Around the World at Christmas
en
December 27, 2024
TLDR: Discussion on recent events in Iran, Germany, Israel, Ukraine, Panama, Greenland, and updates on Trump's ambassadors.
In this episode of the Victor Davis Hanson Show, Victor Davis Hanson and co-host Sami Winc delve into significant global developments, focusing on Iran, Germany, Israel, Ukraine, Panama, and Trump's political maneuvers. Here’s a concise summary of their discussion, highlighting the key topics and insights.
Iran's Aggressive Posturing
Recruitment of Children for Attacks: One alarming update from Iran is their recruitment of children to conduct attacks against Israelis and Jews, particularly in Nordic countries. This signals Iran's increasing vulnerability yet escalating militarism.
U.S. Foreign Policy Dynamics: The hosts discuss how previous administrations, particularly Obama’s, have influenced Iran's nuclear ambitions. With the lifting of sanctions, Iran began to bolster its missile capabilities and financial support to terrorist groups like Hezbollah, leading up to recent conflicts such as the October 7th attacks.
The Role of Trump’s Administration
- Change in Strategy: The discussion highlights how Trump's administration brought about a shift in U.S. foreign policy that empowered Israel. This has led to significant Israeli operations that reportedly disabled Iran’s military capabilities further.
Germany's Security Challenges
Recent Terror Attack: The podcast addresses a recent bombing in Germany where a Saudi national, who had been tracked by the German Secret Service, attacked a Christmas celebration. The incident raises questions about the integration of immigrants and the rise of extremist sentiments against Western values.
Shifts in Political Sentiment: Victor notes a rising public demand in Germany for stronger policies to prevent such attacks, leading to a newfound popularity of the Alternative for Germany party, which advocates for stricter immigration controls and other measures.
Israel's Military Actions
Response to October 7 Attacks: The horrific events of October 7, where over 1,200 people were killed, have led Israel to adopt a more aggressive military stance. Hanson argues that Israel's retaliation is aimed not only at those directly involved but also at the infrastructure that supports them.
Morality in Warfare: The interview highlights interesting points made by Israeli officials regarding proportionality in warfare, especially when responding to acts of terror, which underscores the ethical dilemmas faced amidst existential threats.
Ukraine: The Pathway to Peace
Negotiations for Peace: A notable shift in the discussion revolves around peace prospects between Ukraine and Russia, particularly as Trump looks to reclaim the presidency. The podcast posits that negotiations might focus on recognizing territorial realities while maintaining Ukraine's sovereignty.
Impact of U.S. Support: The dire situation in Ukraine, with staggering casualties and infrastructure destruction, tempts all parties to seek an end to hostilities that seem unresolvable through military intervention alone.
Panama and Greenland: U.S. Strategic Interests
Panama Canal Concerns: Trump’s historic associations with Panama are revisited, highlighting concerns over China's influence in the canal and advocating for a reassessment of U.S. involvement and strategic interests in that region.
The Value of Greenland: The hosts discuss Trump's desire to reassert U.S. authority and ownership of Greenland, emphasizing its strategic importance, especially as global interests in the Arctic grow.
Trump's Ambassadors and Appointments
- Political Appointees: The episode concludes with commentary on Trump's ambassadorial appointments, emphasizing the importance of bipartisan support and expertise in critical areas, particularly in regions with complex political landscapes like Cyprus.
Conclusion
The Victor Davis Hanson Show captures the intricate relationships and challenges international players face against the backdrop of significant geopolitical shifts. From examining Iran's aggressive military posture and Europe's security dilemmas to the future of U.S.-related territories, the hosts provide listeners with a rich analysis of current events and their far-reaching implications. Listening to the full podcast may offer deeper insights and detailed perspectives on these pressing issues.
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Welcome back to the Victor Davis Hanson Show, Victor's the Martin and Nilly Anderson Senior Fellow in Military History and Classics at the Hoover Institution and the Wayne and Marsha Buskey. Distinguished fellow in history at Hillsdale College, you can find him at his website, victorhanson.com. Please come join us there. It is $5 a month or $50 a year still, but we're planning on raising the price. So get in while you still can before the new year.
So, Victor, there's lots of international news this week, and Iran is in the news again, and I know that you wanted to talk a little bit broadly about it, but they have been recruiting children to carry out attacks against Israelis and Jews in Nordic countries. So, that was the news this week, but Iran seems to be coming more vulnerable, given that Trump is in as president, so I was wondering your thoughts.
Before I do, we're trying to do a video. We haven't been doing these, and it's a new experience. And we're in the Reese Davis horse barn, where we had animals right to my backside when I was a kid. And I fashioned into a garage 25 years ago and didn't do a great job. But it's been redone, and it's a nice studio. And Sammy is here visiting in person.
Iran, well, I mean, what can you say? We start off with the idea that the Biden administration, it had this view of the Middle East, and we've talked about it before. There was Tehran, there was Beirut, there was Damascus, there was Gaza City, and there were Yemen. And they formed a bloc that was in opposition to our traditional allies, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Jordan, Egypt,
the so-called moderate dictatorships. And then we had Israel. And Obama came in with deep-seated anger at Israel and at these moderate regimes. Why? Because he felt that they weren't fully revolutionary enough.
and they didn't represent his social activism, his community organizing on a global scale. So he empowered them. How did he empower them? He immediately said he wanted daylight. I'm quoting him directly. He wanted daylight between himself, that is the United States and the Jewish state. And so he entered into this grand deal. Ben Rhodes said that the reporters know nothing.
They don't know a thing, and it was easy to create an echo chamber of disinformation. So they sold it to the Senate without, I think that was...
a number of anti-Trump senators said, we don't need to be a treaty anymore. It's not a treaty. We don't need two thirds. And I think maybe it'd been adjudicated down to 60 votes in a sense. They would have never got that. They passed the Iran deal. It was a way of saying that Iran can have the bomb in 10 years. We released $400 million at night. So my point is this, that they empowered Iran and they lifted the sanctions at Trump.
Now we're into the Biden administration that Trump implemented. And as soon as the Iranians got $100 billion, they started increasing the missiles, the funding, the terrorism from Hezbollah, the Houthis in Hamas, and the ultimate trajectory of it was, as we know, October 7th. So then Trump
as a shadow government, he kept saying, when I get in, when I get in, when I get in. So there was a sense when I'm getting that Jake Sullivan and Anthony Blinken and Joe Biden knew that if they lost the election, this experiment with empowering Iran and its surrogates would end. And Jake Sullivan said,
Pressently in the opposite path. He had the onomitis touch. He said, if I look at my Middle East portfolio, it's the quietest that we've seen in a long time. I don't worry about it, meaning this theory had worked and it led to October 7th and then he went
mute. So here we are and Iran was empowered and then we didn't do anything to stop it after October 7th, Israel retaliated. The Biden administration did two things. Remember that. It said, we are the strong friend of Israel and we support anything it does to preserve the security of the Jewish nation. And then it said, we don't like Netanyahu and we don't like Netanyahu and we don't like Netanyahu and you're not going to have
bunker busters. We're going to put an embargo in three thousand two thousand pound bombs. You can't go to Rafa. You cannot go in there. You will be can't go into Hezbollah. Do not hit Iran. Be proportional. They'll send 500 projectiles. Yeah, you send 10 or 20. Do not. That's that constant harangue. Netanyahu, who was demonized all over the world. He's a so called war criminal. He can't even go into Canada or Poland or other European countries.
because of this bogus international criminal court. So what did he do? He ignored them. And the result is now there is no Hezbollah hierarchy. They've been taken out by walkie-talkies, exploding pagers, missile strikes, targeted attacks on their leadership. There is no Hamas. It's been destroyed, basically. Nothing won't come back, but for five or 10 years, it's been destroyed.
