The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - The Iran War Expert: I Simulated The Iran War for 20 Years. Here’s What Happens Next
Episode Date: March 12, 2026White House war advisor ROBERT PAPE reveals why Trump is trapped in a war with Iran, the risk of a nuclear breakout, the role of China in the conflict, and how the US is losing control of the Middle E...ast. Robert Pape is a renowned political scientist and director of the Chicago Project on Security and Threats. He has advised every White House since 9/11 on military strategy and is the author of Bombing to Win: Air Power and Coercion in War. He explains: ▪️The 3 stages of the escalation trap locking the US into war ▪️Why precision smart bombs trick leaders into strategic failure ▪️The hidden reality of Iran's 400kg enriched uranium stockpile ▪️How killing the Supreme Leader made the Iranian regime more resilient ▪️The pattern that connects Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran Enjoyed the episode? Share this link and earn points for every referral - redeem them for exclusive prizes: https://doac-perks.com Follow Robert: X - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/CACnkUs LinkedIn - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/EhIzCvZ Substack - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/AtTbkWq The Diary Of A CEO: Join DOAC Circle - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/EVyBm53 The Diary Of A CEO book - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/67654nf The 1% Diary - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/2mrbk7t Conversation Cards - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/Ex8Yc9b Get email updates - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/7Az7mkJ Follow DOAC on Instagram - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/6KoLc6C Sponsors: Stan - Visithttps://coach.stan.store?ref=SB&utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=youtube (https://coach.stan.store/?ref=SB&utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=youtube) Fiverr - https://fiverr.com/diary and get 10% off your first order when you use code DIARY Wispr - Get 14 days of Wispr Flow for free at https://wisprflow.ai/steven
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You've been running simulations on a war with Iran.
Yep, every strategy for 20 years, and it's playing out right now.
So I can tell you that we are losing control of the situation.
Like, we don't know where that nuclear material is.
But they have the material for 16 nuclear buck, and we've given them every incentive to develop them.
Professor Robert Pape might be the single most important, credible person we all need to listen to right now.
The Supreme Leader that we took out was, again.
against nuclear weapons.
The new supreme leader, and he's way more aggressive.
He's advised two decades of presidents in the White House.
President Trump is really stuck, but he thrives in chaos.
And spent 30 years building the curriculum that trains the Air Force for the exact type of war
that's taking place now in Iran.
And one of the most mind-blowing things I've learned is that there are three stages to this
conflict.
Unfortunately, Professor Robert Pape, who has two decades of being correct with his predictions,
gives a 75% chance that Trump is about to escalate to stage three.
In this episode, we're going to explain exactly what this means.
Just give me 30 seconds of your time.
Two things I wanted to say.
The first thing is a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show
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We're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to, and we're going to continue to keep doing all of the things you love about this show.
Thank you.
Professor Robert Pate, what the hell is going on in the world?
No, I should ask first.
Who are you and what have you spent the last several decades of your life studying and doing?
And how does that relate to what's happening in the world right now?
We are going through a crisis more and very intense right now,
but it's a crisis that we have been through before.
20 years ago with the Iraq War, even before that,
we saw the bombing of Gaddafi, we saw the reactions there.
Now, I have been studying military strategy, air power, international terror,
now terrorism inside the United States and also political violence in the United States.
It's not related to particular groups.
So I've been studying political violence for 40 years.
What is the headline that people need to be aware of when you've looked at 30 years of these
types of wars?
That bombs don't just hit targets.
They change politics.
What does that mean?
That means that before the bombs fall, and even as the bombs are falling now,
we tend to focus on the tactical success of bombing.
We tend to ask, did the bombs hit the targets?
And with the smart bomb age, it's almost mesmerizing.
They hit the target and destroy the target, crater dirt, crater concrete, destroy buildings
90% of the time.
The problem is, wars are not just about the hardware.
They're not just about the military operation of putting a bomb on a target.
They're about politics.
And when the bombs start to fall, the politics in both the target, the enemy, change, and the politics in the attacker, the initiator, change.
And that threshold is the beginning of what I'm calling the escalation trap.
Because you get at stage one, tactical success often.
What's missing here is the next consideration, which is policy.
politics. Who have you advised, and at what level have you advised them on strategy, war,
etc., etc? So when I finished my PhD, right away, we started to fight the first Gulf War,
which was an all-air power war. And I found my work from the 1980s suddenly more relevant than ever.
I was in the Washington Post, USA Today, Frontline designing the stories because we didn't have the
talking military heads at the time. And then I get a call from the U.S. Air Force. And they're asking me
to come in and help not just teach, but to build the curriculum. Then what happens as time goes on,
I end up advising every White House from 2001 to 2024, including the first Trump White House.
I also heard that you've been running simulations on a war with Iran.
Yep, the last class of every strategy for 20 years. In fact, we did it.
just last May, just before we started the bombing and 90 minutes.
So the class goes a whole quarter strategy in all kinds of different ways.
We ended with the bombing of Iran.
And what did that mean?
That meant we took out the whole target.
We have the targets that laid out.
We have the attack plans.
We really go through the bombing of Natanz, Fordo, Esophon.
There's a number of these facilities and so forth.
And then we play out, and then we look at what's going to happen.
And what you see right away is 90 plus percent, those B-2s are going to destroy those targets.
B-2s being the aircraft.
The stealthy aircraft that can penetrate the airspace, very few risk, small risk of loss.
And then you see, but we don't know where the nuclear material is.
The whole point of this is not to destroy a building.
it's to get at the 5% 20%, 60% enriched uranium that's the material for bombs.
And last May, it was very clear they had the material for 16 bombs.
Now, not...
60 nuclear bombs.
1-6.
Nuclear bombs.
Yes, nuclear bombs, not to produce them all in a single week, but over a period of months.
And then after we did that simulation, we didn't know where a single ounce was.
And we weren't going to know for months after.
So at the end of every, I make some predictions.
I say, what's going to happen?
What's going to happen is after about a year, we are going to panic because that material
could be dispersed anywhere in Iran, anywhere in that country.
And that country, look how big that is compared to the United States, could be dispersed
anywhere now, and how many of those are actually developing toward a bomb? We will not know.
So what will we do? Regime change. From all of your years, I mean, 31 years old, you start
teaching about air power and war in this regard, and you are 65 now. Yeah. What is the, from everything
you know, 30 plus years studying this stuff, Iran, running simulations on Iran, advising the White
House being a master and probably arguably the most informed person in the United States right now
about air attacks like the one the U.S. performing on Iran. What is the headline that you're
trying to send to the world at this moment in time? What is it we're missing? Because we're
seeing Trump come out and Trump say it's going well. Everything's amazing. We've taken out all their
guys. What is, what are we missing? We're missing that we're stuck in a trap of our own making.
I'll explain what that trap is. But the key consequence of the trap is we're losing
control. We are losing control of the situation. And what you were seeing with President Trump is he's
trying to regain control. Now, the problem is that starting not just a week of Saturday, but starting back
in June when we took out Natanz Fordo, we started to lose control. And what are we losing
control of knowing where that nuclear material is? And we now have to, and we now have to, you know,
civilian satellites and you can see them moving things, what would they be moving around the
nuclear areas? I wonder, you think they're moving the, you know, what are they moving here?
It's most likely going to be that nuclear material because their plan, you can see they have
prepared for this war just as we have, except they've been preparing for how to be
resilience, how to now lash back in increasingly aggressive ways. They are winning the escalation
part of the war, and that's not an accident. This you can see coming in stages.
For anyone that doesn't know, we've got leaders that have different levels of sort of information
and knowledge here. I'm going to try and summarize this and butcher it in the most indelicate way
possibly can. So earlier
last year, last year
the United States
suspected that Iran were
very close to enriching uranium.
They're at 60%. They're at 60 already.
