Pod Save the World - MAGA’s Iran War Meltdown (and Micropenis)
Episode Date: March 18, 2026A MAGA civil war erupts over Trump’s war with Iran, JD Vance tries to distance himself, and Megyn Kelly accuses her former Fox News colleague of having a micropenis. Seriously!On today’s show, To...mmy and Ben cover the many ways Trump’s war with Iran is going off the rails. The death toll and economic costs keep increasing, America’s closest allies are refusing pleas to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and a resignation letter from a former top Trump administration official suggests that Trump lied when he claimed Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States. Then they dig into the conservative media battle over Iran, US support for Israel, and the future of MAGA; a New York Post report claiming the new Supreme Leader of Iran is gay, Trump’s imperialist fantasy about “taking Cuba” and the pathetic exit of Trump’s least diplomatic former diplomat, Ric Grenell. Finally, Ben speaks to Middle East analyst and author Kim Ghattas about Israel’s war against Lebanon and the displacement of over 1 million people in the country.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.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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Welcome back to Pod Save the World.
I'm Tommy Vitor.
I'm Ben, you've been enjoying the World Baseball Classic.
You look like a WBC guy.
I'm a WBC guy, and I've enjoyed it, too, because I'm a Mets fan, and Juan Soto was playing
for the Dominican Republic, and he was, I was struck that some of these guys seem
like they're playing a little harder in the WBC than they do during the, which I appreciate.
I mean, you're playing for your country.
I love all the random American players who are playing for, like, team Italy or whatever, and they're just like, look, they're just happy to be there.
They just grab some guy with an Italian name and put him on me.
Yeah, your name ends with a vowel.
You're on the squad.
I was at a sushi place, Japanese place on, like, Saturday night.
And everyone working there was Japanese.
Every customer except for Hannah and I were Japanese.
And the Japan game was on, and people were riveted.
And it was really awesome because I think Shohei went yard in, like, the first inning and was just like playing.
his balls off.
And I don't know, it was just very fun.
It got me excited for baseball season
and for the Dodgers in particular.
Well, it's kind of cool to see baseball,
which has always had an international dimension,
but it kind of like basketball,
it's become this global sport that we used to think of
as a very American sport.
But if you look at the rosters,
it's most of the guys tend to be from somewhere else.
Yeah, it's cool.
I like that.
It is cool, especially, like, the growth of these Japanese players.
Let me show you atani's, like,
maybe the best player ever in history.
Well, when you go to a Dodgers game,
I know if you go, but you'll, I mean, a chunk of the fans at Dodger Stadium are Japanese.
Yeah.
And some of them are Japanese-Americans, but you get a sense that they're literally people
that travel from Japan to come see Shohei at Dodger Stadium.
And, like, rightly so, it's like a once-in-a-generation opportunity to watch this guy play baseball.
Very fun.
Less fun topics today.
We're going to cover a lot of stuff from Iran.
Actually, we're going to do our best at fun with it because there's some kind of like
mega-media crack-up things that are very interesting and entertaining.
So the gist is the straight-of-hormuz is closed.
the prices of gas is up. No U.S. allies will help Donald Trump solve the problems he's created.
And despite ongoing bombing and further assassinations at the top Iranian political leaders,
it seems like we are now further away from this conflict ending than we were last week.
So that's the broader context. We'll update you on all of that.
We're also going to talk about the resignation of a top Trump national security official named Joe Kent.
And while he is a deeply flawed kind of individual and messenger, which will explain his comments are very stark.
and could be a sign of a broader kind of intra-maga crack-up that we should watch.
Then I'm going to get Ben's reaction to this viral op-ed that's making the case that the Iran war is actually going well.
This thing has gone super viral in D.C.
We're going to cover these reports that the Supreme Leader of Iran is gay, some, like I said, massive infighting in the media world.
And then the latest from Trump's slow-motion regime change attempt in Cuba, and then we'll offer our own Kennedy,
honors to honor its former leader, Mr. Rick Cornell. So happy trails to Rick.
Feel bad for that guy. And then, yeah, Tommy, I did the interview with, yeah, that's true.
I did the interview with Kim Gattis, who's been on before. She's a great journalist and writer,
an analyst who's based in Beirut. She'd actually just left Beirut. But yeah, did she have to evacuate?
No, she had some pre-planned travel because she's coming to teach a class in the United States.
but she updated us on the situation in Lebanon what it's like to be there, the scale of the displacement,
the scale of the bombing, the regional dynamics, what Israel's intentions may be, how much of
southern Lebanon they might try to kind of hold or create as a buffer zone, what the Lebanese
political dynamic is a combination of frustration with both Hezbollah and Israel and kind of the
sense of being caught in the middle of things. So good to Lebanon's been overlooked.
in this war, but it's a huge, I mean, a million people are displaced. It's the fifth of the
population. So a good time to spend some extra space with Kim on that. Yeah, we decided to put that
conversation in the interview because Kim is a genuine expert and just left Beirut, as you said.
But in like, you know, on Earth 2, where there's only the war in Lebanon and not a war in Iran,
like that's the entire show today. You know, like the scale of what's happening there is, is stunning.
Her point, which I think, you know, is sobering is that you have to almost go all the way back to early 1980s when Israel occupied southern Lebanon to get at this scale of war.
And there have been a lot of wars since then.
So this, yeah, this is not a small military operation.
Like 800,000 people have been displaced.
I mean, it's just unimaginable.
So, as we've discussed, you know, there's been some really great coverage of the war.
There's also been a lot of, like, terrible, credulous regurgitation of lives from the Trump.
White House. And then there's kind of like endless post-9-11 framing where we are told that the way to
support our troops is to constantly send them to war for as long as possible and not question why.
So we hear at Cricket Media. We promise to be the opposite of that. We're going to do tough,
substantive coverage of the war in Iran and all the other many places Trump is bombing.
So there's two ways that you can support that work as a listener. The first is free. Just subscribe
to Pod Save the World on YouTube or wherever you get your podcast, maybe rate, maybe review,
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you guys for watching, especially all the bonus episodes we've been doing on Pod Save the World.
We really love doing it. And the fact that you watch means a lot to us.
Appreciate it. Yeah. There's a lot to, we could do one every day, unfortunately.
Yeah, a lot of stuff to cover. All right, Ben. So a lot has happened since we talked last week.
just to tick through some of the major updates, and then we'll hear from our president.
So the casualty count unfortunately keeps going up.
13 U.S. service members are dead since the war started.
200 have been hurt or wounded.
So six of the 13 died last week.
There was some sort of mid-air collision between two KC-135 refueling planes over Western Iraq.
I feel like we don't really know the full story there.
I feel like we may never, because the Pentagon is just hiding the ball on a lot of this stuff, but really awful.
In Iran, nearly 1,500 Iranians have been reported dead.
About 18,500 have been injured, according to Al Jazeera.
On Tuesday morning, we learned that Ali Larjani, the Secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council
and the effective leader of the regime, has been killed in an Israeli airstrike.
The head of the Basij militia is also dead.
There was also some big news on Tuesday when a top Trump aide named Joe Kent resigned saying,
quote, I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran.
Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby, end quote.
So again, we'll talk more later in the show.
We'll go deep on who Kent is, why he's a flawed messenger here and some of the really weird shit in this letter, especially about Israel.
But it does seem like a sign that the cracks in the MAGA world are widening fast over this war.
But more importantly, most importantly, for Iran, Ben, the Strait of Hormuz is still closed.
NATO countries and nearly every other country, they refuse.
to, they've rebuffed Trump's request to join this, like, ad hoc kind of like naval coalition
to escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz.
And Trump is not at all mad about it.
Here's a supercut of what Trump and his team have had to say about Iran, the Strait of Hormuz,
NATO, and a lot more over the last couple of days.
Let's watch.
The Strait, Hormuz is a famous, wonderful, beautiful place.
I knew about the straight that it would be a weapon, which I predicted a long time
We've got predicted all of this stuff.
Why can't the U.S. just immediately reopen the Strait of Hormuz?
Well, we could, but it takes two to tango.
We have to get people to take their billion-dollar ship and, you know, drive it up.
The only thing prohibiting transit in the straits right now is Iran shooting at shipping.
It is open for transit, should Iran not do that.
We have 45,000 troops in Japan.
We have 45,000 troops in South Korea.
We have 45,000, 50,000 troops in Germany.
We defend all these countries.
And then do you have any minesweepers?
And they say, well, would it be possible for us not to get involved?
I've long said that, you know, I wonder whether or not NATO would ever be there for us.
So this was a great test because we don't need them, but they should have been there.
We didn't have to be there for Ukraine, you know.
It's interesting.
I'm almost doing it in some time.
cases, not because we need them, but because I want to find out how they react.
You could make the case that maybe we shouldn't be there at all because we don't need it.
We have a lot of oil.
The Iranian regime has filled sky news.
If you put boots on the ground in Iran, it will be another BNM.
Are you afraid of that?
No, I'm not afraid of.
I'm really not afraid of anything.
I love that Pete Hackseth quote so much.
The only thing blocking the Strait of Hormuz is Iran blocking the Strait of Formuz.
Like, thank you, Pete.
You have identified the problem.
Ben, what do you make of Trump?
I mean, I'm curious what you think about any of that.
But what do you make of him folding all of this
into this old fight with NATO?
Like, why ask for help from NATO countries if you don't need it?
Why go public with the ask before getting a private yes?
When you know it'll just kind of like make you look isolated and stupid.
Maybe we're thinking about it more than he ever did.
But what's your take?
I don't feel reassured by that supercut.
And I don't think there is any supercut that it could have been put together that
reassured you because you get no sense of the political objectives of the war
from that, the straight of Hormuz is closed because Donald Trump launched the war. And for him to
turn on allies like this this quickly is both completely insane, but also very much a situation where
the chickens are coming home to roost. So first of all, the idea that these countries should
get involved and literally get in harm's way to support a war of choice.
an illegal war of choice that Donald Trump launched without even consulting any of them is absolute madness.
I mean, it reminded me a little bit, Tommy, to play back one of the hits of how out of sorts the Bush administration got when France and Germany refused to join the war in Iraq.
But at least that was like they went over there. They made the case. They said, you should join us for these reasons. And then they were told, no, this is, we are going to surprise you by long.
launching a massive war in the Middle East that is going to compromise all of your energy supplies.
