TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

The Iran War Expert: The Most Dangerous Stage Begins Now (STAGE 4)

1h 36m 50s16,838 mots2,425 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

Iran has figured out that we can't beat

0:03

them. We're not weakening Iran. We have

0:05

strengthened Iran and we can't stop

0:09

their drone attacks. And what you're

0:11

seeing is far more chaotic

0:13

decision-making is happening in the

0:15

White House than is happening in the

0:16

government of Iran and it's evidence

0:18

Trump is losing power. So when I look

0:21

through the response to the last

0:22

conversation, the audience had lots of

0:24

different types of questions. Like

0:25

there's 90 odd million people stuck

0:26

right in the heart of this that often

0:28

don't really have a voice. What do you

0:29

think happens next for them and what is

0:31

Israel's role in this?

0:32

>> Well, Israel is playing two roles here

0:34

that have not helped us correctly assess

0:37

the situation and we'll talk about that.

0:39

>> And then what do you think happens with

0:40

Europe?

0:40

>> NATO is for all practical purposes dead

0:45

and what happens next.

0:46

>> So for 21 years, I laid out what a

0:48

hypothetical bombing campaign of Iran

0:51

would look like. And when I was here

0:53

last time, every single thing we talked

0:55

about unfolded in the first several

0:57

weeks of the war.

0:59

>> So when you did this 21 years of

1:00

modeling these attacks, how did America

1:03

come out of this situation?

1:04

>> So there was a consistent set of

1:07

findings and America can bomb them,

1:09

attack them. We could even threaten to

1:11

murder all 92 million of them. But the

1:14

bottom line is

1:16

that is the real danger for us.

1:23

This is super interesting to me. My team

1:25

gave me this report to show me how many

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of you that watch this show subscribe.

1:28

And some of you have told us according

1:30

to this that you are unsubscribe from

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the channel randomly. So favor to ask

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all of you. Please could you check right

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now if you've hit the subscribe button.

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If you are a regular viewer of the show

1:38

and you like what we do here, we're

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approaching quite a significant landmark

1:41

on this show in terms of a subscriber

1:43

number. So, if there was one simple free

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thing that you could do to help us, my

1:47

team, everyone here, to keep this show

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free, to keep it improving year over

1:51

year and week over week, it is just to

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hit that subscribe button and to double

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check if you've hit it. Only thing I'll

1:55

ever ask of you, do we have a deal? If

1:58

you do it, I'll tell you what I'll do.

1:59

I'll make sure every single week, every

2:02

single month, we fight harder and harder

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Please help us. Really appreciate it.

2:13

Let's get on with the show.

2:22

Professor Robert Pabe, good to see you

2:24

again.

2:24

>> Great to see you again, Stephen.

2:26

>> It's been 4 weeks since we sat down and

2:28

talked about everything that was

2:29

happening in the war and it's all moved

2:31

at light speed. You made some

2:33

predictions then. Many of them have come

2:35

true already and many of them still

2:37

unfolding. But I wanted to get you back

2:38

to talk about what the hell is going on.

2:41

And I think that's kind of how I started

2:43

last conversation. But there's so much

2:47

that's being said and I get the sense

2:49

that there's a truth that sits

2:51

underneath there somewhere because when

2:53

you look at what the Iranians are

2:54

saying, when you look at what the

2:55

Israelis are saying, when you look at

2:56

what Trump and America are saying, and

2:57

then you look at reality, at some level,

3:00

I feel like we're not being told the

3:01

truth. My first question to you,

3:03

professor, is who are you and who are

3:06

you to speak on this subject matter?

3:08

>> I am a professor at the University of

3:10

Chicago. I have been there for 26 years

3:13

almost 27 years and before that I was a

3:16

professor who taught for the US Air

3:18

Force. I taught conventional targeting

3:21

and I thought I was going to go into the

3:22

foreign service. I wanted to understand

3:25

how we lost the Vietnam War and this

3:28

became the origins of bombing to win

3:30

>> which is your book I have here in front

3:31

of me.