If they get to 90%, they have
a bomb. Yes, but
possibly even with the 60%
Stephen, it depends on just
how good their scientists are and we're not really
sure. So there's somewhere,
we're at 60%, we're already very
worried. You go to 90,
it's a gimmee. And then
The United States dropped these big bunker buster bombs.
They flew those B2 airplanes in, dropped these bombs, smashing up the site.
And then it felt like it was over.
And then the United States went into negotiations with Iran to try and get some kind of deal done.
To get the material we didn't get.
You see, why are we even talking to them?
If this has really obliterated the program, why are we bothering to talk to them?
What exactly are we talking about here?
Do you notice the inconsistency here?
So when you say we thought it was over, that's the public.
Now, the public, you need to understand, they're very busy people.
They're deploying for the price of eggs, okay?
So they're not supposed to be able to be up on this.
It's a good point I've never thought about.
Why would we be talking to them?
Why are we talking to them, you see?
So right from the get-go.
And by the way, all of the Israelis, it's the Israelis, we have a thing called the Defense Intelligence Agency.
There are reports that were done after the bomb.
were leaked, and they all say the same thing, which is we created holes.
We probably shook these underground chambers.
We're not sure because we had no eyeballs on that, but we have no idea where that enriched uranium is.
And we have good reason to worry they got them out because we actually have a satellite
picture that shows two days before we bomb Fordow.
There's a bunch of trucks moving stuff out.
gee, what do you think you might move out if America's about to bomb your site?
Again, I don't think they're moving out the popcorn.
So, and it's pretty, this material can be moved in what looked like large scuba tank.
They call them scuba tanks, but I try to show pictures of this, too.
They're actually like as large as this table.
So you need basically trucks.
Trucks like that satellite photography shows they took out.
So we can't say for sure.
but what you see is these are the indications that you worry they've dispersed the material even before we hit the site.
And then we attack.
The United States attacks in February, February, 26, February 2026, February 28, we start again.
This time with regime change.
Notice we don't go even after the nuclear material.
We don't know where it is.
So for the average person, the average person would think if you take out the Supreme Leader, then
the war is over. Drop the bomb on the person and the war is complete. Yeah. So let's talk about your
jinga thing here because what I find, Stephen, so keep in mind, I am advising, teaching some of the
most brilliant minds in the country. Now, a lot of these smart people, though, they don't know that
they've been given like one inch deep briefings, maybe even one sentence briefings. So their image
is often like this, and it's wrong.
This is what they think the regime looks like.
And they think that because they've been given,
they basically have been consuming probably for years,
one or two sentences about the structure,
they know there's a Supreme Leader,
they might know there's nuclear facilities, missiles command,
and so it looks like, oh, my goodness gracious,
that if you could just simply take out the right node,
you would be able to make this whole thing fall down.
Okay?
But that's the wrong image, Stephen.
This is the way smart people think.
The problem is this is a false image of most regimes, even the bad ones, and certainly
the Iranian regime.
Let me just focus on the Iranian regime.
The Iranian regime is more like a matrix.
It's more, it's not brittle the way this is.
So you can keep trying to.
to pull things out. But with a matrix, or I think the corporate structures now are built to be
adaptive to change because you have so many changes that happen, the structure needs to adapt to
change. That is basically the structure of revolutionary regimes going back to before World War I.
Okay, I want to ask a dumb question.
Yep.
When they took out the Supreme Leader in Iran, who's going to give out the instructions?
The adaptive system adapts and fills in the holes. It fills in the holes usually with what's left. And in this case, the supreme leader that we took out, this particular hole. This was the guy who had two fought was they're called these are religious edicts. It's like a people edict against nuclear weapons. It's a religious.
He's the leader of essentially the religion, a little bit like the Shia Pope.
He is actually issuing religious doctrine, and that's called a fatwa.
And as a religious doctrine, he issued two that said Iran should not have nuclear weapons.
The guy we killed was one of the guardrails against nuclear weapons.
How does that, he was developing them in his country?
No, no, he's developing the enrichment material.
they hadn't been fashioned yet that we know of as nuclear weapons.
Okay.
So we're worried about, again, this enrichment going from 5% to 20% to 60%,
but they hadn't actually taken that next step, which is more of an engineering step,
to develop the nuclear weapon.
Now we took out the person who at the very tippy top was balancing the hawks and doves,
and he had decided for decades to issue this,
These fought was. He did it not just once, but twice. His son, who took over the new supreme leader, no thought. Well, yeah, that thought would die with this guy. So will the new leader come in? It's not clear. He's got the religious authority to do anything like what his father did. This is a very different world. And he's known to be way more aggressive than his father. He's been in charge of the, the, basically the police that, like,
like to go and kill the protesters. He's been the guy who's been very, very strongly supporting,
if not leading that particular effort. And last night it was announced that he has been
appointed as the new leader. He's the new supreme leader. Did Trump expect this?
I think that he expected it because he kept trying to talk the Iranians out of it. This is what
he meant by last week when President Trump was saying that he wanted
not this guy, he specifically said, not the son.
And then he had a problem because people kept pushing him.
And they said, okay, well, if you don't like the son, who would you pick?
And he said, well, it is a problem because when we killed the Supreme Leader,
we killed around the leader 20 or 30 others who we actually thought were better.
So we actually took out the best alternatives when we killed when the Supreme Leader was killed.
And so everybody's scratching their heads, gone, what are we?
talking about here. So we actually helped the, by killing the competitors to the sun.
We made it more likely the sun. And so what I'm trying to explain, Stephen, is this adapts,
okay, so that you're not really taking these pieces out. You're rearranging them. And you are
moving up, in this case, you're moving up. The next Supreme Leader? Well, there's the Supreme
leader, but what we're not showing here, you're seeing the target sets that are being discussed.
You're not seeing the Revolutionary Guard.
What is that?
That is part of the army.
Iran has a million men in arms, a million.
That's as many as we have in our 300 million people.
They have 92 million.
They have a million in arms.
And about 150 or 200,000 of them are what are called the Revolutionary Guards.
These are the most aggressive, the most well-trained.
These are the most dedicated to the regime.
The son, who we just took over, is the prime candidate for that group.
So when we took out a link here, it's not just being replaced by another cock.
It's being replaced by a very aggressive individual who's backed by some of the most aggressive
part of that million-man army.
So this is what I was trying to explain in my substacks, where when you take out the leader,
you may kill the leader, but you get in its place a harder regime, a more resilient
regime, a tougher regime that wants to lash back even more aggressively.
Because you killed dad.
You killed dad.
And also, if you don't lash back, how does the new leader get his credibility with everybody else?
If he's a wimp, why doesn't he get a bullet in the back of the head?
You see, just because he's appointed a new leader, he's still, just like when you're the head of a new company, like, let's say you take over a, there's a company that's in shambles and they get rid of their CEO and they bring you on, okay?
Well, you've got to have a plan, you see.
And if you don't have a plan to turn that thing around pretty soon, you know, Elon must have to have the big plan.
If you don't have that plan, guess what? You're out. Same here. So you have incentive structure here for not just replacing, not just wimpy replacements, certainly not pro-American replacements. You have incentives for lashing back against the attacker, which is why when we tried to kill Gaddafi in 1986, he lashes back and takes out Pan Am Flight 103 killing 200,
71 civilians, 190 Americans. When we try to take out the Milosevic regime to degrade it in March 99,
Milosevic lashes back, sending 30,000 ground forces into cleanse, that is, get rid of a million civilians in Kosovo.
This over and over. I mean, you have written books about suicide terrorism.
That's right. I've got one of them in front of me here called Dying to Win. So I mean, you know a lot about
this subject. And this is one of the concerns that actually my fiance had said to me. She said,
I explained to her. I was like, you know, Iran, they really just have drones at the moment.
