Transcript submitted by a reader
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXxG3qAa7oI
Diesen: 0:00
Hi everyone and welcome. Today we are joined by Gilbert Doctorow, an historian and analyst of international affairs. So welcome back to the program.
Gilbert Doctorow, PhD:
Good to be with you.
Diesen:
So America has attacked Iran, and it seems like a good place to start would be the extent of the destruction. Now, obviously, we don’t know this yet, the extent of destruction that the Americans inflicted on Iran. And the commentary appears to vary between Trump’s insistence that this was a spectacular success, the complete obliteration of Iran’s nuclear facilities — to the other side of the spectrum, which would be that this was a complete failure and the attacks were symbolic at best. Obviously narratives have become an increasingly important part of wars, and given that we have to wait for evidence about the destruction, I think it’s possibly more sensible to explore the meaning of these competing claims. So what do you make of them?
Doctorow: 1:14
Well, as regards the Fordow installation site, which is the most critical, the most important, so we understand, among the various nuclear sites that have been struck by Donald Trump’s B-2 bombers and cruise missiles, we don’t know. And I don’t believe we will know in the foreseeable future when decisions are being made by all parties on how to behave and how to proceed. Why do I say that?
Because these are deep underground. It is the remarks by Trump concerned the external parts of this installation. Of course, nobody from Iran is going to say what was done was not done, what was there was not there. It’s not in their interest to say it. And I’d say that by remote the Americans and all other outside parties have no ability to determine precisely what was … destroyed, nor are they necessarily interested in stating publicly what they find if they find anything. Because the narrative that Mr. Trump gave is the dominant narrative, and it is a sufficient narrative for political purposes.
2:33
And I maintain that this attack had political purposes, and not really military purposes. The important thing to say is that some of the best informed and most informative peers who are on other interview programs, Scott Ritter in particular, has made the claim that no significant damage was inflicted, imposed on the Iranian installations, that whatever was of value had been removed a week earlier and is now in storage in the many different underground centers that Iran built over decades for just this eventuality.
3:23
So that is what Scott has said. And I respect very highly what he said, particularly since it was supported in so greater detail by the one military panelist on the Vladimir Solovyov talk and commentary show on Russia’s first channel, which is Russia One, in the sense that he, General Burzynski, this expert panelist, who is a frequent visitor to the program, maintained that now that there had been no consequential damage to Fordow, that the materials had been removed well in advance and that nobody knows where they are.
He also went on to say that the chances of such an attack achieving success in obliteration, as Mr. Trump said, were close to zero, because you’d have to have sequential dropping of these bombs in the same exact spot, not nearby. If you were going to drill down sufficiently to destroy the deeply underground storage centers and the centrifuges, you would have to have more than one bomb falling at exactly the same spot. And that is difficult, if not impossible, to achieve in these wartime conditions when the planes would be very much on the lookout for attacking missiles that could bring them down. So these are the points that General Burzinski made, and they support what Scott Ritter was saying; I don’t know what his sources were. And they leave us with, as I say, the question what else can we discuss?
05:15
And my peers have discussed a lot of other things, but particularly the question of the legality or illegality of the American military operation. Was it constitutional or unconstitutional? The general feeling is that Mr. Trump was acting in violation of the American constitution. And he certainly was acting in violation of existing American law, which requires that he go to Congress for approval when entering upon a military action against another sovereign state.
That did not happen. Mr. Trump did this entirely in his own initiative. However, that is where the narrative ends from the peers whom I’ve listened to. I don’t pretend to spend all of my time listening to everybody else.
6:02
But these are the most important. I listen to the shows that I consider the least sensational and the most factual. And there, my peers end their discussion and go into speculation that Mr. Trump is irrational, that he’s acting on his own initiative without any solid inputs and so forth. I don’t find that there are attempts to make sense out of Trump to be very convincing or to be very profound.
I don’t say that what I’m about to say is profound, but I’ll just give it a try. What is said now is that if indeed it comes out that the Americans attacked a hollow shell or that their attack was ineffective because it wasn’t deep enough or whatever, then the Americans are left with a second mission. Would they do the same thing a second time? Improbable. It was very risky. It was very costly. And the results seem to be insufficient to the stated objective.
7:09
So what is that left with? They’re left with the same thing that Israel had. Everyone says, “Oh, Israel can’t do this by themselves.” That’s not a serious proposition. They could do it by themselves, if they use their nuclear arsenal. And that is what we have in front of us, the United States. If it should go back and try to redo this, the only option it will have is to use nuclear arms.
All right. Now, that takes us back to Mr. Trump’s thinking. What did he do? Why did he decide on this? And everyone assumes that he is serving his Zionist masters, who are among the big donors to his electoral campaign and simply to his friends in Israel. And that is an assumption which may be true, but it also might be false. It could well be that Mr. Trump foresaw the possibility of Israeli nuclear attack and preempted it by an American strike using conventional weapons, which only the United States has.
8:23
So I would like to give– I’m not intending to be an apologist for what he has done. It was illegal. It was in its own way barbaric. But I can’t say it’s the first barbaric act in American, recent American military history. So it has to be given full consideration and not judged by the prejudice that the man is by nature irrational and whimsical and does whatever comes into his silly mind. That is not a serious way of going about political analysis.
Diesen: 9:07
It is interesting though, because I also made the comments earlier that if the US and Israel oppose a peaceful settlement in Iran because it’s seen as too humiliating, then there’s only two options now, given that Israel is not doing well in the war of attrition. Again, I think they were mainly going for decapitation strike which then failed. That is the only two options then, if they’re losing a war of attrition is either United States comes into the war, or a nuclear weapon by Israel. But what I thought was interesting, which you have commented on, is that if Trump now says that this was a spectacular success and the only objective is to end the nuclear program– indeed JD Vance came out with a comment saying that, you know, the US is not at war with Iran. We are at war with Iran’s nuclear program.
I mean, this is a very strange framing. I haven’t heard this before. But again, I think this is the modern politics is stripping words of their meaning, but either way, if this is true, they’re only after the nuclear program, and they claim that this was an astonishing success, then the US can declare victory. In other words, they can then pursue peace. There is some logic here though, because if Israel is saying that they’re attacking Iran because they can’t allow them to have a nuclear weapon and their American sponsors are saying, well, there is no more nuclear program, why can’t there be peace then? They could have taken the nuclear option off the table.
10:56
So it is a very interesting argument. I guess a good hypothesis– to test this hypothesis, whether or not this is the case, would be what happens next, because Iran have to retaliate in some way to have a deterrent. So when it retaliates, what will the US do? If it walks away from this, that would very strongly support, well the hypothesis that you put forward. On the other hand, if the US looks for an excuse to get further involved in the war, then they would take the Iranian retaliation and use it as an excuse to escalate the war further, I guess. Do you think that would be a reasonable way to assess it? In other words, why not end the war now?
Doctorow: 11:45
Yes, let’s take a step back and put the same thing we just said in slightly different words. I think that by this action, Mr. Trump has taken away from Mr. Netanyahu the whole justification for continuing his campaign. Netanyahu cannot turn around and say that the American attack was a failure. He can’t do that.
The Americans will not tolerate such impudence, and he would lose at once the support that he desperately needs to do anything in the region, for the Americans are the main, principal supply line of all of his military supplies. Therefore, he cannot insult Trump by saying, “You are dead wrong, the program still goes on, the Iranians still have a capacity.” He can’t do that. And if he continues to fight, then why is he continuing to fight?
When he tried regime change as one of the issues– Even the BBC is now putting on air panelists, experts, largely academics, who are saying that the notion that Iran had a weak government structure, low popular support, could be overthrown, that all of this was nonsense. Let me just stop on that point for a moment. What does that mean? It means that Mossad’s intelligence was rubbish, which is an interesting conclusion that nobody is saying. All we know about is that the brilliant, the most effective intelligence in the region, if not in the world, is Mossad. That’s what we hear every day.
13:32
But wait a minute, what was their intelligence good for? It was good for locating the residences or the daily offices of the military, of the Revolutionary Guard’s top generals, and the location of the nuclear scientists who were about to be assassinated by Israel. In that, Mossad did a fantastic job. But I’m sorry, they missed the big picture, that the regime is solid and that the regime is resilient and a regime which lived through eight years of American-fueled war with Iraq from 1980 to 1988, that that regime knows how to have depth of management and resilience in case leading figures are picked off.
14:22
That, Masada did not get, which means the value of Israeli intelligence is no better than anybody else’s intelligence. And the notion that they are leading the Ukrainians into attacking this or that. But if they’re so poor in protecting themselves from their neighbors, what good are they in the larger international environment? So I just say this is a point that is extremely, to my way of thinking, extremely important in our judgment of the relationship between the United States and Israel. It seems to be missed by everyone because they’re not looking at it from a different perspective.
They’re all drilling down in the same spot. Now, is this misjudgment of Mossad the only misjudgment here? What about the ongoing war? We hear very little about it on mainstream media, and also on alternative media. How can you hear about it if there is the strictest war censorship in Israel that we see, now see.
15:37
And even under the strict war censorship, even the pro-Israeli BBC is putting up eyewitnesses on their morning programs who are admitting that, for example, in yesterday’s attack on Haifa, the alarm systems didn’t go off. This fabulously engineered Iron Dome and the three other levels of air defense did not catch the incoming Iranian missiles. And therefore, there were substantial civilian casualties in Haifa from people who were near, but not inside their air raid shelters.
So the notion that the Iron Dome and other air defenses are effective has been given up, even by the BBC. They no longer are saying that, “Oh yes, Israel just had to intercept a few missiles, because obviously the Iranians have run out of missiles or they’ve run out of the capability of launching them because of the strikes that the Israelis and Americans have made.”
17:00
The BBC doesn’t say that any more. There is the understanding, tacit understanding, that the Iranians are firing as many missiles as they think they need to on any given time on the assumption that nearly all of them will hit target. Now, that’s a whole new understanding of the level of conflict between Israel and Iran. The fact that Israel’s air defenses are no longer effective even if they have not run out of all of the replacement missiles that they use to intercept. That is shocking.
They also receive very little attempt to bring together two issues that are very big. The $175 billion that Mr. Trump has committed to building a golden dome in the States. Anyone who looks at what’s going on in Israel today should accept that it is useless. And I don’t see that being aired yet in Congress, that line of attack that the vivid demonstration is occurring every day in Israel’s failures.
18:25
So there’s a lot going on, but not everyone’s looking around, A lot of people looking in the same tunnel vision of one or two issues.
Diesen:
You mentioned that if Netanyahu would say that the American strike was a failure. In other words, they have to continue the war, that the Americans wouldn’t permit it. I find this interesting because it goes to the core of another discussion, I guess, which is also existing, which is that, you know, are the Americans owned by Israel through the Israeli lobby or is Israel being used as an instrument of America? It goes back to this question whether or not the Americans will permit disobedience.
