US Missiles Fired As Putin Threatens WW3 - Feat Benny Johnson
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November 21, 2024
TLDR: Ukraine uses western long range missiles inside Russia for the first time, generating global reactions and debates about Putin's potential actions and Western involvement, with hosts Benny Johnson, Jake Broe, Scott Horton, and Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt discussing on Acast.
In this insightful episode of the podcast, the discussion revolves around Ukraine's recent use of Western long-range missiles within Russia's territory amidst heightened tensions due to Vladimir Putin's nuclear threats. The episode brings together a diverse panel of experts, including Benny Johnson, a former Air Force veteran, and military authorities, to analyze the implications of this development on the Ukraine-Russia conflict.
Key Discussion Points
Ukraine's Military Strategy
- Long-Range Missiles Usage: For the first time, Ukraine deployed Western missiles to target Russian soil, signaling a significant escalation in the ongoing conflict. This move has elicited mixed reactions globally, highlighting the courage of the Ukrainian forces while raising fears of potential nuclear retaliation by Russia.
Global Reactions to the War
- Mixed Reactions: While many are supportive of Ukraine's defensive strategies, there are underlying concerns regarding prolonged Western involvement in foreign wars and the risk of nuclear escalation.
- Public Sentiment in America: Increasingly, Americans express weariness of funding foreign conflicts over domestic needs, aligning with a growing sentiment to prioritize national interests first.
Perspectives on Winning the War
- Debate on Viability: The panel engaged in a vigorous debate regarding whether Ukraine can achieve victory. General Mark Kimmitt noted that if the definition of victory is to regain all lost territories, it’s unlikely Ukraine can win this war given Russian military superiority.
- Realities of Warfare: There are discussions about the feasibility and morality of providing military support to Ukraine, especially amid fears that it might lead to a broader conflict involving NATO.
The Nuclear Threat
- Putin's Justifications for Potential Nuclear Use: Insights were shared regarding Russia’s military doctrine, which allows for tactical nuclear weapon use if its territory is threatened. However, questions around the implications of this doctrine were raised, including the expectation that nuclear powers refrain from mutual destruction.
Political Implications in the US
- Shift in US Foreign Policy: The panel illuminated the evolving landscape of American foreign policy, particularly among conservatives who are increasingly advocating for a more isolationist approach. This reflects a larger trend of questioning the efficacy and moral implications of US military involvement abroad.
- Potential Changes with New Leadership: Potential changes in foreign policy under a new administration led by former President Trump could realign US interests in relation to Ukraine and Russia, with an emphasis on negotiating peace rather than escalating tensions.
Historical Context
- Provocations by the US: Scott Horton emphasized that America’s previous actions, including NATO expansions and interventions in Ukraine, contributed significantly to the current crisis. His view that the US should adopt a non-interventionist stance to avoid further entrenchment in foreign conflicts sparked significant debate.
- Lessons from History: Reference to historical events suggests that unchecked aggressions by nuclear-armed states lead to critical examinations of alliances and defense policies, as seen in analogous situations throughout history.
Key Takeaways
- The episode illustrates the complexity of international relations, especially regarding military support, national security, and the potential for nuclear escalation.
- There is a clear divide between supporting Ukraine’s fight against invasion and concerns about the long-term implications of such involvement for American values and security.
- Strategic communications, both domestically and globally, play a pivotal role in shaping public opinion and policy regarding military engagement.
This episode serves as a timely reminder of the intricate web of war, diplomacy, and the necessity for clear communication and understanding in preserving both global stability and national interests.
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He's a dictator. Let me finish this war. America did not overthrow the government. You can look at the crowds. Oh, man. With this guy talking about, oh, we just have to help them win. That's what they said for 20 years in Afghanistan. While the Ukrainians are already running out of men, and Jake Sullivan is demanding that they increase conscription. That is slavery. According to this guy,
Democratic revolutions are never possible. We had one in this country in 1776. I didn't say that. Why don't you argue with something I said? You dumb bastard. Soviet military tactics and their doctrine always permitted the use of tactical nuclear weapons. They would be sitting there in some doctor's strange love-like situation. So this is just money that will be carried on the depths and the facts of our grandchildren's grandchildren forever for a Ukrainian war that
Somebody has yet to quite frankly explain why we are funding or fighting. President Biden's last stand in the Oval Office is to dramatically change the rules in a conflict 5,000 miles away. The U.S. has given Ukraine his blessing to file a long-range American missiles into Russia, and it's already done so. The U.K. has now done the same. Now Vladimir Putin is changing the rules, too. Kremlin says it will consider an attack from a non-nuclear state, if backed by a nuclear power, as a joint assault on Russia.