So I think that's fine. And then she posed a question to me. She was like, yeah, but what about
suicide terrorism? Let me just explain. So here we are. Here is, of course, Iran. And imagine
it's back in June. So I'm going to start the story in June. This is the beginning of the smart
bomb, the escalation trap. Stage one. We hit Forde, which is right around there.
And then we hit Natanz and some other sites right around here.
And what does Iran do here?
They lash back and who are they lashing back against Israel here?
They have their missiles focused on Israel.
They're not really hitting our bases here.
They're hitting Israel and they send 3,000 Israelis to the hospital the most since the 73 war.
So a long time.
That is stage one, okay?
Now what happened when in February 28?
February 28, they're lashing back a bit against Israel for sure, but now they're at stage two.
This is why I published this piece today in Foreign Affairs about how Iran's winning the escalation war.
So it just came out just a few hours before we came on.
And what's happening here is I call it horizontal escalation.
Because what they're doing now is they're using drones, mostly a few missiles, but mostly drones.
This was almost all missiles, no drones.
And they're using their drone capacity, which they have a lot of, and it's precision.
These drones are like precision-guided weapons.
They go right to the target.
And what they're trying to do is break this coalition.
For anyone that can't see at the moment, they counted with horizontal escalation against Saudi Arabia, the UAE.
The coalition that had been formed against them, they're trying to break the coalition, you see.
And they may well do that.
Why would they want to break that?
Why are escaping Dubai at the moment?
I've got friends staying in my house in Cape Town because he doesn't want to be in there.
Because they want these countries to kick the Americans out of their country.
Okay.
Get rid of the embassies.
Get rid of the bases.
If you can, then we don't have the platforms to plaster them.
You see, these are our basically ground-based aircraft carriers.
I thought they were attacking Saudi Arabia, for example, because that will make Saudi Arabia
call Trump and say, listen, stop, please. We're losing our tourism. We're shutting our airport.
Well, they do want to, they are threatening the tourism hitting the economic nodes. They're
hitting hotels. They're hitting the airports. What they are trying to do is by threatening
tourism, which it varies from 5% to 10% of the GDP of these kind of. This is not trivial amounts here.
They're basically trying to drive wedges between these countries and America.
And America right now, I don't see any movement through Congress.
Where is this $100 billion going to the region to make up for their lost tourism?
I don't remember seeing that bill come through Congress last week.
So I'm just putting it a little humorously to point out, these countries are losing a fair bit right now.
And that tourism may not come back for a while.
I've got friends that have moved.
I've got friends that one of my friends was thinking about leaving
is now in my house in Cape Town,
and he's been there for five years.
He's leaving, and he's going to move to America.
I've got so many friends that I've called you.
And imagine that we have 500,000 American citizens here,
and we have the State Department on CNN.
Call this number.
We'll help you escape.
Even the media in the UK, you see it.
They're showing, like, the BBC showing like evacuations of UK citizens
as they've been greeted in the airport.
putting micro-cerns.
So this is putting a lot of pressure here, and there's something else that's not widely known,
which is there's a big gap between what the leaders of the countries want, willing to support
the U.S. and Israel and their publics.
You see, this coalition that's been built against Iran here is not clearly going down well with
publics.
These are publics.
They may not like Iran.
They may be Sunni and Iran-Shiah, but they don't want.
want to be part of an Israeli expansion plan where Israel is going to conquer more and more territory
and so forth. And so this is where the soft underbelly here of this, this isn't just about the
tourism. That's the short term. The longer term is bottom up pressure, Sadat. He was a leader of
Egypt in the 1970s. He cut a deal with Israel. It's called the Camp David Accords piece for land.
but it was very favorable.
Well, after Sadat did that, the president of Egypt, in 1981, in a military parade, his own security guards at the military parade,
marched with their guns, came up to his place, and they shot him dead.
So you don't, this is the real world here.
So this is very, very dangerous for these leaders.
Now, that's stage two.
Now, what happens if we decide to have one of these limited,
ground deployments here?
Because after all, we still don't know where this material is.
What does that mean?
So if anyone that doesn't know anything about the war, what does a ground deployment mean?
Because I saw Trump being asked about this on the plane yesterday, and he didn't seem to deny it
was going to happen.
It means you try to control a limited amount of space, say the space around Fordo or the nuclear
facility that you bombed in June.
And you would send the, say, 80-second airborne in to control the space.
What's this?
I don't know what.
I see. So 80-second airborne is a division that we have that's especially equipped to go into hostile area and land and control, say, airports, control space. Think about controlling all the size of LAX. So if you want to control LAX, you bring in the 80-second airborne. They will have 5,000 men and women, not just guys now, and they will come in and they will control that space LAX. But they will all. They will all.
also be doing this probably not for a day, not for even a week. They're going to have to spend
weeks and weeks to search for that material because we don't know where it is and it's all deeply
buried and a lot of the stuff has been, the entrances have been blown up. So this means long-term
presence there. You might also take some of the oil fields to cut off some of the money here for
the regime. That is where they,
that book comes in.
Do you think that's likely that America will put boots on the ground American soldiers in Iran?
I think it's at least 50, 50, if not immediately.
So people keep expecting the escalation to be continuous.
And then when there's a pause, as there was, between June and February, they think,
oh, it's over.
I'm going to go now worry about something else.
And believe me, there's plenty else to worry about it.
So we've got Minneapolis.
We've got plenty to worry about here, even with violence.
But that's not how escalation operates.
Escalation can have a ratchet effect that's spaced out by months of what seems like peace,
only to come right back and you're stuck in that escalation momentum.
Which is what we've seen.
Which is exactly what we've seen.
And for the reason I'm telling you, we don't know where that nuclear material is.
that has been the $64,000 weakness in this entire idea of using air power, not just in the last 10 days, going back to June.
It's not just even about the regime change.
It's about how are you going to get that nuclear material out?
We had a deal, this deal with Obama, Trump did not like it, but with that deal, that held.
And Iran took out almost all, virtually just only a tiny bit was left.
Not enough for a bomb.
All out of the country.
And we watched it.
We monitored it.
We had 24-7 cameras to monitor this.
We had human on-site inspections to monitor this.
2018, Trump just ripped it up, walked away unilaterally.
And from that point on, it's been peddled to the metal by Iran in upgrading that enriched uranium.
and that's how you got to that material that would be enough for the 16 bombs.
And right now, we don't know where that is.
So, stage one is...
Okay, stage one, you are beginning the escalation trap.
In this case, it's a smart bomb trap, because it's with smart bombs,
where you have tactical success near perfect.
Call it 100%, because it really is.
But that doesn't mean you have strategic success.
tactical success plus strategic failure. Then that strategic failure weighs on you over time because
the enemy still got the thing that you wanted to get in the first place. Now you do stage
two, which is regime change. Because after all, you've already hit the targets. You can make the
rubble bounce. But what more, that's why we didn't bomb them in the last 10 days. We might go back
and bomb for no some more. Okay. But we already bombed that. So there's a lot. So there's a
isn't what we're watching the bubble.
But now we're at stage two because what are your options?
The only other option is, well, let me get rid of the regime because then the regime
I will control and the next regime will just give us the material.
That's not working now.
And you hear today Trump is dancing trying to figure out what to say.
He doesn't want to say the war's over.
Okay.
Doesn't want to say the war's going on.
But the bottom line is we don't even, he won't even be clear about why we're fighting the
war anymore.
and I'm telling you there's a real problem.
The nuclear material is still there,
and it can still be fashioned into those 16 bombs over time.
So this is where then you get this horizontal escalation,
where now they've really, really working on this,
because now it's a long war.
They start attacking their neighbors.
And try to make it all.
The consequences go on for months.
So just imagine, when are your friends exactly going to move back?
So let's say the war is over tomorrow.
Are they moving back tomorrow?
No.
And when was last time, have you started to plan for your next vacation in Dubai?
I've been to do that.
