The Tucker Carlson Show - Curt Mills: Trump Can Save America or Wage Another War, but He Can’t Do Both. Here’s Why.

Episode Date: January 25, 2025

We’ve got a choice between saving the United States or waging yet another pointless foreign war. We can’t do both. Curt Mills on neocon attempts to subvert the Trump agenda. (00:00) Pete Hegseth�...��s Confirmation (07:37) The Neocons’ Love for Death, War, and Bankruptcy (16:53) Why Israelis Want Benjamin Netanyahu to Resign (28:24) Everything You’ve Been Told About Iran Is a Lie (37:49) What Are the Chances the US Invades Iran? (1:05:10) Why Is Bari Weiss Protecting Mike Pompeo? Paid partnership with: Black Rifle Coffee Use promo code "Tucker" for 30% off at https://blackriflecoffee.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm here for BetRivers Online Casino and Sportsbook with poker icon Phil Hellmuth. Thanks to BetRivers, I'm also a slots icon. Great. And a same-game parlay icon. Cool, cool. A blackjack icon, a money line icon, a roulette icon. If you love games, BetRivers is the place to play and bet. BetRivers.
Starting point is 00:00:18 Games on. Must be 19 plus and present in Ontario. Void or prohibited. Terms and conditions apply. Please play responsibly. If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge. So it's amazing to me that over 20 years after the Iraq war, its architects and supporters are
Starting point is 00:00:36 still not fully in control of America's foreign policy, but certainly influential in it. And it's shocking to me that two months after Trump's landslide victory, a race in which he ran against the neocons, the neocons are still brazen enough to try and influence and sabotage his nominations. Welcome to the Tucker Carlson Show. We bring you stories that have not been showcased anywhere else. And they're not censored, of course, because we're not gatekeepers. We are honest brokers here to tell you what we think you need to know and do it honestly. Check out all of our content at TuckerCarlson.com. Here's the episode. We are days but less than
Starting point is 00:01:26 a week before Tulsi Gabbard's hearings. Where are we in the below the radar war between permanent Washington's national security establishment, the neocons and the incoming Trump administration? I think it's unclear. So as of this recording, 10 minutes ago, Mr. Hegseth, the defense secretary, was just confirmed on a 50-50 vote. Hegseth is an interesting character, I believe a former colleague of yours. He appears to have done a bit of a conversion on his foreign policy beliefs, and the best evidence of that is the people that he's picked so far. So, his cadres, the people that will serve as... Okay, I asked you to pause right there. So this is relevant to people who know Pete Hegseth from clips on acts of him from eight years ago saying things that would lead you to believe
Starting point is 00:02:15 he's a pretty stout neocon. Yeah. But, okay, so that's what you're referring to. Yeah, I mean, I think the available evidence is that he is like a circa 10 years ago was a pretty conventional Republican yes and he has changed his life in more ways than one yeah so he is a question mark um but the early evidence is the people that he has chosen to surround himself are Stark departures from uh the man from 10 years ago and so that's a
Starting point is 00:02:43 big deal and especially it is a big deal. Especially in a place like the Pentagon, which is hard to control. Yes, and wants no change under any circumstances except an annual increase in the number of four-star generals. It's the largest bureaucracy on earth. It is. And it exists to serve itself.
Starting point is 00:02:57 It's got a pretty abysmal record of winning wars, a pretty great record of spending money. It desperately needs reform. And you're saying that based on the personnel choices you think he's making, he's now the defense secretary, by the way, as of right now, that he is like sincerely on board
Starting point is 00:03:15 with Trump's foreign policy. Yeah, I mean, he did not need to make these picks. I don't think he needed to make these picks to get confirmed. I don't think he needed these picks to win any senators. He is courting, I think, minor controversy now, which is why we're having this meeting. He did not need to do this. It was a move of conviction and belief and principle in his early days in office.
Starting point is 00:03:41 So give us an example. Just give us an example of what you're talking about. Sure. There's going to be this Michael D' Just give us an example of what you're talking about. Sure. There's going to be this Michael D'Amino figure who will have the Middle East portfolio. He has been advised throughout the process by another figure named Daniel Caldwell. These are both people in their 40s or 30s, basically millennials who are veterans of the global war on terror. They're very much in the so that they fought in that uh yeah dan did yeah and michael was a cia agent so yeah um yeah i mean these are
Starting point is 00:04:12 these are the guys that were hunting down irgc iranian uh revolutionary guard core people um and the forever wars that trump and vance ran on reforming and ending, et cetera, et cetera. And so, you know, they're very much in the Vance mold of we went there, not really sure what the point was, and we want to roll back from that somewhat. I think you might have heard this message from Mr. Trump at least once or twice in the last 10 years. So these, I don't know, Damien, I know Caldwell, who I think of as a man of genuine integrity, high intelligence and principle committed to his country. I think he's proven that.
Starting point is 00:04:56 Yeah. I honestly think he's like a wonderful person. But he's being attacked by people who never served with a long unbroken track record of destroying America as somehow anti-American? Yeah. How does this work? Yeah, I mean, I think that the tactics are pretty clear.
Starting point is 00:05:13 So, no one reads anything. Fair. Everybody is cynical, confused. Says the magazine editor. Nobody reads anything. Yeah, yeah. Are you right? Get a headline out there.
Starting point is 00:05:29 Call someone a naughty word. Say they're anti-country or they are radical. If anyone sues this publication, it will take years and years and years. And hope that some club member at Mar-a-Lago hands this to President Trump and tries to trick him and thinks that Mr. Trump is a stupid man. And this is the approach and this is what they are trying to do.
Starting point is 00:05:58 That's exactly. It is a cyclone. I mean, the word has been abused by the Democrats. They've done this to me. Yes. But this is actual disinformation. Yes. I hate to use the word has been abused by the Democrats. They've done this to me. But this is actual disinformation. I hate to use the word but like. What are the publications
Starting point is 00:06:10 who are the people involved in this campaign of lies? Okay I mean I'm not familiar and I don't know any of the people over there personally but the big story that's going around on both Domino and I believe Caldwell is from Jewish Insider and again no one really wants to be attacked
Starting point is 00:06:29 by something called Jewish Insider. It doesn't sound very fun. And so they are running headlines against people and they are attacking them. And what they do is they don't say anything that is per se inaccurate, but they totally strip the context for everything. So what, let's go one by one. Do you know Domeno?
Starting point is 00:06:54 Just by correspondence. Okay. And what's yours? Is this a radical figure, anti-American figure? No. This is somebody who wants to pull back, I would say, moderately from the Middle East, which I think at this point is basically bipartisan
Starting point is 00:07:11 outside of the radicals within Washington, D.C. and the Beltway. Okay. I think this is a fair assessment. The people who want to continue what we're doing at unsustainable cost, being a bankrupt country, by the way, sending aid to countries that are not bankrupt.
Starting point is 00:07:28 Those are the radicals, I think it's fair to say. So what are they saying about Domeno in this hit piece? They are trying to make the reader jump to the conclusion that he is anti-Israeli, that he is pro-Iranian. He's pro-Iranian? Pro-Iranian. He is somehow pro-radical Islam. You know, he's pro all the scary He is somehow pro-radical Islam. You know,
Starting point is 00:07:46 he's pro all the scary people in the Middle East. Radical Islam. Sure. Whatever. It doesn't really matter. I don't know the guy. He sounds kind of Catholic
Starting point is 00:07:53 to me. They think... You know a lot of Shiites called Damino or is that a common name for Persians? Not to my information. Okay.
Starting point is 00:08:00 And again, I think it bears repeating that this person was responsible for the tracking of Revolutionary Guard Corps members in Iran potentially sent some of them to their death so the whole thing
Starting point is 00:08:12 has an opera buffet flavor to it that he's being attacked as so what you're saying is these are people who will say anything it doesn't matter they're kind of from the very white school of journalism just like you have an objective something you want to achieve and whatever it takes to get there is fine. You will say it.
Starting point is 00:08:29 It doesn't matter. You'll call anybody anything if it serves your purpose. They are very, very willing to destroy this person with absolutely no compunction. Is there any evidence that he's, quote, anti-Israel? None. Right. None. And in fact, there's evidence to the contrary, which he praises the country.
Starting point is 00:08:48 Yeah. So, okay. He is critical of aspects of the war. It's okay to be critical of other people's wars or your own wars. It's okay to offer analysis of war. Or to even state that it's not, in fact, our war, as the President of the United States just did on his inauguration day, emphasizing from behind the Resolute Desk that it's their war, not our war. So I read something from a guy called David Wormser, who was one of the architects of the Iraq War, not from this country, not really concerned with this country at all. And also, I think it's fair to say, you know, someone who should hang his head in shame
Starting point is 00:09:26 given a lifetime of destruction that he's helped bring to our country, but describe these policies as anti-American. So I have to say, it takes a lot of balls for someone who has no interest in the United States
Starting point is 00:09:40 to accuse someone whose whole orientation is helping the United States of being anti-American. But I've noticed this a lot. If you raise the question, like, what are we getting out of this? You know, the endless war cycle, we're getting bankruptcy, obviously, but like, is this good for us? They'll accuse you, you know, the Constantine Kizan, also not an American, will accuse, that wing will accuse you of being somehow woke and you're like left wing for asking these questions. Have you noticed this?