This wouldn't be Putin's first empty nuclear threat, far from it. But many people are furious at what they see as a reckless gamble, taking so close to the inauguration of a new president with new plans. President Trump's plans could be very different indeed. He campaigned on ending this war without saying how he would do that.
Many of your supporters believe that MAGA means American money for Americans first. But where will that leave the Ukrainians fighting for their independence and their freedom? How worried should we be about the prospect of nuclear catastrophe? And if Trump's supporters believe in peace through the projection of power,
Will they back him if he follows through in using it? To debate this, I'm joined by the host of The Benny Show, Benny Johnson, United States Air Force veteran and YouTube commentator, Jake Bro, author of New Book Provoked, how Washington started the new Cold War with Russia and in the catastrophe in Ukraine, Scott Horton, and the former assistant secretary of state for political military affairs, General Mark Kimmett. Well, welcome to all of you. General Kimmett, let me start with you.
as the senior military man in the room. I've taken a position from the start of this and my brother was a British Army colonel, my brother-in-law was a British Army colonel, lots of military in my family. And it's interesting because they've completely disagreed about this from the start.
I've taken a view of being very pro Ukraine's right to defend itself against what I've viewed as an illegal invasion of the sovereign democratic European country and that everything has followed since is in that context. But it's interesting because my brother, for example, would say it's not a war that Ukraine can win, that Russia with its superior power was never going to lose this war.
What do you feel from a military perspective first? What do you feel about where this war now is? And do you agree that it's something that Ukraine can't win?
Well, listen, Pierce, first of all, I think it's important to understand that two things can be right at the same time. It is certainly the case that a sovereign nation has the right and the ability to defend itself if attacked. But I've written a number of pieces for Wall Street Journal. Three months after the war started, I said this is going to turn out to be a stalemate.
uh... so in many ways i think it's inevitable that our policy the united states policy was give them just enough to fight but not enough went to win is exactly what got us into this position right now despite what's happened in the last week with uh... president biden esteem dumping more equipment in there i don't think this is a winnable war uh... if you define winning by president salinsky's old standard which is retake
and restore territorial integrity, take back Crimea, and make Russia pay for this war. If that's the definition of victory, there's not a chance that Zelensky can win this war.
And before I go to the others, this argument, which I know some of them will put forward, that basically Ukraine brought this on themselves, and that it was the encroachment as Russia saw it, that the encroachment of NATO, which was then going to include Ukraine, and that they had no choice but to defend themselves against this NATO encroachment, what do you say to that argument?
Well, what I'd say is that's been the great debate over NATO in a large since 1991. At that time, when President Xi Jinping's Secretary James Baker agreed with Gensher that there would not be any eastward expansion, we must understand that Russia has as much paranoia about
foreign forces creeping up to their borders, as United States does. The only difference is that we've had that doctrine, the Monroe Doctrine, since 1807, that we will not allow another country to encroach into our hemisphere. So I think it's reasonable concern that the Russians had that
They would, we would, NATO would put military forces in Ukraine, and that unfortunately gave a lot of heartburn and heartache and stomachache to Russia. Don't think they needed to attack, but it's unfortunate that they did.
Bernie Johnson, welcome back to our census, always great to have you. You and I don't agree about this, but explain to me, I mean, your position, I'm going to miscategorise it, but I think your position is the kind of making America great theme, means that America should put itself and its own interests first, and those interests do not include racing to the defence of a country
thousands of miles away. This already had a lot of billions of American money poured into it and can't defeat the enemy anyway. Is that, is that broadly what you say? Yes. And if you go talk to the progressive left or if you go talk to anyone at a MAGA rally, they'll tell you the exact same thing. This is one of the most unifying issues in America right now is that Americans are done having our greatest treasure, which is the lives of Americans poured into
countries that are not our own defending territories and borders that are not our own. And then other treasures of Americans like our national debt, our actual monies being spent to the tune of 35 trillion dollars in debt. What is that going to leave our children? It certainly hasn't made the world a say for place peers. And I'll say this, it is suicidal.
for Joe Biden on his way out to sabotage a piece that President Trump has promised to bring to this region. And I hope he does because an ugly piece is better than a hot war for Joe Biden to say that American missiles should be lobbed into the heart of Russia.
Would you stand for it if Russian missiles were being lobbed into the Midwest? I certainly wouldn't. Well, Russian missiles are being lobbed indiscriminately into a European sovereign democratic country. They've also just recruited 10,000 North Korean soldiers to join the war. And I'm just curious, but genuinely curious, I hear you and I respect your opinion. Generally curious, if you went back 25, 30 years, the idea that Republicans
would be happy for a Russian dictator, held by North Korea, to invade a sovereign democratic European country, and actually want Putin to keep what he's stolen, would be unthinkable. I mean, I think, for example, hang on, I think you can answer, but I'll let this do it. Well, let me add this to it. Yeah, we'll be happy about this. Hang on, let me finish.
