Pod Save the World - Bullsh*t Ceasefires Everywhere

Episode Date: May 6, 2026

Ben and Tommy break down another chaotic week in foreign policy full of bad ideas and worse outcomes. Trump rolls out—and just as quickly unrolls—a new Pentagon plan—dubbed “Project Freedom�...�—to “guide” ships through the Strait of Hormuz, leaked intelligence reports show that the war has not changed Iran’s nuclear timeline, and polling confirms that the war has become a political disaster for Trump. They also share a rare, firsthand account from a teacher in Iran about living under the regime's internet blackout and surveillance state, and discuss how the war has derailed Trump's upcoming trip to China. Then they turn to the humanitarian catastrophes unfolding in Lebanon and Gaza, where so-called ceasefires have not stopped the killing, rodent infestations are causing infant deaths, and reconstruction is fantasy. They also check in on the war in Ukraine, from the staggering death toll to reports that Putin has retreated into his bunker because he fears for his life, and how online dissent from a Russian influencer finally broke through. Finally, Tommy speaks to Rep. Jason Crow about Iran, why he wants to get Pete Hegseth fired, and what troop reductions in Germany will mean for our relationship with Europe.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast, episode title, and episode date.Preorder Ben’s book All We Say: The Battle for American Identity: A History in 15 Speeches and subscribe to his Substack here.

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Starting point is 00:01:30 perspectives. Listen every week and you'll be ready to engage and not just rage. Left right and center. Available everywhere you get podcasts. Welcome back to Pots Save the World on Tommy Vitor. I'm Ben, this morning I saw a bunch of coverage of Jeff Bezos kind of buying the Met Gala. And then I read a story about the family that owns Samsung paying an $8 billion inheritance tax bill. And I thought we could do that. Maybe the Koreans know something we don't. It would be cool to do that. can actually collect money from these people so they don't buy all your cultural institutions. Not that I, I don't know, not that the back gala is always my jam, but no, something kind of gross about it. Yeah, you know, it's a little late-stage capitalism, you know, whatever.
Starting point is 00:02:25 It's very like collapsing Roman Empire vibes. Collegula. Yeah, yeah. Anyway, but yeah, it did make me think like, yeah, we remember all that ranting and raving about the death tax and how it would hurt farmers and all this bullshit. And that's just protecting billionaires who pay. Well, you didn't get invited to any of the good. parties in high school, so now he has to buy the biggest party in the world for his wife. Honestly, not that strategy.
Starting point is 00:02:46 It's fun. Also, you buy your way to space. You can do whatever you want these days. I just want to note, because there's a lot of, my algorithm has trained me for Nick's Twitter. And absolutely paced the Sixers yesterday, getting revenge for you. But there's a huge divide because Ben Stiller, Nick Superfan, went to the Met Gala. It's getting dragged pretty hard. Why?
Starting point is 00:03:10 I give him a pass. He's always there. I'm not mad at Ben Stiller. I will note that Timmy Shalame went to the game. Oh, I see instead of going to the game. Did you also, I also love when Ben Stiller tweeted, well, we got that done. Clearly about the Nix and people thought it was about the correspondence and her assassination. So this is really fun.
Starting point is 00:03:28 So I have a Nix text thread with my best friends from high school. And it's the funniest thread because it's literally like we know we're watching the game. So we're just be like, OG, cat, got it. No context. And Ben Stiller literally tweets like he's on our thing. You have no idea what he's talking about. He's like, we got it. Oh, we almost had it.
Starting point is 00:03:45 And then these maggot people are like, I can't believe you said, we almost got Trump. It's like, you fucking nerds. Just calm down. Not everything is politics. Even for us. Right. Even for us. Even us.
Starting point is 00:03:54 We like sports. Even these nerds agree. We got a great show today. We're going to cover all the latest from Iran from Trump's plan to guide ships to the straight over moves and why the administration is insisting that the U.S. and Iran literally firing at each other. They sank a bunch of boats. Apparently that's not a ceasefire violation.
Starting point is 00:04:10 Interesting. then we'll talk about some newly leaked intelligence about the impact of the U.S. and Israeli bombing campaign on Iran's nuclear infrastructure or lack thereof, and whether there's any semblance of a plan or an end game for negotiations. We'll dig into the politics back home, some polling data from the post over the weekend, and then we'll tell you guys what we've heard from people on the ground in Iran. We'll also cover how this is impacting Trump's upcoming trip to China, the latest from Lebanon, and the truly hellish situation on the ground for people in Gaza and the lack of any reconstruction efforts. Then we're going to do an update on the war between Russia and Ukraine, the political situation in Russia, and then we'll have a little fun at the end at the expense of a U.S. ambassador. Ben hasn't seen any of this yet. I don't know what this is.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Michael has a sense of humor that usually lands. This will be fun. I'm trusting Michael. Trust, trust the plan. And then you'll hear my interview with Congressman Jason Crow from Colorado, who you know well then. We talk about Iran, efforts by Congress to force an authorization of the war. His grilling of Pete Hegseth last week, he took an interesting tack focused on this one. really shady staffer at the Pentagon and made some interesting news.
Starting point is 00:05:15 Then we talked about Trump's plan to move troops out of Germany because the Chancellor of Germany hurt Trump's feelings. Can I just say because we kick around Democrats as they need to be kicked around a fair amount on not just this show, but I notice, you know, Ken Martin. Jason Crowe's great dude. And like just, and like gets it and is taking on Trump on the war in the right ways, is leading the D-Triple-C, the congressional. Campaign Committee, Canada recruitment.
Starting point is 00:05:42 Anyway, every now and then, we need to point out that there's some good Democrats. Yeah, there's some great Democrats out there. It's easier to be mean than nice, but you're right. Well, unfortunately, the Democratic Party gives us a lot of reasons to be. A lot of reasons to be mean. And by the way, Ben is actually doing today's episode Topless to help us get more views on the Pod Save the World YouTube page. Thank you for your service.
Starting point is 00:06:01 Ben. You're looking great. You've been working out. That's probably a joke, but you're going to have to subscribe to find out. But please subscribe to Pod Save the World on YouTube to ensure you don't miss any pop-tops. Any bonus episodes we do there about breaking news? Also, you help us display Ben Shapiro out of the YouTube algorithm. You may need to come up with someone other than Ben Shapiro
Starting point is 00:06:18 because I noticed the daily wire numbers are tanking. Tankin. Tough, tough, tough. Turns out just being died in the world and then, yeah, supporters, not. Yeah, it turns out being just pro-war and e-ocon propaganda isn't as profitable as saying Emmanuel Macron's wife has a dick. Really, that's how you kill it in media these days.
Starting point is 00:06:35 Maybe we'll get there. We got Candace over here. That's how we had subs. We got Pablo Torre winning a Pulitzer for sports reporting. I was just telling you that. I don't know. We land somewhere in the middle. No, Pablo's the best.
Starting point is 00:06:45 Adam of POTSafe America a while back. Also. Pulitzer Prize winner. Yeah, Pulitzer Prize winner. If you like the war Crooked Media is doing, by the way, please consider becoming a paid subscriber. At crooked.com slash friends, you get ad free episodes of this show,
Starting point is 00:06:56 add free episodes of Pot Safe America. You get great bonus content from Pottafe of America. You get Dan Pfeiffer diving deep to polling. And it's really the single best thing you can do to help us grow as a progressive independent media company. Also, So subscribers get early access and discounted tickets to CrookedCon. Another CrookedCon, PRICD, maybe more topless Ben at CricketCon.
Starting point is 00:07:16 Oh, possible. It's the first time you're hearing about this, but there's a movement. Me and Hassan Piker will go topless together. We'll see you as a better body. Yeah. I think it's probably not me. I think I know who it is. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:25 Not you, Hassan. Cricket con. You know that Jordan and our team works out in Hassan's house in Osloy. Oh, really? Crush and burpees and stuff. Yeah. Socialist burpees. It's pretty cool.
Starting point is 00:07:35 CricketCon happening November 5th through 7th in D.C. Go to crookedcon.com for more info. Should we talk about Iran? I think we should. I think we should. Because somebody has to, you know, wade into the cesspool of lies that emanates from our government. Straight of bullshit. So the big news this week is this Pentagon plan to, quote unquote, guide ships through the Strait of Formuz, not escort and defend guide.
Starting point is 00:08:00 It's called Project Freedom. I guess the freedom to get shot at. It's still ongoing. It's paused. Trump was so happy about that name. Yeah, he did really love that name. Project Freedom. Again, Heggseth says this is a distinct mission from Epic Fury. It's not a naval escort mission. He and Trump also insists that Iran firing at U.S. Navy ships in the Strait of Hulmoos,
Starting point is 00:08:21 firing at targets in the UAE and Oman at a South Korean ship. The list goes on. It's not a breach of the ceasefire. And CENTCOM also says that U.S. helicopters sinking six Iranian boats, also not a breach of the ceasefire. I guess that probably tells you everything you need to know. They're giving the Iranians, I guess, the same treatment they give the Israelis, which they can bomb Gaza and Lebanon out with their community and
Starting point is 00:08:43 still say there's a ceasefire. It also probably tells you that Trump does not want to go back to war. Anyway, here is Hegsef talking about this new mission on Tuesday morning in a press event. This operation is separate and distinct from Operation Epic Fury. Project Freedom is defensive in nature, focused in scope, and temporary in duration. with one mission protecting innocent commercial shipping from Iranian aggression. American forces won't need to enter Iranian waters or airspace. It's not necessary. We're not looking for a fight, but Iran also cannot be allowed to block innocent countries and their goods from an international waterway.