What is the situation in Iran? It has no air defenses. Israel sent 300 jets. I can't think of the United States sending 300 planes in one wave or two waves, but they did. And the result was this. Israel is in a position that any time it wants, it can take out whatever it wants in Iran. And the role of this new administration coming in will be
We would not like to conduct an optional military engagement against Iran. That's sort of the mega creed. We don't look for dragons as slave overseas. But if you want to go in there and you need munitions, you need intelligence, you need satellite imagery, and most importantly, you need to be protected from retaliation from nuclear China or Russia. You got it from us.
And so I think Iran now was terrified. All of its surrogates, all of them are inert. Even Assad, people said you couldn't get rid of this government. He was building a nuclear reactor during the Iran-Iraq War. It was just empowered. He hosted Hezbollah. The Russians were there protecting Assad. He's gone, and Syria is going to end up like Libya. It's going to be a tribal wasteland.
And so Israel is in the most, I don't know, a Senate position that I can think of since the 67-day war. And we'll see what happens, but they have an administration coming in under Donald Trump that's very, very sympathetic.
And I would say that the next tesser in this music or the next shooter fall to use another metaphor is how long is this Iranian regime going to last when this week they instituted massive brownouts and could not supply natural gas for heating, electricity for
Lights are fuel for transportation and they're I think the seventh largest oil reserves in the world. Yeah, and I think the Iranian people will say Well, you know, we don't like the West maybe or we don't like Israel But if we're gonna spend a hundred billion dollars to supply these terrorist organizations and make us an international pariah We at least like to win
We're losing. They blew it all up. And Gaza, they blew it all up. And Hezbollah, they blew it all up in Syria. They're blowing it all up. And you mean, heck, they're even blowing it up in Tehran. So these people are not just evil or leaders, but they're incompetent. And they give our money away to be blown up by democratic nations that are fighting against terrorism. So I don't think that's a long-term sustainable.
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Well Victor, so let's turn into Germany since that was a big event, the bombing in the marketplace. And apparently this week we find out that the German Secret Service was following the Saudi National who committed the crime of bombing the marketplace. So I was wondering your thoughts on the updates for that.
We don't really know the motivation of this Saudi terrorist. He's been there for, I don't know, 20 years. And he claimed that he went to the West in Germany in particular to be an apostate.
In other words, to be an atheist, not to be a Muslim anymore, which would get him killed in Saudi Arabia. And he was pro-Western. But that narrative wasn't coherent in itself because he attacked a Christmas celebration. Because he's an atheist, he hates all religion. But he hadn't really expressed the same antipathy for Christianity that he had for Islam. So it's incoherent. We're not getting the full story. He may well just be somebody who felt that he had been
betrayed by the West that had been brainwashed. He went to the West thinking he was going to energize or fuel or double down on his anti-Islamic beliefs and he reacted in a counter-fashion.
And maybe now he's a Muslim. And who knows? But the point is they knew he was on the radar screen. He had a 17-year-old attacker at almost the same time. And then you see throughout Europe, these deliberate demonstrations at Christmas time.
There was one in Britain where people with Palestinian flags, immigrants, resident aliens, students from the Middle East got on scooters and they just kind of swarmed into Christmas crowds. So my point is this, think about the sustainability of this. You're a Western society. You've had a historical rivalry with Islam. The entire 500 million person Middle East does not work.
It is misogynist, sexist, gender apartheid, autocratic, largely anti-Semitic, anti-Western dictatorial.
Theocratic doesn't allow free expression. Nothing in the Bill of Rights anywhere in these countries. And people feel that that leads, it's not even a free market economy in most of these places. That leads to no economic security, physical security, cultural freedom, freedom of expression. So they want to go to the West.
The West then has lost confidence in its value so it doesn't want to impute or to assimilate and integrate these groups. They come and they stick to their religion or their cultural upbringing and they don't do as well as other immigrants.
and they create blocks. And the Western idea under DI and Yoke is who are we to judge that our society, which they want to join and rejected their own, is any better. So we are going to let our immigrants do whatever they want. Well, whatever they want is an increased anger at their inability to excel in these societies. Number one, and number two, the self-realization that they don't want to go back.
Because to go back is to go back to the hellholes of the West Bank or Egypt or Syria or Iran or whatever the country is. So then in this schizophrenic mode, you can't square the circle. I hate. I hate who I am because I like all the Western conference. I like to be able to protest on behalf of Hamas. I like to be able to have a brand news $10,000 scooter motorcycle. I like all of this.
But I feel guilty that I like it, because these people are decadent. They have pornography. Women bathed topless at the beach. They fornicate men hold their hands. They have these gay marriages. I don't like all this, so I'm going to attack it. But I'm going to only attack this stuff, and I hate Christianity.
I'm only going to attack it with one qualifier. Please, please don't send me back home. I don't want to go home. I want to be a Muslim in a Western country with the protective embryo around it. I do not want to be a Muslim in a country that expresses the logical trajectories and consequences of Islam.
And that was the mentality that we saw on September 11th. That's the mentality Israel saw on October 7th. What is the remedy for it? I think you should ask Donald Trump that question. I think Donald Trump is going to say, and it's going to be a model for Europe. He's going to say, if you come over here,
and you go to Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Cal State, and you break our laws, and you protest, and you chase Jews into libraries, and you occupy bridges, and you shut down government offices, or you trash the president's office, or you desecrate a veterans.
We're going to charge you and we're going to cancel your student visa or your green card. You're going to go back home and get your whole life's wish. You get to go back with people of like religion and like values. But we are not going to put up with you coming over here and disrupting our way of life.
while you're parasitical on it. In other words, you want our freedom, you want our prosperity, you want our security, so then you can act against it. We're not stupid. Freedom is not a suicide pact. And so I think you're going to see, and I think Europe is going to look at that. And by the way, Europe does not do as well as we do.
The Arab-American community has a higher per capita income, and by the second generation of citizens than does the so-called white community. I don't know what the difference between white and Arab is, but our statisticians apparently do. So the point is they prosper here.
and Dearborn Michigan's doing very well, but if they don't share the values of religious tolerance, if they don't share the idea that the secular jurisprudence of your nation prevails over religious doctrine and Sharia law, then I don't think that if they break the law, they should go home if they're not citizens. And I think Europe's gonna look at that and say, we can do that too.