Let me finish this war. I don't want this war to happen. I don't want this war to be won. I don't want this war to be happening at all. I want it there to be peace. I want people to stop dying. Much like Israel and Gaza, I want peace. I do not want this to drag on so that it creates a nuclear conflict that might draft my children or your children into another war. You have military age, son. Yeah, sons, peers, would you want them to fight in Ukraine?
But the point I was going to make before you interrupt him was, would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you? Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you. Would you.
Q8 wasn't a NATO country. Why did Desert Storm happen? Why did General Norman Swatchkov, encouraged by every Republican I've ever met in my life, encourage the removal of Saddam Hussein from Q8? What is the difference? You were basically supporting Q8's right to defend itself and to have freedom from a rampaging dictator from Iraq. Why are the different rules now? Watch. Watch. Change.
There's so much that's changed, especially in the policy of the Republican Party, which is where I thought you were going with this, Pierce, which is why I cracked a smile because the Republican Party itself has now taken a stance against neocons. I would argue probably the worst decision Kamala Harris made on the campaign trail. And that's a long list. Pierce, I wonder if you'd agree with me on this is to bring Liz Cheney on the trail. And to say, Liz Cheney is going to be my secretary defense. You go and say, you go and say that to Arab communities in Michigan and you wonder why you lose Michigan.
Yeah. I think it's suicidal. I think people are done with neo-con ideology. That's your point about Saddam Hussein. I'll say the same thing that I'll say about Putin. I'll say the exact same thing. These are dictators. They're bloodthirsty. I don't think they're to be trusted. I don't like these actions. But let me tell you, I am an American first. I was born on this soil. This is my country. I am a native American. I'm born here. My grandparents were born here.
I do not want my children and I have four peers to die for Iraq. I don't want my children to die for Afghanistan or die fighting ISIS or Russia in Ukrainian soil. I think that is antithetical to the founding of this nation and antithetical to our great founding father, George Washington, who warned in his last
declaration to the American people as he was leaving office, do not get embroiled in foreign entanglements. It's the destroyer of nations. And we've seen it with the British Empire, peers, sorry, sorry, sorry. We've seen it with the British Empire. We've seen it with every empire that has existed with the Roman Empire all the way through. And I think we should, we should follow these wise words and as one final point to you before I go to the others, which is if
The deal was done, and Putin got to keep the land he's stolen, along with Crimea. And his next action is to go and invade Poland, just as Nazi Germany did in 1939. What should America do in that position, given that Poland was part of NATO? Again, that would be suicidal for Russia, because Poland is part of NATO, and then there would... What should America do?
Well, Article 5 would be enacted. This is amazing. What do you think morally? What do you think morally America should do in that eventuality? I will have to leave it up to the military mind. Some of them are on this panel. What I'll say this, I'll say this, and this is my stance permanently peers, which is that an ugly peace in the Ukrainian war, an ugly peace, and virtually in all situations, an ugly peace is better than a hot war.
OK, maybe my team. I mean, I find it strange that you wouldn't say, obviously, you've got to kick him out of Poland. Let me go to Jake Bro, US. That's article five would be. Article five would be an attack. No, no, I know what would happen. I know what's supposed to happen. I'm curious what your moral view of it is, given what you said earlier. Jake Bro, US Air Force veteran, thank you for your service. Obviously, I know you don't agree here. I am genuinely, it is very surprising
how the politics of this kind of thing have changed so dramatically. It would have been unthinkable 30 years ago to have a conversation with conservatives on the airways where they would talk this way, I think, about this. I'm not saying, by the way, that Benny's wrong, and I'm not saying he's not right that a lot of Americans agree with him. But how do you feel about it? The conservatives really had their act together in the George W. Bush years, right, everybody? Right. Yeah, I mean, what's your view of this? Yeah, they were really great back then.
So, Pierce, I'm going to defer to your former UK Prime Minister who stated this week that there's this segment of the Republican Party that has a weird, homoerotic fixation on Putin. They love his tough guy image. They love his tough guy politics.
doesn't appeal to me, but it does appeal to a certain segment of the Republican Party. And to bring up the neocons and what happened 20, 25 years ago, I didn't support the Iraq War. I was 19 in 2003. And I'm firmly in support of this war supporting Ukraine because this is a generational fight. History is repeating itself.
