TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

The Iran War Expert: I Simulated The Iran War for 20 Years. Here’s What Happens Next

1h 29m 0s15,840 mots2,285 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

You've been running simulations on a war

0:01

with Iran.

0:02

>> Yep. Every strategy for 20 years and

0:04

it's playing out right now. So I can

0:06

tell you that we are losing control of

0:09

the situation. Like we don't know where

0:12

that nuclear material is, but they have

0:14

the material for 16 nuclear bombs and

0:18

we've given them every incentive to

0:20

develop them.

0:21

>> Professor Robert Pap might be the single

0:23

most important credible person we all

0:26

need to listen to right now. The Supreme

0:28

Leader that we took out was against

0:30

nuclear weapons. The new Supreme Leader,

0:32

and he's way more aggressive.

0:34

>> He's advised two decades of presidents

0:36

in the White House. President Trump is

0:38

really stuck, but he thrives in chaos

0:41

and spent 30 years building the

0:43

curriculum that trains the Air Force for

0:45

the exact type of war that's taking

0:47

place now in Iran. And one of the most

0:49

mind-blowing things I've learned is that

0:50

there are three stages to this conflict.

0:54

Unfortunately, Professor Robert Pape,

0:56

who has two decades of being correct

0:58

with his predictions, gives a 75%

1:01

chance that Trump is about to escalate

1:04

to stage three. In this episode, we're

1:06

going to explain exactly what this

1:08

means.

1:12

Guys, I've got a quick favor to ask you.

1:14

We're approaching a significant

1:16

subscriber milestone on this show, and

1:18

roughly 69% of you that listen and love

1:20

the show haven't yet subscribed for

1:22

whatever reason. If there was ever a

1:24

time for you to do us a favor, if we've

1:26

ever done anything for you, given you

1:28

value in any way, it is simply hitting

1:30

that subscribe button. And it means so

1:32

much to myself, but also to my team

1:33

because when we hit these milestones, we

1:34

go away as a team and celebrate. And

1:36

it's the thing, the simple, free, easy

1:37

thing you can do to help make this show

1:39

a little bit better every single week.

1:41

So, that's a favor I would ask you. And

1:43

um if you do hit the subscribe button, I

1:45

won't let you down and we'll continue to

1:47

find small ways to make this whole

1:49

production better. Thank you so much for

1:51

being part of this journey. Means the

1:52

world. And uh yeah, let's do this.

1:58

Professor Robert P.

2:02

What the hell is going on in the world?

2:03

Now, I should ask I should ask first,

2:06

who are you and what have you spent the

2:08

last several decades of your life

2:10

studying and doing and how does that

2:12

relate to what's happening in the world

2:13

right now?

2:14

>> We are going through a crisis uh more

2:17

very intense right now, but it's a

2:19

crisis that we have been through before.

2:22

um 20 years ago with the Iraq war. Uh

2:25

even before that um we saw the bombing

2:27

of Gaddafi, we saw the reactions there.

2:30

Now I have been studying military

2:32

strategy, air power, international

2:35

terrorism, now terrorism inside the

2:37

United States and also political

2:38

violence in the United States. It's not

2:40

related to particular groups. So I've

2:43

been studying political violence for 40

2:46

years. What is the headline that people

2:49

need to be aware of when you've looked

2:50

at 30 years of these types of wars?

2:53

>> That bombs don't just hit targets, they

2:56

change politics.

2:57

>> What does that mean?

2:58

>> That means that before the bombs fall

3:01

and even as the bombs are falling now,

3:03

we tend to focus on the tactical success

3:06

of bombing. We tend to ask, did the

3:09

bombs hit the targets? And it's with the

3:12

smart bomb age, it's almost mesmerizing.

3:15

They hit the target and destroy the

3:18

target crater build crater dirt crater

3:20

concrete destroy buildings 90% of the

3:23

time. The problem is wars are not just

3:26

about the hardware. They're not just

3:29

about the military operation of putting

3:31

a bomb on a target. They're about

3:34

politics. And when the bombs start to

3:37

fall, the politics in both the target,

3:40

the enemy change and the politics in the

3:45

attacker, the initiator change. And that

3:49

threshold is the beginning of what I'm

3:51

calling the escalation trap because you

3:54

get at stage one tactical success. Often

3:59

what's missing here is the next

4:02

consideration which is politics. who

4:04

have you advised and at what level have

4:07

you advised them on strategy, war, etc.,

4:10

etc.

4:10

>> So, uh, in the when I finished my PhD,

4:14

uh, right away we started to fight the

4:16

first Gulf War, which was an allair

4:18

power war and I found my work from the

4:21

1980s suddenly more relevant than ever.

