The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Israel, Iran and Trump’s Incompetence
Episode Date: June 19, 2025Amid growing fears about where the Israel-Iran conflict leads, Jon is joined by Ben Rhodes, co-host of "Pod Save the World" and former Deputy National Security Advisor, and Christiane Amanpour, CNN's ...Chief International Anchor and host of "Christiane and The Ex Files with Jamie Rubin." Together, they trace the complex history that brought us to this moment, examine Trump's response to the escalation, and explore why achieving peace remains far more challenging than waging war. This podcast episode is brought to you by: GROUND NEWS - Go to https://groundnews.com/stewart to see how any news story is being framed by news outlets around the world and across the political spectrum. Use the link to get 40% off unlimited access with the Vantage Subscription. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more: > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast> TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpod > BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/theweeklyshowpodcast.com Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart Executive Producer – James Dixon Executive Producer – Chris McShane Executive Producer – Caity Gray Lead Producer – Lauren Walker Producer – Brittany Mehmedovic Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Researcher & Associate Producer – Gillian Spear Music by Hansdle Hsu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Get to Toronto's main venues like Budweiser Stage and the new Rogers Stadium with Go Transit.
Thanks to Go Transit's special online e-ticket fairs, a $10 one-day weekend pass offers unlimited
travel on any weekend day or holiday, anywhere along the Go network. And the weekday group
passes offer the same weekday travel flexibility across the network, starting at $30 for two
people and up to $60 for a group of five. Buy your online Go Pass ahead of the show at GoTransit.com slash tickets.
Ever feel like your WordPress site is moving in slow motion? Switch to Kinsta's
managed hosting for WordPress and watch it fly. Host your site on Google Cloud's
fastest servers with worldwide data centers so your pages load instantly.
Need help?
WordPress experts respond in under two minutes and will migrate to your site for free.
Try it yourself, first month free at Kinsta.com. That's K-I-N-S-T-A dot com. Kinsta, simply better hosting.
Hello everybody. Welcome once again to the weekly show podcast.
My name is Jon Stewart and I will be the host, the host today of your, of your podcast as
we find ourselves in a unbelievably fraught moment in a crossroads of history.
And I think I want to talk just a very brief moment
about the president of the United States,
Donald Aloysius Trump.
You hear a lot about his grifting and the corruption
and the meme coin and the authoritarian tendencies
and the overuse of executive action
and his militaristic fetishizing of
bringing troops into American cities and ripping families apart and just the general moral
decay and abyss that we find ourselves living through.
But boy, I have to say, I just don't think we talk enough about the incompetence.
I just, the like, the just rank shittiness of how they accomplish things and the price we are paying for his inability to fight.
It's as though everything that occurs on the world stage is just another weekly
episode of his program.
What's this week's episode?
Liberation day and tariffs.
Great.
Let's, let's do that.
Oh, hey, uh, it's tanking the bond market and everybody is, uh, freaking out.
Oh, great.
Yeah, no, we're, that's the plan.
Now we're just going to give everybody 90 days.
And then he comes on and goes, everybody's kissing my ass to make deals, but nobody seems to be making any fucking deals.
And so then we just move on to the next episode. Oh, this week's episode is we're going to go in
with the military to Los Angeles because that's exploding in chaos and violence, even though it's
not. And God, if anybody, you know, has experience dealing with unrest in Los
Angeles, it's the people that, that the cops that already live there.
Uh, and now it's Iran and it's just, Hey, it's, it's the Iran episode.
And I gave them 60 days because I'm the deal maker in chief, and we're
going to have a nuclear deal.
And, and this is all going according to plan and it's utter incompetence.
We're in such a bizarre world.
You've got me nodding my head to Tucker Carlson videos.
Yeah.
You got, you got Tucker Carlson going, why are we going to war with Iran again?
And I'm like, yeah, you tell him brother.
I was going, why are we going to war with Iran again? And I'm like, yeah, you tell him brother.
Like that's how fucking upside down we find ourselves in, in this moment.
And it's all based on a one distinct premise.
And that is we are being led by someone who doesn't know what they're doing.
who doesn't know what they're doing. And out of Doge has a skeleton staff of,
you know, utility infielders that are just out there
with eight different jobs each,
and nobody has any follow through
and wherewithal to get things done.
And if anything does get done, it will be a happy accident,
not because of the judicious plan that was put into place by
a fifth level Jedi chess master. That's bullshit. And the chaos right now on the world stage is a
direct function of that incompetence. And I mean, we're lucky today. We've got, we've got a great get, we're going to talk about Iran and everything that's going on.
And I'm so happy to have our two guests today that can discuss this because
they are both really well versed in everything that is going on in the
immediacy of it and in the past of it.
So let's, let's get to them right now.
So in this incredibly fraught moment, we're awfully lucky today to be speaking with Ben
Rhodes, who's the co-host of Pod Save the World and a former deputy national security
advisor to President Obama, and Christiane Amampour, CNN's chief international anchor,
host of the new podcast, Christiane and the X-Files with Jamie Ruhman.
Ben and Christiane, thank you so much
for joining us. This is such a fraught moment. And Christian, I want to start with you because
you have just had, you know, we've been hearing from Israel, we've been hearing from the United
States, we've been hearing from a variety of sources. You have just gotten off with a discussion
with the Deputy Foreign Minister in Iran. So if I could very quickly, Christiane,
what is the viewpoint from Iran right now?
Well, I'm gonna download quickly
because I've literally just come off the set.
And just to give you a context,
it's very difficult, their internet,
because of these strikes, are very compromised.
Their phones are very compromised.