Starting point is 00:09:24 Iran is the clear aggressor as a direct gift from the United States to the world. we have established a powerful red, white, and blue dome over the street. Once again, America is using its strength to lift up others. Iran is trying to subjugate the world. To our partners, allies, and the rest of the world, this is a temporary mission for us. As I've said before, the world needs this waterway a lot more than we do. We're stabilizing the situation so commerce can flow again, but we expect the world to step up at the appropriate time
Starting point is 00:10:03 and soon we will hand responsibility back to you given the world a devil. Is it like World B-free, remember that basketball player? He talks about the world like it's a guy. Some guy named World to step up. Something about the way he talks just annoys the shit out of me. Everything? Everything. It's like it's his cat in the hat, war crime, beat poetry. It just drives me nuts. So Sendcom says Project Freedom will involve
Starting point is 00:10:25 guided missile destroyers, over 100 land and sea aircraft and 15,000 service members. They're also like very clearly eager to hand this mess off to other countries soon, Ben. So I imagine they'll be cutting and running. Sure, there are a lot of takers. Yeah. Yeah, a lot of it. So Ben, like I'm genuinely confused by the end game here for Trump.
Starting point is 00:10:41 Like there's no chance this half aspland to like quote unquote guide ships is going to get traffic through the straight back to pre-war levels. I guess we can hand it off to other countries like you said, but like no one has their naval capacity. So I guess, you know, maybe everybody just ends up paying a toll or the straight remains, remains partially closed. and it just crushes the global economy. I don't know. So, like, I'm trying to be charitable here. I'm trying to genuinely understand the strategy for the straight before we get into the nuclear stuff.
Starting point is 00:11:07 Do you have any, like, sense of what they're doing? I think that the fact that we're sitting here, you know, two months into this war, and a war that was started again to change the regime and the nuclear program and ushering freedom in Iran has led to Project Freedom to be a job, GPS service for ships that are already stuck in the Strait of Moos, you know, it just shows you the catastrophic error again.
Starting point is 00:11:37 There are a number of things that jumped out to me. They are worried about the absence of legal bases. So the reason I think that they're going to these great lengths to call it a Project Freedom and say it's distinct from Epic Fury is because under the War Powers Act, which they have ignored, that's the act that says Congress must, you know, authorize a war. you can kind of get a 60-day period where you're allowed to engage in military action before you really get in trouble, you know. If you're responding to an imminent threat, which Jason Crowe kept correcting me on because there was no imminent threat. Because there's no imminent threat.
Starting point is 00:12:15 But because he said when he was on the hill that there was over because of the ceasefire. So they have to make this seem different. It's interesting that he seems to care about that. That just shows you that the, he doesn't care about Democrats. Democrats, that usually that even Republicans are feeling humiliated as they should by the absence of any congressional authorization. The second thing is, I cannot possibly overstate how insulting their tone towards the rest of the world is, you know. You've done a very good job week after week at detailing these massive shortages that are crippling the economies of countries around the world, leading to severe shortages, making life hell for, like probably untold millions of people around the world. And so for him to kind of
Starting point is 00:13:04 marmally say, you know, like some trader who just did a line of Coke in the bathroom before he wanders out to the floor, you know, well, you guys, you know, we don't need this as bad as you do and you better come in here. Like, what is that for? Like, who is that for? Like, who is the audience for that? Because if it's the quote unquote friends and allies, he's talking about, they have no friends anymore. They lost them. And that's not going to make them want to step up, you know? Right. And then the last thing is they just fundamentally, because they did such piss-poor planning about this whole thing and didn't even anticipate that they closed the straightforward moves, they don't even understand that the problem is not that there's a lack of
Starting point is 00:13:44 guidance for the ships. It's that there are minds in the straight-of-hormuz, that the Iranians are firing at tankers, that there's a fear factor that no amount of guidance is going to solve. And similarly, if the United States Navy, which is the strongest in the world, can't reopen the strait, which it has not, no matter what they say. They don't control the straight. If they control the straight, all the ships would get out. It's not like some pickup team of other countries can do it either. So it's just this kind of weird mix of defense and offensive political messaging with no strategy attached to it. Yeah, and there are, there's nearly 23,000 sailors on 1,500 or more vessels that are just trapped in the Gulf, like trying to get out.
Starting point is 00:14:27 That is, that's what's at stake right now. And Rubio also did a briefing at the White House today. They did this full-core press. There was this bizarre event this morning where Trump was bringing back like the National Fitness Award. Remember that thing we did as kids? Noah Cindergarde, the ex-Met pitcher was there. It was always sad to see. It's always sad when the athletes you like turn out to be MAGA.
Starting point is 00:14:47 Some shredded MAGA guy, yeah. He was there. But Trump's like talking about like blowing up Iranians in front of all these children. So there was that. Then Hags-F and Kane did their briefing. And then Rubio went to the White House briefing room today and was just like a pig and shit, like so happy to be there, so excited about what he thinks is his future job. But anyway, Rubio said the blockade is costing Iran $500 million a day. And Trump did this interview with his staffer Hugh Hewitt on his radio show earlier this week about like oil and gas infrastructure in Iran and said, and they say that in two weeks, you know, when they talk about time, in two weeks, they're going to have a natural explosion of their oil that's going to make it impossible for them to really recover from.
Starting point is 00:15:26 So Trump seems to think that if the block A goes on, it will permanently blow up the Iranian oil and gas infrastructure. And maybe that's his plan to bring them to the table. But again, the Iranians are like they're not even willing to negotiate about nuclear issues right now. Their offer is a ceasefire from the U.S. and Israel. So also in Lebanon. They want sanctions relief. They want other financial benefits. And then they're willing to talk about the nuclear issues once the war is basically over.
Starting point is 00:15:55 And then Trump won't even specify what a ceasefire violation would look like. And like, I don't know if you watch the Canaan and Hexeth briefing, but the reporters in that room are such a joke. They were literally asking about whether Iran is using like mind-carrying dolphins to attack ships or like kamikaze dolphins. So that's where we're at in terms of the reporting on this. Yeah. I think, first of all, they have no plan. And they, because when you go to war, not knowing why you're going to war other than the. Bibi Naino convinced you to do it.
Starting point is 00:16:27 You don't even really know what you're trying to get in the negotiation. And then they're trying to spin their way out of this, but the reality doesn't have to spin it. My only observation I add out to this, and it's, it deals with the military. You know, we always have to do a lot. You know, this is kind of throat clearing about how great the military is, and it is. Like the people in it, you know, a lot of them are wonderful people. Dan Cain has been really disappointing to me. I mean, I texted you.
Starting point is 00:16:51 I watched that. He's not as bad as Hexas, so you're watching it. like, oh, this guy seems better than Hegsaith. But he's gilding the lily. You know, he's more factual in nature, but yeah. It's more factual in nature. There's some tethered to the truth, but he gives you kind of a blizzard of very tactical details that add up to no strategy.
Starting point is 00:17:10 And so he, but by standing there next to Hegset and trying to make the military operation seem like remarkably competent, he's kind of putting, you know, he's putting lipstick on this pig. And what worries me is it Trump, you know, look, it's always hard to play the game of what does Trump actually believe because everything out of his mouth about this war is a lie or a half-truth. But I do think that they're briefing him. Like the blockade's going great, sir, you know. Yeah, I do too. This blockade is never in the history of blockades.
Starting point is 00:17:44 Is there been a blockade like this blockade? And Iran is losing $500 million a day, sir. And the oil, you know, things will blow up in two weeks, which I think they said that two weeks ago, by the way. That's what I think too. Yeah. Quite literally. And I think that they're doing a grave disservice to the country in the world if they're doing that.
Starting point is 00:18:01 And I don't know that for a fact, but it seems like that. Because Trump, like, just likes to be told how well everything's going. And then he goes out and he repeats it in a dumber version and he amps it up. But I can kind of feel that happening here. And look, just because you can, like, position ships somewhere, doesn't mean you have a good strategy. It doesn't mean that what you're doing is working. And good military advice is going to the.
Starting point is 00:18:24 President of the United States and saying, this is not working. We cannot solve this problem militarily. And I worry that's not happening. Yeah, I mean, one of the Pentagon Press Corps is like, do you have suicide bomber dolphins swimming around the Strait of Romans? What are we doing here? Okay, Ben, as it has become our tradition immediately after we wrapped the show, Donald Trump sent a tweet that, actually, I don't know the implications of this one. But the war has ended like several times right after we took. Yeah, we've had a million ceasefires. Everything's better. So here's what you. truth on truth social. Based on the request of Pakistan and other countries, the tremendous
Starting point is 00:19:00 military success that we've had in the campaign against our country of Iran. And additionally, the fact that great progress has been made toward us complete and final agreement with representatives of Iran, we've mutually agreed that while the blockade will remain in full force and effect, Project Freedom, the movement of ships through the Strait of Formuz will be paused for a short period of time to see whether or not the agreement can be finalized and signed from President Donald J. Trump. I have no fucking clue what that means. I mean, it means we won, Tommy. I think it sort of means maybe that this whole plan wasn't working for all the reasons we just discussed and we're skeptical of. And now they're going to pretend that they're close to signing
Starting point is 00:19:43 some sort of real agreement to reopen the series. Yeah, I mean, not to be cynical. I'm coming from a place for too. But perhaps Project Freedom did not succeed in lowering the oil prices as he might have wanted. And so now we're trying a different tack because all he really cares about is the markets. Yeah, but he's seeming to suggest that they're close to a final agreement. But as we discussed, I mean, the Iranian position was like full ceasefire in Iran and Lebanon. There's an agreement for him to have that involves sanctions relief. Iran, you know, getting a lot and return for little.