Europe is already paying more than Americans are for higher fuel prices and then say,
oh, and you better send down some troops to support me.
Of course they're not going to do that, nor should they.
I wouldn't do that if I were them.
And for him to then kind of go back and play the hits of, well, we defend you and you don't
defend us.
first of all the chickens are coming on to ruse in the sense that if you treat your allies like shit
for the first year plus of your administration if you threaten to invade European territory in
Greenland if you put tariffs on people if you consistently insult them if you back far-right
parties in their countries and say you're going to quote cultivate resistance in Europe
which is what they said in the national security strategy you should not be surprised that
there's not exactly a deep reservoir of goodwill to draw upon it. And those of us who've been saying
that you need allies and if you treat them like garbage, you're going to ultimately harm American
interest. Well, this is part of what we're talking about. Of course, they're not going to bail Trump
out on this one. And nor is there a minesweeper. I mean, this is the other thing is this
fundamental misunderstanding of the war. What's needed in the strait of Hormuz is not like a few
extra German mine sweepers. It's for there to not be a war. And so it doesn't even really matter
if they kick in some ships.
You're not going to restart commerce as long as Iran is disrupting that commerce,
unless you kill every last single Iranian, which is, you know, a horrible thing to think about.
And so I just think he's flailing.
He's going day to day, and he's refusing to see the consequences of the very war that he started.
Yeah, I mean, your point about pissing off all your allies, this is the predictable outcome and predicted outcome.
He keeps saying there that, like, you know, no one predicted all these bad things that are going wrong now in Iran, but everyone predicted these things is the most obvious things.
And to your point about just like, we need a couple of minesweepers.
It's not that simple.
Like, that's a very important one.
Just like, just for context for folks.
So the straight-over moose, it's the only way in and out of the Persian Gulf.
It's only 21 miles wide at its narrowest point.
And you got Iran on one side and Oman on the other.
And as we're learning, this choke point gives Iran a tremendous amount of leverage because they can cut off the flow of oil and gas on ships as well as many.
other commodities. One-third of the world's fertilizer goes through the straight. One-third of the
world's helium supply goes through the straight. Sulfur, like the list goes on and on.
And so Iran can block the flow of those ships in a bunch of ways. They can place naval mines and
shipping channels, which they've reportedly done, although Trump keeps denying that they've done it.
They can attack ships with missiles and drones. As of this recording, 16 ships have been attacked.
They can also just threaten to attack ships. And that creates understandable fear from shipping
companies and the price of insurance goes up and it's like a de facto blockade. So that is all created
what the international energy agency is calling, quote, the largest supply disruption in history.
And at the moment, it's not a total stoppage of oil and gas out of the Middle East.
Iran is letting some ships through. They're letting their own ships out. There's some like
ships connected to China that have gotten out. And then both the UAE and Saudi Arabia have
pipelines they can use to move oil and gas. But Iran is also now targeting those pipelines with
drones and missile attacks. So the status quo is the prices have gone way up. And if this goes on
much longer, it could permanently impact the oil production from wells in the region, which,
which it leads you to this idea of this naval escort for these ships. And the shipping news
publication Lloyd's List ran the numbers on the feasibility of naval escorts. They said that
escorts would only get 10% of normal traffic through and that a basic naval escort operation
would need between eight to 10 destroyers to protect convoys, between five to ten commercial vessels
in each transit. And then, Ben, I saw there was a retired Air Force general who had specifically
been asked to study how to defend the Strait of Hormuz back in the day. And he told the New York Times
that the only way to truly control the strait would be to take and hold the Iranian territory borderline.
So that's a ground invasion. I haven't seen the Trump administration float that as an option,
but man, was this a failure of planning if they didn't realize that that's kind of like the
escalation ladder here.
No, and in any Iran war game, one of the first things Iranians do is close the straight-of-form moves.
Like, this is no mystery to anybody.
And what Trump keeps trying to do, and I think things have finally caught up to him.
You know, we've talked in the past about how he'd do these things like Venezuela or the
12-day war, and he'd kind of get out before the consequences could really sink in.
and this is the one that caught up to him because this is of a much larger scale because it
existentially threatened the Iranian regime.
And if they feel existentially threatened, they are going to bear a lot of costs to wreak havoc
on everybody else and to make the price of this war so high that they won't be attacked again.
That's clearly what they're doing.
And whatever you think of the Iranian regime, there's plenty of bad things to say about
that if you look at Iran general, well, first of all,
the regime, they went through the Iran-Iraq war for nearly a decade where they lost hundreds and
hundreds and hundreds of thousands of people. Like they have, never mind the fact that Iran,
as a civilization, has been there thousands of years. Like, these are not people that are just
going to capitulate under a few weeks of bombing. They're going to do this. They're going to
continue to threaten the strait. And they're going to try to control that straight. That's the way
that they can, in their minds, win the war.
Yeah, and they win by not losing.
Yeah, they win by not losing.
The regime survives.
They've demonstrated the leverage they have
because of the strait, and that's it.
And that's their path to winning by not losing.
And Trump, you know, and a lot of these other things
is he creates a mess, and then he tries to give himself
credit for solving the problem that he created.
And this felt like he thought it was going to be that way.
Like, I've created this mess,
but now I'm going to build this great coalition
to open the strait.
And he's looking over the left shoulder and his right shoulder, and nobody's there except Israel.
And again, this is what it's like, this is what it feels like, to be in a world in which you're not only launching a war with no idea of what you're doing, but you also have no friends who are going to bail you out.
Yeah. And so a couple quick military and security updates and then a couple of diplomatic or Iran-based updates to close this section out.
So last week, the U.S. bombed Karg Island, which is this tiny little island that we've talked about before, it's 15.
miles off the coast of Iran, 90% of Iran's oil and gas goes through it for export. Trump,
they just had the military bomb, military installations on Karg Island, not the oil and gas infrastructure,
which again is fueled speculation that the U.S. or Israel might try to invade and occupy
Karg Island. But Trump did tell NBC he might have Karg Island bombed again, quote, just for fun.
So that's cool. Then also last week, there was a fire on the USS Gerald Ford aircraft carrier
that apparently now we learned took 30 hours to put out.
Dozens of sailors have smoke inhalation injuries.
More than 600 sailors and crew members lost their beds and are now sleeping on like tables and on the floor and in bunks.
A lot of them can't do laundry anymore.
And this hardship is coming in the 10th month of deployment for this ship.
They sound like these guys are going to get extended until May.
And in April, their deployment will be the longest ever for a post-Vietnam carrier.
So this is just like, it's a brutal and under discussed hardship for the individuals, the men and women on this boat.
And then finally, along those same lines, Ben, I don't know if you saw the videos that were coming out last night from Baghdad of all these drone attacks on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.
Now, like the C-Ram, the missile, the, basically it's a machine gun that fires at these drones automatically and defends the Baghdad embassy from, you know, drone attacks.
but one hit, and it looks just absolutely fucking terrifying because these diplomats are getting
attacked by Shia-backed militias that are supported by Iran.
So, I mean, the security situation is getting worse, not better.
I think there's something really important that we have to flag for our viewers and listeners,
which is something you mentioned earlier when you talked about the casualties,
which is I've lived through multiple wars.
I was you know we were in government for eight years but also just watching you know the Bush years and the
post-obama years I've never felt like I was getting less information from the U.S. government
and information that was clearly incomplete and even at times seemingly dishonest. So first of all,
there's been very little transparency about these casualties. Yeah. The only time we
really seem to learn something specific is when somebody dies, because you can't, you know,
conceal that. I don't know how those planes crashed. I don't know the state of these wounded
troops, like where they're wounded and how, how severe those wounds are. The damage you talk
about, it feels like there's this tide of censorship. So we already know that Israel is trying to
suppress video getting out of the attacks that are hitting Israel. We know that there's a lot of the attacks that are
hitting Israel. We know that the UAE is prosecuting people who post videos online of Dubai being hit.
Now, you could see why they want to do that. The idea of Dubai is this place, you know,
full of influencers and happy tourists. That's part of their economic model. But the reality is,
let's just take the U.S. side of this. Remember the Saudi embassy fire? The U.S. embassy and Saudi
was hit. I don't know how badly it was damaged. I don't know how badly the embassy in Baghdad's
been damaged. We've had military installations hit in Bahrain. I don't know how badly they're damaged.
It feels like we have no idea what damage is being sustained. Like, so just to take, is this billions
of dollars? Like, when are we going to be able to reopen embassies? How much is going to cost
to rebuild things that have been broken? We are not being told by our own government costs that we
as taxpayers are going to have to pay. And nor can we evaluate how much Iran is able to,
able to hit things because we're not being told what they're hitting.
Yeah.
Right?
Like, you get, it's crazy, Tommy.
Like, you know what this is like.
You're piecing together stuff from, you know, the Guardian and Al Jazeera and is this video
on social media.
Right.
There's no damage assessment coming from the United States government.
And that's not normal.
And the fact that you can't trust anything Pete Heggs says is not normal.
I'm disappointed that the military doesn't feel like it's very transparent about all the
targets.
It bombs in Iran.
It's not transparent about the damage that we've taken or the casualties that we've taken.
and this is a huge deal that hasn't got a lot of attention yet.
Yeah, I totally agree with that.
It seems like they're really trying to evade any accountability.
And also, like Pete Hexath, I mean, the press corps has been just gutted.
So half the people in the room are like from, you know, My Pillow TV.
And then Pete Hexath's kicking out photographers who apparently didn't make him look good in photos.
So it's just a fucking joke.
Also, Ben, as I mentioned at the top, so the Israelis announced on Tuesday morning that they killed a top Iranian political leader named Ali Larjani.
One Iran expert I was talking to,
today described Larajani to me as both like kind of hardline but a pragmatic operator.
Yes.
Like during the Obama years, he was Speaker of Parliament.
He was considered a pragmatist, but he seems to have hardened over time as the entire
system and apparatus hardened and built kind of like what was described to me as mafia-like
economic links with the IRGC.
Now, I was talking to another source who was telling me that Largiani was the interlocutor
for U.S. talks at this moment right before his death.
this person told me that specifically he was talking with Steve Wickoff. Now, I can't confirm that.
But if it's true, it would be the latest instance of Israel killing a possible interlocutor in the Iranian
system who could help find an off ramp to end the war. And, you know, my guess is the truth is
probably less complicated than that. Like, I know that Netanyahu is, you know, full send on regime
change and regime decapitation and that that kind of component of this military campaign. And they're
clearly not coordinating with the U.S. as evidence by Trump saying things to journalists,
like, well, all the people we thought, you know, could take over for the Supreme Leader are now dead.