Obviously, you can see they've been targeted,
assassination of leaders
by the Israelis. They have wiped out a whole layer of military leadership and people are scared
about using their phones. So just to get this was quite extraordinary. And I didn't ask exactly
where he was and he didn't want to tell me, but nonetheless in Tehran. Don't imagine he would.
where he was and he didn't want to tell me but nonetheless in Tehran. Don't imagine he would. Yeah. Right. So in response to what President Trump has been saying, like, I demand unconditional
surrender. You know, that we could get your supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei if we decided. I might,
I might not. He's also just been saying Trump, I might join Israel on these strikes. I might not.
There's just a lot of mixed messages coming out and I'm not sure what Trump intends
But he said the deputy Iranian foreign minister that look
We do not buckle under threats and it's very boilerplate Iran commentary, but it happens to be
You know true based on history
He reminded me how they'd gone through eight years of war with with Iraq and Saddam Hussein, how the whole world was not on their side and how they emerged without surrendering. And he said the same here. He said, you know, Israel is trying to destroy them, and that we will not surrender and we will continue to defend ourselves. But he did say, and I think Ben would be interested in this that we
thought we were going to a negotiation on Sunday June 15th in Oman I was and my
bosses were headed that way and then two days before out of the blue we were
attacked across the country and he also said that civilian areas were attacked
and buildings and infrastructure as well as the military and nuclear sites. I happen to know this for a fact. I'm half Iranian. I grew up
there. I know many of the locations but importantly I still have family and
friends so I'm listening to them and there's a huge amount of panic and it's
it's very difficult for them right now. But that's the bottom line. Well
Christiana, I so appreciate that perspective.
And we can get into a little later the complicated relationship that so many Iranians have with their
government and what's going on in there. But I want to jump in really quickly to go off of what
Christiane said. In my mind, this is another example of sort of the impulsive and strange nature of
other example of sort of the impulsive and strange nature of our administration here in the United States.
So the dealmaker in chief, the most wonderful negotiator that's ever existed in the history
of dealmaking and shaking hands is going to make a great deal with Iran.
They've got 60 days apparently to do it because as you know the best deals
always come with only the amount of time you can you can make them and then on day 61 they are attacked
by Israel. Do either of you know whether or not the United States was taken by surprise by that attack
or whether or not Iran had any idea that this 60-day so-called limitation
on negotiations was a hard red line that would be met immediately with widespread bombing.
Do any of you have a sense that this was pure impulse on the part of the Israelis,
that this was coordinated,
or that the 60-day negotiation was a ruse
by which to get the Iranians to drop their guard.
Ben, I'll start with you.
I just don't believe that Trump was somehow,
first of all, I don't believe
that the 60-day thing was a firm deadline.
I never understood to be that, by the way, right?
Yeah, because why would there be a meeting set up
with Steve Wyckoff?
But also the Iranians weren't acting like they
were going to be attacked.
They were not taking security precautions.
That's how some of these people were
able to be killed in their homes.
If they thought that day 61 was a potential military
operation, they would have changed their pattern
of behavior more than they did. I think
that Israel believed and Netanyahu believed more specifically that they had a window of opportunity
where Iran's proxies have been dealt a blow, where Iran's on the back foot, where they'd
softened up their air defenses in some of those previous strikes, and he wanted to take this
action. And frankly, the diplomacy that Trump was in was a threat to their capacity to take military action
against the nuclear program.
And so he does it after the 60 day thing.
That gives him kind of some pretext to say,
I'll let this diplomacy go.
They have not even really presented
like any kind of detailed intelligence case
that suggests an imminence of Iran having a nuclear weapon.
He said the kind of same things he always does.
He's been doing that for about 30 years now, I believe.
Yeah, he's playing the hit.
It's coming tomorrow.
They got it tomorrow.
This is the problem is nobody can credibly say that like if they didn't do this today,
Iran was going to do something tomorrow.
The only thing that was looming was this Witkoff meeting in Oman.
And Trump, I think, has been hurriedly trying to get on board with what is
happening to him in terms of Netanyahu having changed the dynamic. And he doesn't want to
admit that he just got rolled by Netanyahu. And now he's being rolled all the way potentially
into joining the war, you know. And we can talk about all the different dimensions of that.
I can tell you, John, that as someone who's been in simulations of what would happen in precisely this scenario. When you say been in simulations, what is that?
What do you mean by that? It means essentially you war game out. What would happen if the Israelis
bombed the Iranian nuclear facilities? So these are sort of AI generated or computer simulated.
Here's where the casualties would be. Here's what would occur. Or people run them, you know,
or people kind of run them who know a lot about this stuff.
It always leads to Israel asking the United States to bomb this facility,
and it almost always leads to regime change in Iran, because it's like,
well, why did we stop now? You know, and so we're on the, you know,
people have been thinking about this for a long time, and we're on the ride right now,
and the question is, can we get off it?
Right.
And the facility you're talking about is, is that one nuclear facility that is
buried in a mountain that is apparently, uh, can only be reached by United States
bunker busting weaponry, yes, that's right for, for do I believe it's called or
Fordo.
And for all the talk about how sophisticated Israeli operations been, if you
don't blow up Fordo, you've only set the Iranian nuclear program back like a few months.
And so obviously they're going to want us to get the underground facility that only
we can hit.
We are the only people that have a bunker buster bomb that can get at that facility.
The only people have planes that can drop it.
And frankly, we don't even know that it would destroy it entirely.
That's how deep underground this thing is.
Right.
In answer to your question, John, about did the Iranians know they had a 60-day deadline?
No, according to the Deputy Foreign Minister.
Right.
Well, I mean, they were all going to meet in Oman on day 63.
So what's the point?
Ben will remember that it took, I don't know, 18 months to get the Obama administration, call the JCPOA, the nuclear deal,
that was a perfectly reasonable and manageable
and verifiable arms control deal.
Signed off on by the way, by the world's other countries,
Russia, China.