All the claims that Putin is making about Russian speakers in the Donbass region and past territorial claims, it's the exact same argument that Hitler made in World War II, going into the Rhineland and then Czechoslovakia and of course Poland. And the other panel member talking about America first,
We had an America-first movement in 1938, 1939, 1940 to keep the United States out of World War II. I don't want to go to war. I don't like war, but sometimes democratic nations aren't given a choice. What is happening today has never happened since the advent of nuclear weapons. A nuclear-powered state has said this territory used to belong to us. We want it back. Give it to us because we have nuclear weapons.
This is not something the Western Alliance or the international community can tolerate. Nuclear states talking about historical claims saying give us back territory that once belonged to us, otherwise we're going to nuke you. Day two of this full-scale invasion and we just went over 1,000 days. Day two, Putin raised the equivalent of his DEF CON saying,
don't help kev don't give any assistance otherwise we might use nukes and for a thousand days they haven't used nukes because they can't i can lay out the arguments why but uh... this is not tolerable because it'll never end if this works it will emboldened dictators around the world the first group who already have nukes to start talking about historical claims because they know the international communities not gonna stop them
And any dictators that want to go and get back historical territory, they're going to want nukes. And for any smaller country who doesn't feel defended by the international community, they're also going to want nukes now, because the United States, France, UK, the democratic countries that have nuclear weapons are not going to help them. They're not going to defend them.
OK, let me get a Scott, because you've literally written a book about this, provoked how Washington started the new Cold War with Russia and the catastrophe in Ukraine. There's no doubt when you look at the full history going back to the start of the 90s, it's complicated. There's no doubt it is a complicated history that it's not clear cut. It's not simple, I don't think. A bit of American meddling in there, a bit of Russia meddling. Everyone's meddling around in Ukraine.
I think the theme of your book though is that very much that Russia was provoked into waging this war. Why do you say that?
Well, of course it was. It was American meddling, as you say, going back really to the end of the last Cold War as I document in the book. And I would object to sort of the way that you paraphrase it earlier in the show that I think you're implying that I would argue that Kiev brought this on themselves as the title, subtitle there says, Washington is the one who brought this on. I wasn't talking about you directly there, sorry. Yeah.
Right. It's okay. I just want to clarify. And I'm not arguing either that they gave the Russians no choice because I think they had lots of choices to do this. That still doesn't absolve the responsibility of the Americans. And basically, to sum it up, it's broken promises on native expansion. It's missile defense systems installed in Romania.
in violation of the Founding Act of 1997. And it's essentially an American-backed side in a long-term civil war that's going on in the country after America overthrew the government twice in 10 years in the Orange Revolution of 04 and the Maidan Revolution of 2014 because the wrong guy kept winning the election. And as the Americans said over and over again, and I documented as thoroughly as could be,
We are taking Ukraine away from Russia. This is not allowing Ukraine to be independent. This is America forcing the issue. And as everyone on this panel knows, the status quo in Crimea held from 1991 all the way through 2014 until America overthrew the government there for the second time and the new government. America did not overthrow the government. So you can look at the crowds. Oh, shut up, man. You know what?
We heard, we heard your piece. They immediately threatened to kick the Russians out of the Sevastopol naval base. Only then did the Russians change the status quo on the Crimean Peninsula, which by the way belonged to Russia since the 1780s, since before the American Constitution. Should we give Alaska back?
Anyway, this guy's an idiot, but if you want me to keep talking with you, Pierce, I'll have the issue. I'll finish your point. This guy sounds, I'll tell you what, with this guy talking about, oh, we just have to help them win. That's what they said for 20 years in Afghanistan. We just have to help the Tajik's and the Hazaras and the Uzbeks crush the posh tunes. And once we're done, it'll be great. We can't sell them out now. We can't leave now. And then what happened?
Hundreds of thousands of people killed and they lost anyway. And everyone knows it's in the Wall Street Journal. It's in the Council on Foreign Relations Journal, Foreign Affairs, even Haas, Richard Haas, the former president of the CFR, has a new piece in foreign affairs saying, give it up. We know that there's nothing America can do to help Ukraine retake the dumbass Zaproja curse on Crimea.
They can't, unless you want to call in the B-2s and the B-52s and the US Navy, at which point we have a general war. So the war is lost. So this guy can bloviate all he wants about how, no, it would be wrong to turn our back now. The Russians haven't even launched a full-scale mobilization in their country. This is a police action to them. While the Ukrainians are already running out of men, and Jake Sullivan is demanding that they increase conscription, that is, slavery.
