Part Of The Problem - Dave DeCamp
Episode Date: May 1, 2025Dave Smith brings you the latest in politics! On this episode of Part Of The Problem, Dave is joined by Dave DeCamp to discuss the violence happening in Yemen, Trump's statements about war, a...nd more.Support Our Sponsors:My Patriot Supply - https://www.preparewithsmith.com/Sheath - https://sheathunderwear.com use promo code PROBLEM20Blackout Coffee - https://www.blackoutcoffee.com/problemPart Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!PORCH TOUR DATES HERE:https://www.eventbrite.com/cc/porch-tour-2025-4222673Find Run Your Mouth here:YouTube - http://youtube.com/@RunYourMouthiTunes - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/run-your-mouth-podcast/id1211469807Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4ka50RAKTxFTxbtyPP8AHmFollow the show on social media:X:http://x.com/ComicDaveSmithhttp://x.com/RobbieTheFireInstagram:http://instagram.com/theproblemdavesmithhttp://instagram.com/robbiethefire#libertarianSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up, what's up.
Welcome everybody to a brand new episode of part of the problem.
I am Dave Smith and today I am thrilled to welcome back to the show.
The great Dave DeKamp, who of course is the news editor over at antiwar.com and
he's also the host of antiwar radio is the name of the
show. Is that right?
Antiwar news is the antiwar news. I'm sorry. Antiwar news. Uh,
so somebody, uh, Dave,
as I've said both to you and behind your back, uh,
publicly and privately somebody who has been a,
like a tremendous resource for me over the years. Uh,
if you go to antiwar.com as I do every day, Dave is always writing something just about every day,
it seems multiple things most days, uh,
to just kind of keep you up to pace with the latest of what's going on in, uh,
in foreign wars. And, um, very, you know, fortunately for you, it's been, uh,
business has been busy. So you have not, uh,
if you had the concern that you were going to be put out of business because
There just wouldn't be too many foreign wars going on
No that that problem you don't have to worry about but anyway, thank you so much for taking the time to uh to join us
Once again, how are you? I'm good dave. Thanks so much for having me. It's an honor to be
Speaking with the leader of the the woke, right?
That's right
I didn't it wasn't a job. I was applying for, but you know, sometimes they just find you.
But yes, of course.
Well, you're a good, you're a valuable member of this woke right.
We have these wild woke views like, you know, don't go on government mass murder sprees
unless you really have to, which is so it's basically critical race theory right there. Um, so you, you had, uh, pitched me on the idea,
which I very quickly jumped on,
but that we should do an episode really kind of, you know,
talking about, um, what's been going on in Yemen,
in a Trump's campaign against the Houthis there. Uh, you,
you had made the point just off air before we started here that it really is
kind of amazing how little attention this,
this conflict is getting. It's a, it's like,
it feels like only if you live in the United States of America or
Israel, perhaps,
is it just kind of like a normal thing to go on bombing campaigns?
It's not even like big news. You'd think for most countries, uh, that'd be like a really big deal.
If you started dropping bombs on another country for us, it seems to be very
run of the mill.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And what's been happening in Yemen over the past month for about a month and a
half now has been some of the heaviest bombing that we've seen in the country
over the past, you know, 10 years.
And this is a country, you know, I really liked your post when Trump started this bombing campaign again,
because you said something that I thought was great, that the good news is there is a diplomatic solution,
a ceasefire in Gaza. I mean, that's what this is all over.
But as we know, the US has been bombing Yemen heavily for a long time, really starting in 2009
with Obama's drone wars. I believe the first US airstrike was launched in Yemen under George W.
Bush, but Obama really ramped things up against Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. And these were,
when we talk about, when people talk about Obama's drone wars and all the extrajudicial killings and
bombing weddings, a lot of it is Yemen. A lot of
the most horrific atrocities committed by Obama went down in Yemen. And then in 2015, that was
when the Saudis, the UAE, and other Arab countries formed this coalition to go after the Houthis,
who are officially known as Ansarullah. They they took over the capital and the US backed them
in this war, even though a few months earlier, as Scott Horton always likes to point out,
the US was cooperating with the Houthis against Al-Qaeda. This is a familiar pattern that we see
around the region, especially in Syria, where we end up siding with Al-Qaeda. So, you know, the background there is from 2015 to 2022 about the US backed horrifically brutal war bombing campaign ground campaign blockade, you know, on scale with the barbarity that we've seen in Gaza and this went on throughout the whole first Trump administration.
I know it's an issue you've been very good on and talked about a lot. I remember there was a clip, you went on Joe Rogan and like the clip they put on YouTube was
you talking about this history that I'm talking about now. So I know you're aware of this, most
of your viewers are like, you know, what we're dealing with here, all this context, but most people
just aren't. So then when Trump starts bombing them again, and they say, oh, it's to protect
shipping lanes, and everybody kind of falls in line
And I mean I even see libertarians saying well, we got to protect the shipping lanes
you know isn't that the purpose of the US Navy and
So like the other important historical context here for what's happening
Now is that after October 7th after Israel unleashed its brutal bombing campaign on Gaza, the Houthis started
targeting Israeli shipping, essentially declaring like a blockade on Israeli shipping in the Red Sea.
And in January 2024, President Biden launched a new bombing campaign in Yemen against the Houthis
with the UK. And as I predicted at the time, and it wasn't very hard for me to predict anybody who knew anything about
Yemen and the Houthis knew that like a limited bombing campaign isn't going to stop them. If
anything, it's going to embolden them and rally their supporters around them. They're trying to
make a name for themselves as like the only Arabs really standing up for the Palestinians.
And so after a year that nothing stopped the attacks. In fact, they expanded their attacks to start targeting American and British shipping.
And then after a year, they did stop their attacks. Well, what got them to stop was a ceasefire in Gaza on January 19th. They stopped.
And in early March, when Israel imposed a total blockade on Gaza, not letting any food in, which that're still in, you know, that's still in effect, complete violation of the ceasefire deal, the Houthis announced that
they're going to reimpose their blockade on Israeli shipping. And just a few days later,
the Trump administration unleashes this really, you know, heavy bombing campaign, much heavier
than what Biden was doing. And again, they're doing this instead of just making Israel implement that ceasefire deal
that it signed in January, instead of just, you know, cutting off the aid to Israel. I mean,
that's the key here to the regional calm. So, I mean, that's, again, the important context here.
So when we see people say, oh, they got to stop attacking US ships. Actually, the Houthis, a senior member of the Ansar-Allah Political Bureau, said, told DropSight News that they would be willing to
agree to a ceasefire with the US, we'll stop attacking your warships if you stop bombing Yemen.
