Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 3/19/26 Joe Kent on How the Israelis Drove Trump Towards an Unnecessary War with Iran
Episode Date: March 19, 2026Scott interviews Joe Kent, the former director of the US National Counterterrorism Center, about what drove him to resign. Kent explains how he saw the Israelis mislead Trump about an Iranian nuclear ...threat and the supposed fragility of the regime. He also backs up some of the widely attacked claims in his resignation letter about Israeli involvement in getting the US into previous wars in the region, reflects on what the real goals of the Israeli government are with this war, sheds light on Scott’s concerns about significant blowback terrorism in the US and more. Discussed on the show: Kent’s letter of resignation Joe Kent is a retired Army Special Forces soldier who served as the director of the National Counterterrorism Center in Trump’s second term until he resigned in 2026 over the war with Iran. Follow him on Twitter @joekent16jan19 Audio cleaned up with the Podsworth app: https://podsworth.com Use code HORTON50 for 50% off your first order at Podsworth.com to clean up your voice recordings, sound like a pro, and also support the Scott Horton Show! For more on Scott's work: Check out The Libertarian Institute: https://www.libertarianinstitute.org Check out Scott's other show, Provoked, with Darryl Cooper https://youtube.com/@Provoked_Show Read Scott's books: Provoked: How Washington Started the New Cold War with Russia and the Catastrophe in Ukraine https://amzn.to/47jMtg7 (The audiobook of Provoked is being published in sections at https://scotthortonshow.com) Enough Already: Time to End the War on Terrorism: https://amzn.to/3tgMCdw Fool’s Errand: Time to End the War in Afghanistan https://amzn.to/3HRufs0 Follow Scott on X @scotthortonshow And check out Scott’s full interview archives: https://scotthorton.org/all-interviews This episode of the Scott Horton Show is sponsored by: Roberts and Roberts Brokerage Incorporated https://rrbi.co Moon Does Artisan Coffee https://scotthorton.org/coffee; Tom Woods’ Liberty Classroom https://www.libertyclassroom.com/dap/a/?a=1616 and Dissident Media https://dissidentmedia.com You can also support Scott’s work by making a one-time or recurring donation at https://scotthorton.org/donate/https://scotthortonshow.com or https://patreon.com/scotthortonshow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ladies and gentlemen of the press have been less than honest.
Reporting to the American people, what's going on in this country.
It's the babies I make it.
We're dealing with Hitler Revisited.
This is the Scott Horton Show, Libertarian Foreign Policy, mostly.
When the president visit, that means that it is not illegal.
We're going to take out seven countries in five years.
They don't know what the fuck they're doing.
Negotiate now.
End this war.
And now, here's your host.
Scott Porton.
All right, you guys, introducing Joe Kent, formerly of the 75th Rangers,
and then CIA Special Activities Division or Special Activity Center, I guess they renamed it,
paramilitary.
He fought in the Terror Wars.
And then most recently, he was the head of the Counterterrorism Center and famously
resigned from the Trump administration.
over principled objection to the war in Iran.
Welcome back to the show.
How are you doing, sir?
Doing great, Scott.
Thanks for having me.
Absolutely.
Happy to have you here.
And I'm sorry to do this to you, but might as well because it is obviously crucial.
It's since we're apparently living in the 1930s, we need your opinion on the rise of
national socialism in Germany and the avowed anti-Semitism of the new Fuhrer over there.
and whether you think we should take the Soviet Union side against them
and whether you agree with their stance on Jews and things like that, please.
I'd prefer to what I know, the war on Iran, but yeah, your sister year was not lost.
I mean, it does feel like we're living in those times once again.
Yeah.
Well, look, I know your oath was to the U.S. Constitution,
and yeah, more closely resemble the kind of guys who bought against Nazi Germany
in the Second World War, but there's Samaria, yes,
so I figured I'd give you a chance at least to crack a smile,
if not defend yourself from the onslaught here.
All right, so I also am not an anti-Semite.
So apparently you have other motives for your criticisms of American policy,
even so badly that you would resign over them
other than a hatred of some religious ethnic type group.
So why didn't you explain what it was so important, so objectionable about this war with Iran
that you really thought it was worth resigning over?
Yeah.
So look, my bottom line is that I believe that this war, especially the timing of it, was largely driven by the Israelis' agenda and the Israelis' timeline.
And we were forced to react, plunging us into this conflict.
Now, there's been a lot of debate over whether there was an imminent threat or not.
However, Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, the president, the Speaker of the House,
they've all come out and said that we launched this attack because we knew that the Israelis
were going to attack as well.
And so I think that tells you pretty much most of what you need to know that the Israelis
were the ones in the driver's seat.
And I just think that is completely an irresponsible way for us to conduct ourselves as far
as foreign policy goes.
We provide Israel everything that they need.
say the majority of what they need to defend themselves, but also to go on the offense. And so if we're
going to provide them with this level of support, then they need to adhere to our timelines and they
adhere to our strategic objectives or they need to be comfortable with going it alone. And if an attack
is imminent because of an action of a so-called ally is taking, and I think we really need to reassess
what that relationship truly is. In my time at NCTC and the White House at this capacity,
I just saw an ecosystem that was created around President Trump between influential members of the media, such as Mark Levin, Dubowitz, think tanks like FD, Wall Street Journal editorial pages, etc., but then also high-ranking Israeli officials and then some advocates, donors, etc., that created an ecosystem around President Trump that told him that, you know, you said that, you, President Trump, said that Iran could never have a nuclear weapon, but if they can enrich uranium, then
they're going to be able to have a nuclear weapon.
All President Trump had ever said was Iran can't have an nuclear weapon.
And I think most people agree with that.
I agree with that.