Now, I tend to lean towards the former, that is assuming that Israel has huge control over United States, but it is interesting. Yeah, there are opposing arguments And I haven’t really, you know, haven’t locked myself in firmly to my beliefs because there are some, I guess, solid arguments going the other way, that the United States might be using the Israelis as well as an instrument in the region. I was wondering if you, what are your thoughts around this issue? If I just add quick, because it is important to the wider issue whether or not did Trump get dragged into this war, or are they using, for example, Israel as an instrument?
Doctorow: 20:09
I subscribe to the second view, but before going into that, let’s take a step back and look at professional biases.
Now, again, one thing that surprises me is that so few of us look in the mirror and try to discern the level of our understanding and where our prejudices shape our understanding of things that are new. Journalists generally don’t have a time horizon going back more than two weeks. Commentators, perhaps a few years. Historians, maybe a few centuries as a bias. Academics, no, please don’t take this personally in any way.
Although I haven’t taught more than one year at a university at the start of my postgraduate period, nonetheless, I do have an academic background and could be considered one. We have our own limitations, which we very rarely admit to. We tend to love our dissertation subjects. And they tend to influence things that we do 30 years later. I mean, this was Henry Kissinger’s a case in point with his Congress of Vienna, his studies from his doctorate, which influenced his work to the end of his career.
21:31
And he’s not the only one; most of us are that way. The issue here is of one John Mearsheimer, who in 2007 published a book which almost resulted in his banishment from university life because it was so scandalous. It touched on the taboo subject of Israel’s control of the US Congress and US foreign policy. He and Stephen Walt, he’s a, Meersheimers from the main school of American realist studies international affairs. And his colleague at Harvard, Stephen Walt, they published a book on the control of Congress, control of American foreign policy by Israel and its lobbyists.
And John, as a lecturer, you use the same material year after year. And you don’t necessarily start revising or reconsidering it. I don’t think he’s adequately reconsidered what he was saying in 2007 with respect to current events. Because I maintain that it doesn’t explain what’s going on. It’s just the opposite.
22:45
And when I said this a year ago, I wasn’t the only one who said that Israel is a tail being wagged by the American dog with his head in Washington. The consensus view was the tail was wagging the dog and that American policy was being set in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem and not in Washington. So I was in a small minority when I disputed that consensus view a year ago. But now I hear around me people saying as if it’s a matter of course, that Israel is being used in the American foreign policy, war that’s been going on with Iran since 1980. And was alluded to even by President Trump in his speech to the nation two days ago explaining why he attacked Iran and made reference to a hostage-taking of Americans in the embassy in Tehran in 1980 after the Ayatollahs came to power.
23:45
That this tradition is invalidated by the way Israel is being destroyed under the eyes of Washington by the Iranian counterattacks, which resembles, if you want to take three steps back, resembles what the Americans are doing to Ukraine as their tool or instrument, as you said, in weakening, strategically defeating Russia. Would anybody think of saying that Mr. Zelensky controlled Biden and his minions? Well, that’s not easy to entertain because Zelensky was one of a kind, a joker, a third-rate actor and so forth.
But looking at Israel, you have the same man there for 30 years, Mr. Netanyahu, dominating Israeli politics, who seems to have strong personal influence on his American counterparts. Nonetheless, what I see is the destruction of Israel, the degrading of its critical infrastructure. The ports, Haifa’s largely damaged. The refinery, the key refinery there was up in flames. We don’t know the extent of destruction of infrastructure in Israel, though we can assume it’s substantial.
25:24
We know that the Iranians have very precise missiles. Again, this comes up, I think it was on Russian news. Yes, certainly I got this from Russian news. But the Israelis attacked the headquarters of the Ministry of Interior in Tehran. Two hours later, the Iranians blew up a Ministry of Interior head offices in Haifa and the headquarters of the Israeli Ministry of Interior in Tel Aviv.
Now, with such effectiveness, with such fine knowledge of where these buildings were, obviously prepared by drones well in advance, we’re talking about enormous potential destructive power. But we can only touch it here and there and say, “Well, I[they] must be doing something more than just hitting the Ministry of Interior.” Of course they are, but the Israeli censorship will not let any of this word get out. And they’re hitting, as we hear, without specifying which generating plants have been destroyed, they’re hitting the electricity supply in Israel. So they’re getting at critical infrastructure.
26:47
How long can Netanyahu continue this when he no longer even has a reasonable explanation to his nation that he’s answering their long-held prayers of neutering the Iranian nuclear program? I say it’s a question of time; which is going to come first? That Israel’s economy is destroyed or largely incapacitated, or Mr. Netanyahu will be pulled out of office and sent to prison. I don’t know which, but something’s got to give here.
Diesen: 27:20
Yeah, it can’t continue like this. I find that interesting though, the comparison to Ukraine, because that is often where the criticism comes from. That is because when it comes to Ukraine, it’s often much like with Israel, it’s presented by the political and media establishment that there is no higher purpose or no more virtuous goal than to help Ukraine. And this is our moral duty. We have to do everything we can for the Ukrainians and you know it’s such a virtuous goal to the extent that dissent becomes immoral. You can’t criticize this, you know holy mission, and thus opposition becomes illegitimate. But what is interesting is where criticism does come, because often when this policy of backing Ukraine is criticized, often it’s said, “Well, our politicians, they’re all captured, their loyalty is all to Zelensky. Why are we giving more to Ukraine than to the poor people in our own country? You know, we are struggling [with] infrastructure, yes, our politicians care more about Ukraine.”
28:26
And this is kind of where the main criticism comes from, our Ukrainian policy. But this is also, this is not reality. If you look at the actual policies, I would say that our political and media establishment couldn’t care less about Ukrainians.
Again, with every election, they appeared to have ignored the popular will of the Ukrainians. As you said, Zelensky was a peace candidate. Through our backing of a different nationalist group, we were able to flip Ukraine. They had the election again in 2019. They voted for peace, implementation of Minsk.
And again, everything was done by Western governments and their NGOs, which are financed by Western governments, to overturn that entire election and keep them on the path to conflict with Russia, even knowing that this would result in the destruction of Ukraine.
29:24
But again, it’s a useful tool. We saw our governments escalate whenever possible, reject all diplomacy and negotiations, not just to end the war, but even to reduce some of the intensity of the war and prisoner exchange, anything that could have actually helped Ukrainians. And even now that war is, let’s be honest, has been lost, they still want to fight to the last Ukrainian, something we would never do with our own soldiers. But again, these are not our men. And as more and more Ukrainians are recognizing, they are, you know, they’re a cheap instruments to weaken an opponent.
30:01
So this idea that our politicians are all, you know, that they’re subordinated to the Ukrainian interest, it’s a lot of nonsense. They took Ukraine from its beginning when nobody wanted to be part of NATO, when they saw Russia as the main partner and they’ve been using it as an instrument to throw out the Russians. So this idea that the problem is that our politicians are owned by Zelensky.
He was a peace candidate. He didn’t, initially, he didn’t want these policies. We helped to shape these policies. But again, I’m not saying, and I’m not sure if Israel is simply another Ukraine, given that they have this powerful lobby. A lot of America’s wars have been pushed by Netanyahu over the years.
30:46
But what would you say about the argument that Israel is no longer, supporting Israel is no longer in the national interest of the United States? Because this is a key argument by Mersheimer, that you wouldn’t need the lobby if there was a natural harmonization of interest. That is, Israel is costing America much more grief and costs in terms of the money, blood, but also allies in the region, given that its partnership with Israel is so destructive and costly. What would be the counterargument?
Doctorow: 31:23
Americans are very vengeful. And what we’re seeing now is acting out what happened in 1980 when the Shah was overthrown, when a regime was installed that was hostile to American interests and American domination of the country for the preceding decades, which saw massive graft and corruption and lifestyle that was inimical to the conservative elements in Iranian society.
So what we’re seeing now is Donald Trump answered the question for me, the question you’re posing. He gave a litany of complaints about Iran’s conduct. It’s the calculation of death to America that has been in the air since 1980. And he was describing why America was interested in attacking Iran achieving regime change.
32:31
This was all valid without reference to the interests of Israel. And that is an answer to your question. If I were a resident of Tel Aviv, and I looked at the destruction around me of residential blocks, maybe my own home. I mean, the journalist who has been covering Israel for Russian television for the last 25 years, his apartment was shaken, the windows were blasted out. I assume there are many others besides the Russian journalist who saw firsthand destruction of residential blocks.
And I would ask, what is Mr. Netanyahu doing for me and what kind of friend is America if it’s supporting him in these crazy activities that are destroying the country in which I live? So from the standpoint of Israel, America is no friend at this point. America is the friend, so it would seem, of Mr. Netanyahu, in his insane, not to mention criminal, but insane war on Iran, in which Israel is as small a player versus the giant Iran, putting aside the nuclear weapons, but otherwise in conventional forces, the two are not evenly matched by any means.
Of course, Israel has vastly stronger air power than Iran has, but Iran has ground power and Iran has missile power, but they have something like 40,000 missiles and were prepared over well more than a decade for the conflict we’re seeing now. That is an enormous advantage. And say you have Israel that’s from hubris and successive victories against less powerful neighbors going into a combat with the strongest military in the region, Iran, is about as crazy as Ukraine going into combat with Russia.
34:42
The similarity is there as well. It is, you can have the image of David and Goliath, but in this case, Goliath is really pounding on David. And the David sling so-called air defense is not helping. So the Israelis now are paying a price for being America’s friend in the sense that Kissinger said long ago. You know, being an enemy is dangerous and being a friend is fatal. And if they don’t stop Netanyahu, it’s going to be fatal for the state of Israel as it has existed since its establishment.
Diesen: 35:25
That’s an interesting point though that if one addressed the question to what extent Israel’s, I guess, partnership with the United States is in American interest, it assumes that the US is all based on rational thinking around its own national interests. But to bring up, well, I think there was a quote by Oscar Wilde where he said, America’s the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between.
Well, just suggesting that endurance, the sustainability of the project and the rationality is not always there, but I’m not sure if it applies here. I just wanted to shift a bit towards, given that we are comparing this also with Ukraine, How does this relate to Russia? Because Russia, it’s often argued now, has a responsibility to support Iran, given that they’ve signed some agreements.
36:29
But also, Iran has provided important critical assistance to Russia in its own war, this proxy war in Ukraine where a lot of drones have been shipped. This was also something put to Putin, and Putin rejected the idea that Russia had betrayed Iran by not rushing to its aid. Again, it’s a bit unclear exactly what kind of aid that the Russians would send, because the Iranians haven’t sent soldiers to Russia. But what do you see as being– How are you reading this? How much support could they expect from the Russians in this conflict?
