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Scott Horton: The Case Against War and the Military Industrial Complex | Lex Fridman Podcast #478

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The following is a conversation with

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Scott Horton. He's the director of the

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Libertarian Institute, editorial

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director of anti-war.com,

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co-host of Provoked, and host of the

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Scott Horton Show on which he has done

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over 6,000 interviews since 2003.

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He's the author of Provoked, Enough

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Already, and other books and articles

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that have over the past three decades

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criticized US foreign policy, especially

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in regard to military interventionism

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and the military-industrial complex.

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This is the Lex Frman podcast. To

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support it, please check out our

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sponsors in the description. And now,

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dear friends, here's Scott Horton.

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I think one of the darkest and most

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disturbing chapters of modern American

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history is everything that happened

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around conducting the so-called wars on

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terror. I think to me it was a wakeup

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call. I think it was a wakeup call to a

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lot of Americans in understanding and

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seeing the military-industrial complex

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and seeing what the government's

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capacity is to mislead us into war and

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to continuously erode basic human

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freedoms. Uh if I can allow me to list

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some of the estimates from the cost of

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war project from Brown University just

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so we understand the cost of these wars.

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The post 911 wars in Afghanistan, Iraq,

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Syria, Pakistan, and Yemen led to an

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estimated 900,000 to 940,000 direct

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deaths and 3.6 to 3.8 million indirect

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deaths. And the cost in terms of dollars

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was $8 trillion with 2.2 two trillion on

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Afghanistan and 2.9 trillion on Iraq and

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uh Syria and the result on every front

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as we'll talk about I think it's fair to

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say that did not accomplish its purpose

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and in fact if we even just look at the

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human toll of the people of Afghanistan

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I was also looking at the the numbers

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before the war and after the war percent

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of Afghans facing food insecurity went

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from 62% to 92% of children under five

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experiencing acute malnutrition went

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from 9% to 50% of Afghans living in

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poverty went from 80% to 97%. So it was

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extremely costly for Americans and it

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was extremely costly for Afghans as you

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do in your book enough already. Uh can

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you lay out how the full history the

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full context of how it is that the

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American people were misled into this

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war on terror that was so costly in so

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many ways?

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>> Yeah. First of all, thank you for having

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me again. It's great to be with you on

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the show. One important statistic uh

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that you could have mentioned from the

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cost of war project as well is 37

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million people displaced from their

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homes, right? And the same group um it

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was Lex, I'm telling you was at least 5

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years ago. God, it's the future now.

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This maybe 7 8 years ago that they did a

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study that determined that 30,000

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American servicemen had blown their own

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brains out since then. Well, one way or

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the other, deliberately crashing their

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motorcycle or whatever it is. So, talk

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about the cost of war. That's far

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beyond, you know, the actual deaths in

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the war. We had about 4,500 in Iraq and

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about 2500 in Afghanistan of just

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official airmen, marines, and soldiers

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on the ground killed, plus contractors

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and all that. So, that's speaking not

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just to the things that could be

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measured, but you can just imagine the

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the scale of suffering that's going on

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in the veterans minds.

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>> Yeah. And you know what too, like you

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would have guessed this probably, right?

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You probably know more about this

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subject than me. It was a New York Times

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headline, I think yesterday, was, "Oh my

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god, look at or maybe it was the Wall

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Street Journal. Look at this insane list

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of the kinds of drugs that all these

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depressed soldiers get put on. Here's 15

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different psychoactive drugs, all to

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temper the side effects of the others

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and whatever where

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you know, and then they say that this

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could lead to suicide because of course

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we know that, right? They even have to

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say that on TV sometimes that some of

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these drugs cause suicidal or homicidal

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obsessions and this kind of thing that

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we know that's one of the side effects.

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So some percentage of these guys might

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have made it if the government health

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care system hadn't helped them in the

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end is another bitter irony. You know um

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the whole thing is just you know you

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said we got nothing out of it. I I said

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half inest but it is serious but it's

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also it shows by relief what a disaster

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this is that the only thing we did get

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out of it like literally was

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advancements in prosthetic limbs for

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amputees

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whether if they lost their limb in war

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or otherwise like if you want to boil it

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down what did anyone get out of this

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other than you know some people got a

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dividend check from Lockheed or that

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kind of thing but that's not to the

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benefit of the society whatsoever so

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that does not count you I'm talking

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about what society got out of it, what

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America got out of it. We have better

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Luke Skywalker hands than before. That's

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it.

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>> I don't think there's any more clear

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illustrations of the complete failure of

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the military-industrial complex. How did

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this begin? How do we get into this?

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>> Yeah. Well, so I'll try to tell the

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somewhat fast version. Although, Lex,

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that's a kiss of death every time I say

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that.

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>> Please,

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>> we'll go through.

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>> Please go the slow version.

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>> Okay. So, the slow version is

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we'll start with the end of Vietnam.

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Okay. So one major aspect of the end of

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Vietnam was that Richard Nixon felt like

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he had to bribe the military-industrial

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complex some other way. And so one of

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the things that he did was he turned to

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the sha resopi in Iran and asked him to

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increase arm sales. Now I guess I could

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go back. I think everybody knows that

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the CIA uh helped with the coup of 1953

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to reinstall the sha who was the son of

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the last dictator and had already been

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in for a while and they put him back in.

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And so now this is uh and that was in

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53. So now this is in the early 70s, 20

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years later. And Nixon saying, "Hey, you

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know, really help me would be if you

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would buy a bunch of fighter jets." So I

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think it's kind of notorious, right,

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that Iran still has F4s and F-14s.

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That's where they got him from was the

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Nixon and Ford administration in this

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push to do that. And the Shaw was

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apparently pretty obsessed with looking

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very first world with his very fancy

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first world army that he couldn't really

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afford. And it helped to destabilize his

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regime somewhat. And then I don't know

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the full extent of America turning on

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him before the revolution, but I know

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that by the time of the revolution in

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1979, he was sick with cancer and very

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sick. And the Americans secretly knew

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that. CIA knew that, you know, but it

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was not public knowledge that it was

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whatever stage 4 or whatever. He was

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doomed. And so they knew the revolution

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was coming and they were trying to

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figure out how to handle it. And there

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was the revolution was coming anyway.

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And it wasn't just there's going to be a

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change of leadership. When we say

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revolution here, we mean mobs in the

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street demanding an end to the old

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regime in huge numbers, right? A very

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large-scale popular revolution. And

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they're trying to figure out how to get

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the handle on it. Some of Carter's

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critics said what he should have had

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done was had the military just massacer

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all those people. That'll shut him up.

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Or like, you know what I mean? They're

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trying to figure out what to do. Well,

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the CIA and the State Department told

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Jimmy Carter, listen, this Ayatollah

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Kmeni, he's not so bad. We know this

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guy. He was part of a group of Shiite

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clergy who helped to agitate against

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Mosedc in 1953. And so we have at least

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some contact and we think that we can

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