And actually, the former Iatole, before he was killed, he agreed with that too and strictly
enforced a red line with his own government and his own military that they were not allowed
to actually enrich and develop a nuclear weapon.
They could enrich, but they couldn't develop a nuclear weapon.
So the Israelis came in using their official back channels, their unofficial channels, and then also
the media to create an artificial red line and say that there can be no enrichment. And that was
basically laundered into official U.S. policy that took away the president's decision-making space.
And so my issue was that accurate information wasn't being given to the president. The Israelis
were largely in the driver's seat of driving our policies. And I think this is a disservice,
not just the American people, but also the President Trump. President Trump is a fantastic negotiator.
I think if given the space, it could come up with the deal. I don't believe that war was his first
option. So for all those reasons, I tried from the inside for as long as I could to
advocate and slow these things down to give the president more time to make a decision
until, you know, essentially we were boxed out, myself and others who were advocating
for a more pragmatic approach were boxed out. And I felt like, number one, I couldn't be a part
of this as someone who said that I would not allow the next generation to go off into war.
I was a pledge I made to myself probably on my third or fourth deployment overseas. But then also,
I felt that this was probably one of the better ways to be able to communicate to the president
that he doesn't have to continue down this path.
Sorry, I know that was a long answer.
No, that's good.
Long answers are good.
Okay, so the headline is blames Israel lobby.
And here you're saying specifically what you mean by that is they're reframing the question
of Iran's nuclear program in such a way in Trump's mind,
as him as their primary audience here, to essentially drive all the nuance out of,
out of what the uranium enrichment program is for
and can be used for and essentially get him to adopt
the Israeli line that for them to have enrichment at all
is the same thing as them having a nuclear weapons program
and even a very advanced one that must be stopped right now.
And it was that framing being successful essentially over him
is really what you're referring to when you say
that he was pushed into this by the Israel Bob.
Is that correct?
Yeah, exactly. That's right.
I mean, President Trump said,
Iran can't have a nuclear weapon. I think most people agree with that. And again, the Ayatollah,
and the former Ayatollah, anyways, at least agreed with that. And so that was very dangerous for the
Israelis because that leveling of the playing field essentially brought both President Trump and the
Iranians to negotiate any table. The Israelis feared President Trump being able to get a deal,
which could lead to some form of normalization with the Iranians. The Israelis have been very
upfront. I really, frankly, don't think the Israelis care that much about Iran's nuclear
weapons, what I think they care about, or not necessarily nuclear weapons, their enrichment.
What I think the Israelis care about is regime change. And so they wanted to push this more as fast
as they could. And so they came up with this talking point that zero enrichment was a starting
point, knowing that that was a non-starter for the Iranians, because the Iranians were smart.
They knew if they completely got rid of any kind of enrichment, that they would end up like
Kedopi and Libya. And I knew if they had the BS and say that they had a nuclear weapon,
they'd end up like Saddam in Iraq. So they essentially have what I call the Goldilocks.
methodology where they just said, hey, we could, we have enough material here and the capability
where we could develop a nuclear weapon, but we're not developing the nuclear weapon. So therefore,
you can't just come push us around, but also you can't justify coming in because we have
an nuclear weapon. And again, the Israelis wanted to take away any ability for their immune
negotiation because they wanted this regime change more that they can't do on their own. They need
the might of the U.S. military.
And of course, Trump called that bluff against their latent deterrent last June. And I think
you know, you can confirm this, I guess, from your former position here,
but even from the open source material here,
he very much did obliterate their program.
Took Natanz, and Fordo and Isfahan virtually completely offline.
Maybe they have a secret enrichment program somewhere,
but probably not.
Doesn't look like, you know, any of that.
So he called their bluff on that latent deterrent.
So much good it did them after all that time, at least.
But now, so let me ask you about the statements by Marco Rubio and others
that the Israelis were threatening,
we're going to start this war,
and we know that it's going to lead to Iranian attacks
against American interests and drag you in.
So you might as well start the war with us,
this kind of thing.
And in a way, in a word,
blackmailed America into launching the war.
Is that your information as well?
I mean, Marco Rubio and, again,
Marka Rubio and the president and even Speaker House,
I think others have now come out and said,
well, we knew the Israeli here to go.
So we had to go.
And so I think the question for every American,
especially me and my former position, was like, well, who's in charge here? This is going to have
massive consequences for the United States of America. We knew what the Iranians were going to do.
We knew where their missiles were pointed. We basically knew what their contingency plans were.
They were going to target bases in the region. Many of us were advocating for years to limit our footprint
in the Sinkom region just for this very reason because it gave the Iranians more leverage.
We also knew, and I think the U.S. government has known for years, that the Iranians would try to
shut down the Straits of Hormoos to impose economic costs.
So my whole point was that if we're going to do this war, we cannot let the Israelis drive our timeline.
We can't have our hands forced into this because the stakes are just so high.
All right.
This episode of Scott Horton's show brought to you by the books I wrote.
You can see them behind me there.
Enough already.
Fools errant and then enough already and provoked.
And then, of course, one might have fallen down there.
but I got Ron Paul, the great Ron Paul, Scott Horton show interviews and hotter than the sun.
You see that one back there over there that way.
Hotted than the sun, time to abolish nuclear weapons.
That's all interviews I did all about nukes and really great stuff.
And I bust my ass on these things.
And you know, I've gotten a really great reception on all of them.
They all have been endorsed by Ron Paul and Daniel Ellsberg endorsed two of the three I wrote.