By the UN.
Exactly.
I mean, this was not a bilateral deal
between the United States and Iran.
This was a multilateral.
Exactly.
But the key here and Ben's alluded it, is that Prime Minister Netanyahu has never
believed in negotiation, just like he does not believe in a Palestinian state.
He does not believe in negotiating security around Iran's nuclear program.
He believes in wiping it out and regime destruction, as we've just been mentioning.
But there has been successful diplomacy.
They all say, oh, diplomacy failed.
But no, in 2015, under the Obama administration, actually it succeeded.
And then there was this concerted campaign to topple it.
And that's what caused Trump to pull out of it when he was in 1.0.
So Trump pulling out of this nuclear deal set the Iran's off on, you know, more enrichment.
So now they have hundreds of kilograms of 60% enrichment as part of a bargaining technique
or to show their capability.
But even the American intelligence community and Tulsi Gabbard said it again this week,
we do assess that they have not made a decision to go to a bomb or to weaponize.
And that even if they did,
it would take a number of years.
She was slapped around by Trump.
And now she says, oh no,
I have no daylight between me and Trump.
So it's all very confusing.
You guys are familiar with websites, right?
Ground News is a website and it's also an app.
And they're on a mission.
They're gonna give readers an easier data-driven way
to read the news, not the drive you crazy way
to read the news.
Every day they pull thousands of news articles
all around the world.
They organize them by story.
Each story comes with visual breakdowns
of political bias, ownership.
Ownership is a big one.
Oh, is ownership a big one?
Headlines to help you better understand what you're seeing and what you're taking in.
Ground news provides coverage details, bias charts.
You can see how many news outlets have reported a specific story and whether
it's being under or over reported, easily compare headlines, get
summarized breakdowns
of the specific differences in reporting
across the political spectrum.
It's the overlay that you need to better understand
what is happening with the various aggregators
and news sources that you've been dealing with.
Ground News also has a blind spot feed.
Oh dear God, I've been waiting for this. The blind
spot feed highlights specific stories that are under reported by either side any side of the
political spectrum. 40% off the vantage plan with unlimited access when you go to groundnews.com
slash Stuart. Scan the QR code. This is almost too easy. Again, 40% off unlimited access when you subscribe through groundnews.com slash Stuart
or the QR code on the screen.
Go to groundnews.com slash Stuart
and do it and start understanding the matrix.
Do you understand?
See the zeros and ones.
Do it.
In 2015, you know, after that deal was signed, you know, when Trump pulled out and I believe, what was it? do it.
In 2015, you know, after that deal with sent, you know, when, when Trump pulled out and I believe, what was it 2018,
I think when they did that, was that at the behest of Israel
as well, or were there other forces that had asked,
or was that merely a knee jerk reaction to anything that
Obama did, I will undo and therefore I'm gonna pull out.
Do you know what the lead up
to pulling out of that deal entailed?
I would say it was a convergence of those factors,
that Trump wanted to dismantle anything Obama did,
but that Israel and kind of hawkish types in the US
wanted us out of the deal from the day we were in it.
I think what's important to note, John, about that is that Trump wanted to find that Iran
was not complying with the deal.
And if you recall, he kept asking for that report and his own administration, including
guys like Jim Mattis, his secretary of defense, kept saying, well, no, actually, Iran is complying
with this deal.
You shouldn't pull out.
And then ultimately, he kind of overruled his more conventional, but still hawkish advisors
to pull out.
But I think it was Trump's instinct was, I just want to get out of whatever deal Obama
was in.
Because the deal that he was negotiating with Witkoff sounded very similar to the JCPOA,
the Iran deal.
Of course.
We wasted a decade on this and frankly led us to a place
where we might end up in a war because of that
and Timothy for Obama.
Christiane, is that your understanding
of how things went down?
Yes, you could say if you wanted to be really generous
that Witkoff had come up with another plan
and it was about this sort of consortium whereby they would try to let Iran say that it could
still enrich but maybe not right on Iranian soil but maybe in an island.
Anyways it was to try to thread all the needles to go into another deal that was not exactly
Obama's deal but it was, but it had this thing
which said Iran cannot enrich.
So how were they going to resolve that?
Because Iran believes that to be
their fundamental international right.
And so that was what was being worked out.
Especially given that Israel has nuclear weapons
and America has, and everyone else has nuclear weapons
and North Korea has nuclear.
Well, that's the thing, John, John, you just hit on something really, really vital.
Yeah.
Because one of the unintended consequences, and there are always unintended consequences
in a war that is not planned out, in a war that has no exit strategy,
in a war that has actually no big strategy other than let's set back or maybe let's have regime change.
Right.
Some say that if this regime survives,
that they will then, it will be a self-fulfilling prophecy that they may, like North Korea, decide
to go in secret, to get out of the IAEA, the NPT, the inspections, and actually to become a nuclear
power because they've been shown by Israel that their conventional weapons are useless.
Not enough to turn. by Israel that their conventional weapons are useless and shadow war.
Yeah. So, so they could have a kind of a worse negative impact.
And I want to step back for a second and talk about the macro idea of risk assessment within
this world. The one thing about Israel that I truly do not understand is this idea of they
won't live in a world of risk, but we live in a world of risk. There is no zero risk.
It's this idea of if there is one suicide attack
that is done by a Palestinian,
well then we must remove Hamas
or we must wage war until we are safe.
And that just seems like a fundamentally flawed.
The United States certainly lives in a world of risk.
Russia has nuclear weapons, China has nuclear weapons,
North Korea has nuclear weapons.
They have all expressed at different times,
antipathy towards the United States
or a desire to use them in North Korea's case
against the United States.
So this idea that we can create a world
where there is no risk, it seems that what they create
is a world of instability where everything is at risk.