After this attack that you mentioned, the alternative for Germany, that party that everybody secretly thinks has answers, but the failed Christian Democrats and green parties in Germany and their equivalents elsewhere demonizes a Hitlerian 1930s movement that this is going to, after the Reichstag fire, it will take power.
although there's nothing Hitlerian within that party. The leader of that party and that party in particular has risen to the most popular party in Germany because it promises that whatever happened this week in Germany won't happen again. And they feel that they can deport people who are not German citizens. Well, Victor, let's go ahead and take a break and come back and talk a little bit about Israel. Stay with us and we'll be back.
Welcome back. This is the Victor Davis Hanson show. You can find Victor at X. His handle is V at V.D. Hanson, and he's on Facebook, Hanson's Morning Cup. So please come join us him there if those are your social media outlets. He's also on Truth Social, and that is at V.D. Hanson as well.
Victor. So Israel, there was a 60 minutes segment that interviewed an Israeli. I'm going to assume that he was deep in the IDF because he knew everything about the walkie talkie and
pager bombing and it was an extraordinary interview. I don't like to usually sell 60 minutes because he said that this whole plan had been 10 years in the making and then I thought also that Leslie Stahl asking the Israeli if he was worried about the morality at the end was interesting as well. So your comments on either of those things or the interview in general.
Well, if you were in Israeli and you digested October 7th, it wasn't just that 1,200 people were massacred and slaughtered. There were two other force multipliers of that horror. One was we had seen things on screens and had firsthand accounts of things that were medieval.
They were beheading people. They were mass raping and shooting the woman, killing her, murdering her as they raped her. They were putting babies in ovens. They were torturing people.
Number one, and they did all of that to the glee, to the glee of people in the West Bank and in Gaza. So when everybody says the poor Gaza people have been hijacked by Hamas, and they voted one time as always happens, and you get election one time. And they did vote for Hamas, and they had a high degree of support after.
October 7. And had Israel not replied in the way they did, right now Hamas would be lording over the Middle East. And they would say we are the paradigm to follow. But that didn't happen. So Israel said
This is an existential attack on us. And if we have another one, we're going to lose our nerve. We're going to we're going to unravel. Remember, this is a trauma. This is a Holocaust-like event. More Jews were killed on October 7th than any day since the days of Auschwitz. And we're not going to let it happen. And we're going to go after every single person who did it and every single person who shields them, whether they're in hospitals or mosque or schools on top and whether
They think, you know, I have an apartment building, Hezbollah put a big missile in. It's not my fault. Well, it can get out. It is your fault. So that's what they did. And in the mind of Leslie Stahl's morality, if the victimize replies against the victimizer to try to reestablish deterrence so that the victimizer doesn't do it again and doesn't do it to the helpless and innocent elsewhere,
then they're culpable. They have to be perfect to be good. The original victimizer doesn't. They just have to have some cause that they can mouth. So that was the comment, the editorialization that would kind of sabotage their whole interview. Otherwise, it wasn't too bad. What the Israelis were saying, and I think these people were likely from either IDF intelligence, as you said, or from Assad, is
Once we created this dummy company, and once we had third parties who didn't know that it wasn't genuine, sell pagers, and once we figured out that they were going to be big and to operate them when they text morning, they would have two hands, and we had calibrated the size of the explosion, so it wouldn't kill bystanders in almost 99% of the cases.
That was a time bomb. And we didn't know when that we should use this time bomb, but think of the thinking behind it. The Israelis were saying Hezbollah is considered indomitable. You can't attack them. Lebanon is the graveyard of foreign countries. You can't go in there. So they had kind of a escape clause. They said,
We're going to go in there because we have this sleeping time bomb, and we didn't know when it would come in handy. It's handy now, and if we don't use it, we'll lose it. So 10,000 pagers in theory had that device in them. I don't know how many went off four or 5,000, followed by the walkie talkies often at funerals for the people who were in charge of the pagers. And it was very insidious, if you think about it very
abstractly, they took out all the people who were organizing on this communication change to destroy Israel. Number two, they didn't just kill them as the guests said on 60 minutes. They maimed them in almost all cases. I think there were 30 or 40 deaths. So the person then it really taxed the Hezbollah health care system. Number three, it identified everybody
who was a Hezbollah terrorist or a better of terrorism, including the Iranian ambassador to Lebanon, who I think lost parts of both hands. And he's in this ridiculous situation where he's on the camera with bandages. Well, why do you have bandages on your hands? And then fourth, where were they when these
So you have terrorists, and terrorists do what terrorists do. They conduct terrorist activities. And what do they do? They go to places where you conduct terrorist activities. And when you let these devices off, a large percentage of them are conducting terrorism in terrorist places, like apartment buildings where they're in charge of looking at the inventory of missiles headed toward Israel.
or open fields, farmhouses, and barns out in the country where there's drones and they have tasked individual Hezbollah, uh, lieutenants to make sure that nobody comes in and tampers with their offensive arsenal. So when that goes off, the Israelis know exactly where they are because they have
They have electronic surveillance of their own machines. And so not only did they take out the hierarchy, then they followed that with about three weeks of intensive missile and bomb attacks. And they took out most of the Hezbollah arsenal, the dreaded 100,000 missiles.
It was kind of a U.S. State Department. You can't talk about his Hezbollah. Look at those pictures. These are not Hamas. These are not the Palestinian authorities. Look at these people. This is not like the Egyptian army. These people are absolute killers. Look at the way they march. Look how big they are. Look how angry they are. And they have 100,000 missiles. It's just an insoluble problem. No, it's not solid. And so Israel solved it. And now when they don't have their terrorist partner in Syria,
And Iran is broke. And I don't think Iran's going to be able to say to Hezbollah, we're going to give you another, I don't know, 100 billion and we're going to have to cut off all the gas and oil and electricity for our own people to subsidize you. And by the way, I don't know how we're going to get it there. Israelis are going to shoot it down if we try to fly it in. They're going to sink us if we try to come in by sea. We have to go to the ports where the Russians protected.
Or our ships and then smuggle it in through oh wait, we can't there's no Syria and the Russians are gonna leave that base
So now there's just one final question, and that is what Israel is going to do with Iran. And I think they're debating two or three things. Well, we have the ability now we've proven to take three or 400 jets and successive waves and destroy all of their nuclear facilities. It might take a week, it might take 10 days, but they can't stop us. So why don't we do it? A, we're not sure if they have a nuclear weapon.