He would have endorsed the third one I know, but he died too.
soon, unfortunately. Tucker Carlson says that provoked is the definitive account. In fact,
that's what Glenn Greenwald and Aaron Matei said about it too. The definitive account of the
new Cold War with Russia and the war in Ukraine. So maybe check that up. So I'm interested in this
and don't get me wrong because obviously I agree with you that the Israelis definitely did
browbeat Trump into doing this. But it seems to me like they just got agreement from him to do
this, specifically Netanyahu, the prime minister himself. And I don't know if you saw this,
but there's this interesting article at Politico. This is from the day before the war on Thursday.
It says the White House officials believe the politics were a lot better of Israel,
strikes Iran first. And this was essentially the idea was an agreement between the Americans
and the Israelis to have Israel hit Iran first in order to force Iran to hit America so that they
could tell the American people, see, well, they hit us and gave us no choice but to do this.
apparently they decided not to do that.
This is very reminiscent, actually, of the David Wormsler plan in 2007,
where he and Cheney wanted to get the Ehud Olmert government to attack Iran
and force Iran to hit American interest in the Gulf as an end run around W. Bush
to force him to do it.
In this case, it's Trump and his guys trying to do an end run around us, apparently,
or at least that was the idea.
But my point being that even though they didn't implement this plan,
it seems to put the lie to the idea that Netanyahu is like the snort.
Merling Pitbull that Trump could not hold on to his leash rather than they bump fists and
decided to do this together.
You know, from my perspective, there was just a lot of bad information coming from the
Israeli side, particularly around that enrichment issue, really just kind of convoluting
the idea of zero enrichment and then the nukes, as I described.
And then I think as the Israelis got more and more nervous that President Trump may strike a deal
again, he was deploying more diplomats.
From my vantage point, the Israelis just decided to really force our hands and say,
we're going to go do this, and you know it's going to happen next you're going to be attacked.
And to me, that is just, you know, that was a red line for me.
And I said, hey, I can't be a part of us.
Right now, I'm sorry to keep confronting you with like the silly stuff,
but obviously you're a senior official who's resigned over a war.
I mean, it's a huge thing.
The attacks against you kind of are relentless.
And you had mentioned, I believe it was in your resignation state,
But definitely you addressed this a bit in your Tucker Carlson interview, that there was an important role played by the Israel lobby in getting us into the Iraq war and into Obama's war in Syria as well, which obviously you have a lot of firsthand experience.
I know I read that you were deployed 11 times.
I interviewed you a few years ago.
Forgive me, I forget if you had gone to Afghanistan as well, but I know you spent a lot of time in Iraq and Syria, right?
And so, again, they want to say, well, this is an anti-Semitic blood libel from the Middle Ages or something.
And so I just thought, like, maybe you have an actual explanation for what you meant by that.
Certainly.
I mean, in the lead up to the 2002 Declaration, or basically the 2002 portion while it was being publicly debated,
whether or not we should go to war of Iraq, while the Iraq war were being sold to the American people,
the Israeli lobby led by Benjamin and Yahoo at the time, who I believe,
top of my head was their finance manager,
was over here in America,
heavily campaigning for us to go after Saddam Hussein,
saying that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.
The Israeli lobby, APAC, had these talking points
in all of their different briefing books.
So they were pressuring members of the House,
members of the Senate to support the war against Iraq.
The Israelis had a lot of interest in Iraq.
They obviously thought Saddam was a threat,
but they were also concerned with being able to get some of Iraqi oil
for their own uses and their own interests,
in their own interests, but also they viewed Iraq as a staging point for Syria and, moreover,
for Iran. I mean, the Israelis have been very, very, I think straightforward on what they view
as a threat, and they basically view the vast majority of the countries that surround them as a threat,
some more so than others, but Syria, Iraq, and Iran were top of their list for quite some time.
So they, and then also, of course, they didn't do it alone. It wasn't just the Israeli lobby.
They had a lot of, you know, fellow travelers with men who were neo-conservative.
There's a lot of glee over there.
But the neoconservative movement, as you know, and I think most of your viewers know,
they helped really sell the war to the American people,
and then ultimately to the Bush administration.
That launched us into Iraq.
We basically screwed up Iraq so much that we kind of handed the keys to the kingdom
over to the Shia majority, but not just the Shia majority,
in particular, the best organized guys,
where the Bader Corps, the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq,
These guys had fought on the Iranian side of the Iraq-Iran war.
So they were loyal to Tehran because of our own ignorance and then a lot of other lobbying by outside groups.
These guys basically took power in Iraq.
And so at the time we were leaving Iraq in 2011, it was evident that we basically handed over Baghdad to the Iranians.
And so the Israeli lobby said, hey, this is a major problem because now we basically have a Iranian superhighway, a land bridge that,
goes from Iran all the way into Syria through Iraq.
This directly supports Hezbollah's efforts against Israel.
So it was a major problem.
And so we had basically tipped the balance of power in the region over to the Shiites.
So then the Dury War in Syria was launched because Haasas Assad and Bashir al-Assad had
always been longtime friends with the Iranian support of the Iranians, help support Hezbollah
and Hamas from Syria.
And so who do we rely on as our proxies inside of Syria?
well, it was by and large the Sunnis and the most radical elements of the Sunnis.
There was the Free Syrian Army and there were some so-called moderates,
but the guys who were out there and really aggressive against the Assad regime
were members of al-Qaeda and then eventually members of ISIS.
ISIS got so out of control that we eventually had to go back into Iraq, back into Syria,
largely re-enpower a lot of the same Shiite militias that we were trying to take power away from
in order to take out the ISIS Caliphate.
That's where I lost my late wife was fighting the ISIS Caliphate in 2018.
But this is how really the goals of the Israeli government have driven a lot of our foreign policy in the Middle East.
And so at the end of the day, I really think it's time for Americans to reflect on what are our vital national security interests in the region and truly is the relationship that we have right now with this hyper-aggressive, lakud-driven government inside Israel.
Is that worth it to us?