And so I just want to get at the underlying fundamental principle that is being deployed
here, that's causing such destruction in Gaza and all of this death as though you can create
a world of no risk through violence.
It makes no sense to me. Ben, what is your thought on that larger principle?
I think you put your finger on it. There's two things I'd say about this. Because the first is
that there's been an Iranian nuclear program for decades and Israel's lived with that and Israel's
done quite well in that world, right? And what we were trying to do is put a lid on that program, make sure they can't get a weapon.
The risk is them having a nuclear weapon. Transparency and verification. Yeah, them having a
nuclear weapon, now that's a different level of risk, but them having a few centrifuges operating,
if you have transparency, verification, you got inspectors all over there, you're looking at the
whole supply chain, like that's a level of risk that you should be able to live with.
And my concern is, in trying to remove all risk, Israel is creating more risk for itself.
In the sense of, if you remove that-
And for everybody.
For everybody.
If you remove that government through violence, it doesn't- we saw in Iraq, Afghanistan, and
Libya in the Obama years, you get something usually worse.
You either get the IRGC, the worst guys with guns in Iran will be the strongest guys, or
you get kind of a failed state civil war in a country over 90 million people with no plan
for what comes next.
You also could get a situation where, you know, even what we've seen in Gaza, do we
really think that's going to bring meaningful, quote unquote, peace over time?
Or that you can bomb people out of wanting to be free.
Yeah.
What if Netanyahu decides he's actually
the biggest threat to Israel?
Does he have to bomb himself at that point?
Well, but this leads to the second point I was gonna make
because we can get into like,
they're creating enemies for the future.
One of the things I hate about our discourse on this stuff
is if the negative consequences don't happen next week,
it's like, well, look, see, that worked. Well, war is usually like the price comes due five years, 10 years out, right? Iraq took a while.
Looked great when the statue fell in Baghdad, right? But the second thing I think is important
here is they're changing the nature of a country that does what they're doing in Gaza or a country
they've now gone to war in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Iran, that's unhealthy. And their society is
moving to the far right. I think there's a synergy between what you're doing abroad with violence and
the kind of government you have at home. And so it's not just the risks of their foreign policy,
it's the risks of what this is doing to Israeli society and democracy.
What does it turn you into? I have people I know who are like hawks and they're like, well, I don't the risks of what this is doing to Israeli society and democracy.
What does it turn you into?
I have people I know who are like hawks and they're like,
well, I don't like what Netanyahu is doing
with democracy in Israel, but I support, you know,
all these other things he's doing.
I'm like, no, those things are connected, you know?
He's consolidating what it feels like a far right extremist,
you know, political system in Israel.
And a dehumanization of anybody that is in you.
You bring up such an interesting point,
and Christiane, I want to get to this with you.
He talks about the unforeseen consequences,
that royal future events that don't seem to be connected
years later, and I want to go back to this,
because people don't talk about this enough.
In 1953, the CIA, along with British Petroleum
and the UK government overthrew Mohammed Mossadegh,
who was the democratically elected leader of Iran.
They destabilized that country, allowed the Shah of Iran to gain control for so-called,
because he was Western friendly. Did we not sow the seeds for this entire nightmare ourselves
in 1953 to some extent.
As you know, that coup was the first of America's many coups throughout the 50s and 60s and
even into the 70s.
In Africa, you know, Lumumba was killed.
In, in, in Central America, in all over, in Brazil, they supported military dictatorship.
It was a dreadful, dreadful time and it all backfired
against the US. In fact, it said, and I was there during this, you know, the 1978-79 Iranian
Revolution, they brought this up over and over and over again. This is one of the reasons that
they were motivated to, you know, rebel and rise up against the Shah, and also to essentially blame the United States
in great part.
Now, we've moved many, many decades on from that, and I think the high point was the 2015
JCPOA, because it's a very difficult relationship, and the United States and Iran were not yet
ready to address all the issues.
But I can tell you from my own personal perspective that as a reporter
I met with all these top-level Iranians for decades ever since
1995 I was the first into the nuclear plant. There was a civilian nuclear plant called Boucher on the Persian Gulf
I'm the first and the only one to have interviewed almost all the Iranian presidents including including the so-called reform presidents.
Over these decades, many, many officials have said to me, background off the record and
this and that, and even on camera, that they wanted to make peace, maybe not the right
word, but to close the file of conflict with the United States on all issues, on terrorism, on missiles, on nuclear and everything.
And they wanted to get into negotiations.
But as Ben knows, this was scuttled many times by hardliners in the United States, hardliners
in Iran, and hardliners in Israel.
So that was never possible.
So the JCPOA was the single, or the only major negotiation that came out of 40 years
of this Iranian revolution.
As you know, nobody in the world wants to see
a nuclear armed Iran.
Iran says it doesn't want a nuclear weapon.
Intelligence says it hasn't got one right now.
It hasn't made a decision to get one.
There was a time, and again,
I was in conversation with a senior Iranian
during the post 9-11 time in Afghanistan.
And this Iranian called me in and he said, because there was the whole invasion of Iraq
and all the rest of it based on a fear that they had weapons of mass destruction, which
proved not to be true.
And we know the backlash.
But this Iranian told me, yes, we did have a serious discussion in the leadership about
whether we should weaponize, but then we decided not to, because that would make it much more
dangerous for us in the region and in our very dangerous neighborhood.
So they decided not to, and that's what intelligence says since 2003.
There's no evidence of that. So I think that this is a really difficult situation
between Iran, Israel, and the United States
that requires not Trump saying I can fix it in 60 days
or what did he say, overnight between Russia and Ukraine
or fix Gaza, it requires staffing, experts,
technical expertise, and patience to negotiate.
He's got one guy.