Starting point is 00:10:09 Yeah, I mean, it's interesting that you raise some of these figures. We go into this all night. I'd like to. Yeah, they're hoping- There's no more repulsive group in American life than the people who continue to push death and bankruptcy on the United States.
Starting point is 00:10:24 I think that's fair. Can't recover from death. No, you can't. Yeah. So, I mean, I think that they're hoping that Americans don't do the reading. They're hoping that Americans read X posts. Yeah. They're hoping that Americans watch random cable news hosts,
Starting point is 00:10:44 that they're zoned out, and they have, let's say, they have a positive view of certain aspects of America's role in the Middle East, and they start tar and feathering people on the internet, and that there's no pushback on it. At the same time... But it's just, I guess the only reason I have noticed this
Starting point is 00:11:05 is because it's so over the top. Rather than... Look, I think a lot of these positions are legitimate. I disagree with them. A ton of these people are smart people. I know almost all of them. And they could make a straightforward case for their position. Like, here's why we should affect regime change in
Starting point is 00:11:22 Iran, or here's why we should kill Putin. I mean, maybe there's a case to be made for that but they never make the case they attack anyone who stands in their way in the most brutal and dishonest ways they have no limits at all in their behavior at all and I just find that repugnant
Starting point is 00:11:37 and like corrosive even if I agreed with them I'd be against that like what is that? it's guerrilla warfare the win at any costs win at any costs I Win at any costs. I know I'm jumping around, but I'm exercised.
Starting point is 00:11:49 I just watched what's happening to a man called Steve Witkoff. Do you know Steve Witkoff? Yes. So he's a friend of Trump's. He's a real estate guy from New York. I happen to know him just for other reasons. How well do you know him? Pretty well. You know, just personally, I don't know a ton about his views. I don't sense that, you know, we probably don't agree on foreign policy in some ways.
Starting point is 00:12:09 But he was tasked by Trump, as you know, to go over and affect some kind of ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. And he did. And I doubt he's anti-Israel. In fact, I know he's not, whatever that means. And he is being attacked as somehow an agent of the Islamic Republic of Qatar and like anti-Israel Steve Witkoff. Yeah. And I happen to really like Steve Witkoff. I think he's just, I just like him.
Starting point is 00:12:36 He's just a great guy, actually. And he's really tough and he's just a good guy. If you had dinner with him, you'd like him, trust me. But I'm just blown away by the dishonesty. Rather than say, hey, Steve Witkoff, like I disagree with you or whatever it's he's working for qatar no what he's from like long island what are you talking about this is the higher profile i mean like i mean they're hoping again that uh that trump has learned nothing they insult the president but these people are disgusting they're liars like, if there's one thing the country
Starting point is 00:13:06 said too much of, it's lying. Let's just stop lying. Let's just be honest about things. I agree. Yes. I agree. We've been corroded by lies. Completely. The country's about to collapse because of lies. And the people pushing endless war are one of the main vectors for that lying. Like, because
Starting point is 00:13:21 there's just no reference point in reality at all. If Steve Withoff is an agent of islamic republic then i just give up do you know what i mean yeah no okay sorry lecture no no no no i mean i mean the wickhoff thing in some ways is what set the whole thing up right right the most reasonable moderate person in the world no he's not anti-Israel. He's just tough. I think the Wyckoff thing surprised both sides, though, I would note. So I think, so obviously you knew him before,
Starting point is 00:13:52 within recent years. Okay. So I think in general, the open source intelligence, to use a lame term, but like I would say is that the hawks, people who want to say go all the way on Iran, did not expect Wyckoff to be so pragmatic. And then additionally, the realist and restraint camp also did not expect it. that Wyckoff went in there and sort of, with both the incoming Trump administration
Starting point is 00:14:25 and the remnants of the Biden administration, forced Prime Minister Netanyahu into some sort of deal, a deal that he had turned down six months ago in May of 2024, basically identical deal. That threw most everybody in the loop for a loop. And that has set off, as far as I can infer, a climate of hysteria within Israel itself, at least among, I'm not sure, sir, Netanyahu himself,
Starting point is 00:14:56 but at least within the factions of his cabinet that are hardline as hell. Okay, so they disagree. You know, they've had to give a little. Everyone does in a negotiation. Okay, so they disagree. You know, they've had to give a little. Everyone does an negotiation. It's not a disagreement. I mean, like, this will not stop unless there's pushback. All I'm saying is, when you reach an agreement, everyone gets pinched.
Starting point is 00:15:17 Okay, that's just the nature of it. Right. And no one likes it. You know, but, like, tough. That's what it is. And my read on Witkoff is that he's just not super ideological. I think he's pro-Israel. I don't, you know, I wouldn't even question that, but I don't think he's an ideologue.
Starting point is 00:15:33 He's a self-made real estate guy who started with like a single apartment building in Washington Heights. He's a tough human being. And I think you need someone who's practical and tough to affect a negotiation you don't want someone who's captive to all kinds of theories trump says hey wickhoff get a peace deal or you know get a ceasefire in an intermediate peace deal first step toward one yeah and wickhoff's like okay and he just shows up and he's like hey you you yeah you're like that's but isn't that what you want i think i think uh a lot of israel is surprised by this i mean i mean i mean this this was lost in the absolute cacophony of 2020 24 really but yes
Starting point is 00:16:14 like if you if you read uh i i read the israeli express uh daily and um you know there were members of netanyahu's coalition. So these are members of the prime minister Netanyahu, people who are not in his party, who are more hardline than him. And they were saying, Trump's really talking about this endless war stuff. This might be a problem.
Starting point is 00:16:36 And this was back in October and September and August and no one was paying attention because it was Brad Summer and other things were going on, but this was coming. And the fact that they got it done not even before, not even during the transition itself, also surprised people. And so, this is- I'm sensing inflated expectations here.
Starting point is 00:16:58 I mean, this is a foreign country, obviously an ally, a close ally, the closest ally, I think it's fair to say, but a separate country. And so, you know, I think realistic expectations would be, we get some of what we want, we don't get everything we want, because we're not in charge of the United States. But there's a tension here. I mean, so, first, the relationship between
Starting point is 00:17:19 the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Israel is extremely unclear. Yes. I don't think maybe only the two of the United States and the prime minister of Israel is extremely unclear. Yes. Yes. I don't think maybe only the two of them know. They have disagreed since at least 2020 over the election, but they probably disagreed beforehand over strikes in Iran. The last time you and I spoke publicly was over the Soleimani strike in January of 2020. And since then, reporting in the last five years has come out that the two of them
Starting point is 00:17:52 disagreed over that. Trump felt that the Israelis didn't do their part, etc., etc., etc. So for years, for at least half a decade, the well has been poisoned between Trump and Netanyahu. Doesn't mean the relationship is done, but there's been an atmosphere of mistrust. And- Well, he's had that, you know, I've watched closely and, you know, interviewed him more than once. And, you know, for-
Starting point is 00:18:17 Netanyahu? Yeah, for, you know, well, moving on 30 years. Yeah. Because he's been in and out of office and he's had complicated relations with every president. Yeah. You know? Yeah. I mean, I think the key thing to understand 30 years because he's been in and out of office and he's had complicated relations with every president. I think the key thing to understand for your listeners,
Starting point is 00:18:29 turning this off because we're getting into the depths of Israeli politics here, but Netanyahu's situation is unstable. A super majority of Israelis want him out. They want him to resign. He does not want to resign because if
Starting point is 00:18:45 he resigns he may go to prison right and also he's been a power uh achiever for 30 years and i've noticed that people who do that often don't like to quit um i think that's that's fair yeah okay so he doesn't want to quit for both reasons of his freedom and uh uh you know the way of his life yeah yes okay so recognizable syndrome i would say yes yes not confined to bb it's of his freedom and, you know, the way of his life. Yes. Okay. Pretty recognizable syndrome, I would say. Yes, yes. Not confined to BB.
Starting point is 00:19:09 It's international. Yes, it is international. Okay. So, how does he not quit? It's pretty clear that spectacular circumstances justify his presence. It's very similar, actually. I mean, there's been comparisons between him and Churchill. It's actually fair.
