Provoked with Darryl Cooper and Scott Horton - EP:17 - LIVE : Deal or Deception? Peace or Just Politics? Inside the Israel–Hamas Deal
Episode Date: October 11, 2025A “ceasefire” that still features explosions doesn’t deserve the name. Scott Horton, and guest host Kyle Anzalone dig into what’s actually happening in Gaza right now—why strikes continue, h...ow Israeli forces are repositioning instead of leaving, and what the Lebanon “truce” teaches us about violations becoming a daily routine. From there, we trace the political chess behind the deal: Trump’s pressure on Netanyahu, Kushner’s handshake-first style, and the side understandings that let Israel snap back to war at the first alleged breach. Phase A promises hostages and more aid; Phase B whispers about withdrawal and reconstruction. The text is vague. The incentives are not.We map the tripwires that could unravel everything: a landscape seeded with unexploded ordnance, fragmented command across shattered neighborhoods, and continued occupation that heightens the chance of a single incident becoming pretext. Aid numbers sound big until you compare them to need—warehouses emptied, infrastructure erased, and malnutrition spreading. When institutions like schools, mosques, and hospitals are targeted, communities lose their anchors. The human cost isn’t just today’s body count; it’s the trauma curve of an entire generation: orphans, amputees who require surgeries as they grow, and children whose brains and futures are shaped by hunger and fear.We widen the lens to Iran, where deterrence dynamics after the 12-day exchange leave room for miscalculation. Claims about destroyed nuclear sites are overstated; the real question is whether Tehran rebuilds, leverages restraint, or gets painted into a corner. Then we pivot to Venezuela, where sanctions strangled the economy and fueled migration—and where Washington now flirts with escalation under a drug-war banner. Installing a friendly figurehead is not a strategy; it’s an ignition source. Even those who dislike Maduro will resist a foreign imposition, and any strike invites regional blowback, oil shocks, and a crisis that doesn’t stay within borders.Under it all runs a simple throughline: wars are driven by incentives. Politicians, lobbies, contractors, and media ecosystems gain from “flexible” ceasefires, permanent emergencies, and righteous strikes that never quite end. If we want real de-escalation, we have to insist on terms that can’t be gamed: open access for aid, verifiable withdrawals, clear red lines against collective punishment, and real accountability when they’re crossed. Subscribe, share this episode with a friend who follows foreign policy, and leave a review with your biggest question—what would it take to make a ceasefire mean cease fire?Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/provoked-with-darryl-cooper-and-scott-horton/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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Oh man, that's good.
That's good.
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It's all.
Let's doke it, Earl.
Thank you.
I'm going to be.
Oh, my God,
I'm going to be.
Oh!
We're going to be.
We're going to be.
Oh, yeah.
I'm going to have a heart attack one day
just from my own intro.
Hi, everybody, welcome the show.
I'm Scott Horton.
This is provoked.
You know me.
I'm the host of the Scott Horton show
and I'm the director of the Libertarian Institute
and I wrote some books and stuff like that.
And Daryl is out this week,
but it's okay because I've got the great Kyle Anzloon
and he is the news editor at the Libertarian Institute,
opinion editor of anti-war.com,
and he hosts conflicts of interests,
conflicts of interest and the Kyle Anzalone show here on the YouTube's there for you
all the time great stuff and happy to see you and good to have you here welcome yeah
Scott thanks for having me on I usually spend my Friday evenings watching per vote so it's
great to be one of the first guest here so I'm cool to it yeah absolutely happy to have
you here so obviously we got to talk about the ceasefire
in Gaza and what it all means.
So I guess, first of all, can we just start with the latest news as you understand it in terms
of the extent of the end of the fighting, have the Israelis finally stopped bombing the
Palestinians?
I know I saw some footage of people walking along the beach side back north again.
Yeah, so it does seem that there's a ceasefire in effect that's not really being abided to
by Israel, but they are drawing back their position some.
There was, I believe, between 19 and 25 Palestinians killed today by Israeli strikes.
And then, of course, I think they recovered like another 90-something bodies buried beneath
the rubble.
So the, you know, death hole jumped up by 100-something today, but it does seem that Israeli
strides killed like 16 members of one family outside of Gaza City.
And then there was another strike that killed between three and eight people.
And then, of course, they say there's some people still buried beneath the rubble.
So death toll likely to climb.
Israeli strikes are at a more minimal level, but they're still going on.
Yeah, I saw footage at tanks blowing people away as they were just, you know,
regular civilians walking.
Obviously not targeted strikes or defending against any threat, but just blowing people up.
And then I think it was in one of your reports that you had written up for the Institute.
where you talked about how yeah you know they've killed a hundred Lebanese in the last year since
the ceasefire there and so and that's as many as they've been killing in a day in Gaza recently
but still it goes to show that ceasefire means something different to Israel than it does to most
other people right well that that is an important example to look at as we enter into this ceasefire
how Netanyahu has handled the ceasefire and withdrawal agreement with Hezbollah I mean you know Israel
inflicted several blows on Hezbollah, and they were more or less willing to declare ceasefire
and let Israel conduct the genocide in Gaza without sticking up for the Palestinians anymore.
They withdrew their forces above the Latani River, so from, you know, the bottom, what,
quarter of Lebanon near the Israeli border.
And Israel was supposed to end airstriots in Lebanon.
They were supposed to withdraw their forces from southern Lebanon.
on. They haven't done that. They've continued bombing nearly daily. Jason did said anti-war.com is covering it every single day.
And Israeli drone strike kills two people. And that 100 number is the UN report. And so I think Jason has said that it could be as high as 500 people killed. I think, you know, there's probably discrepancies on who was a militant. And, you know, if you're a member of Hezbollah or whatever group that Israel alleges you are or not, but hundreds of people. And they've conducted.
thousands of strikes. I think it's about 4,000 ceasefire violations in less than a year. So there's
daily Israeli ceasefire violations, including, you know, they haven't actually killed any members of the,
I'm not sure what the UN peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon is called, but there is a UN peacekeeping
mission there. I think there's Irish soldiers and from some other foreign countries. The Israelis
have certainly been spying on them, destroying some of their infrastructure, firing near them. I think,
you know, there's a couple times where they lob some grenades near the Unifil soldiers.
So this is, uh, Israel is not backing down in, in southern Lebanon.
And if that's any indication of what they're planning to do in Gaza, is that the
Palestinians will comply with everything, Khamas will comply with everything.
And they'll just continue air strides at a much smaller pace.
All right.
So that's to be expected as bad as it is.
But so that aside, let's talk about the politics of this deal and what all is behind.
it I don't know how it is or how important it really is and I don't know if you saw it
but there's a big profile in the New York
Oh, there it is.
Your audio was not too strong for a minute, but it's better now.
Oh, man, that keeps happening with this program.
We're going to have to switch to string yard or something.
It was that same thing again.
We've had happened to, and it's different people's microphones every week, too.
Anyway, but you can hear me again now?
Yeah, yeah.
You sound strong now.
Okay.
Anyway, so they're saying it was Kushner that came in that essentially Trump called him in.
and said, God dang it, make a deal stick.
And they did this.
And this is what Nixon and Kissinger did with Mouss-A-Tong.
We say, look, we're just going to make friends now.
And then we'll have all our guys work out the details later.
But handshake first, make a deal first.
And so essentially that was how they approached this thing,
was get both sides to agree that, yes, we accept America wants us to make a deal now.
