The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - WW3 Threat Assessment: "Trump Bombing Iran Just Increased Nuclear War Threat" The Terrifying Reality

Episode Date: March 4, 2026

EMERGENCY ROUNDTABLE: How long will this conflict last? Ex-CIA spy Andrew Bustamante, national security journalist Annie Jacobsen, and Iran expert Benjamin Radd break down Trump’s strikes, Ayatollah... Ali Khamenei’s death, nuclear risks, AI warfare, and what could happen next. Andrew Bustamante is a former CIA covert intelligence officer and founder of Everyday Spy, and co-author of the memoir ‘Shadow Cell: An Insider Account of America’s New Spy War’. Annie Jacobsen is a renowned nuclear war expert and Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of her bestselling book ‘Nuclear War: A Scenario’. Benjamin Radd is a Senior Fellow at the UCLA Burkle Center for International Relations, and Lecturer in Law and Politics at UCLA School of Law. They explain: ◼️Who really carried out the strike on Iran ◼️How long this conflict could actually last ◼️Who takes control of Iran now ◼️Why the Strait of Hormuz closure could collapse the global economy ◼️The role of AI in planning military targets 00:00 Intro 00:01:43 What Is Really Happening With Iran Right Now? 00:08:27 What This War Is Really About (Beyond The Headlines) 00:15:43 Why Trump Chose This Moment To Strike Iran 00:28:51 Was This Actually The Right Time To Attack Iran? 00:32:49 Is This About Trump’s Legacy—Or Something Bigger? 00:35:02 What This Conflict Means For The Future World Order 00:47:20 Why Other Regimes Are Watching This Conflict Closely 00:57:43 The Real Reason The U.S. Still Cares About Cuba 00:58:51 Do Nuclear Weapons Guarantee A Country’s Safety? 01:05:51 Are We Closer To Nuclear War Than We Think? 01:11:16 Military Reality Check: How Many Soldiers Each Country Has 01:12:52 How Long Can Israel Sustain A Major War? 01:14:13 How This Conflict Could Actually Play Out 01:21:30 Which Sources Can You Really Trust During War? 01:31:21 What The U.S. Hopes To Gain From Bombing Iran 01:35:32 Are We Entering A Strongman Multipolar World? 01:41:24 The Rise Of Mass Surveillance During Global Conflict 01:46:30 The Most Likely Scenario That Could Trigger Nuclear War 01:54:32 Why Iran Is Striking Multiple Targets With Missiles 01:57:55 How Long Could This War Actually Last? 02:01:15 Is Trump Really Going To Leave Office? 02:03:17 What The Future May Look Like For The Average American Enjoyed the episode? Share this link and earn points for every referral - redeem them for exclusive prizes: https://doac-perks.com Follow Andrew: Find your Spy Superpower: https://yt.everydayspy.com/4s4dXOt YouTube - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/8Tv0QP1 EverydaySpy: https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/2CJoYJD You can purchase ‘Shadow Cell: An Insider Account of America’s New Spy War’, here: https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/4T3ZTlT Follow Annie: Instagram - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/ErFnd8L Website - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/D7QkSEH You can pre-order ‘Biological War: A Scenario’, here: https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/E99Eor5 Follow Benjamin: Instagram - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/GsFWbA9 X - https://link.thediaryofaceo.com/9mF9KFp The Diary Of A CEO: ◼️Join DOAC circle here - https://doaccircle.com/ ◼️Buy The Diary Of A CEO book here - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook ◼️The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt ◼️The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb ◼️Get email updates - https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt ◼️Follow Steven - https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Sponsors: Ketone - https://ketone.com/STEVEN for 30% off your subscription order Wispr - Get 14 days of Wispr Flow for free at https://wisprflow.ai/steven Cometeer - https://cometeer.com/steven for $30 off your first order

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 One of the most successful conversations we've had this year on the show was with a guy called Chris Kona who talks about ways to make money on the side. And it got me thinking because our show sponsor is Airbnb, a brand I love, I've used all over the world for the last decade or so. And this is an unbelievable, untapped opportunity to make some money on the side if you currently are a homeowner. Let me explain. So many of us go traveling. We go on holiday to see in-laws or to go on ski trips or whatever it might be. And our home sits there, usually actually cost. costing us money because of bills, what most people don't realize is that you can put that house
Starting point is 00:00:34 on Airbnb very simply and very easily. If this sounds interesting to you and you currently don't list your property when you go away, your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at Airbnb.com.ca.ca. slash host. That's Airbnb.combe.combe.com What does the United States think it's going to gain from decapitating the Iranian leadership? Well, that's kind of obvious based on what the president has said. It's that... On what the president has said. I'm just saying based on what the president says.
Starting point is 00:01:01 You can't trust anything that you're hearing right now. You can't trust anything that you're reading right now. Too tumultuous. I mean, that's paranoid. It's not paranoid. It's healthy. It is absolutely paranoid to suggest that everything is misinformation. Iran doesn't have a nuclear weapon.
Starting point is 00:01:16 So it's not a nuclear threat. You speak a different nuclear language than I do. This regime is at its lowest, lowest point. Why not strike it now? I mean, I can give lots of reasons while you wouldn't strike it. But what I would also say... What are you concerned about? And what are the unintended consequences that you're foreseeing?
Starting point is 00:01:31 There is a domino effect that happens with every decision that the United States makes. So... Guys, I've got a favour to ask before this episode begins. 69% of you that listen to the show frequently haven't yet hit the follow button. And that follow button is very smart because it means you won't miss the best episodes. The algorithm, if you follow a show, will deliver you the best episodes from that show very prominently in your feed. So when we have our best episodes on this show, the most... episode, the most rated episodes. I would love you to know. And the simple way for you to know that
Starting point is 00:02:02 is to hit that follow button. But also the fact that I think what 41% of you have chosen to follow the show that listen to it regularly is the reason why we've been able to improve everything. It's the simple, easy, free thing that you can do to help us make the show better. And I would be hugely grateful if you could take a minute on the app you're listening to this on right now and hit that follow button. Thank you so, so, so much. Benjamin, Annie, Andrew. First and foremost, thank you for being here today. I have to start with the question that's been on my mind
Starting point is 00:02:36 as somebody that doesn't know a huge amount about geopolitics, which is what the hell is going on? And I say that because that's exactly what I mean. What is going on and what context do I need to understand this sort of historical context of the actions we're seeing in Iran with this war right now? Benjamin, I know you've got a personal, connection to Iran because your family fled Iran, I believe. Yeah, I was two years old when we left in
Starting point is 00:03:01 March of 1979, a few months after the Shah had left and just after Khomeini had arrived. What is the Shah and what is Khomeini? Yeah, sorry. The Shah, the former monarch of Iran, the Path-Lavi dynasty, which came into power in the 1930s, deposing a previous dynasty that had been around for a couple hundred years. And his father brought in that dynasty and then it was eventually he was deposed by the British and the Americans who felt he was getting too close to the Nazis during World War II, concerned about supply routes for the Nazis, oil, and his son was installed on the throne at a very young age, you believe, 18 or 19. And he ruled Iran from that period, 1941, 1942 around that time, all the way through 79, a great ally of the United States over time eventually, and was deposed, was overthrown on a revolution.
Starting point is 00:03:55 and by Khomeini, who is a senior cleric who had been a thorn in the Shah's side since the 60s, was exiled first to Turkey, then Iraq, then ultimately to France, right outside Paris, actually. From there, he basically led the revolution that led to the Shah's removal, Austria in 79. And how was Iran different when the Shah was in power versus when Hermione was in power? That depends on who you ask. It was a constitutional monarchy. The Shah had powers that exceeded beyond what we think a constitutional monarchy has today, like in Great Britain. He was, he ruled with an iron fist when he needed to. He was an authoritarian, but he also was one that was rapidly modernizing Iranian society, wanted to make it more like the West, using Iran's immense oil resources and wealth to
Starting point is 00:04:40 really accelerate development, building of social institutions, health care, literacy, modernization, all of those things. That was his focus, make Iran more like the West. And in that sense, he succeeded, but it came at the expense oftentimes of civil liberties for many people. It came at the expense of freedom for those who wanted to essentially practice religion, Islam, Shia, Islam in their own way. The Shah was not hostile to religion, but his policies were inconsistent with where the traditional religious Iranians wanted to go. And it sort of created a schism in society. And you also had a wealth gap, an income disparity. Immense wealth poured into the country, but it didn't trickle its way downward into the sort of the
Starting point is 00:05:23 village and rural poor. And so there was a wealth gap. a lot of frustration, a lot of disenchantment with his policies, and that led to sort of this populist backlash of wanting something that was more democratic, more accountable, more like the West, ironically. And that sort of was the beginning of where that cycle led. And so how did Hamani take power of Iran? He led a movement, a mass populist movement, not a religious one, but meant to go across multiple socioeconomic and political divides and unified the opposition
Starting point is 00:05:57 under this idea of removing the monarchy, removing dependence on the West. He specifically said the United States was a large part to blame for Iran being in the state that it was, for people not having the things they needed to live, the freedoms, the liberties. He blamed the Shah's use of the secret police
Starting point is 00:06:16 and torture methods on the United States and on Israel, who he claimed, taught the secret police how to do these things. there's a complicated sort of history to that. And he basically promised them salvation from what he portrayed as a puppet tyrant of the United States. And the masses bought into this, both the left and the right. The right consisted of the black, the Islamists. So you had the red, which were sort of the Marxist socialist followers.
Starting point is 00:06:44 You had the black. And then you had sort of that middle in between. And they all coalesced around this one charismatic religious figure, very austere. man, one who didn't really have a lot of luxuries himself, let a simple life, but was consistent with his opposition to what he saw tyranny and despotism. And people bought into it. And the Americans didn't like this. The Americans didn't know what to make of it. And there was a failure, and I think Andrew can talk about this as well, a failure by the State Department and the CIA in the 70s to see where the threat was. They saw the threat coming from the Soviet Union. They were still afraid of
Starting point is 00:07:20 Soviet encroachment in the Middle East, particularly through Iran. Their concerns were with the Marxists, the communist parties. They did not carefully look at the black. They didn't look at the Islamists. They didn't see them as a threat until it was too late. The Shah himself blocked or really didn't give the CIA full access to Iran. There was limited information that was coming out. He relied on his own intelligence, which fed him information he wanted to hear, which is that everything is going great. The country's doing well. The people love you. They're all happy. until the discontent and the protest became, they reached a threshold and it was too late to do anything about it.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Yeah, the United States was kind of at their peak period of meddling in foreign governments at the time. Kind of in a strange way that we've come full circle, this idea of controlling an entire country by controlling the figurehead of the country. That's where we were in the late 70s at the kind of brink of the Cold War, right? Nobody knew that the Berlin Law was going to fall.
Starting point is 00:08:19 We were all concerned with this spring, of communism. Nobody was paying attention to the Islamist threat. Nobody was paying attention to really any other kind of threat at all. It was very much the unfettered, uncontrolled, unsupervised CIA running around with no oversight and with very deep pockets. And that changed at some point? That changed in 2001 when Al-Qaeda successfully carried out the 9-11 attacks in New York. And all of a sudden, the threat that we had all been ignoring was on our doorstep and had grown so wealthy and had spread so vast across the world that Islamic extremism
Starting point is 00:08:54 became almost overnight a household term. Now there's still a difference between al-Qaeda, Islamic Shia extremism, and what is practiced in the Shia faith and with the outcomes that the Shia militants are trying to pursue in support of Iran, but it's hard to differentiate that in the United States where we don't understand the difference between Sunni and Shia.
Starting point is 00:09:18 Annie, what do you think this war is really a problem, out? Very interesting what you both said. And I think what I would add to that, which very much speaks to today, is that the CIA, in fact, had many ups and downs over the decades from its creation right after World War II until this moment in time and then on 9-11. And so it's been like an accordion experience of power being taken away from the CIA and then being grabbed back. because the CIA has always historically been the president's hidden hand. It has been the way in which the White House can execute executive power without having to follow the laws of war that the military does.
Starting point is 00:10:05 So military is a code called Title X, CIA is a code called Title 50. And while that may sound a bit wonkish, it is important to understand because Title 50 essentially, as Andrew can speak to, gives the president authority under classified presidential directive to change any rule he wants that suits him for an operation at hand, which gets us precisely to where we are today. So as far as I understand, there was the Shah, the sort of royal leader who was in power. He was overthrown in the late 1970s by Hermione. Hermione galvanized people to believe in his way, and he's been in power ever since.
Starting point is 00:10:44 It gets complicated because hominy, with an O was the original leader of the revolution and was later replaced by Harmony and A. Okay, that's two. But that's that that is a hundred percent. They're both the supreme leader. Yes. The, you know, and this speaks to the revolutionary nature of Iran, which has been, you know, taking place since 1979. You know, in the news today, people hear the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. And it's so important to understand that word revolution.
Starting point is 00:11:17 because, and you can speak to this better than any of us, but Iran has been holding on to this idea, or rather the regime has, that we are the revolutionary force against America. That is why the chant is always death to America. The wound of pre-1975, the wound of America meddling and having the Shah as its puppet is as inflamed or was as inflamed two days ago
Starting point is 00:11:46 as it was the day after the revolution in 1979. I think that's probably important context we missed, which was the U.S. got involved in the Shah and how he governed Iran. It's a fascinating period. In 1951, so basically under the Iranian constitution, the Shah, the king has the authority to select the prime minister with the consent of parliament.
Starting point is 00:12:08 The consent part is really nominal. And so Mossadegh, who is a senior member of parliament and also a member of the previous royal dynasty, is distantly related, this elderly statesman who, the Shah, out of sort of courtesy after having gone through a successive list of prime ministers, says, okay, I'm going to appoint him prime minister.
Starting point is 00:12:28 So he wasn't democratically elected. He was elected to parliament, but from there, the Shah selected him to be prime minister. Mosadegh nationalized the oil company, the Anglo-American Oil Company, which was owned primarily by the British, this angered the British, who in turn blockaded Iran
Starting point is 00:12:44 France ports and basically shut down its oil industry and creating a national crisis. And Mossadegh was sort of amassing additional powers within himself, for himself, basically overstepping the authority that he had, even though he had the support of a good deal of the public, as it became obvious that this was a bad move, especially in the eyes of Iran's international trading partners. And it was causing Iran to be isolated. There was pushback towards him. and then he was removed.
