Tucker Carlson and Jim Webb critique the Trump administration's flawed strategy in Iran, alleging Vice President JD Vance failed to constrain Israel's territorial expansion while pursuing a regime change based on deceptive Mossad intelligence. They warn that deploying U.S. troops without clear objectives risks a Vietnam-like quagmire, citing historical precedents like the 1942 Japanese American internment and modern Michigan arrests for meme mocking as evidence of wartime authoritarianism eroding constitutional rights. Ultimately, they argue that withdrawing forces and prioritizing diplomacy is essential to prevent global escalation and domestic tyranny. [Automatically generated summary]
It's universally recognized at this point, pretty much, that continuing this war with Iran is not in the identifiable interest of the United States.
We don't get anything out of continuing it by anyone's measure.
And if you doubt that, ask yourself, when was the last time someone explained coolly and without emotion, maybe with bullet points or a PowerPoint, how exactly we win if this goes on longer?
There's no real argument to be made.
The United States does not win if this goes on longer, and no one can claim otherwise.
People can jump up and down and attack you for asking, but they can't tell you rationally how you're going to be safer and more prosperous, how your children will lead better lives here in the United States if this goes on.
So everybody knows it's in our interest to wrap this up in a way that protects core American interests, of course, that avoids unnecessary humiliation, that brings some stability to the region, as they say, but wrap it up.
And the administration understands this.
The Trump administration clearly understands this because news reports just in the last 24 hours have told us that the president is thinking about or planning to, depending on who you believe, dispatch the vice president to hammer out some kind of deal with the Iranians.
And if that happens, and we don't know, just repeating what we read, then that's a pretty clear sign that the administration wants to declare victory and move on, certainly to move on.
And they probably couldn't pick a more credible person to do it.
Ideology aside, vice president is smart, honest.
He's not one of the people who's gotten richer in government service.
He's probably one of the people who got poorer in government service, which is a pretty good measure of someone's moral rectitude.
And he understands power dynamics.
And so we are praying for that, praying that that works, that the two sides, or multiple sides, really, can come to terms and end this and stop the death of innocents or combatants for that matter and stop the destruction of critical infrastructure and restore stability to global energy markets and basically make peace.
Anyone who doesn't want that should answer the question, like, why don't you want that?
So we're very much hoping that JD Vance can get that done sometime soon.
But in order to do that, he's going to, or the administration will have to, do one thing first, which is a prerequisite to any kind of settlement or really any kind of ending to this conflict that benefits the United States, and that's constrain its partner in this war, apparently its full partner, which is Israel.
You can't get what you want unless you constrain Israel.
It's not an attack on Israel.
It's just noting what's very obvious, which is that every nation has unique interests.
And when you pair up with another nation in a war, particularly one that could flower into a global conflict, you're probably hoping for different outcomes because they're Different countries.
There's nothing weird about that.
Israel is not the same as the United States, despite what they may tell you.
It's different and they have different goals.
And so, as we assess this 15 years from now, hopefully, in a prosperous, thriving country, we try to figure out how that happened.
The two decisions we probably should be zeroed in on and most anxious to apportion blame for are: number one, killing the Ayatollah in the very opening moments, which immediately limited the possibility of a negotiated settlement, turned what could have been a narrow objective: get rid of Iran's nuclear program, constraints, the ability to build more missiles,
whatever, into something much larger, potentially a war against a nation itself or a war against a religion itself.
So, no sober person would have recommended that.
And we probably should find out how that happened.
Not because we love the Ayatollah, but because we love the United States, and it's hard to see how that was good for us.
And the second decision, maybe even more important, was the decision to go into this, joined at the hip to another nation, in this case, Israel.
That was never going to work.
It couldn't work.
It just doesn't make any sense.
So, whoever made that decision, well, the president, of course, made the decision, but who advised the president to do that?
How did that happen?
You're, of course, discouraged from asking how anything happened.
You're supposed to just accept things, be shocked by them, get over them, get with the program.
And no one, no one is encouraged to ask why.
How?
It's almost like a father, a hungover dad, brushing off an inquisitive five-year-old.
Stop asking why!
But we're not five-year-olds, we're American citizens.
We have an absolute right to know why our country was put to bad use to our detriment.
And so, don't be intimidated when people tell you, shut up, or that's classified.
No, we have a right to know how that decision was made because it didn't help us at all.
And as a product of that decision, we're putting an awful lot of risk.
So, constraining Israel, bringing it to heel, it's a much smaller country than the United States.
We pay for most of their military.
We make all of this possible.
So, it shouldn't be hard to tell them to get in line, at least for the purposes of this conflict, don't do things that violate our core interests.
But so far, no one's been able to do that for some reason.
Again, another, that's another why proposition.
Why?
Why would that be so hard?
If Ghana was doing this to us, we'd say, hey, Ghana, stop it.
But we're not doing that with Israel.
And because we're not doing that with Israel, the Israelis feel completely free not simply to make public announcements that they're going to pursue their own interests to the detriment of ours, but to humiliate the U.S. government and our nation by so doing.
This is a feature that may be unique to Israel, hard to know exactly, but it's certainly the most obvious feature of our relationship with Israel, which is an ongoing humiliation process.
We spoke two days ago to the former interim president of Israel, Afram Berg, former Knesset leader, a guy who knows Israeli politics and culture.
He's in his 70s.
He's born and lived there his whole life, knows the country well.
And he noted unprompted that a feature of the way that Israel deals with other nations is humiliation.
It's not simply enough to come to terms.
You know, we're both a little bit dissatisfied.
That means it's a good deal.
You often hear that.
That's not the Israeli view.
The Israeli view is: I have to crush you.
I have to put my boot in your face.
I have to diminish you.
I have to humiliate you.
Now, who knows where that comes from?
But you should know it as you watch the interplay between the United States government and the Israeli government because there's a whole lot of that.
And here's a perfect example.
And this is both a problem, like a tactical problem for the U.S. government.
Like, how do you strike a peace deal with this kind of stuff going on?
I'm showing you in a second, but it's also a deeper problem for us.
Watching your country get humiliated by a tiny country in a faraway place and getting no explanation for why they're allowed to do that humiliates you and discourages you.
And if you watch it long enough, you start to lose faith in your own nation.
You start to become humiliated yourself.
So we could pick a million examples of this, but here's one.
So Monday, the president before markets open, which was interesting, announces that the United States is pulling back from his promise to start hitting civilian infrastructure, energy, and infrastructure in Iran.
And we're doing that because we're going to try and find some negotiated settlement.
And we've been talking to the Iranians, and there is a way out of this.
We don't have to get to the point where we're waging total war, not just against the government of Iran or the Ayatollahs or the theocracy or whatever we say we're doing, but against the people of Iran, turning off their electricity, ending their drinking water, letting them die of exposure or whatever, total war against a country of almost 100 million people.
And nobody wants that, or at least no one should want that.
So the president announced: hey, we're in talks.
We're pulling back.
But within just a couple of hours, our partner in Jerusalem, Benjamin Netanyahu, the guy we're in this war with, issued this statement.
Listen carefully.
We're safeguarding our vital interests, the Prime Minister of Israel said.
Our vital interests.
Now, what are those vital interests?
Well, no one's really explained that.
Not even clear the Israeli public really knows the extent of their own country's, quote, vital interest as envisioned by their prime minister.
We're not really sure.
But clearly, they entail territorial expansion, moving the borders of Israel outward, taking other people's land.
And they're saying that in the Israeli government.
This is a win because we've moved our borders outward.
So we're paying for that.
We're making that possible.
As Americans die, and a number have died in this war, Israel is using that opportunity, our money, our weapons, the lives of our soldiers to expand its territory.
So that's not our vital interest.
You can agree or disagree with that.
By the way, if you've been yelling about the Russian invasion of Ukraine, you should probably yell about this because it's even less defensible, really.
But they're saying that, and no one in the U.S. government has told them to stop.
And so, what does that mean for us?
Well, it means that Israel somehow is in control of the course of this war, and they have been since the beginning.
We learned this week, for example, that the decision to go into this war and to kill the Ayatollah in the opening hours of this war was made on intelligence, on the basis of intelligence supplied to the U.S. government by Mossad, the Israeli intel agency, not from the CIA.
CIA, which no one wants to defend, but in this specific case was, sounds like was a voice for restraint.
And again, that's why we have intel agencies so they can advise the president about what to do next on the basis of the best available information.
That's the idea anyway.
And apparently, CIA was telling the White House, no, you can kill the head of Shia Islam, but that probably won't topple the government.
And there probably won't be in the aftermath of that killing this spontaneous creation of a liberal democracy in Southwest Asia.
Probably not going to happen.
But Mossad had another scenario.
They believed or said they believed that knocking off the religious leadership, the head of the snake, in this theocracy would result in spontaneous regime change.
And we wouldn't have to really get involved beyond just the initial bombing campaign.
And that's very appealing to Americans who fought war from the air for a long time.
And that's at this point, pretty much the only thing that the American public will accept.
You know, a low risk, very expensive, but low risk operation that doesn't take very long where you achieve your objectives by killing the right people with bombs.