Doctorow: 37:18
Well, I’ll answer that in a second, but I don’t want to forget something else that is, that is, comes from inside information within Russia that we don’t have in the West. Mr. Dmitriyev, who is Vladimir Putin’s assistant and was his envoy for establishing a rapprochement with the United States, the man who was very well connected with all Russian business and also with American business. He made a statement which is quoted on the Russian news tickers this morning, that what would– since everyone’s looking at the possibility of Iranian response to the American attacks, not only a direct military response, but also in economic warfare, precisely the question of closing the Straits of Hormuz and vastly affecting the global trade in hydrocarbons, oil and gas.
38:15
Dmitriyev said this morning that the Iranians are considering closing the Straits of Hormuz to specific countries, the countries being the United States, Britain, France, and Germany. Why not? Of course, it’s more complicated than that because it’s not necessarily tankers flying the flags of those countries. In fact, it’s improbable to be flying those countries’ flags, which are serving the interests of Western Europe and the United States.
Nonetheless, if you just look at it more broadly, the way that the Houthis were banning passage through the Red Sea of ships, merchant ships, that are serving Israel, regardless of the flags that they’re flying, so the Iranians could do something similar, which would not completely interrupt global trade, but would certainly be noticed and affect the trade in gas and oil in the affected countries.
39:25
But to come back to the bigger question of Russia’s obligations, this is a lot of them make this. Of course, the same people who are saying, “Ah, the Russians have been thrown out of the Middle East. They lost Syria. They lost it.”
Look, this argument is all developed by a whole team of well-paid, well-paid formerly by the CIA, perhaps by Mr. Soros today, consultants, professional panelists, spokespeople on BBC and elsewhere, who are spreading propaganda against Russia and spreading defeatism for Russia, not corresponding in any way to reality. Like, “Oh, Iran had a tremendous loss when Syria went down.”
40:12
Well, yes and no. There was nobody who could save Syria in the final days, largely because of mistakes made by Mr. Assad. That’s a separate issue. The point is that the Russians did not have, and do not have, any military obligation to Iran. And they don’t have it because the Iranians didn’t want it. The Iranians have made a number of errors along the way leading up to their present situation.
Scott Ritter called out their mistake in calculus in their negotiations with the Americans, in that they quickly built up the level of enrichment of uranium as a negotiating tactic and point of leverage with the Americans when in fact it was ready, it was waving a red flag in front of the United States and led to the actions that we saw in the last few days.
That’s not the only mistake that the Iranians have made along the way. They made a very important mistake with the Russians. The negotiations over the so-called comprehensive cooperation agreement with Russia, which they concluded in December, finally signed off, had been talked about for well more than a year in advance. And there were many issues which kept the sides from completing the agreement.
41:39
One of the major issues was what is the level, does it have provisions for mutual defense in it? And finally, the Iranians rejected such provisions. It wasn’t the Russians who refused to give it to them. It was the Iranians who said they didn’t want it.
And they didn’t want it because, again, their own intelligence and their own understanding of the global politics was wrong. They assumed that Washington would, under President Trump today, would conclude an agreement with them under acceptable terms for the continuing enrichment at low levels and supervision of international agencies, and including American inspectors, that this could be achieved and that as a result, the very punishing American sanctions on their country would be lifted and they would be back in the warm embrace of the Western world. They would not be stuck with the Russians and the Chinese.
42:40
Well, they are stuck with the Russians and Chinese, but without any military protection because of their own inability to read properly the United States. What people misunderstand when they look at Russian policy is that occasionally there’s some good logic behind it. I don’t say every time, but often there is. Why didn’t the Russians take Kiev in 2014? Well, they could, of course. The Ukrainian army back then was worthless, but there would have been economic sanctions that would have crushed the Russian economy within a week or two, because the Russians were not prepared in 2014, as they were in 2022.
43:27
So it is here, the reason why Russians were for their own part a bit skeptical about agreeing with the Iranians is they knew that there’s a very strong undercurrent in Iranian politics, notwithstanding the Ayatollahs and the very conservative people nominally in control of the politics, there were strong part of Iranian society and government that were liberal, the same way that Russia had its big group of fifth-column liberals that finally were cast out or fled the country at the start of the special military operation.
44:14
So it is with Iran. They had a large contingent of Iranian government officials and society, civil society, that wants good relations with the United States and was not keen on dealings with Russia but could not meet their needs economically as they saw, as they believed. So Russia was very cautious. And when the Iranians didn’t want to have its mutual defense, they didn’t say.
This goes back again to another issue in recent Russian history. Why not only didn’t they– I just said why they didn’t take Kiev, but why didn’t they support the Donbas oblasts of Lugansk and Donetsk in 2014, and instead forced them into accepting the Minsk Accords? Because the Russians then were not confident that a referendum on leaving Ukraine and joining Russia in 2014 would be won by their side. They weren’t going to hold a referendum and lose. Therefore, they said, “Let go, do what you can, boys. You’re part of Ukraine, and we hope that this Minsk Accords gives you protection.”
45:41
It was not lack of guts or confidence. It was better intelligence on the Russian part than any of us Western observers had at the time.
Diesen:
It’s interesting. I heard the same thing from Moscow, that is that the Iranians were, as Iranians didn’t want it again, that is not a big surprise. But the reason is this lingering suspicion that is to make themselves too reliant or get too close with Russia. Again, they have had centuries of history, not all giving reason to high trust.
I mean, I see the things being very different over the past 10 to 15 years as Russia has shifted more to essentially use the Iranians as a currency to buy their way into a common European home. But now, of course, that the Russians are looking east, Iran is elevated in their views to a key indispensable strategic partner as opposed to something that can put sanctions on, you know, to score some points with the West.
But it is interesting that a purely strategic, if not cynical view that this is not all bad for Russia. That is, a lot of the weapons which the NATO countries are sending air defenses but also offensive weapons to kill Russians are now going to the Middle East instead. So again you see this on the battlefield in Ukraine that the redirection of weapons to the higher priority in the Middle East is quite favorable to Russia.
47:20
But also the West doesn’t tend, you know, it doesn’t like to learn from the lessons of lost war. So when you have the humiliation of losing a war, the best thing to do is we like to offer to, at least there’s been a lot of precedent here to shift focus on something else. So you have a new one to replace the failed one. Also you have, yeah, so it might be easier for political reasons for the West to let go of the Ukraine project.
Also oil prices are going through the roof, which is not bad. And as you said, with the Hormuz, the Strait of Hormuz being closed, at least the Iranian parliament voted for this, then it could take the same format as what Yemen did, that is to let some ships through, not others. Again, I think if Russia is looking for punishing its adversaries and they do see that the NATO is, they’re fighting NATO in Ukraine, this is not primarily about Ukraine, then a lot of this isn’t a bad deal for the Russians. Now, I’m not saying that they see this as positive, that they’re all cynical, but this could be a variable in the strategic thinking. However, that being said, the devastation and possible collapse of Iran would be likely a disaster for Russia as well as China for that sake. Now, I think China was happy that America’s focus was redirected to Russia.
Doesn’t mean that they want the destruction of Russia. I think on the contrary, it bought China a few years that America’s focus was somewhere else. But also China can’t afford to see Russia fail in this war with NATO. So it’s again, I’m not saying that they’re all acting on pure interest, but this is an interest. You kind of have to factor this in.
49:11
I’m not saying that Russia– China is happy about Russian casualties or Russians are happy about Iranian casualties, but interests do have to come into play here. But on the topic of Iran’s possible failure, is this something you believe that the Russians and Chinese would step in to ensure that they wouldn’t lose this fight?
Doctorow:
Both countries have possibilities of applying pressure to the Americans that are not directly involved in the Iranian conflict. So I don’t think that they necessarily have to, well, they would avoid at all costs entering into a direct conflict with the United States in and over [thero]. And there’s no reason why they shouldn’t. China can step on the toes of Taiwan and create an enormous distraction for the Americans.
50:07
But coming back to the benefits that Russia has from the present situation, of course, I agree completely with your remarks that, yes, they benefit from the higher oil prices, they benefit from the panic in Europe that they could be cut off from hydrocarbons from the Middle East and would have to come to the Russians on their knees begging to get supplies if they otherwise have condemned. And of course, the withdrawal of the American air defenses from Ukraine and of non-supply of further military materiel to Ukraine while everything is being directed at Israel in the Middle East. All of this is to Russia’s benefit, although it doesn’t change the direction of Russia in the war. It may speed things up a little bit because the Ukrainians don’t have the wherewithal they otherwise would have to prevent massive airstrikes and movements on the ground by the Russian infantry.
51:12
So yes, there are benefits. There also is the Joker in the pack. I think the Russians are very attentive to what we talked about earlier in this program, the possibility that either Israel or the United States would use nuclear arms in the conflict with Iran, which would open a Pandora’s box and which would be highly dangerous for the global situation. I think that’s improbable, unlikely, but it cannot be excluded. I think that the actions of Mr. Trump in the last week have put in question the confidence of the Kremlin that they were dealing with a wholly rational person, unlike the mad men who populated the Joe Biden administration.
I think they must be somewhat unnerved by the … well, cynical way that Trump has used negotiations to roll his enemy while preparing for a Pearl Harbor type attack because all of these lessons are valid for their own dealings with the Americans. And that puts into question, I think the Americans are now totally distracted from the peace process in Ukraine, which for the Russians is a good thing. It’s also a good thing that the primacy given to the Middle East conflict has removed Russia, this war in Ukraine from the front pages of our newspapers. The less that we see on television about the Russian devastation on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine, the better it is for the Russians.
53:01
So there are positives which outweigh the negatives in this conflict for Russia, but there also are negatives and jokers in the pack, particularly the nuclear question. But the nuclear weapons question of, not being Iran developing it, but of Israel and the United States using it.
Diesen: 53:22
Yeah, no, I think the trust in American diplomacy has taken a, has gone down significantly because it was only once, it was twice. Keep in mind that when the Israeli launched this surprise attack with American knowledge and I’m assuming support on Iran, you know, as they say, they were in the middle of negotiations. This is very deceiving.
But then the second time around, Trump saying, well, consider this for two weeks and then get directly involved by attacking Iran. This is a whole new level of deception. But I think also the Russians started to look at the way Iran has been attacked because the way they smuggled in the drones to then attack Iranian nuclear reactors, it’s almost identical to the way the drones were smuggled into Russia, assembled and then used to attack the nuclear deterrent of Russia. And obviously, I guess the idea that America didn’t know or Trump didn’t know this is looking less and less likely from their eyes given that this is now being replicated in the war against Iran. And do you have any final thoughts before we conclude?