4:23

I was in the Washington Post, USA Today,

4:26

frontline uh, designing the stories

4:29

because, uh, we didn't have the talking

4:30

military heads at the time. And then I

4:33

get a call from the US Air Force and

4:35

they're asking me to come in and help

4:37

not just teach but to build the

4:40

curriculum. Then what happens as time

4:42

goes on, I end up I end up advising

4:44

every White House from 2001 to 2024 uh

4:49

including the first Trump White House.

4:51

>> I also heard that you've been running

4:53

simulations on a war with Iran.

4:56

>> Yep. The last class of every strategy

4:58

for 20 years. In fact, we did it just

5:00

last uh uh last um uh May uh just before

5:04

we started the bombing and 90 minutes.

5:06

So we the the class goes a whole quarter

5:09

uh strategy in all kinds of different

5:11

ways and we ended with the bombing of

5:13

Iran and what did that mean? That meant

5:15

we uh look took out the whole target. We

5:18

have the target set laid out. We have

5:19

the attack plans. We really go through

5:22

the bombing of Natans, Ford, uh Esfon

5:26

there. there's a number of these

5:28

facilities and so forth. Um, and then we

5:30

play out and then we look at what's

5:32

going to happen and what you see right

5:34

away is 90 plus% those B2s are going to

5:38

destroy those targets.

5:40

>> B2s being the aircraft

5:41

>> these stealthy aircraft that can

5:43

penetrate the airspace very few risk of

5:46

small risk of loss and then you see but

5:50

we don't know where the nuclear material

5:52

is. The whole point of this is not to

5:54

destroy a building. It's to get at the

5:58

5% 20% 60% enriched uranium. That's the

6:04

material for bombs. And last May, it was

6:07

very clear they had the material for 16

6:12

bombs. Now, not to

6:13

>> 16 nuclear bombs.

6:15

>> One six

6:15

>> nuclear bombs.

6:16

>> Yes, nuclear bombs. Not to produce them

6:18

all in a single week, but over a period

6:21

of months. And then at after we did that

6:25

simulation, we didn't know where a

6:26

single ounce was. And we weren't going

6:29

to know for months after. So at the end

6:32

of every I make some predictions. I say

6:35

what's going to happen? What's going to

6:37

happen is after about a year, we are

6:40

going to panic because that material

6:42

could be dispersed anywhere in Iran,

6:44

anywhere in that country. And that

6:46

country, look how big that is compared

6:48

to the United States.

6:50

could be dispersed anywhere now. And how

6:54

many of those are are actually

6:56

developing toward a bomb? We will not

6:58

know. So what will we do? Regime change.

7:01

>> From all of your years in I mean 31

7:04

years old you start teaching about air

7:06

power and and war in this regard. And

7:08

you are 65 now.

7:11

>> Yeah. What is the from everything you

7:13

know 30 30 plus years studying this

7:15

stuff Iran running simulations on Iran

7:18

advising the White House being a master

7:20

and probably arguably the most informed

7:22

person in the United States right now

7:24

about air attacks like the one the US

7:26

performing on Iran? What is the headline

7:29

that you're trying to send to the world

7:31

at this moment in time? Like what is it

7:32

we're missing? Because we're seeing

7:33

Trump come out and Trump say it's going

7:34

well. Everything's amazing. We've taken

7:36

out all their guys. What is what what

7:38

are we missing? We're missing that.

7:40

We're stuck in a trap of our own making.

7:43

I'll explain what that trap is. But the

7:46

key consequence of the trap is we're

7:48

losing control. We are losing control of

7:52

the situation. And what you were seeing

7:55

with President Trump is he's trying to

DÉBLOQUER PLUS

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement pour accéder aux fonctionnalités premium

VISUALISEUR INTERACTIF

Regardez la vidéo avec des sous-titres synchronisés, une superposition réglable et un contrôle total de la lecture.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

RÉSUMÉ IA

Obtenez un résumé instantané généré par l'IA du contenu de la vidéo, des points clés et des principaux enseignements.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

TRADUIRE

Traduisez la transcription dans plus de 100 langues en un seul clic. Téléchargez dans n'importe quel format.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

CARTE MENTALE

Visualisez la transcription sous forme de carte mentale interactive. Comprenez la structure en un coup d'œil.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

DISCUTER AVEC LA TRANSCRIPTION

Posez des questions sur le contenu de la vidéo. Obtenez des réponses alimentées par l'IA directement à partir de la transcription.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

TIREZ LE MEILLEUR PARTI DE VOS TRANSCRIPTIONS

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement et débloquez la visionneuse interactive, les résumés IA, les traductions, les cartes mentales, et plus encore. Aucune carte de crédit requise.

    The Iran War Ex… - Transcription Complète | YouTubeTranscript.dev