But nobody in the United States, well, almost nobody has any great desire to send U.S. troops.
In fact, in fact, in June, when the government of Israel and its many paid spokesmen in the United States were pushing for what became the 12-day war, we're just going to take out the nuclear sites.
There were people who said, no, that's not what this is.
This is a regime change effort.
And if pursued, it will wind up with boots on the ground, with the commitment of American troops.
And once that happens, it's kind of hard to see how to extricate them.
And a lot of them could get killed.
And anyone who said that at the time was denounced as crazy, a conspiracy theorist, a grifter.
Well, yeah.
Nine months later, that's exactly where we are.
Today, the head of Mossad, smart, seasoned guy, said that he believes, apparently said this, that he believes regime change in Iran, which is apparently now the stated goal, will require at least a year to change the regime in Iran.
So that right there is Israel saying we're going to need the commitment of American troops.
Americans are going to have to go there.
And surprise, surprise, Americans are going there.
There's not been an invasion of Iran, of the mainland or any of the islands in the Persian Gulf just yet, but there is clearly preparation for that.
There are many thousands of U.S. troops headed there right now.
Some are already stationed in the area.
And this looks like the kind of preparation that you would do if you were planning a land assault on a huge, mountainous country that's surprisingly cohesive and very well armed.
And from what we can tell, there's not a lot of enthusiasm for doing this among people who spend their lives thinking through military tactics and strategy.
This doesn't seem like the kind of move that's going to end the war in our favor quickly.
It seems like the kind of move that could result in disaster.
We pray it doesn't.
But that once made will almost certainly result in a long-term commitment to fighting on the ground in Iran, the very thing we were told we were insane to worry about.
Now everyone's going to say, oh, yeah, it's going to take some boots on the ground.
And one of the things you learn as you watch this change where something that was totally unimaginable and insane.
It was space aliens level crazy just nine months ago to suggest this could happen.
One of the things you notice as you watch people now advocate for it, those very same people advocate for this thing that was never going to happen and you were crazy to worry about is the kind of blase and sushi they display, the kind of, oh, you know, boots on the ground as they call for it.
And there's no place where you see this more.
The world headquarters for boots on the ground would, of course, be Fox News.
So here is Keith Kellogg, retired general Keith Kellogg, who will be 82 years old in a month, telling you that, yeah, boots on the ground, not a big deal.
I'm a big believer in putting boots on the ground, not necessarily into Iran, but taking Karg Island and also taking the Strait of Hormuz.
Look, we kind of need to do it the way the Romans used to do it.
You know, you need to put your legions on the ground to secure the territory and give them confidence that they can do it, that we can open up the strait.
Look, I know there's risk involved.
There's always risk involved, but those kids, those young men and women, they understand the risk involved on taking both Karg and opening up the Strait of Hormuz.
What's interesting, by the way, that is Keith Kellogg.
Keith Kellogg is one of the reasons there has been no settlement in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia.
So Keith Kellogg was appointed by the new administration very, very early in January to be the emissary from the White House to Eastern Europe to try and get some kind of deal between Russia and Ukraine.
And without getting boring about it, Keith Kellogg is one of the main reasons that we don't have that agreement.
And hundreds and hundreds of thousands of Eastern Europeans, Slavs, Russians, and Ukrainians, probably decent kids with nothing to do with starting this war, are dead.
And Ukraine is totally destroyed.
And Keith Kellogg was never, having talked to him at some length, ever in favor of settling that.
And that may or may not be connected to the fact that his daughter works with the Zelensky government.
You never want to blame people's relatives for anything, but she's on the record saying, I'm working on my dad to make sure he stays on Ukraine's side.
Well, you can't have a side in a foreign conflict if you're an American emissary charged with settling that conflict.
The only side you can have is the United States.
And Keith Kellogg didn't.
So that's shameful.
And he's not responsible for that war.
And he's not wholly responsible for a failure to settle it.
But he's definitely partly responsible for helping to destroy American diplomacy and making the United States globally not a trusted partner in any discussion about anything.
Because when you're dishonest with other countries, when you don't state upfront your biases, when you don't do your job, which is to bring a resolution to the conflict, people start to figure it out.
And all of a sudden, your diplomacy doesn't work.
Now, why does this matter?
There are a lot of people in the United States who think diplomacy is stupid.
Why would we have diplomacy?
Are you liberal?
No.
Because diplomacy is a kind of power.
In fact, it's a key form of power.
In fact, it's the main form of power that big countries get to exercise globally.
And it's the power to settle disputes on their terms.
So if all of a sudden no one trusts or believes you because you've lied too much, you've been sneaky and tricky and actually working for some third country as you pretended to work for the United States, which has happened, no one wants to deal with you.
So why is that bad?
Because you're unpopular?
No.
It's not about popularity.
It's about power.
Once you lose the power to settle conflicts by negotiation, the only power you have left is armaments.
So you better have overwhelmingly superior weapons systems in order to protect your interests because that's all you have at that point.
And it looks like we may not have, short of nuclear weapons, overwhelmingly powerful weapons systems in this or any other theater.
Lots of other countries have sophisticated weapons too, conventional weapons.
A shockingly large number of U.S. military aircraft, apparently, have been damaged or downed just in the last month over Iran.
That's not good.
That's not good at all.
But when you don't have credible diplomacy, that's all you have.
And Americans get killed and your power ebbs really fast when they do.
And those lives are ended.
Not an insignificant problem.
Keith Kellogg doesn't seem to be that interested in it.
Just put boots on the ground.
But the key line in the clip you just saw is the end.
He's like, no, these people are really eager to do it.
Will has anyone explained to them, to the people massing in the Persian Gulf, the Americans in uniform, massing first special operators and 82nd Airborne or whatever, any part of the gun-toting U.S. military that's massing for whatever's coming, assuming something is, don't know that, seems like it.
Has anyone explained to them why we're doing this?
Not at the tactical level, like your job is to go in and secure this land, this island or this part of the Iranian mainland, but the strategic goal.
Like, why are we doing this?
Probably not.
And we know that because no one's explained this to the American population.
No one has bothered to explain what the point of this is.
And that's a huge problem, not only because it shows that democracy doesn't really work and that the people we thought were in charge probably aren't really in charge.
They're taking orders from Benjamin Netanyahu, who got us into this war.
They're trying to erase that from history.
You'll never see that on Wikipedia.
But it's true.
That's a fact.
And they admitted it.
Don't let them steal the truth from you.
10 years from now, be like, what are you talking about, anti-Semite?
No, that happened.
But is there something in it for us?
And has anybody explained to the guys risking their lives and to the rest of the country paying for it and grieving over the loss of our troops?
Like, what's the point?
And no one has.
So at that point, you have to wonder, like, is that legitimate?
Can you just tell people go do this without explaining why?
Well, they signed up for it.
Yeah, no, you still don't treat people like that.
You don't treat countries like this.
And in the course of all of this, you have to wonder what happens to our country.
If there's no stated benefit to us from this war, ask yourself, would you ever do something like this?
If it didn't help the country you represented?
You probably wouldn't, right?
What does that say about how the people in charge feel about our country?
Well, you don't have to guess.
Look around the country.
Been to an airport recently.
TSA going on strike.
Of course, there are reasons for that, and the Democrats are responsible.
Fine.
But in a country the size of a continent, you need internal air travel, period.
Not simply for commerce, but so people can see their kids, etc.
So you can have a functioning country.
And all of a sudden, we don't.
Then it turns out, oh my gosh, someone sent an ambulance across a runway and a plane hit it and people were killed.
Well, how'd that happen?
Because there was inadequate air traffic control.
Well, that's been known for a while.
Has anyone fixed it?
Apparently not.
Then a barge runs into the keybridge in Baltimore, kind of a critical piece of infrastructure.
And as of this morning, it looks like not even close to being rebuilt.
That was a long time ago.
Then you drive around the country and you think, wow, looks kind of shabby.
Not all of it.
Very pretty places.
The landscape's amazing to the extent it hasn't been destroyed by solar farms and CBD outlets.
But the actual infrastructure of the country, it's not great.
Our airports are not great.
When you fly internationally, you're amazed, including to poor countries.
Like, wow, why do they have such nice airports here in Mumbai or Bombay or whatever they're calling it now?
I thought this was a poor place.
I read about Calcutta.
I thought people were dying of starvation.
Why is their airport nicer than LaGuardia?
What is this?
And what it is is neglect.
It's neglect.
It's what happens when your leaders are so outwardly focused managing their empire and stoking their dreams of power that they forget to tend to the country they run.
And at this point, it just absolutely couldn't be clearer what's going on.
Our leaders, bipartisan basis now, are so distracted by what's happening outside of our borders that what's happening inside is becoming dire, maybe an overstatement, certainly depressing.
What are the unemployment numbers?
We could do an hour on this.
Maybe we will.
It depends how you read them.
So if you got here from West Africa or Somalia or Punjab or Bangladesh, probably have a job.
Probably make it a lot more than you made in the country you grew up in.
But if you were born here, you're less likely to have a job.