3:32

>> That's bombing to win in 1985. I've just

3:34

finished all my classes and I have to

3:36

pick a topic for my PhD. I wanted to

3:39

find the book that laid out all the air

3:41

campaigns and that explained why Vietnam

3:44

was a loser. Where did that L come from?

3:47

When you say air campaigns, for someone

3:49

that knows nothing about military

3:50

conflict, what do you mean by air

3:52

campaigns?

3:52

>> What I mean with an air campaign is when

3:55

you have military aircraft who were not

3:58

just doing a single raid bombing one

4:00

target one day, but doing a campaign

4:04

over days, weeks, months. in the case of

4:07

Vietnam over years.

4:09

>> And you wanted to figure out why

4:12

countries that do these military

4:13

campaigns, which is pretty much what's

4:15

going on now in the Middle East, why

4:17

they don't tend to win.

4:19

>> Why they don't win when they're so

4:21

strong? Why is it that when a strong

4:25

power really gets its act together, it's

4:28

not careless, it's really thinking hard,

4:31

it then applies this force, a campaign

4:35

overtime and comes out a loser.

4:38

>> And you modeled for 20 years a war with

4:40

Iran versus the United States.

4:42

>> That's exactly right. I imagined uh in

4:46

class for 90 minutes I laid out what a

4:49

hypothetical bombing campaign of Iran

4:52

would look like starting with the

4:54

bombing of its nuclear enrichment sites.

4:57

There's multiple sites. There's uh Ford

5:00

which is an industrial enrichment where

5:02

there are centerfuges. There's Natans

5:05

also centuges. There's Esphon where you

5:08

have gasification of the ore so you can

5:10

make the centurfuges more efficient. So,

5:13

it's not just one target. There's a

5:15

whole target set, a complex of targets.

5:18

And so, what I would do is I would lay

5:20

out here are the aircraft that could be

5:22

used. Uh, here are the likely results at

5:25

a tactical level.

5:28

Ah, yes, just for context. So, we're

5:30

looking at a map of Iran and we're

5:32

looking at the Persian Gulf. And um Iran

5:35

of course is to the east of the of the

5:38

Persian Gulf and Thran is up to the

5:40

north middle. Right in the middle are a

5:43

whole series of these nuclear sites. You

5:46

have Sagad which is where the uranium

5:49

ore actually comes from. They don't have

5:51

to bring in ore. They have plenty of

5:53

ore, but the ore has to be distilled so

5:56

that you can get the tiny bits of

5:57

uranium 235 you need for uh enriching

6:01

the uranium for either nuclear reactors

6:04

or bombgrade uranium. That's first none

6:07

at esphon to gasify the ore so that when

6:11

it spins in the centerfuge uh facilities

6:15

at Natans and Ford, you can get the

6:19

purity of the uranium 235. That's what

6:22

we're talking about here when we say

6:23

it's enriched.

6:24

>> So when you did this 21 years of

6:26

modeling these attacks, how did the

6:28

model show

6:31

America came out of this situation?

6:33

>> There was a consistent set of findings

6:36

you just couldn't ignore, Stephen, which

6:40

is our bombers would always be able to

6:43

destroy the target, the industrial

6:46

facility that was enriching the uranium.

6:49

The problem always was, no matter uh

6:52

which year we did this, you wouldn't be

6:55

able to destroy the enriched material,

6:58

the actual gold. So, if you're panning

7:01

for gold, you see what I mean? And

7:03

you've got the gold. Uh you can destroy

7:05

the pan, you can even destroy the river,

7:08

you can't get the gold. So, let me

7:10

repeat that back to you in layman's

7:12

terms, and you tell me if I'm correct.

7:14

So they they could bomb these sites

7:16

where they're making the enriched

7:17

uranium, but it wouldn't destroy the

7:19

enriched uranium. It would just put it

7:21

underneath a bunch of rubble.

7:22

>> That's right.

7:23

>> So you can bomb it, but you're basically

7:24

just kicking the can down the road

7:26

because at some point they can go back

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