Starting point is 00:20:21 And so at some point, one of these will be true. Right. And there'll be a deal in which the IRGCs is still in charge of Iran, and they get a bunch of money from either sanctions relief for tolling the straighted or unfrozen assets in return for some pretty cosmetic nuclear concessions or, you know, maybe some medium-sized ones like the JCPOA. And maybe this will be the time, or maybe this is just another effort to, try to lower gas prices, but I don't know, Tommy. Would you put Project Freedom up there with Operation
Starting point is 00:20:56 Overlord, the Normandy Invasion? Yeah, it's up there. It's just a remarkable success for Secretary Heggseth and the folks at the Department of War, one of the greatest 24-hour GPS navigation operations ever launched. Here's your map, Operation Freedom. Okay. Well, we wanted to hop on and just tell you guys that this true social post was sent, the story. story of this war is Trump just kicking a can down the road per every 24-hour news cycle and market moving events just to kind of keep the stock market on sides. Yeah, I wonder what trades will learn took place right before. Yeah, I'm sure Don Jr. has a bunch of futures at bed.
Starting point is 00:21:32 But, okay, we're going to go back to the regular show and we're going to talk about the big picture issues and nuclear stuff, the things that really matter. But another truth sort of a post. Diplomacy by social media. Going great. Well, I just, I'm glad our freedom has been defended like this. Yeah, thank you, sir. Potsy of the world is brought to you by Acorns. There are a million reasons why people talk themselves out of investing. It can feel like they don't have enough money to do it.
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Starting point is 00:25:05 it does or doesn't, I have to do what's right. We can't let them have a nuclear weapon. We hit all new highs, and I said, we have to take care of business because we can't let that happen. So we did a little detour. And it's working out very nicely. Our country's booming now, despite the fact that we're in a, I call it a mini-war, did a poll on the war with Iran, and they said only 32% of the people like it. Well, I don't like it, and I don't like war at all. It's a golden age for America.
Starting point is 00:25:33 You know, we hit an all-time high stock market today, despite that we're in a little skirmish military. I call it a skirmish because Iran has no chance. So to summarize, it's a mini-war or a skirmish, the polls are fake, but the stock market is up, so who cares? More importantly, Ben, there was a report from Reuters on the impact of Epic Fury, the most recent round of fighting on Iran's nuclear program. Reuters reported that U.S. intelligence believes that the time Iran would need to build a nuclear weapon has not changed since last summer when analysts determined that the previous strikes, Operation Midnight Hammer, had set them back. It basically pushed the timeline back to a year.
Starting point is 00:26:11 So in other words, like, the latest round of fighting has not set Iran's nuclear timeline back any further. before the war in June, U.S. intelligence said Iran was three to six months away from having enough highly enriched uranium to build a nuke after the 12-day war. They said it was nine to 12 months away, and now they're still about a year away. So it's not clear that this has done anything on the nuclear front. Of course, we've taken out, the U.S. and Israel have taken out a lot of conventional military capacity, killed a lot of Iran's leaders. But that's not what this was supposed to be about. So, I mean, Ben, again, we're not having nuclear talks that we know of, the U.S. and Iran. But the state of positions remain very far apart.
Starting point is 00:26:48 Again, earlier this week, Trump talked to neocon fan boy Hugh Hewitt. He told him he wanted all of Iran's highly enriched uranium out of the country. Iran refuses to do that. Trump has said repeatedly that Iran can't do any nuclear enrichment. Iran repeatedly has asserted its right to enrich. Trump wants to cap their missile program. He wants to end their support for proxies. It seems unlikely that the IRGC is going to be down with that.
Starting point is 00:27:11 So again, I'm trying to figure out an endgame, a path forward. some like common ground in these talks, but I'm just, I'm struggling to see it. I think that the, the fundamental problem here is we had this debate back in 2015, when the Iran nuclear deal went into effect. And having looked at the problem for years and having gotten the same presentation, or a version of it, the Netanyahu gave Trump to bomb Iran, But when we looked at that, you know, and we also looked at what was possible at the negotiating table, you know, what became very clear is, number one, you cannot destroy a nuclear program by bombing it. You just can't.
Starting point is 00:27:56 They know how to do this. They know how to do the nuclear fuel cycle. They have uranium. They have the capacity to build centrifuges. They can enrich that uranium. They have the capacity to stockpilot. You can bomb buildings where that takes place, but, you know, they can move it around. They can go underground.
Starting point is 00:28:11 They've got lots of different scientists. You cannot bomb that out of existence. You could invade the country and fully occupy it and hunt down every last scientist and, you know, piece of the program, but we're obviously not going to do that either. So, therefore, you can only resolve this issue diplomatically. If you resolve it diplomatically, there is absolutely no way that the Iranian government will ever agree that they do not have the capacity to enrich uranium, that they're going to abandon that in perpetuity. They're just not going to do that.
Starting point is 00:28:40 Like, we'd like that to happen. they're not going to do that. And so therefore, all you can do is negotiate some restrictions on their program where they're shipping the nuclear material that they produce out of the country, they're operating less centrifuges, and there are inspections. That's the Iran nuclear deal. That's the JCPOA. The only thing available to Trump as an off-ramp to this war, potentially, because I don't know if the Iranians are even in the mood to do it, is basically the deal that Obama had that he tore up. Right. And agreeing to that would reveal the absolute fucking insanity of not just Trump, but the entire Iran war industrial complex, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:21 all the Lindsey Graham's, obviously the Israelis, obviously the hack, you know, shit posters online who work at, you know, think tanks that had had no purpose for existing other than to cheerlead for a war with Iran. They, they, they, those people cannot admit that they were wrong. And the only way out of this war, is for them to, if not, admit that they're wrong, tacitly admit they're wrong by essentially trying to pursue a version of what Obama's nuclear deal was. I mean, honestly, I think that's where it is. And Trump, you know, they try all these other metrics, like we blew up some of their conventional military, we killed these leaders, and everybody can see with their own eyes that the IRGC took our best punch and is still standing, that they control the Strait of Hormuz, and that they actually
Starting point is 00:30:09 have more enriched uranium in a stockpile than they had the day Trump pulled out of that nuclear deal. And what was this all for, not just this war, this whole last decade, what was it for? The insanity of it is just apparent. And Trump doesn't understand these things. But I think the core point here is absent something like that, this war, like literally there's accomplished precisely nothing and at unbelievable cost. Yeah, according to U.S. intelligence, it's just nothing different. It's just shit. It's nothing because the ballistic missiles, they'll rebuild the ballistic missiles.
Starting point is 00:30:49 They'll find a way to do it. They'll produce the ballistic missiles. Or new drone technology. So like, this is completely insane that this happened. And by the way, at that event with the kids, Trump talked about the power of nuclear weapons. He talked about killing Iranians. He did his whole riff about like trans athletes. And then he said to them, Barack Hussein Obama, have you heard of him?
Starting point is 00:31:06 again to a bunch of kids. Do you think that set of remarks is going to wind up in your forthcoming book about great speeches? I will say, having spent four years writing a book to try to tell the history of the United States through 15 consequential speeches. That's got to make it in there.
Starting point is 00:31:21 Including speeches I don't agree with, you know, the vice president of Confederacy's in there, Reagan's in there. The degree to which the bar has lowered here in Trump. I will say to people, though, book is out three weeks from today. Okay. So now we're in that sweet pre-order window.
Starting point is 00:31:37 Buy that sucker. If you are planning to buy the book, buying it now helps a lot because if you get some pre-orders, they ship more books of the bookstores and it all works out better. Get them on that list. Where do they go? Just go to the Amazon. When I hit the list. But the reason that's...
Starting point is 00:31:52 Wait, wait. Give me a way to buy it. I mean, you go to Amazon, you go to bookshop. Oh, I get refined my plug. Always say the battle for American identity. And actually, don't go to Amazon. Go to Bookshop because of the Met Gala. go to bookshop. That supports independent bookstores.
Starting point is 00:32:07 And then I'm going to hitting the road. I'll be on a book tour. I'm going to like 15 places. So we'll make that available. I will have to say to the San Francisco world those two in particular, though, because tickets are on sale now. I'll be at City Arts and Lectures on June 9th with Jolani Cobb. I'm excited about that event. I know we got some San Francisco listeners. Got a lot of stuff listeners. Great city. Okay. So the politics of this are becoming quite clear. I mean, it's a political disaster for Trump.
Starting point is 00:32:33 The Washington Post had a poll out over the weekend. Some numbers for you, Ben, you tell me if these are good. Overall approval rating for Trump is 37%. Approval of handling of Iran is 33%, 66% disapprove. Approval on inflation is 27%. Obviously, that's getting worse every day because of oil and gas prices. Cost of living, 23% approval. 61% think going to war with Iran was a mistake.
Starting point is 00:32:57 65% aren't confident that will prevent Iran from getting a nuke. 22% think that Trump's actions against. Iran are consistent with his promises in the 2024 election. So, I mean, look, all these numbers suggest that they want to run screaming from this thing. I think as the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump keeps, like, kind of toggling between wanting to severely punish Iran for not doing what he said, but also worrying about getting pulled deeper into the conflict. I think anyone who's gotten in one of these regime change wars over the last couple decades
Starting point is 00:33:28 could have told him that military action was not going to drive political change in Iran. but here we are. Good luck getting yourself out of this one, big guy. He can't get out of it because you can't change prices. You can't change how people are feeling and what they're seeing. I think the other thing from all these clips that stands out to me is that there's a convergence of the extent to which he's out of touch that I think is important. And you're seeing some people on the MAGA right pick up on this, including people like Tucker Carlson, which is that he now is pivoting to the stock market. you know, well, you know, the wars, you know, we had to do this detour. It used to be an excursion now it's a detour. But the stock market's at an all-time high.