I was planning speaking there in a month's time, but it's been canceled already.
Yeah, just start to think about that.
And, you know, minor thing like a drone attack could suddenly come out of nowhere.
You know, you're not even, you think it's, I'm just trying to point out that this is,
this is the world now that a lot of people, this was a luxury market.
This was the playground of the rich and famous here.
This is really now changing.
And it may come back a year or two from now, but it took two years.
for air travel to come back after 9-11.
Just think about that.
Now, we haven't gotten to stage three yet, which gets to your girlfriend's point.
How do we move from stage two to stage three?
Oh, well, because you still don't know where the nuclear material is.
And we don't have to move to stage beyond to stage three this week.
We could do it a month from now, six months from now.
The problem is we've now put in place a much more aggressive leadership, much more aggressive regime,
We've taken away some of what may have been guardrails.
We can't say for sure for the nuclear weapon.
This new regime much more likely.
And we've given them every incentive to develop the nuclear bomb.
We're killing them.
So what exactly is their incentive?
Their best way to survive is to have a nuclear weapon.
And you'll say, well, we're going to kill them.
Well, we're already killing them.
So we've taken away their incentive not to have a nuclear weapon.
So we will start to worry as each week goes by, not because we have great intel, not because our human, it's because of the opposite.
We don't have the exquisite intelligence we had with the Obama deal to know we had frozen the program.
Now that we have Swiss cheese at best.
And what we will see in the holes of the Swiss cheese are indications of nuclear development.
And that will make us worry because what has.
happens with a nuclear weapon? Is it going to go to Hezbollah? And is Hezboa going to help put it in
Haifa? What's going to happen with these, are they going to give it to the Houthis? So these are the
kind of worries we will have that will push us to the ground options. And that, that is with stage
three, the retaliation approaches the homeland. Is that realistic? If ISIS with its 30 to
40,000. Remember, ISIS was not a state. Iran is an actual state with 92 million people.
So if ISIS conformant command-directed, inspired suicide attacks and other attacks, in San Bernardino,
just to kind of bring it a little bit closer to home here across the United States. Paris,
remember the big Paris attack? So why exactly is Iran not if, I mean, ISIS was a lot weaker than Iran?
Do you think in Iran at the moment, they're working on that?
They're working on a terrorist attack.
Well, I don't, I think that my work tells me that it's most likely to come with the presence of the ground forces by us.
It doesn't mean it's a necessary condition, but it's just most likely.
Russia, 96, with our help, we played a trick on them, assassinated the Chechen leader.
It's a leader of its Republican in Russia called Chechnya, Dudaev.
only a million people.
And Russia killed the guy, and we actually have pictures of him seeing the missile hitting him,
because we can put the cameras right in the nose cone.
Then the new guy took over.
His name was Basiev.
And he launched within three months, not the next week, Operation Jihad.
And his Operation Jihad was much more vicious tactics, kicked the Russian forces,
Russia is a big country.
You know, 100, almost 200 million people compared to this little province of a million,
kicked the Russians out after three months,
launches waves of suicide attacks, massive kidnappings here.
This really went on for years and years.
So when you say, are they planning it?
I don't think it's quite right, Stephen.
It's not like they have the detailed plan they're about to execute.
They have the next wave of,
possibilities, which would come, I think, most likely was stage two.
So stage three.
So as this is expanding, as the war expands, it will go global.
Really?
You are already seeing it global with the supply chain, and you're seeing it with the oil.
So that's already happening.
So what Iran said today, the response to Trump's press conference today, that just
literally happened before we came on, is, okay, we will allow Gulf states your oil tankers
to come through if you kick the Americans out. So kick the Americans out and we'll let you pass.
If you don't. If you don't, we got drones. So they didn't put that in there, but everybody
knows they got drones. And again, if you were explaining this to a 16-year-old, just to keep it
super simple, there's this passageway across the water where a lot of the oil tankers go.
Yep, it's straight of Hormuz. Hormuz. Yeah. And it sounded like the tankers are refusing to go
through there at the moment. Oh, sure, because one has been hit, but it only takes one to be hit
with a drone, only one, because the people driving those tankers here, they're doing it for a
paycheck, not a bullet. They're not really wanting to die for this. This isn't a nationalist
cause to ship the oil. Explain why it matters to the world. If oil doesn't go through this
straight of Humu's, what matters? What happens? Yeah, well, we can talk about it in like technical
terms, but the big thing to say is this is what's going to increase the price of gas at the pump.
And it's already gone up. When you cut the flow of the oil, it has global effects. It doesn't
just affect this little region here. It doesn't just affect China over here. It affects everybody.
And that's why the Europeans are starting to freak out because this, every government
worries about, we talk about affordability. That's about to change.
And is this your point about how it changes the politics at home? Because people, someone goes to the pump today. They go, why is the oil higher?
That's right. Why is the, we just came, we now have 4.4% unemployment. If we, and President Trump was trying to say it's all getting better, the interest rates are going down, well, that all predicated on us not having inflation. You see, when the oil is cut, the inflation goes up, the affordability becomes a problem.
problem. That is what is panicking a lot of the businesses right now because they're going to
lose business. And it's a problem of risk. It's not just about the damage. So a little, a few of
these drones can have an inordinate effect on risk. Now, let's bring in another piece,
which is Russia, we find out, is providing targeting intelligence to Iran, much the way we provide
targeting intelligence to Ukraine to hit targets in Russia. And what does that mean? That means
those drones, which are precision-guided, now can more easily find exactly which ship to hit.
Do we know that Russia are doing that?
We've got it pretty well-confirmed from, yeah, you would hear much more pushback here.
And what you're hearing from Secretary Hegsef is not, it's not happening. You're saying,
oh, no, well, it's not over-worry. No, it's happening. And they're
worried because that's the, again, the dancing around. They're not denying the fact that it's
actually happening. I think Trump actually when asked, said something, words to the effect of,
I wouldn't blame them because that's what we do to them. Exactly. Exactly. And why is he
talking to Putin today? He's not talking. He was just on the phone with Putin before he did his
press conference. What's he talking to Putin about? That intel, I'm sure. And maybe cutting a deal,
which is we'll deny the Ukrainians the intel. If you deny, you.
You see, this is the cascading effects that the politics dominates the tactics.
And that's exactly what Trump said.
He said on March the 7th, when asked about Russia teaming up with Iran on intelligence,
he said, if we asked them, they'd say, we do it against them.
Wouldn't they say that?
We do it against them?
It's almost justifying it.
Trump often just speaks his mind.
Sometimes he kind of hides things, but sometimes.
often he speaks his mind. And what you're seeing here is this is the natural thing. Russia is
what's good for the goose, good for the gander. They're doing the same thing to us that we've done to
them. And they have, and they're doing it to hurt us, you see. So rather than just spasmodically or spasm
response here, which we often think the foes we're up against her stupid. We essentially think
they're dumb. We call that irrational. But what's really happening,
Stephen is since the Vietnam War, we have been up against foes that have understood something about
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lose, we lost the long game. Fifty-eight thousand dead, no end in sight, a forever war. What are we
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What do you think happens next?
If you had to, no fence sitting,
if you had to predict what you think happens next,
what would you predict?
Well, I say this at the end of the Foreign Affairs article
that just literally came out a couple hours ago,
which is President Trump is on the horns of a dilemma.
And he has no golden off-ram.
He's looking for off-rams,
but there's no golden one where he comes out politically ahead.
So he's got a choice, sometimes called a Hobbesian choice.
a Hobson choice, where you cut your losses, accept political loss now, and right now, if he
pulls back, and what does it mean to pull back? You've got to pull your forces back. It's not
enough to say you're just doing a pause. If you want to stop, if you want to stop for real,
you take those aircraft carriers and you send them out somewhere. You send them to Asia,
you send them here. You got to actually make, you got to do something here. So choice one is you
stop your bombing campaign, you cut your losses, you do your best to say we just wanted to destroy
missiles, even though nobody will believe it. Okay. But that means you accept a modest loss now,
or the other is you double down and you go on for more weeks, go on for more weeks, hoping you'll
kill this leader and maybe the next one won't be so bad. Or you'll have some other sort of outcome
that you can't imagine.