I tried to get the State Department, the Pentagon, the National Security Council to answer that,
would you consider a deal like that? And I never heard back and they do actually usually get back to me
So I mean this this is just the reality, you know
Hegseth and Trump say if the Houthis stop targeting American ships will stop bombing Yemen. Well, here they are saying we will stop
But they're also saying they're gonna continue the blockade on Israel and that's what this is really about
Yeah, well, so it's like I I really think that, um, you know,
the, the point that I've tried to make about this, like more recently, um,
you know, like, but when you mentioned, you know,
me talking about this on Joe Rogan's podcast a few years ago, I mean,
the point I was making at the time was like, we should stop doing this.
Like it was still going on and I was like, we should stop doing this.
This is horrible. I mean, it's just like, you know,
horrifically immoral to bring this type of destruction on the poorest country in
the middle East for no strategic reason other than what Obama officials stated
that it was like, Oh,
this helps our relationship with the Saudis or something like that,
which is, you know, insane. But I think today when we bring it up, it's,
it's more important to understand the point that you were making in there that
this is not going to defeat the Houthis. I mean, I'm sure you're,
you're kind of like me in this, that when, you know,
when you first saw the Houthis enter this fight, um,
when they made it clear that they were going to stick up for the Palestinians,
there is part of you that's like, Oh God, no, because Jesus,
like the people of Yemen have just been through so much and you,
you know, one way or the other, whether it's justified or not,
this is going to bring even more, you know, destruction toward Yemen.
But the point is that if they made it through the seven or eight years of a
Saudi invasion, a total blockade, these massive bombing campaigns, they made it
through, I mean, you know, it was what was considered by the UN and many other
humanitarian organizations to be the worst humanitarian crisis in the world
through all of those years.
And that didn't
unseat the Houthis, then it's just a joke to think that that launch in a few Tomahawks
is going to like get them to wave the white flag.
And so you have on one hand very clearly there is not a military solution short of another
war in Iraq.
Like, I mean, I think certainly if the U S wanted to invade Yemen,
we could overthrow the Houthis as we learned from all these terror wars.
We'd probably have other problems to deal with insurgencies and whatnot.
Um, but yeah, I mean, if we want to go spend another $3 trillion and lose
another, you know, few thousand U S soldiers and,
and maybe have 10 or 20,000 more commit suicide in the aftermath. Okay. We could do that.
That's one option.
The other option would be the ceasefire that, I mean,
you just can't overstate this that Trump's envoy negotiated
or at least got done.
I guess it was basically the same ceasefire that had been kicked around for
quite a bit, but it just seems so obvious like not that it's like, Oh,
look, why, if it was any other country and Trump's envoy, Wittkopf here was
able to work out this ceasefire and then one country started violating it and it
causes more problems for us that they're not living up to it.
It'd just be so obvious what the answer is here.
It's only because it's Israel that this is even the the conversation goes to like well
Then I guess we got to fight this war for them
Yeah, yeah
And I mean as he mentioned, you know the Trump administration they took this as a big victory in the first few weeks that they got
The ceasefire right now Israel's completely abrogated that deal and you know
We see this daily slaughter happening every day and they're literally starving children now
I mean, there's no debating that they're not using starvation as a weapon of war now that they haven't let any food in in almost
two months and
What we seen in Yemen, so he mentioned during the Saudi War
The Houthis survived that they didn't just survive it
They actually got better at fighting and their thing that really made the Saudis in the UAE sue for peace was the fact
that Houthi missile and drones started hitting oil fields and oil infrastructure
deep inside Saudi Arabia and in the UAE.
They hit some targets there as well.
And we're seeing a familiar pattern here in the U.S.
bombing campaign. Just in recent weeks, the Houthis have shot down seven
U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drones, which are these big
drones. They're used for surveillance that can be used to launch airstrikes. And they've downed a
total of 21 of these drones since October 2023, but seven just in recent weeks, and US officials
have been telling the media that they're actually getting better at targeting them. And the US also
just lost an F-18 overboard off an aircraft carrier that apparently the aircraft carrier, the Harry Truman, had to
make a hard turn to avoid a Huthy attack. So, you know, US warships have incredibly advanced
air defense systems, but it almost seems like, you know, it's only a matter of time before a
Huthy drone makes it through and then we might see some American casualties and
then what happens. So it seems like in response to this, to these airstrikes not working, they're
just ramping them up. The U.S. military or the Pentagon put out this press release on the first
100 days of the Trump administration and somehow they were bragging about bombing Yemen. They said
that they struck more than 1,000 targets in Yemen in just a again like a month and a half
a little less than that
And they've killed hundreds of civilians. This this these have been you know, some of the most brutal airstrikes we've seen in Yemen
On april 17th the u.s. Bombed a fuel port in hodada the red sea province
And killed according to the yemen project, which tracks this stuff,
killed 80 civilians.
And this is mostly port workers.
This is a massacre on a huge scale.
And barely anyone has noticed in the US, at least.
Obviously, people in Yemen are very aware.
And there's also just the other day on Monday, they bombed a migrant detention facility in
northern Yemen and killed 68 people and it looks
like they're all African migrants. And the real, you know, what reason, why would the U.S. bomb this
facility? I don't think the U.S. would intentionally slaughter a bunch of African migrants. But how bad
is their intelligence that they would bomb this? The really kind of egregious thing about it is
that the Saudis bombed the same place three years ago in January 2022, right before the ceasefire between the Houthis and the Saudis. As I understand it, it was a different building,
but it's like the same facility and the Saudis killed 91 civilians in that strike, 91 African
migrants. Three years later, the U.S. bombs the same place and they claim, oh, we're having
incredible success. We're killing all these Houthi fighters and taking care of their air defenses and everything. But I mean, it's just they have no way of
knowing that. They don't really have people on the ground. I saw at one point a statement
from the CENTCOM spokesman said something like, oh, we've killed hundreds of their militants
based on open source reporting. Well, open source reporting means it's just what you
can find on the internet. I mean, it goes to show they just don't know what they're bombing and their solution is
just bomb just bomb away. So yeah, it's really criminal what's happening here. It's completely
unauthorized. Another, this is an important point here, because you see people justifying it saying,
oh, the War Powers Act lets the president, you know, engage in military action for two months,
if there's an imminent, you know, months under an emergency if there's an imminent
threat? Well, that signal chat showed us that there was no imminent threat. They were saying,
JD Vance said, hey, maybe we should put these plans on the shelf for about a month,
work on the messaging. And Pete Hegseth, who wanted to do it right away, even said that if
you wanted a pause, we could pause it.