Doctorow: 54:42
Well, there’s one other small winner in all of this. That is to say the damage being done to it is less severe than what was experienced before this latest Israeli-Iranian conflict, and that is Palestine. The Gaza, “only” 500 civilians were killed in the last week by the Israelis in Gaza, which is a low number considering the genocide that’s been going on since almost two years, one and a half years.
Diesen:
No, but I agree with your assessment. I think the Russians are happy if they’re out of the headlines. But also I think it allows for more aggressive actions. If you see the way they’re attacking in Kiev now and all, it’s much more powerful with higher destruction of civilian infrastructure and also civilian casualties, which I guess is more acceptable if it doesn’t make the headlines. But again, it’s interesting how the media can only focus on one thing at a time because we can’t focus on the suffering in Lebanon because of the increased suffering in Syria. We can’t focus on the suffering in Syria because of the genocide in Gaza. But now we can’t focus on the genocide in Gaza because of the war against Iran.
56:06
So it is a very narrow focus which the media has, I guess. So … and whoever isn’t in the headlines, you have some opportunities to increase the destructiveness until the cameras are back on you. So, anyways, thank you so much for letting me pick your brain, and I hope to have you back on as soon as possible. Thank you.
Doctorow: 56:31
Well, it was a pleasure.
Glenn Diesen: U.S. Bombing of Iran as Political Theatre?
I am especially appreciative that Professor Glenn Diesen let this discussion run the full hour so that we could address a goodly number of issues relating to the Iran-Israel conflict that our peers in the Alternative Media seem to overlook while they drill down on the same few questions and do not look laterally to see still bigger issues worthy of their thoughts. Here I have in mind such questions as how Israel is being used as an instrument of Washington against Iran in a hopeless war of attrition in the same manner as Ukraine is being used as an instrument against Russia; how Mossad proved itself to be no better than other national intel agencies by its failure to see that no decapitation strike could shake the Iranian regime given its depth of management and the absence of any effective Opposition in the country; how Donald Trump may have been moved to authorize the attack on Iran to preempt an Israeli nuclear attack there; and much, much more.
Through his foreign language editions (Russian, German, French, Spanish) of interviews like this, Professor Diesen is building a global audience for serious political discourse.
Transcript of NewsX interview, 19 June
| Transcript submitted by a reader https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_XGX2w0PU8 NewsX: 4:58 Andrew KP Leung is joining us live, a China strategist. He’s live, in fact, from Hong Kong with us. Welcome. Thank you for being with us today on News X World, Andrew. How do you view this latest turn that the conflict has taken? Obviously, escalation has been warned now by Israel. They say that this is an unprecedented attack on a hospital. They are now directly blaming Khamenei for it. Do you see further escalation in the next 24 hours, looking at these latest statements from both sides? Andrew K.P. Leung: 6:01 –Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, has been increasingly been emboldened to seek a greater, greater endgame. Originally, he started off with eradicating Hamas. He is already destroying the proxy forces supporting Iran, the Houthis, and also Hezbollah in Syria, and also controlling a lot of strategic assets in Syria. But now it seems to be seeking not only to eradicate Hamas, but also to eradicate Iran. Because Iran has always been the greatest existential threat to Israel. I mean, it’s not just recent years, it’s over decades. 7:03 And it is the confrontation of Iran that has been part and parcel of Israel’s militarization, including its possession of nuclear weapons. But this time around, it seeks that the, it sees that Iran has been sufficiently, gravely weakened, because all these proxy forces, the Houthis to a certain extent, but definitely Hezbollah and to a large extent Hamas, have been weakened. And Israel has also been assassinating the top military leaders in Iran and trying to foment social unrest in Iran with the hope of overthrowing its government. However, the existential threat for Israel is the possession of nuclear facilities, which are said to be on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon. 8:14 And hence Israel has been planning for this attack for a long, long time. And its military, of course, has been hugely advanced with the support of weaponry by the United States. And now he seems to be targeting Iran’s most secret and most precious nuclear facilities buried deep in the mountains. And they can be reached, according to their intelligence, only by employing the American special bombs, weighing 30,000 pounds, so-called “bunker-buster” bombs. However, Israel doesn’t have the aircraft or the bombers which are capable of carrying these bombs. And then the only bomber that can do so is the [B-2] by the United States. 9:18 And Trump recently has signaled that he has authorized the direct involvement of the US Air Force in the war, without giving the final go-ahead, and asking Iran openly to surrender unconditionally. And of course the Iran leadership refuses to buckle, refuses to [cower in the course] of American aggression. And then, of course, Iran has just displayed its 200 miles special mid-range missiles that can hit Israel’s capital and many other different assets. So the prospects for– NewsX: 10:15 We’re also seeing a phone call, Andrew, that has taken place between, of course, various international leaders. They’re all deliberating, of course, on this conflict and what is a way to de-escalate for both sides. Amidst all of this, we’ve also heard statements from Russia and China. How do you react to the positions that China and Russia have taken on this conflict, where they’re clearly, of course, calling out Israel’s actions as illegal? Leung: 10:50 Well, of course, I think that both for Russia and China, a destroyed Iran doesn’t, is doing a lot of damage to their coalition. Because according to the early warning to Americans, foreign policy doyan, the late Brzezinski, in his epic tome called “The Grand Chessboard”, published in 1997. On page 50 of that book, he already warned that the most lethal coalition against American hegemony is a coalition between Russia, China, and Iran. And now with Iran, if Iran is being weakened, this coalition is, it would be much more, is greatly affected. And hence, Russia and China do not want to see Iran which is destroyed, apart from the prospects for escalation. 12:04 Because if Iran retaliates with missiles and of course with even other attacks, this could spiral into a regional war, which does not auger well for stability in the region or for the world. And hence, both countries, Russia and China, are supporting negotiations as a means to resolve the crisis. And that call for negotiation rather than military coercion is supported by the international community, by European countries and by other countries in the world, who do not believe that ending– the world’s problems will be solved by unilateral action. And indeed, this is the principle underpinned by the UN Charter, that countries involved in conflict to seek negotiations. But unfortunately, this method has been cast aside in favor of military aggression, which has a great danger. NewsX: 13:22 Okay. We’re getting further breaking news now coming in this hour. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to adopt a moderate and controlled approach in Iran. In a phone call earlier today, Merz emphasized the need for restraint and careful decision making. A German government source confirmed the conversation, highlighting Berlin’s focus on stability and responsible leadership. Andrew Leung is live with us on this story. Andrew, how do you react to this phone call that has transpired between the German Chancellor and the Israeli Prime Minister? Leung: 13:56 Well, I think that the– you see, I was referring to these bunker-busting bombs to be carried by B2 bombers. But then, of course, Iran could also seek a way to obtain missiles that can threaten the B2 bombers. And of course, the B2 bombers is a valuable asset. And of course, if one is shot down, this would blow a hole in America’s military credibility. And that explains President Trump’s hesitancy in giving the final word, go ahead. But then, who knows? I mean, no one can tell what President Trump is going to do, because he may well believe that the missiles couldn’t reach the B2. And even before they do, the Iranian nuclear facilities would be totally destroyed, and that would eliminate the only challenger of Israeli hegemony in the Middle East. 15:16 And the Israeli hegemony in the Middle East is important for the serving of Americans’ interests, because the United States can thereby control the whole of the Middle East, regardless of, of course, having destroyed Iran and threatening other Middle East countries. But that, of course, would not be supported by the Arab world. NewsX: 15:43 Okay. Andrew Leung, thank you very much for joining us with your perspective on that story. Meanwhile, Ukraine has secured the release of a group of prisoners of war in its latest exchange with Russia, President Volodymyr Zelensky has confirmed today. While the number of those freed was not disclosed, Kiev’s Coordination Council for Prisoners of War stated that the group included injured and ill individuals, many of whom had been held since the early months of Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022. President Zelensky reiterated his commitment to bringing every Ukrainian home, thanking all those involved in facilitating the exchange. Meanwhile, tensions continue to escalate as Ukraine marks 100 days since Russia rejected a United States-backed proposal for a complete ceasefire. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrei Sibyah accused Moscow of intensifying hostilities, instead of seizing the opportunity to end the conflict. He called on Ukraine’s international partners to increase pressure through sanctions and continued military aid, insisting that the time to act is now. Despite proposals from the West and Ukraine’s stated readiness for peace, Russia set conditions and maintained a hardline stance, further complicating efforts to reach a resolution. 16:56 Gilbert Doctorow, Russian affairs expert, is joining us live from Brussels. Gilbert, thank you for being with us on News X World. You know, prisoner exchanges, of course, continue between the two sides, but have we reached any closer to any sort of peace deal, or is that still a while away? Gilbert Doctorow, PhD: The exchange of prisoners is a positive development which we all can praise. It shows that the discussions that were held in two sessions in Istanbul have produced some results at the technical level. I say technical level, that is what the negotiators consider this. At the human level, the families, the loved ones of those who have been returned, of course, can take great pleasure in seeing them once again. 17:48 Nonetheless, to answer your question, this development has no bearing on the conclusion of a truce, not to mention conclusion of a peace treaty. And Mr. Zelensky’s remarks criticizing Russia for spending 100 days resisting the conclusion of the peace or ceasefire is utter nonsense. He is repeating the same remarks everywhere that he goes. He is looking for financial and military aid wherever he goes. And as we just saw in the past week, when he was attending the G7 conference in Alberta, he’s getting nothing. NewsX: 18:40 Yes. Also, of course, now, do you believe that with different countries across the world’s attention being towards the Iran-Israel conflict, that is going to delay some sort of efforts to continue the talks between Russia and Ukraine, or do you believe those will happen simultaneously? Doctorow: 19:05 Well, as they broke off following the second meeting in Istanbul, there was no prospect of any progress, because both sides were demanding that the other side capitulate. Now, that is an impossible situation. It expresses the utter irrealism of Mr. Zelensky’s position, the utter rejection of the real situation on the ground, battlefield, by his European backers. It is not supported. His position is not supported by Donald Trump, which is the main reason why Trump left the G7 meeting early. And that is of decisive importance, because despite all the rhetoric coming out of the European institutions, leaders, mainly the foreign minister, one can call her, Kallas, and the chairman of the Commission, von der Leyen, there is no prospect of Europe saving Ukraine. They don’t have the materiel, they don’t have the money, and they don’t have the will. So Mr. Zelensky’s hopes for European salvation are completely misplaced. 20:22 As for the United States, so long as Mr. Trump is in control, and that is of course always open to question because he has many enemies. But so long as he is in control, Zelensky will get nothing. NewsX: 20:34 All right. More news that we’re tracking this hour, Gilbert. I’ll leave it at that. Thank you very much for joining us on the broadcast. |
More NewsX World (India) yesterday, 19 June
I bring to the attention of the Community my 3 minutes on air in one of NewsX World’s hourly news wrap-ups, not only for what I said about the latest Russia-Ukraine exchange of injured POWs (minutes 17 – 20) but also for the sake of the comments just prior to my coming on air by another panelist, Andrew Leung, speaking about the Iran-Israel conflict. In passing, Leung mentioned a factor in the considerations of Trump presently whether to participate in the Middle East conflict by sending B2s to bomb the best protected Iranian nuclear installations: the reality that in such bombing raids these extremely costly planes could come under fire from Iranian air defenses and be brought down. Such an eventuality would not just be a huge financial loss for the USA but a huge humiliation and loss of credibility as a global power.
