ones you love the most, you're a Republican. It's the Republicans
that are lying to you.
You're a Democrat.
You have no idea how much they despise you.
They'll lie right to your face.
And they think it's funny when you believe it.
They enjoy your terror because your fear and upset makes it easier for them to do wrong.
That's what it's about.
That's what it's all about.
Why did they do this to Trump?
Because he said he wanted to get along with Russia.
He wasn't going to give them our nuclear codes.
He even said,
legs. I'm doing this because I talk to Henry Kissinger, and Henry Kissinger said,
wow, you're the tallest, smartest, most handsome, wealthiest, successful person I've ever met,
and you have a very smart Russia policy, which is to split Russia away from China.
Is that because they have a black male pee tape of Donald Trump and his prostitutes?
No. It's what Henry Kissinger, Nelson Rockefeller's man, wanted.
the grand Republican, grand strategist of American foreign policy for he only died a few years ago, right?
And he was still writing books.
I mean, they were still turning to him for advice for decades, this guy, since the 1970, since before I was born, Henry Kissinger, the most important counselor to Richard Nixon about what are we going to do about the Soviet Union and China.
He told Trump, yes, Trump.
I agree with you. That's what we should do. We should do what it takes to befriend Russia so that we can
contain China. Now, I'm not a China Hawk, but whatever, man. That's the point. And there's another
major point here to mention, too, which as I was saying before, in this book, I don't quote a whole lot
of Buchanan and Paul. I give them the credit that they deserve, but I make a special point to
constantly quote Kissinger and Brzynski and their contemporaries, where they admit, these are the
vanguard of the NATO expanders. And Brzezinski especially was an anti-Russia hawk. He's the son of Polish
aristocrats and fierce anti-communist and anti-Russian even still too after. And they all said,
we have to come up with a special status for Ukraine because it's so closely intertwined with Russia,
dating back hundreds of years and even the foundation of Russian civilization began in Kiev.
before traveling, moving to the center of gravity to Moscow later.
And as Kissinger said,
Ukraine's been part of Russia for 300 years.
And this is not just some deal
where we just get to do what we want.
We have to take into account
how deeply complicated this is
and how deeply riven Ukrainian society is,
especially on who do we want to run with.
And they said,
so what we have to do is we have to create a special,
status for Ukraine, just like we had for Austria and Finland in the old Cold War,
where Austria and Finland were not members of the Warsaw Pact, nor were they members of NATO.
And they did not have troops.
Well, they did have Soviet troops still occupied Austria for a while.
They finally didn't.
I don't think they withdrew until the 50s, but they eventually did withdraw.
But they were not members, they were not forced to be made members of the Warsaw Pact,
like all the rest of the Eastern European states were.
They had no choice but to join with sock puppet.
communist dictatorships run out of the Kremlin and everything.
And so, but Austria and Finland had this neutral status in the last Cold War.
And they said, well, that's what we want to do again.
That's what we need to do for Ukraine.
That's again, Kissinger and Brzynski, who were not neo-conservatives,
but were very hawkish on NATO expansion and on Russia and on NATO expansion,
being for the purposes of containing Russia, no fooling about it.
But in this case, man, if we're not going to be.
we try to take Ukraine away, the Russians are going to break it, because in fact, it ain't
going anywhere. It's stuck next to Russia. This is another thing that Obama explained to Jeffrey
Goldberg, that well, Jeffrey Goldberg, Russia is always going to have escalation dominance in
Ukraine because it's right there and it means a lot more to them than it does to us. They are
willing to go much further than we are. And then he says to Goldberg, he challenges him and he says,
This is after Obama's coup, or putch, whatever transition of power has led to the loss of Crimea.
And he says, Jeffrey Goldberg, you tell me, who in Washington says that we ought to put American boys on the ground to secure the independence of the Don Bass from Russia?
Can you name me somebody's ready to do that right now?
No, of course not.
So the rest of Washington piped down, right?
You keep saying we're not doing enough, but there's nothing we can do that won't get NATO into a war with the Russian Federation.