Starting point is 00:13:14 The British had wanted, MI6 had wanted to overthrow him, basically get him removed, and they try to recruit the United States to help. President Truman refused to engage in this earlier. Eisenhower comes in, is more receptive under CIA director Alan Dulles to actually engage in this called Operation TP Ajax,
Starting point is 00:13:34 led by Kermit Roosevelt, who is the CIA agent officer tasked with this. And then the Americans and the British basically help foment, crowd that is a part of the movement that removes Mossadegh. Now, whether it's a common, I think, a misconception that the U.S. CIA was behind it. The British had a bigger role in this. The Americans were more of the junior partner, but they became sort of the public face of it. But Mossadegh was not this overwhelmingly popular, democratically elected figure either. The history
Starting point is 00:14:03 is more complicated. And regardless, there were many prime ministers after him. And so he was known as a nationalist because he believed that Iran, oil should be nationalized and not really behold into British interests. And that created a lot of resentment and animosity. But that began the U.S.-Iranian relationship really solidified when the Shah returned. He didn't leave, really. He just sort of took himself out of the country for a bit, but he never stepped down. And while this was all being resolved, then he comes back. And then the U.S. Iranian relationship continues all the way through 79. So the U.K. and the U.S. have been meddling in Iran for a long time and kind of, you know, exerting their
Starting point is 00:14:42 will. The UK's since the 19th century by far. The UK has been the dominant colonial force in modern Iranian history. And they lose that power in the sort of 1980s, early 1980s, because the Hermione comes in. The British lose that power with the fall of pretty much the fall of the empire in the 1940s after World War II and the United States in 79, exactly. And then since then, the UK and the US haven't been able to sort of exert control in their will over Iran. Zero. Zero. There's not even an embassy there because, of course, they took our embassy or they took over the embassy. I mean, it's been like ground zero of nothing for the CIA's power, for any American power, really for any Western power.
Starting point is 00:15:21 You call it a black box. It's a rogue nation. It's a black box of information. A rogue nation is one of a handful of countries around the world that follow no international norms. North Korea is a rogue nation. Belarus is a rogue nation. Cuba is a rogue nation.
Starting point is 00:15:35 Venezuela was a rogue nation. these countries that completely stand separate from the norms of an international society. And in Iran's case, it also became this black box where it did not allow foreigners in, especially not Westerners. It closed down its embassy. The traditional methods for collecting intelligence were very difficult. And geographically, it's so far away and so far outside of the sphere of influence for the United States that in terms of intelligence and military prioritization, it just fell to the bottom of the list.
Starting point is 00:16:09 And yet look exactly where it is. It's right in the middle of the east. And to Benjamin's point, oil, oil, oil, oil. It's always about oil. There's always a component of oil. And there are so many other oil options in that region besides Iran, right? Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar. They've got, the United States could partner with other Arab countries to get what they wanted,
Starting point is 00:16:32 without having to deal with Iran. So explain to me in simple terms, why Trump right now has decided that this is the best time to attack Iran? I want to start with you, Andrew. What's your point of view on that? The full picture of what his motivations. I think the question that you just asked is the most prescient question that we will talk about today. Why?
Starting point is 00:16:53 Why now? Why is it being communicated the way it's being communicated? Why was it executed the way it was executed? So why is now the best of all times? I frankly don't think it is. I think that's the narrative that's being communicated to the world and to the public. What Donald Trump did in attacking Iran goes against what the ODNI report assessed for the most likely threats against the United States in the OD&I's 2005 threat assessment. It goes against the Department of Wars' 2006 National Defense Strategy and it goes against the White House's national security strategy. these massive doctrinal annual assessments for how the United States will protect national security,
Starting point is 00:17:39 the attack against Iran goes contrary to all three of those in terms of priority and action. So why now, why the way that we've done it? I can't answer it in any kind of logical way. What's the non-logical answer? It's a distraction. It's international pressure with Israel. It's a cheap win after a series of losses. It's a last-ditch effort before he understands he,
Starting point is 00:18:07 that Donald Trump and his party will lose control of the House in the midterms this year. I have a little bit of a different take, shall I? I believe the current administration is led as a completely top-down situation. In other words, like sole presidential authority. This current president is very enraptured with power and with prowess, with effectiveness. And on the heels of Maduro and maybe even the cartel leader in Mexico, I believe that the current president saw a moment of intense weakness that had been building, no doubt. And in warring in general, when looking at it theoretically like someone like myself, the decapitation strike is the ultimate strike. It's literally like it sounds when you can, it comes from cut off the head of the snake.
Starting point is 00:19:10 And that is exactly what just happened. Why, why, though? Why did he do that? Well, I cannot tell you why, but I can tell you what we all know that this happened. So if you reverse engineer what happened, I think it's. become, there's only one conclusion, which is that I would think the current president had wanted to do this and was waiting till he had the intelligence, the good and the intelligence part of it is beyond remarkable. Like how they, how the CIA and NSA and, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:44 probably DIA and NGA, all of these intelligence agencies of which there are many, not just the CIA, were able to get that information to the president in that exact moment and make that strike and decapitate the leadership that has been in power since 1979. When they talk about the motives here, Tramble often cite nuclear weapons as the motive, saying he didn't want Iran to get nuclear weapons. Is that what's going on here in your point of view? The 2025 National Threat Assessment that was produced by the ODNI in March, so less than a year old, specifically says,
Starting point is 00:20:22 that Iran was unlikely to pursue the development of nuclear enrichment or nuclear weapons. That was the assessment of the ODNI. And that instead, their primary concern was that Iran was going to focus resources into the research of biological and chemical weapons. So the fact that in March of 2025, the ODNI, the assessment of all intelligence agencies said Iran is not working on a nuclear weapon. And then after the strike in June of the same year, where we dropped bunker busters and Fordo, further obliterating their nuclear enrichment capability and obliterating their program, we have two documents that say they're not developing it, we have another series of attacks that says it's obliterated, and yet we're still saying that we need to attack Iran because of WMD.
Starting point is 00:21:05 We've heard that story before. We've heard that WMD is a justice, that the concern of WMD is a just cause for war, and that was when we invaded Iraq in 1992. So what do you think the real motivation there is, therefore is? It's very similar to what Annie is saying, that we have a, current administration that is president down. It's fascinating if you read the official documentation because when you read the Department of Wars national security strategy, what you hear more than any other word is Donald Trump. Our president Donald Trump is leading America through our president Donald Trump, the great Donald Trump. It's incredible. When you hear the speeches that come out of
Starting point is 00:21:40 Marco Rubio's mouth or Pete Heggsett's mouth, what do you hear more than any other term? You hear the name of the president. Usually you hear we or the government or this administration. It's not around a personality. So it's a very interesting situation because there's so much of a person at stake here. And everybody surrounding the office of the president is only there because they are respecting kissing the ring of the personality in the center. And I'm going to add to that further just for a moment, if I may, because on that point, the button on that is that if I watch the president, the current president's speeches to sort of, you know, discern things. and you can often get your answer right there. And in one of the speeches, either this morning or yesterday,
Starting point is 00:22:26 he mentioned that the Ayatollah tried to kill him. And to me, it's like, oh, that's the tit for tat. You know, again, top down, or you could say schoolboy sandbox. I say that as the mother of two boys. You know, this human behavior that is way outside the norm of, you know, intelligence reports and assessments in these long monographs that may or may not actually be effective. I mean, you know, the biggest surprises of the past 40 years, the Berlin Wall falling and 9-11, were completely unseen by any intelligence reports. So there is an argument that those intelligence reports are as good as a coin toss.
Starting point is 00:23:11 So I want to come to that point because the very fact that we have an Islamic Republic is a direct result of a failure of American intelligence to see that threat. as early as 1976, 77, a failure to inform then-President Carter to do the necessary, take the necessary steps to support the Shah and to neutralize that threat. So the United States track record in Iran for the last 40 or 50 years is abysmal when it comes to intelligence and when it comes to statecraft. And so there's that legacy, number one. Number two, October 7, 2023, the Hamas attack against Israel changed the dynamic entirely. That attack surprised. Israeli intelligence and surprised Americans, it surprised almost anybody watching.
Starting point is 00:23:53 Nobody thought Hamas was going to do that when they did it and the means in which they did it. So all of a sudden that forced a recalibration or recalculation of what's at stake, what could happen. If we wait for an imminent threat till we see actually the sign outside the door, it's too late. So from the president's perspective to answer your original question,
Starting point is 00:24:12 why now, why do this? I believe the October 7th attacks, and it's not at the behest of Israel necessarily, it's the idea that Iran, we know, finances Hamas, subsidizes Hamas, trains Hamas, equips Hamas, provides logistical support on many levels so that Hamas can be what it was, and Hezbollah also.
Starting point is 00:24:30 So you have these destabilizing non-state groups in the Middle East wreaking havoc, destabilizing, causing chaos. You're the United States, you're also dealing with a nuclear threshold state. So Iran may or may not have a nuclear weapons program, but they exceeded the 20% enrichment that they were allowed to do under the non-nuclear non-proliferation treaty. They violated IAEA safeguards.
Starting point is 00:24:53 They lied. So you take all of this together. This is a regime that can't be trusted. The chance death to America, which is more than Saddam Hussein ever did, and is funding groups that had, that up until 9-11, Iran was behind more acts of terror that cost American lives than any other state or non-state group in the world. 9-11 changed that.
Starting point is 00:25:13 But up until that, the Marine Barracks bombing in the 19, 1980s terrorist attacks throughout Europe, South America, U.S. Embassy, absolutely. The USS Coal, all right? So this is a, we've been at war from the president's perspective with Iran since they took our hostages, for which they've never atoned for. They've never been held to account for. So if you take that calculus and then now we're in a post-October 7th world with a nuclear threshold state, what happened that changed was last year's six day, a 12-day war in June, created an opportunity. It weakened Iran enough and its proclamation. has Balah Hamas weakened. If there's an opportunity to finally address this 47-year-old conflict,
Starting point is 00:25:54 this was the window to do it. That is why I believe, rightly or wrongly, the president took the action when he did. That doesn't make it the best window. And that's what we're being told is that it was the last best window. I don't think it was the last best window, but it was a window, or at least from their perspective, it was a window. You've got everyone weekend, you've got the regime less popular than it's ever been. I mean, we saw the protest in January, that led to the, you know, the bloodbath, that, you know, upwards of 30,000 people killed on January 8th and 9th. This was, you know, this regime is at its lowest, lowest point,
Starting point is 00:26:28 both in terms of domestic credibility and soft power and ability to use proxies to carry out its will. Why not strike it now? Would be logic. I mean, I can give lots of reasons why you wouldn't strike it. It's violating international law. It sets a dangerous precedent. It creates instability.
Starting point is 00:26:45 There are Americans dead. Emirati's dead, Saudis dead. For what? For something that was already on the precipice of dying itself. It's been dying for 40 years. So why not let it run its course? Because what more damage is it going to do? What more October 7th can we see?
Starting point is 00:27:04 Arguably less than anything that's already been done. So it's like taking action on, it's like putting down the dead dog after it's done all of its damage. Well, I don't think that you could say to the families of the 30,000 some people, who were murdered by the regime just earlier, you know, in January, that it's a dead dog. I don't, I think they would disagree. That's, it's their country. It's their people. It's their, it's their decision.
Starting point is 00:27:29 It's their right to self-determination. I'm not saying it's correct what was done. I'm just simply telling, saying the facts of that, which I agree with, you know, unilatery, that the weakened situation was perceived by this administration as the moment to strike. Agreed. And what is done is done. Agreed. And so I think what's more.
Starting point is 00:27:47 more interesting to me is, you know, observing how America is dealing with this. I mean, we are in our own crisis, America, our own serious crisis. And there are crises around the world, particularly in this area. And without having a crystal ball, none of us know. And I think that what will happen in the next two weeks will be profoundly telling. Interestingly, people will say, this was a good move or this was a bad move, which in and of itself is a bizarre theater, because your point is correct. You've got, you know, America taking action in a place that's not its backyard. That's a sovereign country. Yes. And to your point, you've got, you know, decades of a menace that is now off the table. I would disagree with that. Exactly. We don't know. And the worst part is that in the lead-up to this,
Starting point is 00:28:41 Iran's relationship with Russia and China, and other countries that are successfully countering American influence worldwide had grown closer than ever before. I think they're fair weather friends that just turn on them in a second. What are you concerned about, aren't you? So there's a number of things here. So first of all, with the removal of Maduro and Venezuela, which happened less than 60 days ago,
Starting point is 00:29:04 and now the killing, the assassination of a leader. The decapitation of the regime. Which was the same thing you did here when you rendered Maduro, right? It's a decapitation of a regime. That's different. I would say if you're going to, to extract someone, you haven't killed them. So that's not decapitation. That's basically swapping out the CEO. This is completely reforming the company. I agree with that.
Starting point is 00:29:26 Because they were different countries. They operated in different ways. But when you attack the leadership, when you attack the head of state, that is protected under international law. Because when you do that, you open the gates for everyone. Of course. What is it at the heart of your concern? Because it sounds like you're saying that this wasn't the right time to do this. And so what are the unintended consequences that you're foreseeing? So there is a domino effect that happens with every decision that the United States makes. And now that we have essentially taken this military action against a sovereign country, it opens the door for all sorts of other countries to just unilaterally choose
Starting point is 00:30:04 when they're going to take action against another sovereign. We have created more opportunity for more rogue nations, which is a greater abandonment of an international community, which destabilizes our global trade, our economics, our sense of personal security. The Americans are less secure now than they were four days ago. They are targeted now more than they were four days ago. And if we are coming to the conclusion that we need to make things worse
Starting point is 00:30:33 before we can make things better, that's a conversation, I guess we can have the debate we can have. But with the crisis that we have here at home, with the concerns that exist, with the stated priorities. What crisis here at home? We have an economic crisis here at home, an immigration crisis here at home.
Starting point is 00:30:49 We have a crisis of politics here at home. The United States is... I would just say it's tribal warfare here at home. I mean, I watch it and it's just very, very, very dangerous. Keep going. No, no, no. It's just... Now we have just exacerbated that even more.
Starting point is 00:31:01 And we've exacerbated that more with an ally in the Middle East that just got done carrying out one of the most destructive attacks in history against. against Gaza. You brought up something. You talk about sovereignty with regards to the January 8th, the violence committed against the protesters. You said that basically it's their own people's self-determination. How does the international community deal with acts of state violence against
Starting point is 00:31:30 its own people? So we have a word for that and it's called intrastate conflicts. Conflict inside of a state, a civil war. Right. The international community has no responsibility for stepping into a civil war. So that was, this is a great point. This is the debate that the, uh, that the four allied powers had at the end of World War II when they were convening the Nuremberg trials. You had this idea that we don't have laws to account for how a country or state treats people within its own sovereign borders. The idea is that Germany could do what Germany did within Germany proper. Forget about occupied Germany. Within its own borders, it could mistreat anybody
Starting point is 00:32:05 because that was German law. And the push was that that's not the world we want to live. anymore. We want to live in a world where basically nations cannot do that to people. And that's where the basis of the Nuremberg tribunals came and that's where we got international law of war crimes, crimes of aggression, genocide, so on and so forth. So the idea is that just because
Starting point is 00:32:24 Iran is sovereign, we sit back and allow them to do that. It wasn't a civil war because one side was fighting with knives, machetes, assault rifles. The other side had spoons, wooden, you know, I mean, that kind of thing, right? It was so lopsided. It was such an abuse and an asymmetric battle.