But, I mean, it seems like this guy was, you know, I've seen an Israeli military analysts say he was the number one target after Hamine and, you know, now he was dead.
Look, this is also very important.
And look, I was very familiar with Larjani.
He was a very familiar figure in the Obama years.
He's like a Rachi, the foreign minister.
He's a very sophisticated person.
doesn't mean, I'm not saying I agree with this politics, right, but he was an operator, and he
straddled the two, there are very few figures in Iranian politics who can kind of straddle
the IRGC hardline and the kind of more moderate political leadership, people like Arachi, the current
fire minister, the current fire minister, and that's why he was often an interlocutor for kind
of back-channel discussions, killing him guarantees that he will be replaced by a more hardline
person chosen by the IRGC. And this is the fallacy of the Israeli strategy, right? If Alec Hamine had died
of natural causes in a year or two, I don't think his son, who's a hardliner, would have been the
most likely candidate to become supreme leader. That used to be seen as a less likely outcome that
the hardliners wanted because of the natural pressures inside that system to move in a somewhat
different direction. By killing Hamine, they got a harder line replaced into Hamine.
Now by killing Larajani, they're going to get a harder line replacement to Larajani.
This is not how you actually get a better future for Iran.
It's how you ensure that the hardest-line people.
And a lot of us have said for a long time, if you decapitate the political leadership of this regime,
you're going to be left with the military, the IRGC, the most hardline people, as the strongest power.
Because in a vacuum, the vacuum goes to the people with guns and resources, and that's the IRGC.
If I was cynical, I would say that maybe that's what Israel wants.
Maybe they want to kind of clear out any potential political leadership that could be in any kind of negotiation with the United States or the outside world and that offers anything other than a binary choice, the IRGC or some kind of violent overthrow of the government or just a civil war.
And again, it's hard for me to look at this strategy and see any like, you know, pathway from like assassinating and.
decapitating the regime to like democracy. It feels far more like a strategy of trying to implode Iran
and have it be in a state of violent chaos and civil conflict. Israel doesn't come out and say
that's their objective, but you have had some Israeli analysts, including some people on background,
saying that's an objective that they would be happy with or they'd be comfortable with.
And so I think here, Tommy, we see what's at odds between the U.S. and Iran. Because if the U.S.
strategy is, as stated now recently, let's degrade all their capabilities and then negotiate,
you, by killing Larajani, you're making that far less likely.
Definitely.
And so this feels like an Israeli strategy at odds with an American strategy.
And they also know that, you know, Trump could wake up tomorrow and just decide he wants
to end the war.
And he needs a phone number to call.
And at some point, he's just going to run out of numbers a call.
One last quick thing, Ben, the Washington Post reported that while we've seen Israeli
Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu repeatedly tell protesters.
to rise up, to take their government, you know, almost seem to blame them for not having done it yet.
Israeli officials are privately telling U.S. diplomats that they believe the protesters would get slaughtered.
Now, that is obvious.
But the fact that they would make those calls and then say that in private to the U.S. government, I think, kind of gets at why Netanyai was such a terrible person
and why he's like the worst possible messenger for these regime change, little videos he puts out.
it's so cynical uh because they're using the understandable hatred of the regime to try to appear like
they're doing this for some values proposition and they're not like bibi naniya has no interest in
democracy in iran or he could care like resa palavi was a useful idiot to him um you know
when they were trying to kind of create this groundswell of support for something that people
didn't support right and i think what you're seeing now is that
there's been this effort for 25 years in this country to make opposition to the war feel like
it's not supportive of the troops and not supportive of the people we're trying to, quote, unquote,
help inside these countries, right? So if you don't support the war in Iran, you don't support funding it,
you don't support the troops and you somehow are turning your back on the Iranian people.
No, we have to take that back. And we've already talked about why we shouldn't fund this war,
but we shouldn't give into the lie that bombing a country is somehow intended to be helping those
people. You're setting Iran back a generation with a scale of destruction that we're seeing in Iran,
and you're certainly not doing anything that feels designed to lead to some kind of peaceful
transition to a different kind of regime. No, it feels like we are all science point to escalation.
Okay, we are going to take a quick break, but, as you all know, November is going to decide
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com slash world. Okay, let's talk about the resignation of this top Trump official named Joe Kent.
So Kent was the head of the National Counterterrorism Center or NCTC.
That is a very big job.
You report to the Director of National Intelligence, so Tulsi Gabbard in this case,
but like you have a huge counterterrorism responsibility,
and you have a seat at the table in like the biggest policy meetings
as you often do a laydown of kind of like the threat.
So he was a very senior person.
In his resignation letter to Trump, Kent says the following things.
These are quotes.
Quote, Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation.
and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.
High-ranking Israeli officials and influential members of the American media deployed a misinformation campaign
that wholly undermined your America First Platform and sowed pro-war sentiment to encourage a war with Iran.
This echo chamber was used to deceive you into believing that Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States and you should strike now.
There was a clear path to victory.
This was a lie and is the same tactic that Israel used to draw us into the disastrous Iraq war.
Okay, so that's the end of quoting.
Let's unpack those claims a bit and then contextualize who Kent is.
So the first claim there to me, Ben, is by far the most important point, which is Kent had access in that role to the crown jewels of American intelligence.
And if he says Iran posed no imminent threat, that is very significant.
And I think we should believe him.
Then we get to the Israel bucket of claims.
And I think it gets a lot more complicated.
So clearly Netanyahu pushed for war with Iran, it seems unequivocally true that the timing of the war was due to.
Israel wanting to strike, like Marco Rubio said as much. But also, like, Israeli officials did do
a PR campaign in the U.S. to put political pressure on Trump, as they did to Obama and other presidents
before. I think it's bullshit to say Israel deceived Trump. Like, Trump's a big boy. He can make his own
decisions, right? Like, it's also, and then it gets crazier. Like, it's crazy to blame Israel for the
Iraq war. That was a Bush-Cheney joint. Netanyahu lobbied for it, right? We've all seen the
clip of him before U.S. Congress, but absolving the U.S. government of agency or blame for
Iraq is nuts and no one should believe that. And there's another important bio point just that's worth
mentioning. So Kent served in the U.S. military. He did 11 combat tours, mostly in Iraq. He reportedly
also worked as a CIA paramilitary officer. And his late wife was killed by a suicide bomber in Syria in January of
2019. He refers to that in the letter by saying he, quote, lost my beloved wife Shannon in a war
manufactured by Israel. Now, I don't know if he's saying Israel manufactured like the general war on
terror or the war in Syria specifically. Either way, it is baseless and wrong to blame Israel.
On top of that, Kent has a bunch of relationships with white nationalist writers and media figures
like Nick Fuentes. He's parroted Russian talking points about Ukraine. He defended January 6th.
I could go on forever. So long story short, I'm not a fan of this guy, but it's hard for me to get past
him completely rebuking the idea that Iran posed an imminent threat because all publicly available
information suggests that is the case. And this guy had access to the most sensitive intelligence
in the entire U.S. government. And he believes so too. Yeah, that part is quite obvious.
I mean, Iran did not pose an imminent threat. They have not produced any information whatsoever
to suggest that they did. And nor can they describe what the imminent threat was. You know,
Trump said, we're going to get a nuclear weapon in two weeks or something, totally bonkers.
I think there are a few pieces of this that you have to take in isolation because, like you said,
Joe Kent is a complicated character.
First, let's just actually talk for a second about Homeland Defense and counterintelligence.
So the National Counterterrorism Center was created after 9-11 to be the place where you connected
the dots, where all the different intelligence about terrorism came together in one center
so you didn't miss plots, right?
This was how 9-11 happened.
The CIA knew things and the FBI knew things.
And if anybody put that together, we probably would have foiled that plot.
The reason I say that is because, look, we've read and heard about the chaos at the FBI,
where you've had a purging of officials, including people, with counterterrorism experience.
Cash Patel is more interested in, you know, shotgunning beers in the locker room at a hockey game than protecting America.
NCTC now is leaderless.
Did you see the photos of Cash Patel with the UFC fighters at the training at Quantico?
And his tailor-made shoes that had the cash slogan with the dollar sign on it.
He's wearing these yellow shoes that have his personal logo on it, like this cash thing.
It's the number nine because he's the ninth FBI director.
There's a Punisher logo on the back.
He is literally, it's like a teenage boy designed his own shoes on a Nike website and then wore them to be around the cool fighters.
Sorry that's an aside, but I just could not believe what a fucking loser that guy is when I saw this photo.
relevant, Tommy, is it we are poised to be in a period where the homeland threat against
the United States is going to be incredibly high because Iran may want to carry out attacks
on the U.S. homeland. There's probably increased anger at the United States for all manner
of things, including the wars we've launched the Middle East. And at that time, DHS is leaderless
and has become an immigration deportation machine. The FBI is led by a fucking moron
wearing personally branded shoes and NCTC is leaderless.
Like, that's a huge problem.
And so if there's terrorist attacks at home, don't forget that right now, at a period of heightened threat,
we have no permanent leader of DHS, NCTC, and we've got a clown running the FBI.
So that's just dangerous.
Then on Kent's kind of claims, I do think it's important as someone who's spent a lot of time
in the MAGA airwaves to just try to.
understand what's going on there. There is truth and then there's falsehood, right? It is undeniable
that Bibi Netanyahu wanted the United States to do this. It's absurd to me that this should
actually not be controversial. Like Bibi wanted him to do this, Trump to do this, he wanted past
presence to do this. It is also undeniable that APEC has been supportive of whatever BB Netanyahu
wanted. Look, Tommy, when we were in the Obama administration, one of the things you used to drive
Obama crazy is the APEC people come see him and say that we want to know.
know that you have kishkas, you know, this kind of Yiddish word for, I was thinking about that today.
Rom used to be like, give the feeling your kishkas.
Yeah, but the kishkas they were talking about was to bomb Iran.
Like, it wasn't subtle.
Like, we don't know that you have it in you to bomb Iran.
Like, this is, so people do no service by pretending.
Like, I get, and we'll get to the darker places, Jo Khand goes, that are deeply
anti-Semitic.
But if you try to pretend, like Israel had nothing to do with it.
with us going to war or that APEC did not support this war.