Starting point is 00:19:30 Only in wartime can someone like Netanyahu at this point get a position. I get it. The war has to go on. So what war? So they have basically a deal with Hezbollah. I think it's not like, I think that is by far the least likely that they're going to go back in there. There are basically two options. One, once all the hostages are exchanged, then they go back into Gaza. Okay. Or I guess one B is to do the West Bank,
Starting point is 00:20:00 which is already going on right now. Or two. What do you mean do the West Bank? Invade it and exit. I mean, what about the people who live there? Like what happens to them? Not Israel's problem. What do you do while you're in the west bank i mean what are you doing there what is the point of the operation do you know to annex the territory and build developments i mean this is this is i mean and you know the unstated thing is that they'll either export these people or eliminate them and so it's pretty terrifying stuff. It's not light stuff. This is not a light interview. And so the problem is the U.S. is the military underwriter of this. The Israelis probably can't do this without us selling them weapons. And so while Americans are tuned out and not thinking about this kind of thing,
Starting point is 00:20:44 our reputation overseas is one of arms dealer and over time that affects your children it's being able to travel abroad that affects america's reputation overseas it's dicey stuff well it caused 9-11 among other things right so yeah it has effects for sure yeah right option two yeah is iran yep which is which is as i'll just quote the hardline perspective itself. It's the head of the snake in the conception of the Israeli hardline and also the neoconservative right in the United States. For sure. And so Israel also can't do Iran, in my view, and also in general assessments, without the help of the United States. It's usually joint U.S.-Israeli airstrikes
Starting point is 00:21:27 or even a solo invasion of Iran by the United States is the ultimate sort of fantasy. I'm going to need more coffee to proceed because you're blowing my mind, Kurt Mills. I was in a restaurant the other night, in fact, this weekend, and I had
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Starting point is 00:23:17 From now until June 30th, lease a 2025 Volvo XC60 from 1.74% and save up to $4,000. Conditions apply. Visit your GTA Volvo retailer or go to volvocars.ca for full details. No Frills delivers. Get groceries delivered to your door from No Frills with PC Express. Shop online and get $15 in PC Optimum points on your first five orders. Shop now at nofrills.ca. Just one quick digression about Steve Whitcoff. Sure. I think it's really significant that he's not a professional foreign policy figure. He hasn't spent a career at the State Department
Starting point is 00:24:09 or doing bilaterals for his career. He's just a smart, tough, competent person who was charged with a task by the president and he got it done. And maybe we need more of that i mean i do you know there are certain parts of statecraft that you know probably it's helpful to have experience in statecraft but but some of it's just pretty straightforward yeah get a ceasefire okay yeah no no i know i mean i i think there has could anyone from the state department have done what steve wickhoff did do you think no especially without the without the president's.
Starting point is 00:24:45 Of course not. But even if Trump had like called someone in and been like, okay, Mr. Career Diplomat, can you affect a ceasefire? He'd be like, well, it's very complicated. Wyckoff's just like, hey, ceasefire, stop. No, it's the same. I mean, like the international relations has been made into, they have to make it into, like, a pseudoscience. Exactly. Smart.
Starting point is 00:25:09 Just like everything else. Yeah, just like everything else. Just like journalism or even education. Like, you can't teach third grade without a master's degree. Are you kidding? Yeah, so it's just needlessly complex. When the first requirement is, do you like third graders? It has nothing to do with your master's degree.
Starting point is 00:25:24 The whole thing is't it's absurd yeah and then you know it's the same thing of all of academia which is like people's theses are increasingly more baroque and like nobody actually just large things like the israeli palestinian conflict or at least know it in a way that uh is applicable in power in real life and um i mean, maybe things are changing now, but like also a lot of the foreign policy establishment, it's different now in the second term, but wouldn't work with the first Trump term, wouldn't work with their team.
Starting point is 00:25:53 And I think that was a discredit of the country. I think that just did not serve the country. Well, of course it didn't serve the country. Well, we know the country hasn't been served because look at the country. And so I think we can say of all players, they didn't serve the country. Well, we know the country hasn't been served because look at the country. And so I think, you know, we can say of all players, they didn't serve the country.
Starting point is 00:26:08 That would include the media. And there have been times when I didn't serve the country, like when I advocated for the Iraq war. I mean, we're all culpable to some extent, but it's just remarkable to me that people are continuing it. So now, instead of telling us
Starting point is 00:26:19 that Saddam has weapons of mass destruction or that Osama bin Laden attacked us for our freedoms, or whatever the lie of the day was. The new idea is that Iran is, quote, the head of the snake. How many Americans have been killed by Iranian proxies in the United States over the last 20 years, do you think? How many Americans in the United States? Yeah, have been killed by Iran-sponsored terrorism.
Starting point is 00:26:41 Zero. Right around zero. How many have died of fentanyl ODs, drugs whose precursors come from China? Millions. Well, more than a million. More than a million. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:54 Okay. I mean, look, to play the... I'm so like, what are you talking about? The Iranians backed proxies that killed U.S. troops in the Iraq war. Yeah, of course. But we shouldn't have done the Iraq war. Yeah, of course. But we shouldn't have done the Iraq war. Well, Iran took over Iraq because we took out Saddam Hussein in a majority Shiite
Starting point is 00:27:13 country. I happened to be there for that. And even I, as a 33-year-old moron, was like, wait a second, it's a basic interest in demographics. Like, isn't this going to go to Iran now? Yeah. Anyway, yes. Right. Right. But I just find it amazing that there's been no public conversation about whether or not the United States should go to war with Iran. There's been no case laid out, at least in 2002, they had the decency to lie to us in a pretty complicated sophisticated way about weapons of mass destruction now it's just like shut up you're anti-american if you ask questions and it feels like we're moving toward a conflict with iran is that a fair i think we have been moving towards one and um you know uh i think the the basically the biggest risk of a democratic administration is a war with russia
Starting point is 00:28:04 and the biggest risk of a republican administration is a war with ir. Yes. And the biggest risk of a Republican administration is a war with Iran. Yes. So my rule is always, that's why it's more ethical to be a Republican because at least the Iranians don't have nukes yet. So that's actually like pretty close to my first principle. Like just outright.
Starting point is 00:28:19 Well, you've simplified it, haven't you, Kurt? But the Iran war would be still like the worst and like not something that we should pursue. And look, foreign policy experts at this point will chime in on this conversation being like, oh, well, that's just so unrealistic. That's not actually what we want. This is actually just a ridiculous externality. But I think it is worth noting that we have done wars toppling governments throughout the region over the last 25 years so number one it's happened very recently number two it is kind of the explicit goal of the hardliners and the hardliners keep moving the overage window in their direction and so while this is um perhaps not a hundred percent certain but hardly. There is a hard drive towards doing this and picking off
Starting point is 00:29:08 Pentagon deputies and allowing leaders like Trump and Vance to be surrounded by hawks and no dissenting voices whatsoever is absolutely essential towards any road to war. And I have to say the amount of calculated deception on the right. So, all of a sudden, Barry Weiss, who's a leftist, becomes a conservative because she's against trannyism or something. You know, every normal person is against that. Yeah. But it's pretty obvious that the whole purpose of her organization, the Free Press, and her career in journalism is to kind of soften up the right for war with Iran and to attack anybody. And she had this whole constellation of people, you know, Neil Ferguson and all these kind of people who had weight to the project, but who really are all kind of paid to flack for war with Iran and attack anyone who's not with the program.
Starting point is 00:30:08 I felt the sting of this, so I didn't really understand how this worked. But then, you know, someone with like thoroughly moderate foreign policy views, I don't really want war with anybody. I'm not against anybody. And all of a sudden you're like, wow, you know, people are calling you anti-American. Well, there's precedent for this. So what you're just, I don't know. I don't know any of the people you just described personally.
Starting point is 00:30:27 But I'm just saying like there was, you said the problem with voting Republican is you're more likely to wind up with a war with Iran. And I agree with you. I'd much rather have a war with Iran than a war with Russia, but kind of don't want either one. And it's just interesting how the groundwork, I just know because I've been in conservative media my whole life,
Starting point is 00:30:44 all of a sudden all these new people and you're like oh barry weiss are you really conservative well not at all then what are you doing here oh you're trying to convince me that i'm not allowed to oppose a war with iran or i'm going to be written out of the conservative movement or something okay so if a lot of people are comparing trump to reagan these days yeah and i think it is an inaccurate uh comparison but there obviously are comparisons that are they're very different human beings is basically my position so if you accept that trump is the biggest cheese since reagan yeah on the republican side uh what happened in the reagan years so the neoconservatives uh that is people who came from the left
Starting point is 00:31:21 and moved to the right uh very, very savvy, effective, and reasonable at domestic policy. They were very, very good on the crime issues of the day. And their periodicals gained currency because, hey, actually, we should clean up the streets of New York, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. I knew a lot of them, and some of them were really smart, decent people too. And by the way, some of their foreign policy views were not crazy at all.
Starting point is 00:31:52 They recognized the Soviet Union was evil. Like the first generation of neocons, Midge Dechter, I mean, I kind of love Midge Dechter. I don't know. Do you know what I mean? I don't think that they were all nuts at all. Yeah. But by the 90s and 2000s,
Starting point is 00:32:05 if you believed in some crime enforcement in New York, you also had to believe towards the march towards regime change in Iraq. And so, again, don't want to sound like- I'm skipping that part of the buffet line. Yeah. You know what I mean? I will take the safe city and the thriving economy.
Starting point is 00:32:24 I'm going to leave out the forever war. Is that okay? But I think that is the essential pitch the buffet line yeah you don't know i will take the safe city and the thriving economy i'm gonna leave out the forever war is that okay but i think it is the essential pitch of this new generation of neoconservatism which of course does not call itself that but it is moderation on the social issues let's turn down the volume yeah and at the same time over here in column space over here a little little news item about what's going on in the red sea and why the us needs to care and it's a drip drip drip drip drip drip and it can go on for months and years and years and years and all of a sudden we super care about the houthis in yemen we super care about iran and we have to underwrite a war in Israel until every single member of Hamas is dead.