Starting point is 00:32:40 Under the Clinton administration, we chose to not be part of the international criminal court. We pulled ourselves out of the very same conclusion that you're talking about. Yeah, but Nuremberg was not, but there's also the ICJ. There's a UN framework that's independent from the ICC and the Rome Treaty. So all I'm saying is we do have international law that addresses what nations can do to their own people. And we violated international law by attacking a head of state. So what is the, there's no continuity. There's no consistency.
Starting point is 00:33:08 We choose to do what we choose to do. We choose to support, what we choose to support, and we choose to abandon. And how do you make sense in a world like that? How do you predict the future? How do you manage even raising a family? How do you know where you can travel? How do you decide on investments? You can't.
Starting point is 00:33:24 That is a great point. And I think that's the, you know, that's the point to be made here is that there's an absence of the enforcement of law internationally. And it's victor's justice. And the dominant will essentially exercise whatever will they want. the law be damned. Do you think this is part of Trump's, what his motivations are linked to his personal legacy? And I say this a lot because I think sometimes you've got to kind of follow the incentive structure, especially of a president that can't be reelected, who has talked a lot about wanting to win the Nobel Peace Prize, although he's probably never said it directly. And it almost
Starting point is 00:33:56 looks like a Trump that's thinking about his legacy ahead of time. And one's legacy is going to be determined by the wars you start, the people you take out, the Venezuela situation, the economies, seems to be really important to him. Do you think this is, he's motivated more so by his legacy than, say, someone else? I do believe that we are in a position where this is the first president we've ever had, and I would love to be wrong. Please disagree with me on this. But I think this is the first president we've ever had that's more focused on personal legacy
Starting point is 00:34:22 than professional or political legacy. I think he's thinking about Donald Trump and the name Trump and the Trump fortune and the Trump future more than he's thinking about the image of him on children. children's bookmarks as a president of the United States for the rest of the existence of the United States. I hope I'm wrong, but I don't feel like he's motivated by country, by service. He is supposed to be a public servant. It's not country over part or party over country. It's brand over country, the Trump brand. I would agree with that, yeah. I've never heard a president talking about, oh, I might take Greenland, might go to Venezuela. He fancies himself a dealmaker.
Starting point is 00:35:03 He wants a Nobel Peace Prize. He prides himself. He prods himself. off on the number of wars that he's ended, conflicts that he's solved. I think ideally he would have wanted Iran to end up with a diplomatic solution. He came with terms. I don't think war was a preferred option. He would be much happier if there was an agreement that, you know, allowed everything to kind of stay in place. Iran would abide by nuclear restrictions, missile restrictions, proxy restrictions. And then a Trump casino gets built in, you know, Tehran. That would have made him happy. Because, yeah, that is about the personal. That is about the brand. And it's also he sees that as benefiting the United States, benefiting the U.S. as global partners in the region.
Starting point is 00:35:39 But I think a lot of this is personally driven. I would agree. I also find it quite fascinating that our Prime Minister in the UK, Kirstama, is not being asked about any of this stuff ahead of time. I think if we go back a couple of decades, the UK and the U.S. were allies. Now it seems like the U.S. is kind of acting as a lone force in the world. And it's funny because, you know, I watch Kirstama come out after the attacks have happened, and he clearly had no idea what's going to happen. Same in Venezuela. once upon a time you would have briefed us. The president did go to the prime minister about, I think, using Diego Garcia and other bases
Starting point is 00:36:12 and was turned down, if I'm not mistaken, right? So there was some awareness that something was being planned, and the prime minister said that the UK government would have no part in any of that. What's going on here? What's the macro picture of, in terms of the declining world order that we once knew, where it wasn't just United States running around doing whatever they liked, and other people might be briefed or asked? I mean, I'm interested in looking at outcome, you know, and then kind of looking backwards at how we got there.
Starting point is 00:36:42 And I'm also very interested in how divided America is because I really do see it as the greatest weakness. So you can show strength in what just happened, but if you are extremely vulnerable at home, and I'm not talking necessarily about Hezbollah terrorist cells being, you know, activated, which may or may not happen, I'm trying. I'm just talking about the clash of political parties in the United States. And to that end, I often look at the past. And so we're talking about you mentioned being friendly and having our allies and our – and I can't help but look at the reaction of the opposing party right now at this action, for better for worse, but bringing up the Iraq war. and talking about how we got our allies involved, we went to Congress.
Starting point is 00:37:41 And I, as a historian, can't help but think, but wait a minute, the Iraq war was built on faulty intelligence. The Iraq war led us into a 20-year, absolute misery with so many people in this area killed and so many more problems metastasizing as a result. And so to be selective about what works and what doesn't work is to me as dangerous as a situation as we are in now. And I know that's a little bit skirting away from giving you an answer as to why what was done was done or whether it's a good idea or a bad idea. It just simply is very interesting to me because I can't help but see, you know, being
Starting point is 00:38:34 a subject matter expert on the history of the CIA in particular, I see these actions where it is presidential authority driven since the end of World War II. And to me, that's what this action looks like. So the new era where we are in, which I find interesting, is where the president of the United States can essentially take what would historically be a covert action operation. You wouldn't even know about it.
Starting point is 00:39:03 That would be the idea. instead announcing it as a military program. So he's merging the legal authorities of Title 10 and Title 50. And of course, the average person in the United States doesn't like, oh, wait a minute, he's merging those authorities because... What are the Title 10 and Title 50? Well, Title 10 is the military must follow certain laws of war. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 00:39:25 And Title 50 says if the president decides it is a national security threat, he can use the CIA's paramilitary. that is an actual military force. They sheep dip tier one operators over from the military and take the patches off their shoulders, put them in non-military clothing, and send them out to do military-type work. So he's using the military how he wants to use them? Yes.
Starting point is 00:39:53 He has that right. As the commander-in-chief, as the chief executive of the United States, the DOD or now the DOW and CIA, fall under the executive branch. fall into the legislative branch. They don't fall under the judicial branch. So the president has, and always has, had the ability to take these types of actions and write executive orders. What's so different here is that while we're talking about CIA and CIA being used
Starting point is 00:40:21 by the president in his exercise of authority, what we're all not talking about. What we're missing is that CIA has been gutted. This is the same president that went to a war with CIA in first term. CIA has gone through massive attrition since then. They were defunded under his first presidency. So Director Ratcliffe is the least used director, the least reference director you never hear about him. Is he the head of the CIA? He is the head of the CIA. And what I am concerned about is that the CIA I left in 2014 was already missing intelligence on Venezuela and Iran. Since then, it's gotten smaller, it's gotten marginalized more. It's been treated hostily by the U.S. president.
Starting point is 00:41:11 And the CIA that I had started hearing rumors about in the early 2020s, 65% of the intelligence that they were producing was coming from foreign allies. They didn't have the ability to create their own intelligence. What I would also say is that every CIA, sadly, you know, has nostalgia for the former CIA. if you look at history and believes that their CIA was better than the current CIA. That's just the nature of... I'm not saying it was better or worse. I'm just saying the intelligence that the CIA is using now,
Starting point is 00:41:43 I would argue that we keep talking about CIA and you keep seeing CIA in the headlines, and it's actually not. But hang on. But hang on. OD&I didn't, or at least according to, shall we say, the New York Times, which must have come from the White House, CIA provided the intelligence with decapitation. So there you go.
Starting point is 00:42:02 That's fake. I don't think that's real. You don't think that is a shield. Here's the thing. CIA is the central intelligence agency, which is by design. It means that every other intelligence that comes from every other agency inside the DOD inside the national security infrastructure has to come through CIA. Only CIA produces the final product for the president.
Starting point is 00:42:23 So therefore, everything is CIA. And CIA contain and CIA is the one that's in charge of maintaining foreign relationships. with foreign intelligence services. So when Israel has an intelligence report that they share with the U.S. President, it goes through the CIA. So all credit and all blame always goes to CIA. That doesn't mean CIA actually had the intelligence themselves. So who do you think had the intelligence? And why does this matter? The number one, most informed country in the world on the goings on in Iran is Israel. Tell me if I'm wrong. No, I would agree with that. There's no way the United States would have been able to launch against Iran without close coordination and incredible intelligence support from Israel.
Starting point is 00:43:03 And I'm going to disagree a little bit. Why does it matter? Because it means that Israel could be directing the activities of the U.S. military by the intelligence they select to give to the proof. So I wouldn't take that step. I don't think Israel has a monopoly on intelligence provided. We know that MI6 has also historically been very active and very capable, probably more so than CIA has been. and in large part because the British government has a embassy, has diplomatic ties, has trade and economic ties with Iran. And the Islamic regime has seen the UK as a effective sort of pipeline or conduit to the United States and has used that in the past, sometimes, you know, to better effect than before. But I think that there's a, I think there's sources of intelligence
Starting point is 00:43:50 that the United States gets. And Israel is influential, but I don't think it is the sole influencer or the one that pushes it over the edge one or the other. I wasn't saying that they're the soul, but when it came to Iran, and I think we're saying the same thing, they are, they don't have the monopoly, but they have the... They're the biggest game in town. Exactly. When it comes to understanding what's happening in Iran. I mean, I'm going to disagree because I think that, okay, look at past situations where the United States attempted to do a decapitation strike and then have a regime change.
Starting point is 00:44:22 You can look at Iraq. We tried to kill Saddam Hussein, failed. and then a disaster blows up. Libya tried to kill Gaddafi, fails, a disaster blows up. Iran tries to kill the regime or decapitate the regime and succeeds. So are you saying that you believe that's because in the other situations, the intelligence was coming from the CIA who didn't have such great intelligence, and in this situation, the intelligence was coming from Israel, who did? No. I'm saying that a big piece of the opportunity of Iran is tied to the opportunity that was presented to us by our allies in the region.
Starting point is 00:45:11 I don't think it's just Israel. Saudi Arabia wants to see the end of Iran. UAE wants to see the end of Iran. Jordan wants to see the end of Iran. There's multiple allies in the region that want to see the end of Iran. But when it came to who had the longest, most reliable human intelligence source network inside Iran, I don't think anybody came even close to comparing with Israel. And you're saying that was used selectively, meaning... Because all intelligence that's shared with an ally is selective. Of course. I have 10 pieces.
Starting point is 00:45:40 Do I give all 10 pieces to my ally? Or do I give just the three pieces that I think will move them off the X? Right. Well, they had to have those 20 individuals tagged. to do their find, fix, and finishing. Period. End of story. It couldn't have happened without it. And I believe that the United States, the CIA,
Starting point is 00:45:58 aggregates all that intelligence, you know, Sig, you know, Sig, I mean, all the inns. To know that, I can't imagine how Israel knew that more than the United States. I just, I, I, I, that's my, that's where I was, that my horse. So let's, I mean, just to give you a very quick example, right? You're 100% right, that people have to be tagged. When you tag a cell phone, let's just say we're talking about cell phone, Cell phones give you a geo-location.
Starting point is 00:46:21 Every cell phone signal sends a geo-tag, but only on the service network that controls that phone. The United States doesn't have access to most of the service providers in the Middle East. So you already have to have someone to interlocute the Middle Eastern service provider with the West. And then on top of that, you then have to be able to identify that that selector, that cell phone, belongs to that person. Again, if you think that the United States is so powerful, it has every cell phone of every
Starting point is 00:46:48 person around the country, around the world, I think there's biometric tagging that is not necessarily electronic based. So you're saying that I appreciate your point of view. The point is that Iran,
Starting point is 00:47:05 according to every prioritized list that we have, is on the low end of our priorities. Russia's above them, China's above them. The cartels across Mexico are above them. So somehow we had such refined intelligence on...
Starting point is 00:47:23 What's your conclusion here, Andrew? Because I feel like there's a second half of your point that's missing, like a conclusion that you're pointing towards, but not saying. Isn't it just the lowest of the hanging fruits of all the ones you mentioned also? Correct. It doesn't... So what I'm saying is it doesn't make sense that we would take this action unless we are really just acting on the behest of our allies
Starting point is 00:47:45 for some other kind of gain, personal gain for the Trump brand, if you will, some sort of hegemony that the United States is desperately grasping for because we realize that we don't have that power and influence anymore. And as a result of these actions and actions like what we took in Venezuela, we have now empowered and validated some of the worst regimes in the world that we've always held accountable for taking the same kind of actions that we take. And who are you concerned about as it relates to other regimes? China, Russia.
Starting point is 00:48:14 This, Russia, I believe that a big part of the reason that, that, that, Zalinski hasn't been assassinated by Russia is because it would be crossing a red line. That would infuriate Europe and the United States because you don't attack world leaders. We just gave them permission to do so. The same thing in Taiwan. Now China has free reign
Starting point is 00:48:33 to just assassinate one person in Taiwan. And that's just them. We're not even talking about Pakistan and India. We're not talking about any of the border disputes that are happening anywhere else across Asia or warlords in Africa. We just validated these illegal inhumane, extrajudicial processes all over the world.
Starting point is 00:48:53 So unlike these other world leaders, Chaminé was his philosophy, his entire ideology was built on death to America among death to other things. You don't have other world leaders, you don't have the president of Taiwan saying death to China, you don't have Zelensky even saying death to Russia. He might want Putin dead, but he's not sort of, he doesn't want the demise of the entire Russian Republic.
Starting point is 00:49:18 So I think this is where Chaminet stands apart, where it is a movement, which became a system of government, predicated on the demise and the destruction of the United States. How do you counter that? What's interesting with the term stands apart is I was imagining therefore a spectrum. And the minute it becomes a spectrum, it becomes somewhat subjective. So, you know, one might say, well, we think they wanted to hurt us. Whereas before in my head, when I grew up, I always used to see these wars and go, why don't they just, they know where the guy lives. Like, I know that sounds like a simplified way, but they know where he is.