Starting point is 00:34:08 I think actually that is the precisely wrong message because people are beginning to get, you know, wise to the fact that the stock market is completely fucking juiced by an AI bubble. Oh, yeah. And so basically, Trump is up there boasting about the fact that a very small number of people are making a bunch of money on an AI bubble creating technologies that are going to come for your jobs while he's fighting a war that does nothing for you and makes your gas prices higher and it's going to start to affect things like fertilizer and all these other things that people really depend upon in this country. And so in a way, the war itself, you know, it's pulled back the curtain that the emperor has no clothes. He has no idea what he's doing. He's broken his promises. He never probably
Starting point is 00:34:56 believed in the first place. But also, like, even his way to... to spin himself out of it is like compounding the error because telling people that they shouldn't be upset about high gas prices or a war or the affordability is a myth. Yeah. You know, a hoax from Democrats. Like, what? If you're only plays to point to the stock market, that would only make me more pissed. Oh, absolutely. Especially, yeah, you barely own stocks. I mean, most rich people own stocks. Speaking of, we've also been trying to figure what's going on in Iran, Ben. I mean, our producers have been trying really hard to get in touch with people on the ground. Obviously, that's very hard. There's an internet blackout. There's all these threats from the
Starting point is 00:35:33 regime. But just to give you a sense of what kind of conditions people are living under. So one contact we did get in touch with through an intermediary, receive this text afterward. This is verbatim. Dear Citizen, following a review of actions carried out in cyberspace and pursuant to articles of the Islamic Penal Code, your act of approving and publishing criminal content in cyberspace is currently under investigation by the cyber police. Obviously, that person didn't want to talk further. We were finally able to connect with another civilian in Iran, a teacher. We decided not to play the audio of that message because we just didn't want to create any risk for this person. We wanted to share some of what was said. They said their ability to teach has been
Starting point is 00:36:11 severely disrupted by the ongoing blackout on internet access. They said even with the expensive VPN services, internet access is limited and unstable and that people have to spend a large part of their income just to stay connected. There's a type of government provided internet often referred to the national restricted internet. That gives you some basic access, but it comes with control and monitoring and all sorts of restrictions. And because of that, people don't feel comfortable using it.
Starting point is 00:36:36 And overall, just getting online is no longer simple. It's expensive. It's unstable. And it comes with a bunch of tradeoffs between access, quality, and privacy. And then they said on terms of fear of the government, quote, we do not have freedom. We do not have freedom of expression. Even basic forms of dissent can lead to serious,
Starting point is 00:36:51 serious consequences. People can be detained or face severe accusations. in my own experience, I've received threatening messages simply for liking a few posts on Instagram. It's not normal that a simple action like liking a post on Instagram can lead to intimidation and make you feel like your own safety could be at risk. So Trump occasionally now will mention the protesters killed earlier this year. He did some weird thing today where he said that 40,000 people were killed by five snipers, which doesn't make a lot of sense.
Starting point is 00:37:18 But it's worth noting that he's almost exclusively made their lives worse and deepen the repression that they face from the regime. Yeah, and I talk to someone I know here, a friend of mine, whose family is Iranian, and they were describing, you know, the circuitous way they have to get news. Like they can't really be in touch. They'll hear secondhand. Somebody hears from somebody, hears from somebody.
Starting point is 00:37:40 They're okay. But, you know, it's just hellish. I'm just going to say something to kind of introduce a new idea here, Tommy, which is in the regime, there's nothing to do with the IRC. the Iranian regime and how repressive they are. We have a deeply fucked up foreign policy because of how routinely we ignore the human cost of all the things that we're due around the world. And this war is case in point. The girls go we bombed in the first day is case in point. The other thing I would say, though, is that, you know, somebody asked me recently,
Starting point is 00:38:18 well, what do you regret about the Iran deal, you know? And usually that's like, you know, They want me to say like this sunset clauses should have been 12 years instead of 10 or something. I actually regret when I think, and if I were to make a recommendation for what Trump should do, not that he'd listen to me, let's lift the sanctions on Iran. And I know whatever intern listens to this podcast. Over it. Yeah. But like maybe not everything, not the sanctions on the IRDC or whatever, but like, is this helping them? We've had, we've been sanctioning the shit out of this country for 20 years.
Starting point is 00:38:52 that teacher's life is far more miserable because of it. And she's getting repressed more because of our sanctions. Our sanctions empower the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. Do not listen any longer to these hawks who tell you that the way that you care about human rights is by sanctioning countries and cutting off basic goods and collapsing currencies. You know what? If you lifted- If you lifted sanctions and try to get something, try to get the nuclear,
Starting point is 00:39:22 program do bigger sanctions relief. Yeah, yeah. Because I'm seriously trying to solve this. Because you know what? That teacher and all these people in Iran like are might still be dealing with like an intolerable amount of repression, but their lives would be better. And if we think that sanctioning this country or sanctioning this regime is somehow changing it, it is entrenched the worst people in Iran deeper in power. And so this is a bigger conversation we can have going forward. But one idea for Democrats looking for new ideas is,
Starting point is 00:39:52 And by the way, because sanctions are hurting people, they're also going to shoot us in the face because the Chinese are going around the world saying this is why you've got to get off the dollars of the world's reserve currency. And so what are we doing here? We're acting against human interest and we're acting against America's long-term interests by pursuing these insane sanctions policies on Iran, on Cuba, and all these countries that things just get worse than those countries. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:16 Yeah. And by the way, Trump's going to China next week on May 14th and 15th, like Iran's foreign minister is there this week to get ahead of that visit. Listeners probably remember that this China trip was supposed to happen in late March, early April, but Trump delayed it to deal with the Iran war. I'm sure this conversation you were just talking about about how the Chinese can help Iran and other countries get around U.S. sanctions is front and center in that conversation. But despite the delay, I mean, Trump was like, oh, look, we have to delay this trip because
Starting point is 00:40:44 then the war will be over and then we could focus on the real things. Like, no, the Iran war has totally overtaken the trip. Trump kind of tried to lo-key it today. Talk about how nice China has been to him during the war, how they haven't challenged us. But Treasury Secretary Scott Besson had a slightly different take earlier this week on, I think he was on Fox News or Fox Business. Let's watch. Let's see if, you know, China, let's see them step up with some diplomacy and get the Iranians to open the street. You said that twice now.
Starting point is 00:41:14 Do you expect Beijing and President Xi to do something with regard to Iran? Again, all I'll say is Iran is the largest state sponsor of terrorism, and China has been buying 90% of their energy, so they are funding the largest state sponsor of terrorism. That's quite a broadside in advance of Trump's trip. Not quite on message there, Scottie. So, first of all, Trump says we control the street. Right. So why does China have to open it? I don't know. I mean, first of all, there's a cognitive dissonance. And second of all, these guys talk like it's, I don't know, 1992 or something? Like China,
Starting point is 00:41:52 did you think China gives two shits what Scott Besson says? Like he can order around Xi Jinping? I mean, we're just living in, there's a reality in the world,
Starting point is 00:42:02 and then there's like the Trump reality. And increasingly, people aren't even trying to kind of play along with it like they were at the beginning when they were a little afraid of tariffs and things like that.
Starting point is 00:42:12 Look, Trump is intimidated by Xi Jinping. You can tell. Yeah. He's always praising him. He doesn't want to piss him off. He's afraid. He's afraid.
Starting point is 00:42:18 his ass handed to him in a trade war. And now he's created a huge problem for the Chinese and everybody else because they have supply lines and energy needs that run into Iran. But like just hectoring them. I mean, if they were doing smart diplomacy, it's kind of like what I say, just so we can be constructive here. Look, a smart diplomatic effort would be like, look, we fucked up. Let's try to solve this problem comprehensively. You know, you work on the Iranians to kind of open up the strait. We will lift some of these sanctions. so that you can buy the oil more easily. And in return, though, you've got to get this stockpile of the nuclear material out.
Starting point is 00:42:56 And you've got to convince them to have the IE in. This is what diplomacy would be. And they're incapable of doing that. But instead, what's happening is the Wall Street Journal reported that China's Commerce Ministry told companies just not to comply with U.S. sanctions over the purchase of Iranian oil. They're actively telling their companies to ignore us. There have been reports that China may be selling around weapons or other dual-use materials. I'm sure they are.
Starting point is 00:43:17 And like, and, you know, like Aldi Vez, who's an Iran expert, who we've talked to on the show a bunch of times, said he's seeing people affiliated with the IRGC saying that Iran has been way too shy about aligning itself with China and Russia. So that's, you know, likely to come. Remember the Chinese facilitated this opening between Iran and Saudi Arabia in 2023. They're also getting very active with Pakistan on the diplomatic efforts to try to end this war currently. So the Chinese are like attempting to fill the void in some way. And it's just, again, like, if this war wasn't happening, I'm sure the agenda would be trade deal, Taiwan, artificial intelligence, like all these big things. Yeah. Instead, it's just going to be this.
Starting point is 00:43:56 Yeah. And the Chinese, by the way, you know, they see us, like, confirming all the arguments they've been making around the world forever. Right. That the Americans are reckless, that they can't be trusted, that they overuse sanctions, that they're militaristic. Like Trump is proving every Chinese argument that has been made. in two months. And so they're going to reap a lot of geopolitical gains from this, although they also have economic concerns about the potential global recession that this war could bring about. Interestingly, they have a stockpile of oil that they can write out for,
Starting point is 00:44:30 I think, something like six months or maybe nine months. They do have LNG issues. And so the Qatar cutoff of LNG, like, is that gas field to shut down because the Iranians bombed it, is a problem for them. But it's a problem with the solution, which is in the long term, they're going to want to pull Qatar and some of those Gulf states into their orbit. Right. And I would be shocked if that's not one of the consequences of this war is that the Gulf states that usually looked in the direction of the U.S. are going to be much more open to look.