And he was the one arguing in favor of doing it.
So that shows there was no imminent threat.
So it's completely illegal, it's immoral, it's failing, and it's only being done to
ensure Israel can keep killing Palestinians in Gaza.
So this is really just, I think, one of the worst things happening right now under this
new Trump administration.
Sorry, I don't mean to smirk as you say that,
but there was something in that that just seemed like
almost what should be the tagline for US foreign policy.
It describes all of it.
It's illegal, it's immoral, it's not working,
and it's only being done for Israel.
That seems to kind of describe every military action that I can remember over the last 25 years. Um, and you know,
it's, it's, it's wildly frustrating. Um,
that really, I mean, the only reason anyone's even talking about this on a,
uh, when I say anyone, obviously there are the good,
there are people who care about this, but broadly speaking amongst the American, you know,
conversation is because of this signal gate thing. And like,
still it seems like the story there,
the scandal is just that this Atlantic hack journalists happened to be added
to the signal chat.
And I've been saying from the beginning that exactly your point,
the real scandal here was that portion of the,
uh, the chat where JD Vance offers the most
impotent pushback,
but I guess I should give him credit for being the only one who seemed to offer
any pushback where he does kind of say, he does say,
I think we're making a mistake. Uh,
I think this is everything against what we ran on, but then goes, I mean, Hey, I'll be, I'm totally on board if you guys want to do
it. But then Hague's right. You said Hague Seth in response to him goes,
I get your point. You know, I get what you're saying. And look,
this isn't time sensitive. We don't have to do this right now. And so in other
words, right, they, the, look, the war powers act and I'm, uh, uh,
I think it was, I think Rothbard had a piece on this where it was like, look, the war powers act. And I'm, uh, uh, I think it was,
I think Rothbard had a piece on this where it was like, look, the wars power,
war powers act was horrible because the,
it basically just gave the president the authority for two months or 90 days or
whatever it gives you to start a war, you know, and it's like,
there it was already in the constitution that you need the Congress.
So we shouldn't have even added that.
But even within the wars powers act, it's like, yes,
the threat has to be imminent. And so no, you don't,
if you have the option to seek congressional approval,
you don't have the right to just launch a military operations.
But like it's crazy that that never even comes up as a thought.
Nobody even thinks to themselves, Oh, well,
if we don't have to do this right away, then we have to go to Congress and get approval for this. Just not even not even
a thought anymore.
Yeah. And I think that's a big risk here when, you know, we talk about the potential for
war with Iran. Like, it's not like they're going to have to do this big media thing like
they did with Iraq and this buildup to like get the public on board, they could just bomb Iran. I mean, like that's just the way that the executive branch operates now.
So, yeah, I mean, this is something when it comes to Yemen that I think,
you know, we've seen some like very mild pushback from some members of the Senate.
I know Rand Paul joined the letter questioning the authorization.
And there was another letter from like three Senate Democrats about the civilian casualties.
But they didn't even say like challenge the fact that the US was bombing Yemen.
They're basically just saying you should try to limit civilian casualties.
So yeah, I mean, the sad truth is, is that if they did go to Congress, they would get
the approval, but still it is still illegal what they're doing right now in Yemen.
And the next possible escalation is backing a ground offensive against the Houthis, which
would essentially be restarting the war that the Saudis failed at.
There's these factions on the ground saying that they have like 80,000 fighters or something,
but I don't even think that would be enough because if you've seen what's happening in
Yemen, the Houthi leader has been calling for these rallies and I mean, these pictures
from the capital, like hundreds, it looks like hundreds of thousands of people come
out and a lot of them have AK 47s like they're, this is again, you know, really emboldening
the Houthis and making them this kind of resistance faction that they really want to be.
So if we continue down this path of escalation,
I mean, it's just going to be just such a disaster. But again, it just doesn't seem like anybody's
learning this lesson in the administration, even though one of the best arguments against bombing
Yemen when Biden started doing it was written by Mike D'Amino, who right now is the head of
Middle East policy in the Pentagon. So unfortunately, looks like, you know, his views are not winning the day,
even though right now we still haven't had a strike on Iran.
I think that risk is pretty high. And it's just a shame that a guy like
Domino doesn't seem to be steering the policy.
Well, or how about a guy like Donald Trump? I mean, Donald Trump said,
I'm sure you've seen the clip, but when Tim
Poole had him on, he did get this amazing sound bite out of Donald Trump. And it was
right. It was right after Joe Biden had just bombed Yemen for the same reason. And Donald
Trump went off on how stupid this was and how, Oh, this is all these guys ever want
to do is drop a bomb on someone rather than pick up the phone call and pursue diplomacy and this whole lecture. And man,
we could use a guy like that to be president right now because it just seems like so obvious.
But you know, it just seems to me, and I know that sometimes, you know, it's funny because sometimes the, uh, speaking of Tim pool, like the Tim pools of the world will say they're,
you know, there's like, you know, there's the, uh, of the Trump kind of broad
coalition, right?
There's like the people who are like total Zionists want to support Israel.
There's the people who are, you know, huge critics of Israel.
And then there's kind of the people in the middle or whatever. And people like Tim Pool will say
like, Oh, why are you guys so obsessed with Israel? Like, why are you just always talking
about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict? I mean, you know what, are you talking about what's going
on in Sub-Saharan Africa right now or in Southeast Asia or and where you know, like why do you care so much about this conflict?
But it's like, you know aside from it just being like something horrific is being done with my tax dollars
It's really this it's like this is really what it's about
It's like now because we support Israel
We have to now be drawn into yet another war in the Middle East with an even larger war looming behind it, which it seems like there's
this huge effort to get us into.
Like this is the this is the whole issue.
It's not just like it's not just like Israel can do this to
the Palestinians with American money and that's it.
It's like, oh, this also requires us constantly being at
war with other Arab States or other Muslim states as a result of it.
And this is what we're opposing here.
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All right, let's get back into the show.
Yeah, and when Biden was in in 2023, when this know popped off, the US bases in Iraq and Syria came
under like constant like rocket and drone attack, because the US was supporting what Israel's doing
in Gaza and it culminated in three US army soldiers being killed in a drone attack. So you know,
this is very much the reason for why the US keeps these bases in Iraq and Syria. I mean, there's been
all these reports recently about the Trump administration, you know, they're drawing down troops in Syria. Initial reports said they might pull out but who was arguing against it? It was Israel. Israel wants the US to stay. Now they're now it's under the pretext of keeping Turkey out of certain areas, you know, after they got rid of Assad, Iran's ally. Now they're saying that the new government, you know, they're justifying
invading southern Syria and occupying it and bombing it. So yeah, I mean, this is the key
kind of everything, especially today, like again, with Yemen, this is just so obvious.