And they're intimidating us with that mystery that we don't want to be intimidated, but if they have a nuclear weapon and they keep acting like they do, so they're waiting for the intelligence. Number two, they don't quite know the timing. Is it better to do with Joe Biden asleep at the wheel? Kamala Harris doesn't know. There's nobody in charge. We'll just go ahead and do it.
but maybe we need the United States to protect us from China and Russia. So should we do it on Trump's watch and then kind of maybe in danger, Trump's MAGA, Jacksonian agenda? And then number three, if we were to do that,
Would it help or hurt the Iranian people? Would they rally to the side of the theocracy or would they say, good, take it, take out? We don't want nuclear weapons. We hate these SOBs. We're glad you did it. And that's these are known unknowns and they don't quite know the answers yet, but they will soon.
Yeah. Well, let's turn to the Ukraine. It seems now that Donald Trump is the elected president or the president to be the elected president to be Putin and Zelensky are both talking about peace negotiations. And in fact,
In Foreign Affairs, which is a journal and political journal, they had a interesting title to an article, a pathway to peace in the Ukraine. And I was, I was shocked because we haven't seen that kind of a title or optimism anywhere up until Donald Trump's election. And the article, of course, said that Donald Trump has to be realistic and patient that
The Ukraine has security concerns and the turns it needs to worry about. And Russia has territorial security concerns as well. And the big thing, of course, is should NATO be on the ticket in the peace negotiations for Ukraine or not? And after reading that article myself, I felt like they're pretty much saying, you know,
leave the Ukraine out of NATO because it's just Europe is just not going to work that way. But I was wondering your thoughts on this current. We've discussed the parameters. I wrote up two or three essays about it. I think even the bipartisan Washington Nexus believes that there's a plan.
So you start with a premise that there's 1.3 to 1.7 dead million missing Ukrainians and Russians. And the infrastructure of Ukraine is about ready to collapse. And of a country of 40 million, maybe 12 million aren't even there. And they can't draft people either because of resistance or they need them in the economy. So the army is very skilled, but it's not growing, it's shrinking.
So everybody wants some kind of end to this madness. The Battle of Stalingrad from August of 1942 to when the Sixth Army under General Paul's collapse in early February of 1943 cost about a million dead on both sides and wounded. And we are getting very close if we have not already exceeded that. We have exceeded the Battle of the Psalm of World War I on Europe's doorstep.
Nobody wants us to go on. This kind of Biden-esque idea that I'm going to give them all these weapons, but...
I'm not going to quite get him enough to win because that would be very dangerous. He doesn't have a plan to end it. We're just fueling this war so that they don't lose, but the dead and wounded and the destruction of Ukraine accelerates. Everybody said the sanctions would bankrupt Putin by now. He would have a coup. He would have mass defections. Hasn't happened yet. He's got 145 million people. Ukraine's got 30 million left.
He's got 30 times the area of natural resources. He's got 10 times the economy, and he's being fueled by Turkey, Iran, North Korea, but especially China and Lincoln, not with India. So if it's not Iran, put it this way, Ukraine is not going to militarily defeat Russia.
The only way it could, if NATO and the United States gave them the types of weapons that would threaten the homeland of Russia in the way that Khrushchev did to Cuba by giving them the ability, supposedly, very quickly to launch a nuclear strike against the United States, or even a conventional strike. And John F. Kennedy said, that's intolerable, and we'll go to DEF CON 1, if you do that. So I don't think they're going to do that.
So the outline is Russia tells the Russian people, the Russian hierarchy of Vladimir Putin says, well, we were gonna lose the dome baths in Crimea. And so I went in there and they have been ours in the Crimea since the 1780s and the dome baths was always Russian and Khrushchev just for administrative purposes allowed there to be a correction. And by the way, Ukraine
exist as Ukraine because we stole it from from them. We invaded Poland in 1939 and took the eastern third of Poland and we didn't give it back because we wanted Ukraine to be Russian. So they lecture us on borders, borders, borders, borders, the one, the
Western one-third of your country was Roman Catholic Polish speaking. In the 1945, even your friends Churchill and Truman said, we can't get it back. Paul, so you've got to go in and ethnically cleanse all of those damn, excuse me, darn Germans.
And 13 million of them walked back from East Prussia and Pomerania, and that's the Poland of today. So the point I'm making is everybody knows the borders are fluid and historical claims back and forth, irredentist agendas, who knows which has the purest of the contending parties. So Putin's going to say,
We say, Tom's going to say to Vladimir, you get to have Donbas and you got to have Crimea. That's why you went to war to institutionalize what you stole. But we want you to go back to the embarkation point of February 24th, 2022. In exchange, we will make a DMZ and Ukraine will not threaten you and you will not threaten Ukraine. There's other considerations, Vladimir. We will not put them in NATO.
but they're not going to disarm, as you've suggested. They're going to be armed to the teeth. If you want to go back in, you're going to the next time find even a better arm. It took them a year and a half to be armed in the way they are. They are armed like that.
So if you try to go back in, you're going to meet a level of opposition that didn't aggregate until maybe the second half of the war. They're ready now. It'll be the graveyard of Russia for you'll just start it again. But they will not be in NATO. So you go back and tell the Russian people, only Vladimir Putin institutionalized Crimea and Don Bauss. Only Vladimir Putin went to war to show you that Ukraine would not be part of NATO.
And Vladimir Putin out of this catastrophe was able to forge a strategic relationship and pull China into our camp. And then Ukraine says, well, what do we get?
Well, you get your crane. You saved it out of your heroism, and you were never going to get Donbass and Crimea back. Besides all the historical arguments that tended to make those Russian-majority-speaking areas anyway, and by the way, Crimea after the end of the Cold War for three years, I think from 89 to 92, was an independent country. And it was just a question, would you steal it before the Russians stole it? And you stole it before they did. Otherwise, it was independent.
The dome bass was even more disputed, but Vladimir Putin took that under Barack Obama and he kept it under Donald Trump and he expanded that under Joe Biden when he attacked Kia. But going back to those three administration, not one said it's the position of the United States to regain the dome bass or crime mail for Ukraine by force. We didn't say that.
So we say to Ukraine, you saved your country. You were never going to get back. Don't bash. You're going to get all of this arms in Europe and the world will help rebuild your country. And you'll have a demilitarized zone. And maybe you can out wait, out wait.
Putin and maybe you'll be more stable than Russia. Then left on said we just won't talk about how we got into this place and whether or not prior administrations under secret protocols, particularly the Obama administration, had given Ukraine the
the impression that they would be part of NATO and that the United States would determine how liberal and democratic would be elected people in Ukraine and the EU together with the United States would force changes upon the Ukrainians they may or may not have liked. I'm talking now about the
This shadow of events of 2014, 15, and 16 when the government was overthrown in Ukraine. And then finally, we won't talk about whether it's wise to put NATO right on the border of Russia. We've got to remember one thing about the Russian mindset. They were invaded by Charles XII.
They were invaded by Napoleon. They were invaded by Hitler. Yes, they won all of those wars, but the strategy of Russia to survive is not to use their army against a Western power after they're invaded. It is to retreat and devastate and destroy themselves almost to the point where they're non-existent so that the attacker runs out of supplies. They did that with Napoleon, they did that with Hitler.