Because now here we are, we're diving headlong into another war.
and this may be the most consequential war in the Middle East that we fought in quite some time,
is it truly worth it? And I think if these facts are laid out to President Trump,
and we have the ability for an off-ramp, we have the ability for negotiations,
I think President Trump can get us out of this.
But I think it's time for us to have these hard discussions, these hard conversations right now,
and be truly objective about what our relationship is with Israel
and what the American interests in the region truly are.
A point of clarification here, I believe it was in the Tucker Carlson interview.
I saw actually someone quote you critically here, but I thought maybe they misunderstood you,
but I wanted to get a little clarification.
At one point recently here, you had said that you had fought with uranium-backed groups in the region.
I think it was a little vague.
So then I wondered, did that mean that you were part of the surge in 2007 against Sauter's forces in Iraq War II?
or in the aftermath of Iraq War III against the Caliphate,
I know that they're Iranian-backed militias that hit guys,
but I think you were out of the service by then.
But so I was wondering if you could clarify that,
because I saw someone say,
oh, this guy's saying that al-Qaeda and ISIS are backed by Iran,
but I know you're not saying that.
Yeah, no, so I first deployed to Iraq in 2003.
I missed the bachelor invasion.
I was still in the Special Forces qualifications course.
We got to Baghdad in the summer of 03.
And then I was in the Special Forces group as a Green Beret.
And so basically every year from 03 until 2011, I would be in Iraq for anywhere between six to eight months at a given time.
So I fought against the Iranian-Brak militias of all varying stripes, primarily at Sahters militia, Sabah, Ketabal Hezbollah, beginning in really 2004 in Najav.
And that's where we saw the Iranians come in heavily and support them, members of the goods force.
Fought them heavily in Sadr City.
I was there in the surge.
Yeah, pretty much throughout the country.
spent my time divided between fighting and hunting the Iranian-back Shia militias,
but then also the Al-Qaeda guys went back after the ISIS Caliphate took over and fought
between, I was in Baghdad for a little bit, but then was mostly up in Kirkuk, Mosul, that area,
a little bit into Syria.
So what I say I fought with, I guess you could take that either way.
At the time, in the counter-IS might, we essentially were acting as the Air Force and our ground-shock
troops were the Shia militias because at the time we had a common enemy. As that fight wound down,
I was out of the service, but then my wife was killed in 2019. I left the CIA that I had transitioned
to after I retired from the military in 18. But that's when the Shia militias turned against our forces
and President Trump ultimately decided to retaliate by killing Kassim Soleimani.
All right. So, as I said, we've talked before, but it's been a few years and I don't remember.
or we might have even had an argument about this or I don't know,
but I want to bring it up because it is crucial.
A major talking point against Iran is that they killed 600 of our guys in Iraq War II.
And now clearly there was some Iranian support for Sauter,
but then again, as you already described,
the Supreme Islamic Council and the Dawa Party were much closer to Iran even than Sauter was.
And it was really America's attacks against Sauter that drove him into Iran,
and drove him closer to Iran.
But a huge part of this whole narrative than
especially at the hands of David Petraeus and Dick Cheney and Michael Gordon,
then of the New York Times, now at the Wall Street Journal,
was that Iran was responsible for every copper core EFP roadside bomb
placed by any Shiite militiamen, especially in the first half of the year 2007.
And as I show in my book, and I actually have them all here,
if you really want to squabble, I have report after report after report after report
of these machine shops being found by American soldiers in Iraq and these bombs being made
by Iraqi Shiites for use against the United States, as opposed to the myth that every single
one of these things somehow were all part of an Iranian plot. And really, it was Petraeus who had
attacked Sada rather than the other way around in 2007. Anyway, I wondered if you wanted to comment
on that, because it is a real crucial talking point equivalent to, essentially in the narrative,
equivalent to the favorite bombing of 1983 and the hostage crisis or one of these things that proves
that Iran is America's eternal enemy?
I think I'll kind of meet you halfway.
So I was over there and I worked heavily on a small task force going after the EFP threat.
So the idea of an EFP, it's not incredibly advanced.
The Iranians just did a very, the goods force just did a very good job of finding ways to manufacture them
and employ them against our up-armored technology
and to beat our jammers.
And then also to punch through our armor.
The Quds Force were kind of like my counterpart
as a Green Beret.
They were very good at training, training, manning, and equipping.
And then what we would say is green berets
is work yourself out of the job.
Train your proxy force so that in short order,
they don't need you there anymore.
And that's essentially what happened with the EFPs.
So the initial EFPs that we found,
they were being constructed inside of Iran.
And I know exactly what you're talking about.
talking about with the copper plating.
We did run ourselves in circles looking for like where the Iranians were storing all
this mythical copper and like were they smuggling to copper across the border.
I think that was something of chasing ghosts because really what the goods force did was
they may have manufactured.
I'm confident they manufactured the first run of the EFPs inside of Iran.
And they probably tested them there as well.
But they were able to take that technology because it's pretty rudimentary and then show
Iraqis how they could basically build them in Iraqi machine shops, local machine shops in
Southern Iraq and Sauter City, et cetera. But largely the TTP, the tactic of the EFB did come from
the Iranians. As for the back and forth relationship that we have with Sotter, I think that if we
would have been more deliberate about engaging with Sotter, especially after, I've drawn a blank on the
Amam, I think the Amman, the Imam Khoi, somebody can check me and spend a while since I thought of
after he was killed when he returned from Iran.
I think we could have made much more progress
in kind of making an alliance with the more nationalistic Iraqi Shias,
which is what Sauter represented,
as opposed to, like you said, the Skiri and the Dawa branch
that were much more beholden to Iran.
But yeah, but I do agree that Iran was responsible for,
I'd say 600.