On behalf of a war, we're looking at anti-war.com today. We have that headline. It's the glory of Ukrainians wanting to negotiate. There's your democracy for you. The majority of Ukrainians know that what I just said is true. Even Yulia Timoshenko a year ago said it's time to negotiate. Okay. This guy is a fool. Okay. Well, before I get a general commit, again, I want to just get Jake to just respond to that because you're a fool, apparently.
Well, according to this guy, democratic revolutions are never possible. We had one in this country in 1776. He's talking about, I didn't say that. Why don't you argue with something I said, you dumb bastard.
Wow. Okay. You got some energy. It was never possible. America spent a hundred million dollars to overthrow the government in Ukraine. These guys on this panel are arguing that the people of the former Barack Obama and Joe Biden in the government, they're saying that as soon as Cuba installs a strong man in any of these countries, that remains corrupt and loyal to him, change is never possible.
Victor Yanukovych was not killed. He was not imprisoned. He fled. He fled back to Russia. He fled back to his masters. And in my opinion, when you're the president of a country and you leave the country, you gave us your power.
Look, man. OK, so I'm being serious here. I generally want to understand the conspiracy that the United States is behind the color revolutions of these. Never heard of the National Endowment for Democracy, huh? When Russia invaded, why did we offer them a ride? Why the delay in tanks? Why the delay in highmars? Why the delay in Patriot systems? Why the delay in F-16s? Why are we just giving approval for attack on this week after 1,000 days of the war if the conspiracy always
was the United States was trying to separate Ukraine from Russia that we're trying to install a CIA backed government or whatever. I don't understand this conspiracy when we haven't done everything to fully support Ukraine. Okay, let me let me just time out. I want to bring in general. I want to bring in general. Okay, I'll come back to you. Something here. So let me answer it.
Look, you're completely mixing up what I said about 2014 within questions about 22. Clearly, as we, as everyone on this panel knows, they announced repeatedly in the New York Times in the Washington Post in March and April of 22 that the purpose of the war now is to prolong it for this strategic weakening of Russia. So no amount of the weapons you just need. Russia can stop this war at any time. Russia's weakening of the weapons that continue in this war.
No amount of the weapons you just named would have turned the tide at that point. Okay. Let me bring in. The Biden administration decided to trickle the weapons in, as you correctly described, in order to keep the war going. You're saying, all right, let me bring you General Kim. I want to bring you General Kim in now.
General Kimmett. Hang on, let me bring in the others. There are four people in Afghanistan in the 80s. Let me bring in General Kimmett. You've been waiting very long. I believe them to bankruptcy. Do you understand? I will come back to you. I will come back to you. There are four of us on the thing. Are you from the panel? All right, guys, guys, please, time out, please. General Kim.
Thank you for your patience. A lot of people are very concerned, General Kim, about the possibility of this developing into a nuclear conflict. I've never understood that because every red line that's been crossed in this war, of which there have been multiple putin red lines crossed, he's not done anything despite threatening to use nukes all the time and his people threatening to use nukes all the time.
I don't understand why anyone thinks he would lose nuclear weapons given the establishment of mad, mutually assured destruction. Why would he press a button that leads to his instant death? Am I misguided? Am I naive? Or is that the military view too?
Well, let me give you the other side of the argument. It doesn't matter what I believe, but the other side of the argument to argue against your point would be that Soviet military tactics and their doctrine always permitted the use of tactical nuclear weapons, artillery launched nuclear weapons on the battlefield if the country of Russia was invaded.
There is a legitimate doctrinal purpose for using artillery-launched nuclear weapons once they went into cursed. I mean, you're talking about a nuclear weapon that really isn't much more than about five or six, one, five, five, around sitting in the ground at the same time.
My view would be, Dr. Lee Putin has a argument to make. His country has been invaded. His doctrine says, use nukes if we're invaded. Now, whether he will or not, I think, is a different story. As has been mentioned a number of times so far,
We've allowed ourselves to be self deterred throughout this war. You ask, I don't believe that your guess that says we're doing this intentionally to bleed out the Russians by giving Dribson drabs of equipment to the Ukrainians so that we can go on a killing spree for
a thousand days at this point. I would simply say no administration is that smart and no administration is that stupid. I've sat in the National Security Council situation room and heard the arguments that are made between the State Department, the Defense Department
uh... and the president national security adviser in the notion that they would be sitting there in some stock for strange love like situation uh... you know ring their hands or wrapping their hands and saying let's bleed these guys out for a couple of years because that's good for america i just
I did not see that in my years in the Situation Room, and I'm surprised that anybody would think that this government is either that smart or that stupid. Before we go back to- Hang on. Hang on. Hang on. Hang on. Hang on. Hang on. Can I please address that? No, I'm going to come to Benny and say, well, I want to let General Kim, if we go to Benny.