The very same point was made yesteday afternoon by a panelist on the Russian news and commentary show Sixty Minutes: to be effective in destroying Iran’s most important and best protected nuclear site, which is situated 90 meters below the surface of a rocky mountainside and is well guarded by Iranian anti-aircraft missiles, an American bomber would have to make 4 bombing raids dropping their heaviest bombs on target sequentially. The chance of the bomber being blown to bits would be substantial.
This is something you will not find discussed in The Financial Times or hear on CNN.
Transcript of ‘Redacted,’ 18 June
Transcript submitted by a reader
Redacted: 0:00
Well, what can Russia realistically do about this war between Iran and Israel and the United States on the Israeli side? Well, according to our next guest, Gilbert Doctorow, the answer is nothing. No rescue is coming from Moscow or Beijing, and a US-Israeli victory is not just likely, it is strategically disastrous. Far from restoring order, he says it will shatter what little regional stability remains and corner Russia geopolitically. The only unpredictable factor left on the chessboard is Pakistan, which is a bleak forecast, but one we’d be foolish to ignore.
It also allows North Korea to strongly align with Russia, which has already happened and most of us have missed it.
[commercial: 0:42]
Redacted: 2:04
Gilbert Doctorow is a foreign policy author and expert on the Russian-US relations. We’ve been speaking to him since the war in Ukraine and he’s been pretty much right about all of it. He has a new book out called _War Diaries_ about the war in Russia between the first two years.
So he joins us today. Thank you for joining us today. It’s a pleasure to see you again.
Good to see you, doctor.
Gilbert Doctorow, PhD:
Well, very good to be back with you.
Redacted:
Okay. So you argue that Russia will not intervene to support Iran militarily. What do you believe? Why would the Kremlin sit this one out? And is that a strategic decision or a sign of restraint?
Doctorow:
I think it is a clear understanding [that] the situation is not as dire as many of the hyperventilating commentators, particularly on a variety of Indian stations like The Times of India, that take up space on the international section of YouTube. If you listen to them, the end of the world’s coming next week. The reality is that the Israelis are running out of supplies for their dome, out of supplies for their air defense. They have maybe seven to 10 days more of these missiles that they’re using to protect themselves. So it’s hard to see that this war will go on beyond that date. For that reason alone, I think there are people in the Kremlin who understand that there is no reason to rush to Iran’s assistance.
3:40
The positioning, the posturing, I should say, of Mr. Trump is typical of him. He speaks very loudly, he catches attention. He did in his first term send those aircraft carriers to just off the North Korean coast. And what came out of that, what followed? Nothing, whatever.
So it is today, The idea that the United States is providing substantial assistance to Israel in capturing and shooting down the various missiles and drones that Iran is sending to Israel is only partly true. The United States doesn’t have the capacity, as no one has the capacity, to stop hypersonic missiles, for example, which is precisely what Iran started using in the last couple of days. So I would calm down. The length, the duration of this war is certainly limited by Israel’s ability to keep on shooting down incoming projectiles. And that is like a week to 10 days. So I don’t think we have the end of the world in front of us.
Redacted: 4:58
What if the United States involves itself with aircraft carriers and additional fad systems being able to shoot down and aid in this process if Israel’s Iron Dome runs out? They’re already not able to stop hypersonic missiles as it is with the Iron Dome technology. Will the United States really step in here to aid this, and then will we see a protracted war as a result of this?
Doctorow:
Again, let’s step back for a moment to what the mission of Israel has been with American support. The primary mission has been to destroy Iran’s nuclear program. So far they have done damage, but they certainly haven’t destroyed it. And there are these impenetrable underground or mountainside nuclear units that Iran has, which only American munitions would have a chance to destroy.
Now, the United States has not yet committed itself to sending in B2 bombers to deliver those wonderful bombs, and I rather suspect they won’t. Mr. Trump likes to stir the water, likes to get a lot of attention and hopes to threaten people and force them to do deals on his terms. That does not seem to succeed too often, and I’m very doubtful it will succeed in this case. But the Iranian forces are not just their own. They’re also their allied militias in places like Iraq, which can threaten, which can destroy, in fact, American bases in the region.
And for that reason, Mr. Trump will tread very carefully– again, he’s making a lot of noise– but to actually place those 40,000 American soldiers and officers in the region in harm’s way, I think would be very, very risky. And certainly there are people in Congress who are telling him that right now.
Redacted: 7:21
Now you say that the one wild card here is Pakistan, that Russia won’t get involved, but Pakistan very well could. And if they did, it would be to defend Iran. Can you tell us what the global consequences of that would be, and if you see that as a deterrent or an accelerant?
Doctorow:
Well, I don’t think it’s an abstract consideration. If you know Mr. Trump’s schedule today, he received an envoy from Pakistan. And while BBC and other major media were talking about this as having some relation to the recent armed conflict between India and Pakistan, I think it is more reasonable to assume that Mr. Trump and his assistants were interested in talking to the Pakistanis following their very noisy and angry statements in the United Nations about the war of the aggression of Israel and how Pakistan wanted to do something about it. So it’s not just my conjecture that Pakistan stands ready to virtually destroy Israel with nuclear missiles, which it has, but I think that was a subject of Mr. Trump’s discussions with the Pakistani envoy today.
Redacted; 8:39
Gosh, I think people missed that. That’s quite possible. You studied this deeply. You heard, I’m sorry, you heard President Putin today saying that the United States should not interject itself in this, that that would be a really a huge mistake. So what will Russia do– I mean, one of the wild cards here is you know, what will China what will Russia do if the United States fully involves itself in attacking Iran? If the United States decides to hit the Fordow nuclear power plant, President Trump says, “We’re the only ones that can do it. We’re the only ones that can have this attack.” What will Russia do in response, do you think?
Doctorow:
Again, let’s take a step back. Destroying the Iranian nuclear program is not the same as destroying Iran. They have said since 2003 that they have no intention of building a bomb. The American intelligence agencies all have been in agreement with that. As recently as under, I think it was March, appearance before Congress, Tulsi Gabbard said the same thing. So the most horrible thing that American intervention could do, if we read the script that Mr. Trump has been reading from, is to impair, damage, or destroy major assets in the civil nuclear program of Iran.
10:15
None of that is the same as regime change or destroying the Iranian nation. So this is not an existential crisis here. That being said, the American intervention would probably bring, would almost certainly bring, a dramatic response from the militias that are associated with Iran in the region, and attacks on American bases that would kill American soldiers. It’s clear as day.
All of that would come back and hit Mr. Trump, because the actions he’s considering have not been sanctioned by Congress. And he’s not even looking for congressional approval. So it’s all his own … standing that will be impaired or seriously damaged if he proceeds.
Redacted:
What would Russia do though? If we do, I get the civil side of it. It’s just a civil, you know, we’re taking out their civil nuclear infrastructure. Like if America, if you’re sitting, you know, you live near like Three Mile Island or you’re in Pennsylvania near these nuclear power plants and suddenly, you know, Iran just bombed those and they just said, it’s just a civil, you know, we just want to make sure you don’t have civil nuclear capacity. I mean, would Iran respond largely? Or is it just the militias? And then what would Russia do in response? Are they going to allow the United States to do that?
Doctorow: 11:48
Well, this is not a question of a Chernobyl-like catastrophe. They’re not speaking about destroying electric generating plants. They’re speaking about destroying facilities that process uranium, store uranium, and not in vast quantities. So the environmental impact, the global impact of any of the strikes that Israel has been performing, or the United States could add to, is not of a nature to alarm us all.
Nonetheless, what is at issue is Iranian sovereignty. To come back to your question of where the Russians are, the Russians are profiting from this right now. They’re doing very well, thank you, because the United States has pulled back a lot of its air defense assets from Ukraine to safeguard, to put in place in the Middle East, to protect its bases there. The United States has also very quietly, under pretext of the need to rearm Israel, they have stopped supplying military materiel to Ukraine. All of this has facilitated the ongoing Russian campaign.
13:09
So the Russians are involved indirectly. The Russian-Ukraine war is definitely affected by the crisis now in the Middle East. In so far as the United States has pulled in its horns in Ukraine, is busy rushing to the aid of Israel, and the Russians can profit from that, as they’ve done in the last two days, with the most dramatic strikes on Kiev during the whole duration of the war. Now, the real interested party in this is not Russia. The real interested party is China.
And there we have– I don’t see anybody talking much about it, because the harm, the economic harm of damage to Iran’s export infrastructure directly affects the energy balance in China, since Iran has become a major supplier to China. This is not to mention the bigger issue of Iran, if pressed hard by the United States and Israel, Iran’s readiness to close the Straits of Hormuz, which would really have a tremendous impact on the global economy. But if you have to look at countries individually, the first ones to suffer would be China, since it is so dependent on energy from the Middle East that would no longer be flowing.
14:43
Will China remain quiet? Well, we know that China has flown in several airplanes with military equipment for Iran. Exactly what nobody knows. But presumably they are ready to do a lot of equipment support for air defense of Iran to prevent the United States and Israel from doing some catastrophic damage and causing many civilian deaths.
Redacted:
Now something you had written about is that North Korea is in fact aligning itself with Russia. Now, Zelensky had been saying this months ago, and I kind of ignored him because he’s an idiot. But this seems to be true. You said that North Korea has sent troops to Russian- controlled Ukrainian territory for demining and reconstruction. That seems like more than a gesture. It’s a deepening military and political alliance with Russia. So what does that tell us about emerging global blocks? What do you think Western media is going to do with that other than ignore it for now?
Doctorow: 15:48
They are ignoring it indeed. The numbers, let’s look at the numbers, the demining groups, sappers as they call them, that is 1,000 soldiers from North Korea. And the construction teams, since a large part of the Korean, North Korean army actually is working at construction during its military service, that is 5,000 soldiers. This is considerable. It frees up the Russian soldiers and officers to do something more valuable for Russia’s defense and fighting on the front lines, rather than this restoration work in the Kursk oblast.
