| Time | Text |
|---|---|
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Israel And Jordan Questions
00:03:52
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| Hi, everyone. | |
| Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. | |
| Today is Thursday, January 30th, 2025. | |
| Pepe Escobar joins us from Moscow, where it is midnight local time. | |
| Pepe, thank you very much, my dear friend. | |
| My pleasure. | |
| You have a terrific peace out this morning. | |
| On what is Sultan Erdogan up to? | |
| And I want to explore it with you. | |
| But first, one or two questions about Israel and one or two questions about Ukraine. | |
| Is Trump going to get General al-Sisi and King Abdullah to each take a quarter of a million Palestinians, as he indicated he would attempt to do the other day? | |
| And would the Palestinians, a million and a half of them, Well, assuming Sissi and the Little King would accept, they would have two civil wars at their doorstep. | |
| They already said no, directly and indirectly. | |
| But there's not much of a margin of maneuver in those cases, right? | |
| These are vassals. | |
| These are ultra-vassals. | |
| Trump can force them to accept it. | |
| And you know, damn the domestic consequences. | |
| But the most extraordinary fact in all that is that Trump is trying to repackage a genocide as an extermination and an expulsion operation, as ethnic cleansing. | |
| This is extremely serious in itself. | |
| And this is how it's seen by the Arab street. | |
| If you go to a souk in Cairo, if you go to the souk of Aleppo, for that matter, and you ask people, everybody's going to say this is beyond inadmissible. | |
| Do you think that both General al-Sisi's government in Egypt and King Abdullah in Jordan would be overthrown by a massive movement? | |
| If this Trump idea were to come to pass, no matter how he sweetened it with cash. | |
| Absolutely. $10 billion, $15 billion, $20 billion, which in terms of the U.S. is a peanuts, but it's an enormous amount in both Egypt and Jordan. | |
| Artificial government, especially Jordan, is a completely artificial setup. | |
| And the king is viewed by most of the population, which, by the way, is Palestinian in Jordan, as a traitor, as a traitor of the Arab cause and a traitor of Palestine. | |
| Do you think that Donald Trump has the same contempt for the personal freedom of the Palestinians as Joe Biden? | |
| That's a very complicated question, Judge. | |
| We don't know what Trump really thinks about First of all, because he really speaks about the Palestinians and he never mentioned the word genocide. | |
| It's not a word. | |
| It's a fact, in fact. | |
| So we really don't know. | |
| He only sees, apparently, if we take at face value what he said so far, he only sees Gaza as a tremendous real estate opportunity by the sea in his own words, phenomenal location. | |
| Well, I think that spells it out, doesn't it? | |
| Wow. Wow. | |
|
They've Been Told Defeated
00:03:41
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| Are we in danger of his having a nickname similar to Biden? | |
| Genocide Donald made in America? | |
| If he proceeds like these first 10, 12 days, unfortunately, yes. | |
| What do you think Prime Minister Netanyahu will ask of him when he visits the White House next week? | |
| A green card to proceed with the second stage, his and Netanyahu's own way, which means he will continue to do what he was doing before the first ceasefire. | |
| And in fact, nothing changed in terms of expelling the Palestinians from Gaza, from Netanyahu and from his cabinet. | |
| Nothing has changed. | |
| This is a pause. | |
| They are regrouping, rearming, and they'll continue to do what they were doing. | |
| I want to play for you a clip from Daniel Levy, the British born and educated, you may know him, former Israeli negotiator. | |
| This is dynamite, what he said. | |
| Sonia, cut number one. | |
| One cannot underestimate the impact on the Israeli public psyche of the release. | |
| The initial three who were released. | |
| And, of course, everyone, therefore, saw those images. | |
| They've been told Al-Qassam defeated. | |
| They've been told the public has turned against them. | |
| They've been told so many things. | |