I mean, I'm not sure exactly where they got that number from,
but they were responsible for hundreds of casualties against the American forces.
Now, again, should we have been there in the first place?
Absolutely not.
And what happens is the narrative is basically push where you're supposed to just believe
that every Iraqi Shiite militia man was an Iranian rather than an Iraqi Arab Shiite fighting
under an Iraqi Arab Shiite militia.
And, you know, as Gareth Porter showed, and maybe I'll follow up with you and show you
this.
And Gareth Porter found where it was actually that they had learned it from, and I don't
know exactly what you're referring to.
Maybe you have a fax on this that you could back it up.
But Gareth showed where they learned it from Lebanese Hezbollah, not from Iran.
And that Lebanese Hasbala got it from the IRA, not from Iran.
And that that was kind of the origin of the technology of how, again, they're pretty simple
bomb, but you have to hear the idea somewhere first to put the copper plate here, you know,
on the shape charge here kind of thing.
And so apparently that was where it came from,
according to Garris, great journalism back then.
But, and then I did kind of flash on the screen there,
a few different examples of these news stories.
In fact, I'll go ahead and show you this one because the main ringleader
in the media at the time, again, was Michael Gordon.
He was the same guy who was the byline on every Judith Miller hoax story
about the nuclear program in the New York Times in the run-up to the war.
Same guy.
And yet here is his co-journalist from the New York Times, Alyssa Rubin,
writing in the same paper, you see the day April 7th, 2007,
right during the same time frame.
And down here, she talks about how they found,
I should have had it all highlighted,
but here they go.
They recovered an assembly area for powerful roadside bombs
known as explosively formed penetrators.
The statement said, in other words,
the military told the New York Times that.
So then, in other words,
when they weren't pushing the Michael Gordon,
you know, David Petraeus, Dick Cheney narrative there,
they kept having to admit that they kept stumbling
across these machine shops.
So you may be right that the idea came from Persia,
but it sure seemed like what they were doing
was trying their very best to conflate solder
with the Ayatollah Communee in order to justify strikes inside Iran,
which Bush ultimately refused to do.
I agree with you on that.
Yeah, I mean, the whole time I was in,
Iraq that was especially I'd say the surge years on it was that the Iranians were the
main threat and basically we needed to take the fight to them so yeah that that that that line of
thinking was very much at play and I think it's something that we always missed and we never really
factored in was that Iraq and Iran had fought a bitter war against each other and the majority of Iraq
which she is so the majority of Shias picked up a rifle whether they wanted to or not and they fought against
the Iranians. And that was something that we never really wrapped our heads fully around,
that there was a lot of nationalistic Iraqis who were not sympathetic with the Iranians
until they had a horrible experience with foreigners coming in and invaded their country and us
trying to impose our will on them. So again, like we never should have been there in the first
place. We continued to get it wrong. And again, this is why I think a lot of our actions right
now are completely and totally counterproductive. If we ever wanted to stabilize Iraq after we
toppled Saddam, we immediately should have been working with guys like Sotter. We should have been
working with the nationalistic Shias and not played into the hands of the Iranians, the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Ayatollahs, much like right now, if our goal is to get rid of
the Ayatollahs and the IRGC, the last thing we should be doing is killing off the Ayatollah, especially
because that was the Ayatollah that had a prohibition on developing a nuclear weapon, but also because
it's creating a rally around the flag type of scenario now where you have.
have Persian Iranians who may have been out in the streets a month ago complaining about the cost
of living and ready to overthrow their government from the ground up. And that might take a longer
time, but at least would have been organic. Whereas now, now that we've killed off the Supreme
Leader, we're starting to kill off all the moderates, the hardliner's case is being vindicated
and the Iranian people are now digging in because they're prideful people like most people
are, like I would be, like probably you would be. And we're moving even further away from anything
that would resemble like an organic regime change inside of Iran.
So really just basically eliminating any kind of option that we would have other than the war option.
Hey guys, you know I have another podcast now, right?
Yeah, me and the great American historian Daryl Cooper, that is Martyr Made.
He's my co-host and we host a show every Friday night.
We might be switching to two days a week here sometime soon, but right now we're doing Friday nights live at 8 o'clock Eastern time on the YouTube's.
checked out our Twitter handle Provoked show.
Okay, I have a couple of questions about that.
Just how organic was that?
Because it seemed like there's a big protest,
but then all of a sudden you had armed teams of guys
burning mosques and sacking police stations
and causing that fight.
And then I have a second question about that,
which is that I wonder if you agree with this,
that it seems that the purpose of embellishing
the casualty count on the part of the uprising,
whether protesters or armed fighters
or whoever all it was,
which must have been apparently like three or four thousand,
something like that on both sides,
including the cops and all that.
But then they embellished that up to 30, 40,000.
I'd like to know, well, your opinion on that,
that's my assertion, that they embellished it, you know,
far beyond reason.
And that obviously the purpose of that was that's war propaganda
to get people to say this is unacceptable as, you know,
an atrocity on the level of the endfall campaign
or something.
We have to go in there and do something about it.
But then it also seems like it must have had,
a perverse effect on Donald Trump because that story could be interpreted to mean that the Iranian
regime had to kill 30,000 to 50,000 people to get the other hundreds of thousands of them to
finally quit and go home or else surely they would have been overthrown any minute when
that's just completely ridiculous. And if it was only 3,000 killed and they were the vanguard of a
protest movement that made up, you know, whatever, a few tens of thousands of people,
then that would not indicate that the Iranian regime is so brittle and is ready to fall.
But if you really believe that they had to kill 30 to 50,000 people in some like
Battle of the Somme-sized massacre in order to cling to power in January,
then you might have believed Netanyahu that you can just, you know, give them a flick
and they'll fall right over by the end of February.