And Trump is nothing.
I call him a chaos kid.
He thrives in chaos.
And he often comes out of this with something happening like when, you know, sort of down the road,
you didn't expect it.
He probably didn't expect it.
But in this case, the price is more likely going to be a political failure of the first
order because we have the midterms coming.
So if he's got a choice, stop now, cut your losses except a limited political defeat
or double down, go on for a few months, go through more stages of this smart bomb trap I'm explaining.
And you're really now in Lyndon Johnson territory.
Remember I mentioned before where in Vietnam, he kept escalating, kept moving up the escalation ladder, every rung.
He said, well, no, we have escalation dominance.
We're just going to double down.
We're going to hit them harder the next time.
We're going to do this the next time.
Sound familiar.
And then what happened is it became absolutely clear that this was.
going nowhere and the 68 election came was coming. And Wyndon Johnson's own Democrats said,
Mr. President, we can't ride your horse into that. We got to do something. And the problem is
they didn't pull the plug fast enough here. That's how they lost. They don't, they, they don't
pull the plug fast enough. So you end up having a bigger loss later. When you talk about the
underbelly that the United States has where they can't prolong these wars, am I right in thinking
this is basically a function or a consequence of living in a democracy?
I think it's a function of a war of choice.
So when we were attacked in Pearl Harbor, we were attacked.
We were reluctant to get in World War II.
And we didn't get in until we were actually struck at Pearl Harbor.
That was enough to really make us anger.
We were pissed off as a country, okay?
And we were going to get payback, not just for a month,
but we were getting some real payback here.
And that's how vicious that island hopping campaign was
and why it was so vicious here.
And that went on and on.
And when we ended the war in dropping those atomic bombs,
22% of the American public wanted us to forget the Japanese surrender
and drop more atomic bombs.
22%.
We were that angry.
So when we are attacked first,
we have the politics in our advantage.
when we do a war of choice, we can make up all the reasons why it was a good idea to start, throw the first punch.
They were going to hit us.
We were going to.
But when we throw that first punch first, that's a war of choice.
And this puts the politics in the other camp's advantage.
And that's the problem that we're facing here.
Iran didn't hit us first.
They didn't hit us first in June.
They didn't hit us first before that.
So on this point.
of war of choice.
Yeah.
And there's really two questions our front of mind.
One is, was Trump right that if he didn't attack,
then they would have enriched uranium,
they would have made a nuclear weapon,
and that would have put not just the region,
but the world at danger, in your view.
And then the second one is this sort of ongoing debate
around the role of Israel in this war.
And I think it was Marco Rubio that came out
and I think maybe accidentally said
that the reason why they attacked Iran,
was because they heard that Israel were about to attack Iran.
So let's go back to the Friday the day before we start the bombing campaign.
This is February 27, literally 315 Washington time.
That's when Trump makes the go decision.
But what is he choosing between?
He has an offer on the table from Iran for a better deal than the Obama deal for America.
And it is not absolutely perfect.
They still want to have some minor enrichment to, but verifications lots of things here.
Now, maybe it's still not perfect, but President Trump has a choice on that Friday afternoon.
He can go back and he can work this deal.
He can, you know, after all, dealmaker, right?
Let's assume he's good at dealmaking.
So we can go back and work the deal.
But that's not what he does.
What he does is he throws that deal away.
and also the Supreme Leader, when he killed,
that's the Supreme Leader, was on board with that deal too.
And what do we do instead?
We go through regime change.
So the choices here, Stephen, were before we got to stage two,
we were in stage one, stage one, we had hit Fordo,
there were negotiations, and Iran's coming up with a better deal than the Obama deal.
And what does he do?
goes to stage two instead. So I don't think this is, this story you're hearing they were going to do
X, Y, or Z is there was a deal on the table. Why did Rubio say that then? Why did he say that they
attack because Israel were going to attack? Okay, I want to play this video, which is what I'm referring to.
Okay. If we stood and waited for that attack to come first before we hit them, we would suffer much
higher casualties. And so the president made the very wise decision. We knew that there was going to be
an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces. And we knew that
if we didn't preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties
and perhaps even higher those killed. And then we would all be here answering questions about
why we knew that and didn't act. So what that shows you is that it's the tail wagging the dog,
that Israel is going to attack, as I'm saying, just happened in June.
It's a replay of what happened in June.
Israel may well have, we don't know why Israel decided to attack and kill the Supreme
Leader.
It was actually Israeli bombs who killed the Supreme Leader.
And also those other replacement leaders as well.
But Israel may well have been thinking that, my goodness, Trump is getting too close to a deal.
That's what happened in June.
Trump was on the edge of a deal with Iran.
And then Israel goes and kills the negotiation.
You see. So just think about that for a moment.
Trump is negotiating with the Iranians. And then they say, well, okay, come back the next day.
And what is there the next day? Israeli bombs killing them.
So, I mean, that's not a great way to handle a partnership.
Well, it's just showing you we had another choice. We could have told Israel not to do it.
We could have told Israel, if you do this, we're going to cut off all your military aid for the next three years.
that would put some pressure on Israel.
Now, then Trump would have to pay a price politically.
So I'm not saying that's an easy thing to do.
Don't get me wrong.
But we need to understand that these are the pressures for escalation in the escalation trap.
So I'm trying to explain why this isn't just randomly happening, Steve.
And it's not like, oh, my goodness, I can't follow what's occurring.
So that's why when Trump says in today's briefing, talks,
about stopping the air campaign, is he going to stop Israel's campaign? That's the question it did not
come up today. It's in my, I put it on my accent. One of the big questions that did not come up is
President Trump, are you going to call Netanyahu and tell him to stop bombing Iran?
Does Trump control Netanyahu in your view? Well, again, it's about pressures here. It's about
what are the ways you don't. It's not about a matter of like a personal loyalty relationship. This is
politics of the first order. That's what I'm trying to explain. So for President Trump to stop
Netanyahu from doing this, this will be paying a price. He will have a, there are a big part of his
mega constituency, very pro, not just Israel, pro Netanyahu version of Israel. So this is the
tension in the politics that I'm trying to explain, which is why you don't really want to
start the trap in the first place. And I asked you a second ago, no fence sitting.
what happens next in this world based on everything you've studied for the last 30 years,
the 20 years of doing situations?
I think it's more likely than not that maybe not in the next week or two.
I've said on my sub-sec, it's more likely than not,
we will get to a limited ground deployment here because of the fizzle,
because of the enriched material that is floating around,
and we know it's dispersing, we know it's dispersing,
we don't know where it is,
and there could be literally hundreds,
of rooms not much bigger than this size,
maybe two or three times this size that we're in,
that could be used to fashion a fat man-style A-bomb.
Not to miniaturize it to put on a warhead.
That would be more sophisticated.
But if what you want to do is you want to have a Hiroshima bomb
that can kill 75,000 people in a second or 10 seconds,
that is what they are in the...
That's what we're talking about here.
We're not talking about can they put miniaturize the bomb to put it on the nose cone of a war of a missile.
This is, they don't need it.
That's very sophisticated stuff.
We couldn't do that for 10 years.
So I guess there's two questions that come to mind.
The first is to understand someone's behavior, you have to like understand their motivations.
And I think a lot about like where Trump is in his career,
legacy, how much that matters to him. It appears, from what I've seen, the whole thing around him
wanting to win the Nobel Peace Prize, the Peace Board, the being the president that stops all the,
it appears that he's thinking about how he's going to be remembered. And when I'm looking at some of
his interviews recently, he's saying things like, I don't want it to be the case that in 10 years' time
or in five years time, the US have to go back in again because, like, I didn't do a good job.