And as even Robert Kagan, I'm ruining the end of the book now, even Robert Kagan said, you know what, it actually doesn't matter to the United States who runs Ukraine.
The northern coast of the Black Sea, that's so far beyond our jurisdiction.
And this is Kagan's words, not mine, Lex.
And I don't agree with him about this at all.
But he says, you understand his context what he means here.
He says, the Soviet Union dominated Ukraine the whole time after World War II.
And we think of those as the good old days.
Now, I do not.
I know people who are enslaved by the communists in Ukraine in those good old days.
There's nothing good about them at all.
Okay.
But what he was saying was America never had a problem with Russian dominance in Ukraine.
We always called it the Ukraine.
And we always pronounced it Kiev.
And what are you talking about, that we're willing to go to the map of the Donbass?
No, dude, makes no sense.
And the mat is H-bombs burning hotter than the sun.
So we cannot fight them.
And certainly not over this.
They're rolling on Berlin, call me.
They're rolling on London.
They're going to nuke London.
Man, I'd hate to see the world in that way, but maybe we would have to fight for the Brits, Lex.
I'm really more of a continental defense kind of guy myself, to tell you the truth.
But that's not what we're talking about here.
We're talking about Czechoslovakia, now the Czech Republic and Slovakia, that's Central Europe.
Or maybe the Czech Republic is Slovakia, that's Eastern Europe.
Bulgaria, Romania, that's Eastern Europe.
Ukraine is east of Eastern Europe, right?
Brent Skrokoff said, we only wanted to liberate Eastern Europe, not Ukraine.
Okay, this is too far away.
It's not our concern.
And it's not to say that, oh, yeah, no, it's fine for Russia to invade and kill and dominate this place with violence.
Because, hey, that's their sphere of influence.
That's not what I'm saying.
I'm saying it was suicidal madness for them to go along with America's push, for them.
to join our military alliance. That's as much respecting of Russia's sphere of influence as they
needed to do, was not mess with that. That's what got them in trouble. That's what made the Russians
say, look, it's either sooner or later. It might as well be now. The longer we wait, the more
the Americans build up their forces, and we're going to end up having to fight them anyway.
They were making them a de facto member of NATO with what they called interoperability,
their military forces with ours as much as possible, making them a de facto auxiliary of the
NATO alliance so that if NATO ever fought the Russian Federation, just like Germany and Lithuania
and Hungary and Poland and the rest, the Ukrainian army would be one other auxiliary army fighting
under United American NATO command. That's what we were doing with them. Without the Article 5
war guarantee that we promised to come protect you, but still normalize.
and integrating their military force with ours is one standard thing,
constantly training with them,
changing their equipment, changing their command and control structure,
everything to mirror NATO standards.
And so it was a legitimate threat.
Putin said in his speech when he declared war,
he said if the Americans put Tomahawk cruise missiles in Kharkiv,
they'll have a flight time to Moscow at 25 minutes,
if they put ballistic missiles in archive they could get here in ten
their new nuclear ballistic missiles that they're making after they have torn up
the intermediate nuclear forces treaty of nineteen eighty seven
and if they put hypersonics there they could hit moscow in five minutes
he said it's like a knife to the throat now you don't have to sympathize with the russians
at all you could hate them and want the chinese to kill them all for you i don't know
But you have to admit that these are serious, incredible security concerns.
This is not a bunch of bluster and a bunch of bluffing and a bunch of ideological, you know,
you know, garbage or propaganda.
And it's not the nationalist theories of some romantic swept away by visions of a lost, glorious past that he wants to regain and all these things, as everyone says.
as I said to Pierce Morgan the day before yesterday, that's the weapons of mass destruction of this war, is that Putin woke up and started this war because of what an aggressor he is, and that there's no backstory that anybody needs to know about how America put Ukraine in the position to get in their ass what by their bigger next door neighbor in this way. That's the lie under the whole thing, the same way that Clinton lied us into Kosovo with the 100,000 dead Kosovo, Bush with his weapons.
obstruction in Iraq, Obama with his impending genocide in Benghazi and Libya. Give me a break.