And we're going to do it it takes to make that happen, that kind of thing.
And so that was how they.
did it. But then, so I guess my question for you is about like your best approximation of why
they did this. Was this Netanyahu came to Trump and needed to bail out here that he was
unable to win the war? And so he asked Trump to throw him a lifeline or this is maybe Trump really
telling Netanyahu I've had enough of this and finally putting his foot down. Yeah. So I think
there's a possibility that is what happened. And Netanyahu really crossed the line with the assassination
attempting Qatar.
You know, it wasn't just Israeli attempted to assassinate Hamas leadership.
They launched 10 missiles at Qatar in Doha and killed a Qatari security official.
And I was surprised by this.
The White House statement actually said that Netanyahu apologized to the Qatari leader.
I mean, that seems, you know, significant to me that he didn't just have Netanyahu made the call,
but they actually publicized that.
And that was a, you know, I think maybe.
the first release of the Trump Netanyahu meeting.
And so it did seem like they kind of wanted to highlight that.
So maybe there's a narrative here where Trump is actually upset with Netanyahu.
He went too far with that strike.
Because at that time, Moss leadership was actually meeting to discuss Trump's deal.
And there have been past reports from the White House where there's administration official saying,
and this is an adcio.
So it's very possible that this is essentially just a cover story,
that this is just meant to make Trump's face feel like, ah, you know, he's really getting upset with Netanyahu.
But they do say things like this effing guy bombed someone every time we're close to making Pete's.
And so, you know, maybe there's a possibility that Trump really was just fed up with Netanyahu, and he said, call it off.
And that's, and then there's this report from Jeremy Skehild, I think it's really important, that Hamas understands this as a gamble on Donald Trump, that they think Trump wants this deal bad enough.
that he's going to make Netanyahu to abide by it.
And if they're right, I think from one perspective,
it may look like they're more or less the victors of this thing.
At least we're able to withstand the Israeli onslaught.
They don't have to disarm.
Gaza is going to be rebuilt.
The Palestinian people are going to stay there.
And the deal does say there should be a path to statehood.
Now, I think another just maybe even more likely scenario,
is that at least Netanyahu, but maybe Donald Trump, don't intend to abide by this deal.
It's certainly written vaguely enough that it doesn't really guarantee the Palestinians anything.
There's no indication from anything that's happened in the past that the United States would stand up to Israel that Donald Trump,
if Netanyahu just violated this agreement tomorrow, wouldn't continue to send billions and billions and billions of dollars of weapons every year.
to Israel. So, you know, I really just, I think it's very possible that this deal is either
a fission meant to get the hostages out so Israel could just go in and finish the job.
The other possibility here is that Trump actually wants to get this done.
And Netanyahu sees the language worded vaguely enough that he's going to be able to claim
Hamas violations. And I found this yesterday in Israel Hayam, which is, I think a fairly
pro Netanyahu outlet, and one of the things they explained is U.S. and American officials
said there's actually a side agreement here that said in response to any Hamas violations of
the agreement, Israel could go back to war and they will have the full American backing to do so.
So Netanyahu is going to be looking for an excuse, looking to a sell on Donald Trump
that, look, Hamas has gone too far. Maybe they can't find the bodies of all the Israeli
prisoners at the captives at this point. It's very possible that some of them are
are buried in tunnels or they may take days or weeds to actually dig out,
especially if Israel continues the airstrikes.
I mean, Hamas isn't going to just call up who I was holding the captives and say,
hey, let these guys go.
You know, this is going to be a process that involves relaying messages through couriers.
And so I think Nanyahu's trying to give himself an out.
And one other important detail in that article was, is Israel said they weren't interested
in the negotiations with Hamas.
until Hamas made it clear they weren't leaking phase A and phase B of the agreement.
And phase A is the hostage release, the ceasefire, the additional aid going into Gaza.
And then phase B is the more extensive Israeli military withdrawal and the rebuilding of Gaza.
And so I think it's pretty clear that they don't intend to go on to phase B.
And this is what happened with the deal that Wickhoff brokered in January, right,
where Israel agreed to it.
They abided by it for its weeds, a few dozen hostens.
were released. But then what was time to go on phase two of the deal, a real Israeli withdrawal
and allowing more aid into Gaza, Netanyahu broke the agreement and posed a total siege and went
back to war. Yeah. And the thing about that one was, you're right, it was a Trump team deal,
but it happened before he was inaugurated, right? And I think it was done as a favor to him to let him
have a peaceful and triumphant inauguration into power without the shadow of the war there. And then
he let him go right back to it. So hopefully Trump has more at stake here. And I guess what I had
read was, and maybe from that same, uh, uh, scale hill piece, which you cited as well, where Hamas
really climbed down here, where they had said they would not, they would not give up all of the
captives, whether POWs or kidnapped civilians or whoever all, um, that they would not do that
until Israel withdrew from the entire area. And now they have gone ahead and climbed down as
per Trump's wishes on that, seems like several rungs on the ladder here, but under the promise
that Trump gave them that he really means it, that he will prevent Israel from going back to
war. So it sounds like he's made promises to both sides on that. And of course, you know,
Hamas or some kukh from Islamahad or who knows who could do something legitimately or the
Israelis could just claim a pretext and say that Hamas violated the ceasefire.
That's traditionally what happens is Israel violates it, but they have some pretext to say
it was the Palestinian side that did.
And, you know, Hamas can't control every single thing in the strip.
There were even one of these ceasefires broken back years ago, you know, I guess in the
Obama years where Israelis even admitted that it wasn't Hamas that fired the rockets and they
were trying to stop it.
But hey, whatever, you should be able to stop it.
And since a couple of rockets went off and no one was hurt, still we.
get to bomb you now and that kind of thing so if they want to be that cynical and exploit a pretext
to relaunch the war you know at a moment's notice they they can i guess but then so i mean
i just think you know to to lay out what i think might be the likely scenario is there's
thousands maybe tens of thousands of unexploded bombs all over gaza right when some you know
poor man dates his entire family out, his little children, out of the rubble of his house
after he returns, and there's essentially Israeli occupying forces still in gossip, right?
One of the things that this deal does is it leaves Israeli forces, certainly in areas near
where Palestinians are going to be, and I'm sure they're going to be doing patrols and
having other interactions with the civilian population.
And so it only takes one enraged Palestinian because there's going to be ordinances everywhere,
to, you know, rig it into even a rudimentary roadside bomb and take a shot at some Israelis.
I mean, I might not even kill people.
But at the same time, if Netanyahu is just looking for an excuse, you're almost ensuring with this plan that these kinds of things are going to happen.
Yeah.
And, you know, I'm sure I know this because you reported it where the Israeli military has admitted.
This is where Hamas gets all their bombs from for all the talk about being backed by Iran.
they're indirectly backed by the IDF because they drop so many bombs on these people that
whatever their dud rate is is enough to fully supply Hamas with all the explosives they need
for homemade landmines and the rest so right grenades and the rest well and one other thing to add
that that that story that I wrote uh I think it was based on a heretz article and one of the
things they explained is because a lot of countries don't like to sell weapons to Israel because
they're going to use them to bomb civilians. And because Israel has dropped such a high number of
bombs on Gaza, they've had to use a lot of, like, Vietnam-era bombs that they had gotten from, you know,
various Eastern European or Southeast Asian countries, kind of on the black market. You know,
these aren't publicized arms sales. And then there's also, they tend to use older bombs on easy targets.