So they, after World War II, they stole all of those independent Eastern European countries. They lied about everything and they broke every agreement they had made at Potsdam and Yalta and they created the Warsaw Pact. And the Warsaw Pact then was liberated and we gave them
I don't know, messaging that it would be like Finland and like Austria, it would be non-aligned. And then we put many of them, if not almost all of them, into NATO. And so now that NATO, in the case of many of these countries, and I support that because they have historical vulnerabilities against the Russians, now NATO is at the doorstep of Russia. And Russia believes that they ever got in a continental war.
They would have armies right on their border as Hitler did and Napoleon. They wanted some buffer zone. So I think in the case of that historical reality, we don't quite realize that now we're not talking just about Eastern Europe. We're talking about a country inside Russia where over 3 million Russian citizens died in World War II against the Germans.
And Crimea itself was 100,000 Chrymeans were killed in the siege of Crimea when Baumonstein and Army Group South besieged the city. So the idea that Ukraine then would follow Eastern Europe, this is the first time that a province of the old Soviet Union and the Zardum would go into an alliance against Russia. And I don't think that's going to be possible.
The best we can do now is stop the killing, have a DMZ, keep it out of NATO, give it enough weapons to deter Russia, try to give them a bone that he can have his own boss in Crimea. They're going to get anyway and then break up this nexus of China and Russia.
Yeah, Victor, let's take our last break here and then come back and talk a little bit about Trump's intimations about countries beyond our borders. Stay with us and we'll be back.
Welcome back to the Victor Davis Hanson Show. So Victor Trump has been making noise about reclaiming the Panama Canal from China is the implication, although the link is a little bit more complicated than that. And that also he wants ownership of Greenland and then to buy it from Denmark. So I was wondering your thoughts on those two things.
Well, let's start with Greenland, the easier one. Greenland is almost a continental sized country, and it's nominally controlled by Denmark, which is a tiny minuscule country.
And it's getting a warmer climate. It was called Greenland because of the earlier stage of global warming. You read the Nals saga, or you read all of these Icelandic sagas. In that period, there was a strip along the coast that was sort of like Europe. And that may happen again. But the point I'm making is it's full of natural resources. In World War II,
The US had bases in Iceland and Greenland because that allowed them to control from both sides of the Atlantic against the U-boat threat. So it's a strategic piece of real estate.
And the Chinese and the Russians have made it clear that they are violating at times their international waters. They go from international waters into Greenland's waters. And Denmark cannot do anything about it. So Trump comes along and says, he didn't say, this is a subtext. He has his advisors and they said, you know,
China is trying to encroach on Western territories and they're going into Greenland now and they see an anomaly in world history, a little tiny country with sort of a post-modern colony.
going back to, I don't know, the ninth or tenth century I did. And this is not sustainable. This is not tenable because they don't have the wherewithal protected. And we are protecting a NATO, so he might as well own it. But he's not going to go to invade it. He just trolls the Danes and trolls the Danes and trolls the Danes and Greenland already has an independence movement. So they may want to get out anyway. So what he's now injecting himself in, and he's trying to draw the attention to
Hey Denmark, why don't you give us a break and give us a little praise because our fleet and our military that anchors NATO keeps Greenland safe and free and you don't.
And in name, really, it's been a protector to the United States. Not you. You don't have the wherewithal to protect it. So from time to time, I'm going to remind you about that. So you don't get on your hind legs and trash Trump all the time when we do so much for you. Now, as far as Panama, the same theory holds. Remember that people had said that we stole the Panama Canal free and clear. We had a coup.
At the turn of the 19th century, in the 20th century, we got a puppet government. We went down there and we spent
in today's dollars, hundreds of billions of dollars, and there were deaths, many of native laborers. We created the canal zone. It was an independent entity within Panamanian sovereignty, and we connected the East and West Coast. The Panama Canal was created so that the Eastern part of the United States could communicate with the Western part.
even though there was a transcontinental railroad, heavy shipping, and it worked wonderfully. And then there were these nationalist movements in the 60s of decolonization, and this was reinterpreted by the Panamanians, even though it was well-run, and no other country had been more magnanimous than the United States. But the idea of Yankees there, and this beautiful canal zone of Medicia poverty, da da da da da, Jimmy Carter gave it back.
and there might have been violence if he's not. Trump comes in and says, you know what?
You people in Panama, your Marxist government, you're a fraud. You are not obeying the letter of the law. We were to be given preference. We are paying your jacked up prices. You have invited the Chinese Communist in or our existential enemy to operate the canal. They are operating it and redoing it in fashions that reflect their strategic purposes and agenda, which is anti-American.
So I'm supposed to sit here and say that you're an independent sovereign nation that honors the letter and the practice of the Canal Treaty, which we gave you.
And I'm not gonna do it anymore. I'm just going to troll you. I'm gonna troll you nonstop. I'm gonna troll you until you return the Panama Canal to its original intent. It was a method of the United States communicating from coast to coast by sea and to facilitate commerce and military security with some of our warships that can fit through it.
and you violated that. I know you're a sovereign country, but you have no historical appreciation of the magnanimity we gave you. And then he's also the subtextives. And by the way, when you had another autocrat who was sending drugs to our country, Manuel Noriega,
We went down there and we took him out with a very small force. And we tortured him by making him listen to Barry Manlow music. That's right. As we surrounded his house. And we're capable. We have singers that are even worse than Barry Manlow. And we're going to violate the Geneva Convention. We do. And we're going to make you listen to, I don't know, JZ. A bunch of rap singers. Yes.
When Kane West and Jay-Z get done with you, you will hand it back. So he's trolling them. And he wants the left to say that he's an imperialist. I think part of this is Trump.
People understand him. I mean, do I always approve? Does Sammy approve? Do you approve when he has a video of an obese empathetic Chris Christie eating McDonald's as the sky is full of drones bringing more Big Macs to it? As if it's the Chris Christie Air Force that supplies him with his voracious appetite or shows pictures of him on the beach.
I think they expect us to lose our humor when we look at those things, but it's hard. Donald Trump understands human humor. He does, and he's trying to act irreverent, and he's trying to be funny. And yes, it's not sober and judicious. Yes, he doesn't bring the same gravitas as George A.W. Bush did.
But that being said, for all of his Randy behavior, he did not do what Bill Clinton did. And he brought that clear. Remember in the October 2nd, 2016 debate, I think, excuse me, it was, I think it was October 28th, something. October 9th, it was two, three weeks before the election when we heard the same lectures that Donald Trump had said,
with the Hollywood, Access Hollywood tape. You remember, grabbed them in the blank and he was talking to Billy Bush. The Bush descended before a show. It was over ten years old and they dug that tape up and put a little timer on it to go off right before the second debate with Hillary Clinton.
and national review said that he should resign. Well, I don't quite think they said that. They said, you know, everybody down ticket, just divorce yourself from Donald Trump and come out and talk him. And then I think, I think with seven or eight senators, John McCain's group, not in my name, he's got to step down. In other words, we'd rather lose and turn the whole thing over to Hillary Clinton for eight years.