All of these lies. That's the lie of this one. Unprovoked attack. Unprovoked attack. It's like white
separatist Randy Weaver. You have to say that. You can't just say Randy Weaver. You can't say
Randy Weaver, survivor of a boy and a dog and a woman, his wife, who were slaughtered by federal
agents. No, you have to call them white separatist, Randy Weaver. Well, Russia's attack has to be
unprovoked attack. Oh, look at this shiny coin. Unprovoked attack. And that works on people. Somehow,
people don't just rebel against that and say, wait a minute, are you calling me stupid or something?
Why would you mandate that we call it that in such a way if you weren't lying and covering up for the
fact that you provoked it and you know you did, which is clearly the case. That's why they called
it that. You know, you could call it an unprovoked attack sometimes. They called it an unprovoked attack
a hundred thousand times because the public relations firms decided that this is the lie and
this is the best way to stick it to the American people. It's absurd. How easily moved the
Americans are. Just give us some lies. And by the way,
our Zionist friend would say that I just blame the Israelis for everything. Well, the only
role that the Israelis play in my book is Noftali Bennett, the guy who caused the September 11th
attack. It tried to end the war, tried to negotiate in good faith and do shuttle diplomacy
between Ukraine and Russia and tried to stop the war right after it started in the spring of
2022. And that's all I have to say about the Israelis role in any of this part, other than
it was their pit column, the neo-conservatives in America, who really,
really got our policy off this way in the first place.
And Robert Kagan's disgusting wife, Victoria Newland,
who really was the ringleader behind the overthrow of 2014,
which was even what Carl Gershman, the head of the NED,
called it was the overthrow with the government there that they did.
What can Trump do to help bring peace in Ukraine?
As I mentioned, that he legitimately, from every interaction I've had, from everything I understand,
he legitimately wanted to make peace very quickly.
I think he's totally sincere about it, too.
But why was he not successful?
And how can he be successful?
What are your thoughts on that?
I don't have an answer to the second one.
I don't know what the hell he's going to know.
I'll tell you what.
The backstory here is that in September,
of 22, the weekend of September 11th, in fact, of 22, Ukraine had their best few days.
They had a brilliant faint where they started building up forces in Kurson and they convinced
the Russians to move forces to Kersan. Then they made a huge move in Harkiv and forced all the Russians
out of Kharkiv and back into Lujansk. And then they also hit them in Kersan down at the river
and kicked them back across the river.
And so maintain that one-third of Curzon on the right bank, I guess I'd call it the right.
Yeah, they were extremely successful in those offenses at that time, probably the most,
the biggest success, arguably the basic success of the war.
Absolutely, and it's been all downhill from there.
And the worst thing probably of all is that Putin said, oh, yeah, well, I hear by annexed
a prosia and Curzon, too.
And these are the two provinces between the Dombas and the Crimea.
And he hadn't claimed them yet.
Now this is the so-called land bridge.
Importantly, the Ukrainians gave them a real motive to do this
because they had cut off the fresh water.
There was a canal from the Nipa River down to Crimea.
And to collectively punish the people of Crimea,
they cut off the water resources there,
which they still had enough for drinking water,
but they did not have enough for any agriculture
or anything else, and it really hurt them a lot.
So they already had their pretext there to take that territory
so they could reopen that channel of fresh water to Crimea.
And then he was just angry.
His men were humiliated on the ground there.
And he said, oh, yeah, well, I hear by annex, two more oblasts then.
Then they passed a law in the doom, and he signed it.
Right, and I guess it's two houses.
He signed a law.
I said, we've now redrawn the Russian border here.
Okay, but now,
If you look at how they're fighting the war,
and I'm not a military expert on this,
but I know some.
And for example, Colonel Douglas McGregor
and Lieutenant Colonel Danny Davis,
I think Davis is the one I trust the best.