It's more in your face with this situation in Yemen. I remember there was a report from
Ynet, Israeli media because so after the US started bombing Yemen on March 15th, and they also preempted Israel breaking this completely breaking the ceasefire it was
March 15th that the US first launched the airstrikes on Yemen and it was March
18th that Israel completely ended the ceasefire and killed like 400 and I
think it was like 470 Palestinians in the first 24 hours, including a lot of kids, like nearly 200 children.
And so you look at the timeline, and after that, March 18, when they started bombing
Gaza again, then the Houthis started firing missiles at Israel again, kind of separate
from them declaring a blockade.
Now they're shooting missiles and drones at Israel.
And there's a report in Ynet that said
the US told Israel, don't worry about these attacks, you know, you guys don't need to respond,
we'll take care of it. Because Israel did bomb Yemen, I believe, two or three times last year
in response to these attacks. But so it is just blatantly in your face about this bombing campaign
in Yemen is about Israel. Of course, there's other factors,
including just the profit, the military industrial complex.
That's always a factor, but this is very,
just so clearly about just ensuring Israel
can continue to do whatever it wants.
And it's really shameful.
I mean, again, I mentioned the blockade,
like Trump has the ability to get on the phone and say,
let the aid into Gaza, or I'm going to cut you off.
And every, every day it doesn't do that.
I mean, it's just, it's just really shameful.
Yeah.
And it seems like, uh, at least in, in, you know, when we'll see how that
develops, but at least like in Ukraine, Trump is certainly willing to say like,
Hey, look, if you want our support and you're relying on us, then okay.
But we have some expectations.
We have some boundaries and conditions that come along with that.
And yet it just,
it almost never seems to be the case with the U S relationship with Israel.
And you know, to your point,
this is something I've kind of been hitting on a lot lately,
but I find this to be an interesting dynamic.
But like, okay, if you know,
like what I know now, what you probably know better than I know,
but like if you know about the war in Iraq and you really know, you know, like, okay,
you could go read through like the project for a new American century or you
can read the clean break memo or you can read Netanyahu's old writings or
whatever. And you could see that like, okay,
the Likudniks in Israel and the neo conservatives,
their counterpart in the United States of America,
they wanted to overthrow Saddam Hussein since at least the nineties. Okay.
And they were very upset that they didn't overthrow him in the first Gulf war.
And they wanted to have plans to overthrow him all throughout the nineties and
well, well before nine 11. However, that was not, first off, there weren't podcasts
and there wasn't social media and there were, you know,
whatever, there were newsletters and stuff like that,
but this was not something that was widely known.
It probably was widely known within connected people in DC,
but it wasn't widely known by the American people.
And the propaganda at least for going into Iraq was no it had
nothing to do with that this has nothing to do with Israel this was about 9-11
this was about nuclear weapons and the fact that Saddam Hussein was in on 9-11
and now he has nukes so he's friends with these terrorists they could end up
getting a nuke and nuking the United States of America so there was at least
you know there was some good old-fashioned propaganda there where Joe
six-pack in America could very reasonably seeing what was said on the TV say to
his friend, well, we got to go see about these nuclear weapons. I mean,
we can't let that, you know, we can't let that go,
but there just simply is no propaganda like this with the Houthis.
Nobody is even attempting to make the argument that some,
aside from the fact that they could, uh,
could be a problem for some of our ships where as I can't remember,
was it JD Vance or Pete Hicks or I think both of them acknowledged on the
signal chat, like a very small percentage of our trade even depends on any of
this, but like that's the best they got.
They got, it's just so obvious that this is about the conflict in Gaza.
However you feel about it, that's what's going on here.
And you do wonder like it again, it seems to me like, I guess,
two thoughts. No, number one, it just seems like everything else.
It seems so short-sighted, um, by even the pro Israel factions.
And then, you know, just because I, I have, you know,
been getting a lot of this heat thrown my way lately,
it kind of seems like almost like, uh, I,
I've gotten to the point in debating about Israel that nobody is even,
nobody anymore is even saying like, oh,
you gotta go debate this guy or something like that.
Like I was getting a lot of, um, Douglas Murray was the one who everyone always used to throw at me. They used to go, well, you gotta go debate this guy or something like that. Like I was getting a lot of, um,
Douglas Murray was the one who everyone always used to throw at me. They used to go,
well, you should debate those more. He'll destroy you on this. And now they're like,
okay. Um, people said Josh hammer was going to destroy me. Dennis Prager was a guy,
but now it's no one's even trying to debate that anymore.
They're just basically saying that I am responsible for all of the Jew hatred
online or something like that. Um, and,
but I just go for all these people who like Jew hatred on Twitter is their biggest
concern. Like, well, what do you think?
What do you think getting into another catastrophic war in the middle East on
behalf of Israel is going to make this country look like?
What do you think the response to that is going to be? It almost to me seems like a call to their bluff. Like you must not actually be that
concerned about this because otherwise this is the last thing you would want to do. Well yeah,
yeah. I mean people they don't seem to really want to engage with with that point. And this
when it comes to Yemen, because again it's more in your face, like it's
just, this isn't even part of the discussion. I mean, when do people say, oh, debate me on
whether or not we should be bombing Yemen or something like that. And of course, the talking
point when it comes to Yemen is that they're, you know, the Houthis are backed by Iran. If you read
any mainstream coverage of it, they call them the Iran backed Houthi rebels. They're the rebels,
even though they've controlled Sana'a now for over 10 years. And an
important point because people, you could look at a map and you'll see the Houthi
controlled areas in the in the West and the rest is not controlled by them. But
that's where 80% of Yemenis live. That's where most of the population lives. So
it's an important point. And Yemen used to be north and south Yemen. It's
basically north Yemen that they control the former country.
But anyway, so the narrative is that they're Iran-backed, and they certainly receive support from Iran.
What level? We don't really know.
Essentially, how I understand it is that Iran probably helped them develop their missile and drone program,
giving them these missile components and drone components.