Yes, of course, it is very important that Russia has established excellent relations with North Korea. They are adding logistical solutions, new bridges across the river that separates them, since they are neighbors, direct neighbors. And the economic cooperation is substantial. And it also shows that the Russia has finally freed itself from the constraints of the Western- imposed sanctions, which they at an earlier time agreed to and signed up for, but now understand to have been a mistake and to be quite ridiculous when Russia itself is under the greatest number of sanctions ever invented by the United States.
Redacted:
Thank you very much. Well, if you want more of this analysis, you can follow Gilbert Doctorow’s substack. We put the link online. He also again has a new book out and has been one of the most reasonable voices during the war between Russia and Ukraine.
17:41
So thank you so much. I know you’re in Europe. You stayed up late for “Redacted” and we really appreciate it. I hope to see you again soon.
Transcript of NewsX interview, 18 June
Transcript submitted by a reader
NewsX: 8:37
We’re now joined by Gilbert Doctorow, who’s a Russian affairs expert, and he joins us from Brussels, Belgium. Gilbert, thank you very much for joining us on the programme. Gilbert, this G7 conference, formally G8, is coming to a close. What have been your thoughts on how everything has played out in regards to Zelensky’s presence and Russia’s absence?
Gilbert Doctorow, PhD:
Russia has been absent for 10 years, so that’s not a new development. But as regards to Mr. Zelensky, his trip was totally wasted. He was on his way into Alberta when he was apprised of the fact that Trump had already left hours before. I think Mr. Trump’s departure was motivated in part to avoid meeting Zelensky and to avoid participating in a discussion of the Ukraine war that was on the agenda for the day.
The fact is that Mr.– this is a meeting of seven, but Mr. Trump would find himself in the minority of one. He would have six fellow members, all grouped against him on the question of the Ukraine war. And that, of course, is not very agreeable or very constructive. As regards his mention of how sad it was that President Obama, together with Justin Trudeau of Canada, had decided to remove Russia as the eighth member of this group — he called this very sad and said that it was, had there been Russian participation in the G8, then there wouldn’t have been a war that we’re now fighting.
However, this is, these are pure rhetoric. The reality is that when Mr. Trump, sorry, when Mr. Putin was a member of the G8, he was in exactly the same disadvantageous and uninteresting position of Mr. Trump presently. He was a minority of one with seven allies in the West aligned against him who agreed, who met privately before he arrived at any conference, and agreed on a policy line which was all directed against him. So in that sense, the problems of today’s G7 are simply repeating the problems that existed in 2014, when you had seven members ganging up on the eighth. Now it was six members who were planned to gang up on the seventh, namely Mr. Trump.
11:18
Mr. Trump is not Mr. Putin. He is the most powerful man in the world. And so they could only lick their wounds and complain when he left, when he left early on the alleged reason that he had business to do in Washington that was more important.
NewsX: 11:39
Gilbert, the Kremlin has called G7 useless. Ukraine did want to make more gains than it did, but it did produce Canada’s massive support, some massive financial support from Canada. Do you think Russia is losing more ground diplomatically or gaining it?
Doctorow:
Well, whatever the G7 does, it really is not news in the sense that they are all aligned against Russia, not a day-to-day matter, not just when they convene together. So Mr. Zelensky left, as you said quite properly, he left this meeting with nothing in his hands other than what Canada could contribute. This may be of some small solace to him, but it in no way helps Ukraine to continue to fight effectively against Russia.
12:33
In point of fact, because of the Israel-Iran war, The United States has withdrawn a large part of its air defenses from Ukraine and moved them to the Middle East to provide some protection for America’s air bases and the 40,000 American soldiers who are stationed in the Middle East, should they come to blows with Iran. The United States also has reportedly stopped sending any further military materiel to Ukraine.
All of this is very bad news for Mr. Zelensky and bad news for his army. It is not a surprise that Russia is staging massive strikes on Kiev presently, as you have otherwise reported, because the air defences there are very weak.
NewsX: 13:25
Gilbert, prior to the G7, Putin and Trump had a direct phone call. They have so far agreed to commence talks again, once again, on the 22nd of this month. What are your hopes going into those talks, given Russia’s escalating strikes on civilian infrastructure across Ukraine? Do you think they’ll make any progress? And do you think peace is still on Putin’s mind when it comes to sending his delegation to Turkey?
Doctorow:
Oh, peace is definitely on Mr. Putin’s mind, but it’s a peace that he wants on his terms. In that sense, He is no different from Mr. Zelensky, who wants a peace on his terms. Both sides are looking for a capitulation of the other side, which of course is an impossible situation and does not indicate that they will reach any agreement until there is a definitive result on the battlefield. That’s, having said that, the meeting between the Russians and the Americans is really about technical matters. It is about restoring the functionality of their respective diplomatic establishments in the other country. Their embassies are operating on a very weak level because staff is missing.
14:48
Staff was thrown out in recriminatory exchanges going back several years. They are non-functional, and the intent is to restore functionality, because you cannot negotiate with the other side, over important matters of geopolitics, which is what Trump and Putin are trying to do, when you don’t have staff on the ground manning your embassy.
NewsX: 15:16
Gilbert Doctorow, thank you very much for joining us on the program and [for] your insight. We now move over to the Middle East–
Redacted: “Israel’s IRON DOME is nearly FINISHED!” Dr. Gilbert Doctorow says Israel has 1 week left
It was a pleasure, after a break of several months, to rejoin Natali Morris and her husband on their interview program Redacted for a discussion of the Israeli-Iran war: its likely duration, global significance and the position on this conflict taken by other world powers including the USA, Russia, China and Pakistan.
Redacted is an enormously popular program in the United States, in Europe and, I imagine, in other parts of the world. The viewer numbers on this show are indicative of the interest that the moderators have developed in a loyal audience.
As one Comment mentions, the Israeli air defense is a lot more than the Iron Dome, which is intended to intercept short range projectiles. Other, higher altitude interceptors protect Israeli from ballistic missiles. The problem that few commentators discuss is that the supply of missiles for these air defenses is not unlimited. The Iranian wave attacks are depleting these interceptors so that the effective protection of Israel from incoming missiles may not last more than 10 days. If that is true, then Israel will not pursue the war beyond that point and Iran has already publicly stated that it will halt its attacks in turn.
Accordingly, there seems to be a lot of hyperventilating on the part of my fellow commentators. Moreover, the environmental threats from Israeli attacks on Iranian nuclear installations are being blown out of proportion for purposes of sensationalism. The world is not facing a new Chernobyl disaster from Israeli bombing raids.
That being said, the direct entry of Washington into the conflict by supplying its heaviest bombs to Israel or, still worse, by flying B2s into Iran and destroying the underground facilities that are best protected, could create a broad regional, even global conflict. Nonetheless, this is all still a hypothetical risk.
In the meantime, the Russians, like the Chinese, are probably quietly supplying Teheran with air defense installations and other military materiel. One has to wonder how long it will be before the North Koreans offer to sell a bomb or two to Teheran. Why build when you can buy?
In any case, barring some dramatic development in the Iranian political structure, the balance of power in the Middle East between Israel and Iran is likely to continue be a major issue in the region for years to come whatever the outcome of the present exchange of missile strikes and bombing raids.
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2025
NewsX (India): Israel Targets Iranian Sites In Tehran Bombing
NewsX (India): Israel Targets Iranian Sites In Tehran Bombing
This interview taken yesterday by NewsX is part of the broadcaster’s live news hour. I appear at minute 8.45 and leave at minute 15.15. Those of you with the time and patience to spare may savor the news presenter’s reportage on the Israel-Iran war which precedes my interview. The broadcaster’s editorial position is, shall we say, equivocal.
The subject of our chat was in fact the gathering of the G7 that ended yesterday with few agreed points in their press release because Donald Trump had left a day before, precisely to avoid entering into discussion of the Ukraine-Russia war on which his position is totally at variance with the other six members. Indeed, one can say that this institution has become a G6+1, with the USA as odd man out. In this regard, we see now a new iteration of what existed up to 2014 when it was a G7+1, with Russia as odd man out.
The main consequence of Trump’s early departure is that Volodymyr Zelensky who came primarily for talks with the American president was on a fool’s errand. He left the meeting with nothing in his hands other than the pennies for the poor offered by Canadian Prime Minister Carney.
Transcript of ‘Judging Freedom,’ 18 June edition
Transcript submitted by a reader
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1jl2vwsQ1_k
Napolitano: 0:32
Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for “Judging Freedom”. Today is Wednesday, June 18th, 2025. Professor Gilbert Doctorow will be with us in just a moment. And here’s the question for him: What does the Kremlin think of Donald Trump after the events of the past week? But first this.
[commercial]
02:21
Professor Doctorow, good day to you. And welcome here, my friend. Does, how does the Kremlin view President Trump’s speech in Saudi Arabia last month, in light of recent developments between Israel and Iran? Do you think that this was a grand, do you think the Kremlin thinks the speech was a grand deception orchestrated by [Trump?], or a momentary lapse by Trump, or he keeps changing his mind? Or are we putting too much emphasis on what Trump thinks?
Gilbert Doctorow, PhD: 2:58
I think we’re putting too much emphasis on what Trump says. The Kremlin, I think, has its own inertia, its own course, and that can be modified if they believe that Mr. Trump is genuine, which I think they do, and it can be modified the other way, if they think that he is losing the battle domestically and internationally to control policy, which I think also is true.
So the Kremlin, will be happy for any benefits to come out of the favorable predisposition of Mr. Trump, but they’re not counting on it, and they’re going their own way.
Napolitano: 3:43
Well, what does the Kremlin think of Trump? Do they believe what he says? When President Putin speaks to President Trump on the phone and they get off the phone, what do they do? Say, “my God, he’s crazy? Who the hell knows whether or not to believe him?” Or do they take copious notes and analyze his every word?
Doctorow:
The one thing they don’t think is that he’s crazy. They have thought the American leadership was crazy, insane in the medical sense of the word under Biden. And that made them extremely cautious in proceeding with the conduct of war, because they didn’t know what could trigger a totally irrational and deadly response from the United States. In the case of Mr. Trump, that question does not exist.
They believe he is rational. They believe he is a dealmaker as he– would-be dealmaker, as he says of himself. But they also are perfectly cognizant of all of the difficulties that he has in steering policy, given the heavy hand of the opposition, which is Lindsey Graham allied with the Europeans headed by Mr. Macron. So knowing about all this, they have to be very cautious with Trump, but not because they doubt his commitment or have some doubts about his rationality.
Napolitano: 5:17
I want to play a clip for you. Chris, I’m pretty sure we have this– I don’t know the number; bear with me a minute– of President Trump on Air Force One on Sunday night, where he was asked about Tulsi Gabbard. Okay, we have it.