I mean, in war of the first casualty is always the truth.
And I'm always skeptical of like any kind of numbers coming out of a conflict zone.
From my former vantage point, it was hard to know which number was accurate.
I share your skepticism in the larger numbers.
But what I do know from my past experience and just pattern recognition,
anytime we launch a war, even if it sounds like it's under noble auspices,
like we did in Libya with the responsibility to protect doctrine that the Clintons and Samantha Power,
We're so fond of saying, hey, we have to go in with military force to topple this regime to save the people.
It sounds noble, but it always ends up in the same catastrophe that regime change driven by the Americans results in.
So, look, I was very skeptical at the time of we need to go in and save the protest movement.
I was always the mindset that look at this protest movement is going to be real, and they're truly going to drive this current regime from power.
they've got to do it on their own for it to actually have any,
for it to really resonate and be a real lasting thing.
If we want to make sure that the protest movement fails,
as we go in there and we say,
hey, we're the Americans,
we're here to back the protesters against the government.
That just does not work for us,
especially in the Middle East.
Okay, now, can you tell us
what's your best assessment of the state of the negotiations
before the war and whether they really could have been successful?
I think the biggest chance that we had was before the 12th Day War and before Midnight Hammer.
I personally believe that, you know, Steve Wittkoff and the folks working with him and in the Army, his Iranian counterparts, I think they were close to a deal.
That's just my opinion.
I wasn't involved in the dealmaking.
I don't want to portray it as that.
My opinion of that, though, was that those talks were going very well.
They were continuing to meet.
There were discussions on, they were having real discussions on enrichment.
And again, this is where the idea that no enrichment was our red line, that's where I saw the echo chamber that I alluded to in my resignation letter.
That's where I really saw that go to work between members of media and then Israeli officials coming in and basically saying, no, no, but you said, you know, no, no enrichment, which is completely total nonsense.
So I think there was a potential for a deal there.
Obviously, the 12-day War, Midnight Hammer set back the potential of the deal.
but the Iranians are very, very calculated.
And when they retaliated for Operation Midnight Hammer,
they did it in a very, very calculated way.
They shot back an equal number of missiles that we dropped as bombs.
And so that signaled to us that, hey, they were still interested in actually cutting a deal.
And again, this is what the Israelis feared,
because they knew that President Trump and his negotiating team probably could get a deal
because you had the Iranians willing to go back to the table holding their self-imposed
prohibition on developing a nuclear weapon and just saying,
Hey, like, we just want to have a conversation about enrichment.
When we were having a conversation about enrichment,
I think there was a real potential for a deal there.
And that's why we had the Israelis come in, full court press with the echo chamber,
and say, no, no, we have to go now.
They're going to develop a nuclear weapon.
They're developing ballistic vessels that can reach America.
They were just throwing anything at the wall to see what it would stick.
And then, of course, our hand to say, hey, we're going to go right now.
If we go, they're going to hit you guys back.
So that's where I saw a lot of the negotiating space get taken away.
and chill any potential for a deal.
But Scott, I think right now, there is a potential still for a deal.
And I think only Donald Trump can do it.
I think he's got to address the Israeli issue first and foremost and demand and force them to stop going on the offense.
I know he sent out a true social last night saying just that to stop bombing the energy sector.
My opinion, my advice to him, if you would take it, is that, look, we have enough data on how the Israelis behave.
If you tell them that they need to stop bombing this target or that target, they might back off for a week or so.
but they're not going to listen to you.
You have to take away their ability to do that.
You have to take away some feature of the defense system to say,
hey, look, we're going to take away a feature of your defense system,
and we're not going to support you while you're on the offense.
If you go completely back on the defense, we will support you.
But until we take something away from the Israelis,
they will not listen to us.
If President Trump addresses that first,
that will give him the space to reach a deal.
And we already saw him today through his Commerce Secretary
talking about lifting the sanctions on some of the Iranian
and oil that's already on the water.
And so I think we, I pray that we're actually moving in that direction, but I think the
timing is crucial.
I think we have a lot of potential right now to get that deal.
Yeah, I mean, politically, that would be a huge clundown for him to have to overtly restrain
the Israelis as part of probably even an official negotiation with Iran.
I mean, I agree with you that he should seek peace at almost any cost.
anyway, but politically speaking, what you're really saying is, boy, did he already jump into
the deep end of this ocean and, you know, where he cannot touch the bottom and how is he going
to get himself out of this thing without something like that where he's implicitly saying,
boy, we just shouldn't have done that or whatever, call it victory now.
But if Israel's still in a position to force the war to continue on and they're willing to
without him absolutely putting his foot down,
then that really goes to show that the best he can do,
the best he is doing is calling time out
rather than actually achieving any kind of success,
much less victory, like David Petraeus would say.
Yeah, I mean, the fundamental issue is restraining Israel.
And until we do that,
we may be able to buy some time,
but we'll be right back at the same situation all over again.
So that's why I say we have to actually be pretty forceful with them
and to say, look, we're paying for the majority of your defense.
we will not pay for you to go on offense.
We have a different strategic goal than they do.
Like right now we share some tactical objectives.
Like we've said that we want to take down their ballistics,
they've got their Navy, et cetera,
and the Iranians or the Israelis are on board with that.
But beyond that, that's where our interests go in completely divergent past.
The Israelis want full regime change,
and the Israelis have a very high tolerance for chaos.
Like they're completely okay destroying that whole system over there
and having a chaotic situation where the straight support moves is still in jeopardy
where potentially there's mass migration,
where you have different fractionalizations within inside of Iran that be stabilized
with the region but poses less of a threat to Israel.
The Israelis are fine with that.
We are not.
That would be absolutely catastrophic for us, for our partners, our allies in the GCC states,
potentially even in Europe, and then also for the world energy trade.