Well, but he was remarking on something I said. I know, but I don't know. Everyone must get a fair chance to speak. Before I go to Benny, Benny's point is that everything has changed in America. A lot of Republicans who would have endorsed all of those, as he put it, the neo-con wars, and I opposed the Iraq War as editor of a daily mirror newspaper here, very vociferously, and helped lead a march for two million people through the streets of London. Tony Blair went against the will of the people, as far as I'm concerned.
His point that really a republicans are driving this movement in America are they're just sick and tired of fighting other people's wars. And that actually there is a real shift in will that is becoming much more insecure in America. And I've heard it said that America's fought wars for the last 60, 70 years and barely won anything.
because, you know, what do you call a win? What do you call victory? And a lot of them have been a massive gigantic mess, whether it's Vietnam, whether it's Iraq, whether it's Afghanistan. So I can understand why people like Benny are like, we're done with this. What do you feel, General, before I go to Benny, what do you feel about that from, again, from a military point of view?
Well, first of all, we do what our nation tells us, unless it's illegal or moral. But what I would say is let's not forget the second goal for 99 senators on both sides of the aisle out of a Congress of 100 senators voted for the use of force in Iraq. Now, they were clutching pearls and ringing their hands about two years later when it didn't turn out the way we thought it was going to. And one can argue about why that happened, whether it's poor intelligence, poor tactics, whatever.
But it's not just the Americans that, the Republicans that either want to start war or stop war. It's really both sides of the aisle. And I think both sides of the aisle will say, look, America is willing to fight a war that's an existential threat to the United States of America. But these optional wars, these, we shouldn't be rushing to war just because there's somebody pointing a gun at other us or our allies. There ought to be a higher bar
the Brzezinski rules that we used to talk about before we start putting American sons and daughters into combat. And we seem to have lowered that bar ever since 1982 when we, or 1983 when we valiantly parachuted into Grenada to stop that hot spot of red terrorism. But no, I just think that, look,
Anybody that says America should go to all wars, or America should go to no wars, is just being foolish. We just have to be more discriminate about the wars that we fight. We need to have a better conversation about going into war before we send the 82nd Airborne in.
Yeah, I do think it's a really, it's a really interesting one. I agree more. Yeah, it's a really interesting debate and it's interesting to hear the general talk that way because it's not a million miles, really, from what you were saying. Yes, thank you, General. That was, that was very sound. Yeah, it was very interesting, I thought. Very reasonable. Very reasonable.
When Trump, you know, Trump did not go to war or didn't start a new war during his 10 years president. I've talked about this. He just sees it as bad business. I mean, it's good business for the people that build all the musicians, but it's bad business for America PLC. Wars are incredibly expensive.
And as Trump put it, what do we get out of all this at the end of the day? And the answer is often a bigger mess in Australia. You look at the Iraq war, for example, you know, out of that came ISIS, which caused Mary hell around the world for years. So other than that, and wrecking Iraq, I'm not quite sure what the purpose of that war was. It was revenge against a country, which had nothing to do with 9-11, et cetera. So I don't want to go over each of the conflicts, but Trump definitely seems to be with you on this, right? And do you think that is becoming
almost the mainstream now with Republicans. The American people are with me peers because the American people are grounded in reality. I have an article right here on my phone that I'm reading right now. It is breaking news at time of recording peers that says that Joe Biden has forgiven the loan of up to the tune of $10 billion that was given to Ukrainian armed forces.
So this is just money that will be carried on the debts in the backs of our grandchildren's grandchildren forever for a Ukrainian war that somebody has yet to quite frankly explain why we are funding or fighting.
And this is something that is catastrophic to the American mind when they can't afford groceries, when a mother is standing in line wondering how she will feed her children, or how she will fill up her gas tank, or why there are so many massive potholes on her road with a house that she has to rent a single room in,
because she can't God help her afford a home that's utterly out of reach and unfathomable in the current economy. And she's sitting here looking at Joe Biden, forgiving the loans of Ukraine to go slaughter the flower of Russia and Ukraine, these young children that are fighting and dying in these trenches. And she's wondering, what the hell? I can't feed my kids.