Whitcoff must be a platinum miles member right now.
He's got one guy, Marco Rubio is doing five different,
he's like the secretary of state, the NSA.
I think he's the ombudsman,
he's the parliamentarian now for the Senate.
They are understaffed, they dozed themselves
out of having any ability to carry out the
complexity of the tasks that they need to be carried out.
And so these are all shortcuts.
And it seems like the easiest thing to subvert in the world is peace.
It seems like as Ben talked earlier, and Ben, I want to ask you this because
it's hard liners can easily, if we remember in Iraq, Hans Blix had gone in and they were going to be inspecting all the sites that had supposed weapons
of mass destruction and we had a process in place that would have avoided the chaos and carnage
of those 20 years in Iraq, in Afghanistan, all those places and it was easily subverted. Ben, how fragile are these moves towards a
more stable peaceful world when hardliners are involved in the room?
I think, I mean, there's some, the problem is our politics in this country is so
messed up on national security that it was much harder to get the Iran deal through Congress
than it was to take this country to war in Iraq, right?
Why is that, Ben, when you say it's,
there's harder to get that peace deal through than war?
What is messed up about it?
Well, first of all, peace,
we could have a long conversation about all the actors
that influence American politics, but I would just say peace is inherently messy, right?
The Iran nuclear deal, sure, it didn't remove the entire Iranian nuclear program.
It's easy to shoot at a target of like, this is a compromise, this is a deal between adversaries.
You make peace with your adversaries.
These are bad people.
Why are you even talking to these people? Because you make peace with the bad people. Why are you even talking to these people? Well, because you make peace
with the bad guys. It's not hard to make a deal with the UK. Even Trump could do that. Whereas
a war, you kind of promise that it's going to look good and we're going to take out these bad
guys and actually it usually looks good at the beginning of the war, right? Right. At the beginning it's like, oh, look at these Israelis, they're killing all these guys.
And wow, the Mossad had drones in Tehran, isn't that cool?
But to your point, the coup in 1953 looked pretty good. It was like, wow,
we got our guy back in there. And now that Iranian oil and gas is flowing,
there's no concern about them being on the wrong side of the Cold War, you know. Well, you know, 1979, it didn't look good.
And so I think that the problem is we are so short-term in our thinking and our response.
And I'll fault the Democratic Party here.
You can sense the kind of fear in some of these Democratic politicians right now.
It's like, well, if I oppose this Israeli military strike or oppose the US getting involved, I'm not picking a fight
with Netanyahu, will I be called weak? Or maybe this strike is going to look good and then Trump
is going to say, I'm weak. Stand for something. If we haven't learned anything from the last 25 years,
we've learned that violence in the Middle East is unlikely to lead to better outcomes. And certainly,
the violent removal of governments by the United States or Israel for that matter is going to lead to a
better government. I don't know how many countries we have to try that out in before we learn that
that is not what works. And so I think opponents need to simplify the message. And Kris Jenner
will remember, she can attest, when we said in the Obama years that it's either this deal
or a war, we were called, you know, how dare you say that?
Well, that was the case.
Because either you're gonna have a deal
over this nuclear program, or Israel was gonna do something
like this and try to get the United States involved
in that war.
And that's where Trump is now.
Trump is either gonna join this war,
or he's gonna try to stop it.
And that is such a consequential choice.
Whether it's a family member, friend or furry companion joining your summer road trip, enjoy the peace of mind that comes with Volvo's legendary safety.
During Volvo Discover Days, enjoy limited time savings as you make plans to cruise through
Muskoka or down Toronto's bustling streets.
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. And I think Ben, you guys saw this in your administration.
Netanyahu, as I said, has been trying to do this for decades.
No other American president allowed him to do it.
Everyone restrained him.
He came to Congress and was given the floor to address Republicans practically only to
diss the JCPOA.
He did that another time.
Yeah, charts.
I think he even went to Kinko's and got some bomb charts.
It's an absolute, now successful strategy against negotiations and against getting a deal.
And I think that this is, you know, we talk about peace. It is hard, but look at what the US was
able to do, for instance, with the parties in
Northern Ireland. Look at what the South Africans were able to do after apartheid. Look at any
number. Look at Oslo. I know Oslo has not come to fruition, and we wish we were back in the mid-90s,
but that was, you know, all sides getting together with really vested honest brokers and third parties, whether it was the US, whether it was the
Oslo negotiators and the parties on the ground decided to come and they got the help to move
towards peace.
Bosnia, I mean, it's not perfect, but after, you know, I covered that war, there was a
US brokered end and, you know, it's tenuous, but it's not back to war. And so it is possible.
Politicians and leaders have to decide
whether they want to do that
or whether they want to react in this kind of easier way
as Ben was laying out.
And you know, whatever you might say about President Biden
and about should he have restrained Israel more
given what's going on in Gaza,
on the day that he landed in Israel after October 7th
and the horrors that were committed there,
he told them, don't do what we did in Iraq.
Don't go for revenge.
Look what's going to, look what happened to us.
You know, self-defense, but don't go crazy
like we did in Iraq, because look at the blowback, and it's been severe.
Why do you think that politicians are more likely
to be okay owning the years of instability
and chaos that occurs from these types
of military interventions, but they are afraid
to own whatever even singular incidents might
be the result of peace.
In other words, if you make, you know, no politician seems to want to make the peace
deal if there might be a suicide bombing that occurs.
I'm not suggesting that that's a wonderful outcome, but they seem much more willing
to own the years of instability and the long-term deleterious effects of these kinds of interventions
than they would have the courage that when you make peace, peace is not oftentimes final idealized
serenity. There will be spasms of violence within that.
Is that the fear that they have?
They don't want to own those outcomes?
Or is that not in the calculation?