These are the numbers right now.
The unemployment for native-born Americans is going up.
And that's before the energy shock and the rollout of AI.
Really?
How could that happen?
And if you didn't know that, how did you not know that?
That's not picking a fight with anyone or criticizing anybody.
That's like a baseline measurement of how your country's doing.
The people who are born here, not the immigrants to whom you're offering the American dream, but the people who thought they would live the American dream because they were born here.
There's birthright citizens and they're paying for everything.
How are they doing?
Not great.
And by that measure, it's not improving.
So, okay, how much are we spending on this work?
Unclear, of course, nothing is clear in war.
You can't get an accurate count of anything, including the dead.
But it seems like about a billion a day.
Probably more.
It's classified.
A billion a day.
You see the point.
You give up a lot when you wage a war.
And when you wage a war in return for no promise of a return other than the theoretical safety you feel because Iran, which you probably thought about like four times in the last 10 years, doesn't have nukes, which they told us in June they didn't have anyway.
Do you feel better?
No, it's the whole thing's ridiculous.
So I think the rest of us probably need to pay pretty close attention as we're tempted to be distracted by following what's happening in Iran and the Persian Gulf.
Pay close attention to what's happening here in this country, because things change fast in war.
That's the number one thing to know.
Societies are completely transformed by war.
In fact, every major societal change, the big ones, have come during war.
And the bigger the war, the bigger the change.
And some changes have been good, like all change, and some changes have been, well, really bad.
But whatever change is in progress is likely to be accelerated during wartime.
So if the country is feeling a little weak in some area, it's likely to become very weak in that area.
And then things will happen that nobody expected, but all of it is likely to happen during war.
So this moment is profound, but also kind of hard to read.
So there are a couple of things you should be aware of that are happening that you might not know about.
And they're going to have long-term effects for the world and for the United States.
And one of them is the destruction of Europe.
Now, why should we care about Europe?
Well, in the United States, most of our ancestors came from Europe.
And so there's that sentimental attachment, that cultural attachment, that religious attachment.
That's the Christian West that we sometimes talk about.
Christian West, what is that?
Well, it's like Istanbul in this direction.
That's the Christian West.
And Europe is the bulk of it.
But maybe as important, certainly geostrategically as important, if China rises and takes the East, what do we have here in the West?
Well, we have Europe and we have the Americas.
And that's our world.
That's what we influence.
Those are our actual allies because they live close to us.
Much as you might like the Philippines, in 30 years, will the United States have a lot of influence in the Philippines?
Probably not.
Anything in the South China Sea is going to belong to China.
Whether you want that or not is totally irrelevant.
So what happens to Europe really, really matters to us here in the United States.
And despite having a lot of silly leaders, we basically are aligned on the level of values.
I mean, they're like liberal and annoying and eat cheese and all that stuff.
But ultimately, if you're looking around the world and trying to figure out who are my real allies, who are my baseline allies, would be the Europeans.
Well, one of the things you notice, if you pay any attention to this at all, is that the main victim of this war after the six Gulf states is Europe, because it's their energy that's being destroyed, both by Iran and probably also by Israel, despite a lot of lying about it.
It's their energy.
And by the way, if you're paying any attention at all, you may have noticed it just the other day, the Ukrainians, really a proxy for, if there was ever a proxy for the American deep state, is the Ukrainian government, just went and hit a Russian energy installation, really.
So who's the victim of that?
Europe.
Now, why would Europe be the victim?
Too little has been written and very little even is noticed about this, but the hostility that Israeli government leaders feel toward Europe, whenever they speak about it, is very, very obvious.
So here's the former leader of Israel, Naftali Bennett, talking just the other day, maybe I think yesterday, about Europe.
We pushed the United States, which has bases in all your countries.
A fellow NATO member of the United States, we pushed the United States into a war that shafts you completely to end a threat that was not actually a threat to you.
And in so doing, we constricted your energy supply to the extent that you're going to have a depression in Europe.
And by the way, in case that's not enough, we're going to give you a migrant crisis.
We're going to give you a migrant crisis because Iran is pretty far from Milwaukee, but not that far from Paris.
And the aftermath of every Israeli-inspired war over the past 30 years has been to send desperate migrants into Europe.
So if you're one of those people who consumes dumb stuff for the internet, it's like, how did this happen?
London's becoming Muslim.
Well, it happens because the Brits hate themselves, of course, and masochistically want to import people who don't share their values.
But it also happens because we have wars in the Middle East that have downstream consequences.
And this war, the biggest country in the region, watching its infrastructure get destroyed will inspire mass migration.
And ultimately, a lot of those people are winding up in Europe.
But Naftali Bennett is saying to Europe, you haven't thanked us for that.
So what you have here is the never-ending battle, the real battle, which is over the moral high ground.
That's the real battle.
Who occupies the moral high ground?
And high ground is a real thing.
If you're in the high ground, you aim down at people.
You've got a clear field of fire.
You're in charge.
And if you control the moral terms, if the conversation begins with, hey, you've wronged me.
I'm the victim.
There's really no way to win that fight.
And that's what Naftali Bennett was just doing.
And that's what Bibi does, Benjamin Netanyahu does in every sentence.
Hey, no one suffered like Israel has suffered.
Therefore, shut up and do what we want and don't complain about it.
In fact, thank us for it.
So you should know that Europe is in very serious trouble because of this.
And that matters to Americans.
But the concerns that we're going to have to deal with, we pray not, here in the United States, are not limited to the slow death of our true allies.
They would include attacks here, both acts of terror that are pretty predictable when you kill religious leaders in foreign countries.
It does tend to inspire extremism.
It's not an excuse for it.
It's horrifying.
But that's why you don't want to do anything to encourage religious extremism, particularly if you pretend you don't like it.
Maybe don't kill Ayatollahs and you'll get less of it, obviously.
But that's not just it.
The United States has never engaged in a policy openly of targeting other heads of state because countries don't do that.
Why don't they do that?
Because it's not a precedent they want to set.
It's one of several precedents that countries hesitate before setting in warfare.
Don't assassinate the head of state because we don't want our head of state to be assassinated.
Don't openly target civilian infrastructure, of course.
And if you can help it, don't call for absolute, total, abject surrender, because that's a lot to ask of any nation.
And it tends to inspire people to fight to the bitter end when you start talking like that.
And when you start talking like that, you are opening yourself up.
And maybe most of all, don't say out loud that we're replacing a government in order to control it and steal its resources.
Now, why wouldn't you do that?
Two reasons.
One is a kind of abstract moral reason because it's wrong.
That's why theft is illegal in every country in the world.
You can't just say, I want that.
I'm going to shoot you.
We have laws against that.
And those laws are rooted in the understanding that you're not allowed to just take something because you want it by force.
We think that's immoral.
That's the basis of our legal system and of our religion and of most religions, by the way.
So there's that.
But the other reason is because you don't want it done to you.
And it might be a good time just to remind ourselves that the United States has a lot of resources.
In fact, by some measures, it's the most resource-dense nation in the world.
And it's also by say Nigerian standards, pretty lightly populated.
350 million people spread out across a continent, the prettiest continent on the planet with abundant everything.
Now, we don't extract a lot of it because we decided we're just too rich to mine things, but it's still here.
We also have the largest fresh water reserves of any country in the world.
Maybe after Russia, but certainly close.
Massive amounts of fresh water, most fertile farmland in the world, abundant oil and gas.
So we have resources too.
And so if you set up a precedent, because we make the rules, because we have been the beneficiary of this unipolar system, we're in charge of the world.
And the new rule is, if you've got a lot of resources and we want them and we can just overthrow your government and kill the people who run it and take them for ourselves, is that the standard?
Apparently.
Then at some point, it's at least conceivable that we would have to suffer that standard.
And you just pray that that never happens.
But it's worth thinking past like next Wednesday and acknowledging that it could.
And if we're blowing up other people's civilian infrastructure, which we have done for a while now, since we blew up Nordstream, because we don't like Putin, because he's bad.
He's just bad.
But that was the vital energy artery into Europe, our supposed allies.
And we just blew it up, proving simultaneously that we didn't care about global warming, of course, because that was the largest man-made emission of CO2 in history, but that we're disregarding our own rules.
It's a very long way of saying there could be consequences to this.
Consequences, you don't have to be some sort of liberal who loves the UN or whatever, is pro-French.
Stop.
If you care about the United States, you should be worried.
So there was a Valero refinery in Port Arthur, Texas, on the Gulf Coast of Texas, where a lot of refineries, where a lot of our refined petroleum products come from, those include jet fuel, gasoline, diesel, all the way down to asphalt.
And there was a massive explosion two days ago on a cloud and they had a stay-in-place order and it was high drama.
And now they're saying it was just a, it was just an industrial accident.
No one was killed, thank God.
But it happened.
And maybe it was an accident.
Accidents do happen.
And just because a whole bunch of food processing and energy and ammunition plants in the United States seem to be blowing up over the past five years doesn't mean they're not all accidents.
They absolutely could be.
Have no information to the contrary.