So, like, houses full of people and things like that. And then they end up having to drop multiple
bombs to make sure that one doesn't go on and explode. And so there's just so many bombs being
dropped on Gaza because of the way Israel is waging this war. Yeah. All right. Now, so look, I mean,
we're just prognosticating about future things that we can't know and what have you anyway. So,
yes, on the typical recipe, this goes on for a little while. Then Israel breaks the ceasefire and
starts bombing them again and maybe all other things equal. That's the most likely, you know,
prediction of how the winter plays out fine um on the other hand let's say for example that they are
you know trump is stern enough in his insistence that they keep the peace that they allow minor
violations that are out of centralized hamas control to whatever degree that they can ignore what
they can and mean to rebuild the strip at all what is phase b of this thing supposed to look like
Is it that Qatar and Egypt and UAE take over the strip or Turkey, they take over the strip?
I guess Turkey and Egypt would be the most Muslim Brotherhood friendly country, especially Turkey.
They're going to take over, and Egypt, of course, used to run it.
They're going to administer it or the plan, the 20-point plan was kind of vague about.
Essentially, I think, implying that I infer correctly here that they were saying that essentially Hamas should stand.
We would stand aside, not disarm, but they would stand aside and allow a different separate, not the Palestinian Authority, but a different Palestinian authority to be established to run the strip.
And then I guess my question is, does that mean then with the cooperation of these other nations would come in?
Because, of course, for anybody who's seen the drone footage of the thing, it looks like Dresden.
I mean, they've absolutely leveled the place.
So when you talk about reconstruction, shock doctrine economics, man, you're talking about you need the world's largest bulldozer to come and scrape that land clean and build a new thing.
For the Palestinians, I mean, not for the Israelis to steal it from them, to be clear.
But that's no way to live quite literally after what the Israelis have done to the place.
so yeah so one of the things that i've recognized i think for some time now is i don't think
there's ever going to be a rebuilding of gaza if you look at what israel's policy has been for
gaza over you know i guess since the disengagement right it's been complete blockade of all
kinds of construction materials how could you ever build the facilities and everything
when israel isn't going to allow in pipes and concrete and all other kinds of construction
material. And I don't think that there's a doubt that Israel isn't going to fight, even the
United States, every step of the way on this to prevent the reconstruction of Gaza. Because
even at this deal, if phase A of this deal gets implemented and Israel just kind of leaves the
situation there, well, they have almost an immediate chokehold over the Palestinians, where
if you don't have infrastructure, if you don't have industry, if you don't have even the slightest ability
to have a society, then if the aid gets cut off, you have maybe months to live before
you're absolutely desperate.
And so, I mean, at most, I think that that's as far as we get in this deal where Israel
just allows the Palestinian, some Palestinian technocrats that they pick to rule over some
refugee camps made attend cities in like the coastal areas of Gaza.
And that's essentially it.
I don't think we're going to see a large scale.
Israeli withdrawal. I think the strides will continue at least somewhat frequently. I mean,
I just don't think we're going to get that far in the deal. And one other important thing is
they haven't even negotiated that part. They agreed to the first phase of the deal. They haven't
even started negotiations on the second phase. I mean, Israel has said Palestinian authority could
have no role, that they're never going to allow another body to have like security control over
Gaza. And so that sounds like continued occupation to me. And, you know,
you know, no real plans to turn over anything to the Palestinians.
Yeah.
One of our guests in the chat room here I saw a minute ago had noted, which I hadn't seen
this, but not surprised, that Ittmur Ben Gavir, who is a major part of Benjamin Nantiyahou's
coalition government, has said that he would leave if they stopped the war and fall short
of their, of completing their task of eradicating Hamas. And so that would mean that to go along
with the deal, the Netanyahu government would have to fall and a new government would have to be
elected and installed in power that's willing to go along with Donald Trump's wishes here.
So that may be the end of that. Netanyahu wants to be, you know, he wants to die in office if he
can just to stay out of a prison cell, I think. Yeah. And I think one of the real problems for Israel here,
And this is actually in an article I wrote for the Institute on Thursday was that Israel's Channel 12 just released some documents about the discussions in Israel before this war started.
And they had discussions and they decided that the hostages weren't going to be important and that they would see it as a loss if they just exchanged some Israeli or Palestinian prisoners in Israel for the hostages up front.
They said they didn't want to do that.
They learned the lessons of the second Lebanon war.
Well, one of the parts, even a phase A at this agreement is 250 Palestinian lifetime prisoners.
So people that at least Israel claims murdered someone are getting out of jail in exchange for the hostages.
And so this is the exact outcome of the war that the Israeli government, the top levels of the Israeli government,
Joav Galant, the IDF chief at the time, Betzel Smaltrich, all said that this would be a failure.
failure. And this is, you know, phase A of the deal is to release them for the hostages. And so I think
with that, Netanyahu is probably concerned about his legacy. And he doesn't want to be known as a
loser. And to win this war for the situation they set up, it means genocide. Now, so look, this is
the thing about it, man, right? Is this is what they were up against is they had failed. Right. It's not
that they lost the war to Hamas, but, you know, all it takes to win as an insurgency is to not
lose. And so all Hamas had to do was survive, and they did. And so it seemed to me, like the
most obvious interpretation of this thing was that Trump was throwing Netanyahu a lifeline here.
He's sick of this for political reasons here, I guess, too. But he was, you know, the, it's very likely
someone in the military profession explained to Trump that they're not able to destroy Hamas, sir.
They're not willing to climb down into those tunnels to go after them.
And there's still thousands of them left.
And it's exactly as I said in, I think, the first article, I wrote a couple of articles for anti-war.com right after this thing happened in October of 2023,
where I said, look, the strip is small enough and two million people are few enough, that with a real effort,
you probably could hunt down anyone who was a part of this thing and kill them.
But to do that, first of all, they would have to be really smart
about how they filtered people out and relocated them into separate locations and whatever.
We're not talking about South Vietnam here when we're talking about the Gaza Strip
where there's not a tree in sight, you know.
This could be done.
But at a cost, far beyond what humanity is willing to bear in what the Palestinian
civilian population can possibly be expected to tolerate in terms of their mass slaughter in
order to accomplish that it's just too much you have to find a way you know like in other words
if there was ever an insurgency that could truly just be crushed it might have been in the
gaza strip but only with hit larian efficiency of killing right and i don't mean 60 000 but i
mean 600,000 dead.
Like really, you know, we, we look at all this carpet bombing, and I ain't making excuses
for what the Zionists have done here, but you look at the absolute carpet bombing
of the strip and destruction of all this territory.
They mostly made all those people move first, and then they destroyed empty buildings,
empty neighborhoods and things like that.
So they definitely bombed a lot of apartment buildings with people still in them, too.
I'm not saying that, but I'm just saying when you look at the vast destruction that we're in
entire cities are raised to the ground, all that.
The people had mostly been forced to flee before they came in and finished that job.
So, you know, it's a little bit less worse than it might look on the face there.
But still, anyway, you see what I mean is the, from the beginning, the calculation was obvious.
That, yes, with like, you know, even short of atom bombs, with enough absolute firepower,
Hamas could be destroyed, but only at such a cost to pay.
the Palestinian civilian population around them,
that it would be absolutely criminal to do.
It'd be impossible to do it in a reasonable way.
Yeah, I mean, I would say, I do think the death toll
is in the hundreds of thousands at this point.