And then I guess that was Stephen Bannon's heyday because he brought Paula Jones and Kathleen Willy and Kathleen Sheehan. And he had another one, the woman who was raped and unfortunately in the restaurant, she was owned a restaurant. Oh, my God. One eat a broad rate. Oh, yes. And he put all four of them and he tried to, I'm doing this by memory, but he tried to bring them into the family section at the debate.
each candidate got their guess and they were going to be right there. The point was even better though, they came in and then the sponsors of the presidential debate, oh my God, look at this, this is not fair and they made them sit in the back but the media caught them there and then Hillary's face was, oh my God. And so...
The point was, don't lecture me in a sanctimonious fashion. I may be a sinner, and he said he was sorry. It was locker talk. But I will not conduct those types of activities in the White House and the way that Franklin Roosevelt or John Kennedy, but especially Bill Clinton. And that's what he does. He tries it. He wants people on the left to get sanctimonious. How dare you? And then he replies to it. So he wants to say,
Kamala, you never worked at McDonald's. You can't even name the location. There's no records that you did. You have no evidence. Just show us one paste. Don't go around the country. And soberly and judiciously lie to us. And I'm going to point that out. So then he goes to McDonald's. How dare he? That's horrible. Well, no, it wasn't horrible. It was trolling her. It was funny.
And he had the two most iconic slogans or moments and not slogans of the entire campaign and that, as I said before, that Indian-American couple, he said to her, we're just ordinary to Trump, you're just, no, you're not ordinary. And then his wife said, and you took a bullet and he said, you know, I guess I did.
And those were reflective moments that were genuine and authentic. So he's capable of that. That's more who he is. But these are trawling incidents. And they have a purpose. They're trying to rebalance an asymmetrical world. And he's trying to tell the world,
that our historic investment and the Panama Canal that our forefathers thought was essential to the security of the United States, and which we in our pride, our stupid magnum, any judge any way you want, handed over this invaluable investment with the idea that it would be neutral.
and that United States would get first passage given her historic relationship. And it's a two or three billion dollar money maker for Panama. And what do you do? You invite the Chinese communist in whose whole purpose of running this canal in the same fashion. If you look at the map of the world, it's got the same type of apparat in the pyress and it's trying to get control of the world's choke points. And you did this and don't lie to me that you don't know what you're doing.
But he's not going to invade, but he wants people to understand what Panama's doing and put pressure on them. Yeah. Well, the last thing about Donald Trump is that he is appointing ambassadors. And I know that you had a few that you wanted to talk about. So one, the two, what they weren't ambassadors, both. I thought that I was on the American Battlefield Commission. Yes.
the American battlefield, excuse me, not battlefield, my gosh, losing my mind, the American Battle Monuments Commission. And I was a George W. point me and I got fired. It was a nonpartisan physician. I did visit, I think, 10 of this cemeteries on my own expense. I never build the government, although they gave you a diplomatic passport and an expense account to inspect them. It was very valuable. I talked to the directors of those cemeteries when I was on the board.
I wrote about them. But we have somebody, Tom Conner, a professor at Hillsdale, who's retired, but this is the point. He's an expert on World War I and World War II. And more importantly, no one had rather really understood the invaluable work that the Battlefield, the Battle Monuments Commission did. He wrote a book about it. He researched all of the archives. It was formed after World War I. John Pershing was one of the directors of it, the original director.
And they had all sorts of famous generals, and it's a wonderful organization. Anybody goes to those cemeteries, sees how immaculate and honorific they are, hollowed places, but it doesn't come naturally.
the marble, the landscaping. It's very expensive. It has to be controlled to the very detail. So you want somebody. I understand that donors, when I was on the commission, most of the people were donors. And that turned, I think, Max Cleveland took over and the Obama people, they waited a long time. They left it open for about a year. And then they bought their largely donors. But I think Donald Trump could really show
a country that if he appointed someone who was the most knowledgeable person about the traditions and the operation of the commission, who was a retired PhD, Carolina PhD, and a Hillsdale, which I think speaks for itself, and a Trump supporter.
that that would be, that would be unique and the commission would be wider known and it would reflect well on Trump. They are attacking him for these celebrity, um, yes, mostly Kimberly Gore, Gore for, Gore for in Greece. I lived in Greece. So that was especially close to me, that appointment, um, and it had a little wrinkle in it.
That in 2000, as I said, 2005, 2015 or 16, when Greece was bailed out by the EU, she went on the five in a series of disparaging marks, characterized the Greeks as irresponsible, even lazy or slothful, and therefore deserve to be cut loose. Let them declare bankruptcy and get them out of the EU.
And they remember that. That's a tapos now in the Greek newspapers, especially the left-wing ones. But on the other hand, I know, and then the other tapos is that she was Don's girlfriend, and he wanted to break up whether he has a new model. And one of the most effective ways of cutting that Gordon knot would be to dispatch her to a very enviable place, known in the jetset crowd from everything from Santorini to Meekonos.
and therefore she's frivolous or she was a payoff. But actually, Kimberly Gopher, I've been on her podcast. She's very intelligent. She has a law degree. She was first lady of San Francisco when Gavin Newsom, her first husband was mayor and she had a lot of experience
in handling and arranging diplomatic visits to San Francisco. And she is a media personality that made it in the rough and tough tumble world of entertainment news. So she has the skill sets and that she could be a good ambassador, even though she doesn't have experience. The ambassador that's there now was a, I don't understand this actually,
I think Trump allowed him to come through a stay from the Obama administration, and then the Biden administration kept him on, it could be wrong. But I'm getting up to something. Almost all of these ambassadorships have been taken, but I wrote a letter to a person in the transition committee that I thought that Max Nikias, the former president of USC,
who had created this huge renaissance at USC. When I was in high school, it was UCLA was the academic Los Angeles campus, along with Caltech down in Pasadena. And USC was OJ school. It's where the pretty girls were, the athletes were. UCLA campus was upscale and Westwood. USC was on the edge of Watts, very dangerous neighborhood.
But in fact, under Max Nikias, they raised $6 billion. They brought in stars all over the academic landscape. They built up all the professional schools and they toughen the requirements. And it was almost as he left his tenure, it was more difficult to get into USC than UCLA. And the SAT scores of incoming freshmen and the GPAs
were comparable to Stanford's. And then a series of things happened. The Me Too came in. And Max, I've known him about 25 years. He's a very sober guy, and so he doesn't
He doesn't get caught up in the panic. So the MeToo came and there was a person on campus, was a gynecologist, I think, the public health director and there were accusations. So he set up a committee to investigate. They wanted him immediately fired and the DA to come in. DA looked at the case. Max retired onto this pressure. He just didn't want to fight it.
I don't blame him. There was also people that were around him, as they were in California, and that's my university, Stanford. Remember, we had a person at Stanford who was selling admissions to get, I think there was kind of a bogus, you can be a yachtsman or a boater or something like that.
and then we'll get you in on an athletic scholarship even though you don't make the minimum. That was happening all over California, mostly by Hollywood celebrities. Some people got into Stanford and USC. I can tell you they never really fired anybody at Stanford except the people who were actually involved, not the president, not the provost.