Can I take a small attention on that?
Sure.
Just to give a shout out to Daniel L. Davis,
that you mentioned, excellent podcast.
Somebody that I've had a bunch of conversations with privately.
He's a sweetheart.
Oh, he's a wonderful man.
First of all, his backstory is a fascinating one.
but also he's extremely knowledgeable on the very nuanced details of all aspects of military operations.
Absolutely does.
As I mentioned an eon ago when we began this interview, that in Iraq War I, it was Colonel
McGregor with McMaster and Davis under him that did the Battle of 73 Easting against the Iraqi
Army and what the Soviet tanks says is where they both, all three come from.
McMaster sold his soul to Satan, and McGregor and Davis have been good guy, well, at least
since Iraq War II.
Now, I don't know if you know this about Danny Davis, I guess you probably do, but your audience
doesn't, that he was the heroic whistleblower of the Afghan war in 2012.
Do you know that story?
So in 2009, there was a former Marine captain turned State Department employee named Matthew Ho.
And he warned Obama not to do the surge.
And his boss, the ambassador, Ikemberg, he had been the general in charge of the war previously.
And Ikenberry backed up Ho and said, don't do the surge.
That's all Obama needed to hide behind was I Can Barry and Ho, and he could have said no.
and instead he gave in and he ordered the escalation.
He had already sent 40,000 troops.
Then he announced he's sending 30,000 more
for a total of 70,000 additional troops.
The giant horrific failed Afghan surge of 2009 through 12.
And then at the end, Davis was the whistleblower
who broke ranks, testified before the Senate,
and published an article in the Armed Forces Journal
saying that David Petraeus is a liar
and that America has not achieved
what Petrais called success because he wouldn't dare call it victory in the war in Afghanistan.
And here's the real truth.
And here's how Davis knew is he had a special job, which was arming and equipping all the guys all around the country, whatever they needed.
His job was to go and give them whatever equipment.
So that gave him a special insight into the war because he was going to all areas of the country and seeing the guys everywhere that they were.
And he said the same thing that Matthew Ho said.
So these boys are getting killed for this.
And then as Ho had pointed, like,
how am I supposed to write a letter home to this guy's wife?
And say that he died a good death when I know it's not true.
And same thing with Davis, like, these guys, you know how military guys are.
They talk about these are my men.
They're mine, you know?
And so what do you do when they're dying for nothing?
And so Davis said enough of this.
and came home and did what he could, told the truth, to end the war.
And he's a great American patriot.
And you're right, he's a brilliant genius, too.
And he's a brilliant war analyst on all the wars, particularly Ukraine right now.
That's his show is Daniel Davis Deep Dive.
Yeah, I highly recommend people listening to DDD.
Daniel Davis Deep Dive.
It's on YouTube.
It's on all the podcast platforms.
He served for 21 years in the Army with four combat deployments.
And he's got stars and things too, man.
Yeah.
But the most heroic thing he ever did was quit and tell the truth.
Anyway, I trust his analysis of the war better than anybody else.
There's another guy I really like named Willie O-A-M.
His name is Matt Williams.
He's an Australian veteran of the war in Afghanistan.
You'd really like him.
He's a brilliant war analyst.
He looks at the maps every day and analyzes day by day by day.
Oh, see, there's where he interviewed me.
he's a wonderful guy i'm afraid he's got cancer right now but uh he's he's hanging in there
and and he's uh he's just a brilliant analyst of the war you'd really like him and he goes day by day
by day he shows who's taking how much land this is why i could only shake my head at wesley
clark the other day that i'm going listen the russians are ascending on the battlefield do
there's no reversing this believe harder come on man and and and he acts like what are you talking
about Horton? The Russians aren't winning. It's like, yeah, they are, dude. They are. Danny Davis and
Willie O-A-M, they're not wrong about that. You know, these reports, this depends, I guess,
on who you're reading. And I do see some kind of wishful thinking from people from time to time.