I mean, I don't think it sits 100,000.
But last year, the American doctors who had done medical work
in Palestine are in Gaza, like that was for one year
in a couple months of the Israeli onslaught,
they said 118,000 people had died.
And so, you know, it seems like it wouldn't be unreasonable
to think the number would be up close to 200,000 at this point.
Sure.
And I guess the other thing I would mention is,
at one point, I think it was Betzel Smulchurch,
but it might have been a different genocidal maniac Israeli minister said,
we could kill 100 Palestinians a day, no one cares.
And I do think that is more or less the case.
It was the starvation of children that started to push the world viewpoint against Israel,
the capture of the flotilla activists.
But when they were just killing 100 people a day, nobody really cared.
Yeah.
We talked about that on the show, right where it was at the beginning, the momentum was too high, right?
Donald Trump was even cringing at how bad it looked and advising them that for public relations purposes,
they needed to dial things down.
and then they settled on approximately a Waco massacre per day
somewhere between like 75 and 120 people every single day
I see the headlines on anti-war.com every single day
but it seemed like we talked about this
I hadn't read anything in the Israeli press about this or whatever
but it seemed as though someone had given an order
I said let's keep it at around you know low 100 per day
100 and something per day and not too much higher than that
in order to not raise the ire of, you know,
adversarial politics too high to keep the temperature, you know,
at an acceptable level.
It sure seemed to be that way.
And which is just, I think about that,
where an equivalent to the Waco massacre
is probably politically acceptable and tolerable
to do that on a daily basis to people.
a Waco masker every day for years.
Okay.
All right, listen, I do have to take care of some business.
First of all, let's say that we're streaming live on YouTube here,
which provoked from now on is just going to be a live show.
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And then we're also now streaming live on Rumble,
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We're also on Twitter.
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So that is expatmoneysummit.com slash provoked to check all that.
out and then um get excited because the scott horton academy for foreign policy and freedom i guess
of foreign policy and freedom is coming very soon um and so i'll tell you more about that as i have in
the past i'll tell you more about that in the future here too um but so that is coming up and then
i've used anything i remembered everything um let me look at my list oh i wanted to ask you about the yellow
line here that Israel has withdrawn to. Can you describe that for me? And have they actually
withdrawn to it yet? And then are they supposed to stay there and for how long? And then I guess
you've already stipulated, you don't think they're ever going to get any further than where
they are with this deal now anyway. But then supposedly they're to withdraw to a further line,
further back, not to the old Gaza border, but a new internal border. Yeah, I think there's overall
three lines that they're supposed to withdraw from.
There's like this first yellow line that basically just stops the offensive.
They're not withdrawing from a whole lot of territory that they've taken.
Still most of the Gaza Strip will be under Israeli control.
And then from there, they're supposed to negotiate, I guess, the Nets withdrawal line.
At least this is according to the Trump peace map that I saw.
And then there would be a third withdrawal, which would be to the new buffer zone,
between Gaza and southern Israel.
Again, so the second line, I think, is more or less at this point,
could be like pencil on a map.
It could be withdrawn and redrawn and probably will be redrawn a couple times
if they ever agreed to anything.
And then the border area seems to be just, you know,
take the Gaza-Israel border and extend it between one kilometer
and a half kilometer all the way around.
So taking a pretty significant chunk.
I think somebody calculated like 90% of the strip will be taken by this buffer zone.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, now at least they're going to unleash the humanitarian aid into the place.
Do we got some strong indications of that?
They say 600 truts a day.
So I would spend Israel to allow somewhere.
I think it was in the double digits recently, certainly not over 200.
600 a day is what the kind of at the very start of this conflict, eight organizations were
saying were needed to feed the people of Gaza.
Of course, the situation has become much worse.
Almost everybody in Gaza is displaced.
I think day to camp at anti-war.com had article this week.
83% of homes in Gaza are damaged, are destroyed.
So everybody is living on the streets.
Everybody is living, you know, just eating whatever they could get their hands on that day.
And so the number of aid shots they need is probably a lot higher than 600 at this point, just to like sustain life.
Additionally, all the warehouses, everything has been absolutely depleted.
And so getting more aid into Gaza in case Israel does decide that, ah, Hamas is fighting bad too hard against our airstrients.
So they're not giving up the captives enough and start to choke off the aid again, then there would be a little bit built up.
And, you know, this is another important note.
Whenever aid starts to enter a conflict zone, one of the things that aid agencies try to do is build up enough aid that you could flood the area with the food or else you create riots and stampedes and people getting knifed and killed at the aid distribution sites like what we've seen with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, right?
Like if you're forcing people to literally fight for their food that they're going to bring to their children that day, it's going to end up with people being.
killed Palestinians killing each other.
And I think this is an intentional thing that the Israeli government is trying to do
and cause the collapse of the Gaza culture, the Gaza society.
That's why they've destroyed all the schools, the mosques, the hospitals,
not just because that's where people need to go, but those are community senators.
That's where doctors are.
That's where people like have meetings and things like that.
Making sure that none of those institutions no longer exist.
And then forcing Palestinians to turn on each other.
other, right? If you throw a bag of rice between two starving people, they might kill each other
for it. And I think that's a part of what Israel is trying to do here, where they don't necessarily
have to do all the dirty work. They could create situations where Palestinians are killing
each other. Or society is just breaking down to a point where the tens of thousands of orphaned children
in Gaza don't have anybody to take them in. They don't have anywhere to go. They're just street children,
right? And they end up not being able to get food and starving to death and kind of just ending
up you know lost yeah i think it's going to take a while before it really sinks in even for people
who um have been paying close attention this whole time about the absolute level of devastation
of this society right not just the buildings but like you're talking about the number of orphans
the number of people who are going to be absolutely traumatized beyond believe many people probably
who had been driven out of their minds by surviving nearby exploits
explosions numerous times, including the physical brain damage from the concussions,
and then just the tear, especially little kids growing up, you know, living through these airstrikes.
You know, I talked with Phil Turney and the guys that survived the Israeli attack on the USS Liberty
about what it was like to get machine gunned and napalmed for, what, 45 minutes?
Those guys are absolutely effed up out of their minds, man.
They're really traumatized to them.
this day, dude. And they're tough
guys. They're military guys.
They're sailors and NSA
officers.
If anybody's supposed to be
man enough to be able to survive,
being under fire like that, and
somehow come out okay, it would be
them. And
that was in 1967.
And they're messed up,
man.
So now, like, how about the
four-year-old who just
spent two years living through this um these people are going to have never mind drinking water
after their basic needs are met if they ever are um you know what is going to happen to them as far
as you know having lived through this trying to somehow rebuild after this and what effort it's
going to take to take care of all the orphans for example uh to raise them up and all that it's
And as you say, when we already know the Israelis are never going to allow anyone to make a good faith effort to help these people.
That's the real tragedy.
This whole thing is the Israeli policies, we've got to force them out of here.
But no one wants to, no other nation state wants to abet the Israelis by letting them kick the Palestinians out into their country.
And so, but the Israelis just refuse to let them out of this vice, though.
They're not going to relent and say, okay, well, I'll tell you what, we'll just let Jared Kushner rebuild the Gaza Strait.
for you guys, right? They're not going to do that. They're just going to continue to keep the pressure
on one way or the other. As you say, they're not going to let in the concrete for the rebuilding.