Yeah, you look ridiculous.
You lose your credibility to then say that these other things that Joe Kent said are
are not true or anti-Semitic.
Like, we have to be able to accept two things at once that Israel pushed hard for this,
the Bibi Nanyahu pushed hard for this, that I cannot imagine.
Put it this way, Tommy.
If Bibi wasn't pushing for this, would we have done it?
No, and we know that because he didn't want us to do it a couple months ago,
because we didn't have enough posture
and like forces in the region to defend him.
Yeah.
So, so now to the problematic part,
I hate how these MAGA people act like Trump was who they see as a strong man on everything.
On this one, where it becomes anti-Semitic is it's like,
it's not just a BB pushed for this.
It's somehow Trump was like lobotomized and became like a maturian candidate,
you know, a robot of the Israeli.
no, that's where it gets crazy. The idea that they cannot accept that their guy, Trump, is the one who did this. No one is more responsible for this than Trump, not even Nanyahu, because Trump could have said no to Nanyahu. So that's where they lose me, where it's like, we're going to be intellectually honest up until we have to confront the thing that we're uncomfortable with, which is that Donald Trump did this. And then you get to, yes, Joe Kent like takes this to the far extreme. I think that point about Syria is that,
that every war that's happened in the Middle East is all part of this Israeli design
and there's an Israeli hand behind every one of these wars,
which, again, that's where Joe Kent loses his credibility, right?
Because there's not an evidentiary basis for that either.
We have to be able to kind of find the truth in this kind of cesspool of people
that some people who don't want to acknowledge that Bibi had anything to do with this,
and some people who want to make it about, you know, world jury, you know.
No, there's a truth that is very clear about what happened.
Yeah. Now, to your point, I do think MAGA is about to have a big crack up on this.
Yeah, look, I saw some Democrats saying, don't share Kent's message. He's the wrong messenger.
Don't elevate this guy. I'm like, I disagree completely. There's no such thing as a right messenger.
This guy will reach people who are part of the MAGA base who will never, ever hear, you will not know that you or I exist and then wouldn't listen to us if they did because of our backgrounds.
And Kent might be able to reach. Or they've watched nothing but Fox where they've been told there was an imminent threat.
Exactly. And suddenly Joe Kent says, and it wasn't.
And like, I also noticed, you know, Tulsi Gabbard put out a tweet about Kent.
where she just was like basically said that you know trump is the commander chief he's
responsible for determining what is and what is not an imminent threat and he acted accordingly
which is neither uh it's it's neither um disagreeing with kent nor affirming the iran policy which
makes me wonder if she's living on borrowed time here and then again we just want to get back we're
going to get to this maga world stuff in a minute but um uh j d vance is trying to do this dance
where he distances himself a bit from the iran policy
but says enough trolley shit to keep Trump happy.
And I just, I really don't think it's working.
But I wonder what you think.
Ben, so we edited together two of his answers about Iran recently.
One is from Friday of last week, I believe.
And then one I think was from Monday.
Let's watch.
I'm not going to show up here in front of God and everybody else tell you exactly
what I said in that classified room, partially because I don't want to go to prison.
And partially because I think it's important for the president of the United States
to be able to talk to his advisors without those advisors running their mouth to the American media.
You're trying to drive a wedge between members of the administration between me and the president.
What the president said consistently, going back to 2015, and I agreed with them, is that Iran should not have a nuclear weapon.
One big difference, Phil, is that we have a smart president, whereas in the past we've had dumb presidents.
And I trust President Trump to get the job done, to do a good job for the American people and to make sure that the mistakes of the past aren't repeated.
He's just trying so hard to signal that he wasn't all in.
on this war, but also his people have briefed that he told Trump to go big.
And he owns everything they're doing.
I just, like, it's, it's not working, buddy.
I don't want to tell you, J.D.
He's full shit.
I mean, that's the main thing you take away from these things.
He's clearly trying to have it both ways.
Look, he's never had a problem coming out of meetings and telling people what his advice was to
the president before.
So it's not like he applies that standard across the board that I don't reveal my advice
to the president.
He does constantly.
He doesn't want to do it on this one because either.
Like he went along with the war or he argued against it but doesn't have the guts to tell us that.
Either one is not very flattering for J.D. Vance.
And the idea that he thinks he can absolve the consequences of this war by like winking at MAGA,
he's not going to be able to. He owns this.
And he's never going to be able to come out and fully throw it to say it was wrong because he depends on Donald Trump for his political survival.
So you're watching J.D. Vance's diminution as a political figure in real time because his identity doesn't work.
without opposition to Forever Wars.
Like, it's central to him.
In a way, it's not to a Rubio.
And so I think, you know, the air of the J.D. Vance balloon is rapidly running out.
Yeah, I agree.
The air is coming out of JD there a little bit.
Okay, so let's talk about the MAGA media, well, the media generally.
So over on the kind of normal media side, we get FCC chairman, Brendan Carr,
threatening networks that cover the war in ways that Trump doesn't like and, you know,
threaten to revoke their licenses.
So that's great.
But the really interesting stuff, Ben, is happening in the MAGA Media world.
So we've talked previously about how some of the lattice opposition to the war with Iran has come from MAGAMedia folks.
Tucker Carlson, Macon Kelly, Candice Owens, Marjorie Taylor Green, who's obviously a congresswoman, but now is just an outsider doing press.
There's also more moderate voices like Joe Rogan, who has spoken out.
So here's a little taste of what they were saying about their opposition to the war.
And then we'll come back and talk about what they've been saying since.
I think most people, no matter how they feel about Israel, whether they love it or
or hate it or it doesn't matter. It's nothing to do with this specific country. It has to do with
any country that might be leading us around, particularly to our destruction, and putting its
interests before ours. If you want to bet on the future of the Republican Party and keeping people
in it, you would side with the isolationists because there's not a person under the age of 40
who's a voting Republican who's in favor of this. It just seems so insane based on what he ran on.
I mean, this is why a lot of people feel betrayed, right? And he ran on no more wars.
these stupid senseless wars, and then we have one that we can't even really clearly define
why we did it.
Trump has betrayed every last single one of us, okay?
Make no mistake about that.
Trump is now a never-trumper.
The very people that we had to fight to get Trump into office, he is now partnered with and
insulting us, and he thinks that we're too stupid to notice or something.
So it's an interesting range of criticism there, right?
Tucker's talking about Israel.
Megan Kelly is just making a case for isolationism.
You got Rogan being like, no one voted for this.
And then Candace Owens is like the Jews and the Frankis cults are running American foreign policy.
But now is where it gets fun.
So the kind of one of the loudest pro-Iran war pro Netanyahu voices has been a guy named Mark Levin.
He's on Fox News.
And Levin has gone super hard at critics of the war, especially Tucker Carlson.
He's also gone hard at Megan Kelly for questions.
questioning the war. And the fight between these groups finally erupted. So here's Megan Kelly
talking about her back and forth with Mark Levin and Donald Trump weighing in. Let's watch.
Since October of this year, he has been coming for me relentlessly. I mean relentlessly.
In the most vile and disgusting personal terms possible. Finally, I had enough. And I tweeted at Mark
Levin this weekend, something to the fact of I'm very sorry about his micro penis, which I really
enjoyed. I mean, I thankfully have never had to look at it firsthand, but you can just tell. And really,
we should be feeling sorry for Mark Levin. We should be comforting him because that's got to be
really tough. He actually ran to the president of the United States. He ran to Donald Trump
and had Trump send out a nice tweet about him last night overnight.
And it was a ridiculous tweet for which now the president is getting blowback because he does not have his finger on the pulse of where his party is right now, which is very unusual for Trump.
When they go low, we go micro penis.
If only Michelle Obama could have known that her line would be invoked like that.
So, Ben, I'll be the first today that Candace Owens is a crazy person and an anti-Semite.
But I do think it's worth reflecting on the fact that the isolationist side is winning and the side criticizing.
Israel is winning. There was some polling out earlier this week that shows U.S. views on Israel
have changed dramatically since 2023. That includes a nine point decrease in the percentage of
Republicans who have a favorable view of Israel. Favorable views of Israel are down 21 points with
Democrats and 19 points with independence. So like that all just makes this kind of battle for the
future of MAGA so interesting. And I think as you've said previously on this show, like Tucker Carlson,
Megan Kelly, they're also looking at audience data. They know what's resonating and
getting clicks and getting downloads.
And it might be for bad reasons, but, like, they follow that lead.
Well, I think that the important point here is that what we're seeing is about the future of MAGA,
not even the present of MAGA.
Yeah.
You know, some people pointed to this fact that if you look at the polling around the Iran war,
after the war started, some Republicans and MAGA voters kind of came home.
Yeah.
That's not surprising.
No, most people don't think that deeply about stuff.
or for whatever.
They like Trump, so I'll go along with Trump or they watch Fox.
These people, Tucker in particular, are kind of at the vanguard, to use a term, of where MAGA is going.
It doesn't matter if it's only a smaller percentage.
It's where the energy is flowing.
It's certainly where the younger people are going.
If you look at the numbers on support for Israel, the only demographic that is staying firm in support for Israel are Republicans over the age of 50.
The younger people get in MAGA, the more they don't like the war, and the more they want to rethink the relationship to Israel.
Tucker gets that. Megan Kelly is following Tucker's lead on that. Candice Owens has built a huge audience on a bunch of things, including this, but also on just conspiracy theory.
And I do think that there's a sense that this is a betrayal of something fundamental to MAGA.
this you know immigration no forever wars and kind of upending the elites that that was the core maga project
and so he's betrayed a core promise and you know candace said that never trump thing that trumps
become never trumper as much as candace is a lunatic the point there that's interesting to me is
that this is not a case where some other people in maga got trump to do something that another faction
of maga didn't want to do the people that wanted trump to do this
were not MAGA. And so if you take Lindsey Graham, I think that for a long time,
MAGA kind of was entertained by the Lindsay Graham Trump friendship, in part because they hated
Lindsey Graham. And it was kind of funny to them that Trump seemed to carry Lindsey Graham's balls
around in his pocket. And Lindsey Graham just kissed his ass. Sorry for that imagery.
It worked. But now the appearances that Lindsay Graham just got Donald Trump to do something.
And brags about it in the Wall Street Journal. And brags about it. Yeah. So I think this is a big problem. And I
would not, if I were Donald Trump, take comfort in the polling that shows a lot of MAGA people
prove this.