But no, Lord, they are losing. Pravaska's about the fall. They move, they have virtually 100% of
Lujansk. They are making major gains in Doniesk, and they're making moves in
De Nipro Provostk, which is the big, I can never say it right, but that's as good as I could
ever get, of the oblast between the river and the Donbass there. And of course, there's
Sumi and Harkiv in the north, and all of this is still in danger of being taken. Oh, and I'm
sorry, because I never really answered your question right about Trump. Trump's problem is, Lex,
that he got just elected and inaugurated at the wrong time for his second term here.
And the Russians, they annex those territories, but they don't control them.
Daniel Davis, our tangent here, he explains that this strategy in the war is to fight a war of
attrition, to grind up Ukrainian forces with artillery and airdrop bombs,
and move slowly to preserve Russian soldiers' lives and make the other guys die more.
Now, typically, and this is in some specialized stuff out of my purview, but it's like they say that, like, it, you'll lose three to one disadvantage for the advancing army on a defensive position or whatever.
That doesn't hold in all cases, and I think I may even have said that wrong.
Somebody tried to correct me on that recently.
Like, it's not exactly that way, but the thing is it's more dangerous, obviously, to move on a defensive position than to remain in one, like, all other things being equal.
guess, but then they just have way more artillery and way more time, and they can just move very
slowly and make sure that actually the defenders die at a much higher rate than they do,
and they're not running out of artillery, and they're not running out of men.
They've not even launched a full-scale mobilization for the war.
People know that they're winning, and so they're volunteering to go and get some, and they're
they can afford their economy is not crushed and so they can afford to pay bonuses and have people
sign up and while meanwhile ukraine's on a conscript army that's had at least tens in some reports say
more than a hundred thousand of deserters flee the front lines refused to fight there's been at least
hundreds of people have drowned to death in the denister river on the border with moldova trying to
escape. People, oppressed gangs, riding around in vans, beating people up and kidnapping them
and throwing them in the back of the van and taking them off to the front to be killed in a few
hours. And it's a horror show over there, man. And I don't know if Ukraine is going to survive
because, see, and this is part of my argument, and I said this in my four-hour speech right after the war
began. And I was assuming then, as a lot of people did, that the Russians were going to have a lot more
success a lot sooner and that the Ukrainian military would essentially be smashed and they'd be
fighting an insurgency here, which is what, that was plan B. Plan A was to warn them, don't you do
it. Plan B was, we're going to back the Mujahideen. In other words, the Nazis, right sector and
Azov and whatever, because the military will be smashed and Russia will dominate the entire east of the
country, at least was the presumption going in by the American side. So we're now, unlike plan C was
actually better than plan B, right? They skipped a step and wanting to back an insurgency.
The state army has been able to hold. We're recording this thing three and a half years into the
war and the state army still exists. They've still been able to pour arms in there all this time
and keep the thing going for now. But as I predicted in that speech, I said, you know,
this could be a real Pyrrhic victory for the Russians. And Russia's government is a government
program and all they do is fail upwards in their self-licking ice cream going fashion. That's not a
speciality about Americans. That's a speciality about the economics of government monopolies on
security forces, right? And so think about the map for a minute. Putin just went in there
and drew a line around all the pro-Russians. Not that everyone who's an ethnic Russian and a Russian
speaker in Ukraine wanted to join the Russian Federation, but I'm sure you've seen the election
result maps where it goes from dark blue to dark red and a real kind of gray scale fade in
between there, where when you get all the way in Doniesk and Luansk, you have people who are,
you know, have a lot of intermarriages and mixed families across the borders and very much
consider themselves to be Russians, even living inside Ukraine. And I read a study of Ukrainian
nationalism that was about how the only Ukrainian nationalists are the Nazis.
out west most ukrainians really identify with their city more or their region more than really
considering themselves overall ukrainian patriots in that larger nationalist sense according to some
some pretty in-depth surveys about all that they had done in the past and so but anyway i'm not
in other words i'm not trying to oversimplify it and say oh yeah everybody in donyisk was
just begging for russia to invade or whatever some of them were uh some of them of course were not
But anyway, by drawing the line to where he has now,
he's now taken everyone who could even be potentially pro-Russia out of Ukraine permanently.