Starting point is 00:49:51 Why don't they just take him out? And it was always, it always felt to me that that was off the table in war. You can't just assassinate a leader because you don't like them or you're having a sort of geopolitical disagreement. And it's actually only in the last sort of year or two that I've thought, okay, maybe it is free reign to just fly in and snatch someone out of bed with their wife, which is what happened in Venezuela. And then seeing this, that you can just drop a bomb on them wherever they are,
Starting point is 00:50:12 it does kind of make you, you know, wonder, maybe this is now on the table. I've never really seen that in my lifetime. I mean, I know there were some things that went on Libya and Iraq and so on, but to snatch a prime minister out of bed with his wife and fly him over and with photos of it, I go, wow, this is a new type of geopolitical action. It's what our Secretary of State is calling the golden era of the United States. The old world is gone. Like these are the, this is the narrative coming out and being spread by the representation of the free world.
Starting point is 00:50:50 France, their Macron just this morning, stated that to be free, you must be feared. This is the world that we're creating. Death to America, guess how much I care about that? Guess how much I care that a poor, broke ass, far away fucking piddly dink country says death to America. Guess how afraid I am of that? Zero. And guess how afraid multiple people who have led the United States have been afraid of that? They're not.
Starting point is 00:51:16 You can say it all you want. It doesn't matter. And when you do carry out an attack against the USS Cole, for every one attack that's successful, 25 of them are thwarted. That's the benefit of being the most powerful military in the world. You don't have to worry about everybody who chants in the streets. How many people disown their kids because they say, I hate you when they're teenagers? You don't care. You're like, give it time. They'll grow up. They'll be fine. They've got to go through their shit before they realize what it's like to be grownups. That's what we say about our children. You can say the same thing about a country that just came to power in 1979. They're less than 100 years old. What do they know about how to actually be a country? What do we know? We're only 250 years old. I mean, it's hard to swallow that, like, you know, it's okay if you have like a horrible, you know, murderous, brutal regime making women run around in hijabs and ruining entire thousands of years old Persian civilization.
Starting point is 00:52:18 Have you been to this part of the world? I have not been there. That's what they, that's normal life there. That's what do you think is happening in the, in the hermit kingdom in North Korea? I mean, shoot, look, Afghanistan. We left Afghanistan and knew that that's exactly what the Taliban was going to do. Right. What's happening here since 79 is not normal. But just to go back to one step for a second, who do we know launch the missiles that kill the Supreme Leader
Starting point is 00:52:43 and all the other in the hierarchy? I think the credit is going to the United States. No, no, no. The credit is going to Israel. So Israel is the one that essentially push the button, pull the trigger, what have you. The United States provided the intelligence. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:52:58 In which case then, does Israel have the prerogative to take out a head of state That was essentially the only nation state, might I remind you, that came out in support of the October 7 attacks. It was only Iran. Not even North Korea came out and said anything. No one else did it. Chaminet absolutely said this was just and needed to happen. Not only that. On October 8th, he directed Hezbollah to join the war.
Starting point is 00:53:19 Therefore, is he a fair target for Israel? That's a great question. Is he a combatant? Yeah. If a head of state authorizes funds, motivates, endorses, and basically encourages and shoves out the door, your attacker, do you then have a right to go after them? I think that's, maybe that's the $10,000 question here. Okay.
Starting point is 00:53:40 Because if you are willing, if you're willing to see the leader of every country as a combatant, they are the heads of the military, the president is the commander-in-chief of the military. If they are a combatant, they are illegal target. So if they're illegal target, why is it against international law to attack head of state? And even more, what's the acceptable collateral damage? because Israel is notorious for assassinations around the world. It's what makes them so difficult for other people to ally with
Starting point is 00:54:07 because we don't support assassinations. And most assassinations are not legal combatants. They're scientists. That's a civilian. They're experts. That's a civilian. They're heads of industry. That's a civilian.
Starting point is 00:54:20 They're generals, but not in a hot conflict. That makes them a non-combatant. The spaces you're talking about, the line between civilian and someone who works for the government or is on a government-funded weapons program or something of that nature. Those lines are blurred in the Middle East. We know that.
Starting point is 00:54:35 Those lines are blurred everywhere. A civilian who works for a company that's hired by the U.S. military. Is that person a combatant? Okay, but those distinctions are far more subtle in the Middle East, and especially when you're a scientist working for a state nuclear program.
Starting point is 00:54:51 That you're being forced to work for because you're one of the few scientists that can do it. I don't know. Are they forced to work for? Absolutely. There are defectors. there are those who opts, and then there are those who double down and become religious cheerleaders supporting what the government's doing. I mean, the point I'm making is that you saying it doesn't give you the international, under international law, the right to take out ahead of state.
Starting point is 00:55:12 What if it was self-defense? That's not what it was. I have a counter-narrative here. Just to throw it out and kind of switch up the discussion here, you know, this administration is very interested in social media. And for that reason, I am too. And I look at, I saw a meme that was going around immediately after this decapitation event. So quickly, in fact, it made me wonder, like, who pushed that out that quickly? And it's a white sheet of paper with all the months of the year of 2026.
Starting point is 00:55:48 And January, there's a picture of Maduro. February, there's a picture of the Mexican cartel leader. March, one day off, there's a picture. of the supreme leader of Iran. And then there's a question mark in the other months. And it made me think and sort of wonder, speculate, is this messaging to Putin that he better start negotiating with Trump? No, Putin's a whole different beast.
Starting point is 00:56:14 What that's a message to is the leader of Cuba. Yeah, Cuba is going to say he's next. And if you follow what the United States considers to be the four state sponsors of terrorism, the only one that remains after Cuba is North Korea. You know, every once in a while you come across a product that has such a huge impact on your life that you'd probably describe it as a game changer. And I would say for about 35 to 40 percent of my team, they would currently describe this product that I have in front of me called Ketone IQ, which you can get at ketone.com as a game changer.
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Starting point is 00:58:24 Check it out now at WhisperFlow, spout W-I-S-P-R-F-L-O-W. It will be a game-change of you. Why does the US care about Cuba? What's the context there? What does the US want with Cuba? Well, Cuba's 90 miles off the coast of Florida, for starters. So geographically, it's very dangerous.
Starting point is 00:58:46 Cuba was where the Soviet Union put nuclear missiles, they're almost bringing the United States to the brink of nuclear war during the Kennedy administration. It's one of the only countries in the Western Hemisphere that does not fall under the United States' sphere of influence. I actually saw this yesterday. The Cuban government is talking with us. They're in a big deal of trouble, as you know.
Starting point is 00:59:12 They have no money. They have no anything right now. But they're talking with us. And maybe we'll have a friendly takeover of Cuba. Exactly. So Trump says that maybe we'll have a friendly takeover of Cuba. And he said that two days ago. So Cuba's next and then North Korea? They wouldn't, North Korea have nuclear weapons though, don't they, Annie? Yes, they do. I always wonder that actually does getting to a point where you have nuclear weapons kind of mean the U.S. will leave you alone.
Starting point is 00:59:42 Absolutely. I think that part of all of this is the sort of elephant in the room is that you cannot, you know, The United States will not let anyone else join the nuclear nine. North Korea was the last example of that mistake during the Clinton administration, being told by the leader of North Korea, oh, no, no, we're not going to have a nuclear program. And then him not, you know, deciding by sort of committee and all his sage advisors and following and talking to Congress and all of that, we're not going to attack North Korea. That would be unacceptable. That was the Democratic President Clinton's position.
Starting point is 01:00:22 And as a result, North Korea developed nuclear weapons and now has nuclear weapons and the nuclear weapons systems to strike the United States. And has demonstrated, you know, a desire if provoked, or actually has said if provoked, it would do so. And so, you know, that was not going to happen with Iran, certainly not on this watch and probably not on any watch. Is there a bit of an unspoken rule geopolitically where if you get to nuclear weapons, you can do whatever the hell you want? It's the ultimate deterrent. Absolutely. You can't mess with somebody who has a nuclear weapon and you don't. One of my friends was asking me this morning how the situation with Iran getting nuclear weapons is any different from the situation with North Korea having nuclear weapons? Or is it the same?
Starting point is 01:01:09 Well, it's the same thing. It's only perhaps we're, well, now this regime is up. We don't know what will happen with it. but having, you know, an Esch, correct me on this pronunciation, you know, the idea that the Shia idea that the sort of apocalyptic end is not necessarily a bad thing. Oh, the arrival of the Mahdi and that whole thing, right, sort of creating the conditions for that to come about. Yes, there's kind of a undergirding the Islamic regime's thinking is this idea. And that's very dangerous to the idea that we don't want to have a nuclear war. Though that regime is not suicidal. I will sort of state that. Chaminé was prepared to die for his cause, but he was not suicidal in the sense that he would go out and sort of, you know, if he could, I don't think, start a nuclear war that he knew his country was going to get destroyed fighting.
Starting point is 01:02:02 That is, I think, you know, one distinction, and I'm not saying North Korea is suicidal, but definitely what remains of the government there is not suicidal. I don't think there is ideological diehards as we saw in the founding fathers of which Chamini was the last. one. So that changes it a little bit. Now that he's dead, you know, there's a philosopher, Eric Koffer, he sort of wrote that great causes start as movements, then they become businesses, then they become rackets. Okay. So Khomeini's movement that started in the 70s, that was the movement. It became a business, a enterprise, of which the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps profited immensely till it became a racket. And now we're at the racket phase of it. And the only one really left are the racketeering leaders, you know, and because the spiritual leaders are now gone.
Starting point is 01:02:48 What happens next, I think, is sort of, you know, we're now in very much an unknown territory with that. Andrew, to that point of nuclear weapons, if Iran had already violated many of the things they'd said around nuclear weapons, and I think they'd enriched uranium to 60% roughly, they would have theoretically continued to go, because they know that if you want the U.S. and other people in the region to stay away from you, you've got to get nuclear weapons. And once you get back to that point, then no one's going to mess with you? I think the assumption is that no one will mess with you with nuclear weapons. I don't think that that is going to be the assumption for much longer.
Starting point is 01:03:20 I think that Iran recognized that if it could get a path to a deployable nuclear capability, whether it's a rocket or whether it's a missile or even if it's a truck with a nuke in the trunk, they had options. I mean, that's a dirty bomb. They have options there. I mean, with just nuclear waste, they have options to cause real damage. But enriched military-grade, sustainable kind of permanent state nuclear capability is a much higher level of enrichment than that. And that's arguably what they have in North Korea.
Starting point is 01:03:55 Their deployability, their capability for actually putting it on a rocket and having the rocket hit where it's supposed to hit and not blow up on the launch pad is a little bit different. And for that reason, I think we have to take seriously the fact that if the United States wanted to demonstrate their power against the nuclear capable country, they could do it against North Korea. There's also this concept that our current military doctrine under Hegeseth has applied that no other president has ever applied and no other Department of Defense, Department of War has applied.
Starting point is 01:04:22 And that's this idea called burden sharing. According to the Department of War, their doctrine now is a doctrine of burden sharing, which means they will force the burden of a national security interest on American allies. An example is they go into Iran with a small, naval force, they bomb Iran, knowing very well that Iran is going to spread the pain across our allies
Starting point is 01:04:47 in the Middle East. To the United States Department of War, that is us, that is our allies, sharing the burden. If they want to be our allies, they have to do this. Same thing is happening with Ukraine and with Russia. If you want, if Europe, if you want to counter Russia, you must share the burden with the United States. It also gives the United States now carte blanche to go anywhere it wants with a limited force, stir up a hornet's nest, and then let everybody else pay the price. Well, in terms of the Middle East, it certainly was an effective move because, you know, all of these six countries that Iran has now, you know, attacked in the past 48 hours are now very angry with Iran.
Starting point is 01:05:31 So the burden sharing has gone from kind of like, this is a fight that we're not in to this is a fight we are in. I don't think that anybody has taken any offensive actions against Iran except the United States and Israel. But they're not happy with that. They weren't happy before. Oh, but the statements they put out are some of the strongest that we've seen in years. I mean, we've never even seen anything like that. We've never seen the Gulf states put out what they've basically, you know, condemning Iran and holding it responsible.
Starting point is 01:05:58 It's now any pretense that there was a rapprochement, there was some sort of a coming together is now shattered. And that's a setback for whatever's left of the Islamic Republic. Huge separat. The power that Iran has over the Middle East is a power of agriculture. All of the countries that we look at, all the oil collegi countries can't make their own food. Iran makes their food. So they've always had this weird relationship where they disagree with them politically, they disagree with them religiously, they disagree with them militarily, but they're still allies because of food. The United States has sanctions all over Russia, except in one area, space.
Starting point is 01:06:34 We still cooperate with Russia. It's a carve out. because we don't want to lose their access to the space program. Do you think we're closer to nuclear war now because of this action? 100%. So you think this has moved us closer that? 100%. And I've got, there's proof of that all over the headlines today
Starting point is 01:06:51 because France is deploying air-launch nuclear warheads. Air-launched nuclear warheads. That means small warheads that fit on the ends of airplane rockets. They're deploying them all over Europe. That means France is now taking its nuclear, and spreading it across its European allies. The more nuclear proliferation, the more risk of nuclear war. That has nothing to do with Iran.
Starting point is 01:07:16 That has nothing to do with Iran. That has nothing to do with Iran. It happened two days after Iran. The threat of nuclear war comes from the conflict, in my opinion, comes from the conflict in Iran, from the war in Ukraine and comes from Russia. Because you have an actual superpower president who has threatened the use. of nuclear weapons. Iran doesn't have a nuclear weapon. So it's not a nuclear threat. You speak a different nuclear language than I do. Russia is launching intercontinental ballistic missiles that can't be intercepted. It's got the Oreschnik. What the hell is it going to be
Starting point is 01:07:54 afraid of a warhead on the tip of an airplane? It's not. That's a tactical nuke. That's a battlefield nuke. But what is your point? My point is that the deployment of a nuclear weapon is nuclear war. The deployment of a nuclear weapon. If you're talking about Hang on. Mutually assured destruction... Are you talking about the use of a nuclear weapon?
Starting point is 01:08:12 Are you talking about putting a warhead on an aircraft? No, that's been technology for a long time. Using it in the battlefield. But it's not being used in the battlefield. I agree with you a thousand percent. You don't think it's been... You think it is being used in the battle. No, I'm saying being deployed,
Starting point is 01:08:25 is that getting as closer to nuclear war? Yes. Yes, but it's not because of Iran. It has nothing to do with Iran. And what are you talking about being deployed? because you're talking about France maneuvering where its weaponry is. That's the definition of a deployment. That is – well, then we're talking about it.
Starting point is 01:08:42 I'm talking about nuclear use. I mean, the United States deploys its nuclear forces all the time by President Trump saying, I'm moving our submarines, which is just talk because they're moving anyways. It's the same as – it's threatening when Putin says, I'm moving at my nuclear, or when he tests, you know, Norway by popping up right offside, outside of their shores. Those are maneuvers that are very dangerous. I absolutely agree. Annie, but in this particular case, has the, even from a Russian perspective, has this war in Iran increase the probability that a Putin would use a nuclear weapon?