Because I think Tucker is looking past Trump.
Who's going to take the mantle?
And you don't see anybody, whether it's J.D. Vance, Steve Bannon, Megan Kelly, Tucker Carlson,
the people that are thinking about how do I have the audience after Trump, none of them are betting that Mark
Levin and, you know, Lindsay Graham are where that's going to go.
No, it's Mark Levin is not the future.
It's Candice Owens doing a 12-part series that Sarah Netanyahu was born a dude or something like that.
That's where we all have to look forward to.
Ben, last thing on this, just the dumbest neocons I've noticed have been coming out of the woodwork to support the war.
Bush propagandist turned Saudi employee, Ari Fleischer.
Oh, this is amazing.
So he complained that, quote, today's media cheer against the U.S., overstate enemy abilities,
understate hours, and paint a picture that the U.S. is losing while we are winning.
And then he posted an article from 2001 from the New York Times,
where I think it was R.W. Apple, the author,
talked about concern that Afghanistan could turn into a quagmire like Vietnam.
Ben, what happened in Afghanistan after that?
It turned into a quagmire that was longer than Vietnam.
Much longer, right.
We were there for 20 years.
It's such an amazing window into the kind of paranoid mindset of these guys.
Because if you want to be generous to him,
he's kind of not denying that that happened.
He's suggesting that it happened because people in the media said it would
happen, that everything would have been fine in Afghanistan if R.W. Apple didn't write that
there would be a quagmire, that that somehow created the quagmire. And this is kind of a weird
part of the kind of right-wing authoritarian mindset, which is that if bad things happen because
of what we do, it's not our fault. It's because of the media, like, writing about the bad things
that happened, you know? That's what's scary about it to me. It was crazy. I mean, yeah, he like made like
three points and none of them made sense. He was like, and then, out of him, he was like, and then
after this article was written, Kabul fell. It's like, hey, buddy, again, fast forward to
Kabul falling again to the Taliban. The other one I just want to quickly flag then was a post from
Newt Gingrich. Mr. Gingrich tweeted an article that said, instead of fighting over the Strait of Hormuz,
we should cut a new channel to the Persian Gulf, I think, kind of through Oman. Here's how he
described it. This is from Newt Gingrich. A dozen thermonuclear detonations, and you've got a
waterway wider than the Panama Canal, deeper than the Suez and safe from Iranian attacks.
There was a community note on his tweet that said,
this proposal originates from a satirical article published the same day,
presented as a humorous open letter with a disclaimer that its views,
quote, do not necessarily represent those of anyone with brain cells.
So that was the speaker of the house for a while.
Well, not only that, this was a man who was held up as kind of the intellectual.
Yeah, big time.
Yeah.
I mean, seriously, like if, you know, those of you're not old enough to remember these days,
he was this professor and he was this intellect and we were supposed to take him seriously.
we are like
I've learned that these are the dumbest
fucking people imaginable that have been like
driving this country to the far right
I mean I didn't need to get
into why nuclear explosions are not
the answer to the straight of Burmuse but
Newt doesn't seem to get that
yeah I think the Omanis might not appreciate
a bunch of nuclear detonations so a couple more
things on Iran so there's this op-ed
in Al Jazeera of all places
that has been making the rounds in D.C. I got it
sent to me a bunch of times I don't know if you did too Ben
it makes the case that the war in Iran is going
really well. And I thought it would be worth trying to, like, steal man the argument and, like, take it on
seriously. It's by a guy named Muhammadad Salum. I think he seems to have worked in, like, the Intel
world now as a professor. It's a long piece, so I can't do it all, but I'm trying to summarize it in,
like, a good faith way and get your reaction. So he argues the following. Like, when you look at Iran's
ballistic missiles, their nuclear infrastructure and their military, it is being systematically
degraded and destroyed after decades of the U.S. allowing it to build up. So that's an important
correction in his view. He says that phase two of the war will be taken out Iran's industrial
base, so the missile production facilities, the nuclear facilities, and basically set them back to
square one.
He argues that the pre-bombing status quo for Iran's nuclear program was unsustainable, and that Iran
was basically just being allowed to constantly inch towards getting a nuclear weapon, and that
weakness is what led to this moment where we had to deal with it militarily.
He concedes that the argument for a nuclear deterrent will be strengthened, not weakened,
by the military conflict.
Like if you're Iran, Iran will probably want to get a...
bomb, but says that's an argument for a, quote, a comprehensive post-conflict diplomatic architecture,
not arguments against the military campaign itself.
He argues that closing the Strait of Hormuz hurts Iran the most financially and also hurts
their relationship with China while its capacity to close the strait is also being steadily degraded.
And he says that this war is going to kill off Iran's ability to have a proxy network.
And quote, what the critics described as an expanding regional war is better understood as the
death spasm of a proxy architecture whose authorizing center has been shattered. He says the disarmament
Iran is like that's happening now is similar to what allies did to Germany in 1944 and 45, which is a
prelude to a post-conflict framework that does not yet exist in public, a verification regime,
a diplomatic settlement or a sustained enforcement posture, basically saying like, look,
there's no diplomatic framework to end the war that is public yet, but that doesn't mean the military
campaign is failing. I'll stop there.
What do you make of that claim?
And why do you think this is gaining so much currency in D.C.?
First of all, it's funny that the very people sharing this are often people who say don't listen to Al Jazeera.
Yeah, I noticed that too.
I think the fundamental flaw with this is that he is kind of accepting the premise that you can measure a war based on the amount of things that you're destroying.
And so to me, there are two questions related to that.
Okay, let's take him at his word that Iran's ballistic missiles,
will be significantly set back, their ability to manufacture ballistic missiles to be set back,
their nuclear program will be set back significantly, we'll see if there's a ground operation
to get nuclear fuel out of Iran. There are two questions, though. One, was it worth all this?
So before even what happens after the war was just setting back their ballistic missile program,
nuclear program worth all this death, all this violence, all this global economic disruption,
all this uncertainty, all the geopolitical changes that could come.
from this that are not good.
But second, even more importantly,
time doesn't stop.
Iran will rebuild its ballistic missile capabilities.
Iran will want a nuclear weapon,
and it might take a little longer,
but if this regime survives,
you have to think that they're going to be more hell-bent
on some kind of deterrent.
And he kind of gives away the game
with the Germany reference.
We occupied Germany fully,
and carved it into four zones and ran the place.
Like, if we're not, you cannot do that from the air.
You cannot engineer a political transition from the air.
And so if you get a regime implosion,
I actually think that's worse for the Iranian people in the region
because you could get a civil war that draws in neighbors.
You get refugee flows.
You could have tens of thousands of people die.
So the problem with it is the article only makes sense
if you look at Iran as like a spreadsheet of ballistic missile,
ballistic missile launchers, nuclear fuel, and ignore the entire political dynamic around it on the back end of the war.
Never mind the cost of doing all this, and whether is this how we want to spend tens of billions of dollars and all this time.
So it's a good steel man for what's working, but all that's working is destruction.
There's no political strategy.
There's no geopolitical strategy.
And even in the peace, the only nod he can make is to some secret plan that is akin to post-war Germany, which, again, was a much different scenario.
Yeah, he keeps sort of like yada, yada, yadaing this diplomatic framework that would be needed.
But again, like, how are you going to get them to agree to that or do a ground evasion or you're going to fully occupy them?
Yeah, is the IRGC going to agree to that?
Also, I think it kind of ignores the impact now.
Like, the biggest winner of this war is Russia.
Yeah.
The price of oil is way up.
Russia's make more money.
The Financial Times says they're making another $150 million per day because prices are up.
Trump, he's temporarily lifted sanctions on Russian oil.
ostensibly to lower prices, but that doesn't even worked. The U.S. and Israel are blowing up so many missile defense
interceptor missiles that there's no chance will give Ukraine anymore. And any hope for these peace talks
that you might have had, look, I think Whitkoff and Jared Kushner are hapless idiots and they were
not going to get a peace deal. But Putin is completely pulled out of any talks now. Like there's no
chance of anything happening on the diplomatic front. The other place that's benefiting enormously
is North Korea. So the U.S. is pulling missile defense systems out of South Korea. We're putting
them in the Middle East. And then North Korea over the weekend, tested rocket launchers that can fire
tactical nuclear weapons. So that doesn't feel good for us. And also the Chinese are watching
us pull, you know, missile defense assets out of South Korea. That by the way, when we put them in
South Korea, the Chinese flipped their shit. And they imposed all these economic consequences on the
South Koreans. And now we're just rat fucking South Koreans by pulling these things out again. And
They too are watching the U.S.
burn through its stockpile of interceptor missiles and T. Lambs and things we would use in a conflict with China and also eviscerate any moral authority that the U.S. might have had to rally the world around stopping an invasion of Taiwan.
So there's a lot of unintended consequences here.
Well, this is the thing.
And you ask why is this getting currency in D.C.?
It's because people in D.C. love the fallacy that the United States controls events in the world and that we alone are the.
the actor. And so they love the narrative that, no, no, look, our military is capable of destroying
their ballistic missile launchers and their drone capabilities and assassinating their leaders
and setting back their nuclear program. And they're looking in a narrow tunnel at these kind of
outputs in Iran as proof that the United States is controlling events in the world because we're
destroying all these things inside of Iran. If you step back and you say, well, yes, but wait a second,
what if Russia is getting enormous benefits from this war, economic and geopolitical,
political? What if the Gulf states are going to turn away from the United States towards China and
Russia for their security potentially in the future? What if North Korea acts on a South Korea
or China acts on Taiwan? What about the American people losing even more confidence in their
government? What about the tens of billions of dollars that we had to spend on a war that didn't need
to be fought? D.C. doesn't like to look at all of that. The blob doesn't like to look at all that.
They love to show up and brag about how many fucking ballistic missiles they destroyed in Iran,
never mind that they made everything else in the world worse.
And by the way, if you look at polling and you want to look at arguments against the war,
the shit that pulls through the roof is the argument that we should not be spending billions of dollars on weapons.
We're spending like a billion a day or something like that.
We should be spending on literally anything else, education, jobs, like whatever it is.
Voters fucking hate it.
But you're right.
The DC blob views it very differently.
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Final Iran thing, Ben, we have to talk about the most obvious info op in the history of infoops,
which is a story that the Trump administration clearly planted in the New York Post,
suggesting that the new supreme leader of Iran, Mush Tabocamenei, is gay.
