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WW3 Threat Assessment: Trump Bombing Iran Makes WW3 More Likely!

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0:00

What does the United States think it's

0:01

going to gain from decapitating the

0:03

Iranian leadership?

0:04

>> Well, that that's kind of obvious based

0:06

on what the president has said. It's

0:07

that

0:07

>> on what the president has said.

0:08

>> I'm I'm just saying based on what the

0:10

president says.

0:10

>> You can't trust anything that you're

0:12

hearing right now. You can't trust

0:13

anything that you're reading right now.

0:14

Two to multiply.

0:17

>> It's not paranoid. Absolutely. It is

0:20

paranoid to suggest that everything is

0:22

misinformation. Iran doesn't have a

0:24

nuclear weapon. So, it's not a nuclear

0:26

threat.

0:27

>> You speak a different nuclear language

0:28

than I do. This regime is at its lowest

0:30

lowest point. Why not strike it now?

0:32

>> I mean, I can give lots of reasons why

0:34

you wouldn't strike it. The ability to

0:36

create their own.

0:37

>> What are you concerned about? And what

0:38

are the unintended consequences that

0:40

you're foreseeing?

0:40

>> There is a domino effect that happens

0:43

with every decision that the United

0:44

States makes. So

0:48

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

0:50

We're approaching a significant

0:51

subscriber milestone on this show and

0:53

roughly 69% of you that listen and love

0:56

this show haven't yet subscribed for

0:58

whatever reason. If there was ever a

0:59

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

1:01

ever done anything for you, given you

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value in any way, it is simply hitting

1:05

that subscribe button. And it means so

1:07

much to myself, but also to my team

1:08

because when we hit these milestones, we

1:10

go away as a team and celebrate. And

1:11

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

1:13

thing you can do to help make this show

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a little bit better every single week.

1:17

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

1:19

um if you do hit the subscribe button, I

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won't let you down. And we'll continue

1:22

to find small ways to make this whole

1:24

production better. Thank you so much for

1:26

being part of this journey. Means the

1:28

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

1:34

Benjamin, Annie, Andrew, first and

1:37

foremost, thank you for being here

1:38

today. I I have to start with the

1:40

question that's been on my mind as

1:42

somebody that doesn't know a huge amount

1:43

about geopolitics, which is what the

1:46

hell is going on? And I and I say that

1:48

because that's exactly what I mean. What

1:50

is going on and what context do I need

1:52

to understand this sort of historical

1:54

context of the actions we're seeing in

1:56

Iran with this war right now? Benjamin,

2:00

I know you've got a a personal

2:02

connection to Iran because your family

2:03

fled Iran, I believe.

2:04

>> Yeah, I was uh I was 2 years old when we

2:06

left in March of 1979. Um uh a few

2:10

months after the sha had left and uh

2:12

just after Hani had arrived.

2:13

>> What is the sha and what is hermeni?

2:16

Yeah, sorry. The sha uh the former

2:19

monarch of Iran um the Pathfi dynasty

2:21

which came into power in the 1930s

2:23

deposing a previous dynasty that had

2:25

been around for a couple hundred years

2:27

and um the he his father brought in that

2:30

dynasty and then it was eventually he

2:32

was deposed by the British and the

2:34

Americans who felt he was getting too

2:36

close to the Nazis during World War II

2:38

concerned about supply routes for the

2:40

Nazis, oil and his son was installed on

2:42

the throne at a very young age, I

2:44

believe 18 or 19 and Um he ruled Iran

2:48

from uh from that period 1941

2:51

1942 around that time all the way

2:52

through 79 a great ally of the United

2:55

States over over time eventually um and

2:58

uh was depos was um overthrown on a

3:00

revolution and uh by Kumeni who was a

3:03

senior cleric who had been a thorn in

3:04

the Shaw side since the 60s was exiled

3:07

first to Turkey then Iraq then

3:10

ultimately to France right outside Paris

3:12

actually from there he basically led the

3:15

revolution ution that led to the sha's

3:16

uh removal um after 79.

