Nima Rostami Alkhorshid:
- What is the reality behind the humanitarian aid being delivered in Gaza, and who is actually controlling it?
- How can the U.S. justify its support for Israel given the allegations of war crimes and the destruction of aid infrastructure in Gaza?
- Why are European leaders delaying recognition of a Palestinian state until September, and what real impact will it have?
- What are the implications of Russia’s military actions and strategic gains, particularly in relation to NATO and U.S. military credibility?
- 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:
- Humanitarian aid in Gaza is largely controlled by the IDF; only four distribution centers remain, all in active combat zones, effectively weaponizing aid access.
- 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.
- Delaying Palestinian statehood recognition is a political excuse; real pressure on Netanyahu won’t come from symbolic UN gestures but from cutting military aid.
- The U.S. military is overstretched and declining in capability, while Russia has shown pragmatic strength, exposing American strategic weakness and naval fecklessness.
- 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:
- Aid operations in Gaza are facade—IDF controls all access points, and contractors like Safe Reach Solutions take direct orders from the Israeli military.
- The U.S. intelligence on Ukraine comes from Ukrainian sources, not human intelligence in Russia, making it unreliable and potentially biased.
- Netanyahu uses war to survive politically; he will provoke conflict with Iran to distract from domestic crises and maintain power.
- 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.
- Countries like India and China are circumventing U.S. sanctions through black markets, proving that Western economic pressure is no longer effective.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.