She of course, and we’ll run this clip as well– Chris has interspersed one inside the other– told a congressional committee under oath that the IC, as she calls it, the intelligence community uniformly agree that Iran is not developing and is not close to a nuclear weapon and hasn’t been since 2003. And then a reporter asked him what he thought about this. I’d like your views on this. Chris?
—————-
Reporter:
People always said that you don’t believe Iran should be able to have a nuclear weapon. But how close do you personally think that they were to getting one? Because Tulsi Gabbard testified in March that the intelligence community said Iran wasn’t building a nuclear weapon.
Gabbard:
The IC continues to assess that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon.
Trump:
I don’t care what she said. I think they were very close to having it.
—————-
Napolitano: 6:34
Under federal law, she is the principal and sole briefer of the President of the United States on intelligence matters. And he says publicly, knowing it’s going to be aired internationally, “I don’t care what she says.” How does the Kremlin view that?
Doctorow: 6:56
It might be scandalized. I don’t think the Kremlin would say, but I’m about to say now, that she should resign.
Napolitano:
I absolutely agree with you.. Scott Rittera said it. Our colleagues on this show have said it. If he says, “I don’t care what she says”, and she comes in with a briefing book three inches thick, he’s only interested in the top two pages, she should resign if he doesn’t trust her. What is his source of information if it’s superior to hers? She has supposedly the best intel sources in the world, the Five Eyes and their collaboration with Mossad. She comes to a conclusion and he says, “I don’t care”?!
Doctorow: 7:36
Judge, I wouldn’t read too much into this. I wouldn’t look for the source of his latest statement. I wouldn’t necessarily say, “Oh yes, Netanyahu or Netanyahu’s minions whispered this in his ear.” I don’t think that’s what’s going on.
I just– it’s inconvenient for him to hear this when he sees the opportunity to strike gold by joining Israel in a victorious attack on Iran. My colleagues have said various things about Trump’s personality, that he’s weak or that he’s stupid or he has no strategy. I don’t agree with these remarks, not because I think that he is a saint or a genius, nothing of the sort. I think he has another problem. And the problem is opportunism.
8:24
Now that may sound– opportunism taken by itself in general cultural or intellectual discussion is considered a negative. I’ve had experience with opportunism, people who’ve hired me and who made my career possible only because they were opportunists. And so I am personally predisposed towards opportunists. Opportunists generally are not corporate people. They are people like Donald Trump, who is an entrepreneur.
Entrepreneurs have their own belly feel for people who come in and make all kinds of crazy or brilliant proposals for investments and so forth. And they use their nose for opportunity to back or to decline these proposals. Trump is that kind of a person. So by itself, his leaning to opportunism is not necessarily a big discredit to him, but in the given case, it certainly is. The question is, is he right?
9:30
I mean, he could be right. As I’ve written today, judging by what the talk shows in Moscow were saying last night, the Kremlin thinks that Iran will get bashed, bashed if the Americans join the fight. And that is obviously the reading of the situation that Donald Trump has. And he would like to cash in by being on the winning side, not only because that is good by itself, but it’s important in keeping onside and behind him all the political forces on Capitol Hill.
Napolitano: 10:07
Is the Kremlin, can the Kremlin do anything to resist or temper the effect of that bashing?
Doctorow:
It is again, reading the, listening to the remarks of the expert panelists on Vladimir Solovyov’s show, they are not the Kremlin, they are not Mr. Putin speaking, but they give you a sense of what insiders are thinking. They believe that Russia will not intervene and they believe, sad to say, because this runs counter to what I and many of my colleagues thought, they do not believe that China will intervene. They are placing their bets on Pakistan intervening, which to my knowledge, nobody much is talking about. Apparently Islamabad has come out saying that it will blast Israel to bits with its nuclear missiles if this proceeds.
11:09
And that is believable. So I think the Kremlin is hoping maybe they have backtrack, they have back channels to Islamabad to know what’s going on. I think that would be a safe guess
Napolitano:
What is the Kremlin’s view of Benjamin Netanyahu? Do they think he’s a madman?
Doctorow:
I imagine so. I’m not sure that there are professional psychologists who are advising Mr. Putin on what he should say or do. But they do not believe he’s rational, that’s correct.
Napolitano:
Do they believe that Mossad– or they, the officials around President Putin in the Kremlin– was responsible in any way for the drone attacks on four Russian air bases and two or three Russian civilian targets a few weeks ago?
Doctorow:
Well, when I heard this, it must have been a week ago or so, expressed as a possibility by Alistair Crook, I thought, no, this cannot be. It seemed improbable to me. But now I have to take back my words. Again, on last night’s program, experts in Middle Eastern affairs were saying that it looks like the hands of Mossad were all over the Ukrainian attack on those bases. And the logic for this is what happened, the way that the attack by Israel was carried out. Part of it was drone attacks on the air defenses, knocking them out.
And those attacks were by drones prepositioned near these defense installations, very similar to the way the attack was carried out on the Russian air bases. So it would not have been possible to make this conclusion until the Israelis carried it out. And I said another thing. We go back to the same time period. It was said on the show that these drones were pre-positioned or the whole program was put into effect at virtually the same time as Spiderweb in Ukraine, that is to say 18 months ago. This was not done last week.
Therefore, the involvement– and why would Mossad get into it? Well, here’s where I disagree with Alastair. He was saying, “Oh, but the Russians always have been villains for the Jewish people going back to Tsarist times.”
13:47
That’s a very nice generalization. I won’t take it, I won’t begin to dispute it, though I think I can. The issue is not that. The issue is: the Russians were playing footsie with Iran over a comprehensive cooperation agreement which at various times in his discussion appeared to have– this goes back more than a year– appeared to have a defense alliance within it. What they actually signed does not have any alliance or common defense in it. Nonetheless, it could have touched off alarm bells in Israel that the Russians and Tehran were an alliance. And therefore they decided they are strategic enemy and they would act on its strategic assets. That is all credible.
Napolitano: 14:39
I’m going to jump in on this a little deeper in a minute, but first I want everyone to know that we’re running a chat room poll. So all of the thousands of people that chat, that text us during your show are being asked to vote on the following. Can President Trump be trusted to negotiate in good faith? Yes, no, undecided. We’ll have those results before we finish.
Is Netanyahu out of his mind that he would dispatch the Mossad against Russia?
Doctorow: 15:14
He is a desperate man, and there you have it. He’s a cornered rat. And cornered rats do things which are rational for the rat but are quite irrational for everyone depending on the rat. That’s to say the whole Israeli people are held hostage by this cornered rat who happens to have the name Netanyahu.
Napolitano:
Is there any military or political significance– and maybe this hasn’t happened; I thought it did– to the transfer of the name, the nomenclature of the conflagration in Ukraine from “special military operation” to “war on terror” or “war against terrorists”? Can you explain that to us, please?
Doctorow: 16:08
Well, a lot has been made of that in the last 10 days or so, with the reason that obviously a change such as that would mean that Mr. Putin is assuming far greater powers of control over the military, where it is acting and indeed who is acting, than he enjoys presently under the Duma-approved edict giving him a special military operation. As you know, he cannot move Russian conscripts out of the borders of the Russian Federation under the powers he enjoys now. This is one example, one small example of the ability he would enjoy to have virtual free hand in conducting the war in and against Ukraine if it were changed in designation from a special military operation, which is very circumscribed activity, to a war on terror, which has an international, is an international concept widely shared. When you’re speaking about acting against a terrorist state, all bets are off. You can do whatever you want, you can assassinate anybody you want, and so forth.
17:25
The problem with this change is: I don’t believe it ever took place. It was hinted at. Mr. Putin was suggesting that this is where we could go, but he’s not going there.
Napolitano:
This change, even though to the West it just sounds like nomenclature, obviously it triggers a lot of things legally. I would imagine, and correct me if I’m wrong, this change can only be done by the Duma, the Russian legislature.
Doctorow:
Exactly right. When the special military operation was initiated, it was with the specific voted approval of the lower house of parliament, the state Duma, ratified of course by other authorities. The point is that no such bill has been introduced into the Duma.
Napolitano: 18:13
Is the Duma basically controlled by one political party, which is headed by Vladimir Putin? I mean stated differently, if he wanted this, even though there are some legislative hoops through which he’d have to jump, couldn’t he get it just by asking for it?
Doctorow:
He could get it just by asking for it, but not because there are no opposition parties in the Duma. Their opposition parties are opposition basically on domestic policy. As regards foreign policy, all of the several parties in the Duma are aligned totally with the governing party, United Russia.
Now, having said that, as a matter of fact, the legislation, enacting legislation, which made possible Russia to stand behind the Donbas independence, the declarations of independence, and to treat them as sovereign states and to conclude treaties with them for mutual defense — all of that was initiated by the Communist Party, not by– there were two bills before the state Duma. And-
Napolitano: 19:24
Let me just copy it. There still is a Communist Party in Russia? Forgive my ignorance.
Doctorow:
There is, it’s the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. Mr. Zhuganov is a 20, 25 years leader of it. If it were– but for the historical record and all of the old timers who constitute a large part of the membership and who hold very dearly a memory of the old Communist Party. If it weren’t for that, Mr. Zyganov would do– what he should do, is rename it the Social Democratic Party of Russia, because in all respects, it is like a West European social democratic party. It fights for workers, it fights for unions, it fights for social justice.
Napolitano: 20:11
OK. And where is it on the war with Ukraine? It’s aligned with President Putin.
Doctorow:
It is, but sometimes it’s one or two steps ahead of him. It is more patriotic and more aggressive, I would say, regarding Ukraine than Mr. Putin and his United Russia party.
Napolitano:
You mentioned something earlier, and I don’t want to nitpick on words that under the special military operation, President Putin is unable to send conscripts, people who have been drafted into the military outside the geographic area of the Russian Federation. Is there a Russian manpower shortage in the military as we speak, Professor Doctorow?
Doctorow:
Oh, not at all. They’ve been running 50-60,000 new recruits. Now, these are not drafted people. These are volunteers who are signing up for a service in the area of the Special Military Operation and receive 8,000, 10,000 euros upon signing, maybe more, because I’m speaking now of the federal allotment. But each region where these people are resident has its own additional allotment. So it could be 30,000 euros that you get on signing up. It’s a very big incentive for people who don’t see more than 10,000 euros a year at their jobs. And so they have, this is an incentive, it is not the incentive to sign up, be patriotic, do your service and look after your children and grandchildren.
21:51
The signees are not 20 to 25. When you look at them, they’re more like 40 to 50. And they’re even people who are older, because not every job requires perfect physical fitness. You can send up a drone very nicely when you’re 80. So the point is that he has no problem filling the ranks of the– And additionally, they’ve gotten a bonus in the last week by Mr.