So the states are very, very high from our strategic objective standpoint.
And so to let the Israelis continue to essentially call the shots and drive the ferocity
and the strategic objectives of the battle, that is not doing any service for the American people,
And I think as soon as President Trump can realize that and use his force that only President Trump has to restrain the Israelis,
we're going to continue to be in this cycle.
Now, do you think that plan A was to parachute the monarch, Rezapalavi, the grandson in there?
Or it was really the Israeli goal was just convinced Trump to get it started and the plan is destroy Persia.
The Israelis were big fans of throwing everything at the wall to see what would stick.
So I think at some point in time, they probably briefed like the monarch's son or the MECA or the Kurds or et cetera, et cetera.
But really at the end of the day, the Israeli goal was to get in there and hammer the regime,
kill the Supreme Leader.
And killing the Supreme Leader, I think, was twofold.
I mean, basically it killed the guy that was restraining the nuclear program.
And so now there's a more compelling case to make that, hey, look, if they have anything that even resembles any kind of enrichment or any nuclear component,
they're going to make a bomb because actually probably now they will because we killed the one
restrainer. Actually, we killed several of the restrainingers. I say we, I mean, between us and the
Israelis, we will all be blamed for it. But really, the entire Israeli goal was just to launch this to
topple the regime at any cost, because they know the time is short. They know that they're losing a lot
of support on both sides of the aisle in America. And so for them, timing was of the essence, and they
basically work out the details later. Get us deeply entrenched in this thing as fast as they can.
and after that,
they basically met their main strategic objective.
Everything else is just a matter of getting us to stay committed to the fight.
Yeah.
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All right.
So I want to get back to the state of the war over there in a minute,
but I have to tell you I've been thinking about you a bit for the last year or so here,
knowing that you're up there running the counterterrorism center
at a time where I am completely paranoid to the point where I'm,
point where I need to take pills or something about the danger of bin Ladenite blowback terrorism
in this country. And yes, I know you know, we all know that the bin Ladenite factions overall,
these Wahhabi, Salafi factions most often work for the United States, Britain, and Saudi Arabia,
going around being mercenaries, killing people and taking over Syria and fighting in Bosnia
and Chechnya and wherever Bill Clinton or Joe Biden need them, Republicans too. But also,
these are the guys who kill Americans.
And when al-Qaeda turned against the United States in the 1990s,
I know a lot of people think that that was all puppetry and an inside job kind of thing,
but I don't think so.
I think Bill Clinton was backing them here while they're backing them there while they're attacking us here
and continued to do that.
And their primary motivating factor for attacking the United States with support for Israel
and Israel's mandated policy, of course, of dual containment from the bases in Saudi Arabia.
But so then after the two years of war plus in the U.S.
Gaza Strip and the horrific slaughter of 70,000 plus people in that war, it seems like Americans
must be, you know, greatly susceptible to this kind of terrorism. And then now add on top of that
the Shiites who, you know, Trump and I guess Israel assassinated not just their political leader,
but they're one of their highest-ranking religious leaders in the world in the Ayatollah cominy.
and I know Sistani so far has not issued a fatwa against us all,
but if people think of like the fatwa against Salman Rushdie
where they said kill this author,
well, what did they did not do then was do that to all of us?
It was just that one guy, right?
But they could do that.
Sistani could say, all true believers fight,
and we would have a whole new fight on our hand.
So can you please address,
don't get yourself thrown in prison for telling me secrets or anything,
but tell me about how justified is my paranoia.
about bin Ladenite terrorism in this country right now.
And then also please add on top of that,
any worries about Shiite terrorism in this country?
And, you know, there are kind of oftentimes in right-wing media
rumors about Hezbollah sleeper cells and that kind of thing.
But that's not impossible.
So I don't know.
Tell me.
Yeah, I mean, there's a lot there.
I would say, you're right.
The bin Ladenite selfie Wahhabists, lohabists,
unfortunately because we're so consumed right now with this war in Iran, there's several places
where they are predominantly, I would say, in Yemen, also what's taking place in Syria needs
to be monitored, but we're not paying as much attention to those areas as we should be,
and we have active al-Qaeda cells, active al-Qaeda organizations there that are very threatening,
and they exist solely, especially in Yemen, AQAP, exists solely to attack the homeland.
And they don't do that by infiltrating covert cells anymore.
to my knowledge, what they do is they reach out and they inspire. I'm going to walk the
as Inspire magazine, but they're using social media as a way to reach out and to inspire people.
The majority of the terror attacks that we had last year, they were not done by someone who had
traveled overseas and then come here to attack us in some sort of a sleeper cell. They were
inspired to action. Most of them cited what was taking place in Gaza, because a lot of the
propaganda coming out of Gaza, a lot of the media coming out of Gaza was just so graphic and
inspired people to action, and they actually cited that in their manifestos or the last wills
we're going to call them. So that is very concerning. And that combined with the wide open border
that we had under the previous administration, we frankly just don't know who came into our country.
Over the last four years, I publicly testified that we had identified a potential 18,000
known suspected terrorists who had gained access to the country. Basically, the further we dug into
the books of what took place with immigration over the last four years, I realized like the less
we knew. There just wasn't any accurate data. There was limited amounts. I didn't say there
was any, but there was limited amounts of accurate data. But that wide open board just presents
such a potential for actual radicals to infiltrate our country and then at the time and place
they're choosing to carry out attacks. But in terms of blowback terrorism, I think we've already
started to see it in the last two weeks. We've had several terror attacks here at home that they appear
right now to have been inspired by what was taking place in Iran. That.
As you indicated, we took out an Iranian Shia cleric, the Ayatollah.
For many, he was the number one.