Starting point is 00:33:09 And it's just not clear that the U.S. international, U.S. national interest is there, to put it lightly. Yeah. And I guess what I object to is, I mean, I'm never offended by people with different ideas. I'm never offended by someone who makes a sincere case, affirmative case or something that I disagree with. Okay. And by the way, maybe he's right and I'm wrong. I've certainly been wrong a lot. The part where I get enraged is the bad faith. And so you ask questions like, well, is this in our interest? Well, you hate so-and-so. I don't hate anybody. And I certainly don't hate that country. I like it a lot, actually.
Starting point is 00:33:49 But there's no room for it. They're preventing discussion. Yeah. And a lot of these people have the gall to describe themselves as warriors for free speech when, of course, free speech is the last thing they want and they've gone out of their way to prevent any kind of open conversation about the most important topics in our collective life. So I'm just bothered by the lying.
Starting point is 00:34:15 There's too much lying, don't you think? Absolutely. I would say, and by the way, I'll even go farther and say, having worked for Bill Kristol for five and a half years. Bill Kristol, the editor of the Weekly Standard. Correct. That was the absolute launching point magazine of the Iraq War.
Starting point is 00:34:30 For sure. And I was there. I mean, I started the very first day of the Weekly Standard, August 1st, 1995, 30 years ago. And I thought Bill Crystal, I still would say, was a great boss, you know, interesting, fun to talk to, funny as hell. Obviously, I think he's taken a really dark turn and his life has been kind of a disaster and I feel bad for him. But one thing I'll say about Bill Kristol circa, you know, 2000 is that he would make an actual case for his views.
Starting point is 00:34:58 He would say, we have to go in and take out Saddam for the following eight reasons. And he would write- And you would say this is in 95, 96, 97. I mean, I was there for all of that. And I wasn't paying super close attention because I was dumb. And I was focused on other things. And I was like, oh yeah, it's a foreign policy hobby horse. You know, he's into that stuff. I'm not that into it.
Starting point is 00:35:15 I didn't understand the stakes. I didn't really understand anything, actually, when I was like a kid. But I always admired and still admire his willingness and that generation's willingness to make their case, to write some paper. Here's what we're for. That is gone. And now it's just like, can we censor the people?
Starting point is 00:35:32 Can we call them names to the point where they get kicked off social media? So there's no counter argument. Well, even Crystal himself has stopped writing. Well, he could never write. Not a genius genius I will say but you know an affable amusing person in meetings I mean probably the most successful
Starting point is 00:35:51 political organizer of the last 30 years yeah and tireless you know and there are good things to be said about Bill Kristol obviously he's called me a Nazi like a hundred times but that's kind of the point I'm not a Nazi I'm not for the Nazis. I just don't... I've got different views. And that's
Starting point is 00:36:08 the turn that I'm really bothered by is just the pure ad hominem attempts at... It's an attempt at censorship. And Barry Weiss engages in that like relentlessly behind the scenes using all kinds
Starting point is 00:36:24 of proxies, some of whom I know. And I just want to say it out loud. I just want to say this is deception here. OK, so I hope people know that. I think it makes it impossible for the new president to do what he's promised to do if he doesn't solve this conundrum. Tell me what you mean. expanding the war in the Middle East, even with prolonged arms sales, corrodes his political capital. Who's going to pay for that?
Starting point is 00:37:13 The United States. No, but I mean, we literally are operating in the red to the tune of trillions of dollars. In what world can we afford that? Well, it's a very complex topic. We don't have any functioning community hospitals left. We have the reserve currency, and we can keep writing debt until it causes an inflation crisis, which a lot of people thought would happen earlier and did not.
Starting point is 00:37:37 And even our inflation crisis in the 2020s was mild by global standards. So accordingly, we've got plenty of room for the big enchilada, which is an Iran war. Yeah. So this, it just feels like a big deal. It's a big deal. To me,
Starting point is 00:37:53 and it feels like it's worth, I mean, certainly if you comment on this, you do ask yourself, is it really worth it? You know, do I want to get into this? By the way,
Starting point is 00:38:02 a lot of people I really like and I'm friends with violently disagree. So you run the risk, which I really don't want, of rupturing friendships over it. That's the last thing I want ever. And you think, maybe I should be quiet. But it does seem like that's a huge step. And at the very least, the public ought to understand that there are highly motivated people pushing us toward that do you think that we will participate in a military action against iran um well the big question is right now so there's a new iranian president so uh the previous iranian president died along with his foreign minister in a helicopter accident over the summer
Starting point is 00:38:43 a little mysterious are you going to use air quotes around accident? I mean, a lot of things happened last year. It's very possible. I mean, I don't think... Everyone got killed last year. So many accidents! The Iranians' equipment, helicopter equipment, to my understanding, is old. And it is a rough part of the world.
Starting point is 00:39:03 And it's possible that it, it's likely that it just went down. Yeah. And again, I would say. I would not fly in a helicopter with Iranian officials, I'm just telling you that. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:16 And again, if you think it was Israel, the Israelis pretty much took credit or didn't deny all the other assassinations that occurred last year. I don't, you know. Leading of Hamas leadership, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Just for the record, I try to suspend judgment because I know a lot about what countries do. And I do think, this is one thing I'll say in support of Israel, I do think that it is,
Starting point is 00:39:42 you know, it isn't fair to just single out Israel and say they're doing naughty stuff. Like lots of people are doing naughty stuff. That's just a fact. My only, you know, the only point where I would feel like I want to say something is if the United States gets sucked into it. Sure. Now we're talking about our interests, my country, where my family's from. And I think it's fair to speak up then. Yeah. So I guess maybe the 2025 zoom out, you would say there was an election in Iran right
Starting point is 00:40:10 afterwards. A lot of people disagree with our perspective, will disagree with this term, but the more moderate candidate, people think there are no moderates within the regime, but the less hardcore candidate won candidate one yes the first time this has happened since trump left the iran deal uh and this person uh it is not clear how much power he has within the system the supreme leader is old it's not clear how old um and there will be a succession crisis to succeed the supreme leader should he die yeah so it is this weird situation where every time iran is in a crisis and their crisis right now they're an electricity crisis by all reporting um again don't know if we can trust all the reporting
Starting point is 00:40:54 but they can't keep the lights on in tehran fully um and what will they do and so every time iran is at a decision point uh there is a fracas between what I will call the moderates and the hardliners within their government. The hardliners want to go for the bomb. They think, we can't trust anybody. Right. We need to get the bomb. They also recently signed a mutual, you know, a defense pact, just short of mutual defense pact, but a security arrangement with the Russians. So they seem to have a bunker mentality right now.
Starting point is 00:41:32 If U.S. intelligence or Israeli intelligence or Western intelligence assesses that they are going for the bomb in a real way, so they can either be true or false, but if they assess it, then there will be severe pressure on the new administration to do airstrikes on Iranian nuclear. I get it. Look, I don't want Iran to get the bomb. I don't want anyone to get the bomb. I'm against the bomb, okay? But I was around when Pakistan got the bomb.
Starting point is 00:42:01 Yep. And Pakistan is a country with a lot of wonderful people in it. Kind of a great country in a lot of ways. Spent a fair amount of time there. However, the government of Pakistan. Is arguably scarier than Iran. You think?
Starting point is 00:42:15 Harvard, Osama bin Laden, et cetera. ISI has been, you know, really a source of disorder in South Asia for a long time. And they've exported nuclear technology, including to North Korea. So no one's ever said anything about that. Like, it's not a crisis that the Islamic Republic of Pakistan has the bomb. I don't really get it. I mean, why was that not a crisis?
Starting point is 00:42:37 Why do we do nothing to stop that? I guess it occurred basically when the U.S. was still quasi-pro-Pakistan over India. That was a bad bet, by the way. It was a Nixonian bet, actually. He really didn't like Indira Gandhi. It was basically... Okay, well...
Starting point is 00:42:55 I think we can say longitudinally that was a bad bet. He just didn't like one person and it didn't really matter. That was like betting on Wang computers over Apple. It just kind of didn't turn out. Fair? I'm not holding a Wang in my... But the point is... I might want to cut that.
Starting point is 00:43:16 We're keeping the Wang in. Look, all I'm saying is... My father sold Wang computers. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to make it personal. No, no. At one point, the top salesman in the country had Wang computers. Your father sold Wang computers. I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to make it personal. No, no. Well, no, no. It's just at one point, the top sales in the country of Wang computers. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:28 Your father sold some Wangs. Yes. Is this actually going in? Of course it's actually going in. Are you kidding? Yeah. Yes. Yeah.
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Starting point is 00:45:45 or someone you know has concerns about gambling visit connexontario.ca t's and z's apply look all i'm saying is it's important to maybe dial back a little bit on the moral outrage and assess the world as it is, assess what you can do, you know, create a hierarchy of priorities. Like, we don't want other countries to get nuclear weapons. I think that's, I'm with the neocons 100% on that. But, you know, in a complicated world that we don't actually control. Right. but in a complicated world that we don't actually control, what can we do? What are the limits of our power,
Starting point is 00:46:30 given a lot of other factors, like our domestic, our economy, the needs of our people? You can't do everything. That's all I'm saying. Yeah, no, I mean, so I think Trump should complete the work of his first term, which is he revoked the JCPOA, the Obama-Iran deal, and he should do a Trump-Iran deal.