| And then they saw those images. | |
| An occupying army, armed and aided by the most powerful military in the world, the US. | |
| A nuclear armed state? | |
| Israel. In a struggle between that and a resistance movement, we saw a very powerful display, and Israelis saw that. | |
| we're being told by Israeli analysts, talking heads, political leaders, and their backers in the West, that the next phase has to be to move forward. | |
| We have to have the demilitarization of our Al-Qassam emerges from this with a very strong narrative. | |
| Israel's narrative doesn't look so good at all. | |
| Has Netanyahu failed? | |
| Is Daniel Levy essentially correct? | |
| Daniel is essentially correct, even if he doesn't mention genocide. | |
| He was very diplomatic trying to cover it, right? | |
| But his argument is absolutely correct. | |
| And Al Qassam is much more powerful now than they were 15, 16 months ago. | |
| What is Al Qassam? | |
| Brigades. The brigades. | |
| The brigades that we see exactly in this video. | |
| And this proves that what Yahya Sinwar was correct from the beginning, what he was doing. | |
| Correct in terms of building a resistance-fighting force capable of withstanding absolutely everything that Israel threw at them. | |
| And that was massive, as we all know. | |
|
Turkey's Oil Operation in Syria
00:13:37
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|
| Okay. To Russia. | |
| Does the Kremlin believe that the war is effectively over? | |
| Not over. | |
| Very important context. | |
| I arrived here four days ago, Judge, so I haven't had time yet to have in-depth conversations and to have answers to, I have a list of questions like, you know, gigantic. | |
| Tomorrow night, it's the first big night. | |
| I have a dinner with a very good source. | |
| He will answer probably 80% of my questions, including your question. | |
| Not that it's over, but it's proceeding the way they want it. | |
| And it's fascinating to see on the American side this, I called it the disco inferno, this enormous bombast by Trump 24-7, cameras clicking, breathless headlines, you name it. | |
| And the Russians are like Taoist monks observing all that without barely a smirk. | |
| And Peskov, He said this week, look, we still haven't got even a phone call to set up the famous Trump-Putin phone call. | |
| For the moment, it's only bombast. | |
| There's nothing substantial. | |
| Do you think that Trump and Putin will have, perhaps with President Xi and maybe with the Prime Minister of India, a Yalta-like meeting? | |
| Resolving the huge long-term problems of the security of America, of Europe, of Russia, of China, and who has hegemony over what? | |
| Is that too optimistic to hope for? | |
| Realistically, if this was a reality and not an environment set up by fantasy overlapping over fantasy, we are living in a completely Artificial. | |
| And the word of those postmodern theoreticians of the 80s called simulacra. | |
| Yes, it's a perpetual simulation. | |
| If we had a new Yalta, you have to be Putin, Trump, Xi, perhaps Modi, and perhaps a fifth component, certainly not from Europe, because Europe is absolutely irrelevant. | |
| It would be certainly from somewhere around Eurasia. | |
| And considering Trump will be on the table, he will probably call Saudi Arabia, for instance. | |
| If we have these five players deciding, especially in terms of West Asia and parts of Eurasia, and the relation between the Atlanticist sphere and Eurasia, the post-Soviet space, etc., this will be a realistic new Yalta. | |
| We know it's not going to happen, realistically. | |
| Let me ask you some questions about Turkey. | |
| Can Turkey be a member of BRICS and NATO simultaneously? | |
| You actually asked the question. | |
| I'm mouthing your own question. | |
| This is what I ask my fabulous interlocutors, you know, academics, scholars, very well-connected people. | |
| We usually have one of these like once a year when I go to Istanbul. | |
| We get together and at the end of the dinner, I launch my questions and they go on. | |
| It's really fascinating. | |
| The great thing is that they are not Islamists. | |
| They are not affiliated with the AKP party. | |
| They are not pro-Erdogan. | |