He was essentially their version of the Pope.
We took around that.
The Israelis killed him.
President Trump said that, hey, we were a part of doing that as well.
So I think there is a high potential for blowback terrorism.
And again, while most of our resources are focused right now on the fight in the Persian Gulf
and against Iran and in that region, we are kind of taking our eye off the bull.
all on the threats to the homeland that we should be focused on.
So there is a lot to be concerned with there.
I think we've got our work cut out for us here at the homeland.
I think that's where our focus should be, not on picking new flights overseas.
And I think your overall point, I've heard you make this many, many times.
I think it's very accurate.
Just the amount of blowback terror that we receive because of our support for the state of
Israel, that's going to be addressed as well, too.
And at the end of the day, it's not really about any love or affinity for anyone.
It's like, hey, is this relationship worth it at the end of the end of the day?
the day? Are we getting more than we're having to pay a cost for? I think that's worth discussing.
Yeah. On the first day of the war, a terrorist went and killed three innocent people drinking at the
bar in my hometown, Austin, Texas, wounded 15 more. And he just happened to pick a spot where there's
cops everywhere. So they were able to corner him. But, you know, you know better than me as a
former special operator and whatever, but any man could tell you, that'd be really easy for
any man to kill a lot of people if he's willing to die trying.
And there's this entire nation from Bangor to Bangor is, there is a lot of soft targets of
innocent civilians standing around everywhere.
The only way to protect us from terrorism is to not do this kind of thing over there and
not motivate.
And I'm not saying, yes, we should have open borders.
We certainly should not be bringing these people into our country, potential terrorists
into our country.
The guy that attacked the synagogue the other day, they say,
that he was brothers with a Hezbollah guy.
I don't know if that's really true.
But if that is true, he should have never been allowed in the country in the first place.
And they absolutely, as Ron Paul said, if they ignored the danger, then they're putting the
people of this country in peril.
They think they just go around and do this stuff and that there won't be consequences because
they're absolutely will to.
And now I'm sorry, I know you've got to go and I'm almost up at the time while here too,
but I have to ask you really quick about these alleged Iranian assassination attempts against
Donald Trump. And my friend Ken Silva is a great reporter, and he's already shown that these are
complete nonsense. But then again, that was your job up there. So can you tell us whether it's really
true the Ayatollah put out a hit on Donald Trump leading up to this war?
After President Trump killed Qasem Soleimani, the Iranians were pretty vocal, that they wanted to
have vengeance for President Trump killing Qasem Soleimani. So there was a legitimate threat. Now,
in terms of how much resources the Iranians put behind it, that's up for a debate. So far, all we've found
is the trial of Asif Mershant that Silva covered. I think he did a great job of covering it.
So Asa Murchin was recruited by the Iranians, came over to America. We learned about it
ahead of time. So at the time he even got into America, the FBI basically put him under surveillance
and was able to have a confidential human source go befriend him. And so as Mershant was planning
this assassination against President Trump, kind of in a kind of clownish way.
I was still have to take it seriously.
He was planning it under the FBI's control, essentially.
I think that that should be looked at, that trial is done.
Can still was done a good job of covering it.
Mershot was arrested just two days before the assassination attempt in Butler.
And according to the FBI, the two events aren't linked.
Again, as I discussed last night on Tucker's show, there's still a lot of unanswered questions
if we've done our due diligence to truly see if there was any linkage between what Marchant had cooking and then also Thomas Crooks and everything that took place there.
The DHS IG has been blocked from investigating what's taking place in Butler.
So I think there's still a lot more work to do there, a lot of unanswered questions.
But that was about the most serious threat against the president's lack that I had seen.
But there was a very real.
The Iranians did threaten to kill President Trump.
that was real. The Iranians did seek to avenge Qasem Soleimani. Kassumai was a hero to the Iranian regime and
also to a lot of the Iranian people. So that part was real. Again, the amount of resources they
dedicated to it is kind of unknown. So far, all we can put our fingers, all we can put our finger on is
Mershant. And even the thread, it was not. Was it equivalent to like the Fatwa against Rushdie?
I don't believe there was ever a thought so. I'd have to go back and check. I'm
someone can research that, but to my knowledge, there was not a thought as well.
There was lots of, I had just kind of internet snack talking about they were going to kill him.
But, I mean, they did recruit a guy and send him over here.
So I think you have to take those threats very, very seriously because the Iranians have tried to kill,
they tried to kill a Saudi ambassador in Georgetown before.
That was a pretty serious plot they had.
That one was fake, too.
You know, I think we all got to look real close at Ken Silva's.
First of all, on the recent story here, on the timeline of who was recruited by who,
when, and who started telling what to which informants and all that, we should be really skeptical.
And then now the one against the ambassador in the Obama years, that was big.
The guy was the absent-minded car salesman from Corpus Christi who couldn't find his car keys
and was like caught on a phone call with Hezbollah drug dealers.
And they just embellished it into this plot.
When that ambassador wasn't even a member of the royal family, he was some kind of lackey.
no real point in them.
And then suppose this guy was going to blow up a restaurant or whatever.
I think the whole thing fell apart once Gareth Borders started looking at it,
as many of these stories often do.
Yeah, it's been a lot of stuff.
I've been looking at that one, so I'll take your word for it.
I, it's been a minute.
Yeah.
All right, well, listen.
Thank you.
Congratulations.
And thank you for doing the right thing and standing on principle and resigning over this war.
I'm sorry, I didn't get a chance to ask you about the choice to stay and make it less
worse or go ahead and stand on.
principal i know it was a difficult one for you and you're going to face a lot of heat even going
forward here but uh you obviously did the right thing and i really appreciate it appreciate your time in
the show joe absolutely scott thank you so much this scott horton show is brought to you by the
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