But they make them domestically, so it's not like they rely on Iran for weapon
shipments. And this is something Trump has said, oh, Iran has to cut them off, or we're going to
blame them for every attack. And he actually said something recently, like a couple weeks ago,
just in a press conference, he said, did you know who knew the Houthis make their own missiles and
drones? Could you believe that? It's like, yeah, I knew that. A lot of people knew that before you
started bombing them. But anyway, back to your point. So it is the that? It's like, yeah, I knew that a lot of people knew that before you started bombing them
But anyway back to to your point, so it is the narrative that it's like, you know
This is the axis the the anti-israel axis and I do think you know
Hezbollah is basically neutered at this point Assad is out of Syria
They do really see the Houthis as a major thorn in Israel's side
Because they just keep getting better and better at being able to send missiles
and drones, you know, in these, these long range attacks. So, you know, that's,
that's a big part of this is trying to take out another one of Israel's enemies
in the region. And of course the big one is Iran.
And I also think part of this bombing campaign is kind of as a threat to Iran,
you know,
cause Trump saying he's going to bomb Iran if they don't reach a deal
It's not an idle threat when you see him using two aircraft carriers and B two bombers stationed in Diego Garcia
The bomb Yemen to you know, really?
Bomb the crap out of the country. I mean over a thousand airstrikes. It's just it's really insane
And yeah, I think the fact that the US is doing this for Israel could increase anti-semitism more than
You saying hey, maybe we shouldn't help
Gaza
Even even more than mentioning the name Paul Wolfowitz you think?
That was too much
Yeah, I know it really was it was the moment
It was the moment, you know one thing about this anti-semitism stuff
Like I think you know, obviously if you go on X, you see this stuff, you see these kind of anonymous accounts that Jordan Peterson is talking about on Joe Rogan, I guess.
But I think not talking about this stuff and pretending like Israel doesn't have this influence over our foreign policy, yeah, like, we'll add to that fuel that fire more,
but having people that can honestly discuss these things and aren't anti
semites, we can discuss, you know,
realistically what's happening will lead less people down that path.
So that whole talking point is just nonsense.
Yeah, I, right. I completely agree. And there's something, you know, there's,
like I mentioned this a lot on the show cause it's, I don't know, I think it's, it's important and it's important particularly to me, but like,
so, you know,
what pulled me into the libertarian world and set me on this trajectory to be
whatever I am now, um,
was the Ron Paul Giuliani moment and that Ron Paul was just making this what
I found to be at the time.
And then since obsessively reading
about this for many years,
I've just been more and more convinced as the truth is that like, you know,
there is a consequence to certain military actions.
And that leads to creating a lot of hatred in the world.
And that, you know, there's all these different kinds of like,
uh, you know, different people have noted this. Uh, of course, obviously, uh, um,
general, uh, general McChrystal's insurgent math, 10 minus two equals 20.
You know, you keep killing people and there's a lot of innocent people who get killed in the process and then more and more people join up to the resistance.
But it is even as you're saying that,
you know, and of course as, as Scott Horton points out and demonstrates in his,
his book enough already, you know,
on September 11th Ben Laden and all of his men were like a few hundred people.
And then at the height of the global war on terror,
it's like tens of thousands of Ben Laden night Islamists who are fighting.
Like it's just, it's right in front of you that you're not
Eliminating them you're creating more of them. But as you say this it's maybe even like the first time
I'm thinking about it exactly in this way, but imagine you could zoom out like go back
20 years and
And you were to say or make 25 years to keep all of them in but like in terms
of like Israel's enemies in the region because again this this really was anyone can go read
the clean break memo like this was the strategy their strategy was like listen we're going
to have a break from the peace process we're going to have a break from this idea that
we have to settle the Israel Palestine issue in order for Israel to make peace with the broader Arab and Muslim world and
Instead of settling that issue we can just take out Israel's enemies in the broader Muslim and Arab world and
Imagine you were to say to Israel. Hey
You know your big enemies. All right, Saddam Hussein gone
Momar Qaddafi gone Bashar al-Assad gone. Hezbollah's leadership, totally
annihilated like all of that. And they go, ah, shoot,
now we got to go see about these Houthis. And you're like, oh, it's,
it's just kind of prove it's like, yeah,
you can never whack a mole enough to get them all got.
You just can't keep doing this to the Palestinians and think that there's not
going to be resistance
against that and it's like in the same sense that like even just within the
Israel-Palestine conflict like Israel's been dominating and occupying them for
for 60 years and they're still dealing with resistance you can never put it out
enough because people do not much like to be brutally oppressed and there's going to
be resistance to that. It just seems so obvious to me.
Yeah. And when you talk about insurgent math and all that stuff, I mean, this
applies, I think so much with Yemen with kind of who the Houthis are, like what
their identity is. For the background of them, you know, something Douglas Murray
said in your debate was he was like, oh Iran colonized
You know these countries he said that they colonized the Yemen and it's just such an absurd
it's funny for like a British guy to say that in the first place, but
To say that Iran colonized Yemen
I mean again, it's just it shows he has just no understanding of the situation in Yemen who the Houthis are
They're a specific sect of Shiite Islam, they're Zaydi Shiites, and the area of North Yemen,
like their kind of stronghold, Sadda, and most of the area that they control now,
was ruled by Zaydi Shia imams for a thousand years until the 1960s. And the Houthis, they started,
I believe they were called the Believing Youth,
they started as like a religious movement, kind of as a pushback to the Sunni, you know,
Wahhabism that the Saudis were pushing in Yemen. So they started as a religious movement, but they
have very, you know, deep roots in the country. And yeah, they're allied with Iran politically,
because they ended up being on the same side of certain things.
But this idea that Iran, because people, again, if you read the media every day and you see
Iran back, Iran back, Iran's proxy, the Iranian proxy, you would think that Iran plucked some
Shiites out of its own country and dropped them in Yemen, but it's just not true.
And again, their whole identity is part of this resistance against Israel, against US imperialism, against the Gulf monarchs. And you
you do what the US is doing now bomb residential buildings full of civilians to kill a guy,
one guy, and then, you know, you think that's not going to, you know, you talk about the insurgent
math. I mean, this is just
really building up their support and my hope is that
the reality is because we see this talk about the US backing a ground campaign but what i'm also hearing is that the other factions in Yemen, some of them have
rallied behind the Houthis now
in response to them being the ones, you know, really the only ones sticking up for the Palestinians at this point
So it's like it really just kind of building up their whole, like just
their whole thing, their whole identity, their whole narrative. And if you're a Yemeni, just
a regular guy in Yemen, living in these conditions, I mean, you just got to put yourself in their
shoes. We see what's happening in Gaza every day. Oh, well, that's why we're being bombed
now by the Americans, because we're standing up the, all those, you know, those dead children you see on the news every single
day. We're the only ones, you know, standing up for that.