But if we're blowing up other people's civilian infrastructure and partnering with a country that blows up other people's infrastructure as a matter of course, just took out a ton of bridges in Lebanon yesterday for some reason, Israel, and we think that's fine, then at some point you have to wonder about our infrastructure in this giant, largely unprotected country.
If you're trying to protect your own country, you have to keep that in mind.
But no one is keeping it in mind at all.
So there is a potential physical threat to the United States without going on and on and on and on and on about it.
You should know that it exists and it's one of the downsides of this war.
The other downside that people are not considering in any great detail, mentioned it a minute ago, but are the long-term effects of Israel's strategic goal in this war, which, as noted, differs from ours completely, which is territorial expansion.
What exactly does Israel want?
We don't know, but they clearly want to extend their borders or at least the buffer zone around post-67 Israel, whatever their actual goals are.
Well, the rest of us are focused on whether we're going to invade Karg Island, probably not, by the way.
Who knows?
The Israelis are tending to their own agenda using the cover of our military and our tax dollars.
So one of the things they're doing is trying to grab southern Lebanon.
Now, why does that matter?
What's Lebanon?
Who cares?
Well, I don't know.
If you're a Christian, you care because Lebanon has the largest population of Christians in the region by far.
In fact, it was a Christian country for centuries.
There's a Christian president of Lebanon.
Did you know that?
Every time Lebanon is mentioned, it's through the lens of like Israel's interests.
But if you're a Christian, you know, you don't have to hate Israel, but you may have different interests.
Like, what about the Christians?
Well, Lebanon is a Christian president.
The head of the military in Lebanon is Christian.
And there are a lot of Christian villages, ancient Christian villages, villages Jesus probably walked through.
They've been Christian ever since.
Only 2,000 years.
And they're being destroyed.
Because under the cover of this war paid for and led by us, Israel has decided to take a big chunk of Lebanon.
Watch.
unidentified
Israel's defense minister on Tuesday said the country's military will control southern Lebanon up to the Latani River.
The remarks are the first time Israel has clearly spelled out its intent to seize swaths of territory that make up nearly a tenth of Lebanon.
Israel has been trading fire with Iranian-backed Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon.
That's after Hezbollah struck Israel following joint Israeli-American attacks on Iran.
Rockets damaged buildings and vehicles in northern Israel on Tuesday.
Katz has previously threatened Lebanon's government that it would lose territory if it did not disarm Hezbollah.
Israel has destroyed five bridges crossing the Litani River and has accelerated the demolition of homes in Lebanese villages close to the Israeli border.
Katz said, quote, the principle is clear.
If there is terror and rockets, there will be no homes and residents, and the IDF will remain inside.
But at some point, we will know what actually happened in this period and over the last two and a half years.
So if you look at the internet and you see pictures of war crimes committed in Gaza or the West Bank or now in Lebanon, you can't be certain they're all real.
And of course, the shills on the internet will say they're all fake.
But they're not all fake, actually.
Some of them are real.
Tens of thousands of people, non-combatants, women and children, have been killed by the Israeli military using our weapons, American weapons paid for by the U.S. Congress.
And there will be a reckoning over that.
And there are indications, real indications, not anti-Semitic propaganda, but actual indications that war crimes have been committed.
Torturing people, killing people, unarmed non-combatants, kids on purpose.
There's a lot of that.
And some of it's probably fake.
Some of it is propaganda, undoubtedly, but some of it isn't.
And in the end, we're going to know because we always know in the end.
And so you have to ask yourself, the people who are defending this and paying for it, would you want to be one of those people when we find this out?
How about the religious leaders, the American evangelical leaders, not rank and file evangelicals who, if they knew, would be horrified, but the people who run the biggest evangelical associations in the United States, the people around Liberty University, for example, or Franklin Graham.
These are household names.
Have they said anything about the destruction of churches and ancient Christian villages in a country in the Middle East with a Christian president?
Do they even know Lebanon had a Christian president?
Who knows?
They haven't said word one about it.
Why?
Well, that's a good question.
That was the question that a lot of people asked the Reich church after the Second World War ended in Germany.
How could you have gone along with that?
And there was not a good answer other than, I don't know, didn't want to offend the powerful.
There is going to be a consequence to this.
And one of them is very easy to predict.
Big evangelical institutions, which have done good things, by the way, if you're for the family and you're pro-life, you're grateful for what they've done, for their personal decency of the people in the pews, a lot of really decent people.
But the leaders of American evangelical Christianity, not all, but some, will have no legitimacy at all when this is over.
Where were you when a country that you pledged fealty to was murdering Christians, your brothers in Christ in the Middle East?
Where were you when people were starving, when kids were starving in Gaza?
And the Gaza aid program was run by some kind of crypto-Christian preacher.
Like someone's have to answer for that.
These people will have to answer for that.
And if you're wondering in this moment where there's a religious awakening underway in the West, there's really no question about that.
If you're wondering why not a lot of new converts are going to the evangelical institutions, this may be why.
There's going to be big change because remember, once again, the truth always comes out.
Always.
And this will affect American politics, maybe more than anything we've seen over the past 20 years.
It'll change the Republican Party forever, that's for sure.
Most of the polling you see about the attitudes in the Republican Party toward this war, polling Fox News viewers, polling MA people.
How do you find MAGA?
Well, people who agree with anything the administration does.
Well, by definition, they agree with this.
But people under 50 also vote.
In fact, because they did vote in the last election, Donald Trump is currently president.
And it's not close there.
Try to find one who supports this.
Good luck.
Unless he works at Liberty University, probably not for it.
So that will have massive consequences.
Massive.
Is the Democratic Party going to absorb all those people?
Who knows?
But there will be big political change because of this.
And the reason is really simple, because the people who endorse this and lie to us about it and selectively ignore the suffering of other human beings, including their fellow Christians, have lost their moral authority.
And they will not regain it anytime soon.
And you just hope that this ends soon enough that the nation itself doesn't lose its moral authority because that is, in the end, the most compelling kind of authority.
That's where your actual power comes from, is from your decency, which is far more powerful than nuclear weapons in the end.
It's more powerful than anything.
And it is one of the main reasons more than Coca-Cola and Marlboroughs and Blue Jeans and capitalism and the democracy agenda, the decency of the American empire, often indecent, but compared to what other empire, it was the decency of America's stewardship of the world that made it powerful.
And now it's very fashionable to say, oh, it was always bad and threw up Mossadegh and it was always bad.
But the rest of the world didn't feel that way about the United States for most of that time, most of the Cold War, for example.
But a lot of the world now does feel that way.
And that's a loss for the United States.
It's not a matter of caring what foreigners think, though an awful lot of people care what Israel thinks, but they don't care what anyone else thinks.
But it's a loss of power and authority for us.
It's a huge loss.
It makes us weaker and more endangered.
And the final thing to remember, maybe the thing to meditate on about this moment, and you may not catch this because you're breathlessly watching Fox News to find out if we're going to invade the Isle of Karg.
The thing that you should be paying attention to is the change in American authority and the level of power our authorities domestically here in the U.S. feel like they can assume, because that always expands during war.
Wartime leaders become authoritarian, every single one of them, every single one of them.
And authorities below the executive also become authoritarian.
Did you know that in 1942, when Franklin Roosevelt issued his famous executive order to intern about 120,000 Japanese Americans, mostly in the West, Oregon, Washington, California, in concentration camps, did you know the most interesting fact of that decision is often omitted from it?
The overwhelming majority of them were American citizens, actual citizens, or legal residents, but two-thirds were American citizens with full citizenship who'd been convicted of no crime, hadn't even been charged with a crime.
But they were thrown into concentration camps for three years and lost their property.
And there was some effort in the 80s to be like, oh, we're so sorry.
And also, who really cares?
Imperial Japan was bad.
But these people weren't actually subjects of Imperial Japan.
They were American citizens.
And they were thrown into concentration camps with their families and no one really said anything.
I mean, it's complicated.
It's complicated.
That's not complicated, actually.
That's totally wrong.
You can't treat American citizens that way if you're the U.S. government, ever.
And yet Roosevelt was able to do it because it was 1942 and the war wasn't looking good.
And that's the other thing to remember, that as wars get tougher, say if you commit ground troops and find yourself stuck in a place and can't get out, it's happened many, many times.
As things get tougher and leaders become less popular and people become more enraged and discouraged and sad and distracted, governments can assume powers unimaginable in peacetime, even more dramatically than they did during the COVID epidemic.
That can happen.
And it may be starting to happen.
Speaking for myself, I've been threatened with more FBI investigations in the last month than during the entire Biden administration.
So maybe that's an indicator of something.
Two more than during the entire Biden administration, which I criticized every single day for its duration.
But here's one pretty specific example, a piece of tape that should tell you what to be on guard against.
And that's at the local level, not at the level of federal law enforcement, but like your local sheriff, assuming powers that no man short of God possesses.
And certainly no one in the United States possesses.
In flat, obvious contradiction to our founding documents, to the Bill of Rights, this sheriff, Sheriff Bouchard from Michigan, has decided that he's going to arrest and imprison people who make memes mocking him.