Starting point is 00:44:59 The Chinese deal is reliable. Terms are, you know, Beijing favored, but we know what the terms are. Yeah. Whereas the Americans, we have no idea what the fuck they're going to do day to day. Right. Exactly. So the other front in this war is in Lebanon, and that fighting is just raging. between the Israelis and Hezbollah. The Lebanese health ministry said 17 people have been killed
Starting point is 00:45:20 since Sunday and over 2,600 since the conflict started. Hezbollah said it carried out over a dozen attacks on Israeli soldiers on Monday. And Ben, I don't know about you. I'm on social media seeing more and more videos of these FPV drone attacks by Hezbollah on like Israeli tanks and stuff. They're basically taking all the technology we saw in Ukraine with like fiber optic drones that can evade electronic warfare defenses and using those. in southern Lebanon to pretty devastating effect. The New York Times did like a pretty big deep dive on satellite imagery from southern Lebanon. They found, quote, widespread demolitions have flattened expanses of at least two dozen towns and
Starting point is 00:45:57 villages near the border with damage to government offices as well as civilian infrastructure, including schools, hospitals, and mosques. Israel's defense minister, Israel Katz, explicitly said this pattern of destruction is following the Gaza models, basically. And Trump is pushing for talks and ceasefire plans. But neither side seems particularly interested at this point. So not a ton to say new about Lebanon right now, except for it's like incredibly grim and just kind of steady state.
Starting point is 00:46:25 Like, I don't know they're calling it a ceasefire, but it's just an ongoing war. It's insane that they call it a ceasefire. And it's insane that Western outlets like, you know, talk about fragile ceasefires and things like this. The other thing that did you see Smotrich, you know, the finance minister? Yes. Say that, you know, he promised his son that he wouldn't destroy all of Lebanon so that his son. in his generation could.
Starting point is 00:46:46 I mean, this is really psychotic stuff. And look, when I remember they started carpet bombing southern Lebanon, if you posted like, which I did, you know, they're going to do the Gaza model in Lebanon. People would be like, oh, you Israel hater. Like, how dare you, you know. And now the Israeli government says we're going to do in southern Lebanon what we did in Gaza, make it uninhabitable.
Starting point is 00:47:08 Because what they're doing just so people understand is they're literally making it, they're not just destroying these villages, they're so comprehensively destroying, you know, the farmland, the olive trees, that there will be nothing to move back to you. That's what we mean by Gaza model. It's not just that they're leveling every building. It's there's going to be nowhere for those people to go back, you know. This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
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Starting point is 00:48:43 This podcast is sponsored by Squarespace. Squarespace is the all-on-one website platform designed to elevate your online presence and drive your success. Squarespace provides all the necessary tools to claim your domain, build a professional website, expand your brand, and facilitate payments making it the ideal solution for businesses of all sizes. With Squarespace's collection of cutting-edge design tools, anyone can build a bespoke online presence that perfectly fits their brand or business. Start with Blueprint AI, Squarespace's AI-enhanced website builder to get a fully custom website in just a few steps, using basic information about your industry goals and personality to generate premium quality content
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Starting point is 00:49:53 Because last October, everybody celebrated the ceasefire deal, brokered by the administration. But unfortunately, it's really been a ceasefire name only for people who live in Gaza and life in Gaza is hell on earth. So some numbers for you guys. The Palestinian Health Ministry says that since the ceasefire, between Israel and Hamas, 823 people have been killed, and 2,300 have been wounded. Four Israeli soldiers have been killed since the ceasefire began.
Starting point is 00:50:19 Only 250 of the promised 600 trucks of aid per day are getting into Gaza, partly if that was the result of the one of the two crossings being closed for a long time to do the Iran War. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs estimates that rodents are swarming 80% of the camps for displaced people, and the World Health Organization reports that there have been over 110,000 cases of disease or infestation due to external parasites. Then I was texting with Faro Siddwa earlier this week. He was for listeners, he was this heroic doctor who came on the show after he had volunteered in Gaza during the conflict.
Starting point is 00:50:55 And he said that like the society and the health infrastructure in Gaza is just so thoroughly destroyed that rat attacks on infants are now a major source of morbidity. So kids are getting sick and dying because they're getting attacked by rats. Just imagine your baby getting attacked by rats. The only power comes from generators. There's no grid left. And the reconstruction cost is estimated at $70 billion. And a third of that is needed like up front in the first year and a half just to do basic infrastructure and essential services.
Starting point is 00:51:24 So basically, the long story short is the place is in this nightmarish limbo. Hamas is not disarmed. They refuse to disarm until Israel withdraws and Trump promises them a Palestinian state. Israel is occupying pretty much half the Gaza Strip. it refuses to let in items that are essential for reconstruction. All the people chapped by the Trump administration, this like group of, you know, experts and technocrats who just sit on their ass. Yeah, they're sitting in Egypt at a resort doing nothing. Some of them want to be doing more, but there's just no funding.
Starting point is 00:51:55 There's no way to do anything. The civil police force that they kept talking about, none of them have been trained. And it's just, it was so obvious then at the time and even clear now that Trump and Jared Kushner and Steve Whitkoff, they only gave a shit about. getting the Israeli hostages out. And once that happened, they were like, you know, jobs done. They don't care about people in Gaza. And, you know, the Israelis and Hamas both seem kind of fine with the status quo because it keeps them in charge for Israel. It deals with their kind of security concerns. And the Palestinian people just suffer immensely in, you know, in the meantime. So that's the latest. I mean, just sort of couldn't really be worse. Yeah, I think, I mean, a couple of things.
Starting point is 00:52:39 I point out here, first of all, the ceasefire violations tend to get highlighted are the attacks, the bombing of Gaza and the killing of civilians with violence. But another piece of this is that Israel has just fundamentally refused to let in the aid that it promised to do under the terms of the ceasefire. And so the reason the conditions are so squalid, the reason that life continues to, you know, just be just hell on earth for civilians there is at least in part in large part that you know look if if if if if Israel wanted to let assistance in you wouldn't have infants getting attacked by rats you wouldn't have people suffering malnutrition you wouldn't have preventable deaths like this is a genocidal policy like that is continuing and just because they're not bombing at the same pace that they were before
Starting point is 00:53:35 it doesn't mean that they're just not squeezing and squeezing and squeezing with completely disregard to the loss of civilian life. And the second thing, like I'd say is, when you look back, there's just something ghoulish about the celebration of that agreement. Right. And we, you know, we were calibrated at the time. But this is like the worst case scenario in a lot of ways. I mean, I guess it could be worse.
Starting point is 00:53:59 They could just start bombing indiscriminately at the pace that they were before. But nothing, not a finger is being lifted to help these people. And there's still drone strikes regularly. Yeah. And I'm sure that if you're Palestinian, all you hear is like the buzzing of drones overhead, you know, the fear that that engenders and children is unimaginable to me. And it just shows you that Trump and Netanyahu, they wanted the hostages out. And they kind of just wanted it to be downgraded on the every assignment editor's desk around the world. Like the media, it's off the television screens, a little less social media attention on it, you know, like we can all move on.
Starting point is 00:54:35 Well, pretend we both pull together this board of peace, Gaza reconstruction effort. In fact, nothing will come of that. But Jared Kushner will get to hit up the Saudis on the margins for his investment fund. Steve Whitkoff can talk to the Pakistanis about buying hotels in New York and the crypto deal he made with the Trump family crypto business, right? The president of Indonesia, as we talked about last week, can ask for Eric or Don Jr.'s cell phone number to figure out the golf course deal back home that he's using the Greece, Trump. It's just like it's grift on the side. Yeah, and that's the last thing I was going to say is like the Jared Kushner presentation at Davos that we spent some time on with this kind of Jetsons, Dubai.
Starting point is 00:55:14 Data centers. Yeah, data centers and high rises. How about tents? And commercial real estate. And it was grotesque at the time. But again, to be constructive, why let him make that presentation at Davao? Like, stop humoring these people. Like, there's a kind of, you know, deference to,
Starting point is 00:55:36 Jared's here. We have to sit attentatively while he, you know, gives us the Jetson's version of Gaza. Like, it's time for people to start saying no to these people, to start calling bullshit on these people, to stop. I mean, if you're the Saudis or Emirates or whomever is, like, invested in Jared, how you feel about that investment now with the war in Iran fucking up your economy? Like, you don't need to pay this guy. Like, like, there's not a requirement that you pay him. Like, I know that, you're doing it to get Trump off your back, but is it working? No, no, it's not. And it is not working diplomatically either. I mean, the next topic for us is Russia and Ukraine. Another conflict Trump said he's going to solve in 24 hours that Jared Kushner and
Starting point is 00:56:15 Wyckoff were on the case. They've gotten literally nothing done. So later this week, then, the Russians are going to hold their annual Victory Day commemoration that celebrates the defeated Nazi Germany in World War II. It usually entails this huge military parade of tanks and other weapons, but this year Putin is not going to be displaying kind of major military hardware. It could be because drone strikes could reach that hardware. and hit the parade, it could be because I think Zelensky was speculating that the Russian
Starting point is 00:56:40 military just doesn't have enough kit to show off this year, so they're not going to try. Putin proposed a ceasefire for the day of the parade itself. That's obviously a bit cynical and self-serving. In response, Zelensky proposed a long-term ceasefire and a lasting peace deal. Don't hold your breath on that getting done. But the casualty estimates are just staggering. So there's a CSIS report from January from like five months ago that estimated Russia had 1.2 million casualties from the start of the war through the end of 2025. Ukraine's casualty
Starting point is 00:57:10 estimate was about half of that. But again, that was five months ago. And every week, advances in drone technology make life at the front lines more deadly and hellish. So I'm sure the numbers have increased. Ukraine has been able to hit targets deeper into Russia than ever before. And there's been some really interesting reporting about dissent in Russia and security issues in Russia itself. So in mid-April, there was this blogger named Victoria Bonya. She posted this 18 minute Instagram video outlining a bunch of concerns and anger at problems in Russia itself and she directed it at Putin and it went super viral. So the Guardian said it got 26 million views in four days, which is surprising since Instagram is technically banned in Russia as is
Starting point is 00:57:49 criticism of Putin really. But Bonilla, she complained about flooding, oil pollution along the Black Sea, this massive call of livestock in Siberia, which really angered people, internet restrictions. And the government was forced to respond in a real, way because she was seen as actually a defender of Putin. Then there was this fascinating report in the Financial Times about how Putin is increasingly paranoid and worried about getting killed or assassinated. They say you spending more time in bunkers underground. Security around him is tighter. People aren't allowed to have phones or internet connected devices near him. Some of his staff had security systems installed in their own homes, which that sucks. The piece also said Putin
Starting point is 00:58:26 is almost entirely focused on the war in foreign affairs and just kind of lets domestic stuff languish. So Ben, I think, you know, we wanted to raise this because it's been a while. I don't know. I personally, like, feel guilty every week. We don't talk about Ukraine more because the stakes are just as high. The death toll is just as horrific. But over time, there's always just like a new nightmare that we're covering the Gaza or Iran. But also there's kind of like an undertone in these reports that maybe Putin is losing
Starting point is 00:58:49 his grip on Russian society. The polling is going down. We're sitting in L.A. I have no idea how stronger weak Putin's grip on power is. But I don't know, maybe it's wishcasting. but maybe there is a sense that the Russian economy can't just sustain this level of fighting casualties for this long. But I don't know. What did you make of these reports? I think they're really interesting. And we should just say, I mean, for the Ukrainians,
Starting point is 00:59:12 it sucks. They're just this grinding front line and this casualty levels is just beyond the immediate human toll, like how that country gets out of this situation and is viable. in terms of rebuilding gets harder with each passing month or year. On the Putin piece, he's never as weak as the wishcasting sometimes suggests. So back in, you know, 23 when I was like, oh, Putin's going to fall and the Ukrainians are counterfeiting is going to be victory and they're going to take back Crimea. Like that was serious wishcasting. But at the same time, a lot of the issues in this war are ones that are going to be.