And Taylor Swift and Lizzo and Oprah and all these billionaires are out telling me, this is great. This is good. No, it's not good. It's how you lose an entire country. And it's a horrible thing to do to the American people. And I'm telling you peers, because I have a man on the street show and I go and I talk to both sides, you can go to the far left Palestinian protests, you can go to the far right Israel and or, you know, all the way to the heart of MAGA,
And they'll all say the same thing. And I ask them these questions, peers, and I'm telling you, this has got to be a 90-10 issue in America. If any politician is listening, this is your 90-10 issue. Americans want money spent in America first to improve the lives of Americans first. And we have big hearts with the biggest, I think the biggest hearts in the world to help out those in need. But we are sick and tired of being sold out for endless wars, and you just listed many of them for my
Generation, which is millennial, it's Iraq and Afghanistan. And how did we leave Afghanistan with 13 body bags in an avoidable, chaotic, disastrous, nightmarish, suicidal mission that got us effing nothing, peers. And we're sick of it. Jay, your response to that?
America is not fighting this war. There's no American forces on the ground in Ukraine fighting this war for Ukraine. So just keep saying, I just showed you were fighting this war. America shouldn't be fighting this war with a American soldiers are not children. So concerning all of the past wars that America has been involved in, we can't overlook the Cold War.
is the world better off today because of the collapse of the Soviet Union? Is the world better off today with the Kremlin and the Russians weakened? The 14 Soviet republics away. Some of them have gone. Some of them have gone. Democratic revolution. Look at the American of Eastern Europe and all these countries joining the EU, joining NATO. Do any of them want to return back to the Russian sphere of influence?
What this war is about is does Ukraine have the right of self-determination? And other people on this panel are saying no, because the Russians have nukes, because we don't want confrontation with Russia, if Russia wants to go into Kiev and install a puppet regime and basically absorb it back into their empire, like they've done with Belarus, they've got troops in Transnistria, they've got troops in Syria, they've got troops in
Um, Georgia, the pattern keeps repeating and Putin's never going to stop. He's dictator for life. He could potentially live another 20 years. These wars are never going to end. When you look at the stuff, they're teaching their kids in Russian schools, they're preparing them for war for the next 20 decades.
Putin wants his empire back, and I'm going to continue arguing that is not in the best interest of America. A resurgent Soviet Russian empire dominating Central Asia, dominating the Caucasus, dominating Eastern Europe, committing acts of hybrid warfare all the time. The Russians with impunity are poisoning people, destroying underwater cables, conducting cyber attacks.
When is America going to say is enough is enough? We're not going to let Russia have the vampire back. And it's pennies, the billions that we've sent in old equipment. We're spending the money here in the United States. Defense production is ramping up here to rebuild our industrial base.
to keep the world safer. Peace through strength. That's the that's the legacy of Ronald Reagan. And I don't know why I have to remind Republicans of what Ronald Reagan achieved, defeating the evil empire. And I don't understand the people on this panel who are saying let Russia have it, let Russia obtain this population, these people, their resources, and then go to the next war, Poland, the Baltics, Finland,
Well, Dover, it's nice. I agree with you, but others don't. And Scott Holton's one of them. Wait a second. Russia blew up the pipeline. Russia. Hold on. Do you believe that Russia blew up the Nord Stream pipeline? Like, do you have better sourcing than New York Times on this? Do you do you actually play that Russia pipeline? You just said that Russia. I don't care about the pipeline, but you just said that in your argument. So now you don't care about your own argument a minute ago.
How many people died with a pipeline blew up, dude? I don't care about this pipeline. I don't know why people keep talking about this pipeline. So you don't care that Ukraine blew up the pipeline? No, it's war. OK. OK. All right. They're blowing up oil refineries. What's the difference between an oil refinery and a pipeline?
So you're okay with Ukraine blowing up the Nord Stream pipeline, even though that went, I guess. We don't have evidence that they did blow up the pipeline, but if they did, it's war. Russia is blowing up all their thermal power plants right now. They're blowing up coffee shops. They're blowing up supermarkets. They're blowing up hospitals, children's hospitals. Children's hospitals are being blown up by the Russians. I don't give a damn about the pipeline.
OK, let me bring in Scott. Scott, final word to you. And I want it to be this question, really, that you address. What do you want Donald Trump to do once he takes office in January? What do you want him to do about not just this war, but maybe widen it and to say generally as a foreign policy in the next four years? Obviously, the Israeli mass war is still raging. And so what doctrine do you want him to have?
Well, I prefer pure Ron Pauli and non interventionism and abandon all of all these alliances and come home and people can make all their Hitler analogies all they want. But Hitler's long gone and so is Joe Stalin. Putin is not a romantic. Putin is a bureaucrat. And the fact that, you know, this claim that he wants to rebuild
The whole Russian Empire and all that is nonsense. This is a border dispute and America forced the issue through our intervention in Ukraine over the last, especially 20 years as I demonstrate in the book. That doesn't mean that he's coming for Poland and the Baltics and everybody else next. This is just essentially fantasy land. That's not what this war is about.