And that's why the Americans, you know, the evil empire is bombing us. I mean,
this just few,
it's just fertile ground for more recruitment for the Houthis like to kind of a
ridiculous degree. Yeah, no, that's, that's exactly right.
And it is the, um, I know like,
you know, certainly I, I do know that right,
like Iran was arming, um, Hezbollah for a while.
I think there's a part of the major part of the reason why they wanted Bashar
al-Assad gone, but it is interesting. First of all, like,
anytime Hamas, Hezbollah or the Houthis, any of the H's, uh,
get written about, it's always Iran backed.
And yet this logic never seems to apply. Like,
it's not like if Jordan ever does anything,
they must be referred to as the U S backed Jordanians do this or the U S
backed Egyptians or the U S backed Saudis this or the us backed Egyptians or the us backed Saudis
or the us backed Israelis or the you know what I'm saying? Like it's just they never
like apply this standard across the board. By the way, I mean, again, you know, a point
I love to make, but you could also call Hamas the Israeli backed Hamas militants launched
October 7th. You know, like if you were to say it like that, it would, first of all,
it would actually be much more accurate. Um, and, uh,
and, and much more damning and eye opening to the whole situation,
but it is an interesting tactic that they use that you're never, you know,
it's, it's funny because if I, um,
let's say I were to argue with someone like maybe on Joe Rogan with someone with
a posh British accent, I were to argue with someone like maybe on joe rogan with uh, someone with a posh british accent
I were to say that like hey, you know the national endowment for democracy in the usaid poured
100 million dollars into the madon revolution though. Well that now i'm denying agency
You know like you're denying agency if you bring that up and yet referring to every militant group in the region
as an ir proxy is somehow not
denying agency. And so like, like you're putting, like it's not even saying that Iran hasn't
been political allies with some of these people, but they are their own groups with their own
motivations as well.
Yeah. Yeah. And as I understand, you know, Iran has a lot of sway over Hezbollah. You
know, they're very closely aligned with, over the Shiite factions in Iraq
that the US helped put in power.
But when it comes to Yemen,
the Houthis are known as being much more their own thing.
So yeah, it's just,
and I've seen people say the opposite,
but it's just not true.
But whenever we see what little mainstream coverage
there is of the situation, it's like oh
US airstrike in Yemen killed 65 migrants the Iran backed Houthis say
Like they just kind of acting like everything's not really a big deal. What's happens? Like oh, it's just the Iran backed Houthis that that
We're bombing, you know, don't worry about all these civilians
So, yeah, it's just and you talk about the consequences of blowback
and everything for what's happening now.
It's just there's such a better way to approach the whole region
at this point.
And I don't even think Trump wouldn't be like I think if Trump
really wanted to bring peace, he has the ability.
I mean, again, it's all Gaza is the key, but it just doesn't seem like he wants to do peace. He has the ability. I mean, again, it's all, Gaza's the key,
but it just doesn't seem like he wants to do that.
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mind while it's still available all right let's get back into the show do you what do you make of
donald trump uh who appears to have at least temporarily thwarted the Israeli
plans to, uh, to launch attacks on, on Israel, uh, excuse me, on Iran.
Um, and now the, over the last couple of weeks, Netanyahu has been saying
he they're about to do it anyway.
They're cut, you know, and, but it does seem like the plans that they had laid
out involve the U S helping them.
Cause of course they can't actually do any of this stuff without our help. Um, do you think,
I mean, like this does,
it seems to me like a small temporary win at least given a bad situation,
but do you think he's like, like you said, I mean,
he could be pushing for peace in this region and he doesn't seem to be using any
of the leverage he has, which is substantial.
What do you make of that?
Where do you see this all going?
Yeah, I mean, I think the fact that he's even just saying
like, oh, if we don't reach a deal, we're gonna bomb them.
It's not, you know, that's not good.
You don't need to approach these negotiations like that.
And I mean, when he was asked about this report recently
and somebody said, it was in his time interview,
they said, oh, do you think Netanyahu
is gonna drag you into war? And he said and he said I he said I'd go willingly basically he said
I could go into it willingly and that if we do attack Iran will be leading the pack so he's you
know really making these threats and a lot of people kind of point to his first term like the
threats against North Korea but again we're talking about a situation where in the same region the US
has all this firepower that's bombing another country and a big part of the buildup sending the bomber, sending the aircraft carriers and also sending air defenses to it actually to Israel to prepare for this potential war with Iran.
Like the US has the military posture to do it.
So I mean, the fact that he chose not to bomb Iran, I mean, I don't it's hard hard for me to give him credit for that because like, it shouldn't even be a possibility in the first place. But it's just concerning. You know, it does seem like he wants a deal. He does keep saying that and while he makes these threats.
Associations are advancing. I mean, they've had three rounds and they both sides say they're they're they're going well
On the other hand you have the the Trump administration officials like Marco Rubio and Mike Waltz saying publicly that any deal must
Dismantle Iran's nuclear enrichment program altogether, which that's just not even that's just a non-starter for Iran
But it looks like that's not the demand that they're making behind the scenes So, I mean it's tough to say where this is gonna go
But it looks like that's not the demand that they're making behind the scenes. So I mean, it's tough to say where this is going to go.
There was recently over the weekend, a huge port explosion in Iran that I believe killed
60 people.
And with things like that, I mean, the Iranians haven't made the accusation that it was an
attack or sabotage.
But Israel has a history of sabotage attacks inside Iran and of doing them to sabotage
diplomacy between the US and Iran.
They did it. They detonated an explosive in an Iranian nuclear facility in April 2021,
when Biden started negotiations with Iran. But again, so far, no Israeli sources have
taken credit for that or in the Iranians. There's like an Iranian member of parliament who accused
the Israelis of being behind it. But the fact is we don't really know at this point,
but something like that, like a sabotage attack,
you know, we might see things like that
that Netanyahu might do to try to sabotage the diplomacy,
because I think he sees this as the time,
this Trump administration is his chance,
possibly his last chance to get that war with Iran
that he's always wanted.
And then, you know, imagine if the US and Iran
are engaged in a war,
he could just do whatever he wants to the Palestinians
in Gaza, there's not gonna be nearly as much attention on it.
They could advance their designs in the West Bank
more freely.
So yeah, it's, you know, he has a lot of motive
to make this war happen in Yahoo.
Do you think, the way I've always felt about this, uh, as I've been paying,
paying attention to it over the last, you know, couple decades, um, is that it,
it seems to me that the Iranians, you know,
much like, um, I think this is kind of the way it always works with governments
and in general, but let governments are,
they kind of have to, um,
at least pose as your protectors in,
in order to preserve any perceived legitimacy amongst their, their people.