Starting point is 00:59:59 going to get worse with time for Putin. So, for instance, like people from the front, like going, I mean, if you look at the Soviet war, like, in Afghanistan, it took years for that war to start to eat away at, like, Russian society because guys are coming home. They're disabled. Their alcoholism rates are going up. Like, it's, you know, there's PTSD. People are, you know, like literally the workforce is being hard so if you look at Russia today for instance like yes they they've been able to create a war economy that can employ people and artificially you know boost growth rates and they can manipulate oil prices they benefit from the war because the price of world goes up so they get a little more revenue but at the end of the day they're spending
Starting point is 01:00:49 extraordinary money on this they're losing an extraordinary amount of people the people that are coming out as war and going home are probably not you know okay So towns, small cities are starting to probably feel, you know, it takes two, three, four, five years. That's how long this war has been, by the way. The Ukrainian strategy of striking these targets deep into Russia is pretty smart because it's bringing the war home to certain places. It may actually be causing, like, you know, demonstrable damage. And they're hitting energy infrastructure and sources of revenue. And the repression, you know, like we make a mistake sometimes of it's like, I'm, I mean,
Starting point is 01:01:27 maybe we should know, because now we live in a version of authoritarianism, that, like, it's a spectrum. So just because Putin's always been repressive doesn't mean it can't get worse. And it's clearly gotten worse. I mean, alone is pointing out to us repeatedly that, like, these internet restrictions, like that fucks up people's lives. Yeah, you can't call people. People want to be online. People want to be in touch with their family. People want to be in touch with so many Russians are out of the country and they can't be in touch with their family. Businesses rely on the internet. So I do think that they're, they're, you know, Putin is not as strong as some people project or as weak, but these cracks are starting to show,
Starting point is 01:02:01 and it might take time, but at a certain point, the bill's going to come do for this war. Yeah, and there's been some interesting reporting about Putin, like, trying to erase even Soviet history. You know, the strike me as a particularly, I mean, it's an authoritarian move. It's not the strongest move. There's also been a bunch of reporting about Russian entities, these like kind of fake businesses that could set up recruiting men from Africa and telling them they can come work at some private security job and sending these Kenyan men to the front lines just to be cannon fodder. I mean, it's horrible stuff. Also, though, just back on the negotiating fronts, I mean, I think the last trilateral talks were in February. And I think I read somewhere that
Starting point is 01:02:38 Wickoff and Jared Kushner, they've been to Russia a bunch of times, right? They'll meet with Putin whenever they can. I don't think they've ever been to Ukraine. And the question is why? You wouldn't go one time to meet with the people, to see the place, to understand the issues. So first of all, two things. Notisably, that meeting was before the war on Iran. So another casualty of this war is that there's just no attention on Ukraine. I don't have inside information. I have to do all the caveats that we don't know for sure. They want to do real estate deals or mineral deals in Russia. That's why they're there. They don't care of this shit about the Ukrainians. They see a bonanza on the back end of this war being solved. Jared and Whitkoff, I think, wanted to do deals
Starting point is 01:03:21 in Russia. I don't, why might I surmise that? One, the guy that Putin started sending to the talks is the head of the sovereign wealth fund. Yeah, that's a big signal. He's not from the foreign ministry. He's from the sovereign wealth fund. Two, in Alaska. He's in Miami like jet skiing with them all the time. Yeah. Dicking around. Yeah, dicking around. Two, in Alaska, Putin brought all these people from like these various, you know, we're going to do mineral deals and all the stuff. They clearly want to skip ahead to that step. The problem is that the war's going to end first. And three, to your point, why would you not go to the country that's been invaded, you know? Jared and Whitkoff's interest in this, I think, had nothing to do with peace and everything
Starting point is 01:03:54 to do with making a buck in Russia. And that's fucking disgusting. Yes, yes, it is. And there's a great piece, I think, in the New York Times Magazine this week about kind of the privatization of diplomacy and the way that those two are fusing profit. For example, the Pakistanis did this big crypto deal with the Trump family company. And now what do you know? Oh, they're hosting the, you know, talks.
Starting point is 01:04:13 Like you and I have laughed on the show about how Trump is always shouting out like the field marshal general in Pakistan is probably like a human rights violator. Well, probably. We know why. Pretty safe bet. Yeah, pretty safe bet. And calling him by his honorific field marshal, you know, it's like some field marshal. Field marshal. It's a cool title. This fucking Eisenhower, like, don't you break.
Starting point is 01:04:32 Okay. So final topic, this one comes courtesy of Michael and our team. So enjoy Ben. It's a quiz for you. Pop quiz. Oh, no, no. This is not like a Tim Miller pop quiz. No, no, no, no.
Starting point is 01:04:43 First of all, who was, do you know who our current ambassador to both Switzerland and Lichtenstein is? I have no idea. But if I'm going to guess, like, is it a Kushner or Whitkoff relative? Let's roll the tape. I'm callistic, a church, United States Ambassador to Switzerland and Lichtenstein. I'm delighted to celebrate National Apprenticeship Week. As U.S. ambassador to Switzerland and Lichtenstein, I've seen first-hand the power of apprenticeships. Wow, amazing.
Starting point is 01:05:14 So here's, I just have one comment first. I know this movie. The years or decades go by. and Callista Gingrich would look exactly precisely the same. Brother, that face doesn't tune itself. Like, whatever they shot into that face, like, we will be dead. You and I, and there will be a video of her in some Republican administration in 2075 as ambassador to, you know, Luxembourg or some, you know, fancy European place looking exactly the same.
Starting point is 01:05:42 Yeah, she face tunes with a belt sander. By the way, that was Callista Gingrich, former ambassador to the Vatican under Trump one point. know wife of former speaker Newt Gingrich. So Callista is now representing our interest in Byrne. Remember, she's Newt's third wife. So we met his first wife when he was a teenager. I didn't know this when she was his high school geometry teacher. It's very Macron-esque. Yeah. They're Candace on that case. Yeah, Candice. Was she a Rothschild? We'll find out. That marriage ended in divorce after his affair with Marianne, who became his second wife. This is Newt. Newt then had an affair
Starting point is 01:06:16 with Callista for six years while he was still married. and he asked his second wife for a divorce shortly after she was diagnosed with MS. So again, good guy. Callista, I think, is 23 years younger than Newt, about the same age as his daughter. And again, we cannot point out enough that Newt was having this affair while constantly attacking Bill Clinton over the Lewinsky stuff. So Newt married Callista in 2000, conferred it to her faith, Catholicism in 2009. So, Ben, to honor her.
Starting point is 01:06:46 Where does Catholicism stand on these personal? on this, yeah. A little quiz for you. Okay, one. First question. Like Cash Patel, Callista Gingrich is a noted children's book author. In her seven book series, what animal, quote, travels through time to discover the pivotal moments that have shaped American history? Is it A, Ellis the Elephant, B, Newt the Narwhal, C, Donald the Dalmatian, D, Liberty the Links? This is actually just as good as Cash the Wizard. What was A again? Ellis, the elephant.
Starting point is 01:07:22 I'm going to go with the elephant. I'm going to go to the elephant. You nailed it. Yeah. You absolutely nailed it. I think of all the things to choose. These are actually Republicans before they're Donald. I'm bummed it wasn't Newt the Narwhal.
Starting point is 01:07:33 So the books are apparently written in rhymes. Like after winning the war, Washington would not become a king. He became our first president. And that's a better thing. Could we please get a dramatic reading of these books by Pete Hegsef? Oh, that's a good idea. With a American flight pocket sport. You're right.