But Max was a conservative, and that was his sin, that he was an actual conservative that had, you know, he wasn't allowed conservative, he wasn't an activist, but it was pretty well known on the USC campus by the faculty that he was a conservative, and he was an anomaly.
So when the Me Too came, they said fire him, he wouldn't do it. And so he stepped down. But my point about the ambassadorship is he's an engineer. He's got an analytical mind. He was very highly regarded, he's well published, but more importantly, he ran.
this huge university and he met with people all over the world and he was able to get along in a way even though the Los Angeles Times went on a vendetta as it does a lot of people, clearly myself I think in a book review, but he was able to get along with the Hollywood set, the Los Angeles Times people, all of the left wing
People that surround Los Angeles that are movers and shakers within the LA community, even though they knew he was a conservative. But the key thing is that he grew up in Cyprus. He was a refugee, not quite a refugee, but when Turkey invaded 1974, his home was on the northern part, the most beautiful part.
of the island, and he had to flee to the south, and then he went to Athens, Greece was educated, came to the United States with nothing, nothing, and became a professor of engineering, and then went to department chairman and then assistant dean, dean provost all the way, worked his way up into a pinnacle.
And so he's the person who understands how to operate huge budgets to deal with all these diverse communities that you have to students, faculty, donors, alumni, Los Angeles, which is larger than Cyprus, and then in addition to that.
He's a loyal conservative Trump supporter, and in addition to that, he's a native of the island. He understands the whole strategic...
He grew up with the strategic challenges of Eastern Mediterranean. And that is, of course, there's now Russian oligarchs that have been trafficking in Cyprus. You've got a wonderful new government in Cyprus that wants to be pro-Western. It wants to renew its alliance with Israel and Greece to have this natural gas pipeline into Europe, which would be wonderful, which the Biden administration canceled. And so you need somebody who knows the island, who's got
demonstrable administrative skills, who is a native Cypriot, but a very loyal American citizen and always has been, and he fluent his native languages Greek, and he knows all of the people in the Cypriot government, and he would be exactly what Donald Trump needs right now when he's under criticism for not having meritocratic
appointees that he got some pro to go in there. And some of you are going to say, well, we should have State Department people. Well, we saw the State Department. I can I'll never forget the Fiona Hill testimonies during the Venment caper that led to Donald Trump's impeachment, whether you like it or not, the State Department below the the political appointments of Marco Rubio will be anti-Trump.
It's just the culture. It's the mother's milk of the State Department. But you could get somebody better qualified than a State Department diplomat that knows the language and culture who would be loyal to Donald Trump and would be a wonderful ambassador. And that was the argument that I use. I don't know if it's going to, if anybody listened to it, but it's the hours late. The appointment to Cyprus was probably being made by the time you hear this.
You know, a good movie that showed the State Department for what it was, was that 13 hours, that recreation of the Benghazi debacle under the Obama administration, and with Hillary Trump as the head of the State Department. And the State Department officials were just incompetent. I just remember the Vennan hearings. Here you were sitting here.
And the house was trying to find out what happened. And the whole thing was out there and nobody could do anything. It was this Alexander Vinman had a security clearance. He's sitting in the National Security Council. He's a
American expatriate Ukrainian, Ukraine has been knee-deep in charisma, has been giving, what, a million dollars a year to a crack cocaine addict who's been funneling it to the former vice president of the United States who's going to run against Donald Trump. And Donald Trump is worried that
This government, which has been given millions of dollars in military aid, is utterly corrupt. So on a phone call that's classified to Mr. Zelensky, he says, you know, I want to put a hold until I know what's going on. You've got a guy on your payroll who's getting a million dollars, who's tied up with this corrupt Biden conglomerate. And more importantly,
You fired Victor Slochen, your independent prosecutor who was looking into this corrupt family and Hunter Biden. And Joe Biden is bragging about it in a Council of Foreign Relations meeting. SOB.
I told him, here's my watch, I want him, and they fired him. So clean it up, and I will approve offensive weapons for you, which by the way Barack Obama never did, and which Joe Biden would put a hold on when he came in. It was so rotten. And what did Mr. Vinman do?
When he discussed, he had this call. He called a friend, Eric Ceramala, said, Oh, by the way, don't mention me. I'm breaking the law by disclosing a class, but you can be a whistleblower. But we all got to go talk to Adam Schiff.
in the House Intelligence Committee. And that's what they did. And so they cooked up this entire impeachment scam. And then then everybody, he was supposed to be the hero of the left. He never came forward. How dare you suggest that I call that? Remember that? I think Devin Nunes asked him that. Aren't you really the person that got
the so-called whistleblower. And by the way, whistleblowers remember were deified. How dare you even question that was? The left said they had to be sacrosanct. Then we had two whistleblowers, two IRS devoted public servants that said, Hunter Biden is getting a sweetheart deal. We've never seen such egregious IRS violations, millions of dollars that he's liable for, and they're cooked up this deal. How dare you say that?
You're a traitor. You're dishonest. You're a mole. No, they're whistleblower, just like Mr. Benjamin. And then what's happened to the whole thing? Donald Trump was impeached. They got their wish.
the Donald Trump Council as Barack Obama did? No, he gave them the Jalvans before he was impeached. The Jalvans turned in to be mostly one of the reasons why the Ukrainians saved Kiev. But had been up to Obama or Biden, they wouldn't have had Kiev. It was that ability to destroy Russian tanks that were marching on the Capitol with troops that saved them. Donald Trump was the one that allowed that, no matter. And then was he the
the upright patriot that had engineered this from the shadows. I don't know about that. He, after he stepped down, he and his wife, I think, excuse me, his sister-in-law,
tweeted that on one of the Trump assassinations, it was too bad he wasn't shot. Think of that. And then Venman set up, quote unquote, a nonprofit corporation, which he directed, whose main duty was to transfer weapons through his agency to Ukraine. In other words, he was an arm merchant.
Then he bragged as well that he had been offered. He said two things during those hearings very quickly. He said, don't ever suggest that my patriotism is questioned.
Decorated veteran and I and I had a wound and I yes, we appreciate that but don't suggest that by Bringing the topic up or somehow disloyal ourselves because you bragged that the Ukrainian government offered you that to be defense Secretary of their country Why you were here as an American citizen? That's a little strange and then after the whole thing is over the whole and broadly is over the whole disaster is over and
then you end up making an arms company using your ties with the anti-Trump Biden administration to funnel weapons with a little price added on to Ukraine. And when you look back at all of those people in the State Department that were testifying, they were not sober and judicious people. We've got to remember that they were involved in spreading the dossier. Yes, they were.