Starting point is 00:46:46 Well, he's sending Wyckoff over to do that, apparently. So, Wyckoff, the aforementioned, not only did what he did with the Israelis, he was promoted for it, per reporting. It has not been confirmed to my understanding by the transition or the White House, but per the FT and I believe another outlet wickoff is getting quote the iran file within the trump universe that's as much power as the president wants to give it but as of filming he his role is expanding and uh if trump wants a lasting legacy of peace and prosperity uh there needs to be uh an accommodation with the de facto government of Iran. So if, of course there does.
Starting point is 00:47:28 This is just, this is totally insane. It's counter to our interests, I guess, is what I would say. Yes. If you were Trump and you say to Steve Witkoff, hey, Steve Witkoff, go get a, you know, ceasefire in place. And he comes back like 20 minutes later with a ceasefire. Wouldn't you say, okay. We like that pace. later with a ceasefire wouldn't you say okay we like that pace i like that pace wouldn't you send him to iran i would yes yes yeah i mean i think i
Starting point is 00:47:53 yeah i mean i mean and this is actually something both uh trump and obama uh who apparently get along now at least perfunctorily yeah uh agreed on well they both just both dislike Michelle, I think. So, they, remember Obama on the debate stage in 08, said, and he was just howled down
Starting point is 00:48:10 for this, whatever you think of Barack Obama, said, we should meet with the Iranian leaders face-to-face. And Trump did
Starting point is 00:48:18 similar maneuvers in the first term. Yeah, with Kim Jong-un, et cetera, et cetera. And, again, He's sucking up to dictators. Oh, shut up.
Starting point is 00:48:27 I mean, was North Korea policy more stable from 2017 to 2021 or 2021 to 2025? I don't think after 25 years of this nonsense, killing dictators and watching their countries become more chaotic and more dangerous to the United States and the world, that we have any obligation to listen to people who chirp like that. No. Sucking up to Dick Settler. Shut up. To link it all. You don't know anything, actually. So we started this conversation with sort of the campaign
Starting point is 00:48:54 against the cadres that are now serving Secretary Hexeth. The people that are leading it, as far as I can infer, are oftentimes many of the people that were behind the original rock war. And so- Well, yeah. Yeah. So this may seem obvious.
Starting point is 00:49:08 Well, I'm 55. So this is driving me completely insane. I thought after we discovered that the pretext of the war was a lie, that those people would, I don't know, don ashes and sackcloth and go like sit on a pillar for 10 years. I think a lot of Americans assume that they did. So we do this for a living. No, they didn't. They went around the World Bank and they still run the State Department.
Starting point is 00:49:29 And Toria Newland, who was an architect of the Iraq War, was an architect of the Ukraine War. Like this just doesn't end. But most Americans have real jobs and don't know this. And so these people are disguised or shrouded from public view. And they are still quite effective at driving home an agenda. In fact, I would assume they will win absent pushback.
Starting point is 00:49:53 Oh, they'll definitely win absent pushback. Oh, 100%. Yeah. That's why I wanted to interview you. Yeah, they're still hegemonic. And even if they're a minority government, so to speak. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:07 And I'm, because I've spent my life in the media, I'm very kind of fixated on their enablers, their agents in the American news media. And one of them who's working, has been working for years on their behalf, on behalf of Permanent Washington, the foreign policy establishment, every bad idea,
Starting point is 00:50:25 is Jennifer Griffin at Fox, the Pentagon reporter, who is now, you know, basically texting Domino, is that the? Michael Domino. Yeah, is, you know, running around on behalf of,
Starting point is 00:50:40 you know, her sources at the Pentagon, doing their bidding, trying to torpedo these guys because the permanent staff doesn't want to be challenged on anything. And okay, there's a role for that kind of behavior. It's called lobbying, but it's a little crazy
Starting point is 00:51:00 that a supposed news reporter would be acting like that. I'm not guessing. This is a fact. She's doing that right now and has been doing that kind of thing for as long as I've been paying attention, like a couple decades. How does that continue? Yeah, I don't know her personally, but what I will say is the role of most Pentagon reporters has always struck me since I've done this as extremely hierarchical. I mean, it- What do you mean by hierarchical? It almost felt like the reporters
Starting point is 00:51:25 worked for the Pentagon. Well, of course they... Yeah. So, I mean, in any place that I've worked that had a Pentagon correspondent. And that was the only way you stayed in the room.
Starting point is 00:51:35 And... Isn't this a democracy? Where we have civilian command of the armed forces and the entire federal government works for the population of the country, its voters, its citizens, its constituents, shareholders. No. There's no sense of that whatsoever in Washington at all. It's like, what are you doing here?
Starting point is 00:51:55 I think it's fast moving. of the military from the right until the very last few years, including from the new president, including from organs of conservative media. I think it started with Mark Milley, but also the sort of... Well, some of us were at it before that. I know, but in public opinion... It was considered a fringe position. It's not fringe. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:22 You know, I just refer you back to the pivot point in American politics in my lifetime, which was the 2016 debate in Greenville, South Carolina, where Donald Trump, home of the highest percentage of military veterans of any state, famously, and Donald Trump came out against the Iraq war and all the dumbos at the channel I work for and in Washington are like, oh, he's lost it now. He'll never get the nomination. He's offended all the veterans.
Starting point is 00:52:44 And of course, all the guys whose lives were destroyed fighting these wars, not on behalf of the United States, not to the benefit of the United States, they were filled with many emotions, frustration, shame, rage, sadness, and they immediately knew what he was talking about. And no one in DC knew what he was talking about. I think he overperformed his polling. So like he was polling a certain, he was talking about. And no one in D.C. knew what he was talking about. I think he overperformed his polling.
Starting point is 00:53:05 He was insane. He was polling a certain... He was ahead. And the Bush family came in. That's when it was the last stand for Mr. Jeb in February of 2016. And George W. Bush campaigned finally for Jeb. And it was like,
Starting point is 00:53:19 we got to keep him in the race. We're going to make our stand. And he did the big fat mistake. That is Iraq debate. And I think Trump is up 10 or 15. I think he won by over 20 in that debate. Don't quote me on that. But it was something like that.
Starting point is 00:53:35 He was right before the primary. It was over the polling. So like, not only did he not go down and still won, he went up and then clearly triumphed. That was the moment when I was just, you know, whatever his flaws, I was for Trump because here was a guy telling a real truth,
Starting point is 00:53:50 a hard truth that no one wanted him to tell and was rewarded for it. And I just felt like that was, that's consistent with my principles and beliefs, which is you ought to tell the truth and a healthy country rewards people who tell the truth, not people who lie.
Starting point is 00:54:05 There's a cynical bet though though, I would say, and it's a cynical bet on Trump, and it's a cynical bet on Americans, and it's a cynical bet on Republicans and independents. Let's use the actual language of center- left or left wing media it's a cult and uh once the cult leader leaves uh we can just go back to 2005 and uh implant the same old free trade open borders maybe endless neoconservatism and actually the people that are driving the opposition to these selections in the Pentagon agree with President Trump's critics in spirit and in practice. You know, that's an interesting analysis. I mean, it's like MSNBC level dumb person analysis, but it's also like a real analysis. And there is a sense in which devotion to trump has a religious quality to it i mean that's undeniable i was just in dc for the
Starting point is 00:55:09 inauguration i can't confirm that um and there are a lot of reasons for that i you know i i think a lot of voters feel like trump is the only person who cares about them he's their only option and so they're on board regardless because where else are they going? And I think that's true, A. And B, I think that's a reflection of how badly the leadership of the country has failed. People will take anything other than that. But I also think saying true things out loud changes history. I think that's the lesson of history. The only people who actually change history are not the ones who marshal the biggest armies, but the ones who speak the truth out loud. I think it's a holy act. I think it's a transformative act. And all of history is the story of that act, actually. And sometimes it, you know, it takes centuries for the consequences to unfold, but they do. It's inevitable. It changes everything once you, that's why there's such a
Starting point is 00:56:00 almost a crazed attempt to shut down people from speaking. Why speaking? They don't care about violence. They care about talking because they understand correctly that that's what matters over time. Right? So once Trump has said all this stuff, there's kind of no going back. No. Do you think?
Starting point is 00:56:17 I mean, that's my view. I don't know. No, I don't agree with the cynical bet. I think it's a bad bet. Yes. Which is why the tactics are increasingly hysterical. Hysterical. And marginal.
Starting point is 00:56:27 But we're robbed of like a real debate. I mean, I don't know. You know, if you think it's so important to kill the leaders of Iran and get into a full-scale war with a real country, which Iran is, which is part of a real coalition. They won't say full-scale. They'll say that the Ayatollah has to go. It's very important to use as scary words as possible. Ayatollah,
Starting point is 00:56:52 the Mullahs, the Islamic Republic emphasize, you know, and again, like, basically the bin Laden who's dead runs a country, even though he's a different ethnicity and a different religion, and so it doesn't really matter. You're stupid, and we need
Starting point is 00:57:08 to do this again. And, like, they won't say an invasion, but, again, some of the people pushing this stuff didn't say an invasion in 1996. They soft... They laid... They softened the ground for it. But where's the debate on it? I guess that's
Starting point is 00:57:24 the point. There wasn't a debate. I mean, it's a little harder here too because on the question of Russia, it's been surprisingly effective for them to just dismiss all criticism as sponsored by Putin. Like, you don't think it's a good idea to prop up Speed is very important here. The Zelensky government,
Starting point is 00:57:40 you're a Putin puppet or whatever. You want someone to do something can you really call like a white american christian guy a puppet of the mullahs probably not it's like i don't think that works right does it i guess they're trying it with steve wickhoff you're a you're a tool of cutter oh so you're referring to so the shiites i just don't think as a rhetorical matter it's quite as easy to... Should we address the actual allegation?