Orphanage, nothing. They're not even going to have fresh water here. Yeah. No, and one of the things
that doctors have brought up who've treated children in Gaza in the U.N., I think UNS.F has said that
the largest population of children amputees in the world is in Gaza. And one of the reasons is that
significant is for children, bones continue to grow. And so you really need a surgery. I think
every like six months to a year or else there's like extreme discomfort and really gnarly things
could happen. I don't want to really go into it. Think about it. So you're going to have these
children who need intensive medical care, you know, for 13, 14, 15 years. And there's one like
semi-functioning hospital left in Gaza. Even that hospital has been bombed multiple.
times, right? The Israelis have raided the hospital before. So there's really no hospital in Gaza
like the hospital in your neighborhood or your county, right? There's nothing like that. Everything's
damaged destroyed. And even if there's what, you know, Israel has destroyed the roads and everything
along the way, nobody has cars. And so it would just, it's going to be an absolute nightmare to,
for these, at times, orphaned and amputated children that have to like figure out and get medical care,
get transportation to whatever medical centers there are,
I do wonder if one of the things that Israel is more or less hoping for
is that they've injured enough of these children
that are going to need long-term care
that they're going to be able to ship off large percentages
of the Palestinian population by sending them
and their families outside of Gaza.
And this is not just pure speculation.
One of the things that Ron Dürmer said,
this is one of Netanyahu's closest allies,
the Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister,
In his report that he gave Netanyahu after October 7th is basically you have to diminish the quality of life for Palestinians in Gaza to the point that all these Arab states that don't want to take them in because they don't want to facilitate the genocide of the Palestinian people will see it as an active charity to the Palestinian people because there's nothing left and their children are dying.
That's the situation that Israel has been trying to and has more or less created here.
And one other thing I'll add there, Scott, is one of the things that really took me from like an average listener of the Scott Horton show to somebody who wanted to work at anti-war.com and be an anti-war activist was I was a psychology major in college.
And, you know, you go through the classes and they talk about all the different mental illnesses and what causes it.
And you take childhood development classes and you understand like what happens to children who are intensely traumatized when they're younger.
And then this report came out.
I think it was human rights watch, and they had some psychologists go to Yemen,
and they are talking about how all these 12-year-old boys who had lived under four or five years of a drone war,
the constant buzzing of the drones and things like that,
like the air conditioners and the fans were sent off the boys into a violent rage.
All the girls were withdrawn and scared all the time, wouldn't talk to anybody.
And what we've inflicted on Gaza, I don't know what it's going to do to, you know, the children,
So much to say about what COVID did to the children in, you know, the United States and around the world two years, a lot of people doing lockdowns, mandates and things like that.
Two years of the genocide of constant fear that you and your family are going to be blown apart.
I mean, I horror to think about what that is going to look like five and ten years down the road.
And what, you know, the mildnutrition, the widespread malnutrition of children in Gaza, I mean, everybody knows that has lifelong health consequences, brain development.
I mean, proper nutrition is very important there.
So the entire population of Palestinian 4 to 12 year olds, I mean,
are probably going to have some pretty serious, like, lifelong consequences from this.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, a few things.
First of all, there's a comment here that says the Israelis didn't win because they
weren't willing to do what it took to go and engage with Hamas toe to toe and fight.
Well, yeah.
Instead, they just bond the crap out of them and that was not effective.
the Israeli way of war was not effective and that was what I meant when I said that at the beginning too was
understand they're they're not going to do what it takes or they're unable to do what it takes to do this
without inflicting massive collateral damage on everybody who happens to be nearby um because exactly right
because they're cowards as soon as somebody pops up out of some rubble and snipes them they turn around and run the other way
so got that right dude no argument here now secondly uh if you're just tuning in
This is provoked and you're looking for Daryl Cooper, martyr made, but he's not here because he had some important things to do.
So instead, I've got the great Kyle Anzalone and he's news editor at the Libertarian Institute, opinion editor at anti-war.com, and he hosts a couple of great shows, conflicts of interest and the Kyle Anzalone show, which you ought to subscribe to.
And he does such great work.
He does the news round up for us every day at the Libertarian Institute, Libertarian Institute.org slash news.
and is our managing editor there.
He is, right?
Or no, news editor.
Yeah.
Describe to the newsletter.
Can I plug the newsletter?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Please do.
I read that thing every day.
I just forgot to say something about it just now.
It was all.
Yeah.
Every day at the Institute, all the news articles I write up, I put in a newsletter so you
can subscribe at the Institute.
And then on Sundays, I do like a little op-ed style commentary and include some of the
highlights from our featured articles over the past week and any podcast appearances scott
and some of our other guys have had yep yeah absolutely great stuff and everybody can just sign up
there real easy from the front page of the libertarian institute libertarian institute dot org so that's all
good stuff um now i want to slightly change the subject to another problem is causing for us and
that is the potential of another conflict with iran and i wonder
First of all, here's some things I want to know from you, ma'am, assuming that you're up on all this better than me, which must be the case.
What's your best estimation of the status of operations at Fordo, at Natanz, at Isfahan, if anything?
What's left of Iran's nuclear program?
How operational is any of it?
are they in fact building new nuclear facilities i know i've read reports that they said one y'all
can go to hell we're going to still enrich forever but also too we are not making nuclear weapons
the ayatollus fatwa still stands now obviously they could be lying about that but that's at least
what they're saying and it's obviously true that the inspectors were kicked out of the country
for what 10 weeks and that's enough time to divert nuclear material and try to figure out a way to
get away with it so um before we talk about the policy
politics of Washington and Tel Aviv. Tell me about the reality of Iran's nuclear program now,
the best you can, please. Yeah, I mean, I guess I haven't seen any recent updates, Scott,
from maybe the past month or so from the initial kind of battlefield assessments and what's
been reported after. Certainly, it seems like the White House's claims that all these sites were
completely destroyed is really overblown. I think the big question is, what is Iran going to
rebuild and what are they going to do with the stockpile of, I guess, you know, 60% of
enriched uranium, which Israel seems to have known that they weren't going to destroy this war
and were okay with Iran possessing afterwards. That was, you know, in Israeli government defense
ministry conversations before the war started. So I think for Israel, that kind of gives them an
excuse to go back to war. Maybe they didn't want to destroy Iran's nuclear program too well that
they never have an excuse to go back to war or something like that. But that is still out there.
And I think the big question is, what are the Iranians going to rebuild? And I wonder if Iran,
so far, I haven't seen anything on any new reports that Iran is rebuilding or building a certain
facility. They are saying that they are going to rebuild their facilities. But I wonder if they
maybe haven't started yet or aren't in a hurry to, that way they could maybe leverage not
rebuilding something or only rebuilding something under a certain framework in an agreement with
the United States. I do think Iran is still looking for kind of a diplomatic exit here. And I think
Trump would prefer that as well. The question is, will Netanyahu allow that to happen?
Yeah. Well, and of course, yeah, once Trump has adopted Netanyahu's theme or, you know,
standard that a nuclear program is a nuclear weapons program, I mean, let's.
he can change his mind about that but he can also go back to war based on that fiction at any
time really as long as they're still enriching so um now a guy interviewed me earlier today and was
saying he had all these indications that he thought it looked like they were preparing to go back
to war here real soon netting yahoo after all does need to stay in a conflict somewhere or another
are you seeing anything like an emergency saying they're really getting ready to go again
You know, I haven't seen anything, Scott. I read reports from Trita Parsi and Matt Blumenthal,
who I think are usually right on these issues, and they are very concerned that Israel is going to go back to war sometime this year.