Starting point is 01:09:25 In my opinion, absolutely not. No. In my opinion, no. In my opinion, what it does to Putin is it makes him say, wow, this president is unpredictable. And to some, to an authoritarian person like Putin, that's a match for him, not someone for him to walk on. And I think that I'm not saying that's a great way for world diplomacy whatsoever. It's not diplomacy. It's just, you know, it's just strong arming one another. but we are not, I do not feel at all that this situation makes us closer to a nuclear threat whatsoever.
Starting point is 01:10:10 I agree. I think it's a combination of Ukraine and China's military exercises and action in the South China Sea. And the whole sort of, you know, what we're not saying, there's this argument that China's watching what's going on with the U.S. and Iran. Here we are depleting our interceptors, our munitions, China's meanwhile stockpiling, you know, its resources. and does this put us at a disadvantage if and when the date comes where China decides to take proactive, aggressive action vis-à-vis to Iran? That's something to think about. And I think that I'm worried about the risk of nuclear war in that instance. I don't think Iran by itself in a vacuum is moving the needle on that sort of nuclear risk meter.
Starting point is 01:10:50 To your point, what this is a boon for is the defense contractor world, is the military industrial complex. Because, for example, part of why Iran is so weak. is because they've used up so many ballistic missiles in their conflict with Israel. I read today the interceptor to missile ratio, something like 25 to 1, that the interceptors needed to catch these ballistic missiles that Kuwait, the UAE, Israel is using. They're like upwards of 10, 15 times more expensive. Yes. And these drones are relatively cheaply made, these Shahid drones that they're using.
Starting point is 01:11:25 So, you know, there is that aspect of it too, that Iran can just fire like a madman. all these sort of expendable munitions. And meanwhile, we're spending three, four, five, ten times as much to intercept them. Yes, although you do see in any kind of conflict like this, you always see new weapons on the battle. And that's what happened now. And America actually has been copying the Shaheed drones, these cheap, we call them the Lucas, these cheap systems that can just go in and, you know, cause havoc without precision. And we deployed them.
Starting point is 01:11:58 So I think this was a long time. I thought to interrupt you, Stephen. I think this is one of the big questions that a lot of people are asking, which is how long can Iran fight for in this war? And what does that fight look like? Here in these jars, you have, I think it's the relative amount of soldiers that each country has. Now, obviously, soldiers are just goes back to what Obama said about horses and bayonets. They're one form of combat.
Starting point is 01:12:22 But I was quite surprised at how big Iran's military is relative to even, the U.S., but other countries in the region, I think they have the biggest military in the region, is that correct? So we have to separate between the IRGC and the National Army. They serve two different functions. What are those two things? The IRGC, which Annie brought up earlier, so the I stands for Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, not Iranian. What does that mean? It's protecting the Islamic Revolution. It is an ideological army that sits outside of the main structures of power, accountable only to the Supreme Leader. The National Army really goes through the Office of the Presidency and others, and even though the Supreme Leader has a say in it,
Starting point is 01:13:01 but the Army's job is to protect Iran's borders. The IRGC's job is to protect the revolution and the ideology and the proxies and everything else that we have come to know about Iran. So if we look at those, if we look at what's in the jar, we have to separate what the national army, which is only its job is to defend the borders versus the ideological army. I'm curious what that would look like if we took out the National Army and are left with the ideological force.
Starting point is 01:13:28 Iran have the largest stockpile in the Middle East of missiles, drones and air defenses, possessing thousands of ballistic cruise missiles and Kamakazi drones. This is their primary offensive strength, and they have quite a significant defense budget as well. I guess the question I'm trying to get out is like, how long can they fight for? And how does that fight look over time? Because I know they shot hundreds and hundreds of ballistic missiles over the weekend. Yeah. Israel claims that in the June war of last year, it eliminated about half of Iran, what it believes Iran stockpiles, but also batteries, launchers, basically the capability.
Starting point is 01:14:00 So whatever it was, let's say they have half of that left. I've seen a statistics saying that really they can't go at this rate Iran for more than two to three weeks before they're completely depleted. Well, there's also an interesting move that the United States does. Well, we didn't kill the Supreme Leader. What we did do was send our B-2s to take out underground missile systems, which Iran has. Which are the aircrafts, right? No, they're underground. They actually call them the Missus cities.
Starting point is 01:14:28 Yeah, the B-2s of the bombers. Yes, they came from the United States. And this is a considerable damage because the two ways in which these sort of rogue nations, whether it's North Korea or run, work their missiles, is they have them on what are called road mobile launchers so that they cannot be tracked and targeted, or they bury them deeply underground. And one of the only things that can take out those deeply buried missile sites is a B2. too. And that's what the United States said.
Starting point is 01:14:58 So how do you think this plays out over the coming weeks and months? Because at some point, yeah, they might run out of missiles, but that doesn't necessarily mean the war is over. I'm presuming that the U.S. don't want to throw soldiers on the ground in Iran either. So how does this play out and how long? And that's one of the major strategic areas that we made in attacking Iran. They have the benefit of time, not us. They can choose how to react, when to react, in what way to react. We don't know if they have a dirty bomb that they're finishing up in some underground bunker right now.
Starting point is 01:15:29 That's just going to sit there and wait until American boots on the ground show up. The fact that you guys think that current nuclear deployments have nothing to do with what's going on Iran, it's, I want to respect that opinion, but to me it shows just a lack of military experience and actual strategic intent to kill. Like when you look at how military and intelligence operators are trained to think, we are trained to think through a lens of maximum damage. Iran is thinking through the same window right now. And they're watching what we just did in Afghanistan. Don't forget, we killed Osama bin Laden, who was an ideological figurehead of al-Qaeda in 2011 and didn't leave Afghanistan until 2022 when we gave up.
Starting point is 01:16:15 That's another 11 years of war after the guy that we were supposed to kill. to end the war. Khamini is different. Khamini is different. But how different? I don't know yet. And what are we going to do? The new leadership in Iran,
Starting point is 01:16:31 what's it going to be? Is it going to be a leadership that kowtows to the United States, that kowtows to Israel? It's going to be another shadow government like the Shah? And we're going to place somebody else and the Iranian people are going to love it?
Starting point is 01:16:41 Or are we leaving a vacuum that China and Russia are going to step into? And now we're going to see a strengthened Iran that's strengthened by our largest adversary in the world. This is the reality of what we've got to figure out because whether they launch all their rockets in the next two weeks, that doesn't mean that's the end
Starting point is 01:16:58 of the fight. For all we know, it's going to come back and bite us in six months when some Hezbollah cell lights New York on fire. We don't know. But when it happens, arguably it's going to be justified. To Andrew's point, Iran can wage a war of attrition.
Starting point is 01:17:14 It's harder. A war of attrition is basically low-level warfare. Think of death by a thousand cuts, right? I'll just keep poking at you enough to eventually wear you down, destabilize you, weaken you. Whereas what you can do is massive retaliation and these big sort of theatrical strikes. War of Atrician is basically grinding for the long haul and wearing you down. This is something that, to his point, Iran is capable of doing and is probably willing to do and seize is the only way that it can survive this. Who leads that? It's whatever remnant is left. It's how Russia has survived so long. It's a war of
Starting point is 01:17:48 But I'm like, who's the leap? Do you need a leader? Or is it just lots of different pockets of people? Time will tell. And, you know, Hezbollah sort of cells around the world will tell us what happens. But I think another way of looking at it, I saw a former member of the National Security Council commenting that, like, yes, cells could be activated in America or they could just fade away. And this is where I don't have a crystal ball. And I'm just observing. what's happening, but I do think that all of this hangs on the razor's edge of public opinion. Because, you know, time will tell whether or not this regime falls, whether what you're saying, if it's either or. But I don't think that we, I don't think that we can know. Have we been here before to some degree?
Starting point is 01:18:39 Too many times. Too many times. What is the lesson from history that everyone seems to have forgotten? That we are shitty learners of history. That's what the lesson is. To your point of who the leadership would be, something else that that philosopher, I quoted, Eric Hoffer, had said that, you know, mass movements, they don't need a God, but they do need a devil. So to that effect, the leader doesn't matter as much as having an enemy does.
Starting point is 01:19:01 That is the, so basically, so long as we, the United States or the Western world is framed as the enemy, that is enough to keep a war of attrition going, absent any figurehead or a charismatic leader. And he was a religious figure versus just a political figure. He was a religious figure. But to your point, he was the racketeer at the end. Yeah, I mean, he was running. I mean, effectively. And everyone in most people in that country knew that.
Starting point is 01:19:25 Yeah. Absolutely. Thousands of people have gathered in public squares in Tehran to openly weep and mourn his death. Roughly 20% of the population are staunch ideological supporters of him. Yeah, 20% and 90 million. Yeah. And it's interesting because one can imagine that that 20% might grow, especially if the coming months make their lives worse in some way.
Starting point is 01:19:44 They experience, I don't know, poverty. or whatever else. And then, you know, friends die because of this war. It doesn't take long for narrative to turn. So that's what everyone's been warning about. You strike Iran. This was a warning last June. You strike Iran. You're going to get rally around the flag. The people that are secularists now are going to turn
Starting point is 01:20:01 and they're going to start supporting the regime. And we're going to set back the cause of, let's say, freedom or democracy. It didn't happen. It turns out that basically the people in Iran blamed the regime for the misery that was put upon them. And so I think that 20% will get even. and smaller as a result, not just of this. It would have gotten smaller anyway.
Starting point is 01:20:20 As a result of this, I think it'll get even smaller still. Because their salvation is not at the end of a turban or a robe. It basically comes with liberty and freedom that this government, this regime won't give them. And so that is, I think, evident now to the 80% of Iranians, all of whom of that mean that, you know, 80% of the population is born after 79. They don't know the old regime. All they know is this one. And what they know is they don't like it.
Starting point is 01:20:44 They don't like living under it. and they want anything other than what this is. You feel differently? I think that that's an overly idealistic way of thinking about it. We failed to convert Iraq when we took out Saddam Hussein. We failed to convert Afghanistan when we took out the Taliban. Iran is not Iraq and Afghanistan, though. It is not.
Starting point is 01:21:01 I'm not saying it's the same. I'm saying that when you change a government from the top down, that doesn't do anything for the people. No one's changing it. There's no nation building. We're not going in to do it in Iraq. We're not cracking their constitution. So what's going to build it?
Starting point is 01:21:14 What's going to change it? The people? the people that have been slaves for basically the last, what, 40, 50 years, the people who have had no education, the people who have been marginalized? Do you think they're just going to understand how to organize themselves? Right, I'll be educated very, very highly. I mean, it's one of the most educated populaces in the world, and I have, and they are very, the people that are not regime supporters are very Western thinking. I mean, we see this. We see this in the culture they produce, the media they produce, when they go and they speak around the world. So the populace is there. The capability is there. The will. is there, all they need is basically
Starting point is 01:21:47 not to be, you know, not to be facing the barrel of a gun. We are about to find out if that's true. And that is what we are all writing on right now is whether this intellectual minority in a poverty-stricken, economically defunct country is going to even fucking stay there.
Starting point is 01:22:03 Or whether they're going to take their brains and their success and their opportunities somewhere else. The diaspora and everything we're hearing says they are, the people are cannot wait to help rebuild the country. Why do you trust what you're hearing? Well, his family's there, so he's probably better. Even worse, the worst thing you can do is trust the people that you have a personal relationship with.
Starting point is 01:22:23 They're the least objective people that you can talk to. So who are there 80% of the population? Who do you talk to? Exactly. Who do you trust? You can't trust anything that you're hearing right now. You can't trust anything that you're reading right now. The information landscape is too tumultuous.
Starting point is 01:22:37 So who do you trust? I mean, that's paranoid. It's not paranoid. It's healthy. It is absolutely paranoid to suggest that everything is misinformation. One would believe, at least I certainly believe, that I have a faculty up here, to be able to take information and try and discern what might be misinformation and what isn't, and then also be willing to stand corrected. That's a very important part of it. And that goes back to my tribal problem is once you have a horse in the race and you become convinced, and I am hearing a little convincedness from you that, you know, then I believe you lose your.
Starting point is 01:23:15 ability to be able to go, oh, wow, maybe I was wrong. Maybe this. And again, I'm not condoning what the administration did whatsoever. I'm just listening to Benjamin and saying that is, to my eye, a much better source. I'm a journalist. I'm going to listen to what people on the ground are saying they're certainly family members because their opinion is going to be legitimately, you know, heartfelt and not propaganda. Again, we speak a completely different language. When you talk to me about opinion, heartfelt, and family and belief, none of those are objective. No, those are based on fact.
Starting point is 01:23:57 Rebellions are born on those things, by the way. I agree. And that doesn't make it objectively correct. It was a rebellion that ended up in the Iran that we just saw fall apart. That was a revolution. That was a rebellion. Andrew, where does your skepticism come from? What's it rooted in?
Starting point is 01:24:12 because you did spend almost a decade as an undercover spy for the United States in the CIA. Where is the skepticism coming from? Why shouldn't we believe people on the ground who are saying what they're saying? I have seen this stuff firsthand. I've been trained in how this stuff works. I've had to deploy this in pursuit of American goals and ambitions in the past. And what you're saying isn't inaccurate as to how people react. We just trust the opinion of the people that we trust the opinion of the people we trust,
Starting point is 01:24:42 more than we trust the opinion of others, only because it's our opinion that they're trustworthy at all. So who do you trust to get your information from? I want to take my information from as far opposite sources as possible and then see where the information confirms itself, where it correlates. Because if you see anti-American people saying the same thing as anti-Iranian people, where their messages are the same has corroboration. the number of dead leaders as an example. That's a corroborative point because you're hearing both the Iranian state media say that and pro-US Western forces talk about that.
Starting point is 01:25:19 But what if it's to your point of black box and you can't get information from the sources you're used to getting from? Well, that's exactly right. It is a black box. So if we know it's a black box, we have to question every source that comes out, every piece of information that comes out. What we're seeing a lot of right now with Iran
Starting point is 01:25:33 is called circular reporting. It's one single source of information that comes out that gets multiplied over and over again. We're saying it happen in the White House too because the White House has kicked out so many journalistic legacy media outlets. So now one story gets multiplied over and over again and we're saying stuff that's repeated.
Starting point is 01:25:51 I have to say something. I am a little bit skeptical about what is true. I'm like the furthest from ever being a conspiracy theorist, but a little bit skeptical of what's true because I did a post about this subject. And obviously I've spent 15 years in social media, so our whole business was scaling huge social media audiences. And what I received in my DMs was like I've never seen before.