Starting point is 00:58:07 Yes. So, Wyckoff, I believe, took his real estate firm, took some sort of investment from Qatar. Okay. So, first of all, I would say, throughout the Trump entourage, a lot of them have worked with Gulf states. And as far as I can tell, the real estate business is rife with investments from Gulf states. And then additionally, as far as I'm aware, this is hardly that man's net worth.
Starting point is 00:58:31 Well, the domestic, I mean, you can't buy an apartment in New York because there's so much Chinese money in the residential real estate market. So like, okay, so the argument is what? You're only allowed to invest in your own country's real estate? Okay, let's start here.
Starting point is 00:58:44 Let's ban foreign investment in our real estate markets. Oh, no, that's anti-capitalist. Just the whole thing doesn't make sense. What are they saying? What? Well, with the Qatar argument specifically, I mean, I think it's an unusual place. It was supposed to be the 8th Emirate.
Starting point is 00:59:00 So it is separate from the UAE. It is the most conservative of those emirates i would say at least in terms of the government um they have a perspective uh they spend money on media they spend money on press junkets uh they have an influence operation no question um but the idea that this small jetting uh you know, LNG dependent, you know, peninsula controls U.S. foreign policy, hook, line, and sinker, top to bottom. If you think that, I don't think you're extremely curious. It's worth having an honest, I've never seen one, there never has been one, but an honest conversation about foreign influence on American policy. Sure.
Starting point is 00:59:49 That's a totally legitimate topic. And, you know, we've kind of done a lot of lying and pretending, for example, that Russia has like undue influence over American foreign policy. It's absurd. But why not have that conversation? Are there foreign countries that exert influence on American policy whose interests supersede those of American citizens when, you know, the minds of policymakers?
Starting point is 01:00:13 There may be some of those. How would we rank Qatar in terms of its influence? Maybe not in the top three. Yeah, no. So, just having lived in D.C., this whole conversation of its influence. Maybe not in the top three. Yeah, no. Right. So, just having lived in D.C., this whole conversation
Starting point is 01:00:28 is like so infuriatingly false and just silly. I mean, are they running intel operations against us? There's a lot of Qatar surveillance in Washington. A lot of Qatar agents running around the Willard Hotel.
Starting point is 01:00:45 I don't think so. Maybe. Very well disguised. Like, what are you talking about? I mean, our country's doing that. Are they hacking the Pentagon's mainframes? I don't think, oh, China's doing that. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:57 Right, okay. But making the allegation, though, is a kind of armor, though. It makes you seem informed. It makes you seem like sort of a spy master. You know, like, I know something you don't. I'm more serious, quote-unquote, than you. Everyone traffics in that nonsense. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:15 Like, let's not have a conversation. And it's very anti-democratic, small d. Of course. It is not agreeing to disagree. It is not saying we have different values and shaking each other's hand and walking out of the room. It is shutting down the spirit of the system. Well, so that's exactly the complaint that I have.
Starting point is 01:01:34 And that's the problem that I have with Barry Weiss. It's the problem I have with Jen Griffin. It's the problem I have with The Washington Post. And just so much of the media coverage of foreign policy is based on insinuation. And like the cruelest sort of character-destroying insinuation is that you're not loyal to your own country. They reach for the biggest sword. Man, they go right for the face. And I just think that that's beneath a great nation like ours.
Starting point is 01:02:04 I think it's beneath any decent person to behave like. If you have evidence that someone's selling out his country, tell me what it is. But to start with that, to accuse Steve Witkoff of being a tool of cutter, it's like so over the top. I just feel like it's important to call out the people doing it and say, you're disgusting. We're not listening to you anymore. You have no influence except that that you project through aggression and threats. And like, we're not, we're not playing along. I think a lot of it is effective in Republican politics because, you know, so you were there for the inauguration I observed a week ago.
Starting point is 01:02:42 And, you know, I've always observed that is usually when I meet someone from a red state, like a deep red state, Oklahoma or Alabama, it's often their first time in Washington, D.C. Yes.
Starting point is 01:02:53 It's very like Roman province visiting Rome for the first time. Totally. I'm here from Gaul. Yeah. Show me around.
Starting point is 01:03:00 Yeah. And, versus, I would say, blue state America actually has a lot, the coasts, have a more familiarity with D.C. back and forth, airport access, etc., etc. So, when they hear the argument going on in the capital, there's actually a de facto trust there that might be not as much there on the democratic side. There's actually a more jaundiced cynicism of the democratic side so it's less effective they assume that the despite it all despite all the failures that you've announced that you've reported on fairly
Starting point is 01:03:34 tirelessly they assume that the people in dc know what they're doing um and i'm not sure that's the greatest default assumption well i i mean i think the track record is pretty, speaks conclusively. I mean, look, respectfully to the new president, I mean, Donald Trump, again, is the only U.S. president who was not a general or a former statewide official or federal official to get the presidency. And with all due respect to the new president, a healthy country doesn't elect someone like that. It had that level of outsider. That level of outsider could only exist within a polity that was deeply sick. And I think he knows that.
Starting point is 01:04:21 I think he recognizes that. And the fact that the Capitol doesn't imbibe that lesson, I think they're imbibing a little bit more, but it's like, I mean, it's still bizarre. 10 years on, I mean, Trump, June 2015, so it'll be June this year, 10 years of Trump, longer than Obama at this point, the Trump era in spirit, in length.
Starting point is 01:04:48 It's like, well, maybe there's something wrong with this country. But it's like a 5% recognition. It's not a 95% recognition. I think national, I mean, first of all, I agree completely. And I wrote a piece at the very beginning of this whole saga almost 10 years ago. Donald Trump is a shocking, vulgar, and right. Yeah, he's winning because you failed. It's simple, you know, obvious. It was five years ago this month that people started to drop dead in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.
Starting point is 01:05:09 Five years since the beginning of COVID. And yet, for some reason, we still don't know answers to the most basic questions. And one man knows those answers. His name is Dr. Tony Fauci. And now a documentary filmmaker called Jenner First is out with a new film explaining exactly what happened. The film is called Thank You, Dr. Fauci. We'll see it exclusively here on TCN. At Desjardins Insurance, we know that when you're a building contractor, your company's foundation needs to be strong.
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Starting point is 01:06:06 Despite all of our wealth and technology, Americans aren't doing well overall. Obesity, heart disease, autoimmune conditions, all kinds of horrible chronic illnesses, weird cancers are all on the rise. Probably a lot of reasons for this, but one of them definitely is Americans don't eat very well anymore.
Starting point is 01:06:22 They don't eat real food. Instead, they eat industrial substitutes, and it's not good. It's time for something new, and that's where masa chips come in. Masas decide to revive real food by creating snacks how they used to be made, how they're supposed to be made. A masa chip has just three simple ingredients,
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Starting point is 01:06:58 They taste how a tortilla chip is supposed to taste. But the thing is, you can hit them really, really hard, and I have, and not feel bloated or sluggish after. You feel like you've done something decent for your body. You don't feel like you got a head injury or you don't feel filled with guilt. You feel light and energetic. It's the kind of snack your grandparents ate. Worth bringing back. So you can go to MasaChips.com.
Starting point is 01:07:19 Masa's M-A-S-A, by the way. MasaChips.com slash Tucker to start snacking. Get 25% off. We enjoy them. You will too. Anyway, I don't think DC gets it, but I also think at this point Trump is the most powerful president certainly since Roosevelt. Interesting. And the potential for, you know, achieving his promises is really high. America has greater problems than it's had since the Great Depression, maybe even bigger than it had then.
Starting point is 01:07:59 And we have a chance to address them. Probably not solve all of them, but make some headway on things that could help Americans. Sealing the border, stopping the chaos, just taking a breather so we can figure out how to fix the country. And the only thing
Starting point is 01:08:12 that could derail that is another foreign war. We can't do it with this stuff. It is an actual choice. It's an actual choice. We cannot do the border if we do the Middle East. Full stop.