Some pondscum felt empowered and emboldened enough to put this picture of me up to try to threaten and intimidate me, which of course he didn't do because I signed up for this.
And by the way, the person that did this said a bunch of terrible things, not just against me, but against a lot of groups and individuals, who, by the way, was arrested today in Wisconsin.
My point is this, though.
If this person is emboldened and empowered enough or feels safe enough to do this for me, what does he do to a kid?
What does he do to a Jewish family walking down the street?
I knew the risks of the job when I became your sheriff.
This guy's like some former Republican, Republican politician in the state of Michigan.
I knew the risks.
I signed up for this.
Someone made a funny meme about you or an ugly meme about you.
It's a meme.
It's an image on the internet that was on Instagram, not on the battlefield.
You faced no physical risk.
You just admitted that.
And you had the guy arrested in another state and he's in jail.
How is this not?
How is this not leading to mass protests?
Why did they not shut your sheriff's department down?
Where's the Department of Justice?
Where's the Civil Rights Division?
Are you allowed to just arrest people who make fun of you?
Oh, it's so ugly.
It's anti-Semitism.
Okay.
Well, it's racism.
You're mocking the vaccine.
It's all the same.
These are all pretexts that we take literally because we're dumb and no one wants to be an anti-Semite or a racist or deny science, whatever they tell you your crime is.
The actual crime is always the same.
It's mocking and impeding the authoritarian impulses of the people in charge.
It's making fun of the sheriff, which is exactly what this criminal did.
But the sheriff's okay tonight.
He's going to be all right.
He signed up for this.
The rest of us did not sign up for this.
This is illegal under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.
It's also totally incompatible with what it is to live in this country.
You get to say what you think.
There is no legal category of hate speech.
There's only speech the people in charge hate.
So this guy should be the subject of a federal investigation, like in about one minute after that hits the internet.
Don't think he has been.
Let's hope he will be.
But that's exactly the kind of change that can bubble up in your country during war.
And it's like some kooky sheriff, Republican.
That's the Republican?
That's the Free Speech Party guy?
Really?
And it's in Michigan and who even knows, some county in Michigan.
And all of a sudden you wake up and you get arrested for a meme because it's hate speech, which means it's speech the people in charge hate.
And then if this goes on long enough, or if the United States are to really suffer, it gets more extreme.
They're already neocons saying if there's a terror attack in the United States as blowback from the war that they pushed for, that they will make certain that people who oppose the war are arrested for the terror attack.
Follow the logic chain.
Oh, you can't because there isn't one.
They're openly saying we will use the deaths of Americans to settle our political scores using your government law enforcement.
Not so different from we will settle our ancient tribal disputes on another continent using your military.
Kind of the same principle.
But it's not acceptable here.
If the Iran war was bad, allowing the U.S. government to arrest, persecute, investigate, spy on U.S. citizens for exercising their God-given rights is worse.
And you'll know it's bad when they start talking about a draft.
Now, what is a draft?
Well, of course, it's the definition of tyranny.
It is somehow the right of a government to take the fruit of its population, its young fit citizens, the ones who are supposed to build the civilization, continue the country, take them and force them to risk their lives, in some cases die for a decision they didn't make.
And in this case, they don't support at all.
What percentage of 18-year-old American men support the war in Iran?
Haven't seen the polling.
Imagine it's quite a bit below 30%, maybe even lower than that.
And by the time we get to a draft, you can be assured it'll be even lower than that.
So that would be tyranny if there's another definition of tyranny, forcing people to die for a war for another country when your country is not even conceivably in peril of like invasion, except the long-term kind created by immigration, but an imminent invasion of foreign troops.
But, you know, we went into this war because Benjamin Netanyahu wanted us to, and it's not going well, and you need to fight that war at the risk of your life, even though you hate it and have never really understood what it's about because everyone lied to you about it.
And if you don't do that, we'll arrest you and put you in jail.
I think that's the definition of tyranny.
And simply because it's happened in the past doesn't make it any less tyrannical.
So I want to bring you now an interview that we did a short time ago with a man called Jim Webb, James Webb III.
And if the name sounds familiar, that's because he is from one of the most famous military families in the United States.
His father was Navy Secretary, a U.S. Senator.
And Jim Webb, the man we're about to speak to, was himself an enlisted United States Marine, third in a row in his family, a family that I still tell you has fought in every American conflict since the French and Indian wars.
And we thought we would push him a little bit on what it would look like if those fabled boots on the ground that Fox News so badly wants to commit actually came to pass.
What would that look like?
And why are we doing this?
And how would it work?
And most critically, what would the end result be?
And we thought it was a pretty interesting conversation.
So we hope you will stay for it.
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One of the many reasons I wanted to talk to you, in addition to the fact that you're knowledgeable and honest, is that you're a veteran of the last big American military effort, the Iraq War, and you grew up steeped in this world and have some perspective on it.
So first to the question of likelihood of ground troops, we don't know, of course.
We're kind of trying to figure out what's going to happen, but what's your view?
Do you think the United States will commit meaningful ground forces?
And then the bigger picture is that there has been no real debate about our involvement in Iran at all.
At the congressional level, there was never really a case made to the American public.
And we are charging into an environment that has not effectively been cleared according to our constitution, nor is there consensus among the American people that this is necessary for our national security.
While at the same time, it's very, very clear through the statements of the administration, such as Marco Rubio, that we are doing this because Israel decided that we should do it.
Therefore, by virtue of that, it's not in our national interest.
We are committing our treasure and our blood to fight somebody else's war.
And it would be really great if we could have a debate about that before that happens.
I think one of the reasons that there hasn't been A real debate.
There hasn't been any meaningful demonstration anywhere against this is that people are having trouble believing it could be true, that we'd be committing ground troops to a war with Iran.
Can you just explain a little more fully why you think that might be in progress?
Well, the complicated thing about that, right out of the gate, is that, I mean, as an American citizen, we have not been given any type of tangible objectives for this entire operation.
Is this, you know, is this a regime change?
Is this to reduce their military capacity?
Is this to reopen the straits of Hormuz, which is actually probably the most biggest imperative right now?
So without an end-state objective, at least even at the operational level, it's very, very difficult to find a justification for it.
Ultimately, ultimately, if we don't know the long-term plan or even the interim plan, the medium-term plan, I doubt they know.
They have an operation in front of them, which they've more than likely been briefed on for sure and execute.
They may know that, but what's the tie-in?
How does this further the interests of the country?
How does this further our strategic objectives around the world or even in the region?
And I look at the prospects of ground troops in particular to reopen the Strait of Hormuz as an indicator that we do not have the initiative in this fight.
The straits are closed, gas prices are going up.
And we are looking at a scenario, by all accounts.
You can talk to any number of economists about this, where if this goes on for much longer, the entire global economy could potentially be brought down.
But it's already, we're already feeling the ramifications of it.
So, in effect, what it appears that we're doing is we are committing people to regain the initiative to open the straits.
It would be a quote-unquote bold or over-the-top stroke in order to put the Iranians on their back foot.
Myself, as a former Marine, grew up in the Marine Corps.
I have had a relative or ancestor fight in every single American conflict going back to the French and Indian War.
You know, but the military gave him that opportunity.
And also the country gave him that opportunity to advance, you know, advance up into society.
My mom used the army for the same reasons.
My father came, or my grandfather came back from World War II and got a job as a foreman in a factory in a small town outside of Pittsburgh.
And, you know, it was light years ahead of where their family had been.
And the military was, you know, not only a vehicle to get out, but it was also a way to kind of pay back, you know, the opportunities that they had had.
And my dad, same cut.
His mom was a sharecropper in Arkansas.
And my grandfather didn't come from any kind of means in Missouri.
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What's so interesting is that you're at Penn State in 2004.
You don't, the Iraq war has been in progress for a year.
By that point, it's clear that we're not getting out anytime soon.
It started to get squirrely there.
We can't really pacify it.
And it's not just liberals who are starting to say, wait a second.
And you're one of them.
You're not a liberal in a conventional sense, but you think this war is bad.
But you drop out of college to go anyway and enlisted in the Marine Corps.
Well, and not only understood it, I mean, for the people who don't know, I mean, he was like a legit war hero in Vietnam.
He was also a public intellectual who explained not just that the war was bad, but why it was bad in a way that, you know, non-liberal peacenc types could understand because it was rooted in an American understanding of what war is for, I think it's fair to say.
So like, is it fair to say your parents were, you know, not pro what happened in Vietnam?
There was no safety net for those guys when they came home.
You know, I think of our experiences or my experiences is I'll say our as collective veterans with the GI Bill, with the way that the VA takes care of disabled veterans.
You know, it's, it's one thing that we did learn after Vietnam.
We've been really, really well taken care of because they were not.
He was very much opposed to the war in all, you know, in all phases of us going in.
But it was very disorganized.
For example, they brought in a bunch of Shia troops to Sunni Ramadi and tried to put them in the middle to do security.
And those rivalries bubbled to the top any number of times.
It was kind of wild to watch in person when some Sunni policemen and some Shia troops both on the same side get in an intermedial firefight.