It says Trump, laughed out loud when he was briefed.
There's a senior official quoted who said he has not stopped laughing about it for days.
Apparently, it's just that funny this person to be gay.
The claim is that Homene has been in a long-term sexual relationship with either his childhood tutor or someone that worked for the family.
The least believable part of this article is that Homene made sexual overtures to people caring for him after he was hurt in an airstrike.
like as he was drugged up or something.
It just doesn't really track to me that you could have your foot blown off in an airstrike.
Like Pete Higgsats keeps saying he's like incapacitated, but he's like hitting on his nurse.
I'm not sure that that works.
The story describes Hominay is the power behind the robes, hopefully more powerful than Mark Levin,
and claims the intel was, quote, derived from one of the most protected sources that the government has.
There's also like been some traffic in WikiLeaks from 2008 about Hominay maybe getting treatment for impotence in the UK.
And, you know, this broader sort of belief that he was not the one, he was not the, his father,
how many his father did not want him to take over for him, but that, you know, for whatever reasons.
So, Ben, who knows if this is remotely true?
Though I was reminded last night when I was researching all of this that the CIA constantly floats theories like this that autocrats,
that U.S. wants to topple or like bad guys we don't like are gay.
The Washington Post back in the day reported that the CIA considered releasing a fake video that was supposed to be of Saddam
saying having sex with a teenage boy.
That was, they thought that would work somehow.
They apparently did film a fake video of a fake Osama bin Laden bragging about gay conquests.
And they thought about leaking that one.
There was something, you know, any advocate about gay porn at Gaddafi's house at one point.
Like, none of this is very subtle.
I doubt it's particularly effective either.
But I'm sure, you know, the Trump White House is quite satisfied with you saw their,
Stephen Chung, their press guy, like giddily retweeting it.
Yeah, but it's, if you wanted to.
have like a information operation, which again, I don't think we should in this space. I don't know why
denigrating people on their sexuality is the space of the United States should be in. But you would do it
subtly like it would be a peer in some regional publication. Like going to the New York Post is so
freaking transparent. I mean, you might as well put it in like the free beacon or something. I mean,
the idea that the New York Post is at the vanguard of coverage of the intelligence community and has
gotten this secret, you know, through its sources. No, like they were, someone called and was like,
hey, we got a fun one for you. Why don't you write this? And we told Trump and he laughed.
So it kind of fits with the kind of war porn that they put out in the sense that it's almost
like they're entertaining themselves. Because this is not going to have an impact inside of Iran.
It just feels like it's a chum in the water for for them to be entertained, which is kind of part
of what's so chilling about this. I don't know what the fuck.
Hamanay's sexuality is.
I will say this, though, again,
I believe that actually he wouldn't have been chosen
and that shows the failure of the policy
because he is a tool of the IRGC.
That's all he is right now.
Like, he's the Supreme Leader in name.
Doesn't matter how injured he is.
The IRGC is running the show down there.
Do you think any of the Libs were reading this
and they're like, more LGBT Theocrats?
Remember the famous female partisan guns?
They see their culture wars
is global. And like, I don't really care to make our culture wars. Yeah, no. They're dumb enough at home.
Also, Ben, I do want you to know that the, there was a draft intro to this section written by
someone on our team who wanted me to read the following. Well, Ben, as you're so fond of saying,
Trump 2.0 has been an absolute banner era for the sinister homosexuals of the world.
Yeah. Yeah. They wanted me to put that quote in your mouth. And I didn't do it.
No. Thank you for that. I love you. Yeah, this is talking about multiple minefields.
But we are raising the pride flag here at Cricket H.
Q for Mushaba.
Okay.
Let's turn to Cuba.
Well, you'll do one fun thing.
Then we're out and we'll get the Ben's interview.
So Cuba remains in crisis there with the total blackout across the island on Monday.
The Cuban electrical grid has been shaky and subject to blackouts or brownouts for a while.
But the full blackout comes to the U.S.
has been enforcing an energy embargo on the island since January.
That includes cutting off all oil from Venezuela and shipments from Mexico.
So it's very dire.
Life is intolerable for the average person.
No refrigeration.
There's no trash collection in all in the streets because the garbage trucks don't have gas.
There are thousands of surgical procedures have been postponed.
And there are growing protest movements.
The Trump administration, meanwhile, has been in talks with the Cubans.
Mainly it's Marco Rubio talking to Raoul Castro's grandson, who was also named Raul,
and apparently nicknamed the crab or Raulito.
So the New York Times said that the U.S. wants President Diaz Canal to be ousted as a precondition for resetting relations with the U.S.
Trump was asked about all things Cuba Monday.
Here's his incredibly weird, ominous reply.
Let's watch.
When you say Cuba is next.
Cuba.
Is Cuba, whatever you do with the military there, seems like something?
Will that look more like a whale?
Can't tell you that.
I can tell you that they're talking to us.
It's a failed nation.
They have no money.
They have no oil.
They have no nothing.
They have nice land.
They have a nice landscape.
But I think Cuba.
see the end. You know, all my life I've been hearing about the United States and Cuba,
you know, when will the United States do it? I do believe I'll be the honor of having the
honor of taking Cuba. That'd be good honor. That's a big honor. Taking Cuba.
Taking Cuba. Taking Cuba in some form, yeah. It's like he sounds like, uh, like a, like a,
like a comic book villain. Like it's, I mean, do you think that rhetoric will make it even harder
to get a deal done? Or is Cuba just so, like, decimated?
that they're just going to be forced at gunpoint to do something.
I mean, first on his rhetoric, it's outrageous,
and we should not be desensitized to the fact that this,
he's talking about pure colonization.
Like, I'm going to take Cuba.
Like, this is imperial shit, right?
It's great land.
And this is the third country this calendar year.
Tommy, it is March 17th,
and he's talking about the third government he's going to oust.
I don't know who needs to wake up to the fact that an authoritarian leader launching war after war and replacing government after government has historical echoes.
They're not good echoes because they continue.
And never mind that it's just wrong.
We don't colonize countries.
We shouldn't.
I guess we do now.
But we shouldn't.
That's no way to kind of enter into a negotiation.
Now on the negotiation itself, part of what is so interesting to me about this is that Diaz Canal is not a very,
important figure in Cuba. I know it says ridiculous. He's the president of the country,
but nobody's ever seen him as the actual leader of the country. When I negotiated,
Raul Castro was transitioning to Diaz Canal. And I met Raul Castro. I met his son. I met
the farm minister. I met lots of people. I never met Diaz Canal. He was, and he was often
described by Cuba analysts in some Cubans as kind of a frontman, an apparatchik, right? The guy who got
the job because he was not going to challenge anybody else's power. Raul Castro still has some power,
even though he's in his 90s. The military has a lot of power. So I don't know, this isn't even like
negotiating, you know, getting rid of Maduro and replacing him with Delci Rodriguez. Maduro was
actually the leader of that regime. So I guess the Cubans might, I can see why some of the Cubans
might be like, sure, we'll get rid of Diaz Canal. But that's the Cubans wanting to not change
the regime. If Trump wants to take Cuba,
Like he'll need more.
I've seen this far the Cubans release some political prisoners.
Maybe they put Diaz Canal on the table in some fashion.
But what they're trying to negotiate is we stay in power and nothing really changes,
but we give you some symbolic win and maybe we let you develop some real estate down here.
That's probably what the Cubans are aiming for.
Trump seems to be aiming for something more.
And I think he needs more pushback.
He needs to feel more pushback.
It's not okay that we're starving an island.
People are dying because of American sanctions.
people are dying if you have like blackouts like this and people can't get food and people can't get medical care because the power shut off like that's the scale of what is happening in Cuba right now it is it is tantamount to an act of war to kind of completely blockade a place to the point that the power grid goes down yeah they're they're trying to turn into Haiti it is it is unconscionable and it just seems to be I mean people are so distracted by what's happening in Iran and everywhere so it's just sort of happening um finally Ben it's a bittersweet day here at potta of the world because we are bidding goodbye
at least for now to a show favorite.
Listeners have probably heard us talk about Rick Grinnell,
a living, breathing Twitter troll turned diplomat.
Rick was kind of a reject toy in the Bush administration.
Then he found favor with Trump.
He was U.S. ambassador to Germany,
where he managed to make basically every German political party hate him.
He served in some weird special envoy role to Serbia and Kosovo for a minute.
He was director of national intelligence at the end of the first Trump term,
which is terrifying.
And then for Trump, 2.0,
Grinnell made a very hard play
to become Secretary of State
and it did not end well.
Apparently, Susie Wiles,
Trump's chief of staff,
cannot stand Rick Cornell
because he's a dickhead
and he screamed at her.
So Trump made him like a special envoy
to Venezuela,
but he got crosswise
on policy with Rubio
and ultimately fucked that job up so badly
that we toppled
and invaded the government of Venezuela.
That's probably more,
you know,
correlation than causation,
but, you know,
roll with me here.
And then Trump installed him as head of the Kennedy Center.
But Grinnell apparently fucked that up, too, because the place is now closed for two years.
No one would play there.
And Grinnell just got pushed out of that job, too.
So we hope this is not goodbye.
It's more of a see you later.
But any final thoughts on his tenure?
I just always knew of his longstanding and deep passion for the arts, Tommy.
And so to see him lose this premier platform to advance his interest.
and, you know, opera and the performance arts in this country is just heartbreaking.
I will say that the serious lesson to take away is whenever the sudden like this happens
reminded that no matter how far you wedge your head up Trump's ass, like the bus is going
to roll over you at some point.
I hope that's the lesson that people take from this because this guy was out there doing
Stop the Steel press conferences with Rudy Giuliani and the final deadenders after January 6.
He was down there kissing the ring in Mar-Lago.
he was trolling every Trump adversary.
He was trying to do corrupt business deals with Jared Kushner and Serbia.
That deal fell apart, by the way.
So poor one out for that.
Where they were going to do an apology for the NATO mission, which is endlessly funny.
And now we can kind of go back to being a lonely Twitter troll.
So good luck.
Back to who he really is, maybe.
Back to, you know.
Yeah, I was rereading some of the stories about Grinnell.
I didn't, I'd forgotten that he floated himself as vice president.
Yes, he did.
the campaign team.
There was one of the articles...
A little too close to the sun, did Rick.