Starting point is 01:08:23 What, 200,000 people a year dying of drug ODs and no one said anything about it? And endless lectures about Ukraine? And it's no disrespect to the Ukrainians, who I really feel sorry for, but that's so unbelievable that that happened. It's like a bad dream. And now we've woken up from the dream and we have this chance. And I'm sorry, I just, you know with respect to barry weiss and jen griffin you can't do that to us again i'm just not gonna not gonna go without a fight this time
Starting point is 01:08:49 we have to reorient toward our own interests that's no disrespect to any other country to our allies who we wish well and will help to the extent we can but like the idea that we're responsible for all these other countries when we're dying here no mas is is that is that a radical position that's my actual position in my heart that's my actual position i i agree but it's it's it's very upsetting not only to uh leaders of some foreign countries um and this is not just the middle east we didn't even talk about russia ukraine but like i mean uh that perspective is obviously very very relevant for extricating the united states out of the russia ukraine but like i mean uh that perspective is obviously very very relevant for extricating the united states out of the russia ukraine war and almost every european capital
Starting point is 01:09:30 is unhappy with that um and you know you can have a conversation with a a nice danish person and you might agree on immigration or trade or or wine um but you mentioned like hey i'm not really sure the united states should be underwriting uh quagmire in Ukraine. And the conversation shuts down. It is stunning. Well, they're hell-bent on suicide, the Western Europeans. Not the Eastern Europeans or Central Europeans, but the Western Europeans have
Starting point is 01:09:55 decided to kill themselves. And it's almost like if someone's standing on a bridge or in a window of a skyscraper and you're trying to talk them back in, it's hard. And who knows why that happens? I think there's a supernatural element at work, is my personal view. But whatever you think the cause is,
Starting point is 01:10:11 that's what it is. You blow up Nord Stream, destroy the German economy, and you're not allowed to say anything about it in Germany? I don't know that we can help you at that point. You know what I mean? Like, if you're that intent on self-harm,
Starting point is 01:10:27 that anxious to destroy your own civilization, make it impossible for your children to live there then you're killing yourself you can't help someone who doesn't want to help himself like go ahead and jump then kind of that's how i feel but just from an american perspective like all of this has been bad for us there's no way to pretend otherwise except to launch into some airy moral lecture about dictatorships and winston churchill and neville chamberlain or something just shut up okay the churchill thing's really it's just played out it's played out i mean it's played out in but there's a there's a there's a gamble that some of this stuff isn't played out though i mean there's a there's a gamble that, um, that this,
Starting point is 01:11:05 I mean, I think people have, have, this country has a generational problem, right? Generations don't get along. Um, I think that's fair. For good reason.
Starting point is 01:11:15 Yeah. And I, I think there's just a bet, uh, that a lot of the voters, uh, that, um,
Starting point is 01:11:21 made the decisions in the nineties and two thousands, um, are dumb and don't care about their kids' future and will vote for the exact same thing. Clearly they don't. Yeah. Sorry. And will exert pressure on the new administration
Starting point is 01:11:33 to do the same thing. And I think there's a bet that the president is a desperate, cynical man who will do whatever it takes when he's pressured. And I think the early evidence is that it's untrue. I mean, I don't, I mean, the, the, the, the, the, the. The evidence is that Trump is less cynical than even his supporters thought he was. I think that's the truth.
Starting point is 01:11:57 I mean, there's, there's, do you want to discuss the Pompeo, Brian Hook stuff? I would. I was just reading the, the Barry Weiss editorial about how pulling Pompeo-Brian Hook stuff? I would. I was just reading the Barry Weiss editorial about how pulling Pompeos... What did she say? I didn't read it. It's outrageous.
Starting point is 01:12:12 It's a betrayal of Trump's promises. Mike Pompeo... Is that what the free press argued? Yeah, that you can't, you're not allowed, you are required to pay for Mike Pompeo's security detail. And I will just say, point blank,
Starting point is 01:12:27 as someone who has faced greater physical threats than Mike Pompeo, I can promise you that. If I have security, I pay for it myself. Why does Mike Pompeo, as a private citizen, get to stick me with the bill for his security detail? How does that work, Barry Weiss? And the point is that Mike Pompeo is a faithful servant of the kind of ideas that she is here to push on the rest of us and therefore he will be defended at all costs but but like let's just be honest about what's going on anyway sorry yeah I mean details roll off the government doesn't usually advertise it um you know everyone's got a detail yeah Fauci has a detail yeah yeah because he's in my dog park in Washington I hear about it I think the interesting thing
Starting point is 01:13:06 it's very easy to just glaze over Trump fighting with officials blah blah blah the error example of this is Trump vs. Bolton and we talk about that and it's fun but it's kind of over Bolton's not in the mix or at least with Trump
Starting point is 01:13:20 but he's still got bits of egg in his mustache and I don't have his cell anymore so I can't tell him but he needs to fix that yeah so Pompeo and Hook I mean tell us who they are Mike Pompeo was the former secretary of state
Starting point is 01:13:38 former CIA director former Kansas congressman former West Point valedictorian Harvard graduate Harvard law graduate one can make former Kansas congressman, former West Point valedictorian. Harvard graduate. Harvard law graduate. Ozempic user. Sorry, I'm just doing the whole CV here.
Starting point is 01:13:51 Okay, right. And he was... I'm so bitchy. I'm so sorry that I said that. It's beneath me. I shouldn't have said that. The Bolton-Trump feud is old. The disagreement with Pompeo is potentially quite new. And so, by all available information, Pompeo was in the mix for Secretary of Defense, most likely, in the days after the election. Donald Trump Jr. intervened in a sort of online campaign, and other allies within that milieu stopped both Pompeo and the former UN ambassador and South Carolinian governor,
Starting point is 01:14:33 Nikki Haley, from getting administration posts. I had heard about that, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Pompeo- Patriotic Americans rallied, as they in boston in the 18th century to act on behalf of their nation at some personal risk but they did it anyway um unsung heroes one of pompeo's former deputies brian hook who ran something called the iran study group and had various other portfolios and titles at the state department he's actually someone pom Pompeo inherited from Rex Tillerson, his predecessor. He kept him on. Brian Hook, at various points throughout the transition in the last 100 days, was reported to be running the State Department's transition at some point, then was rumored, again, rumored.
Starting point is 01:15:20 If it's rumored, I don't post about it. I don't tweet it out. I don't write about it. But it was tweet it out. I don't write about it. But it was rumored to have been fired. Very unclear. Trump, in the days leading up to him taking the Oval Office oath, issued, essentially, an enormous denunciation, a fatwa against Mr. Hook. Extraordinary to say, not only like, is this guy not in the mix? I hate him. And he said that. So that occurred. And then additionally, both Hook and Pompeo's security detail was removed in the last few days. I don't know that Brian Hook has served in government in four years.
Starting point is 01:16:07 He definitely has not served, Mr. Biden. Why would he have a security detail paid for by taxpayers? Not an expert on who gets Secret Service details. But can I just, I just want to say... Actually, I can actually directly answer that. Yeah. So the key thing here is that there is an allegation, a belief, many in the intelligence community believe this,
Starting point is 01:16:26 that there were serious, credible plans by the Iranians to assassinate members of the Trump high command, as it were. So, Trump, Hook, John Bolton, etc., etc., in revenge principally for the Soleimani assassination. Because they've been getting a lot of terror attacks in the United States you've noticed oh no no that was in and so right and so that is the essential that is the causes I'm just gonna have to scoff at all of the I've heard the causes belly for this all the time I think the key thing here is uh the critique on Trump uh always was
Starting point is 01:17:02 he fired Bolton but he didn't really understand why so he just he he soured on the always was he fired Bolton, but he didn't really understand why. So he just, he, he, he soured on the guy, but he didn't change any like policy. You know, he didn't learn this, this, this, this is the sort of pedantic way of looking at the president. But with the hook and Pompeo removal from his inner circle, there is, think very credible evidence that uh trump's personal grudges are now blending quite heavily with policy he doesn't trust the iran hawk old guard a lot of the iran hawk old guard think tanks struck out in getting transition officials and officials in this government, and again, circled around this very unlikely Pentagon, helmed by a guy who has changed his life, it appears,
Starting point is 01:17:54 in pretty severe ways over the last five years, both ideologically and morally, is this very new Pentagon that is now being targeted by all the usual suspects. And it is the biggest story in American politics that people aren't talking about. So if I could sum up what I think you're saying, it is that Donald Trump may have actually broken the grip of the neocons on Washington. I mean, you control the Pentagon. You control the military. I mean, you control the Pentagon. You control the military.
Starting point is 01:18:26 I mean, it's... It just seems like this is... Because there was always this question about Trump. You get up and you give these speeches where you say, we don't want more pointless wars. I believe in peace through strength. Not a wuss. It's not Jimmy Carter. But like, you know,
Starting point is 01:18:42 you assert American power, but you don't embroil a country in wars that you can't win for no reason. It's a very moderate, sensible, common sense, I would say, view. So you say those things, but then you hire John Bolton. And the question is why? And Trump would say, I've heard him say, well, I heard Bolton, I beg your pardon, I heard Bolton because he's a lunatic. And he's a warmonger freak. He's obviously like watching war porn late at night and people can smell that on him.
Starting point is 01:19:11 And so when he goes into a negotiation, he scares the crap out of everybody. And then I show up, you know, he's the heavy and I'm- He's the backup. I mean, I've heard Trump say that. And I didn't know if I believed that or not, but I'm starting to think that I should have just believed him because it sounds like Trump's actual instincts are what he says they are. Yeah, I mean, the Bolton firing itself is, again, ancient history, but it's circled around an issue of policy.
Starting point is 01:19:39 Oh, I remember. Yeah, so, I mean, Trump had invited the Taliban, which was then the outlaw, not government of Afghanistan, as it is today, to Camp David on 9-11. I just love the sound of it. So, Trump invited the Taliban to Camp David. He did. He literally did that. I mean, I'm just reporting the facts here. It's a great sentence. So, Donald Trump invited the Taliban. So, tonight, who's coming for dinner tonight at Camp David? Oh, the Taliban will be here. Bolton was wiped out before this meeting never happened,
Starting point is 01:20:11 but it was the instigating incident for the final breakdown of their relationship. I do think it's important, Kurt, to just recognize the inherent hilarity of a lot of, you know, it's just, it is, in addition to being grave and, you know, historically significant, it's very funny. It is funny.