It happened on occasion.
Yeah.
But overall, it was very informative in all kinds of different ways.
It's probably the best way to put it.
You could see that fairly early on, and I don't want to speak for everybody in my unit who was there, but most people came around by the end of the deployment to understand that what we were doing was completely temporary.
We didn't really have a coherent plan.
The biggest event that happened on the ground there was the Sunni Awakening.
And that changed the nature of our battle space virtually overnight in a way that really rubbed a lot of people the wrong way.
Not in the sense that we wanted to keep getting out there and getting shot at and blown up and the rest of it.
But one day, we would be fighting military-age males in track pants.
And then literally the next day, those same guys are on the corner, you know, saying they're on our side, but at times taunting, saying, you know, they had been on the other side.
And we had no control over that.
That was not forced by any policy that we were doing.
It was just the result of internal politics within the Sunnis out in Anbar province.
You know, deciding to make the switch.
And it was, I watched as a city was, you know, it was already pretty torn apart, was effectively torn down to the studs while we were there.
And it was, you know, that it was Iraq.
But at the same time, you know, it's, I kind of made a, I made a mental note.
It'd be too strong to say it'd be a promise that if I found the same kind of diddling, non-strategic focused situation happening again, that I would do whatever I had in my power.
I mean, and there's no way to gauge that when you're, you know, 20-something years old to speak out against it, to try and find a way to convince whomever I could to look for a saner option.
So you actually thought that while you were in Anbar province, Iraq.
When I get older, if I'm still around and I have any influence at all, I'm going to do everything I can to make sure we don't do this kind of thing again.
Conversely, we had several true believers, as I would refer to them, who flipped the other direction.
It's just the way it was.
And strategically, the reality was that we tied down the greatest maneuver force in the world into a counterinsurgency fight that we were, you know, it wasn't necessary.
And at the same time, we weren't really trained to do it.
I mean, we got trained to do it.
We got better at it as we went along.
But when we went to Iraq in 2003, we were still designed to take down a major conventional force rapidly, which is what we did, you know, right out of the jump.
And then over the arc of Iraq, we reoriented all of our forces.
And this is, you could say Iraq would be a little short-sighted, but the entire global war on terrorism, we reoriented everything to fight counterinsurgency, stripping out many, many, many things, many, many different capabilities that are highly effective in a conventional fight.
And we found ourselves over the past probably five or six years trying to reorient the force, you know, towards a conventional fight.
And we're not quite there yet.
But in terms of strategic force projection and our presence, if you want to take that into account, it's been very detrimental.
We are in the middle of a major overhaul at multiple levels.
And to accent that, you know, I think one thing to really look at right out of the gate is drones.
The war in Ukraine has been effectively defined by drones for the past few years.
We're still trying to figure out how to field equipment to counter drones.
Our tactics, our operational methods are infantile compared to, say, the Russians.
And you might ask yourself, okay, why is that important?
It's like, well, a large bulk of what the Russians are doing in Ukraine is with Iranian Shahads and other technology that we may or may not know about.
So they are very, very, very far ahead in their development.
And they're undoubtedly passing that back to the Iranians.
So you can kind of look at it like a sine wave, right?
Where on the front end, you run into these technologies and your ability to deal with them is at its lowest point.
And eventually you adjust the top of the sine wave and become much more operationally effective.
And that's where I would peg the Russians are at right now.
Like we have been observing.
They have been practically applying and using Iranian Shaheds, for example, and they understand how to counter our equipment.
We have put a lot of defensive equipment out, Patriot missile batteries, anti-aircraft fire, probably some signals and jamming equipment in overall kind of a piecemeal fashion.
It's probably the best way to put it, where we're not massing these types of fires.
If you take a look at, say, the High Mars system and an offensive capability, you're not massing these fires in the way that we're supposed to use them or massing, say, Elant capabilities in a way that we would use them.
But we put just enough out there to give the Ukrainians cover.
And then what the Russians can do and have been doing is engaging them piecemeal, building a profile and taking those lessons and then incorporating them into their own doctrine and undoubtedly passing those off.
So one of my fears at the big picture level, and we can talk, we can drill our way down into, you know, possible contingencies, operational stuff in a second.
But, you know, my big fear is that they, the Iranians, understand how their systems work against our equipment.
And there's evidence all over these last couple of weeks that that is the case.
And if we commit ground troops without the appropriate countermeasures to defend them against, say, suicide drones, larger drones, ballistic missile systems, we could be positioning ourselves for a lot of bloodshed unnecessarily.
We're doing it for somebody else who gives us campaign contributions to say that out loud, which is what they did, makes it puts the guys who are away from their families risking death in a very weird position.
Like they know that.
They have internet access, right?
So, and I'm sure if any of them refuse to fight, they'll be called cowards or anti-Semites or whatever they'll be called, but they'll be slandered.
But it still leaves unanswered the question: why are we doing this?
And don't you owe the guys who may die in the next week or two an explanation for why they may die?
Their conclusion is that you can connect the dots.
Just because you're in the military, and you don't go to Harvard doesn't mean you're stupid.
You can read the room.
You can see what our elected officials and our cabinet officials say about the justifications for this war.
And then you can turn around and see what happens when somebody else mentions that out loud as if it's negative, as if it's a bad idea, or it's perhaps dishonorable as a country to send your military to fight on behalf of somebody else.
So they put it all together and understand what that full picture is, if you will.
I mean, I guess the bet is that these are guys who are so duty-oriented and so focused on tactics and good at their jobs in a lot of cases.
Like, you know, you're trained to do this thing.
Go ahead and do this thing.
They'll be so focused on that that they'll be compliant.
And then I assume the guess is if there's, you know, domestic resentment against this, that technology will somehow allow them to stay in power by, you know, crushing that dissent.
You said the most revealing part of the reaction to the Joe Ken interview was the contempt that a lot of the people sending troops into battle have for the troops.
They don't want to hear it.
They don't want to hear any disagreement at all.
I've noticed that contempt also.
And it came out in an interview I did with the U.S. Ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee.
And I asked him about what's happening in Gaza and the murder of all these children.
If it wasn't so insulting, it would be completely laughable.
Like, I'd want to just laugh out loud at the absolute, it's just, it's completely baseless.
We did everything in our power in Iraq, at least in my AO, which was Ramadi in 2006 and 2007, described by an Intel officer when we got on the ground as the most dangerous couple of square miles in Iraq in a very densely built up urban environment.
We did everything in our power to avoid civilian casualties to the point where our heavier weapons at the infantry level, 50 caliber machine guns, for example, were cut off a lot of the time because we didn't want to risk responding to us being attacked.
And this is not even at the individual level.
This is at the battalion or division level.
It wasn't worth risking hitting a civilian or hurting civilians.
That's a rifle type, a heavy machine gun, but it's a, you know, if we called in attack helicopters to back us up, they would do a show of force, which means they would fly around and just kind of try to scare the bad guys or scare the insurgents into going away.
Same thing with aircraft.
Granted, one of the, you know, it's one of the cooler things you could ever experience is an F-18 coming in above the speed of sound, like right above your head.
But they weren't dropping ordinance.
On occasion, they would, but the situation had to be unique for that.
And that gets into the way that the American military fights its wars.
It's based on Enlightenment principles.
It rolls all the way back into, I would very eagerly argue, Christian ideals, where you avoid unnecessary death all the way around, civilian combatant.
You engage with proportionality with the enemy.
You don't drop a 2,000-pound bomb on one guy because of the collateral damage that can cause.
And that is the way we fight.
That's the way we fought.
And that is why in conflicts such as World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, the civilian populations of those countries and even the enemy combatants to a large degree viewed us favorably.
Our tactics on the battlefield in the European theater in particular of World War II shortened the war where millions of Germans surrendered to us rather than kind of risk it with the Russians because the Russians went pure total war, crushed the ant with a sledgehammer, no quarter.
And it's that actually in the long term, when you apply those principles saying, hey, we're here to solve a problem with violence, but we're going to limit it to the absolute minimum that we have to inflict.
It sends a very clear message that you can be approached, that you have good intentions.
You're not there spreading around evil.
And it enables somebody on the other side who may not believe in their cause to put down their rifle and say, you know what?
Like, actually, I'm out.
And that's just as effective, if not far more effective than killing somebody on the battlefield.
Yeah, it's an unrecorded fact of history that a lot of those German POWs went up in the United States in refugee camps across the country, including in downtown Nashville, Tennessee.
There was a German prisoner of war camp in downtown Nashville during the war because so many surrendered because they knew they wouldn't be tortured to death, shot on sight, sold into slavery.
They knew that they were dealing with a humane opponent.
I mean, I would love to peel back the onion on the base rationale for so many of our recent decisions as a country.
Who is allowed to be in power?
Why do when they get into power, their views change so rapidly?
And then why is there this undying need to refuse to discuss what is out in the open in a logical and straightforward fashion?
You know, it's not a slander on anybody to want to discuss the goings on in Gaza in a, you know, shall we say, an academic way.
It's not a slander to want to discuss why we're in Iran or what our objectives are or have this go through Congress.