A little bit.
Yeah, it's amazing when someone is just such an asshole
that Trump talks about it very publicly.
He's like, I got a little rough, Rick.
A little rough.
There's this, one of the stories,
I think it was The Times,
linked to an Instagram post
of these absolutely insane,
vicious, over-the-top emails.
He sent to a, like,
finger-style guitar player
who was scheduled to play at the Kennedy Center
who asked some basic questions.
It's just like, this guy,
was on tilt with everybody.
He's a terrible person.
It just did not work.
But we wish him the best of luck.
Maybe you can come on the show if you're in L.A.
No, he'll be back like arguing with you on Twitter.
Yeah, he'll be back on online.
Okay, we're going to take a break, but when we come back,
you're going to hear Ben's conversation with Kim Gattis
about the massive war and displacement happening in Lebanon,
so stick around for that.
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Kim, thanks so much for joining us.
Thanks for having me, Ben.
So I understand that you recently left Beirut, and there's a lot to get into in terms
of the dynamics inside of Lebanon.
But just to begin with, what was it like recently when you were there?
And how do you describe kind of what's unfolded in the last several days?
So I do want to clarify that I left because this is a pre-planned term.
trip. And I'm always very careful to emphasize that because friends in Lebanon or acquaintances or
people who follow my work worry a lot if they see me leaving the country. So I want to emphasize
that it's a pre-planned trip because I have to go teach at university in the United States. And I
had to make a detour through Europe to pick up my visa because the U.S. Embassy in Beirut closed
already at the end of February.
And so we've been living
with the tension
of the military buildup
and I was fairly
convinced that there would be
a war that the negotiations
would not go anywhere.
For Lebanon,
there is a real
sense of
trauma being revived
of layers of PTSD
of exhaustion.
Because then the last time you and I spoke,
was just before the last war in Lebanon between Hezbollah and Israel in 2024.
That was a devastating conflict coming a year after a year of war in Gaza
after the massacre of October 7th.
And Lebanon's just been in this replay mode of war
in a country that has seen so much war already
whose economy has barely recovered from the financial crisis of 2019.
2020. We now have almost a million refugees displaced internally. That's a fourth or a fifth of the
country's population. And this puts a huge toll on resources, on families, on the government,
on NGOs that really cannot cope with this renewed conflict. I also want to just point out one more
thing, Ben, is that since the ceasefire in November 24, up until the conflict resumed,
Israel continued to strike Lebanon regularly. There were over 2,000 strikes on Lebanon during that
time, which don't make headlines. And Hezbollah never responded. And so there is real anger in
Lebanon today, because as soon as Ali Khamenei was killed, Hasbullah most likely, um,
in coordination with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps,
launched missiles at Israel to avenge the death of Khomeini.
So you have the opponents of Hezbollah who are angry
because they say, you know, what do we have to do with this?
Why did you drag us into this war?
And even amongst the supporter of Hezbollah,
there are people who say,
you let 2,000 attacks by Israel go by
and you never, you know, decided to retaliate for that.
But for the leader of Iran,
retaliate and you drag us into a war when we've barely had time to recover from the last one.
Yeah, now I think for people who don't follow this as closely, right,
this was the separate ceasefire reached with Hezboa and Lebanon in 2024,
which has been violated, serially as you describe.
I want to get into what Hezboa and Israel are doing,
but just before that, I do want to ask you just one more question about the people of Lebanon,
you referenced that almost a million people have been displaced.
There are evacuation orders for a huge part of southern Lebanon from Israel, parts of southern Beirut.
Where are these people going to go, is my question.
It's not like Lebanon's already a small country.
It's already had to absorb refugees from Syria over the years and other places.
It's not like there are other countries next door where people can.
Where are these million people going?
So they're going to other areas of Beirut and of Lebanon into the Shuf, into the Beqar Valley, into the north.
The Lebanese government has opened hundreds of refugee centers in public schools, which brings up another problem.
You know, kids can't go to public schools.
Private schools are open, but as far as I understand, public schools have not been able to reopen.
a lot of people are staying with relatives, with friends, with acquaintances.
You know, people in Lebanon continue to be incredibly generous, opening their doors and villages.
Those who can afford it have rented houses and other parts of Lebanon have gone into hotels
or, unfortunately, are sleeping on the street in the rain.
It is pouring with rain in Lebanon.
This is bringing up, you know, a lot of tension.
Also social tension, you know, amidst all this intense, you know, Lebanon is a pressure cooker.
So there are, you know, inevitably, you know, local fights erupting.
There is some anger in some parts of Lebanon towards those in the milieu of Hezbollah who may have become refugees.
And in some places, they're not wanted because the responses you brought this onto yourself and onto us.
There are also, unfortunately, security concerns because amongst the refugees, there are members of Hezbollah and of the IRGC.
and we have seen a few instances of targeted Israeli strikes in civilian areas well outside of the southern suburbs or areas where Hezbollah is dominant and where it was very clearly targeting IRGC members, for example, in a hotel on the seaside, Corniche of Beirut.
They had taken a hotel room and they were struck there.
So this is a lot for a small country to manage.
And in terms of your assessment of what Israel is trying to accomplish, you know, from the Israeli side, it's, what you hear is that they're trying to kind of destroy Hezbollah once and for all. They're issuing kind of these ultimatums to the Lebanese government to kind of break from Hezbollah once and for all. At the same time, you know, I hear from a lot of people in the region who think that what Israel wants is actually to kind of permanently occupy and perhaps inevitably annexed southern Lebanon. And that,
You even have some Israeli politicians, not necessarily Netanyahu, but people further to the right saying that.
I mean, you can't know for sure which it is, but how do you assess the kind of spectrum of what the objectives may be for Israel between wanting to degrade Hezboa to potentially wanting to hold territory?
It could be all of this, Ben, at this point.
And I just want to rewind a little bit into history and say that Israel has tried this before,
pushing out the Palestinian Liberation Organization from Lebanon in 1982 with an invasion that went all the way up to Beirut with Ayr Sharone as Minister of Defense.
This is going to change the region.
This is going to help us get rid of the PLO once and for all.
This is going to bring Syria down on its knees and push Lebanon to sign a peace agreement with Israel.
The PLO did leave and the Palestinian guerrillas did get on a boat, but instead we got Hasbullah and it went downhill from there.
And it was, you know, when America became a target of bombing attacks in the Middle East with the Marine barracks bombing, of course, in 1983 and the U.S. Embassy bombing.
Right now, I feel like we're just having a replay of this.
And Israel has abandoned any pretense of trying for diplomacy or for deterrence and it's just going for what they call mowing the
grass. And they keep doing this again and again. And they may have, you know, tactical military
victories, but they're not translating any of it over the last two years into diplomatic successes
and real diplomatic engagement that can make this long-lasting. What are they trying to do in Lebanon
today? Mowing the grass again, degrading Hezbollah as much as possible, even though, you know,
they said that by the end of 2024, they had degraded Hezbollah down to, you know, at least
70, you know, up to 70 percent. And Israel accuses the Lebanese government of not having done
enough in the year of the ceasefire to make sure that Hezbollah is fully degraded and disarmed.
But of course, there are concerns in Lebanon that taking on Hezbollah sending the Lebanese
army to forcefully disarm Hezbollah could lead to a civil war.
So Israel's argument is, well, you know, the Lebanese government failed to do its job.
We're going to do it.
I think they also want to take parts of South Lebanon, maybe five, 10 kilometers into the territory, establish a buffer zone.
You know, hello history.
We've been there before with a buffer zone from 1982 to 2000, which, you know, did not protect northern Israel.
I don't know if they want to go further into Lebanon, further than they had before.
But what I think, and again, who really knows, but from watching some of the military moves and from looking at the map and looking at what they've done already on the Syrian side, outside of the Golan, they've expanded the buffer zone.
They've taken Mount Hermann.
And then from there, they can connect to the Bekha Valley and then take the rest of that border area along the border with Israel up until the Mediterranean Sea.
have a neat sort of buffer zone that then connects with the West Bank.
So I think that's what I think they're trying to do.
It's important to point out that Lebanese government has offered to sit down for direct
negotiations with Israel, which is something that has gone a little bit unnoticed, but is really
a historic first.
It is breaking a big taboo.
I'm not saying that negotiations with Israel necessarily lead to positive developments,
but it is definitely worth noticing that the Lebanese government has offered these negotiations
and has come out very forcefully to say that Hasbalah's military and security actions are outside of the law.
And that is a very big step for Lebanon.
Well, yeah, I'm going to get to that.
But one more question about Israel, which is there's this question of whether there'll be a large-scale ground invasion
and perhaps to occupy that buffer zone, however large it ends up being,
Is there a sense of inevitability around an Israeli ground invasion in Lebanon and are some of these government diplomatic overtures meant to kind of forestall that kind of ground invasion and de-escalate before it gets to that?
Part of it is certainly trying to forestall that ground invasion, but Israel is made very clear that it will not stop whatever its military plans are for the negotiations.
They will negotiate. They want the Lebanese to negotiate under fire.
I'm not sure, you know, where we will end up.
But I think this buffer zone, Ben, will most likely be an uninhabited buffer zone.
So they don't need to occupy it.
They just need to monitor it, you know, with drones, with towers, with, I don't know, walls.
But the idea that I've heard also that, you know, maybe settlers will move in there, I don't think so.
I think it is the geography of Lebanon does not allow for Israeli settlers to move into this buffer zone
inside Lebanon and be safe from, you know, what will be for sure renewed activity to try to
then liberate southern Lebanon. So I suspect it will be an uninhabited, demilitarized zone.
And that will then be part of the negotiation as well if they happen with the Lebanese government.
Yeah. So ground invasion is more about, I know, taking out Hezboa infrastructure and clearing out an area
and then...
Clearing out a large enough area
that you, from Israel's perspective,
you guarantee there are no incursions by Hasbullah into Israel
and that you push back as much as possible
from into Lebanon and deny Hasbullah
close-range attacks against Israel,
but some of these missiles have much longer ranges anyway.
The idea is probably also to sort of break up
the popular base that Hezbollah uses or relies on for its support.
If you splinter the Shia community where Hezbollah still finds support,
if you push them out of the southern suburbs of Beirut and they're scattered around the country
because they're not allowed to go home because Israel is continuing to strike their areas,
then potentially Israel is also thinking about making it harder for Hezbollah to operate.
and most certainly it is trying to provoke tensions within Lebanon.
