Dialogue Works

Larry C. Johnson & Col. Larry Wilkerson: Iran WARNS, Yemen Rewrites the Rules, Russia SNUBS Trump


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Nima Rostami Alkhorshid:

  1. What is the reality behind the humanitarian aid being delivered in Gaza, and who is actually controlling it?
  2. How can the U.S. justify its support for Israel given the allegations of war crimes and the destruction of aid infrastructure in Gaza?
  3. Why are European leaders delaying recognition of a Palestinian state until September, and what real impact will it have?
  4. What are the implications of Russia’s military actions and strategic gains, particularly in relation to NATO and U.S. military credibility?
  5. How is the shifting global order—especially the rise of BRICS and declining Western leverage—affecting U.S. foreign policy and economic threats like sanctions?


Col. Larry Wilkerson:

  1. Humanitarian aid in Gaza is largely controlled by the IDF; only four distribution centers remain, all in active combat zones, effectively weaponizing aid access.
  2. The U.S. is complicit in war crimes by enabling Israel’s actions; military and political support continues despite clear violations of the Geneva Conventions.
  3. Delaying Palestinian statehood recognition is a political excuse; real pressure on Netanyahu won’t come from symbolic UN gestures but from cutting military aid.
  4. The U.S. military is overstretched and declining in capability, while Russia has shown pragmatic strength, exposing American strategic weakness and naval fecklessness.
  5. Sanctions on Russia are ineffective because Russia doesn’t need the West; meanwhile, the U.S. relies on Russian fertilizer, showing economic interdependence and policy hypocrisy.


Larry Johnson:

  1. Aid operations in Gaza are facade—IDF controls all access points, and contractors like Safe Reach Solutions take direct orders from the Israeli military.
  2. The U.S. intelligence on Ukraine comes from Ukrainian sources, not human intelligence in Russia, making it unreliable and potentially biased.
  3. Netanyahu uses war to survive politically; he will provoke conflict with Iran to distract from domestic crises and maintain power.
  4. Trump’s foreign policy is incoherent—he talks tough on Russia but ignores that trade is minimal, and his focus on deals ignores structural global shifts.
  5. Countries like India and China are circumventing U.S. sanctions through black markets, proving that Western economic pressure is no longer effective.

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Dialogue WorksBy Nima Rostami Alkhorshid