That's what they say on Kremlin TV. Where's a long term civil war going on in since 2000 for eight years. And it took eight years before he rolled in a full scale invasion to reverse the civil war that had already been raging since Obama overthrew the government in 2014.
OK, so it's just silly to say that this is all about preventing him from taking over the whole world and all these World War II fantasies. It just has nothing to do with that at all. But all other things being equal, what Donald Trump should do on this issue is he should just be honest with Ukraine. They already accept this. The last general in charge got fired Zaluzni for saying that, look, we have to negotiate. We're out of men. We're not in any position.
to make the change here. Now, you could argue that if France and Germany and Poland in the United States sent our NATO forces into Ukraine, we could liberate the Donbas. But that would be at the cost of thermonuclear war, and no, the sovereignty over Diprenovsk of Rosk.
over there is not worth it. Nobody in America has ever even heard of these Oblasts before. And no, I'm not willing to trade Travis and Williamson County, Texas, for DiPranovka, Flaksk, and for Luhansk Oblast. I'm just not. And no one in America is. And as I said before, the majority of the people of Ukraine want to negotiate too. Even some of the radical writers have said, you know what?
Let's just let the Don Bass go. We hate them anyway. It's not even a real country anyway. So let's just be rid of them and then we'll be happier and we can move west without their burden. Check us Slovakia broke up into the Czech Republic in Slovakia. Nobody thought that that was the world's greatest sin and it's too late now anyway, Pierce. If maybe if
If Barack Obama had given Kiev some H bombs back in 2016, then Russia would have never been able to do this. But there's nothing you could do to reverse it now. So we need to negotiate. And the fact is they're going to lose those four Oblast because even if and I used to think maybe we can negotiate two out of four or something like that.
But the thing is, Ki have already cut off the fresh water to Crimea. And Russia has to control Zaproja and Kursan in order to guarantee those fresh water supplies. They're not going to give up that so-called land bridge. It's already over. The question now is whether they're going to lose Harky, even Odessa.
or whether we can call it now and quit while they're only so far behind. And I want to address to the general's point real quickly here. And I show this in the book. And I had missed this before the war because I was doing something else and I missed it. But there are so many quotes of the American establishment and including Admiral Straveritas and others saying, we don't know how to defeat an insurgency, but we sure know how to back one
And what we're going to do is we want to replicate the Afghanistan war. And they weren't talking about our Afghanistan war. They were talking about the 1980s operation cyclone. And they said, what we'll do is see they assumed that the Ukrainian military would be broken.
and that it would be an insurgency from the get-go, and that we would back this insurgency as long as it took to bankrupt the Russians and force them out the hard way, the same way that Osama bin Laden just got Bush and Obama to do to us in Afghanistan over the last generation. And they said, let's do that again. They said it over and over again. Right now, we're on Plan B, where the Ukrainian military wasn't broken. They stood, and so America has been able to back them.
If they were to finally be broken and Russia were to dominate the place, all other things being equal, a status quo, our government would go back to Plan A, backing the militias of Ukraine against the Russian occupation for the long term. And this is just crazy. And as the general said, we actually are backing Ukrainian forces inside Russia.
Look, we have crossed the line of their doctrine of nuclear use. Now, I'm not saying they're going to. I think they're going to hold their horses and negotiate here. I think the White House calculated that, well, now's the time to do this because Putin won't do anything crazy because he's going to wait on Trump. So now we can go ahead and bloody their nose a little bit more. But even the Reuters piece says they're just trying to get one peg ahead
for a better position to negotiate because they know that the status quo is the absolute best that they could possibly hope for. OK, listen, I just want to say that's one of the best panels I've had in a long time. I learned a lot of new stuff. I heard a lot of passionate views.
argued extremely articulately, I thank you all. I thought that was really a meaningful discussion about a complex issue. And we'll have to hope and pray this gets resolved soon. But how that gets done is going to be very complicated, I think. But I'll be fascinated to see what happens. Thank you to my panel. I appreciate it. This new Trump administration. They're calling it the Avengers. You're a fool if you're going to predict the outcome of that.
He has Musk. He has RFK. Rama Swami. These are formidable people. These aren't people who need the political power. Those are the people you surround yourself with if you're out on a quest. Putin will hold himself in check until Trump takes power and that the war will come to a rapid end. I'm strapped in for the ride. My father, he died recently. Man with very high standards. My deepest condolences.
I think I remember mostly reading with you. That was so much fun. I thought so. I can see how moved you are. You say he could be fearsome. Here's you always make me cry when you interview me. Do you believe in God? Do you think there is a heaven? The problem is there's a whole literature that Richard Dawkins knows nothing about. Go to hell. You're not stopping me.
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