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Is Trump Repeating the 2003 Iraq Playbook in IRAN? /Lt Col Daniel Davis
Manage episode 490059304 series 3619212
The video reflects on the 2003 Iraq War, calling it one of the greatest disasters in recent U.S. foreign policy. It emphasizes that the war was initiated under false pretenses — namely, the Bush administration's claim that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction, which later turned out to be untrue. The war led to the fall of Saddam Hussein but came at enormous human and financial costs: thousands of American troops killed, tens of thousands wounded, trillions of dollars spent, and massive suffering for the Iraqi population.
The discussion then draws a comparison to the current situation with Iran, suggesting troubling similarities. Despite intelligence assessments — including those by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard — indicating that Iran does not currently have a nuclear weapons program or an order from the Ayatollah to begin one, Trump has repeatedly claimed otherwise. When questioned, he dismissed these intelligence assessments, saying they’re wrong.
The commentary criticizes Trump’s erratic and self-focused approach, noting his repeated shifts between threatening military action and pursuing diplomacy. It also questions the motivation behind potential U.S. involvement in a war with Iran, suggesting that just like in 2003, the true aim may be regime change rather than preventing nuclear proliferation.
Ultimately, the piece warns that if U.S. leadership ignores current intelligence — as it did in 2003 — it risks repeating the same catastrophic mistakes, this time in Iran.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
553 episodes
Manage episode 490059304 series 3619212
The video reflects on the 2003 Iraq War, calling it one of the greatest disasters in recent U.S. foreign policy. It emphasizes that the war was initiated under false pretenses — namely, the Bush administration's claim that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction, which later turned out to be untrue. The war led to the fall of Saddam Hussein but came at enormous human and financial costs: thousands of American troops killed, tens of thousands wounded, trillions of dollars spent, and massive suffering for the Iraqi population.
The discussion then draws a comparison to the current situation with Iran, suggesting troubling similarities. Despite intelligence assessments — including those by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard — indicating that Iran does not currently have a nuclear weapons program or an order from the Ayatollah to begin one, Trump has repeatedly claimed otherwise. When questioned, he dismissed these intelligence assessments, saying they’re wrong.
The commentary criticizes Trump’s erratic and self-focused approach, noting his repeated shifts between threatening military action and pursuing diplomacy. It also questions the motivation behind potential U.S. involvement in a war with Iran, suggesting that just like in 2003, the true aim may be regime change rather than preventing nuclear proliferation.
Ultimately, the piece warns that if U.S. leadership ignores current intelligence — as it did in 2003 — it risks repeating the same catastrophic mistakes, this time in Iran.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
553 episodes
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