Ben, you were in the room when these things were going on.
I'm only saying that in the way of like,
in Israel, the only person, when they tried to make peace,
there were assassinations.
Sadat was assassinated, Rabin was assassinated.
That's how things roll.
But if you make peace, if you shake hands,
and then there's a bombing,
now suddenly everybody says,
see, you never should have done that.
But nobody goes back and says,
this is a nightmare of instability.
Yeah, I think that this has been a huge issue
in American politics for a long time.
And again, it comes back to the point that he's like,
like LBJ was, even though it was evident in 1965
that we're unlikely to defeat North Vietnam
and South Vietnam, right?
That the Vietnamese people didn't want us there, that the South Vietnamese government
was corrupt.
He was afraid of, you know, essentially pulling out and being told, well, look, this guy,
you know, he wasn't tough enough to stand up to these guys.
And because he escalated, he destroyed his own capacity to do the great society, you
know?
So in other words, he was more afraid
of the much smaller cost.
And I think part of the, I think that the reason is, John,
is that everybody can see what the cost is going to be
to doing the peace deal.
You're gonna be called weak by all these people,
there's gonna be holes in it.
But what they don't
see is that the costs are usually deferred to doing the war. And again, so I think it
interacts with this kind of short term way in which we think about these things in our
politics. If you look at, you know, Israeli and Palestinian leaders even. Rabin is the only Israeli leader who was like,
you know what, like I've fought in all these wars
and I'm gonna take this risk and make this peace.
And guess what?
He was assassinated, you know,
by a right-wing extremist, right?
And so sometimes people are afraid to make peace
because the peacemakers have been targeted
in some of these places too.
Always, always.
So that's a more extreme version of getting criticized politically.
But in the US, I just think this default to like, you know, despite the fact that one
other thing I want to say is that every American, I worked for Obama in the way he ran as the
anti-war candidate.
The American people keep telling us through their elections who they want, the kind of leaders they want, or leaders who don't get us into these wars,
and yet politicians have not absorbed that lesson apparently. And it looks like Trump is struggling,
I don't know, but I mean every time I look around there's another Trump thing saying,
oh you know Ayatollah says he won't surrender, good luck to him, and then but I wanted to not go to war. I wanted to be the
peace candidate. I wanted the Nobel Prize, et cetera, et cetera. I mean, we're just not sure
what's coming out. Yeah. Why is it easier to own war than to own peace? I don't understand that.
Yeah. Ehud Barak, also a military man, prime minister, defense minister, head of the Israeli
army, chief of staff, he made one of the most far-reaching offers to the Palestinians back at the famous Camp
David of 2000 with Yasser Arafat and Clinton, et cetera, and Arafat couldn't get himself
over the line.
I think partly because he was afraid of being assassinated like Assad was, but I also think
they missed a huge opportunity. And once Netanyahu came back, it's been no way has there been any effort to make any
peace deal.
And then I'll say another thing.
People are never incorporated.
The Iranian people for 45 years have never been mentioned, not by Israel, not by the
West, not by the United States.
It's all been about terrorism, this and that. Nobody has thought about the people.
We have been so dehumanized, so delegitimized.
You know, now Netanyahu's saying, rise up, you know,
and using the slogan and saying,
Zan zindagi azadi, woman life freedom.
I mean, when did you ever care about the Iranian people?
Likewise, when did anybody, the entire body politic, care about the Iranian people? Likewise, when did anybody, the entire body
politic care about the Palestinian people?
And by the way, as difficult as the Iranian people's relationship is with their government
and nobody is making the case that the Aitole is a great dude and has brought, you know,
real progress to them. Boy, if you want to get a people to unify with their government,
even those that have an incredibly fragile relationship with that government, bomb them.
Well, you know, the deputy foreign minister said exactly that because I said, you know,
people are unhappy with your, your regime and they have been for a long time.
And the rest of the world is watching to see whether this is finally going to
lead to the end of your regime.
And he said to me, Christian, people may have a lot of problems with our policies,
but as you just said, once they are bombed by a foreign entity,
then they coalesce.
Look, I will say that is also complicated.
There are, I would say the majority of the people of Iran
want a different kind of government.
They want freedom.
They want to be able to have electricity and heat and travel and
pay their bills and all that other stuff. And some may even be hoping that this Israeli
attack will lead to some kind of freedom. But the majority of those who are commenting online
are actually more rallying around the flag at this time. So I think that's something also,
potential unintended consequence that we don't know where that's going to lead. But I would say, and then the about people. They just don't. Boy howdy. And as you see this, you know, and it brings up an interest.
I want to talk about one other dynamic,
and I so appreciate you guys spending the time with this.
So we've talked about Israel, Iran, the United States,
the sort of fraught relationships between.
I want to talk a little bit about the Sunni world
within this and more Saudi Arabia is kind of the,
and maybe even Egypt is kind of more the central.
I am confused as to who's whose proxy
is Israel our proxy?
Are we Israel's proxy?
Is Saudi Arabia and that world,
because if anybody is going to be pleased,
and I know that they have to send out
the diplomatic missives stating to the other,
but if anybody is pleased in this moment,
I would assume it's the Saudi group
that is constantly at battle with the Shia world.
This has changed, John, a bit.
Really?
Yeah.
Okay, tell me.
So, MBS has actually evolved on this thing a bit,
and it gets to your thing about risk.
Right.
MBS got spooked a few years ago
when the Iranians demonstrated
that they could hit Saudi oil fields. And the Emiratis also got spooked a few years ago when the Iranians demonstrated that they could hit Saudi oil fields.
And the Emiratis also got spooked when the Iranians demonstrated they might be able to hit
you know Abu Dhabi or Dubai. And so what the Saudis did in 2023 is they normalized relations
with Iran. And I think it's not because they like them. It's not because MBS has any love for this
regime. He doesn't. He loathes them.