Like if you, if you ask these questions, you're immediately attacked.
And it makes very little sense other than what could possibly be the, you know, unfortunately the open, glaring reality in the room, which is those at the top are being suppressed deliberately from that debate for whatever reason.
Is it corruption?
Probably.
Who knows?
But without answers, without a public discussion, people's opinion default to that.
It's like, okay, well, you are deliberately screening and running interference for another country.
Therefore, what's the incentive?
What's the natural incentive?
That country perhaps has dirt on you somehow.
And I think there's a lot of different things that have happened in the past 20 years, possibly further back, that need some light shone on them in order to ameliorate ourselves from that.
One is to destroy people's faith in their own nation.
If you wanted to dispirit a country and make people feel like it wasn't worth defending, if you wanted people to lose confidence in their ancestors and what their ancestors built here and the whole idea of being American, this is exactly what you would do.
You'd shake people's confidence in their own country and in the virtue of its mission.
And the second thing that jumps out is the malice, the loathing of the American population by the people in charge.
Like, it's not enough.
You could just lie and say IDF's doing nothing wrong in Gaza.
But to say, actually, what the IDF is doing in Gaza is better than what we did, that tells me that you hate me and that I should be afraid of you.
You said we basically created a caste system where I think a lot of people watching will be amazed by the number of people in your world who've served in the military.
You said, I know people who are getting ready to deploy right now.
Most Americans don't know anyone who's getting ready to deploy right now, just because the division between the people who serve, which is mostly young white men from far away from the coasts, in general.
We are simply trying to, I guess, I mean, it depends on the day of the week, eliminate a regime, get nuclear weapons, reduce capabilities, all these different pieces.
Not because that they have, there's any threat to America, you know, not because of anything other than it threatens one of our key partners in the region.
And that is, I don't think there's a whole lot of honor in that.
And I don't want to see my kids go do it.
And I know a lot of people feel the same way.
And, but I will say that I don't feel that people in my peer group are necessarily demoralized by this.
I mean, it's heightened their awareness of how we're viewed, what's going on.
And it's zeroed in on these specific needs for change in this country.
Can we get there?
I don't know.
We have to get out of what we're doing in Iran first before we start talking about that, just because it's such a huge deal.
It's impacting our global standing.
It's impacting our economy.
It's impacting our alliances.
I mean, you name it.
It's having a detrimental effect on the American way of life and the way we've done things for the last 70 years, at least.
So you describe the motive for going into where the impetus is dishonorable, inherently dishonorable, because it was not done in defense of the United States or its interests.
Well, I mean, we can start with the way it opened up by killing the Ayatollah.
And saying this may not be very popular, but that is the absolute worst thing we could have done for any number of reasons.
First and foremost, assassinating the leader of another country has been taboo since at least the Treaty of Westphalia, you know, almost five years ago.
And by doing so, when we assassinated the Ayatollah, and if I'm correct, it was not the Americans who assassinated the Ayatollah.
It ensured.
a number of different things along those lines.
We took away somebody who could be considered comparatively immoderate to the rest of Iranian society as a talking, as someone we can talk to.
And then we created him into the martyr of martyrs, if you will.
You know, we killed, this is going to be a little bit of a paraphrase here, but we effectively killed the Pope during Lent while he was standing on a street corner or with his family, including a grandkid.
And that would be bad enough in the Catholic religion.
But when you take into account the nature of Shia Islam, where there is no greater honor than to die in defense of the faith, and then layer on top, it was in defense of Iran.
You have, we emboldened the entire civilian population to stand up and fight us.
Had we taken a step back and not that I would have agreed with this as a policy move and hit targets and reduced, decided just to reduce their capabilities and cause, say, the IRGC pain in a large area, then at some point, we probably would have had a pretty decent chance of once again sitting down with the Iranians and discussing off-ramps.
But by creating a martyr right out of the gate with effectively a cheap shot that also is completely taboo in terms of international law, international relations, we have cemented these people's will to fight and their need to protect their own honor.
One thing I've noticed is that whenever you talk to people who fought in Iraq or Afghanistan or Vietnam or World War II or anybody who's actually pulled a trigger on behalf of the United States, there is a notable absence of bloodthirstiness, at least in comparison to like Lindsey Graham.
When you've seen it up close, it's something that A, never leaves your mind.
And B, something you can do without.
I mean, it doesn't mean you're not capable of it.
You can never ramp up and do it again, but it's once you've been to the extreme, you just prefer not to go back because it's war is the most horrible of all things.
It's not clean like it's on TV or a video game.
You know, there's no respawn point.
And when people die, whether they're your friends, whether they're civilians, whether the guys on the other side, it's rarely clean.
And it's just a horrible thing to witness.
So once you see that, I think it becomes part of your psyche to just, you know, you understand that you can go to that point, but you really want to do everything in your power to avoid it.
Conversely, when I see people out there who have never done it, such as Lindsey Graham, you know, there's a certain bloodthirstiness that comes off basically as evil, straight up.
I'm not calling Lindsey Graham evil straight out, but I'm saying if you think that killing is a good thing, double tapping boats, you know, killing for the sake of killing is good, then you should probably re-examine your entire moral ethos.
Because generally speaking, it's unnecessary and it's, it's not, you know, it's not effectively human in its own, in its core nature.
But when a man dies, even if it's someone you disagree with or even hate, like there's a certain reverence in death that's required if you're going to have reverence for life.
You know, when you have daily Pentagon press briefings, which focus less on successful hits, you know, you take a compare Pete Hagstadt's briefings to, say, Donald Rumsfeld.
But at the same time, there was at least an attempt to be somewhat transparent in his briefings, right?
You know, we now see the Hagstadt talking about no quarter and like how incredibly lethal and like we have, we need $200 billion to kill bad guys.
You know, that's A, it's beneath the station.
It's beneath his office to talk like he is a Lance corporal, quite frankly.
But also, it's always focused on killing.
And, you know, that's not a headspace where I think, you know, people who have participated in that a whole lot usually sit.
And honestly, it worries me, but what worries me even more about it is the message it sends our enemies or adversaries.
And I don't think we have, we have few enemies right now.
We have one country which we have created into a massive enemy that we're trying to muck our way out of a fight with.
But to tell them, to glorify the killing of its citizens, of its people, and then to tell the press that we're giving them no quarter also backfires.
You're going to see that on the battlefield.
You're going to see that in the way they approach fighting us.
Like, okay, cool.
Like, I mean, I can, you know, I can, I can speak as a fighting man here where if I knew that the people on the other side, if they got their hands on me, were going to finish me off no matter what.
And we talked about this a minute before, you better believe that I would be amped up and doing everything in my power to take as many of them with me.
I'm not even going to think about surrender.
You know, it's, it's very much, I think, like the attitude of the Marines in the Pacific during World War II.
That was the Japanese approach.
And they deliberately told their own troops, this is the Japanese, that, you know, the Marines were the same way.
Like you had to do, commit atrocities in order to become a Marine, murder your family, all kinds of random stuff.
And it creates this fight-to-the-end mentality, which is not conducive to allowing any kind of diplomatic space.
Well, and they convinced, you know, hundreds, if not thousands of civilians on the Pacific Islands, famously on Okinawa, to kill themselves rather than surrender because they were going to be eaten or raped or sold into slavery or whatever.
So that is the message that we are sending or command is sending to the Iranians.
I want to get back to the question of honor and what is honorable and what is not and why you would fight for your country in the first place since the pay isn't that great.
So what are you fighting for when you leave Penn State to enlist in the Marine Corps in a war that you don't agree with?
What you say loyalty to America, you love America, but why would a patriotic young man love America more than Liechtenstein pick a country?
Like, what is it about America that we are fighting for?
It is, you know, the city, like the shining city on a hill, you know, the different aspects of this country, which have just, you know, the whole story of this country, people,
people pouring in and carving out an entirely new way of life, throwing off, you know, the bonds of being under repressive kings and governments from all over the world for incredibly long periods of time and reforming this under ideals that are stipulated in the Bill of Rights and the Constitution.
You know, nobody has the right to prevent you from defending yourself.
You can always speak your mind.
You can't incriminate yourself.
And I think a lot of people take this for granted here.
And a lot of these are slipping away, by the way, which is very troublesome.
But those are why, you know, that's what motivated me is seeing the historical arc of this country growing up, knowing that my dad, my grandfather, you run it all the way back.
People served to defend those ideals and the quality of life that you have here, the freedom of movement that you have.
I mean, you can move wherever you want.
You're not constrained to an area by a repressive government or forced to repopulate an area like the Soviets did.
You know, it's all of those things.
It's a gift, you know, it is truly a gift from God that we have this experiment occurring in such a rich, rich piece of land on earth.
And the flip side of that is coming from different areas where you didn't have that.
So that's the contrast, if you will.
Now, when it comes down to actually fighting on the ground, you end up doing that for the guy next to you, for your peers.
And one thing that was always evident in the Marine Corps is that there's a deep sense of institutional history.
I mean, could it be as something as simple and perhaps nefarious as an AI targeting program, deciding that because there was a key word that we were going to launch a missile at that particular building?