3:19

>> And how was Iran different when the sha

3:21

was in power versus when her was in

3:23

power?

3:23

>> That depends on who you ask. Um it was a

3:26

constitutional monarchy. The sha had

3:28

powers that exceeded beyond what we

3:30

think a constitutional monarchy has

3:32

today like in Great Britain. Um he was

3:34

he ruled with an iron fist when he

3:36

needed to. He was an authoritarian, but

3:38

he also was one that was rapidly

3:40

modernizing Iranian society, wanted to

3:42

make it more like the West, using Iran's

3:44

immense oil resources and wealth to

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really accelerate development, building

3:48

of social institutions, healthcare, uh,

3:51

literacy, modernization, all of those

3:53

things. That was his focus. Make Iran

3:54

more like the West. And, uh, in that

3:57

sense, he succeeded, but it came at the

3:58

expense often times of civil liberties

4:01

for many people. It came at the expense

4:03

of freedom for those who wanted to

4:06

essentially practice religion, Islam,

4:07

Shia, Islam in their own way. The Sha

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was not hostile to religion, but he he

4:12

his policies were inconsistent with

4:14

where the traditional religious Iranians

4:16

wanted to go. And it sort of created a

4:18

schism in society. And you also had um a

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wealth gap, an income disparity.

4:24

Immense wealth poured into the country,

4:25

but it didn't trickle its way downward

4:27

into the sort of the village and rural

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poor. And so there was a lot of

4:31

frustration, a lot of disenchantment

4:33

with his policies. And that led to sort

4:34

of this populist backlash of wanting

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something that was more democratic, more

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accountable, uh more like the West uh

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ironically. And uh and that sort of was

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the beginning of of where that cycle

4:46

led.

4:47

>> And so how did Hani take power of Iran?

4:51

He led a movement, a mass populist

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movement, not a religious one, but meant

4:56

to um go across multiple socio-economic

5:00

and political divides and unified the

5:02

opposition under this idea of removing

5:05

the monarchy, removing dependence on the

5:07

west. He specifically said Iran uh the

5:09

United States was to large part to blame

5:11

for Iran being in the state that it was,

5:14

for people not having the the the the

5:16

things they needed to live, the

5:17

freedoms, the liberties. He blamed the

5:19

Shaw's um use of the secret police and

5:22

torture methods on the United States and

5:24

on Israel who he claimed, you know,

5:26

taught the secret police how to do these

5:28

things. Um there's a complicated sort of

5:30

history to that. And he basically

5:32

promised them salvation from a what he

5:34

did what he portrayed as a puppet tyrant

5:37

of the United States and the masses

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bought into this. But both the left and

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the right really the right consisted of

5:44

the the black the Islamists. So you had

5:46

the red which were sort of the the

5:48

Marxist socialist uh followers. You had

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the black and then you had sort of that

5:52

middle in between and they all coalesed

5:54

around this one charismatic religious

5:57

figure very um austere man um one who

6:00

didn't really have a lot of luxuries

6:02

himself led a simple life but was

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consistent with his opposition to what

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he saw uh tyranny and despatism and

6:10

people bought into it

6:12

>> and the Americans didn't like this. The

6:14

Americans didn't know what to make of

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it. And there was a failure, and I think

6:18

Andrew can talk about this as well, over

6:19

a failure by the State Department, the

6:21

CIA in the 70s to see where the threat

6:23

was. They saw the threat coming from the

6:24

Soviet Union. They they were still

6:25

afraid of Soviet encroachment in the

6:27

Middle East, particularly through Iran.

6:29

Their concerns were with the Marxists,

6:31

the Communist parties. They did not

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carefully look at the black. They didn't

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look at the Islamists. They didn't see

6:36

them as a threat until it was too late.

6:39

The Shaw himself blocked or really

6:41

didn't give the CIA full access to Iran.

6:44

There was limited information that was

6:46

coming out. He relied on his own u

6:48

intelligence which fed him information

6:50

he wanted to hear which is that

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