Starting point is 01:07:48 question two newt gingrich owed as much as five hundred thousand dollars to which retailer in the mid two thousands was it a vineyard vines b tiffany and co c radio shack d rolex 500 000 because i i would say nude has a a taste for the vineyard vines but i'm gonna go rolex yeah so it was b tiffany tiffany okay uh hard to spend 500 grand at very very hard that's a lot that's a lot of
Starting point is 01:08:18 That's a lot of salmon pants. Yeah. We got a clip of this. Apparently, I've even seen this. Doesn't that whole thing strike you as stupid? I mean, these are stores. These are stores that have a wide range of things you can buy. She has girlfriends with birthdays.
Starting point is 01:08:33 What? Is that him defending himself in 2000? Just a quick swerve here. The fact that this guy was held up as like some intellectual. I know. It's always bothered me. Like the bar for these Republicans is so low. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:47 Yeah. This is our moral leader and our electoral leader. Our moral and intellectual giant. So this Tiffany thing came up in his ill-fated presidential campaign in 2012 for the nomination. He also got flak for suspending his campaign to go on a Greek cruise. Do you remember he was like the frontrunner fellow? I mean, that was a crazy feel. That was like Romney, Rick Santorum had a moment there.
Starting point is 01:09:06 Thinking back, I can see why Trump mop the fucking floor with these guys. Because he came in and he was like, I have a personality and a sense of humor and I'm not a loser like these idiots. Last question. When leaving a second wife, Marianne, Newt compared Marianne to Callista saying, I can't handle a insert luxury consumer good right here. Right now, all I want is a less expensive good. You got the formatting here? So I can't handle this luxury thing.
Starting point is 01:09:32 I need a less expensive thing. Was it, I can't handle a Charmin ultra soft right now. All I want is a Scott one ply. Was it B, I can't handle a gray poupon right now. All I want is French's. Was it C, I can't handle espresso right now. Now, all I want is instant. Was it D?
Starting point is 01:09:48 I can't handle a Jaguar. All I want is a Chevrolet. One of those is actually true? Yep. I mean, I guess I'm going to go D because anyone else is like... Dude, you crushed this quiz. D. Chevrolet?
Starting point is 01:10:01 Yeah, yeah. I mean, he wanted a Chevy. That's a bad thing to say to a human being. I mean, you know, that you're marrying. I mean, nude's been in plenty of back seats over the years. I mean, like I... Like I... Like I...
Starting point is 01:10:14 So is Callista, well, I guess. Backseat, windows up. That was a great quiz. Thank you, Michael, for that. This is what happens when you give this guy an hour of free time on the show day. All of a sudden we're doing. No, that was good. It was a pretty, like, dark, angry, you know, run.
Starting point is 01:10:33 So we needed that. It's important. It's important to have a little fun of you in here. Okay, we're going to take a quick break. By the way, isn't that better than Tim Miller when he's like, you know, asking you the name of the foreign minister of, Yeah, Tim thinks there's people who seem to think that working in foreign policy meant you worked in geography. No, it's funny. The reason he does it is because George Bush, like, got asked the name of the head leader of Pakistan as Mirjarov. And Tim thought that that was like a dumb liberal gotcha thing. But actually, like, I'm not sure that was a dumb question because Pakistan ended up being like the most important country after 9-11. So.
Starting point is 01:11:07 Yeah. Look, I think asking, I think people running for president asking them basic civics question is a good idea. Like, I think, I think, I think people running for president asking them basic civics question is a good idea. Like, I think, I think, think, you know, if you ask Donald Trump, like, how many branches of government are they? He would just flunk a lot of these basic questions, then it would have been useful along the way. But yeah, Tim likes to just torture us when we go on the show. Yeah, he does. We're going to take a break. We come back here and hear my conversation with Jason Crow about Iran, about his curling of Pete Hegsef, about Trump moving troops out of Germany. So stick around for that.
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Starting point is 01:13:00 off. It's simply safe.com slash crooked world. There's no safe like SimplySafe. My guest today represents Colorado's sixth congressional district and he serves on the House Armed Services Committee, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and many other august committees. Jason Crowe, Great to see you again. Tommy, thanks for having me back. So the war powers resolution, the law, establishes this 60-day deadline after which a president has to stop the use of armed forces in a conflict or else get congressional approval. Trump's war with Iran hit that 60-day deadline last week, last Friday.
Starting point is 01:13:40 But the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, he argued in a Senate hearing that because of the ceasefire, the clock stopped. The 60 days is not up and they don't need Congress to act. We should all just note that since that spin, the U.S. and Iran have been shooting at each other in this rate of Hormuz with the U.S. sinking a number of Iranian boats earlier this week with helicopters, I believe. What did you make of Heggseth's claim? Well, can we actually just, there's an important step missing here. The 60-day clock is determined on the War Powers Act, which is determined on there being imminent threat. Right.
Starting point is 01:14:18 There has to be an imminent threat, and then under an imminent threat, then they have 60 days. And then there's an additional 30 days to conduct the troop withdrawal beyond the 60 days. But they never showed the imminent threat. Right. So all this ado about much to do about the 60 day thing, we never met the initial threshold, right? Which requires there either be, there's only two ways the president can take our troops to war. One is if there's an imminent threat, in which case they have the 60 days, which they never showed, or there's an AUMF by Congress.
Starting point is 01:14:50 Neither of those things are true. So this whole thing from the beginning has been unlawful and without authorization, but more importantly, without actually the consent of the American people, which is really what this is all about. So you're right about that context and it's important. But I guess associated with that,
Starting point is 01:15:07 wouldn't this new military operation, this like guide mission for boats in the street or whom it was Project Freedom, would that also require congressional authorization? Yeah, it would. Well, there are so many things going on here. One, one is the initial attack on Iran, right, which required imminent threat or a congressional AUMF of some sort. The second is an ongoing naval blockade. I mean, international law and the law of war is very, very clear. A naval blockade and stopping ships from coming in and out of ports is a very clear act of war, right? And then you add on top of it, Hegsses claim that somehow is cease. fire tolls this 60 days. There's zero precedent for that assertion, not to mention the fact that there actually is conflict going on right now. In the last 24 hours, there have been numerous exchanges of fire between the United States and Iranian forces or proxy forces. So the whole
Starting point is 01:16:02 thing is a mess. It's convoluted. They keep on evolving and changing their definitions, their legal basis for it, which of course is just par for the course of this administration, much like the operations going on in the Caribbean, which use circular legal reasoning to justify. They always say that there isn't an armed conflict. It falls just short of an armed conflict level, but they have to use the military because it is an international armed conflict. So they want to have their cake and eat it too. So what does Congress do about it? That's the big question here. Like, how can you guys exert some pressure on the administration to change course, to follow the law, to follow the Constitution, whatever.
Starting point is 01:16:44 Yeah, but Congress has the power. This is less the story of Donald Trump or any president for that matter, matter. And I'm always really clear that this isn't just something that Donald Trump has abused. This has been abused by multiple presidents, Democrat and Republican, and multiple Congresses have allowed it Democrat and Republican. This is a 20-year problem in the making. And Congress tomorrow could fix it.
Starting point is 01:17:10 We have the authority, constitutional authority. And we can walk in to the House floor, we could take a vote and take that power back tomorrow. Right. So that's what this is about. This is about Congress giving up its power and seating its constitutional authority, but more importantly, it's constitutional duty. This is more about duty than it is about authority. It's our job, for God's sakes, to actually take these votes and to be held accountable and to appropriate the money or not appropriate the money for all of these things. Because the framers knew that presidents will take.
Starting point is 01:17:42 take all the power they're given and use all the power they're given, that the accountability loop is in members of Congress that have to go home to their districts every weekend, every week, and stand in front of their constituents and be held accountable for it. So that's ultimately the fix. And this should be the most bipartisan thing in America right now, is Congress because it's been abused by both sides over the years. And because Americans of all stripes, Democrat, Republican, independent want it over. They want no part in this. And they want it to be ended. The other sort of way you guys can get some accountability or oversight is through hearings. There were some hearings last week. You had this extended exchange with Pete Hexeth about a guy named Tim Parletory, who is Pete Hexeth's
Starting point is 01:18:29 private attorney. He was then appointed to a Pentagon job. You pressed Pistol Pete on Parlatorie security clearance. You asked him about his foreign clients. He's still in private law practice. Can you explain why you were so focused on this one individual and what you learned in that exchange and like how we act on it? Yeah, my singular goal right now is to get Pete Hegseth fire. Right. He has such an extreme danger to our service members, the men and women who I love, who I've served with, who I have a deep affection that come from my district, come from districts around this country. There, you know, people's sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, mothers and fathers. And he is putting these folks at such extreme risk because of his not just his incompetence, but his cavalier
Starting point is 01:19:15 attitude and his unwillingness to actually do the right thing and to run the Department of Defense the way that it needs to be run. So I want this guy gone, which is why I chose a very different approach than I've ever chosen before. I was speaking largely to Donald Trump into the White House when I was questioning. And I was pointing out that in Pete Hegsett, you have a man who publicly professes unfaltering loyalty to the president, you know, kisses his ring, kisses his ass every chance he gets. And yet behind the scenes, he's hiring people who Donald Trump despises, who Donald Trump has called a lawyer who has fired from his legal team and, you know, basically building a fiefdom with these Heggseth loyalists. And, and at the same time, the corruption, just the
Starting point is 01:20:03 extreme corruption of Pete Heggseth, putting all these people in place. who are making money off of their positions, very, very purposefully and intentionally. So that's what I was drawing attention to. There's also been, there's been some reporting that Hexat is increasingly isolated, that he's paranoid about getting fired, that he brings his wife to official meetings, that his closest advisors are this little circle like Tim Parletory, Pete Hexas' brother, this guy, Ricky Buria, who is like a military aide under Biden who stayed on, who sort of, I think, risen to much higher heights.