And it made me start to believe that actually one of his, one of the reasons why we might escalate
this war further from a United States.
perspective, is because legacy changes in hindsight.
And if we think about George W. Bush, I think you're putting your finger on it, Stephen.
George W. Bush's legacy now is, like, completely tarnished because of this war and actually
how it ended.
Yep.
It's a mistaken hindsight.
But also now mirror image that to the Iranians.
Why aren't they thinking about their legacy?
Think about that for a moment.
Sure.
Why would the Supreme Leader, 86 years old, decide.
He's not going to take too many more precautions.
How many more months does he have cancer, apparently?
How many more months does he got?
How does he want to go out?
How does he really want to go out?
What's he want to be remembered for?
A coward?
Or does he want to be remembered as somebody who stood up for Iran, the revolution,
the whole thing he built his whole life for?
You talk about Trump.
So when I get into behind, when the cameras go off and I get a chance to, again,
let's just say go to the West Wing.
I'm not seeing people being picky, minor, petty.
I see them worried about their legacy.
The national security advisors, their assistants,
they're worrying about their legacy.
Do they want to go down in the history of American history as X, Y, or Z?
And this is how humans are.
It doesn't stop with, like, how much money do you have?
It's what's going to happen with your legacy.
So with that in mind, if you think Trump is legacy motivated, does that increase the...
In part. I want to be careful. In part. It's always a balance. You can't be reelected. So I'm like, that's not motivating him.
Because, you know, you play differently if you think you can win a second term, which I knew would be important to him.
But if he is legacy motivated now, when you think about which direction he's going to go in, it does appear on the balance of things that he's not going to want it to be left a mess.
And the biggest mess that could really embarrass him in his legacy with international is if Iran has a nuclear bomb and they detonate a test, say, next September.
Let's just imagine what would happen next September.
So people need to think about, see, the discussion of Iran and nuclear bombs here is not very strategic.
It's to scare you.
It's, oh, they're going to get a bomb and the first one's going to go on television.
the second one's going to go on New York.
I don't think that's the sequence.
Why would they, if they're willing to commit suicide to take out Tel Aviv, they don't need
16 bombs, okay?
If they're willing to have their entire population destroyed by, they just need one bomb,
take out Tel Aviv, they're done, right?
That's not what's going on.
They're following the North Korea plan.
The North Korea plan, the North Korea figured out when we went through this with North
Korea in the 90s, okay, the very same thing, except we didn't do the bomb.
because it was not going to, we didn't get, we avoided the trap.
What they want is multiple bombs at the same time.
So what they want to do, if they can do this, is have, say, five bombs working at the same time.
And the first bomb goes off as a test in the mountains, in the mountains.
And then what do we say?
Oh, they blew it.
They're stupid.
They blew their one test.
And then they do a second test.
still in their mountains.
When we dropped the first bomb on Hiroshima,
wasn't clear we had any more.
When we dropped the second one,
nobody needed to wait for a third or fourth.
Nobody really, they knew more would come.
You see what I mean.
So with Iran, this is, again,
we're talking about now, you know,
let's call it the brown belt or black belt strategy here,
that they are, and notice, they have been very smart
in their escalation.
what you would do is the North Korea strategy, which is, again, you want multiple bombs,
and then you want to do some tests. And even if one doesn't quite work, you want to have another.
You want to have multiple bombs so that you can do multiple tests, you see.
And that is how North Korea basically stop Trump trying to kill the leader.
So notice that Trump wants to say it was just his winning personality because, you know,
Trump is so charming here, but North Korea now has 60 working nuclear weapons, as best we can tell.
And the idea that we're going to start killing leaders in North Korea anytime soon, I'm not sure that's going to happen.
They're kind of immune now, right?
Well, and notice that Ukraine had a bunch of nuclear weapons in the 90s, gave them up.
And there's a lot of people in Ukraine right now are saying, boy, I wish we had those nuclear weapons back or else we wouldn't be fighting this war.
So you start to look at the history.
Why does America have nuclear weapons here?
Are we an evil country?
And the reason we have is because we're evil?
We want it for our security.
So why doesn't Iran want it for their security?
So this is the strategy part that we have to, the politics, Steve, and I keep trying to talk about.
So you're saying your prediction is that we're going to move to stage three, where Trump puts...
Okay, I'll go 75, 25.
75% which way?
That we will put, we will send in some ground forces to get that.
dispersed material. The only 25% would be if somehow magically the Iranians gave it to us.
So that's where the 25% comes from because there is some chance.
Yeah, maybe there's some. I don't want to, I mean, we live in the real world here.
So I, but I think the problem we're going to face is it's going to become more.
And if you're in Iran right now, exactly why aren't you fashioning the nuclear weapon?
We're already killing you.
we can pause for months and say, we won't kill you, and then you wake up one day and you're dead.
We've done this movie now several times on Iran.
Your best chance of survival is a nuclear weapon.
And so we now know that.
Our intel knows that.
Israel now knows it.
We've taken these options.
So unless Trump will make a deal, that's that 25%.
So I think if he makes a deal, then there's a chance that Iran.
Ron, we'll go forward here.
If the 75% path plays out, we put boots on the ground.
Yep.
What happens then?
Now we're at stage three.
Now we've moved to stage three because we have to search very, not just, so we will
start by deploying ground forces in a very limited area.
Say, we're going to go to Esophon, it's called.
That's the, do we have a...
I mean, you could try and write.
Does that work?
The thing I'm trying to explain, yeah, assume this is Iran.
Yeah.
Okay.
We will start by putting in a small footprint.
And again, we have several options here to do it.
And so the hunt will be for the enriched material.
But let's say that we even find it, Stephen, how do we know that in the intervening
almost a year since the bombing, 10 months since the bombing, how do we,
no, they haven't enriched more somewhere else.
Because this is what happened with the WMD and Iraq and Saddam Hussein in the 90s through 2003.
We had inspectors in.
We could never be sure.
There wasn't material.
And the problem was over time, the fear got worse and worse and worse.
And the fear is a nuclear handle.
or the radiological handoff, you handoff some of that material to Hezbollah, to the Houthis.
Who are Hezbollah in the Houthis?
They're like terrorist groups?
We call them terrorist groups.
And Hezbollah, which is this famous terrorist group, started in 1982.
How did Hezbollah start?
Where did it come from?
Is it the CIA again?
No, it's Israel.
Israel invades southern Lebanon in June of 82, was 78,000.
combat soldiers, 3,000 tanks in armor vehicles. So think about that. That's like invading
Chicago was 78,000. So just, or L.A. was 78,000. Okay. So they invade southern Lebanon with 78,000
Israel does. One month later, Hezbollah is born as a resistance movement. So Hezboa was born out of
resistance to Israel. They have hated Israel from the beginning because that's how they were born.
you see. So what you have is you have a group that's been radical since, and since 82,
this has been going on since 82, Israel just can't put that country, that Hezbo group out of business.
And what are they doing literally this week? They're trying to depopulate this Beirut,
the city of Beirut. Because what happens when you go up against terrorist groups, which we haven't described,
but the terrorist group here is like a group that's in a sea of people, okay? And you keep saying,
all I want to do is get rid of that terrorist group.
The problem is that in all that effort, military effort, to get rid of the terrorist group,
you do kill them, but they regenerate, and they regenerate, and they regenerate,
just as Hezbo has for, God, 45 years almost.
Okay, and so what do you then push to do?
Get rid of all the people.
So you think, I'll just genocide?
I don't want to use those terms because I've written about that.
that has certain very specific.
So that's a whole conversation here.
But I just want to point out, how is it that Israel got itself into the idea they were going to cleanse, expel large portions of the 2 million out of Gaza?