Starting point is 01:20:28 A lot of this stuff is very funny. It's sort of funny. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, it's pretty great. Yeah. So you're very restrained and businesslike and precise as a reporter should be,
Starting point is 01:20:38 as an editor should be, but the story that you're telling, I think, I don't want to put words in your mouth, is a story of real change. Yeah. Finally, we actually appear to be getting to a foreign policy that puts America close to the center of the action. Yeah. Is that what you're seeing? No. I mean, if he sees this through,
Starting point is 01:21:01 this is the biggest presidency, certainly since Reagan, you alluded to FDR. I mean, it is moving the ship of state, and people are going to try to stop him from doing it. Yes. But they're not going to say that he's bad, though. They're going to go after anyone. No one will ever say, right. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:19 Well, I just want to countersignal by saying, I think what you're saying is true. I think it's real. And I've never admired Trump more. I don't think I'm going to ask this around the Trump question, but this is like, America really needs this. It's just super important. And it's not radical at all. It's not attacking anyone or canceling our allyship with any country at all.
Starting point is 01:21:42 It's just readjusting expectations for what we can achieve. The reason that I started covering war on foreign policy principally is that the reality is that U.S. domestic policy is a morass. It's impossible to get anything done. Obama tried to do a healthcare plan.
Starting point is 01:22:00 They did six years in, they couldn't even get the website working. You know, the country is hard to govern. Yeah. But externally, the president is imperial. He's God. Quite literally the most powerful person on earth. And if you want to burnish a legacy real quick, you do big things in foreign policy.
Starting point is 01:22:19 You do shocking things in foreign policy. That's what all the Republican senators have figured out. You do surprising things in foreign policy. You're John McCain. Like you're, you know, whatever. You've got a lot of problems in your personal and public life,
Starting point is 01:22:30 but you can bomb around Eastern Europe and get treated like an emperor. Right. And feel like you're doing something. You're, you know, Jim Risch or Mike Rounds
Starting point is 01:22:38 or some like U.S. senator nobody's ever heard of even in his home state. But when you travel to Romania to tour a NATO base, people are like, oh, you know, Senator Risch is here. You know, it's like...
Starting point is 01:22:49 The foreign relations chair. Yeah. So. Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And so that's a big motivator for our lawmakers, isn't it? For sure. For sure.
Starting point is 01:23:00 Yeah. I mean, yeah. I mean... You go to Idaho Falls and no one's like, oh, I can't believe you're here. But, you know. Chairman Rich. Chairman Rich. It's like such an absurd.
Starting point is 01:23:12 Anyway, excuse me. Interesting. So, and I interrupted you because I can't control myself. Zero self-control. Get on the topic of pizza or neocons and i'm just out of control um tell me your analysis of trump canceling the security details for brian hook and mike pompeo well he seems to have the authentic um view that these people can afford it especially especially with fauci um and especially Bolton. He specifically flagged them.
Starting point is 01:23:45 Yeah. And Pompeo, who's now running around being like, I'm actually a businessman. He's on a board of a Ukrainian company as well. Well, he's on, I think, more than one board, but he's certainly running around, including with people I know, saying, I'm really kind of a business guy.
Starting point is 01:24:02 Look, so the Pompeo thing is supremely interesting because I think it's somebody who probably would have positioned himself to run in a major way had Trump lost. I think it's somebody who's not going to quit being president. This is not an unintelligent man. Pompeo is smart. Yeah, this is a real fighter. He's not dumb.
Starting point is 01:24:22 No, I agree. This is a real fighter. And I don't want to say he's part of the cynical bet crowd, but he's making a bet that the Trump thing will pass and I will be able to steamroll people like Vance and even Rubio in the future because I'm more vicious.
Starting point is 01:24:38 And in the meantime, maybe make some money, influence the debate, etc. etc. And he's very impressive if you don, maybe make some money, influence the debate, et cetera, et cetera. And he's very impressive if you don't know. I mean, if you don't come in with huge foreign policy convictions, as I think you and I do, he can be very persuasive. Just for the record, I had no foreign policy convictions. I don't think I'm ideological on the question at all.
Starting point is 01:25:02 I just think in general, our foreign policy should serve the nation. I am. I think this was very interesting about some of these Pentagon picks, not to keep linking it back, but also the vice president. A lot of these people, my generation, the millennials, fought in these wars. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:19 Although the baby boomers forget it, we're now old. And we grew up. And we're quite mad about it um and it's a it's a bipartisan thing it's not just like a democrat you know anti-irok war indie music thing it's like young republican people hate it too oh and they might hate it more actually which is actually the interesting thing. And the Republican Party, frankly, under Trump, might be a vessel of anti-war sentiment far more effectively than the Democrats.
Starting point is 01:25:51 I mean, I didn't see a lot of protests for the Ukraine war. The Israel stuff was pretty interesting. That probably was number one threat to Biden circa April. Remember that? For sure. But if you look at the conversation online if you look at the sentiments of of younger conservatives young republicans the anti-war stuff is big and it is not going anywhere and i think that also drives the sense of a timetable
Starting point is 01:26:15 which is um you know we've got these older people in their 60s 70s 80s and 90s they have a certain belief set they're the people that voted for the stuff in the 90s and 2000s and we get this get this stuff done now before the united states turns um you know on both parties on this stuff and this was always this was so we can't afford it anymore and our allies pivot to china and sell even more defense technology to china um yeah i do think they're okay so the backbone of support for these wars has been evangelicals. Let's just be blunt about it. It's everyone, you know, beats up in the neocons or whatever, these fervent intellectuals in Washington. But really the foot soldiers of this have been
Starting point is 01:26:55 Fox News viewers who are not ideological. They're not intellectuals. They're not, they're just normal American patriotic, heavily evangelical people. And the truth is, I think a lot of them are beginning to recognize that their religion does not support this at all. It's really clear. Genesis 6, why do we have the flood? Why does God kill everything on earth? All the people except no one in his family, all the animals except the ones in the ark. Why does he do that?
Starting point is 01:27:24 He spells it right out. Because they're committing violence. That's why. So, it's like the idea that, I mean, the Iraq war breaks out and all these preachers are like, no, no, no, really? We have to fight Islam and kill all these people and that's what God wants. That's not what it says at all. And there's no mention of any specific secular government in the New Testament. Sorry, guys.
Starting point is 01:27:45 And I think a lot of Christians are beginning to realize this. It doesn't, because you're a Christian, doesn't mean you have a specific political agenda at all, I don't think. Yeah. But if your political agenda is like violence, that's prohibited. Sorry. And I, it could not be clear. It's on every freaking page.
Starting point is 01:28:04 So, I don't know. The deception involved in this was just like mind boggling that these preachers could get up on Fox News and tell you that like, yeah, killing people is what Jesus wants. No, that's not true. And I just feel among people I know, a growing recognition of that.
Starting point is 01:28:18 And I think it's a huge problem for the war lobby, which has used these people as its supporters. And you see it in the Congress. You know, I'm an evangelical and I'm for another war with somebody. No, you can't do that anymore. I'm hoping people are zoned out. You do think that? Yeah, I think they're hoping the country's old, tired, zoned out, can't oppose it.
Starting point is 01:28:38 And they're hoping that these initiatives can be achieved piecemeal. You know, start by bombing Iran here, etc., etc. Maybe the government will collapse, etc., etc., etc. To be replaced by what? The same people who replaced Assad and Gaddafi and Saddam and the Taliban.
Starting point is 01:28:58 I mean, I think, okay, to take the other side, I mean, the Assad thing is pretty close to the best case scenario of how that could have gone. I think in Iran, it would go way, way, way worse. It's a much bigger country. It's hard to know. You're rolling the dice.
Starting point is 01:29:15 You start killing people and things go sideways. It's pretty close to Iraq and Afghanistan combined, right? It feels that way to me. You have the capacity for major urban violence a la iraq you have huge cities the kabul's small but you know you have that and then additionally you have the mountain element so any any outlaw contingent can just flee there i mean and and we learned this with our southern neighbor right why is mexico ungovernable the mountains you just just just fleet i mean the entire coastline right why is kentucky ungovernable same reason okay yeah yeah yeah i mean so just kidding no no i mean it's i mean it's it's hard to
Starting point is 01:29:54 it it would be very very very difficult and ask saddam hussein no i tried to invade iran and uh didn't work out for mr hussein a lot of things didn't. No, I agree completely. Well, you have actually given me, I asked you to come for this conversation. It's late at night. I was very exercised about it. You were nice enough to come. And we're in a hotel room in some city,
Starting point is 01:30:16 but I thought I was going to be more depressed by the end. But actually, I feel really heartened by what you said. Thank you for having me. Well, thank you for making me feel a lot better. Kurt Mills. Appreciate it. Thank you. Thanks for listening to the Tucker Carlson Show. If you enjoyed it, you can go to
Starting point is 01:30:36 TuckerCarlson.com to see everything that we have made. The complete library.

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