Starting point is 01:20:36 and that Hegset is preoccupied with stuff like the Pentagon's chaplain services and not managing the massive workforce. I mean, are you hearing similar things from contacts you talk to within the Department of Defense? Yeah, absolutely. I'm hearing a variety of different things. One strand of things I'm hearing is about the culture of fear and intimidation and retribution. that if you're a senior military officer, you can't give your honest advice to the civilian leadership. You have to show a loyalty. How dangerous is that? We're conducting military operations in dozens of places around the world.
Starting point is 01:21:15 And our senior military officers don't feel empowered to say if there's something wrong or to dissent. I mean, that is so deeply dangerous. That kind of proves my earlier point. So I'm hearing that. We're hearing rumors that, you know, this parliamentary has to be hired by, senior officers to get promoted, that, you know, they have to basically pay this guys, which is, you know, part of my questioning. So we need to drill down into that.
Starting point is 01:21:38 Wait, so if I want to go from a two-star general to a three-star, I have to hire this random lawyer to get a, to get a promotion to do what? Yeah, that's what we're hearing. And that's why I questioned head set about parliamentary. I know those are the, those are the rumors that we're hearing from a lot of different places. And what's crazy is that that wouldn't actually surprise me if it were true. Yeah. That, I mean, that's part and parcel to this administration. It's happening, uh, administration-wide in so many different ways.
Starting point is 01:22:08 You know, this pay-to-play politics and it's seeped into, actually seeping isn't the wrong word because that's passive. It's been implemented. Yeah. Injected. Yeah. And the people around him. To put it in terms, Pete might understand, he shotguned it.
Starting point is 01:22:23 So it's, uh, down the hatch. He would understand that. He would understand that. Yeah. I bet he, he funneled it. Um, the, administration said the cost of Operation Epic Fury, the war with Iran, is $25 billion. I've seen news outlets estimate that it's much higher. I think CNN said 40 to 50,
Starting point is 01:22:39 CBS said closer to 50 billion. What do you think? Did you buy that $25 billion number? Yeah, there's no way. That's true. First of all, even if that's true, that's a lot of freaking money. Yeah. We have people losing health care by the millions. I was just in a roundtable yesterday with some young folks in my district and it was all about health care. They're like, you know, my health care has gone up. They're now paying $2,000 a month for premiums with a $6,000 a deductible and a 20% copay, right? And they're like, we can't afford that. Right. So even if it's $25 billion, which it's not, right, it's a multiple of that two times, three times and four times. It's much higher than that. That is a lot of money, right? We have expended vast, vast amounts
Starting point is 01:23:25 of our most exquisite high-end munitions in our stockpiles. There's a lot of, been tremendous damage done to our infrastructure throughout the Middle East. Let's not forget that a lot of these drones, a lot of these missiles actually have hit infrastructure, defense infrastructure in our bases that's got to be rebuilt. So it's cost a lot of money and it continues to cost a lot of money. This blockade is not cheap either. So that's kind of the biggest point here. Not only as our service members at great risk and we've lost 13 of them. Over 300 have been wounded, but Americans are paying tens of billions of dollars for a war that's going to end poorly yet again without achieving a strategic goal and they're fed up with it and they
Starting point is 01:24:04 should be. And like obviously they're trying to claim that this new guiding operation through the Strader Humu's is actually a separate thing with a different name. But it's obviously, you know, it's all just part and parcel of the Iran war. How would you designate the cost of that to the war effort? I mean, I think they said like a bunch of guided missile destroyers are going to stay in the region, over 100 air assets, 15,000 troops, presumably that is an enormous cost that keeping all those individuals in theater that would continue to add up every day, right? Yeah, this is this is a kind of smoke and mirrors budgeting tactic that they have been using where they say it's really not costing us extra.
Starting point is 01:24:45 Well, and their rationale is it goes something like this, that, hey, we have these ships anyhow, and hey, they have to be somewhere doing something anyway. Right. And we're paying these service members every, every month anyway. So let's just take all those normal, it's called O&M funding operations and maintenance, and we'll just move that money over into this contingency operation, this planning, and we'll call it a wash. It doesn't work that way. Actually, doing this comes at some cost.
Starting point is 01:25:15 So instead of training, instead of being back in their families, instead of that maintenance that has to be done, instead of the modernization that has to be done, instead of all the multilateral training exercises that we would normally be doing with our, with our allies, in other places in the world, we're doing this. There's an opportunity cost to it. And our point is, tell us what that is costing, right? And is costing extra because, like I said earlier, if you're shooting off munitions in a stockpile,
Starting point is 01:25:43 and if you're taking damage, that actually is a fixed capital cost. So I'm kind of done. And frankly, we did this under Iraq in Afghanistan, too, for decades. They did the same thing. Other administrations and they think that the O&M, and they count it as part of the, contingency. So I've been battling that for a long time now. And Americans and taxpayers deserve to know what these operations are really costing and how much more is costing.
Starting point is 01:26:12 So, you know, that's what we're trying to drill down on. Yeah, it seems like the bare minimum information they should owe us. Finally, President Trump is planning to pull 5,000 troops out of Germany. This is in response to criticism of the war in Iran from Chancellor Mertz, the leader of Germany. What do you think the impact of that move is or will be? And are you concerned about it? Yeah, I am concerned about it. And I'm not presumptively against troop movements. A commander and chief should have flexibility to move troops around, to respond to needs, to respond to crises. That is kind of part of the authorization that the commander-in-chief inherently has. when it becomes our business is when the commander chief is doing it out of an emotional meltdown
Starting point is 01:27:01 or to enact some kind of retribution or vengeance on a political opponent or a foreign leader because he's upset. Then it becomes my business. Right. Right. Because he's abusing our military and their families that need to have some sense for how to live their life. He's using taxpayer dollars to do that. Right. So that is the important distinction.
Starting point is 01:27:24 The reason why becomes important, because if it becomes a reason that's not acceptable and not in a normal course of being the commander in chief, then it's Congress's job to say, okay, this is a problem, and we're not going to use taxpayer dollars to do it. We're not going to mess around with our military and our military family's time and money. And we also have to make sure it's in the best interest of our national security because there is the largest land war in Europe happening. right now between Russia and Ukraine, and having a troop presence there is really important to make sure that we're sending the right message against Putin, that we are affirming our commitment to NATO. So that's why we're trying to invoke a legal provision that we actually put into the defense bill on a bipartisan basis last year that says you can't move troops beyond a threshold level unless you have met certain criteria to do so. And so in this case, we're talking about Trump trying to move troops from Germany because of specific comments, but he's also threatened to punish NATO in other ways like pull troops or even bases out of Spain because they won't participate in the war.
Starting point is 01:28:31 Is he any close to actually taking those steps? Because my understanding is we don't have troops in Spain just for the hell of it. It's because, you know, that geography provides some important, you know, capability to United States military. I mean, I remember talking about basing and troops and airplanes and airplaces. assets in Spain and Italy a lot during the Benghazi attacks and the fallout from that because that would have been, you know, sort of the closest team to get to that site on September 11th and actually try to rescue those individuals. But so just move, it's not like you can just move them around like chess pieces. You can just move a bunch of troops from Spain to like Eastern Europe and not have
Starting point is 01:29:11 an impact on your ability to fight wars. But is that even being discussed with Congress or is this stuff going to happen? Yeah. Well, it's not being discussed with Congress. in the way that it should. I mean, this administration is violating a bunch of laws or potentially violating a bunch of laws in the case of the troop levels. Like, for example, like, they, they haven't provided, there's a statutory provision in the defense bill that says they have to provide what's called an exord, an execution order, which is the order that starts contingency operations. They have to legally provide every exord to the Armed Services Committee, and they haven't, right, for a year, right? So they're violating that. But the troop movement thing is an important point. I had an
Starting point is 01:29:50 exchange with one of the senior deputy defense secretaries a couple of months ago where he was trying to justify the movement of troops out of Europe. And what they said was, we're going to take troops out of Europe and we're going to move them back to the United States so that we can train more. We can actually train better. And I'm like, well, let me understand this. You're going to actually take troops away from the places where we actually have training grounds, some of the best training grounds in the world in Europe where they actually train with our allies, because they're co-located with them, where we can conduct exercises, and we train moving troops around Europe because movement of forces on rail lines, on highways, and learning how to
Starting point is 01:30:36 do that throughout Europe is essential. You're going to take them away from there. We're going to move them back to the United States, and then to actually train them, we're going to have to temporarily ship them back there. That seems stupid. And actually do that. And actually do that. the same training that they normally do, but now we're going to have to move them back to Europe and incur that additional costs. And he's like, yeah, that's our plan. So the whole thing makes no sense. It's more expensive. It's less efficient. It's actually worse training and all being footed by the American taxpayer and the commonality to all of this, all because of Donald Trump
Starting point is 01:31:13 wanting to send a message and he's pissed at NATO or certain leaders. I mean, that is the reason behind so much of what's going on. Well, that seems. very stupid. Well, look, Congressman Crowe, thank you very much for joining the show today and trying to hold these Goobers accountable. And if you learn more about whatever Tim Parletori is doing or Hagsath or anybody else, please come back and fill us in because it's a bit of a mystery over here and we'd love to get more information. Yeah, thanks for having me back. Thanks again to Congressman Crow for doing the show and prepare our own quiz for Tim Miller next week. Yeah, yeah. Talk to you soon.
Starting point is 01:31:52 Pod Save the World is a crooked media production. Our show is produced by Alona Minkowski. Michael Goldsmith and Anisha Bonnergy. Our team includes Matt DeGroote, Ben Heathcote, Jordan Cantor, Kenny Moffat, David Tolls, and Ryan Young. Our staff is proudly unionized with the Writers Guild of America East.

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