It seems to me that Iran maybe should have, at least, if there's any rational thinking in Israel,
establish a real deterrent during the 12-day war.
I do think at the end of that, it was then Yahoo that had to give up the war, not necessarily of the Iranians.
Well, you know, with the Iranians, they do have to walk this very careful tightrope where
if they do too much damage to Israel, then Israel is going to resort to their nuclear weapons.
And so it's not as if Israel really lost the war, but lost the war without going nuclear,
I think is more or less the way that ended.
But at the same time, I do look at the particularly the political situation in the United States.
And if you're Israel or anybody in Tel Aviv, I think you have to calculate that Israel support in the United States and the U.S. government in the halls of Congress, in the Pentagon, in the White House is never going to be higher than it is now.
The American people, particularly younger Americans, has absolutely turned on Israel.
And I'm sure they're going to launch propaganda campaigns and they're going to turn some of the support back after, even after they could completely genocide the people.
blah, Gaza. I'm sure over time and with enough money and propaganda, they're able to
like sway the needle bat the other way a little bit. But right now, I mean, Congress just
absolutely subservient to Israel. Trump seems at this point to have not stood up to Netanyahu once,
even as Netanyahu is probably what's preventing him from having a realistic chance to gain
the Nobel Priest Prize he covered so much. And so I just, I think Netanyahu,
is going to do everything he can to at least significantly destabilize Iran.
And I don't even know if they care so much about regime change.
I don't think they would mind say if they were able to weaken the Iranian government
enough and maybe get the Kurds to rise up or agitate some other kind of minority, ethnic
kind of violence in Iran, right?
They just, they want destabilization.
Remember, you know, the Israelis wanted the Syrian war.
They didn't want that to be resolved.
They didn't want Assad to win.
they didn't want the jihadist, when they wanted Syria to bleed and to be destroyed and to be
focused on internal conflicts so they couldn't focus on Israel. And so I could see something similar
with Iran, but also really going for the West Bank, if not outright annexation, making sure
they carve up the West Bank so significantly that there's just no possible Palestinian state
that would be laughable to say that, oh, there's going to be a Palestinian state even though
he had to travel through Israeli communities to go to one town from the Nets.
and maybe parts of southern Lebanon and southern Syria, too.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, we got a couple thousand people watching live tonight at least.
So first of all, that means that we're kicking CBS News under Barry Weiss's ass.
They had Nora O'Donnell interviewed Hillary Clinton and Condoleez-Rice and 125 people tuned in.
So you and me are a hell of a lot more persuasive than those two old freaks.
So that's pretty good.
And also, everybody like and subscribe and click the bell and share it with your friends.
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Let everybody know how great provoked is.
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We're doing just fine, I think, without them.
And now, speaking of Nobel Peace Prizes,
let me ask you a little bit here about Marina Corina Machado,
who did win the Nobel Peace Prize.
apparently she is the new female Juan Guaido
and they mean to put her in power over there in the Venezuela
and man right before we went on
at first I thought it was just a put on
but it seemed like a credible source
it just sounded too perfectly hilarious to be true
that this same lady had asked Israel
to do a regime change in Venezuela
and install her in power personally
not just her friends or somebody she knows or the right
but her hey Israel will you put
put me in power in my country, please?
Just as Juan Guaido had urged
an American invasion of Venezuela.
Imagine if Hillary Clinton
had asked China to intervene
to overthrow Donald Trump for her
since, you know,
Putin stole the election of 16
from her and all that.
So obviously,
you know, Maduro is a filthy
commie rat and all of that.
But what's the extent of
American intervention in Venezuela?
What's the danger we're really going to go to war down
and is this Nobel Peace Prize all part of a plan to put this lady in power?
Well, Scott, I didn't think Trump was going to win the Nobel Peace Prize,
but he actually might have, or at least his secretary of state Marco Rubio.
I mean, it seems absolutely insane to go to war in Venezuela that we would understand
this is going to create a huge migrant crisis.
It's not going to go anywhere near smoothly as the military planner say it will as
whoever is agitating for this, probably Marco Rubio.
inside the halls of the White House is agitating for it.
And so it seems almost too stupid that they really can't be thinking about,
as they talked about, invading Venezuela and taking over some ports and things like that.
At the same time, it really seems like they're about to, and all the reporting says that's the talk.
I even read this in the Atlantic, Nancy Yosef, I believe you used to interview her on the Scott Horton show,
said that she spoke with defense officials who said that they are talking about it,
sending the strides on Venezuela to inside territory, not just on ships that leave
in our international waters, but actually targeting strides inside of Venezuelan territory.
And Dave DeCamp has been doing a good job at anti-war.com, documenting all the little times
that Trump administration officials are unnamed, but they're saying things like, oh, you know,
we could go after Maduro, we could stabilize his government, and it's looking like this,
more towards a regime change war.
And unfortunately, Scott, I was really worried about this whenever Marco Rubio was named
Secretary of State.
I thought, you know, my hopeful possibility here was that Trump names Marco Rubio Secretary of State
because he looks good in his suit and he could read a press statement.
Unfortunately, he has elevated Marco Rubio and is now National Security Advisor by
read reports that he's really the most influential voice on foreign policy.
policy within the White House.
And so, you know, because there are people who I think are more realistic and more likely
to try to get deals done.
Steve Wiccoff, Adam Bowler, Rick Cornell.
In fact, Rick Cornell had gone to Venezuela at the start of the Trump administration,
gotten Venezuela to agree to take back illegal immigrants in the United States.
Maduro is willing to take them back.
He releases since American captives.
Like, I think Maduro actually made a good faith effort to, like,
paid tribute to the new king, which really seemed like what Trump was trying to do in his first
few weeks as president, right? He was going through bullying all these countries and saying,
if you don't stand or do what you're supposed to, I'm going to put all these sanctions and
tariffs on you. So every country, I give up something. And Maduro tried to. And then Marco Rubio
comes. He increases sanctions. He tates Maduro's plane. And then he lists two cartels,
one of which cartel de Los Soles, I don't even think is this.
They say there's this drug trafficking network that essentially mates up the Venezuelan government
that's headed by Maduro.
There's also the other cartel that does is its TDA.
It has some presence in the United States.
I believe even the U.S. intelligence community has said that there's little evidence
that Maduro is actually the leader of this cartel.
But Marco Rubio claims he's the leader of their cartel.
He has a $50 million bounty on Maduro's.
head and uh gurnel has been sidelined when it comes to venezuela discussions trump told them they
had to break off tots with maduro and it seems like this means we're ramping up for war
crazy and venezuela is not panama a regime changed war there could go very sideways you know
there whenever they do these protests even back in the days of hugo chavez they would show on
TV, these pretty impressive seeming right-wing protests against the regime.
Then you turn the camera the other direction, and there's a hundred times as many people
protesting for the left.
And this is what happened during Wang Guaido, too.
On TV, they show that same clip over and over and over and over again, that APC running
over a guy's legs or something.
They ran over him.
I don't even think they'd kill them.
It had tires, not treads, and I think he lived.