| They are secular. | |
| Very, very important. | |
| They are, let's say, different brands of Kemalism. | |
| They are pro-Turkish Republic. | |
| Nationalist Turks, of course, but not out of control. | |
| And one of the first things that they actually answered is that no, it's impossible. | |
| Because Erdogan, once again, he's always hedging. | |
| This is something that I learned three years ago when I spent the first part of the year, 2022, including the start of the Special Military Operation, I was living in Istanbul. | |
| And this is something that I didn't know and I learned over there, that 90% or even more of the Turkish elites are in fact totally Atlanticists. | |
| They are pro-US, pro-Europe and pro-NATO. | |
| I didn't know that. | |
| I thought it was like 50-50. | |
| No way. | |
| It's the absolute majority of the ruling elites and the ruling classes. | |
| So they look at Eurasia, they look at Russia, China, they don't really understand Russia and China, especially. | |
| India, on a more folklore vein, all right? | |
| But they still don't understand. | |
| and they think that their destiny will be linked to the West. | |
| It's not going to happen because we all know that the EU... | |
| But that's the mindset of the people around Erdogan and behind Erdogan and the people who follow the money crowd in Istanbul and Ankara especially. | |
| You refer to Erdogan as the sultan, and that, of course... | |
| Well, of course. | |
| I mean, you have the best sense of humor, Pepe. | |
| But who and what are the neo-Ottomans? | |
| And is Erdogan one of them? | |
| In other words, do these people want an empire of Turkey? | |
| Or reconstituting parts of the Ottoman Empire. | |
| That's why we call them neo-Ottomans. | |
| The number one neo-Ottoman, in fact, the guy who conceptualized this in a few books, Was the former foreign minister Davutoglu, which now he is in a very small political party. | |
| He's practically a sideline from politics. | |
| And he influenced Erdogan a lot. | |
| Another thing that I learned in Istanbul, Erdogan doesn't read. | |
| Erdogan doesn't know in detail. | |
| He has that in common with the current President of the United States. | |
| Well, on a different level, yes. | |
| I'm sorry to interrupt you. | |
| How does he gather information and who influences Erdogan? | |
| The people who have his ears, and at the moment there are two. | |
| His chief of Intel, Kalin, and his former chief of Intel, MIT, which is the current foreign minister, Hakan Fidan. | |
| Fidan is a very, very smart character. | |
| He has presidential ambitions or prime ministerial ambitions or whatever. | |
| He wants to be on top later on. | |
| And so Erdogan listens to these two, especially. | |
| No question. | |
| What does Erdogan want? | |
| Exactly. And this is something, part of their answer, answer my question. | |
| He wanted Aleppo, Judge. | |
| He was not expecting the thing going all the way to Damascus. | |
| And that's why one of my interlocutors said, now Turkey was waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting, but in the end they got something that they didn't want. | |
| They don't have the resources, financial resources or the military resources to take over Syria and to manage the western part of Syria, the Syria that really works, right? | |
| That corridor from Aleppo in the north to Damascus in the south. | |
| They can't. | |
| At best, they could try to have a proxy government in Aleppo. | |
| That's it. | |
| But now they have practically the whole thing. | |
| Will Erdogan allow the Israelis? | |
| To conquer Aleppo and Damascus? | |
| Never. No, never, never, never, never. | |
| From a Turkish and MIT point of view, Israel stops far away from the southern suburbs of Damascus. | |
| That's it. | |
| That's where they are at the moment. | |
| We don't know if they're going to proceed. | |
| the north, they went to the left, to the right, but not to the north. | |
| So the problem is that Right. The new president of Syria is one of the world's great terrorists. | |
| He proclaimed himself president on Wednesday. | |
| This is completely nuts and not a word from the NATO stand space. | |
| You have a former cat shopper, a former Al-Qaeda in Syria, who's now running the government. | |