But we have been through a civil war before, including an episode which came after
Lebanon and Israel did sign a security agreement in 1983.
And the uprising against it was very violent.
And it was led by, at the time, Syria's Hafiz al-Assad, the president,
the sort of nascent Hezbollah and various other factions.
And the army split into two.
And the Lebanese president, who's the former army chief,
is really trying to prevent that.
Well, yeah, I wanted to ask about this internal dynamic.
So you mentioned that it seems like Hezbollah came into this war
after Alec Chaminé was killed,
kind of firing rockets into Israel as part of the Iranian bombardment.
You then had a situation where the Lebanese private.
minister did speak out against Hezbollah, you know, but the question is, where does this go from there?
And what is your sense of if you have Israel trying to kind of manufacture politics in Lebanon with force,
you know, kind of compelling the government to fully diminish Hezbollah as a political actor,
disarm them, but at the same time you have a Shia population that's being fractured, you have
people that are upset that Israel is, you know, bombarding the country. How does Lebanese politics
hold up under this? What is a potential plan for Lebanese political leaders about how to manage
being caught between Hezboa and Israel? Very difficult. Very difficult. I haven't seen many
creative ideas right now on the table other than offering to negotiate. The other,
approach by the Lebanese government is to try to, in a way, do what they didn't really do
properly over the last year, which is to make sure that Hezbollah can no longer launch rockets.
But nobody really wants to see the Lebanese army intervene in between Hezbollah and Israel.
That is not the Lebanese army's role either.
And already we're hearing from members of Hezbollah, it's, you know,
officials who are still alive, calling for an uprising against the Lebanese government,
describing the Lebanese government as a co-belligerent with Israel, which really stirs the
pot in terms of sectarian tensions and political tensions. And I know that this all sounds
sort of quite local and specific to Lebanon, but it is really part of the bigger war that we're
witnessing unfold in the region. Because A, it's very clear that Iranian Revolutionary Guards
are operating in Lebanon and that the battle that Lebanon is fighting today is not just against Israel,
but also against other countries yet again fighting their wars on our territory and using
Lebanese territory, you know, as they please. But second, it also means that these two fronts,
Lebanon and the war against Iran, are happening.
in tandem. And I don't think anybody knows yet how either one really ends, other than my prediction
that there will be a demilitarized uninhabited zone along the border between Lebanon and Israel.
You know, this war started without international support, without UN resolution, without congressional
approval, and there may be a lot of tactical successes, military successes, but it's also
become much bigger than anyone anticipated in the Trump administration. And as my good friend and
analyst Karim Sajadpur said, it went from being a war of choice to war of necessity to open the
strait of Hormuz. And Hizbalah is watching very carefully how this works out because it is also
for their own political survival in Lebanon as a political entity and as a militant entity that
they're fighting this war. How it ends will determine both in Iran and in
and in Lebanon, what the future of Lebanon and the region will look like.
Well, yeah, one thing, you've written about the Gulf states too.
You've written a book about Saudi Arabia and Iran.
One of the things I'm struck by is just how weak, you know,
and compromise the Gulf states' position feels right now in the sense that, you know,
Israel is a hegemon in the region.
You know, it's whatever you think of its actions, it has freedom of action.
the United States is still a hegemon in terms of its ability to project power.
The Iranians have a lot of power.
They've been able to shut down the economies of parts of the Gulf states, the Strait of Hormuz.
And yet you have these big, rich Arab countries that just seem caught in the crossfire.
Geopolitically, I think I know what that means, which is they're going to have to find hedges against the United States.
They may feel like they need to align more to check Israeli power.
But just in terms of public opinion in a place like Lebanon, what is the perception of the lack of capacity for the Gulf states, the Gulf Cooperation Council, the GCC, the Arab League, like the idea that there's no capacity for any kind of Arab support for Lebanon in this moment when they're kind of being caught in the crossfire of this regional war?
Actually, I think there has been support for Lebanon.
And I think that the Saudis, but also the Turks and the Egyptians have been quite involved to make sure that they tamped down whatever Israel is trying to do.
We also had French involvement, I believe, to try to reduce the intensity of what Israel was trying to achieve in the southern suburbs a couple of weeks ago when they put out a
an evacuation notice for the whole area, which had not happened before, a little bit like
they used to do in Gaza.
In Lebanon so far, it is quite targeted.
It used to be building by building, move out of this building, move out of that building.
And crazily enough, Ben, people listen to or read these tweets by the Israeli army spokespeople
who say, you know, this building is going to be targeted, move 500 meters back.
And they actually do when they film.
And it's crazy that people trust the Israeli sort of warnings that, you know, 500 meters away and you'll be fine.
But suddenly there was a whole area-wide evacuation.
And I think the French intervened to say, you know, if you're planning to carpet bomb this area, we strongly, you know, recommend that you don't.
And indeed, it wasn't as bad as people thought.
Even I left my apartment because I live very close.
I live not even half a mile away from the southern suburbs.
So it gets quite loud.
And even I left because we weren't sure anymore what to expect.
So we can be very critical of Arab countries for many reasons.
But I think that they are trying to help as much as...
I think it is having a bit of an impact.
Yes, I think we could be, if possible, even in a worse.
position. There was this crazy idea, apparently, from the Trump administration to call on
Ahmad al-Shara in Syria to get involved in Lebanon to disar Hezbollah, which is really, again,
a repeat of all the, you know, bad stuff that happened in the late 70s and 80s in Lebanon.
And the Saudis and the Turks intervened quite strongly and advised Ahmed al-Shara to stay out of this.
I think that Gulf countries are coordinating together quite a bit.
I think they're doing as decent a job as possible in intercepting these drones and missiles that Iran is launching.
I think they're angry at everyone at the moment, but they're mostly worried at this point.
They may not have wanted this war, and I strongly believe they did not, despite some reporting that suggested that the...
I agree that the Saudis wanted this.
I don't think they wanted it.
They want to build.
They want to have economic prosperity.
They have grand plans and ambitions, et cetera.
But now that this war has started and that Iran has clearly, as expected, not capitulated,
they really don't want to be left with a wounded Iranian regime that is just going to come back
and hit them again in six months or a year.
So right now I think probably in, you know, the back channels is the advice to the Trump administration, you know, try to finish this job.
We're not quite sure what this means, but you need to degrade Iran's capacities enough that we don't feel we have this threat hanging over us for the next, you know, for a repeat of this.
I still don't discount the possibility that the regime does somehow collapse in Iran,
which could go in two ways.
Chaos and civil war or somehow an internal opposition that organizes
and maybe even Palavi, Reza Pahlavi, despite all his shortcomings,
somehow coalesced to make something of the day after.
I think we're looking at another month of war, at least, Ben.
Well, the last question I want to ask about Lebanon, which is that, you know,
we've lived through this kind of, quote unquote, mowing the grass,
i.e. bombing Lebanon periodically.
And now it's reached another level that feels like akin to the early 80s.
And like you said, the PLO become, you know, leaves, but then Hezboa comes in.
I mean, it does strike me that the absence of political objectives in this war,
There are all these military tactical objectives.
One of the problems of that is the other thing that's not being considered is the amount of resentment that is being generated by this constant military action.
I mean, what do you see as the recipe for peace in a situation where, you know, it's asking a lot of people to just absorb being bombed this regularly without.
It doesn't need to be peace.
can be, you know, an armistice. Let's just agree not to fight anymore and you stay there and I
stay here and let's not talk, but let's not fight. I think people in Lebanon specifically, I cannot
speak for the wider region. I have some sense of how people feel, which is most likely angry
at Iran and pissed off at Israel. They're worried about replacing, you know, one actor that brings
chaos Iran with another actor that brings chaos that has a military superiority which allows it to
live somewhat safely within its own borders, whereas, you know, Iran shares borders with so many
countries, including Saudi Arabia, and, you know, the proximity is making a difference in the
sense that more missiles and drones are now landing on Arab countries than on Israel. So there's
this sense in the Arab world and in the Gulf countries that they don't want to be left with this
problem, because Israel has more capacity to defend itself, and America is far away. But no one is
getting closer to Iran, right? They're trying to talk to Iran, but nobody's thinking, you know what,
now is the time to try to find another side deal with Iran or a detente with Iran, even though
the detent between Saudi Arabia and Iran served Saudi Arabia quite well over the last few years
since they had it signed in Beijing in March 23. When it comes to Lebanon, I think the overwhelming
sentiment, Ben, is we are fed up of being.
the battleground for everybody else's wars. We are fed up. Iran, Israel, Syria, everybody
fights their battles on our ground. Are the Lebanese guilty of allowing that to happen as well?
To some extent, yes, but we're a small country and some of it is beyond our capacity.
I'm very curious to see how the Lebanese government and the president are going to manage this period,
and whether they can somehow get Lebanon to the other side of this war, mostly intact,
and then somehow negotiate the return of people to southern Lebanon.
It's a very, very tall order that would be in a very optimistic scenario.
But we have to keep hoping and pushing and be proactive.
You know, the Lebanese government needs to be proactive in this.
Yeah.
Well, it's a lot to take on.
I mean, with everything in Iran, I think there has not been enough attention on Lebanon,
which has absorbed as much of this war as anybody other than the Iranian people.
So thank you, Kim, for walking us through so much information.
And best of luck getting to the United States.
And if I could, I just mentioned one last thing.
I've spent the last three years writing my next book, which comes out in October.
and it is all about how we got here.
And I go back to the 1980s
and sort of unpack how the Iranian revolution
collided with the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982
and created this dynamic of confrontation
between the US and Iran
with Israel in the middle of it.
And to watch it all unfold
and reach this climax today with Benjamin.
and Netanyahu saying, I've dreamt of this war for 40 years. He was deputy ambassador to Washington
in 1982. To hear Lindsay Graham say we, you know, Lebanon, the U.S. should also bomb Hezbollah in
Lebanon and avenge, you know, the 1983 bombing of the Marines. We need to get out of this
cycle. And I'm not sure that we will, but I can only hope that somehow we come out on the other
side with something a little bit more positive for the region.
Well, we'll hope so, and we'll definitely look forward to having you back on when your book
is at in October.
People should watch for that as well.
So thanks for that, and thanks as always for your analysis.
Thanks for having me.
Thanks again to Kip for joining the show, and we'll talk to you guys next week.
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