But they just played that over and over and showed a group of protests.
protesters and whatever. But then, and I never could find this again, I was bummed out because
I really should have saved this. But I remember it was Max Blumenthal, no surprise, had found
and was retweeting drone footage of the sea of protesters outside of the presidential, whatever,
if is the palace or whatever, you know, I don't know the name of the building there, their White
House where the president was. And it was, you know, hundreds of thousands, if not more than a million
people turned out essentially to protect the white house right the the the presidential building they
weren't there protesting him they were there and and we can understand this too we're like even if
we had a commie government here that we wanted to kill so bad if it was a legitimate homegrown
government and we had foreigners invading our country trying to solve that problem for us
we'd shoot them first and then our commies you know nobody wants to be invaded and
save, especially by the global superpower, making it their business there, and especially not a
tool like Juan Guaido or Wang Guaido with breasts here, whatever her name is,
Peace Prize winner here.
So that's not to stick up for Maduro at all, but there's got to be a better way than this.
I mean, there's, you know, if the CIA could just walk out of there, you know, and say,
yep, we slit his throat, that problem solved or something, hire a couple of guys to do a coup.
I'm not in favor of that.
But I'm just saying that's within the realm of, that's in the same hemisphere as reasonable
as opposed to a war launch, what, airstrikes sending in the Marines, right?
I mean, no, this is, that is absolute insanity.
You might as well invade Persia.
Forget it.
So that's just crazy.
And I'm not, I'm not, I had said this is a sanitaria for.
Yeah.
So I think we're in the realm where we really do have to consider that.
that even if it sounds insanely stupid, it doesn't mean that we have to completely write it off.
And I think Venezuela is the best example of that.
Marco Rubio is an idiot, but he has a lot of power, and he hates Maduro.
He doesn't have a good reason for it.
And at this point, it doesn't seem like Congress are the American people really need to be informed on these issues.
I mean, Trump says we're in armed conflict with the Latin American cartels.
they just stuck them on the foreign terrorist organizations lives.
There's no real reason to do that.
They're not tied to al-Qaeda or jihadists.
They don't even make a claim that they are.
They just stick them on this list that al-Qaeda is on.
And then they say, oh, just like al-Qaeda, we could bomb them.
And they say Maduro is the leader of one of those cartels.
So why not go kill him the same way we kill any terrorist leader anywhere else around the world?
I mean, I really think this is a possibility.
And Congress has made some wheat statements on this issue.
but, you know, I'm not sure that it's enough.
And if they do this, it's going to be an absolute disaster.
As you are saying, you know, Maduro shouldn't be popular.
He seems like a fairly ineffective leader.
He, you know, he's no Hugo Chavez.
I'm not a commie in any way.
But Chavez did seem like he was kind of effectively able to run the government.
Maduro seems to always be hanging on and barely winning elections.
That being said, the poor of the country do like them.
they're dependent on the Venezuelan government, and the U.S. has given them an excuse to blame the United States for every possible thing that's happened wrong in Venezuela.
I was reading a story once, Scott, they had bought a power plant, I guess, or had it built by the Germans.
And then once some parts and pieces went bad, I think it was Siemens that had to sell it to them, and they couldn't because of the sanctions.
And so they have this whole, you know, probably hundreds of millions of dollars that they invested in this power plant.
that they now can't replace the parts for anymore.
And so, you know, there's so many reasons for the poor of Venezuela to hate the United States that when we invade, you know, I think Maduro has like 8 million people that are militia, essentially, right?
All these poor, they're absolutely loyal to him who will take up arms and who will shoot at the Americans.
I mean, what they're talking about is insane, but you're talking about Pete Headset, Marco Rubio, and what, a 79-year-old, Donald.
Trump.
So what I need to do is read
oilprice.com every day
because I don't know anything
and I don't know if you know, have you been seeing
any reports in the news whatsoever
about Venezuela's oil
industry and whether they have any ties with
American firms left anymore.
The last I had heard about this was
a long time ago about how there's
essentially one firm, one
refinery in Corpus Christi
that's capable of refining
Venezuelan heavy crude.
which is extremely polluted with sulfur and other pollutants.
And so, and that was a Koch brothers, now Koch brother, Charles Koch firm corporation there.
And Citco, 7-Eleven gas, was Venezuelan gas back when.
But I don't know a damn thing about it from, say, the last even decade.
So is any of that oil still flowing to Corpus and to American gas tanks?
Or that's all under total blockade from America now?
There was one license that was given towards the end of the Biden administration, and I believe Trump revote that. I forget if he gave it a waiver, I revoked it, but there's not very much. There was a really good article in responsible statecraft, Harrison Berger. I actually had him on the show. And if you go to the most recent episode, the Kyle Lansloan show, it's the last thing we talk about. And in it, Harrison kind of explains that there is some lobbying firms that seem to be going one way and the other. Off the top of my case.
at my head, I can't remember, like, who's lobbying for at Sahn and what they seem to be
lobbying for. But it does seem there are still some competing interests when it comes to oil
money. I'm just not sure how much interest, influence that has in the Trump White House at this
point. It seems to more be like Marco Rubio, Latin American, South Florida politics driving
Latin American policy. And he's in complete control. And Pete Henseth wants to be the Secretary of
War. You know what I mean? I think he wants to go
on aircraft carriers and be taking in pictures of leather jackets with aviators on,
walking on the aircraft carriers as bombs are going off in the background.
Like, that's, I think, the way he looks at things.
And so I'm very concerned that these two idiots are going to get the United States
and create a massive mess that is really going to upend Latin America, you know, South America.
One of the things I think they're going to agitate for is Guyana has a huge disputed
area with Venezuela and there's a lot of all-shore oil rights there. And so the Biden administration
was even tinkering with this a little bit backing the Guyanese military and giving them some
assurances if Venezuela attacks, you know, maybe they agitate there. And that's their go-ahead
an excuse for war. Hey, I'll drink that Kool-Aid. What the hell? Okay, no, not really.
That was just a Gianna joke. Listen, um, well, that's insane.
And, you know, sometimes people take this wrong when you point this out like you're apologizing for the commies.
I mean, first of all, Venezuela had, I believe, the most diverse and successful economy in all of Latin America back under some mean old right wingers.
They weren't libertarians anyway, but they were capitalists at least.
And they had, you know, a major agriculture industry and all of this stuff.
And Hugo Chavez ran that into the ground.
And Maduro is, you know, probably even more commie than him and completely destroyed that country's economy.
But it ain't, you don't have to be an American commie to admit that, yeah, and also Congress is just as commie when it comes to the Venezuelan economy as the Venezuelan government is.
And we put such sanctions on these people.
I mean, they have all these oil resources.
And we make it essentially a crime, de facto, a crime in the world for.
any multinational oil firm
to go to Venezuela and
help get their oil back online
so they can have enough money to
whatever at least get by. We wonder why we got
all these Venezuelan immigrants, including
criminal gangs, killing people in the United
States of America. Well, our
regime helped turn
their country upside down
as a form of punishment for them being
commies and for being independent from us.
We ended up destroying their country
helping to make it much worse.
I don't know, Kyle, the percent.
Venezuela's economy sucks this bad since it was good.
And some X percent of that is Uncle Sam's fault.
I don't know how to quantify it for you exactly, but I can tell you this, we're number one.
And USA's the world empire and Venezuela is nothing.
And so it's a safe bet that America's sanctions regime under Republicans and Democrats
has a lot to do with the bankruptcy of the Venezuelan regime.
Because, again, even Akami can hire a French company to come in and develop their oil and run it for them.
You know what I mean?
If they want to.
So, and I don't know about agriculture and everything, but at the very least could sell their energy that comes free out of the ground.