Starting point is 01:26:11 About what? I've heard people talking about bots for decades. And most of the time, they're actually, they're wrong. It's something else going on with the algorithm or maybe something they don't like they saw, so they call it a bot. I received thousands and thousands and thousands of DMs when I posted about this subject matter. And some of those accounts, when you go on the page and you look at their posting history, their engagement, you look at certain patterns, which we've built tools before to kind of spot, some of these accounts aren't real.
Starting point is 01:26:41 And I said to my friends, I was like, what the fuck? I posted about this issue. And then I had thousands and thousands and thousands of these accounts DM me encouraging me to post more about certain things. First time in my life ever, I go, oh, that was definitely. It was so a typical. An influence operation. Just so atypical.
Starting point is 01:26:58 What were these bots pushing you to post it on? I'm conscious whether I should say or not, because I don't want to infer. By doing so, you're... I'm like inferring that a particular, but I'm just saying I've never felt what I experienced then. And I have, I mean,
Starting point is 01:27:13 this trailer will come out, we'll see loads of bots, we have systems, but this was in my DMs. It was encouraging someone like me who has a big platform to push a certain narrative. And the only reason I noticed
Starting point is 01:27:22 is because of the sheer volume. And then the narrative was almost identical. And I think, well, 1,700 different accounts of all asking me to do the same thing. So you have final control over the edit of this.
Starting point is 01:27:34 Yeah. So there's no, if you don't want what you say to get edit to get to get aired but then it'll get cut but one way or the other whatever you say like I want you to say what you saw because if the narrative was anti-Iran then you were attacked by Western forces Western bots attacking a known Westerner if you were if you were propped up by pro-Iranian cyberbots then now you're talking about a cyber capacity a cyber capability in Iran that nobody's talking about so one way or the other or maybe an ally or someone else or whatever it might be I don't know but
Starting point is 01:28:05 I just, it made, what it's, my point was that it's made me skeptical about my own information chamber. And I'll be honest, before I realized what was going on, very persuasive. Very persuasive. You were persuaded by the bots before you realized they were bots. And then they're encouraging you to continue to, to push a certain narrative. And it just took, it took me a second to pause and thought, actually, maybe, wouldn't that be a perfect strategy in these moments to get people who have big platforms to just bomb their DMs and tell them that, you know, like, why aren't you? standing up for us and please use your voice to speak on this particular issue. And I thought actually maybe I need my information from somewhere else.
Starting point is 01:28:44 Well, I think the point that you're making, which is very important, it has to do with, you know, memetics or popularity. In other words, what we don't know the outcome of the situation yet. We don't know if the Hezbollah sleeper cells will be activated. Are they waiting to see whether what they do will be welcomed? or will be demonized. And I think that there's a profound influence in social media. And that is true in this administration and previous administrations about the rise of pushing public opinion.
Starting point is 01:29:21 I mean, to your point, that's what you worked on at the agency or you at least saw happen. The fact is, I'm glad that you're seeing it for yourself. You can't trust what you see. first of all, if you're a single language person, you only see what's in your language. You don't see what's in a different language. And then we all have an echo chamber around us, and the fact that we have so much technology
Starting point is 01:29:43 just amplifies our echo chamber. Our algorithm sees what we see. It sees what we like. It sees what we pause longer on than something else. And it gives us more of that. And people become very wealthy and very successful, understanding the behavior that people prefer. And you give people more of what they already prefer,
Starting point is 01:30:00 and then it makes them happier and they don't even realize they're sitting inside of an echo chamber. So for all of these reasons, I don't trust the information I see. I don't trust information unless multiple sources of conflicting values and conflicting priorities and conflicting goals
Starting point is 01:30:15 where they say the same thing, I'll give that more credence. And if you can't get those sources because information... Then you can't have a conclusion. You can have a living assessment, but you can't have a conclusion. So do you not operate
Starting point is 01:30:25 if you're a foreign policy decision maker, if you're a president, if you're a national security advisor, you have to give advice and consent. You have to figure out something. You can't say I have a lack of evidence, I have a lack of opinion or lack of information, and therefore, because they can't corroborate or verify,
Starting point is 01:30:41 there's no Venn diagram of overlapping views. That's when you have to use time as a tool. You have to use time to be the tool that you use to collect more information. If you give up time, you give up one of your most important tools, which is what we're giving up with this attack. We're giving up time so that we can potentially just fit a calendar, January, February, March. Like, that's why what did we actually gain?
Starting point is 01:31:07 How did the United States actually tangibly benefit from what just happened in Iran? If in the United States, how did we? If in four months from now, before the midterm elections, there is new leadership in Iran, entirely new. If there is regime change. In other words, if there is, by the president's own metrics, victory. Okay. Will you change your tune on this? the school of what did we gain?
Starting point is 01:31:30 What if it's not evident right now? What if it is in four months? I don't know. Yeah. It's a living assessment. So, of course, if for all we know, the president's decision is going to work out. But for all we know, it's going to get worse. For all we know, it won't be four months. It'll be four years of a drought and poverty-stricken.
Starting point is 01:31:47 And Iranians dying. Civilians dying because they can't find food and water. The 79 revolution took two years to happen, really began late 77. And then you had a sort of reign of terror, almost like the, you know, Thermadorian Robs-Pierre period in early Iran. in the early 80s, where it took really four or five years for all the dust to settle. But so the question is, do you want where are my results, right? It's only been since Friday.
Starting point is 01:32:09 No, no, what are we gaining? What do we even think we're going to gain? What does the United States think it's going to gain from decapitating the Iranian leadership? Well, that's kind of obvious based on what the president has said. On what the president has said. I'm just saying based on what the president says, I'm not, but if you ask what the point was, according to the president, because he's the one who authorized the operation, it was putting an end to Iran's nuclear program and regime change.
Starting point is 01:32:38 Based it off of what the president said, the nuclear program was obliterated in June of last year. But there's an attempt to reconstituted. They were looking to rebuild these facilities. They have satellite footage of this. Why are you disregarding previous narratives to adopt the current narrative? Because if I've learned nothing from 79, is that the previous narratives were wrong.
Starting point is 01:32:57 The assessments were wrong. So I don't trust the assessments either. But there's satellite imagery that shows, oh, there's reconstruction happening at Esfahan or Natanz or wherever. We can see trucks moving. We can see buildings coming up, right? They wanted to have a new. Something is going on. It shows to share that satellite imagery.
Starting point is 01:33:14 So what's my Nazi? It's impossible to practically say, no, no, no, Iran didn't want a nuclear weapon. They just wanted to have electric power. I mean, nuclear power. That's not really not a plausible assessment. That's what the ODNI put into their official report. How else do you explain that they're going beyond 20% in Richmond? Then why are they doing that?
Starting point is 01:33:41 They don't need more than 20%. And it was a racket. It is a racket. And we're talking about Tulsi Gabbard as a head of DNA. Exactly, exactly, which is a great point. Because she is a Trump supporter. Well, you have not heard from her. Are we not?
Starting point is 01:33:56 I don't think Aber has been a lot of things in her career. Yeah. But do you don't think there was any risk of Iran developing uranium to the point that they could use that as a nuclear weapon? Because if you look at the timeline here, which I'll throw up on screen, which is just a screenshot. By 2021, they were at a dangerous threshold. Iran begins enriching uranium to 60% purity, which is a short technical step away from the 90% needed for a weapon. And by 2023 to 2025, we were told that they were theoretically weeks away from being able to create a weapon, which is when Trump decided to attack, you think that's false?
Starting point is 01:34:28 We only know what we're being told. And what we're being told isn't even consistent between what's publicly being released by our own government and what we're being told in mainstream media. So what you think is the... There's clearly... There's some kind of inconsistent. Is it false?
Starting point is 01:34:43 I don't know. I don't know if it's false. Well, just look at North Korea if you want to know if it's false. I mean, I interviewed Bill Perry, the Secretary of Defense, who went there and got the guarantee and the promise from the dear leader. There was no chance they were going to develop a new... nuclear weapon, fingers crossed behind the back, thermonuclear weapon, and look where we are now. And so I think it would be foolhardy for this administration or any former administration
Starting point is 01:35:07 to think that Iran wasn't doing the same thing. It has every incentive to do it. If Iran, I would absolutely build one. Because look what it did for North Korea. We're getting lost in the wrong question. I'm not trying to say that Iran wasn't creating nuclear weapons. I'm saying that the official stance of the ODNI was that it was not. The official stance they want you to see.
Starting point is 01:35:29 Now we're getting... To your point. Now we're getting closer to the same point. Right. Why would the president say something different than what the OD&I is saying to the public? That is a failure in narrative control. There's an inconsistency there and that's the question. We agree on that.
Starting point is 01:35:43 We absolutely agree on that, yeah. So what do you think is actually going on? I asked you this at the top. But clearly you're pointing at some sort of ulterior motive. So I think what... What's happening here is that we are seeing an administration that doesn't actually know how to govern. And they're trying to find a way to grapple back some sense of success in the face of overwhelming contributing failures, economic failures, alliance failures, power struggles all over the world. We are seeing a transition to a strong man, multipolar world when we've only ever lived in a unipolar world.
Starting point is 01:36:23 What's a strong man multipolar world? It's what she was just talking about with Putin and Russia, right? When you act in strong authoritarian ways and people respect your authoritarian behaviors by giving you safety and giving you security, then that's strongman diplomacy. And why does that matter? What happens next? Because that's not cooperative. That creates conflict.
Starting point is 01:36:42 That creates more opportunities for conflict, less opportunities for communication, less shared common interest, which is a pathway to more what we call interstate war, which is conflict between states. because they're not communicating, they're not sharing, they're not even reliant on each other. Therefore, it's easier for war to break out. I have a sort of pessimistic thought here, which is an alternative to what is happening in Iran right now, which is what would happen, what could happen, and what might happen in the United States. And to your point that where you said this administration doesn't know how to govern, I would separate from that, whether that's true or not, I would say this administration
Starting point is 01:37:23 thinks very futuristic about surveillance systems and systems of control. And you can see that with ICE
Starting point is 01:37:33 and with Homeland Security. And my concern would be that red teaming or round tabling all the different possible blowback,
Starting point is 01:37:43 well, what if we have Hezbole sleeper cells set off a dirty bomb in the United States or do something? That is
Starting point is 01:37:50 in the eyes of some a perfect opportunity to create more of a surveillance state in the United States, to use biometric surveillance platforms, ISR, against United States citizens, because it's the only way to control people and to really know where the bad guys are. And that is a concern of money. So can you be a bit more explicitly clear that? So you're saying that?
Starting point is 01:38:18 Well, in other words, sort of I always just look at things because I consider weapon systems a lot and understand where we have come from. You know, nuclear weapons are the weapons of the past. Surveillance systems are the weapons of the present and drones. What's the weapon systems of the future? I mean, there's a serious motivation. You can just look at what happened with Anthropic and Open AI
Starting point is 01:38:43 in the Defense Department the day before all of this went down. So you're saying they're using this as a whole, way to introduce surveillance mechanisms potentially on United States? And I'm not saying that per se. I'm saying one hypothetical scenario that I can see is red teaming a bad outcome is not necessarily a bad outcome. Like if there were a problem in the United States as a result of this, we could counter that with legitimate reasons for more surveillance systems. Do you think people sit around and say that kind of thing? I know they do. Really? I mean, I don't think you can ever forget that the Department of Homeland Security, which by the way, was like the big issue in
Starting point is 01:39:21 the United States, you know, just a couple weeks ago. ICE, DHS, Department of Homeland Security, for those of the younger generation, did not exist before 9-11. It was an absolute byproduct of America being attacked. So you're thinking that this Iranian situation could give them cover to track and surveil U.S. citizens more. It would create a justification. I would change the word from cover to opportunity because I do think that's the way the systems work inside the, you know, executive branch. And I think that there is a always an extremely powerful hidden hand that has to do with weapons developers. And this sets us up for a false dichotomy. It's basically you can have security or liberty.
Starting point is 01:40:12 You can't have both. So which one do you want? You're biting your tongue there a little bit? No, he's 100% right. And the consternation that I'm feeling about this whole situation is really tied to the fact that we had a chance to not exacerbate the security situation of our planet by just not attacking Iran. We could have not exacerbated the security conflict.
Starting point is 01:40:38 For every other country, only Iran was struggling with their own decision about what they were going to do with themselves. Now, we have put dozens of countries at risk, active current risk, near-term risk. There are people dead today that would not have been dead. Had we not sent bombs into Iran? There's been property damage. There are markets damaged.
Starting point is 01:40:59 There are life height, like livelihoods are being damaged. There are 30,000 dead today who wouldn't have been dead if we'd done this in 1980. You're never going to hear me say that I really care that much about an Iranian life compared to an American life. That's just not how I roll. This is my priority. This is my citizenship. I don't begrudge you that, by the way. And it's not that my loyalty is elsewhere,
Starting point is 01:41:20 but I'm saying, you're not saying there are people that are dead. You're talking about the four Americans? You're talking about Arab citizens of the various cities that are attacked? Absolutely the four Americans, but also the Arab cities, right? And if we want to, like, when we start counting death toll, we start to lose sight of the fact that we all have to live in a prioritized world. It's like we talk about the 30,000 dead Iranians. We haven't said anything about the Palestinians that died in Gaza, right?
Starting point is 01:41:44 There's a lie, a life is a life. practically speaking, a life is equal, a life is a life that's a tragedy to lose any human being. But you still have to prioritize that on top of another... So can we interchange them with the four potential lives that were lost as results of the Austin shooting that happened yesterday? Sure. An American life that's lost is an American life that's lost, and the priority should be on protecting American lives. Including protecting Americans from themselves? Absolutely. That's one thing that we're not resourcing right now because our resources are going somewhere else.
Starting point is 01:42:12 Which is my point about, I think, you know, the real place to look at this is surveillance in the United States. Surveillance in the United States is 100% a guaranteed future. Mass surveillance has already happened. It will just get exacerbated, expanded, and legalized. It's already there. It's just the government has to buy their data from your Apple phone. They can't just pull it on their own. I think it's probably worth introducing the anthropic piece here just because some people won't have context.