But if this war goes off the rails, right? If the Iranians feel like we have no choice but to lash
out, they could bomb Saudi oil fields. They could just become nihilists and say, you know what,
we're going to burn it all down with us, you know? And you're going to get sucked into the
quicksand of this war too. And, you know, these guys have a good thing going right now in the Gulf.
They don't want to mess
with it, you know.
So do they do they now see Israel as more of a threat to
that, then I always assume that they saw Iran as more of a
threat, Iran and through Iran, Russia, as more of a threat to
their supremacy in the region, and would rather surreptitiously
work with Israel.
That's how it's been.
And your in your mind mind has that flipped?
I think this latest, so that's how it's certainly been,
but I think it's been evolving.
And now, given all that Israel's been doing,
I actually think that it's beginning to flip,
not everywhere in the Gulf,
but I think the Saudis are looking at this and thinking,
this is just creating a lot of risk, right?
There's more risk in what Israel's doing now than in living with the Iranian regime.
And secondly, if you look at Gaza, like these guys have large populations of younger people
that are completely outraged about the massacre of tens of thousands of civilians and children
in Gaza.
And precisely because they are going to be around for a while, I guess as a young guy, if he's thinking about the risks to his potential rule and
legitimacy, the anger over what's going to happen to the Palestinians, particularly if
they end up getting ethnically cleansed and people get in there and find hundreds of thousands
of people killed, and the disorder of what's happening in Iran ultimately begins to pose
a bigger threat to him than the Iranian regime.
Christiane, you report on this. Iran ultimately begins to pose a bigger threat to him than the Iranian regime.
Chris John, you report on this.
I think you're right.
And I think that something that solidified the Saudi risk appetite was when Trump did
not come to their aid.
Do you remember after Iran did hit the Abqaiq, the gas field or whatever it was, the energy
target during that time, and they're, oh my God, you know, who's our ally here? And notably back in the October, you know,
missile exchange between Iran and Israel,
you had all these countries, including Arab countries,
saying that, hey, we are defending, you know,
we're helping strike down Iranian missiles.
Today, nada, okay?
No allies, not the Europeans, not the Arabs.
So Israel is on its own with the United States right now as far as we can gather.
And that goes to the heart of what Ben mentioned, and it's about Gaza right now.
Israel which would have wanted, and Saudi which would have wanted the normalization
deal, cannot do it.
Saudi cannot do it while Israel is still in Gaza, while it's still slaughtering civilians.
And every single day we get pictures
on our feeds and statistics of children, women and men being killed just at the aid distribution
site.
There was I think 140 killed just yesterday within a 24 hour period at these hate sites.
It's insane.
Yeah.
And the settlers running rampage in the West Bank.
But why then, guys, for MBS, who is assuming this sort of larger role within as a statesman,
not just in Saudi Arabia, but in the larger Middle East, why then is there passivity?
Because it is, look, they could have very easily, the idea that Gaza is being left to be brokered by Israel in the United States clearly is not going to in any way help the Palestinian people avoid this just god-awful carnage that they're living through.
Why hasn't MBS and that part of the world been more forceful. You know, they all, like I say, they throw out the mischief.
That's why in my mind, I think to myself, well, ultimately they must be okay with this.
Well, I mean, look, Ben, but it's for me, it's been my first question.
I ask every Arab leader.
It's a shameful dereliction of their duty as well, which doesn't mean to say,
unlike Mike Huckabee is suggesting the ambassador to Israel for the US, that it's the Arab countries who should give the Palestinians their state, but it
does mean that they've never given them, you know, citizenship. They've kept them in, quote-unquote,
refugee camps, and they have not done what you just suggested. Use their influence, their strength,
and make this... That's what I don't under... That's what I don't understand. They tried in 2002 the so-called, you know, Arab Saudi Arabia peace plan
and it was rejected by the way. Yeah, could still could still be an effect.
Yes, the only one. Why does Israel have a veto on all this?
That's what I don't. Why are we continuing to allow Israel purely to have a veto based on
their sense of security? Why is everyone else's security secondary to their sense of it?
I think that they I mean, there's a layers to this.
You know, there's no love for Hamas, obviously, in Riyadh and Saudi Arabia.
Right. Or or anywhere.
Yeah. Or anywhere. Or anywhere.
Or even like there's not a lot of confidence in the Palestinian authority.
There's a lot. But I think one of the
reasons, John, is at the end of the day, they believe that the US will back whatever Israel does.
And so why do they want to stick their neck out for the Palestinians?
So they don't want to own the peace. It goes back to what we talked about. They won't own the peace.
They don't own the peace. But they don't trust Netanyahu is going to make peace.
How could they? And so why should they spend a lot of capital? Now they tried to kind
of shortcut this thing with the Abraham Accords where the Saudis stayed out of the Emiratis were
kind of like, well, let's make this deal. We'll normalize relations, which was not really a peace
deal. It's like direct flights and commercial relations. Cause the peace has to be made with
the Palestinians, not the Emiratis, you know? I think some people sincerely believe that maybe that would like pull this issue
into kind of a broader context where the Palestinians could do economic development,
everything in this region is going to get rich.
Well, it turns out, to your point, John, earlier, people want to be free,
and they want to be free in the places that they live.
And the Palestinians didn't get anything out of a deal
where the Emiratis are making business deals with the Israelis, right?
And there's just not an Arab leader that has been able to speak to that
Or has been willing to go out on a limb and speak to that because they frankly think if they go out on that limb
The US and Israel are gonna saw it off at the end of the day Christian
I know you have to go and so we're gonna let you thank you. What does pulling back from the precipice?
look like in your mind?