And which, by the way, Greg Pallas told me years ago, that wasn't even Indian land.
It's essentially their oil is under rocks, under barren wilderness where nobody ever lived before.
So the national government has always owned it.
and, you know, used it for patronage and whatever.
But in this case, America's made that basically impossible
and helped to devastate their economy and that meaning their population too
and drive them as refugees, not just to the United States,
but all across Latin America and the rest.
And you would think that Hillary Clinton just doesn't care.
What are the consequences of things that happens while she's Secretary of State
and such like that?
But that's exactly right.
And same for her and for Kerry and for Pompeo and the Rises and everybody else.
It's completely crazy the way these people operate.
And it sucks the way the American people never put these things together.
It was same for Honduras.
It was Hillary Clinton.
Remember this one, Kyle?
You might be too young for this one.
I think it was 2009.
There was a coup in Honduras where the right wingers over through the left winger.
And they were just business criminals.
They weren't even like capitalist guys.
They were gangsters and drug dealers and stuff who did the coup.
And Obama said, we're not for that.
We want to undo that.
We don't like that one bit.
And Hillary Clinton overruled him and told them,
shut up you i'm in charge here not you and i say we stand by this coup and shut down the organization
of american states when they tried to oppose it and everything and then they completely
destroy the country and criminal gangs thrived and ran everywhere and then you have a massive
refugee crisis including you can see hillary clinton on camera or somebody asked her there are all
these parentless little honduran children at our border who are being sent what do we do and she
just send them back i was like she's the one who overturned that country's entire domestic
order and force those kids and of course it was probably her and her friends who wrote the law
that made it where you have to be a parentless child refugee seeking asylum to get through the loophole
to get in there you know and whatever at that time so it's the same story over and over again the
drug wars too help to just destroy these countries as you said they're invoking the drug war to
attack venezuela now um and and it's been that way that's how george w bush destroyed venezuela
when he made Vincente Fox militarized, I mean, pardon me, Mexico,
when he made Vincente Fox militarized the entire drug war.
When we talk about the Zetas and the Sinaloa cartel and all those guys,
they all come from the W. Bush era.
They're the reaction to the militarization of Mexico's drug war
that America forced on them, USA forced on Mexico then.
It says the same story over and over again.
Pisses me off, too, by the way.
Yeah, sorry, go ahead.
Oh, I guess, one thing I had to ask, guys,
I think a lot of it is the result of the drug appetite of Americans,
but that we demand that all these other countries in Latin America make it illegal.
And these are tiny countries with small economies.
And so if there's billions of dollars worth of drugs flowing through,
then the people who are moving those drugs have to act outside of the judicial system.
So they're violent criminals, right?
That's how you establish dominance when you don't have any kind of rules or courts or things like that.
And then they have a significant amount of weight and power, right?
A few billion dollars in the United States, or even tens or hundreds of millions of dollars in the United States doesn't give the cartels any real power in Washington, D.C.
But when you're talking about Honduras or Guatemala or any of these smaller countries are, you know, poor areas of Mexico, the cartels are major business.
And so that makes them a major part of the country's economy.
and it just fosters like an unstable situation
where you're going to have a lot of chaos,
a lot of crime in those countries.
Yep, absolutely.
All right, so listen, we should wrap here soon,
but I wanted to talk about one last thing here before we go.
I wanted to recommend everybody read this great piece
that we're running at the Libertarian Institute.
It's by our scholar Joseph Solis Mullen,
and it's called Libertarian Realism.
Justin Romando's challenge to empire, and thank you, sir, for choosing that to be the spotlight
today on anti-war.com as well. That's an easy way to find it, everybody, if you're looking
for it. And it's about the founding editorial director of anti-war.com, of course, who is
Murray Rothbard's protege, or one of many Murray-Rothbard protégés. And this article is about
his theory of libertarian realism, which he wrote about in his toward his dying days.
guess not so much this is from 2011 um he ended up he died in 2019 of lung cancer uh yeah there he is
and there's the article there uh libertarian realism and so he had written back in 2011 a pair of
articles and they are called why governments make war that's october 26th 2011 and looking at the
big picture and that's november 11th 2011
and they're both at anti-war.com, anti-war.com slash Justin.
And these two articles, why governments make war and looking at the big picture,
they essentially outline Ramando's theory of libertarian realism.
So this is taking, as Joseph Solis Mullen says in his article today,
it's essentially one-half public choice theory and one-half non-aggression principle, right?
So as libertarians, we are hell-bent on having extremely limited government.
And, of course, you cannot have a limit.
republic at home when you have a global empire and so we want to limit government intervention
overseas as much as we possibly can in order that we may limit the size and the scope of the
regime here in the united states of course um at the same time justin's trying to answer the
question well why do we go to war all the time and it ain't for self-defense um and so what is it
And the answer, what it really comes down to, is public choice theory, which is a wonky way of saying that private actors make all the public choices, right?
And so it's not about us.
It's about Bush and Cheney or Homsfeld and Wolfowitz and Pearl.
It's what they want to do.
And for their reasons that they want to do it.
And that can have very much to do with foreign lobbying, with the military industrial complex, with media pressures, and with, you know,
You know, I can't tell you how many times I've had real, you know, long time experienced experts tell me on my show that so much of our foreign policy can be boiled down to politicians being afraid of being called soft on communism or soft on terrorism.
They're willing to get tens of thousands, hundreds, millions of people killed before they look weak.
You know, there's that famous phone call of Lyndon Johnson on the phone with a Republican senator friend of his saying, I can't be the first American president to lose a war.
so forget it we're just going as bush junior himself said too uh when asked about how a rock was
going to end he said well that'll just have to be up to other presidents because there's no way he was
going to make the decision to climb down on the thing because that would be in some sense admitting
that he didn't get what he wanted and he wasn't willing to do that and he was willing for your cousin
to pay any price for him to not have to admit it and so that's the point of justin's liberty
terrorism here is what's it all about what's our foreign policy all about it's all about domestic
politics and that isn't he's not just saying so a house member can run on a popular slogan like
i'm tough on terrorists he's not reducing it to just that he's talking about the lobbies and
the pressures and the incentives all the way around but that that's what it's really all about
the name of the game is at the end of the day the should be everyone's but especially
the libertarians insight is that people are individuals and they act like it and they act in their
own interest and do what they think is good for them and of course if they're in power they'll
call it what they think is good for the government or good for the country at large when that
ain't how it really works so i just wanted to point that uh great article out to you because joe wrote
it and it's about justin and um justin himself and all of his great work for antiwar dot com and his
book and everything is part of our anti-imperialist heritage as libertarians in the society too so we need
to all know it good and well and so those are a couple of great ones you can read again uh joe solace mullin's
uh piece is at um libertarian institute libertarian institute dot org today and it's the spotlight on
antiwar dot com right now as well uh and i guess we'll be all weekend uh thanks to you con for that
and then um again you can find i'm not sure if he links to justin's articles in there there's actually
two Ramondo articles where he
really tackles this two in a row here. Why
governments make
why governments make war and looking at
the big picture, both from the
fall of 2011
at anti-war.com.
And then with that, let me just recommend
to you again, follow Provoked's
new Twitter handle. It's
at Provoked Podcast.
And I'll be back here
I think with Darrell. Maybe not. If not
Daryl, then I'll have another great special
guest for you next week.
here uh friday nights at eight o'clock on the youtube's for provoked thank you very much kyle
and thank you everybody for watching thanks scott
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