Starting point is 01:42:40 in July 2025 Anthropic, who are a big AI company, one of the biggest in the world, the most exciting in the world and one of the most advanced in the world, signed a $200 million deal to build AI tools for U.S. national security. In February 2026, which was last month, the Pentagon demanded Anthropics AI be available for all military purposes, but Anthropic refused to allow autonomous weapons or mass surveillance of American citizens. This dispute started after the U.S. military used Claude in its raid to capture, Claude is a tool made by Anthropic, an AI tool made by Anthropic. They used Claude in a raid to capture Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in January, which Anthropics had violated its terms of use. The Defence Secretary Pete Hegesa threatened to cancel the contract
Starting point is 01:43:27 and brand Anthropic a supply chain risk unless it dropped its safety restrictions and stopped telling the US how to use Anthropics AI. And that started a big conversation which is raging raging online around mass surveillance, which is one of the things Anthropics said it didn't want America using with its AI. I mean, I think it's a convenient narrative to position one giant AI company
Starting point is 01:43:52 as somehow moral because it went up against the Defense Department and another one not because it didn't because like you said in there, Anthropic was part and parcel to the Maduro raid. So I don't believe that corporations certainly AI corporations, you know, are sitting around with a violin for American surveillance. I just don't, I mean, American sort of general well-being.
Starting point is 01:44:17 They're not altruistic. No, of course not. And I think that narrative is dangerous. There was a research piece done by King's College in London where they ran simulations on Cold War-Star War games using Chatch B.T. Claude and Gemini, which are three AI tools. Each played the leader of a nuclear arm superpower. And in every single simulation, at least one of the air models, escalated the crisis by threatening to use nuclear weapons.
Starting point is 01:44:40 Claude, which is owned by Anthropic, recommended nuclear strikes in 64% of games, which was the highest rate among all three of those AI models, but stopped short of advocating for a full strategic nuclear exchange or nuclear war. Bingo. Wasn't that the plot of the movie War Games in 1980s? Bingo. I mean, that's Skynet. And so these are major concerns.
Starting point is 01:45:02 Many of our former generals who were heads of, you know, and NSA are on the boards of these companies. I've had conversations with a number of them about this. I think smart people are and learned people are aware of like this is an absolute cliffhanger precipice. Eat what you do? Just making myself a delicious coffee. From the freezer? From the freezer. Have you not heard about contentia?
Starting point is 01:45:33 No. Oh my gosh. This is going to change your life. I invested in this company called Cometeer last year, and then I'm one of the sponsors of this podcast because they've taken a pretty revolutionary approach to making coffee. Every coffee is precision brewed at 10 times the strength. And then they flash freeze it with liquid nitrogen to lock in the flavor and freshness. And then it's delivered to you on dry ice in these recyclable aluminum capsules still frozen like a little ice cube. All you have to do is pop the capsule out, add.
Starting point is 01:46:06 some hot water, and then you stir it, and you are good to go. You can also make delicious ice coffee drinks as well. Just pour it in, stir it up. And for anyone that hasn't tried it, you can get $30 off your first order of Cometeer coffee if you go to cometeer.com slash Stephen. We have finally caved in. So many of you have asked us if we could bundle the conversation cards with the 1% diary. For those of you that don't know, every single time a guest sits here with me in the chair, they leave a question in the diary of a CEO, and then I ask that question to the next guest. We don't release those questions in any environment other than on these incredible conversation cards. These have become a fantastic tool
Starting point is 01:46:51 for people in relationships, people in teams, in big corporations, and also family members to connect with each other. With that, we also have the 1% diary, which is this incredible tool to change habits in your life. So many of you have asked if it was possible to buy both at the same time, especially people in big companies. So what we've done is we've bundled them together and you can buy both at the same time. And if you want to drive connection and instill habit change in your company, head to the diary.com to inquire and our team will be in touch. What is your most likely scenario that would lead to a nuclear war? Like, because you wrote the book on this stuff that, you know, you're the person everybody thinks of when we think about the scenario that nuclear
Starting point is 01:47:30 war could break out. Of all the potential routes there, which one do you think is the most likely? I do think that North Korea is very dangerous. I think Putin has, I would have told you five years ago that Putin would, you know, he's an former intelligence officer. He's familiar with history. He knows better. And now I would, I have a changed opinion about that. I think it's very dangerous. And I think that he, you know, his use of the Ereshnik was sort of like a, like that, that was a ballistic missile that is capable of carrying a nuclear warhead. There wasn't a nuclear warhead in it. He did. notify the State Department prior to the launch of that, you know, 30 minutes prior. But that's, like, incredibly dangerous. So everything is dangerous. Any nuclear-armed nation that, you know, threatens nuclear weapons is dangerous. But AI is its own extraordinary level of danger. And the article that you wrote speaks to that. Now, my understanding is currently everybody knows that, you know, air quotes. And then when you learn, when I, I learned about the Department of War,
Starting point is 01:48:38 anthropic AI late at night battle over using AI in these systems, I was surprised. Why? Because I thought there was more restraint on that. And what I see in this administration... From the government. Yes. And to see sort of the same bravado that we do agree on is coming out of this administration
Starting point is 01:49:01 about exerting power, about just being able to do a decapitation strike effectively using AI, I go, wow, that is not what I expected. The interesting thing with Trump generally is that he has a reputation of saying and doing things, that at one point we would have all gone, oh, my God, but we've almost become so used to these things that there's almost a desensitization to some degree. Shattering of norms, they call it, right? He also contradicts himself.
Starting point is 01:49:32 I mean, that's not even, I mean, he's spoken. on the record about how, I mean, I think he put out a video in 2011, I might be wrong in the date, like attacking Obama for, you know, and saying that he was going to attack Iran. In 2013, there's a, there's a tweet that he posted saying attacking Iran is showing that you fail that negotiations and, you know, something to that effect. So here we are talking about how important it is to change your mind. Maybe if you're not the, maybe not if you're the president of the United States. I think the slippery slope is so gradual that sometimes you don't see where you're heading towards.
Starting point is 01:50:06 And in terms of military action and the use of AI and all these things and autonomous weapons, it would feel like we're going down a slippery slope here in a way that I haven't felt for the other 33 years of my life as it relates to geopolitics and war. And also generally, when you think about some of the actions and speeches at Davos where the US leaders were saying to the Europeans, listen, you guys are weak now. And it sounded to me saying like you guys are week, get your shit together, figure out your energy situation. we don't need you anymore. Listen, we're going to, we're going to run this now. And this whole idea of special relationship, blah, blah, blah,
Starting point is 01:50:36 it seems to have gone out the window. So you've got an emboldened United States military and leadership who seem to be able to do what the fuck they want. If you don't let us use your area how we wish, we'll smash your company, we'll take away that 200 million contract and we'll cut you off from the rest of the supply chain. And we get used to it.
Starting point is 01:50:51 You know, we hear the head and go, oh, that's crazy. And then we kind of get desensitized again as humans do. But the direction of travel is sometimes what you want to look at. versus just this sort of static state of where we are. That's the concern. I think you have hit the nail on the head with that. I agree.
Starting point is 01:51:07 I think you've got a much clearer picture than most, Steve, on what's going on here. The United States, it has to pursue AI far more aggressively than what the CEOs of these companies want. I actually do believe there's quite a bit of altruism in the CEOs and the founders of these AIs. They didn't create these AIs. so they could be warmongers.
Starting point is 01:51:30 They created these AIs for some techy, beautiful vision of some utopian future. That's like saying Zuckerberg didn't create Facebook to cause teens to feel bad about themselves. You created it for people to connect. For something else, exactly. Right. Look what happens. Yeah. Unintended consequences.
Starting point is 01:51:48 So regardless of what the United States' opinion is about AI, it also has to very realistically look at how China is developing AI. And China is already 10x more aggressive than the United States is. And if they crack the code on certain types of AI, like artificial general intelligence or recursive self-improvement, if it breaks the code on these first, it's an exponential head start over the United States. And all of their AI, everything that we have some sort of reticence about using automated or autonomous weapons, mass surveillance, China's already using. So the number one strategic priority consistently in all documentation is China. the United States has to aggressively pursue AI.
Starting point is 01:52:32 I understand that mindset. It is absolutely ludicrous to think that one day an AI helps us take that leader of Venezuela, and then the next day we claim it's a supply chain risk. That's just, that's the kind of lunacy that we live in every day. That's a good point. But my bottom line concern here is that the United States used to be the leader of the free world. We're not a leader of the world at all. We're adopting more autocratic behaviors because we're seeing other countries,
Starting point is 01:52:59 succeed with autocratic behaviors. And we're abandoning Europe, which is the only place left trying to say that democracy still counts. Like, we are, we are not leading anymore. We are mimicking. We are reacting. We are petulant. But we are not leading. I'm still thinking about your doomsday scenario with a deathbed Vladimir Putin and what he might do. Is that realistic? Is it realistic? You know, it's like from hell's heart, I stab at thee. I mean, it, it, I don't know what's realistic anymore. Again, these norms that are shattered, these restraints, these, these guardrails that we think, no, a leader wouldn't do this or someone wouldn't do that. I'm beginning to question all of it, too. I don't know anymore what someone is or isn't capable of.
Starting point is 01:53:42 And I think humans have a discomfort with cognitive dissonance where, you know, holding two opposing viewpoints at once. We've gotten, I think, worse at it, evolutionary over, over time. and our politicians are the worst yet, or our war leaders are the worst at it yet. And so that's a cause of concern for me. I always think that what has someone got to lose and what have they got to gain? And if you've got a couple of days left of your life or a couple of days left in office and you're, I don't know, Trump's going to be, what, 83 by the time he gets out of office or something? Yeah, why does he care if he pushes a button and does whatever?
Starting point is 01:54:12 At which point, you know, and the same with Putin. At some point he's going to be old and he's going to have a couple of, you know, a couple of weeks left in his life. And he's going to be reflecting on his legacy and he's got nothing to lose. Trump's got nothing to lose with... There's no second term. Well... I watched him the other day taking great admiration
Starting point is 01:54:31 to the fact that Zelinsky can't be... They can't be elections in Ukraine because there's a war going on. And I think he cracked a joke saying that he would kind of like that that if there was a US war going on, then there wouldn't be elections.
Starting point is 01:54:44 And it sounded like a joke. But a lot of things have sounded like jokes before that he said. So what is your... What do you think happens next? And also, I wanted to get your take on, you know, we've got this map here which shows where Iran can strike with their missiles. I've got friends in Dubai. Never in my life did I think bombs would be dropping on Dubai or any strikes or drones would be happening in Dubai. And one of my best friends was in the basement in a bunker two nights ago
Starting point is 01:55:10 because of what's going on. That whole region has been hit. The Dubai airport has been hit. Saudi Arabia has been hit. Bahrain's been hit. What does this do? Qatar? Qatar has been hit. What does this do to the region? And why Iran has been hit? And why Iran has been hit? hitting these places? So this is part of the burden-sharing strategy that the United States military doctrine has put in place. And I think to a certain extent, all of the region already knew they were on Iran's radar. They've all had this weird, hostile, collaborative relationship with Iran out of necessity
Starting point is 01:55:42 because Iran is the breadbasket of the Middle East. So they've known that there's always the risk. But I don't think they ever took that particular risk seriously. Why Iran doing it? Why do they care about messing up Dubai or making people in Dubai scared? They are lowering the pain threshold. The deputy foreign minister said, we can't strike Americans in America. We can maybe strike Americans at their bases in these Arab states.
Starting point is 01:56:07 And we can also strike the states that are hosting Americans, American civilians, American military, American contractors, you name it. They're all complicit. It's lashing out. Because what happens is if you make it miserable for everybody, then the United States is pressured to bring this to an end. Okay. So they're going to continue.
Starting point is 01:56:25 What does Iran have to lose? Back to your sort of doomsday scenario, they're about to be destroyed anyway. What do they have to lose? They're going to take everyone down with them because only if that threat is real, will the United States say, okay, you know what, we're going to pause
Starting point is 01:56:36 and see if we can get back to diplomacy. And it might work. If the Arab states, you know, decide that, okay, we're not going to sustain this. We're not going to fight back. We need this to end. United States, you have to stop what you're doing. So we could see a lot of the conflict
Starting point is 01:56:49 actually taking place in some of these neighboring countries, terrorist attacks, etc. It's working. It's causing pain to these sort of peripheral countries that are not central to this conflict. And look what the United States has done, arguably, right? Yeah. And one of the unintended, well, maybe intended consequences is if I turn on the news in the UK right now, the narrative is that this region, Dubai, all of these places, Abu Dhabi, it's all unsafe. And what that means is they're showing that Sky News are going up to families in Dubai and going, how is you're going, how is you feeling and they're going, I'm stuck, I just want to get home. And this region have spent a lot of money building their reputation over the last couple
Starting point is 01:57:25 decades, their tourist economy. And this is going to, even if the war was to stop today, there'll be a big cohort of people that choose not to go there on holiday and choose not to go and relocate there. And that will reverberate. One could argue that it's actually in, you know, this narrative that the Middle East is unsafe. One could argue that that's actually in the interests of the UK. It's going to drive down the price of real estate. Yeah, and drive up our tax receipts because we have a lot of, I think it's the biggest place that UK taxpayers have gone to and millionaires have gone to is this region.
Starting point is 01:57:59 So, did you have any thoughts on that? No, you're not. I don't think you're wrong. I think that there's, whether or not, I don't believe that Western countries want to see death and destruction in the Middle East. I don't believe that. I do think that when they plan for blowback, they account for that and they try to make the best opportunity out of the blowback that they already expect. And that does make sense. But at the end of the day, Iran has to do something to react. And it knows that it can't just send all of its rockets at the fleet that's off the coast of Oman because the fleet that's off the coast of Oman is going to be able to intercept most of those rockets. So if they want some kind of effective response, the most effective response they can have is to share the pain and create some. some sort of international resistance against what the United States has done.
Starting point is 01:58:47 How long do you think this goes on for, Angie, if you had to guess? If I had to guess, I would say that there's going to be an active hot conflict with Iran that lasts a few weeks, hot conflict, meaning every day we wake up and we see new rockets being launched and new attacks, new air sorties being launched. But the actual reverberations of this from Hezbollah, from Hamas, from the Houthis, from whatever loyal stanchions still exist in Iran, we could see that for years. There's no guarantee that Iran's going to bounce back from this in a better place. I hope it will, but hope is not the same thing as reality.
Starting point is 01:59:23 Hope is just hope. I hope that it will. But in the vacuum, we could see the biggest adversaries to the United States flood in and support Iran, like the biggest adversaries in the world, flooded and support Afghanistan. We might see that we have even less influence over the region in the future than we do now. Is there an issue of the distraction this is causing to what's going on in Ukraine and in other parts of the world where there was already conflict and there was already Tamil? Like, are people now not going to pay attention to Ukraine so that gives Putin some cover to be more aggressive there? It emboldens every authoritarian ruler out there because now it's been, it's validating to them that they're not actually doing anything wrong.
Starting point is 02:00:00 If the President of the United States can do it, then certainly Putin can do it and Xi Jinping can do it and any warlord in Africa can do it. it's certainly it's allowed. Or on the flip side, it's showing that if you act outside of international norms that the United States president will not hesitate to decapitate your entire leadership, which is something maybe we didn't think was conceivable a couple weeks ago. So there's that inverse message. Is it conceivable that both might occur? Yeah, both can be true.
