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Col Doug Macgregor: Threats & Intimidation Don't Work on Iran FINAL

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We're not a reliable negotiating

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partner. We lie. You show up, you may be

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killed during the negotiations. Uh we

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cheat. We're not honest. And our our

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response is that the Iranians lie and

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cheat all the time. I've talked to

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people that were inspectors. I've talked

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to people that have been involved over

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there and they say the opposite is the

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case. You know, I remember going through

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this in the Balkans and people kept

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insisting the Serbs were dishonest. You

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couldn't trust anything they say. I

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found just the opposite of the three

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parties, the Bosnjaks, the Croats, and

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the Serbs. The Serbs were scrupulously

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honest. If they said they were going to

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do something, they did it. If they said

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they wouldn't, they wouldn't. If they

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were going to show up, they did. You

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know, this business of constantly

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demonizing your opponent really makes it

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very hard to come to some sort of

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arrangement that terminates the

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hostilities. And that's effectively

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what we're doing. You know, we go back

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to World War II, this World War II

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nostalgia where nobody

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actually knows what the hell happened

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during the Second World War and just how

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difficult the whole thing was. But we

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act as though we were the great ones who

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solved everything, won everything,

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determined everything. Nothing could be

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further from the truth. But one of the

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things tragically that we did is that we

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so completely demonized our opponents

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that we made it possible to destroy them

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completely to the point where we had to

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spend 50 years compensating for the

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destruction of the power they once held.

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This business of now setting out to

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destroy Iran because they refuse to

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accept our terms is equally insane. Only

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this time around, Iran is in a far

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better position than we realize. And the

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Chinese and the Russians and many others

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are very interested not only in seeing

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Iran successfully and survive, but they

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want Iran to be a partner in the future

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with regard to the straight of Hormuse.

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You know, we've mentioned this before,

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the Dardinels was a failure. The British

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at least had the uh presence of mind to

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come to the Montro convention and sign

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over the rights to determine who goes

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through or doesn't go through based on

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very clear unambiguous conditions to the

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Turks. There hasn't been a problem in

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the straits of in the with the

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convention of Montro since 1926. It's

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worked very well, but we insist that we

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should be the ones to make the

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determination and we readily admit that.

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But for a few items, we're not really

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that dependent on the Persian Gulf. The

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rest of the world is. None of this makes

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any sense. And we're headed for a

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serious, serious fall. And I think we

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have to look at the rest of the region.

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People are not paying attention to

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what's going on in Turkey. People are

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not paying attention to Egypt. These

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countries are gearing up for some

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action. I don't know exactly when,

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where, how, and under what

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circumstances, but the whole region is

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turning against us. And we would do well

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to ignore these so-called Epstein elites

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that govern the Emirates and places like

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that in Saudi Arabia. These people are

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finished. The populations there know

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they're corrupt and evil and want

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nothing to do with them. We need to

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start thinking about our place in the

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world, not as the world's dictator, but

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as a participant in what really is a

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multipolar world and a world in which

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there are multiple great powers and

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start dealing on the with people on the

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basis of mutual respect, not bullying.

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But that's not going to happen with this

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president. That's pretty clear.

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>> It's not. And in fact, I I would go so

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far as to say is nobody in power right

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now. Even you could say the Biden

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administration in some ways was even

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worse at the at the senior level, though

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that's a hard standard to to or to to go

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beneath. But there's a there was a a

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comment here by uh an Israeli analyst

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here that I thought was really poignant.

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His name is Danny Sen Senetrinowit,

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sorry if I pronounced that right. Um

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really I think quantifies why we're in

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this trouble. He said Washington still

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doesn't understand Iran. Yet again, we

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are seeing evidence of how poorly

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Washington understands the Iranian

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regime. The persistent belief that a

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single decisive move like a naval

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blockade, strikes on critical

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infrastructure, or even targeting and

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killing senior officials could

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fundamentally change Thrron's behavior

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recks a profound misreading of their

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system. This point cannot be stressed

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enough. When faced with a choice between

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conceding to US demands and escalating a

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confrontation, it believes it can manage

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and even win Iran's decision is not

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difficult to predict. It will not

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capitulate. And then the I think the

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even the more important things you said

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there is no scenario in which one

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dramatic move forces the Iranian regime

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to raise a white flag. No pressure

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campaign, not military actions and not

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symbolic shows of force. And yet

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American polity continues to go after

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that elusive silver bullet, meaning a

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single action that will deliver quick

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decisive victory. That search is bound

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to fail. Uh, and I mean I he wrote that,

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but I mean it's stuff that you've said

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many times, but that that just goes to

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show and and whether we're talking Jack

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Keane, uh, Mike Pompeo, uh, General

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Keith Kellogg at all, Trump, all these

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folks, Rubio, Keg Seth, they all seem to

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be of the same, I don't know what you

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call blindness or self-d delusion, but

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something as a as an elite cohort, they

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seem unable to come to what it seems to

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me to be common sense.

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Well, there's a documentary uh that one

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can watch on uh YouTube about Secretary

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of Defense McNamera and it's all about

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Vietnam. And what does he say at the

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conclusion? We just did not understand

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their culture. We did not understand the

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opponent. Well, the sad truth of the

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matter is there were large numbers of

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people before 1965, during the Vietnam

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War, and afterwards who absolutely

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understood, gave excellent advice, and

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they were ignored. It wasn't a question

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of not understanding. It's not wanting

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to hear the message. That's a big

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problem in Washington. It's not that

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there aren't people who know what

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they're talking about. It's just that

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there are people that don't care. And

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President Trump and his so-called

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adviserss, this this little circle

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around him, fall into that category. And

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I think we have to understand that that

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also characterizes most of the senior

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military leadership because I listen to

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all sorts of nonsense from people about,

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oh, he's a general and he must know he's

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an admiral. Come on, give me a break.

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These people are not there because of

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demonstrated character, competence, or

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intelligence. They are there because of

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their readiness to go along. Say, "Yes,

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sir. Three bags full. Let's move out."

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We got to come to terms with the reality

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that if you create a culture that that

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favors and and advances the sickopant,

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you're not going to penetrate the inner

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circle unless you're prepared to go in

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there and tell the president or whomever

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is in charge whatever the Dickens he

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wants to hear. That's the bad news. I

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don't see any of that changing. Maybe

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the disaster that's looming on the

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horizon will have an impact. I don't

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know. And uh if anybody's in doubt about

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what's going to happen with that because

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I mean we're looking we have some

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near-term pressure points uh number one

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is time because the ceasefire period

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runs out at the end of tonight. So

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tomorrow uh US time then he's going to

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have to make a decision. President Trump

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is do you go back to bombing like he

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said in that opening clip and we said he

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said yeah I'm planning on it or or do

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you extend it out and and trying to do

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