Perhaps.
But I would think and I would like to think that that was verified beyond just like, you know, a blip on a screen.
Hey, this says Shahed, therefore we'll hit it.
So, you know, I will say that at every point and turn in this conflict in Iran so far, every time that we seem to be headed for an off-ramp, there has been some sort of obfuscation, interference, interjection by the Israelis to prevent that.
And it started with the killing of the Ayatollah right out of the gate.
I mean, we got blooded right out of the gate.
We got put in a situation where it was impressed upon the Iranian people that this was total war by basically our very first action.
And in conjunction with that, I believe the girls' school was hit.
That's another message being sent, I think, by somebody.
You know, unless we could have transparency and say, hey, how did this mistake happen?
Who gave it to us?
And traditionally, that would be a very easy decision to make.
I mean, I know there's probably a number of officers in the military who were involved in that strike who would love to step forward and say they gave us the information.
Being muzzled, maybe it wasn't even that, you know.
But these are the things that we need to have, you know, that we've traditionally had with our military is a little bit is transparency on what we're doing as far as objectives go, how it's going on the ground.
And why did the mistakes that we made, you know, why did they happen?
We got, we probably had more clarity out of John Calley or Lieutenant Callie in Vietnam to get more.
If we thought that we could drop the 82nd Airborne over Tehran and overthrow the government, we would have already done it.
What we're looking at is an operation or a series of operations to effectively reopen the Straits of Hormuz, which is a problem that we created due to our operation there.
But to roll it back a little bit more, it's also because we didn't have the contingencies in place to deal with the most obvious thing that an Iranian regime that was fighting an existential fight would do.
One, and primary, it puts global pressure on the United States or whomever is attacking them to come to the table and resolve this quickly because if it goes on for long enough, it can crash the entire economy of the world.
So the fact that we didn't have people in place to even address that contingency or moving into the region to address that contingency tells me this whole operation in Iran was not our decision.
We are following along with somebody else, the Israelis.
And that is not how America fights its wars.
We are not known to fight wars in an unprepared fashion, quite bluntly.
No, I mean, it was a rumor, but you know, it seemed kind of crazy.
Yeah, it's one of those things.
It just seemed like there was, I mean, there's, it was very clear there was ulterior motives in place, but how that was being governed and driven was, you know, way outside of what I was saying.
Written by the same policymakers in the Pentagon who pushed the Iraq war.
And in six pages, you can go through it, seven pages maybe, and read the entire arc of the different conflicts that they felt were going to be beneficial to enhance the Israeli state in the region.
In at least the circles I run in, which are pretty broad.
He's a bit of a laughing stock.
He's a caricature of himself.
People from all over the country that I know are hoping that he loses his election finally.
And part of that, the big part of it is he gets out there and talks a tough game and flexes his military creds, which have nothing to do with combat and everybody sees it.
And in the context of the war in Iran, it's so clear that he is pushing a narrative that has nothing to do with the American people.
It's all about Israel and the Israeli government and furthering their objectives.
It has nothing to do with advancing American prestige because it's costing us all of our prestige.
It has nothing to do with American troops because American troops are going to be dying on behalf of another country.
If ground is, do you believe, I was such a guess, do you think that there's anybody from the service chiefs, chairman of the joint chiefs, who's telling the president we can actually fix this problem with ground troops?
I would hope that they're cautioning against that.
You know, there is plenty of data out there that speaks to the folly of trying a headlong assault into the Straits of Hormuz.
And everybody keeps talking about Carg Island.
That's probably not the target.
But before we get into that, I think it's important to go back and talk about Millennium Challenge in 2002 with General Van Riper.
He's a legendary Marine Corps general who was the head of the Red Force, aka the Iranian force, in a massive war game, multi-million dollar war game in 2002, where this exact scenario was gamed out at a very, very large level.
It was a 14-day war game that he ended on day one as fighting as the Iranians came after the American force stepping into the strait and annihilated it, causing, I think it was 20,000 simulated casualties in one day, just ended it, like straight out of the gate.
And the services were so upset by this that they reset the war game, limited the capabilities that the Iranians could use, and then progressively walked.
You know, you might want to talk to a coroner on the way out the door.
But no, yeah, they rigged it and they redid it.
And he hung around as an advisor for the rest of the game for 13 more days under protest.
But it was designed to produce a result that people wanted to see within DOD.
It was not designed to take a look at a particular problem set.
And I'm sure there's a PAO out there who's having heartburn right now for me saying it like that and is going to refute it.
But the reality is, is you can talk to the man himself about what exactly happened.
And this is not the first time.
I have a number of friends who went through high planning levels as senior warrants and staff NCOs talking about different types of war games.
How if they didn't rig it in, say, a scenario where I know specifically of where you're dropping a unit into the fight with Russia, if you didn't rig it, we would be annihilated.
And that doesn't demonstrate the capabilities.
And the overall justification coming out of Millennium Challenge was, well, we had a 14-day exercise planned and we spent all this money.
So why should we end it on day one when there's plenty more to experiment with?
But that's data point one.
We have wargamed this and it didn't go well.
The other parts of it are the, if you look at the terrain of Iran, It is Afghanistan, but worse, with a larger population that is obviously well more equipped than any other war we fought in recent memory.
But at the same time, you have to recognize realistically who you're dealing with.
And they're not a backwater.
They are a very advanced philosophical mathematical society.
They've given the world a lot.
And if you don't take that into account, you rely on hubris to make your planning, you're going to walk into a trap.
So when you start looking at the actual Straits and Hormuz, the Straits of Hormuz, which is our current problem that we are trying to fix, opening that is not going to crash the Iranian government.
That moment is gone.
That moment was probably dead the second we killed the Ayatollah.
And thinking otherwise is folly at this point.
There's a lot of talk about taking Karg Island.
The problem with taking Karg Island is twofold.
One, that it lies a long way on the other side of the Straits of Hormuz, where we have no ships.
We have no logistical capabilities.
It is closer to Kuwait than it is where our current troops are located or Marines are located.
There's another place which is called Keshim, which is located literally right in the middle of the Straits of Hormuz.
But that is a 600 or so square mile island that is effectively in a U in the strait.
If I was going to try and reopen the Straits of Hormuz and I'm not some grand tactician, I would think that's a pretty good spot to go, which also means your opponent knows exactly that.
That being said, is there the potential for us to land troops in either one of those places?
But speaking to Karg first, if you drop a bunch of guys into Karg, which is, I believe, eight square miles, it's a small spot, you are assuming that they can hang out there and shut down the Iranian oil exports without receiving any kind of counterfire.
You're banking on the Iranians deciding not to destroy their own infrastructure when you've already signaled to them that this is an existential fight.
So to me, that makes no sense.
Like you can rebuild infrastructure, but you can't take your country back after it's been taken down.
So that math problem seems very, very, very simple.
You know, that would be, I would think that if we landed there, we would get ashore one way or the other, whether we're led on, whether we have some fighting that goes on.
This is not going to be Iwo Jima.
This is not going to be force on force uniformed.
The Iranians have fought us asymmetrically the entire way.
They understand our vulnerabilities in an asymmetrical environment.
They sat right next door and participated in Iraq to a degree.
But what they will do is let us stop moving and then make us a giant sponge for drones, missiles, and indirect fire.
I think that's your game plan for either island.
Kesham, much bigger problem to try and solve.
But I think that the scenario is rather similar, where if we got ashore, that's not the end of our problems.
You're not going to end the war by doing that.
You're going to have massive problems trying to resupply these guys, trying to evacuate wounded.
And, you know, it builds from there.
Their capabilities in drone and ballistic missiles are immense, as we as have been demonstrated.
But if it continues on its current course, we are going to have the commitment of ground troops and we are going to amp up our involvement.
It's going to just be a it's going to be a Vietnam-like push of more and more men and materiel into the region in a ground war or a conflict that we are not going to be able to win.
They are not going to quit.
And there is no real way that I believe that we can drive them from power.
They're not going to leave voluntarily and we're not going to be able to snatch it from them.
And every time that we commit a new unit into theater, it weakens us in other parts of the world.
It weakens us in the Pacific.
It weakens us in Europe.
And it provides larger freedom of movement for our adversaries in those theaters.
And quite frankly, you give them enough space and enough bad will towards the U.S. for what we're doing.
And what happens after that could be unbelievably catastrophic and global.
Well, I think you could legitimately have a World War III type of scenario.
You know, if we are once again tying our military down in the Middle East to deal with a regional nuisance, which is what the Iranians are, which is what the Iraqis were.
However, this time it's costing the global economy and all kinds of other nations.
You know, their economic prowess, it's costing our reputation.
We could align the rest of the world against us in, I'm not going to say short order, but not over a long enough arc or not over a very long arc.
It could cause other countries to consider using a different currency, which would be the kind of the kill shot for the American empire and the American experiment.
And I'm not convinced that the Chinese want to take Taiwan by force, but if there's nobody home, what's to say they don't walk across the strait in an administrative manner and just say, okay, now you guys are part of us.