Starting point is 02:00:25 It sounds to me like that might be the most likely outcome that you're probably going to go one of either ways. China might say now's a good time to get Taiwan because, I mean, I mean, objectively speaking, people are distracted. And it's a perfect time. It's a perfect time for someone to try to assassinate the president. But then Cuba might say, you know, if we're going to behave. Exactly. Because look what happens if we don't.
Starting point is 02:00:44 What do you think, Annie, on this subject of what happens next and most likely? I mean, to that end, I would say how fascinating is it that what happened with Maduro in January still shocks me. 150 paramilitary or military and intelligence officers go in, grab the sovereign leader. and his wife in a heavily fortified military base, take out his guardsmen who are actually Cuban. I mean, there's just so many things to unpack in what I just said about what just happened. And yet, that's just old news.
Starting point is 02:01:26 And that, to me, is more interesting than what might happen in the future, not because I can try and wrap my head around the past, but I can't predict the future. But I do believe they correlate with one another. And only after time, you know, it's the old hindsight is 2020. It will make how Iran unfolds, you know, maybe we'll get the band back together in five months and have a discussion and we'll all be wrong. don't know. Separate question, but do you think Trump's going to leave office? I mean, the Constitution
Starting point is 02:02:10 says he is. Do you think he will? The Constitution says he is. But do you think he will? I don't have a crystal ball. Do you think he'll leave office? I do. Do you think he'll leave office? I do. I have more confidence after last week's learning resources, Supreme Court opinion, that we saw two justices who Trump appointed, who basically defied a policy that was the signature of his second term, his campaign, his tariffs and saying that you don't have that power. I was emboldened. I would have been more pessimistic, but after seeing that, it gave me a little bit more hope that there is still sort of guardrails and separation of powers. It's still a thing. What do you think happens next in the region? I'm with Andrew. I think three to four weeks
Starting point is 02:02:51 is the timeline. I see for the actual kinetic war. And then after that, every one of these Iranian leaders, whoever's left, whoever steps in and fills a role of a, whether it's a military junta that takes over, whether it's a symbolic supreme leader, these are all marked men. They're all going to be targeted for assassination. By who? By Israel? By primarily that pretty much anybody that considers them enemies,
Starting point is 02:03:13 even maybe now some of the Arab states, for that matter. At the end of the day, it doesn't pay to be a political or religious figure in Iran. So at this point, I think what we're going to see in the months to come is a slow fracturing of that support. I'm not surprised
Starting point is 02:03:29 if we start seeing defections from the IR and people, just like we saw during 1979, saying, you know what, it's not worth it? There's no long-term gain here because this regime has lost any credibility domestically. There's none left, zero. And it's losing credibility in the region. It violated an unspoken agreement with its Arab neighbors
Starting point is 02:03:48 that they don't directly fight each other in this way. And its allies, so-called allies, have abandoned it. It has nothing left. So when you have nothing left, what is there to fight for? That's why, but that's going to take a few months up to a year to play out. What is the most important thing that we should have talked about that we didn't talk about, Andrew, as it relates to all of the stuff we talked about today? I think for me, what I'm always, what I always come back to is what is the future for the average American.
Starting point is 02:04:16 What does it look like for us? I'm not sure how this plays out. I'm not sure that we improved the state of the average American very much in the last few days. I don't know that we will see much improvement in the next few weeks. I don't know that we will see much improvement in the next few years because of what actions we took in Iran. But I do confirm, I agree with what the other two have said. Like the United States administration has shown it's powerful in Venezuela. It's powerful in Iran.
Starting point is 02:04:45 Cuba's already being more than whispered about as the next transition in government. How much chaos are we going to see to the existing world establishment? before Trump then leaves office. And somebody else has to come in and pick up the mess. And I've always been concerned not about Donald Trump, but about who comes after Donald Trump. Why? Because if Donald Trump paves the way for this authoritarian type of shift,
Starting point is 02:05:13 and if he has support through his final days in office, then whoever comes next will have even more legitimacy to come in with a strong hand from the beginning in potentially a world where only authoritarian actions work. And that just continues to take us down a road of panic. I've been talking to you about this for the better part of three years that I believe the United States, I believe the world and especially the United States, is coming into one of its darkest decades ever. This is the world that we live in now, a world where it's not unipolar, a world of AI technologies we can't predict, of conflict that we can't anticipate, of mass surveillance, of the breaking of international norms. This is the world we are coming into now. It's the world that our children are going to be developed in.
Starting point is 02:05:58 It's the world that one day they will have to create their own future in, and our grandchildren will inherit whatever's left of it after that. It's sad to me to see that this is where we are, and unless we take some sort of responsibility for our own future, we will keep following this authoritarian trend. But isn't this better than the past? I would say no. A unipolar world where the United States is a supreme power as an American, that is a better world. But at least you won't die of dysentery out in the wilderness, right? Yeah, I mean, that's kind of. kind of what people say, right? They say, well, babies aren't dying anymore at childbirth and,
Starting point is 02:06:32 you know, less people are struggling with poverty. So it's a better, it depends what metric you're measuring, I guess. On that point of the transition after Trump leaves, would it be worse if a weak leader came in? Because I'm wondering, look, we know Putin's still going to be there. We know a lot of these other powers are still going to be there. Biden didn't strike me as the the scariest guy in the world. The toughest guy in the world. Didn't strike me as the toughest guy in the world. So if another figure like Biden came into power after Trump
Starting point is 02:07:07 once, with that war raging over there and with China, thinking about Taiwan, et cetera, is that not even more dangerous? I think there's a difference between a strong leader and a strong arm. A strong leader can chart a path, keep a vision, make hard decisions, balance priorities, keep people focused.
Starting point is 02:07:25 where a strong arm is out to win. And Donald Trump, his entire career, he's been the man who's out to win. Again, I don't think this is a Trump issue. I don't think this is a Trump problem. I don't think Donald Trump is some villain of the world. I just think Donald Trump is the manifestation of how most Americans felt at the time that they elected him,
Starting point is 02:07:46 which was like, we want to win. And now we're realizing that two years after, the second time that we wanted to win, there are other secondary consequences that we hadn't considered. And that's why so many of the kind of groups that supported Donald Trump have changed flavor about him. It's why his approval rating is so low because he's found a way to ostracize
Starting point is 02:08:07 so many of the groups that used to support him because they didn't realize that he was more complex than what they had originally thought back in that November booth. Annie, the most important thing we should have talked about that, didn't? I'm going to pick up on Andrew's thought about a strong leader versus a strong arm because it's so important to think about moving forward. Is that even possible, you know? Yes, we absolutely cannot have a weak leader. I mean, look what happened with Putin moving into Ukraine, taking Ukraine, attacking Ukraine. And I think that, you know,
Starting point is 02:08:43 who wants to be president? There's also this idea of you, you know, you look at the records of how people say come into office how they how they campaign saying what they are I'm going to get rid of these dangerous nuclear policies I'm going they have all kinds of optimistic ideas about things and then something happens in that first briefing something none of us know it's so mysterious and they never talk about and then their policies and their their perspective deeply changes and I think people move from an idea that they can be a strong leader to the idea that they have to be a strong arm. And I think that's deeply depressing to me.
Starting point is 02:09:26 And I am an eternal optimist, so I want to see that change. Presumably they're being made aware of the real threats that they face, that the US faces, and suddenly what was, I don't know, theoretical becomes very real. Perhaps. And so the I who loves narrative, the question is, what is that narrative?
Starting point is 02:09:45 and anything that is kept absolutely secret, I want to know about. And no one knows that answer. No president has ever spoken of it. So what is that narrative? What are they told? It's definitely not aliens. That's a conversation for another time. Benjamin?
Starting point is 02:10:05 Here. Right here. Taiwan. So I've been working on a simulation, a war game, that looks at something that's become up in the news Now, what happens if we don't need China to invade we need China to just blockade and completely cut off 90% of the chips and microprocessors
Starting point is 02:10:23 and all the things we need in this AI age into the West? What the hell do we do under that scenario? We don't have the infrastructure, the capacity, the resources to bring everything back online that we need to fabricate and make these chips. We talked about China a bit, but I'm really worried about this. What happens here? Because we realize so much on that little island.
Starting point is 02:10:43 and we don't need it invaded, we just need it blockaded. So what we see in the Straits of Hormuz happening right now, 20% of the world's oil, OPEC can increase production, it'll take a few weeks to bring it offline, stabilize the markets. We don't have that luxury here, not when it comes to the very things that powers the next generation of warfare and diplomacy and economic development. I don't think the average person realizes how much the West relies on that little island. 90% of our, at least here in the United States, 90%, as I understand.
Starting point is 02:11:13 That comes from that one island. The chips that are in our electrical devices. Why don't they just move it over here? They're trying. They're trying, right? It takes years. It takes years to get it cleared. It's very environmentally damaging.
Starting point is 02:11:28 The infrastructure takes time. The expertise isn't here. All the IP that's on that island comes from the United States. But the actual factories have been there and will be there. I guess there'll be a big labor cost impact as well. Absolutely. Regulations, all kinds of things. We have to work our way around and figure out how.
Starting point is 02:11:43 and then, you know, training the workers to be able to fabricate them due to as efficiently yield, you know, results that are high enough. So that's your concern? Huge concern. I mean, our communications could shut down. Our cars could. I mean, so many things can go wrong if we lose the capacity to power the devices that we need. What advice would you guys give?
Starting point is 02:12:07 This is my last question, I promise. What advice would you give to the average person? You know, because we've talked theoretically about geopolitics, and the average person at home can't do a lot about that. But if you were to give advice to the average person who's thinking about their family, about their future, about their work, what would you say? We are not helpless. It's not out of our control. But we do have to assert our control.
Starting point is 02:12:28 There is a midterm election that could effectively, quasi effectively block the decisions that the president can make unilaterally. If we exercise our right to vote, we create either able. blue Senate or a blue house of representatives, arguably we have demonstrated our ability to exercise our right to vote and taking back some semblance of control in our country. But unfortunately, I think people don't like waiting. They don't like taking seven months before they can take an action. They want to do something right now. And we live in a country, in a democratic process, where we get a chance to exercise our power every two years. So we have to actually show up and exercise that power. What are you doing for you and your family? We're leaving the United States.
Starting point is 02:13:18 Why? Because the United States is not going in the direction that I believe is the most conducive to the kind of citizen that I want to build in my children. I don't want my children to grow up in a country that is either afraid or angry. I don't want my children to grow up in a country that's constantly compromising its own democratic principles. I don't want to raise my kids in a country that puts capitalism before all other things. I want my children to grow up as global citizens to recognize that we're all interconnected, to value every human life. I wasn't given the privilege. I was the perfect candidates to sit here and tell you that American lives are more valuable than everybody else. That's not what I want to pass to my children. I want my children to look at lives
Starting point is 02:13:59 around the world as valuable, independent individual blessings. And I can try to teach them that, but that's not the message that they get. So where are you going to go? That's for me to know. Costa Rica. I remember this one. I remember this one else. Absolutely read as much as you can across the broadest spectrum that you can find and have conversations about what you think you know and what you want to know with as many people as you can across the broadest spectrum you can. And don't be afraid to have a little bit of friction like we had here today. That's the way it works and that's how the mind stays flat.
Starting point is 02:14:42 fluid and flexible, and you can always realize that you're wrong. Amen. I think that's increasingly important in an age of misinformation, disinformation, is to be able to have conversations like we had today where you have an opinion, but you're open-minded to listen. And something that I think is increasingly important, but increasingly rare. Even as a podcaster, you're kind of forced to fit somewhere, you're pushed to be on the right or push to be on the left or push to believe this or push to believe that. And it takes, especially in the modern world with algorithms hitting you every day, It takes some restraint and thoughtfulness to try and remain open. So I love that message.
Starting point is 02:15:18 And I hope for our audience, they're listening, I hope that that's what they do as well. Like even if they don't like a guest we have on the show or they have a different of opinion, I hope you can at least bring yourself to listen and fight the cognitive dissonance, which is very natural in human instinct to hear them out and to allow those ideas to clash with your own, to arrive at your own conclusions. Benjamin. I'm going to echo a lot of what Andy said, stay curious. I think podcasts like yours and I think others.
Starting point is 02:15:42 do a great job of exposing people to different things they didn't think of. So continue to feed that curiosity. And cognitive dissonance is uncomfortable, but it is a good thing because it forces us to think of opinions that we wouldn't otherwise. And I try to teach my students the power of empathy, which basically means you don't have to like the other side. You can hate the other side, but just see the world as they see it for a moment before you do. So I think empathy's critical. Why do we find more of your work, Benjamin, someone who's checking? I mean, for me, I'm building out ways to be able to find more of it, but on socials, on X and on Instagram, I try to post as often as I can and give talks when I can.
Starting point is 02:16:21 You haven't written a book yet? Not yet. I'm designing a simulation platform. That's sort of my work product, but it's not available to the masses yet. And Annie? Where books are sold. I mean, you've got a lot of them, but you write fantastic books. Any particular one you would like people to read? Start at the beginning. Okay.
Starting point is 02:16:40 Or start at the end. The Annie Anthology. I'll link them all below in the description so people can find them. And, Andrew? You can find me at Everydayspy.com, the business that I own. You can find me everywhere as my name,
Starting point is 02:16:51 Andrew Bustamante, and yeah. YouTube, and you've written this great book, Shadow Cell, which has been a smash hit with New York Times best seller, wasn't it? Yes, sir. It was. And this is, I mean, we talked about this in our last episode, but it took a long time to get this book declassified,
Starting point is 02:17:05 I believe, and get permission from the CIA to release it. And it's a fascinating story of uncovering a mob. within the CIA, which is fascinating. So thank you again, all of you for getting together and demystifying a lot of this stuff for me. It's helped me to build my own perspective on what's going on in the world. And I hope we can have you all back again soon
Starting point is 02:17:23 once we figure out what actually happens. So thank you so much. I appreciate a lot. Thank you. One of the most successful conversations we've had this year on the show was with a guy called Chris Conner who talks about ways to make money on the side.
Starting point is 02:18:00 And it got me thinking, because our show sponsor is, Airbnb, a brand I love, I've used all over the world for the last decade or so. And this is an unbelievable, untapped opportunity to make some money on the side if you currently are a homeowner. Let me explain. So many of us go traveling, we go on holiday to see in-laws or to go on ski trips or whatever it might be. And our home sits there, usually actually costing us money because of bills. What most people don't realize is that you can put that house on Airbnb very simply and very easily. if this sounds interesting to you and you currently don't list your property when you go away,
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