And so the, the Iranians, like, for example, um,
when they responded to the Israeli attacks back last year,
and they sent those rockets,
or they sent those missiles at Israel,
but they gave the US warning,
and they didn't really send everything they had.
They essentially, it seems like,
similarly to after Donald Trump killed Soleimani,
and they kind of sent like some rockets at US bases,
but didn't kill anybody.
Like they wanna, you know, and they kind of sent like some rockets at US bases but didn't kill anybody like they want to
You know, they basically want to act as if they've responded to kind of save face with their own people
But then at the same time they don't really want this fight because they know I mean
You know if you could picture where Iran is like if you could picture a map of them like their neighbors are Iraq and Afghanistan
They've seen what the US military has done to their two neighbors while threatening to do it to them you could picture a map of them. Like their neighbors are Iraq and Afghanistan.
They've seen what the U S military has done to their two neighbors while
threatening to do it to them for these entire 20 years.
And it does almost seem like they're, you know, they're,
they don't actually want this fight. They want to, you know, posture as if they're not pushovers and that they will respond.
I think what a lot of the, um, you know, it's like, like,
I almost think about, you know, like an analogy would be that like, you know,
it's imagine you're like walking with your wife and,
and your two kids down the street or something like that.
I think we both got the same amount of kids. Um, they were walking with your,
your two kids and your wife and you're surrounded by much tougher guys and
they're like talking shit and they're disrespecting you and
you're almost like, all right, okay, just take it. Let's keep walking.
Like I don't want anything to happen to my family here. But like at a certain point,
if they, if they cross the line, you're going to be like, well,
I guess I got to fight these guys and land as many punches as I can.
I'm probably going to lose, but I have to do something here.
And it does seem like the Trump administration and the Warhawks
are presenting this as if it is an option to just take out the Iranian nuclear sites,
like to just have a massive bombing campaign in Iran and then that's it.
We don't have to do like a full invasion like we did in Iraq.
We could just do that and then go back to life as normal.
My guess would be there is no way that Iran could allow that to happen without some type
of response and they have a lot of responses available to them.
But what do you think about that?
Is it possible for the Israelis and the American military to just take out the Iranian nuclear
program and that's that? Israelis and the American military to just take out the Iranian nuclear program.
And that's that.
I do not think so, but that is the talking point we hear.
Like I remember Tom Cotton said that recently in a hearing and you see people who
support this idea of bombing Iran acting like it'll be no big deal.
But I think it's very clear, you know, if they take that step, because, you know,
what it would take to try to destroy Iran's nuclear
facilities would be dropping the the US's heaviest bunker busting bombs are like 30 000 pounds
because they built these facilities deep underground because in anticipation of of
something like this happening so if the US goes out and drops those bombs on that I mean I they're
gonna respond and the fact is is that they have advanced ballistic missiles that can hit,
I believe about 10 us bases in the region, probably more. And as you know,
this is something Tucker has been talking about a lot lately.
The Pentagon assessments are like hundreds or thousands of American casualties.
And then what happens is Trump just going to be like, Oh, well that's that.
No, then it's going gonna become an even bigger war. I don't really see a situation where the US like tries to invade Iran
I mean, it's just not realistic
Like nobody has the will none of the people in the US have the will the US military doesn't have the will
Where are they gonna invade from?
But I could see just like really heavy bombing maybe some ground fighting and like Iraq or something
Until somebody says alright enough. I guess see just like really heavy bombing, maybe some ground fighting in like Iraq or something, until somebody says, all right, enough,
I guess we just gotta negotiate here or something.
But like, yeah, it's just,
there's no way that the US just takes out
the nuclear facilities and that's it.
The other thing is that Iran does not have
a nuclear weapons program.
That's what US intelligence has said
that's been the consensus since the early 2000s. But they use their nuclear program essentially as leverage, and they kind of use the threat of it turning into weaponization as leverage. And the conversation has changed inside Iran, you're seeing more calls for the Ayatollah to reverse his ban on making nukes. And an advisor to the Ayatollah said that if you know the US and Israel attacked
then we could change our position on nuclear weapons. You know they want there to be consequences
for bombing them and that New York Times report was interesting. It said that the plans to attack
Iran could set back their nuclear program by a year. So suggesting that, they actually can't completely destroy it, which makes sense.
So, yeah, it would be like bombing a country under a phony pretext of them having a nuclear weapons program, and it could actually create one.
So the whole thing, for every reason, it's just would be a very foolish thing to do.
And there's just no reason to be this hostile against Iran
right now, except for Israel.
Yeah, no, that's right.
And it reminds me even, right, like Douglas Murray said to me
when I pointed out that the war in Afghanistan
was not just about taking out al-Qaeda,
but that we launched a 20-year regime change
war against the Taliban. And he goes, well, you got dragged into the quick sound of war.
And it's like, right. Yeah, that's right. That sure can happen. Not like if you,
um, if, if you look at the, uh, the original, you know,
authorization of use of military force against Iraq,
it was very narrow to take out Saddam Hussein.
And we took out Saddam Hussein very quickly
But then we were there for another two decades and I still have
Some military forces there today even at the beginning of the Ukraine War Joe Biden
Was very clear that the Ukraine can win with sanctions that we could support them
Just with sanctions that was supposed to be the extent of American involvement.
And you just see this all over the place.
So the idea that, right, like we're going to, that we're going to just bomb the crap
out of Iran, but that'll be it.
Man, you want to talk about risky games.
That is a risky one.
And as you said, it just seems like it would, you know, it would be a situation where they would have to really respond.
And if they really responded,
then how the hell are we not going to really respond to that? I mean, you know,
again, just try to, try to even imagine, you know, they,
there, there was after Trump killed Soleimani,
there was some restraint showed on both sides of that. And look,
you could say, um,
killing Soleimani was probably one of the worst things Donald Trump ever did
just in terms of how risky a move it was.
But then you could also say that one of the best things he ever did was just
leave it at that and not, you know, respond any further.
But if you could just like run a counterfactual in your head and imagine that like the Iranian retaliatory strike had
killed 10 us servicemen, is it, is it possible that Donald Trump would have,
I certainly don't think so.
I don't think there's any world in which Mr.
tough guy, Donald Trump with all of his Maryam Adelson money and all of the
neocon hawks that he has around him It would possibly be able to say you're gonna just let them kill
Ten US soldiers and not have a bigger response to that
And so this is you know the quick sound of war as even neocon Douglas Murray would call it
you just see it right in front of you and
And again for what benefit are we even playing with this game so that the country of
Iran that poses no threat to any of us might continue to
pose no threat to any of us. It's just, it's, it's madness.