And how could that be achieved in these next, you know, tumultuous days? Well, from my perspective,
having just talked to the Iranian foreign minister, so from their perspective, they're one party to
this. If it stops, they'll go back to negotiations. He told me, we haven't given up on negotiations.
And what does escalation look like on the Iranian part? Like, what do you think they're willing to do?
Well, he wouldn't tell me straight out, but they have threatened if the US gets involved,
and as Ben laid out, the US has a lot of bases. It has 40,000 troops, I believe,
or something like that, personnel in that region. And already, you know.
And more right now, we're sending more. Yeah. And, you know, it's considered that Iraq or,
you know, militias in Iraq, Iran-backed militias, perhaps the first line of attack on various,
you know, Israeli, American targets, but it's not going to be good.
Right.
Ben, your final word on what you think deescalation could look like, and, and
in your mind, how that could be accomplished.
A deescalation involves the United States stepping in saying Israel has to stop
the military operation and we're going to make a nuclear deal with the Iranians
and the Iranians, you know, get crappy terms and terms and this thing is just kind of put on the freezer.
If it doesn't happen, and I think if the US bombs Fordow to end where Christianity started,
there's real meaningful pride in Iran.
It's a revolutionary government.
It's a government that went through the Iran-Iraq war. So the idea of unconditional surrender, as Trump tweeted, is just not in their DNA.
Right.
And I think that-
Or any countries.
Or any countries. And again, we might not see, maybe they go underground with their
nuclear program and they pretend like they're making deals but they pop up in a year or two like North Korea did with a nuclear weapon. Maybe the response comes to an immediate flood
of attacks against US service members or oil fields. Maybe it comes later in terrorist actions.
But the idea that this is going to be neat and clean and that they're just going to surrender
or that I saw Newt Gingrich post, they nabbed the time for a moderate inclusive, secular democratic government in Iran. I'm like, we don't even have one of those in the United States.
By the way, they had it and we overthrew it. Not in Israel either.
Right? Yeah, not in Israel either.
Anymore. So the idea that, yeah, the regime change thing is the catastrophic success, right? If you
remove that regime, I worry about that more than I worry about, you know,
what they might do against US troops.
Because it's not because I like the Iranian regime, I don't, but it's the Iranian people
that should replace it, you know?
And I worry about a failed state in Iran.
And I would like to say-
Oh yeah, go ahead, Christiane, please.
Just a plug for myself and my new podcast.
I do this with my ex-husband on this episode, which has just dropped all the behind
the scenes stuff.
Christiane, truly professional. Well done. That was that was cherry. Ben Rhodes, co-host
Pod Save the World, former deputy national security advisor to President Obama. Christiane
Omobor, CNN's chief international anchor, host of the new podcast, Christiane and the
X-Files with Jamie Rubin, which is talking about this very topic, as Christiane just
mentioned.
Guys, thanks so much for spending the time.
I know it's a really fraught time for both of you, so thanks.
Thanks for you taking the time.
Thanks, John.
Okay, we are gonna take a quick break.
We'll be coming right back.
["No Frills"]
["No Frills"]
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.
Ever feel like your WordPress site is moving in slow motion?
Switch to Kinsta's Manage Hosting for WordPress and watch it fly. Host your site on Google Cloud's fastest servers with worldwide data centers so your pages load instantly.
Need help? WordPress experts respond in under two minutes and will migrate to your site for free.
Try it yourself. First month free at Kinsta.com.
That's K-I-N-S-T-A dot com. Kinsta. simply better hosting.
Boy, I want to thank Ben and Christian for being here. You know, you're in the middle of it and you just know that their phones are
dinging the whole time because they're in the midst of actually talking to,
uh, uh, the relevant players within this fiasco and hearing in real time, as Christian
was saying on the phone with the deputy foreign ministers of Iran.
But the one thing that struck me was the ease in which de-escalation can take place.
And for some reason, that being the moment that's fraught, that peace is more fraught than war in the
immediate moment of political gain, whether it's even for, even for the regime in Iran,
whose own people rose up against it time and time again, who they've had to physically
put down, whether it was based on the green revolution that took place or the Masi Amini, and I hope
I'm pronouncing that correctly, Masi Amini, that sparked so much protest and unfortunately violence
within that country. And you see how war is in some ways their answer to coalescing their people.
to coalescing their people. It's a stunning kind of realization
that it's easier for these so-called leaders
to live in war than to live in peace.
Anyway, I appreciate both of them taking the time
to enlighten us in those issues.
I wanna thank our folks as always
for helping me put on the podcast.
Lead producer, Lauren Walker,
producer, Brittany Mamedovic,
video editor and engineer, Rob Vitola,
audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce,
researcher and associate producer,
Jillian Spear, and our executive producers,
Chris McShane and Katie Gray.
Thank you for listening,
and we shall see you again next week.
Little Billy. Thank you for listening and we shall see you again next week. Buh-bye. The weekly show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast.
It's produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions. Shop with Rakuten and you'll get it.
What's it?
It's the best deal.
The highest cash back.
The most savings on your shopping.
So join Rakuten and start getting cash back at Sephora, Uniqlo, Expedia and other stores
you love.
You can even stack sales on top of cash back.
Just start your shopping with Rakuten to save money at over 750 stores. Join for free at rakuten.ca or download the
Rakuten app. That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N. Rakuten.ca.
Shop with Rakuten and you'll get it. What's it? It's the best deal, the highest cashback,
the most savings on your shopping. So join Rakuten and start getting cash back at Sephora, Uniclo, Expedia, and other stores you love.
You can even stack sales on top of cash back.
Just start your shopping with Rakuten to save money at over 750 stores.
Join for free at rakuten.ca or download the Rakuten app.
That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N. Rakuten.ca
Paramount Podcasts