So it used to be that the people who leaned more or less,
people always said Yanukovych was Putin's puppet or whatever.
It was not actually true.
It was a separate tangent.
But the more or less Russian-leaning guys from the parties in the east, they would win.
that's why America had to overthrow the government there twice in 10 years
in the Orange Revolution and the Maidan Revolution.
Well, that's never going to happen again.
All of those people are never going to vote in a Ukrainian election again.
And who's going to be dominant if they ever do hold elections?
It's probably going to be somebody to the right of Zelensky that wins.
Remember, Zelensky was brought him because he was Jewish,
meant he wasn't ethnically Russian, he wasn't ethnically Ukrainian or like culturally,
whatever the sectarian leave with those, he was kind of a third choice.
and he was from Harkiv, so he wasn't from all the way in the Donbass, right, but he's still a Russian
speaker, and ran on peace. That was supposed to be his charm, right? Well, those days are over.
So who's going to win now? My biggest fears is going to be Andrew Boleski, who's the leader of the
Azov Battalion, which is now known as the Third Army Corps. It went from the Azov Battalion to the
Azov Regiment to the third separate infantry division. Now it's the Third Army Corps.
And Boleski is the guy, the famous quote, I'm sure you've heard, about leading the white race against the semi-led intermention. That's him. And I quote at length, that whole speech, which I found on archive.org, you know, the official Azab battalion website is down, but you can find the wayback machine version of it. That whole speech is absolute insane Hitlerian lunacy about Aryan values and the nation of Ukraine is a single living organism and every egg and every sperm belongs to the state for the great.
glory of the Ukrainian Empire and just, yeah, that's Nazism all right. That's exactly what that is.
There's no mistaking it for any other thing. And these are the proud grandsons of the Galatian SS
and, you know, Stepan Bandara and the UPA and OU.N., who had, before the UPA was OU.N., who had
served the Nazis in the Holocaust in the Second World War. And these are their proud grandsons
and legacies. And this guy, Boleski, is from, this is called the Patriot
of Ukraine, which is a group out of Harkiv that was, again, descended from these Nazis.
And he's, he and his ilk are very likely to be the leaders of the new Ukraine. And so how's
Russia supposed to deal with that now? Well, now we've got to go to Odessa, so at least we can
take that great and an important port city from them. And geez, now we can see Transnistria from
here, you know, that little strip of land that Russia controls on the Moldovan side of the river
on the Moldovan Ukrainian border. That's Russian control land, a frozen conflict, since
the end of the Soviet Union. Well, man, from Crimea, we can see Odessa, and from Odessa, we can see
Transnistria, and we can really punish those Ukrainians by completely cutting them off from the
Black Sea. And then still you have a frozen conflict with a bunch of right-wing, radical,
severely anti-Russian grudge-holding national socialists. And so now what is anybody going to do with them?
You know, that's who the new Ukrainian government is going to be dominated by.
his people who are far to the right of conservative man and man then what and then so now put put yourself
in puttun's point of view again this is a government program gets worse and worse and worse well the
next option is now that you've created i'm i'm assuming some things but still you created a radical
right wing rump state of ukraine that is going to constantly be a disruption well what you do is
you finish cleansing them into Poland and Romania,
you just kick them all the way out
and reabsorbed the entire place.
Right.
That is the obvious solution
from the Russian point of view,
and that's how they fight their wars.
They just move very slowly with artillery
and wipe out everything in their path
until they own it.
That's the mess that America has gotten Ukraine in.
I don't see how this ends anytime soon
or any time that really,
again, from the Russian point of view,
let's say they take those four oblasts,
Well, look at all the people in De Nipro-Provsk and all the people in Sumi and Harkiv, who are Russian speakers, who, of course, the Russian government is going to say need our protection, especially now that there's a smaller minority in the country than before, when their side will never win an election again, a national election again, well, we're going to have to go all the way to the river now, right? It only makes sense, man. It's a government program. It's a disaster. And it's going to keep getting worse and worse and worse.