Yeah.
And unfortunately it seems like the lesson Trump got out of the Soleimani
thing was that he could hit Iran hard and not really suffer any consequences. That seems to be, and you see this kind of talking point
from him and like his supporters like, Oh, you know, Ron didn't do anything after that
after we killed Soleimani. Well, they killed Soleimani under the pretext that he was helping
plot attacks on us bases in the region. A us soldier was killed a few weeks earlier
in Kirkuk, Iraq, and we don't really know
who launched that rocket. And then in March of that year, more American, I believe two, one or two,
or maybe some British soldiers, I forget exactly the number, but at least one American was killed.
Like just a couple months later. So the whole talking point is, oh, Iran didn't, you know,
nothing happened after we killed Soleimani. It kind of solved all the problems, but it's just not
the case. So, but that is, you know, you hear Trump whenever, you know, how he always says,
oh, this would have never happened if it was me, Iran was broke. He touts his first, you know,
administration's Iran policy, even though it was a complete failure, as like this great thing that
like brought peace, which is just not, not the case. So unfortunately, it seems like that's,
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Alright, let's get back into the show.
So do you, I mean, if you had to, you cover this stuff, you know for a living and and in much more detail than I do
What if you had to guess where do you think? Where do you think happens from here?
Man, it's tough. You know, I think one big risk here
We talked about American casualties is the Houthis. They're full of surprises. I
Wouldn't be surprised if we see one of their drones or
missiles hit a US warship or maybe they'll try to target a base across the Red Sea in Djibouti or
something. Or who knows? I mean, you just never know what they might be able to hit. There's a
risk there and then of the US really escalating in Yemen and trying to back a ground invasion.
escalating in Yemen and try to back a ground invasion. But obviously the big thing is Iran.
And a few weeks ago, I was much more pessimistic. I thought it was inevitable. When he started bombing Yemen and was making all these threats and Israel's just unleashing in Gaza again,
it's just like, oh, wow, we're actually just going to go into war with Iran, aren't we?
like, oh, wow, this is we're actually just going to go into war with Iran, aren't we?
But since the negotiation started and the fact that they seem to be, you know, there's there's progress happening, they've even had some direct engagement. And it looks like obviously, Iran
doesn't want to war with the US. And I think they're making that very clear to Trump. So that I
think the risk is a little lower. But it's so hard for me to imagine them signing a deal with Iran.
It's like that was like the Iran that was like the JCPOA that Obama negotiated because like every Republican is is going to be against it.
Even you know, it's just hard for me to imagine like an Iran nuclear deal happening right now.
And that is the thing it seems like will is the only thing that'll prevent war. So I think the chances are still
pretty high of this turning into the US and Iran launching some strikes. Sorry, the US and Israel
launching strikes on Iran. I think there's a good chance of that still happening here. And then,
who knows where things escalate from there. But it's just, you know, I just don't see,
I follow the stuff in Gaza every day, the negotiations. It's like, you saw Trump the other day saying, oh, he told, claiming that he
told Netanyahu he's got to be good to the people in Gaza. And, you know, we're taking care of the
aid situation, but there's no aid, there's no food going in there. And they're just killing dozens of
people every day. So it just doesn't seem like he's willing to put any pressure on Israel to stop
that right now, even though the, you with American citizenship has apparently, according to Hamas,
has gone missing after an Israeli airstrike. I mean, you think that would be enough if that
was his priority to get him to stop this, but it just goes on. It just goes on and on. And
everybody's focused kind of more on the domestics up here in the US. I mean, for good reason, there's
a lot of stuff happening, but it's just, you know, one thing really kind of more on the domestics up here in the US. I mean for good reason there's a lot of stuff happening but it's just you know one thing really kind
of showed how the media views all this stuff. After the signal gate thing Trump
was in the Oval Office talking to reporters and they were like grilling
him about them having this conversation and signal and including the Atlantic
reporter and he was trying to deflect and the way he was trying to do it he's like I don't get why nobody asked me about the
The airstrikes against the Houthis. They're going great. We're launching all these were bombing on me
But and like nobody is saying well, actually they're not going great. Like nobody challenged him on that
They just kept asking about the thing. So it's like, you know, and this is the issue
I mean even with all this going on with Iran
it's like a lot of Americans don't just don't really follow it
and that if this does lead to
The us and israel bombing iran iran hitting back with missiles killing americans then then that's it
You know, we're at war with iran
and uh, you know, however that will play out, so there's just a real risk of this unless
Something really changes
Yeah, yeah, and man, uh, it's,
it probably can't be overstated how as disastrous as the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan and Libya and Syria and Somalia and Yemen, as bad as they were,
Iran is biting off a lot more than any of those. I mean, by far,
and they're much more formidable.
And that's not to say that there are more powerful military than the United States
of America, but like neither was the Taliban and they're there they outlasted us in that war
So yeah, it's a it's dangerous times. I tend to agree with your assessment
I would love to think that these negotiations could lead to a deal but just looking at the people just around Donald Trump
I mean, it just seems like every people just around Donald Trump, I mean,
it just seems like every one of them is going to oppose this.
And so we'll, we will see. Uh, but I do appreciate as always,
Dave DeKamp, you coming and helping us, uh, understand this stuff better.
Please let people know where they can find your work or anything else you want
to promote and, uh, let them know.
Yeah. Well, my writing is at antiwar.com.
If you look at the news section at the top, there's usually a few articles by me there.
And I have a show called Antiwar News with Dave DeKamp where I basically go over the
daily news stories five days a week.
It's on YouTube.
So if you're watching this on YouTube, you could go subscribe to that.
Also on Rumble Odyssey and most people listen to the audio, the podcast. It's great to kind of just throw on, it's like 30 minutes a day to get also on rumble Odyssey and and most people listen to the audio the podcast. It's great to kind of just throw on
It's like 30 minutes a day to get updated on the foreign policy stuff
It's kind of for foreign policy nerds and it's can get pretty depressing to listen to it every day
But people seem to like it. So
But yeah, that's it and follow me on X at the camp. Dave is my handle over there. Yeah, absolutely
Listen, I can't I can't recommend Dave's work highly enough.
If you do want to stay informed on what's going on and yes, it is depressing,
but you know, it's, uh,
it's always better to know the truth than to bury your head in the sand. Um,
so anyway, thank you again, brother, for, uh, as always.
And, uh, I look forward to talking to you soon. Uh,
and thank you to everybody for watching. Catch you next time. Peace.