That happened because they got into stage three of the escalation trap in Gaza.
So this isn't just about America.
So we're only talking about the escalation frameworks with respect to this one conflict, really.
It applies much more broadly.
I've developed these since I taught for the Air Force because I needed to find a way to help our government, our military, understand how the transition from the bombing or the military piece to the outcome.
And what's in the middle is the military, the bombs change politics.
They change politics in the enemy.
They change politics for us.
For us, we don't want to lose.
And that's why we got stuck in two forever wars.
And now we may well just get right back into another.
Not because Trump wants to.
He's being sucked into it.
So what happens after stage three?
After stage three, this is what America has faced in Vietnam.
and President Biden faced this in spades here.
When you try to pull out after you're in stage three and end these ongoing conflicts here,
usually it ends poorly for your legacy.
And you saw that with Lyndon Johnson and you saw that with President Biden.
President Biden, actually President Trump is the one who was negotiating with the Taliban to pull out.
But President Trump wouldn't leave, not leave.
He didn't leave before.
Who did he hand it off?
to, he handed it off to Biden. Biden pulled out. And what has Biden's legacy been? It's been
negative ever since. If you look at his opinion polls, President Biden, you will see. He was
riding high until he withdrew from Afghanistan, and he never recovered. Yes, inflation hurt,
too. The bigger hit was the Afghanistan problem. And this is why President Trump is really stuck.
You see, he's on that horns of the dilemma.
Does he want to accept the short-term price, which is real, or does you want to go and double down?
And then you face the potential long-term price of becoming LBJ and President Biden.
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I have to ask then, you know,
you said when you're in the White House,
they're very smart people.
Yeah, pretty smart.
Presumably Trump knew this stuff
or someone around him knew that, by the way,
when you drop bombs,
these sort of very specific bombs we have now
that can hit a very narrow target
and take out a leader, you get into an escalation trap.
Surely he knew this.
I believe General Kane told him almost this in so many words.
I believe it.
I don't have the exact evidence for it, but we have some inklings of it.
What do you think he thought was going to happen?
I think he, I've described Trump as the ultimate chaos kit.
There are people who thrive in chaos.
They feel the best when they're in a chaotic situation.
and I think that he believes he can navigate the chaos better than anybody else.
So the answer to the question I was looking for is, what did he think was going to happen?
Did he think, I'll drop these bombs, Homania will be out, someone else will come in, then we'll negotiate with that guy, and then we'll get a better deal.
I think that's not quite, I think that's too specific. People keep looking for that.
And my experience here, it also is that's too narrow of a way to understand what I think happened here.
And again, we're reading quite a bit into very few tea leaves here because this will come out over time.
But I believe that what you're seeing with President Trump is he likes to do what's called mixing it up.
He wants to get the chaos going.
And then he reads the chaos very well.
And when it's a media storm, man, there's very few people that have beaten him.
Just think about that.
That's why he's president twice.
He's beaten quite a few black belts at this, right?
But this is a different story.
So if you take that same MO and you apply it to political violence, now you have these other
actors, you have this other set of momentum.
You have Israel playing this big role.
You have the Iranians playing a big role.
You're suddenly now have more players that can trap you in the chaos.
And this is, I think, what has happened.
Now, with Venezuela, he also went through the first stage.
of the trap and notice that with Venezuela, he just said, oh, yeah, we're just going to forget about
developing the oil.
No second stage.
Okay.
So with Venezuela, there's a reason why that has paused.
It's because he didn't go to stage two because the oil company said, we're not going to die
for you to build that oil.
So he is basically, he took out one person, just literally one person, that person's not even
dead yet.
And he's not really developing any of those oil fields in Venezuela.
They're just not being developed.
He said he has a good relationship with the Venezuelan government now that...
As long as because he's not doing any...
The Venezuelan government, he's leaving them in place.
He's basically declaring victory and moving on.
He removed Maduro, kept the others in, and it sounds like...
And kept the regime.
It sounds like that might have somewhat inspired his move to bomb around
because it appears on the surface that Venezuela kind of didn't go too badly.
It kind of was a political victory.
Chaos kid.
Chaos kid.
Because chaos.
Snatched him off bed with his voice.
But then he stopped.
So this would be, the equivalent would be last June.
So last June, okay, he went through stage one and he tried to stop.
What made the difference here?
It wasn't Trump.
It was the intel he got from Netanyahu.
The phone call from Netanyahu, which is President Trump getting ready.
We're about to assassinate the Supreme Leader and about 20 of his associates
other leaders here. You decide how you want to handle this, but we're taking off. And so that is,
that did not happen with, with, uh, with, uh, the, uh, the Maduro regime. So just imagine that there
was another country that had after Trump took out Maduro decided they were going to keep
assassinating, uh, the regime in, uh, Venezuela. Now you would be in a different story.
You made a quite famous prediction, professor. You predict in 2009 that America's era as the
world's only superpower was ending. Oh, yes. And I think that is true. We haven't talked about China,
but I believe that since Trump has come into office, he's making China number one.
His tariffs have done nothing but helped China. China's been on charm offensive since the
tariffs have been, and they're picking up all the pieces. I was just spent two weeks in China in June.
While we were bombing Iran, I said I had to learn how to do social media.
toured advanced industries in China for two solid weeks.
One of the most amazing visits trips I've ever had in my whole career.
And it was stunning.
So, Stephen, since COVID, almost nobody has gone to China.
Now, if they have, they've gone to Beijing or Shanghai.
They haven't gone to Wuhan.
They haven't gone to Sanchez, visited the B-Y-D electric car factories, seeing the robots.
that are now doing the metallurgy.
And you can't see it very well on the web
because China's keeping it to themselves.
They don't want to brag about it.
They're motoring ahead.
So Wuhan, to give you an example,
Wuhan is kind of like Pittsburgh.
It's a bigger version of Pittsburgh.
It's an old steel area.
That's not Wuhan today.
Wuhan today is the AI.
It's developing not just a robotic company.
They're uplifting,
nine million people in Wuhan. Their medicine is improved. Their infrastructure is improved. They have
more construction jobs than ever before because they have to build so much to uplift the whole
nine million people. This is what Pittsburgh should have been and hasn't been. And I know.
I'm from Western Pennsylvania. It's heartbreaking to me to watch what's happened to Pittsburgh
over the last 30 or 40 years.
Wuhan, exactly the same trajectory,
an old steel city,
is now one of the leaders here in,
they have a robotic Silicon Valley there
that I visited and so forth.
And why does this matter?
Why does it matter if the U.S. are no longer the world's superpower?
What then does history tell us is the consequence of that?
The consequence is, first of all,
you get enormous tension here for violence.
So when you see big hegemonic shifts, hegemonic, that means when one leader, the world's number one becomes replaced by another, bad things happen.
This is what happened, how you got the wars between Britain and France.
When they were fighting theirs wars, this is how you got essentially World War I because of the rise and fall of Germany versus Russia versus Britain.
So these rising and fall, they make a huge difference.
It doesn't always happen.
The one time it was peaceful was when America replaced Britain as number one.
So just think about that.
But other times have been very tense.
So how does trying to feel that the U.S. are now at war with the Middle East?
So what's interesting is to get ready for coming on here, I listen to the All In podcast,
and I hope that's okay to talk about.
Oh, I love that.
I think they're brilliant, by the way.
I love it.
But what they said, just in the most recent, is that Trump's playing a game for China.
What they said is China's shaken in its boots and that what this is about is it's kind of
Venezuela plus Iran is all about to cause Xi to be shaking in his boots in April so that he will
somehow make some bigger deal with Trump.
I think this is just wrong.
I think that it may be that there's some, you know, China does absolutely by 90% of Iran's oil.
We're not disagreeing with the facts of the matter.
It's the interpretation and the consequences for who's going to be number one down the road.