I really hope the next leader of Ukraine is not a right-wing extremists, as you're suggesting.
Yeah, me too.
And I think the bigger picture here is, as we've been talking about for many hours,
that it's the politicians and the bureaucrats that waged a war,
and it's regular people that pay the price of it.
That's right.
As Ozzy Osbourne said, right?
They leave that all to the poor.
Rest in peace, by the way, Ozzy Osbourne.
Yeah, man.
I think this whole conversation was a really deep, eloquent case against the war
in all parts of the world, and especially to the degree the United States is involved.
And your whole life's work has, too, been this incredible case against war,
with the anti-war.com, with the Libertarian Institute,
with all the work you've done.
And so in this goal, I'm very much with you, 100%.
I'm really glad that you're doing the work you're doing.
So thank you for fighting the good fight.
Thank you very much, Lex.
As long as here, I'll say one more thing,
which is, if you've ever heard of the great libertarian,
Tom Woods, from the Mises Institute,
and the Libertarian Institute.
He has something called Liberty Classroom,
where it's him and his professor friends
telling you the truth about the things
that they were supposed to teach you in school, but didn't.
Well, he built me my own Liberty Classroom.
It's called the Scott Horton Academy
of Foreign Policy and Freedom.
And if anybody got all the way through this podcast this far,
they might be interested to know.
We plan on going live next month,
and it's two huge courses on the Middle East
and the Cold War, Russia, by me.
And then I also have the great James Beauvard,
the most successful and important libertarian journalist in world history,
current writer for the New York Post and fellow at the Institute.
A great author, brilliant man,
is going to be doing a course on his entire career of investigative journalism.
And then we have Ramsey Baroud is going to do the story of Israel Palestine,
the great Palestinian refugee in exile,
writer of the Palestine Chronicle and a regular writer with us, a regular contributor at
anti-war.com, good friend of mine, wonderful man. Then we also have William Bupert on how he's
an army infantry officer and expert on debunking the bankrupt counterinsurgency doctrine of
David Petraeus and James Mattis. They call it coin in Afghanistan and Iraq. He debunks all that
and is from the Chasing Ghosts podcast,
and he's going to do a course on how America lost every war since 1945.
And then the great historian, Dangerous History, C.J. Kilmer,
is going to be doing a course on how Woodrow Wilson is the worst person who ever lived,
because, of course, he is the father of Lenin and Stalin and Hitler
and World War II, and for that matter, the American Empire,
to contain communism after it was all over, too.
And so it's going to be a hell of a thing, man.
And we got a bunch of great guys doing really great work to put this thing together.
So that's at Scott Hortonacademy.com.
And it will go live as September.
I'm really hoping in August, maybe not.
So you can watch, first of all, this awesome video by Dan Smots,
who's the most talented video editor in the world.
But then also just enter your email address.
Then you'll be the first to know when we go live
and launch the Scott Horton Academy.
Scott, thank you, brother.
Appreciate it.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Scott Horton.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you once again with the words of Dwight D. Eisenhower,
spoken in 1953.
Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense.
a theft from those who hunger and are not fed,
those who are cold and are not clothed.
This world in arms is not spending money alone.
It is spending the sweat of its laborers,
the genius of its scientists,
the hopes of its children.
The cost of one modern heavy bomber is this,
a modern brick school in more than 30 cities.
It is two electric power plants,
each serving a town of 60,000 population.
It is two fine,
fully equipped hospitals.
It is some 50 miles of concrete highway.
We pay for a single fighter plane
with a half million bushels of wheat.
We pay for a single destroyer
with new homes that could have housed
more than 8,000 people.
This is not a way of life at all,
in any true sense.
Under the cloud of threatening war,
it is humanity hanging
from a cross of iron.
Thank you for listening.
I hope to see you.
you next time.