| Did the United States, against which he fought in Iraq and Afghanistan, utter a peep over this? | |
| Nothing. | |
| Absolutely nothing. | |
| It reminds me... | |
| Yes. You may have quoted it, or it may have been Aaron Maté. | |
| There's a very famous email from Jake Sullivan. | |
| From Jake Sullivan to Hillary, you're right. | |
| Correct, correct, saying they're on our side. | |
| They tried to hide that email, and of course she was humiliated when WikiLeaks exposed it. | |
| She couldn't justify it. | |
| And this was the confirmation. | |
| Okay, all of us who were following the war, even from the outside or from around, from Lebanon or from Iraq, we knew that. | |
| But we didn't have an official confirmation by an American official. | |
| There you go. | |
| So nothing changed, in fact. | |
| So the Americans got what they wanted, which is what they wanted for 13 years at least. | |
| The Turks didn't get what they wanted. | |
| What would the Americans want besides Assad gone? | |
| A totally destabilized Syria because that profits Israel. | |
| Wow. That's the short answer. | |
| Supposedly Donald Trump has ordered American troops out of Syria. | |
| I don't know if that's true. | |
| If it is, it'll be the second time he did so. | |
| First time it didn't happen. | |
| Will it happen this time? | |
| And if so, what will be the consequences? | |
| We don't know if it's going to happen, Judge, because the deep state doesn't want it to happen. | |
| Right. And on top of it, there is a very profitable operation going on with the oil in the Northeast, where the Americans are protecting the Kurds, who are stealing Syrian oil, crossing the border to northern Iraq. | |
| And this oil stolen is sold to Israel at the discount. | |
| Why? Because it's stolen. | |
| For them, it's free. | |
| So they can charge anything to Israel. | |
| It's already a profit. | |
| So this oil rat line, let's put it this way, to quote our friend Sy Hirsch, it will continue. | |
| It profits the Kurds, it profits the Americans, and it profits Israel. | |
| If the Turks had not sold oil to Israel, would it have been able to commit genocide in Gaza? | |
| That's a really good one. | |
| It will be much more difficult. | |
| But we have to look at the sources of oil. | |
| And the main source, if I'm not mistaken, 40% of Israel's oil comes from Turkey. | |
| The BTC pipeline, Baku, Tbilisi, Cheyhan. | |
| So the oil is Azeri. | |
| Comes from Baku. | |
| Then it travels through the pipeline, which was set up by our good old friend, Grand Chessboard, Zbigniew Brzezinski. | |
| Arrives in Cheyhan in Turkey. | |
| And from Cheyhan is transported to Israel. | |
| 40% of Israel's oil. | |
| Wow. I asked my friends why he didn't just, you know, turn off the speaker. | |
| No, he can't. | |
| He can't. | |
| He can't. | |
| It's too much money and Turkey Absolutely. But this is taboo in Turkey, Judge. | |
| Forget about seeing this on Turkish media. | |
| Out of the question. | |
| This is discussed among independents, of course. | |
|
God Loves You
00:01:11
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|
| And let's say, even in the bazaar, it's fascinating to compare all that to the bazaar. | |
| I always go to the bazaar. | |
| I have very good friends in the bazaar. | |
| And we were joking that we should bring Donald Trump here. | |
| So the real art of the deal... | |
| Then this is the real shit. | |
| I would love to see Trump negotiating for a carpet out of Bazaar. | |
| That'd be worth the price of admission alone. | |
| I'll let you go, but what do you do now? | |
| What is Moscow like at 12.30 in the morning on a Friday morning? | |
| Lively or quiet? | |
| Everybody's asleep except this little studio. | |
| All right. | |
| God love you. | |
| Thank you for staying up. | |
| We much appreciate your analysis. | |
| It's brilliant and gifted, as always. | |
| I hope we can see you again next week. | |
| Have a nice evening. | |
| You too, Judge. | |
| Thank you so much. | |
| Thank you. | |
| God bless you. | |
| What a wonderful, wonderful human being. | |
| Tomorrow, Friday, at the end of the day, for the end of the week, 4.30 in the afternoon, as is our custom, the Intelligence Community Roundtable. | |