And in addition to that, and this new one was involved with the spreading of the dossier, and in addition to that, the ambassador
from Ukraine to the United States in 2016, during the campaign wrote an op-ed, why you must vote for Hillary Clinton. And she was put up to that by the State Department. So I have zero confidence in the impartiality and professionalism of many of the State Department, life professionals.
Just listen to them give press conferences and see how much you trust them. And you're right to mention the entire Benghazi disaster.
While we were at the end of our show, Victor, and we did make it through, we're videotaping this show. And we hope that it all works out. This is the first time we are in Victor's ex-barn here. So I'm sitting right near the horse manger. I know we're kind of amateur. So bear with us. I know that I'm going to get a lot of emails. Victor, look at the camera. Victor, where makeup, Victor, you look awful. Victor, this looks like it's a,
What would it be? Fly by night? It is a fly by night. I don't have a lot of stuff here. I just want to communicate to you guys. Well, we have a comment on the website on one of your ultra articles, the turning point on the road to Trump's election, which we just recently put up.
The train derailment in East Palestine highlights the greater possibility of such accidents because of the increased reliance on railroads and trucks rather than pipelines to transport combustible substances like oil.
Counseling the Keystone pipeline favors investors in rail transport and creates less flexibility in securely transporting oil over thousands of miles. What happened in East Palestine isn't surprising. Both the accident and the Democrats' desire to ignore those affected by it.
It was a denial of what was needed and an unwillingness to admit that the policies they support those least able to deal with the impact of such an accident. That's a very, oh, that's a very analytical and an eloquent letter. And he's absolutely right.
transporting oil across or any hazardous material across long distances is very dangerous. But in the case of fossil fuels, oil, natural gas, it makes a lot more sense to do it by pipeline than railcar. Yeah. The question very quickly is in response to this series on riding on ultra right now. And I'm trying to figure out how it was at Donald Trump.
After January 6, he had seven senators as he was a private citizen vote to convict him. These are Republican senators. He had 10 Republican House members vote to initially impeach him. He had people wanting to put him in jail.
He was pulling about 33%, 34% when he left office. How did he come from the abyss and climb out and soar up to destroy his primary rivals? After the Marlago raid, after the five criminal and civil suits, after the impeachment, the second impeachment, the trial, the effort. And so I'm trying to look at iconic moments. The first ultra was on Latita James.
And that, excuse me, the first one was on the August Marlago rate of 2022 that had never happened before. That's when they spread these files on the ground and photographed them and said it was insecure. And they knew the entire time that Joe Biden
was vulnerable to the same criminal, if it was criminal liability. And they would only appoint a special prosecutor after they went into Morlago. And then, remember, Corinne John Pierre lied about it and said, oh, Joe was looking at all of his things. And he realized after 30 years, he had classified files. And he said, oh, my God, I'm a lawful person. I'm not like Donald Trump on my FBI just rated because he was just about ready to announce his presidential campaign.
So I'll go volunteer and say, I found classified documents and the New York Times will praise me for my statesmanship and castigate Donald Trump. That's what that was. That was the first one I did. The second one was Latina James, where the Deutsche Bank comes in and says, we want clients. Like Donald Trump, we gave them alone.
And we knew how valuable Marlago is worth a lot more than $17 million. And we loaned in the money. He paid it back on time one. We made a hefty profit on interest. And number three, we would lend another loan with a client like that again.
And she said, oh, he inflated his real estate because me, Latita James and a former third ranking prosecutor under Merrick Garland, who worked for me and would go back to Merrick Garland and then go join Alvin Bragg. I'm talking about Mr. Colangelo, his name. But anyway, the point is that after all, that was the second one that they tried to draw and they find Trump
$450 million. I think it was reduced down on appeal 373.
But that was so outrageous. And the judge in Goron, he was as bad as Judge Mershan in the Alvin bride case. He was the one that was kind of laughing to the cameras and posturing and editorializing and putting a gag order on Trump, but not on the Latita James staff that was going out and having these press conference about what a criminal Trump was, had campaigned. That was the second one.
And that started to give empathy toward Donald Trump and the way he handled it. He didn't, you know, most Republicans, let's face it, they would have said, please, please, let me cut a deal. I promise you, I didn't. Yes, I didn't. And he didn't. You said, this is warfare. Do your best to me. You do your worst and I'll do my best. We'll see who wins. And then the one that we just discussed was,
In the case of and I'm writing them. I'm writing to right now Altras that for this week Christmas week and one of them was the Alvin Bragg case We all know about Alvin Bragg go read about it on ultra and that was and I'm gonna have another one posted today. I think sometime
So the point I'm making is that there's going to be 10 of these, and at each juncture, it looked like Donald Trump was going to suffer a sharp rebuke in the polls and public opinion, the opposite in a Nietzschean fashion happened. The more they went after him, at Morlogo, and more Latita James went after him, and the more that Alvin Bragg went after him, the more that he climbed up. I think this will run for about two weeks, and it will culminate
with some of the things on the campaign trail. And you can join Victor Davis Hanson's website. It's at victorhandson.com, and it's called the blade of Perseus. And that's where you'll find those ultra articles. And they're on all sorts of topics, both current and historicals and military. So lots of good material there. Please come join us. Oh, you know what I was going to add? The third, the fourth one was East Palestine. I've written about come on and read about that.
that East Palestine, we had the toxic flume and the rail that you referenced in this letter. That was the one that came up first. And remember that Joe Biden did not go to East Palestine for a year. And Donald Trump went three weeks after when Joe Biden was in Ukraine, giving them money.
And then Pete Buttigieg came and made another fool of himself and tried to suggest that Donald Trump was a corporate lackey and corporate lackeys that allowed the railroad to derail. Donald Trump came there and talked to everybody. And he actually bought goods there. And that was a turning point because it said to them, you may be deplorables, irredeemables, clingers, dregs in the mind of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. But for me,
We're going to take care of you. And that was kind of like, well, Mr. Trump, their lower middle class, 98% of the community is white. There's only 5,000 of them. They're in Appalachia. What's the upside? The media has just ignored him. He didn't care about the upside. He said, these are people who have been neglected. And I'm going to make sure that my campaign addresses their needs. That was an iconic moment. East Palestine, as was Brian, as was Latina James, as was the Marlago raid. And as I'll have six more of them. Hope you enjoy them.
Yeah. All right. Thank you, Victor, for everything today. It's lots of wisdom, as always. And it's just absolutely stunning. So thanks for your all your kindness. Thank you. Merry Christmas to everybody. We were recording on Christmas, by the way. I want to thank our dear reader who sent me this.
That was so cool. That's one of the coolest things you've received. Nobody knows what it is. Does anybody know what it is? We'll let you guys write and tell us. Think about it and write me what this is. I'll give you one hint. It came after the end of everything came out. So there you go. It's a treasured gift. I want to thank the most generous person who sent it to me. It was authenticated as genuine with proper documentation.
All right. Thank you very much. And thanks to our listeners for joining us here at the Victor Davis Hanson Show. Thank you. This is Sammy Wink and Victor Davis Hanson and we're signing off.
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