So my assessment here is China is probably thrilled that we're on the verge of getting into another quagmire in the Middle East
and that they would gladly give up.
They have about 20% of their GDP that turn the energy, not GDP, 20% of their energy, it's a much smaller fraction of their
GDP that turns on the oil issue.
Most of their energy is not generated through oil.
And so I think they would really, if they had to give all of the Middle Eastern oil up to
suck us in to another Forever War with Iran that would go on for years and years,
oh my goodness gracious.
Because they see themselves as growing through Asia and spreading their wings through
Asia. And so to get us pinned down in the Middle East with an even bigger problem than we had with
Iraq, this is mana from heaven for China. And that's what I, they told, that's what I saw when I was
there. If I was Putin or if I was running China, based on everything you've said and based on
everything I know, I would really want this war to go on for a long time. Oh, for sure. I'd really,
so I'd really be helping Iran, you know, prolong this thing. And also because Russia are in their
situation at the moment with Ukraine. So it's quite a distraction from whatever Putin's objectives
are in Ukraine. No one's really talking about Ukraine this week. And it's bad for the Ukrainians because
what's happening is by the little bit that Putin has gotten himself involved here, there is a chance
he set the stage for a deal, which is again, America stops the intel to the Ukrainians,
if Russia will stop the intel to Iran. That is much, much, much to Putin's advantage with Ukraine.
So I think that you have a situation here, Stephen, where Putin, it's not so much he's itching to get in the fight, is he's trying to do it in ways that he gets something out of it in his relations war with Ukraine.
Think about that with President Xi.
I don't think the Chinese want to get in the fight.
I think, in fact, right now, if I'm assessing this correctly, they're probably not wanting to get in the way of an enemy who's shooting himself in both feet.
So right now, America's damaging itself a lot more than China could.
And if China inserts itself, there's a very good chance, then that would help Trump, again, pull a rabbit out of a hat.
I don't think they want to do that.
I think right now you just look at this from we're running out of what's called standoff PGM.
Remember Secretary HECF said, well, yeah, okay, we're running out of standoff PGMs,
but we're going to do something from the bombs that we can drop moreover country.
Well, that's the problem for a problem for Taiwan.
If we're going to defend Taiwan, we've got to do this with long standoff precision weapons.
And we all, everybody who studies this knows that.
So if we're really running low on standoff precision weapons, she's just licking his chops thing.
My goodness, how much better does this get?
If Trump was listening, probably the case.
I think he just watches CNN and Fox News.
But if Trump was listening, what would you say, Tim?
What I would tell him is take the deal.
I would say, stop right now and do everything possible to go back to the deal you rejected the day before you started bombing.
And what your goal should be is to get as much of the 60% enriched uranium out of the country as possible.
If you could also get the 20% enriched uranium out, that would be good too.
but you're probably not going to get as good a deal
because the Supreme Leader you were dealing with is gone
and you now have a much tougher,
so you might have to accept President Trump a worse deal.
Are we just kicking the can down the road here
because if you're an Iranian, like you've said,
you've watched bombs drop,
you've realized that the reason why you are such a target
is because you don't have these nuclear weapons.
So is there not an element where Iran getting nuclear weapons
is inevitable in some way?
So, Stephen, this is the myth of 100%
security. So we see this in not just America, but in lots of conflicts in history, where the idea
that you don't have 100% security lead you to essentially do things that look like suicide
for fear of death. So we know that there is a long-term problem out there. And sometimes a really
good solution is to freeze it for 20 years. Just freeze it for 20 years. And you know what? You're right.
You didn't permanently take it off the table, but if you can freeze a problem for 20 years,
that's actually a lot of, you might get lucky.
You might get something good like the Soviet Union might just fall apart on you.
You know, out of the blue, it might just fall apart on you.
And not because you did anything.
It's just because something else changed in the world.
So the way to think about this, Stephen, is not this idea that we're going to take an action
and have 100% security, this is how big powers lose war.
Big powers are up against these little countries.
And think about how often they lose.
We lose to Vietnam.
That's how I got into this business in the first place.
I wanted to understand that.
And so this idea of the search for perfect security is often getting us into trouble.
Kick a can down.
You're right.
It's only 20 years.
I'll take that.
That's better than where we are right now.
Professor Robert Pape,
of all the things that we've talked about,
which has been a wonderful conversation, by the way.
And very diverse, but really focused on this subject of what's going on in the world at the moment
with Iran and Trump and America as decline.
What is the thing that we should have talked about that we didn't talk about?
The big thing, well, we're finally getting to it at the end,
is the real consequence of what President Trump has done since coming into office.
the real consequence of the tariffs, the real consequence of not just threatening discussion of Greenland,
but becoming very aggressive with our European allies on Greenland,
being very aggressive to the point of taking out a leader from Venezuela,
which is in our Western Hemisphere.
So it's creating what this is really doing is it's threatening America's primacy.
So I am a big believer that America's.
America should be the strongest, most secure state on the planet.
I think that is good for us.
That means that it does make, it is valuable to be the top dog, to be the number one strongest economic military power.
But in order to do that, you have to be the world's number one economy for real.
And with $40 trillion in debt, with us pushing away our trading partners, with us engaging away our trading partners,
with us engaging in hostile actions here, which are scaring the rest of the world to further drift away from us and maybe not side with China but be neutral?
Oh, my goodness gracious.
And again, as I said before, China is motoring ahead on the AI revolution.
We're talking AI, but are we really doing Wuhan?
Are we up to Wuhan?
I think it would be interesting for folks to go to Wuhan and actually visit or go to Sen Chen and visit or go to Hank Cho and visit and see where Alibaba is and see that it's not just one company here.
It's not just deep seek.
That there's clusters that are being built that are uplifting 10 million people at a swath.
And my goodness, why aren't we doing that?
that in America. We certainly need that in the rest. We're too distracted. We're too distracted,
which is what I'm trying to say is to China's advantage. And I think this is the real long-term
price, which is are we actually eroding our position as the world's number one? And I think
our primacy is in danger. Professor Robert Pape, we have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last
guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who they're leaving it for.
Ah.
The question left for you is, what is the prediction you have for the future that most people
do not want to hear?
Well, this is going to lead into the conversation.
So I have a book coming out in September called Our Own Worst Enemies.
As bad as all this problem is, Stephen, as bad as it is, I have spent the last several years
focusing on what's happening with political violence in the United States and its normalization.
And the most, the biggest danger that we face, even bigger than Iran, and all the problems
we've just talked about, is the normalization of political violence in our own country.
And by political violence, you mean?
I'm talking about in the last 10 years, we have seen a surge of violence.
riots. We have seen a surge of political assassinations that we haven't seen since the 1960s.
On top of that, we've just had Operation Midway Blitz in my city, Chicago. That is the surge
of militarized immigration enforcement, which surged ice, which surged into neighborhoods over
almost 300 times.
Crazy.
Not just a small, and then what happened after they left Chicago is they did even more of that in Minneapolis.
So these, this trajectory, Stephen, that we're on where we are seeing the incredible normalization of political violence.
And it's happening on both the right and the left.
I'm not trying to make moral equivalence, but it is, and the book will explain this, is probably the greatest.
danger that we face because if we are our own worst enemies, think of what that means for us being
that great power that is so important for us and the great future we want for our families and
our communities here. We are in danger of becoming our own worst enemies, not for a day,
not for a month, but for years. Professor, thank you so much. If anyone wants to go and read more,
about many of the things we've talked about today.
Where do they go?
Substack.
I would go, you can read my books on it.
You can get them from Amazon.
I would go to Substack, and that's the escalation trap.
And I would also just be aware that there will be more discussion of political violence.
So it's not just political violence abroad, and it's not just political violence at home.
It is both happening at the same time.
Professor, thank you so much.
Thank you very much.
Really, really enjoyed it.
Thank you very much.
It was fantastic.