Shoigu’s visits to Pyongyang, where he met with the Supreme Leader Kim. And he agreed on 1,000 North Korean soldiers who are specialists in mine detection and disarmament, and 5,000 construction worker soldiers from North Korea to come to Korsk province and rebuild it. So that also frees up several thousand Russian combatants to do fighting.
Napolitano: 22:53
Understood, understood.
On the poll, can President Trump be trusted to negotiate in good faith? There are about 8,200 people watching us now, 1,600 have voted in the vote. Can President Trump be trusted to negotiate in good faith? No 93% Yes 6%. I guess there’s 1% in there: Not sure. That’s the … tenor over here in the US, if I can put my finger on the pulse. I haven’t seen any official polls. Even the MAGA people are, a lot of them are very dismayed about all this.
One last thing, my longtime friend and former Fox News colleague Tucker Carlson has an interview coming out later today. It was taped either yesterday or the day before, and he sent us a small clip with Senator Ted Cruz, who’s in the Lindsey Graham, Richard Blumenthal, bombed them into the Stone Age camp, meaning Iran, in the Senate.
And Tucker begins by saying, what’s the pop– to Ted Cruz, Senator Cruz, what’s the population of Iran? –
-I don’t know.
How big is it?
–I don’t know. It’s a big country.
What’s their ethnic makeup?
–I don’t know.
You want to kill these people and you don’t even know who they are?
And they go back and forth and back and forth. This is just the beginning. I’m sure there’s a lot more fireworks. Are you surprised if that is typical, a typical level of ignorance of those calling for the destruction of Iran? They don’t even have the faintest idea of the amount of human suffering and death that their calls if enacted on would produce.
Doctorow: 24:43
I can agree with you completely about our opponents. I’ve spoken of the world leaders in the West as being depraved and I don’t take back those words. They are jackals. At the same time, I urge all of our fellow thinkers to look in the mirror, not because we’re depraved, but because we are sometimes a little too liberal, a little too limited in our own perspectives and horizons.
When I studied, when I dealt with Russian dissidents– these are not active dissidents but just people in intellectual circles who are very critical, hypercritical of their government and all of its failures and corruption, and they go on and on– the unique thing about them is that they don’t think about the rest of the world, and they don’t want to hear about the rest of the world. Their concerned only to focus, they are razor-focused on the flaws they see around them, that it’s not a perfect world around them, that it’s quite an ugly world. I say the same thing to us. You have to consider that Mr. Trump is working in a world of depraved fellow leaders.
25:54
When he was at the G7, he was a minority of one with six warmongers. That is the world we live in. And before you make any judgment about Mr. Trump and whether he is trustworthy or not trustworthy, you have to consider where he is operating.
Napollitano:
It’s hard for me to accept the exact use of your phrase, he was with six warmongers. He’s not a man of peace, even though he claims he is. He’s threatening to drop 30,000 pound bombs on Tehran.
Doctorow:
We’ll see if he does that. But there is around him, there is around all of us, a controlling political elite in our country, in every European country except Hungary and Slovakia. The people in control are ugly people, ugly people, not physically, morally ugly people. They are, they all should stand before courts for their warmongering.
Napolitano: 27:09
On that I agree with you fully, but Donald Trump is migrating toward them. He’s funding a genocide in Gaza, he’s funding Joe Biden’s useless war in Ukraine, and now he’s threatening to destroy Tehran. This is a man of peace?
Doctorow:
In the middle of that, you slipped in Ukraine. The reports are that he stopped all supplies and military equipment to Ukraine. So let’s give him a break on something.
Napolitano:
Oh my goodness, if he did that, I would applaud him. It would also be front-page news. This must be, I know you wrote about it, but this must be either unknown to the West or of such recent vintage we haven’t seen it here.
Doctorow:
It is not broadcast on the “Financial Times” or the BBC. They are still hopeful, though they’re wrong, that they can bring him around. And he leaves open that possibility. Why did he sign this ridiculous trade agreement with Keir Starmer, giving them a benefit? To shut Starmer up and to let him also know that it hasn’t been completed, and he can still revise the tariffs on British steel and so forth, to keep him on the hook.
28:21
This man is more tricky than any of his critics in the liberal camp, liberal I mean, our camp, not the neoliberal camp, than we give him credit for. But he is working in a vile environment.
Napolitano:
Your analysis is so astute and so nuanced, Professor Doctorow, and I’m deeply grateful as are the viewers, now that you are sharing it with us. Thank you very much. Continue to send your notes to us. We may have to call on you if something dramatic happens in the Middle East and we need your analysis. Short of that, we’ll look forward to seeing you next week.
Doctorow:
Well, thanks so much.
Napolitano: 29:02
Thank you. Great analysis, very smart, nicely nuanced, very helpful.
Coming up later today, we’re going to call and wake him up, at 11 o’clock this morning, Max Blumenthal, and Max is my dear friend and he loves to be teased. And I’m sure he’s been up since the crack of dawn.
At three o’clock, Phil Giraldi, just back from vacation and filled with vinegar, so to speak. And at four o’clock, I’m not sure where he is, but at four o’clock, Pepe Escobar.
29:35
Judge Napolitano for “Judging Freedom”.
Transcript of WION interview of 17 June
Transcript of WION interview, 17 June
Transcript submitted by a reader
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUQw6ECkhvk
Netanyahu: 0:06
Ayatollah Khamenei tweeted almost every day “death to Israel”.
Trump:
I want to see no nuclear weapon in Iran.
WION: 0:32
Well, US President Donald Trump has left the G7 summit in Canada a day early, heading back to Washington. Trump’s helicopter lifted off from the summit venue in the Canadian Rockies to take him to his plane shortly after G7 issued a joint statement calling for de-escalation on Iran while stressing Israel had the right to defend itself in the escalating West Asia crisis.
Now the statement said, and I’m quoting, “We affirm that Israel has the right to defend itself. We reiterate our support for the security of Israel. We also affirm the importance of the protection of civilians. Iran is the principal source of regional instability and terror. We have been consistently clear that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon.”
1:22
Now earlier French president Emmanuel Macron claimed Trump was considering the prospect of a ceasefire between Israel and Iran. Calling Macron a publicity-seeking president, Trump said that his French counterpart had mistakenly said that he had left the G7 summit in Canada to go back to work on a ceasefire. The US president further said Macron had no idea why he was on his way to Washington and that it had nothing to do with ceasefire but something much bigger than that.
This is not the first time. At the 2018 summit, coincidentally also hosted in Canada, Trump left the gathering of the world leaders to meet with North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un. Now, owing to his early departure, Trump will miss important discussions, including that on the Russia-Ukraine war. But he kicked off the summit with a big statement on the war, though. He said it would never have begun had Russia continued to be part of Group of 7, which used to be Group of 8, until Moscow’s removal in 2014, following its annexation of Crimea. He called it a mistake and pinned the blame on former US President Barack Obama and former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Trump: 2:48
The G7 used to be the G8. Barack Obama and a person named Trudeau didn’t want to have Russia in. And I would say that that was a mistake, because I think you wouldn’t have a war right now if you had Russia in. And you wouldn’t have a war right now if Trump were president four years ago, but it didn’t work out that way.
WION: 3:18
All right for more we are being joined by Dr. Gilbert Doctorow, who is joining us from Berlin. He is a Russia affairs analyst and an international relations expert, author and historian. Thank you so much for joining us on the broadcast.
Now, let me begin by asking you, sir. US President Donald Trump has departed the G7 summit early amid escalating tensions between Israel and Iran. And he said that– well, it’s when President Macron has said that perhaps this, he has also mentioned the crisis in Israel-Iran– Trump said it’s something bigger. What could be bigger than a ceasefire?
Gilbert Doctorow, PhD: 4:01
Saving American military assets in the Middle East from an impending Iranian attack if the United States pursues its support for Israel by providing it with bombs capable of destroying underground Iranian nuclear facilities. The situation is very fragile. It is improbable that Iran will attack these assets, but it is a possibility.
WION: 4:30
Right. Also another thing that I want to point out was earlier Trump did say that he will impose sanctions and back to secondary sanctions on Russia because he was not happy with how Russia acted. However just recently while he was speaking with the UK prime minister, he said when asked about the sanctions, he said that Europeans should do it first and that “sanctions cost us a lot of money”. What do you make of this comment?
Doctorow:
Well, I do not follow very closely what Mr. Trump says. I follow very closely what he does. And the two are very often in sharp contradiction. He is an opportunist. He tries to make the best of things which are outside his control. The imposition of new sanctions on Russia is outside his control. It is now being steered through the Senate by opponents of Trump’s rapprochement policy towards Russia, and it has 82 senators backing it, which means that it is impossible for him to veto it if it should be passed by the Senate.
5:41
He is making the best of the situation and pretending that he is deliberating over sanctions to do this or that. I don’t believe that for a minute. But it also is a key to understanding his behavior overall. When he waffled, when he went back and forth this past weekend as to whether he knew anything about the Israeli attack on Iran, first saying he knew nothing about it, and then when it looked like he was being very successful in the first wave of Israeli strikes against Iran, then he took credit for it and said that he was in from the beginning.
He– as I say, you should not pay too much attention to what he says. What he does is often extremely important. So I don’t mean to suggest that the man is not worth paying attention to. He certainly is, but not his words.
WION: 6:37
Right. Also, since you’ve mentioned Israel, now he has been speaking of a good deal with Iran, while also asking Iranians to evacuate Iran. And we have seen Iranians do evacuate, they are evacuating. What do you make of this, what do you expect in the coming days after these statements from Trump? Do you think that has, is going to force Iran to come on the table?
Doctorow:
Yeah, he’s jumping on the seeming success of Netanyahu in the first stages of his attack on Iran. The situation is very difficult to judge. I’m not a military expert, and I will not pretend to give an evaluation. I can only say that following the remarks of people who are experts in these matters, it appears that we are in a state of war, and that is a fog of war. We, the commentators, are not privy to the real level of destruction that Iran has been wreaking on Israel. All Western reporting, not speaking about yourselves, but the BBC, the “New York Times”, the “Financial Times”, all of them highlight the level of destruction of residential properties in Israel, the suffering of individuals whose apartments have been destroyed, how somebody pulls a dog out of a wrecked house or a baby out of a wrecked house. That sort of human interest story is what this featured in the major coverage of the war by Western media.
8:14
The reality is that Iran has struck many military assets, starting with Ministry of Defense headquarters and intelligence headquarters in downtown Tel Aviv. So there is a lot of military impairment that Iran has inflicted on Israel, about which we know nothing.