cover of episode Bill Kristol and Michael Weiss: Catastrophic Success

Bill Kristol and Michael Weiss: Catastrophic Success

2024/12/9
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Tim Miller:特朗普威胁将国会成员监禁且未说明理由,这令人震惊。他还计划赦免1月6日事件的囚犯和取消出生公民权,这些都是荒谬的举动。他优先考虑的立法是延长特朗普减税政策,这可能比人们预期的更难实现。此外,任命Michael Anton和Alina Habba分别为国务院政策规划主任和总统顾问也引发了担忧,因为他们的背景和经验不足以胜任这些职位。 Bill Kristol:特朗普威胁将国会成员监禁,但没有说明其犯罪行为,这违反了美国法律程序。他反对对国会成员进行预防性赦免,主张团结一致对抗特朗普,而不是采取可能遗漏某些人的赦免措施。在Meet the Press采访中,特朗普巧妙地平衡了对支持者的煽动性言论和为其辩护的借口。国会对税收法案有发言权,特朗普简单地延长减税政策并不容易。参议员们似乎正在为特朗普的提名人“结成同盟”,但仍有可能出现反对意见。共和党参议员对特朗普提名的态度往往会随着时间的推移而软化。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why did the Assad regime fall so quickly in Syria?

The Assad regime fell quickly due to the lack of strong support from Russia and Iran, both of which were weakened by their own conflicts (Ukraine for Russia and Israel for Iran). Additionally, the Turkish-backed rebels, particularly HTS, took advantage of this vulnerability and launched a swift offensive.

What are the implications of the Assad regime's fall for the region?

The fall of Assad has significant implications, including potential weakening of Russia and Iran's influence in the region, a possible resurgence of ISIS, and a new power dynamic involving Turkey and HTS. It also opens up opportunities for the West to negotiate with new players and potentially weaken Iran's presence.

How did the international community's approach to Assad change over time?

Initially, many countries, including the U.S., were opposed to Assad. However, over time, there was a shift towards normalization and rapprochement, facilitated by countries like the UAE. The Biden administration even watered down sanctions, but recent events have forced a reevaluation of this approach.

What role did Turkey play in the fall of the Assad regime?

Turkey enabled and protected groups like HTS, which played a crucial role in the offensive that led to Assad's fall. Turkey's strategic interests, including dealing with the Kurdish issue and managing refugee flows, drove their support for the rebels.

What is the potential impact of the Assad regime's fall on American interests in Syria?

The fall of Assad could lead to a more complex but potentially more manageable situation for American interests. With 800-900 soldiers still in eastern Syria and allies like the Syrian Democratic Forces, the U.S. could have more influence and leverage in the region.

How does the fall of Assad reflect on the capabilities of Russia and Iran?

The fall of Assad highlights the limitations and vulnerabilities of both Russia and Iran. Russia's inability to prop up Assad despite significant investment and Iran's decimated Hezbollah forces show that their influence is not as robust as previously thought.

What challenges does HTS face in governing Syria post-Assad?

HTS faces challenges in governing a diverse and fractured Syria, including dealing with other rebel groups, managing local administrations, and maintaining international relations. Their ability to hold power will depend on their pragmatism and willingness to make deals with other players.

What is the significance of the Syrian revolutionary flag flying over the Syrian embassy in Moscow?

The flag's presence signifies a significant humiliation for Russia, which had heavily invested in propping up Assad. It also symbolizes the rapid and unexpected collapse of Assad's regime and the shifting power dynamics in the region.

How does the situation in Syria impact the broader geopolitical landscape?

The situation in Syria impacts the broader geopolitical landscape by altering the balance of power in the Middle East. It weakens Russia and Iran, challenges Turkey's policies, and opens up new opportunities and challenges for the West and regional actors.

What is the potential for a resurgence of ISIS in post-Assad Syria?

There is a potential for a resurgence of ISIS, especially in ungoverned spaces and areas where the regime's control has weakened. However, the presence of U.S. forces and allies like the Syrian Democratic Forces could mitigate this threat.

Shownotes Transcript

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Hello and welcome to the Bullword Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. The Assad regime has fallen in Syria, and we're going to have an update on that in segment two from Michael Weiss. But first, it's Monday, so we have our editor-at-large, Bill Kristol. Bill, we'll also get your thoughts on Syria at the end, but we've got to start with some more pressing matters, such as the fact that we should be together right now, but we're on opposite sides of Manhattan. I'm in my comfort zone in Brooklyn, and you are? You're aware? I'm on the other side. Yeah.

You're in Brooklyn with the young hipsters, and I'm on the Upper West Side with the people I grew up with. It's appropriate. This is natural. Natural laws coming back into order in the country. You can already feel it. We need to start today with the Meet the Press interview that Donald Trump did. Lengthy interview. I've got a bunch of thoughts on it. I want yours, but I think the most significant one

I don't know if you'd call it news, but the most significant exchange was related to Donald Trump's thoughts on the January 6th committee. And I want to play a little bit of that for you now. And Cheney was behind it. And so was Benny Thompson and everybody on that committee. For what they did, honestly, they should go to jail. So you think Liz Cheney should go to jail?

For what they did. Everyone on the committee used to go to jail. I think everybody, anybody that voted in favor. Are you going to direct your FBI director and your attorney general to send them to jail? No, not at all. I think that they'll have to look at that, but I'm not going to, I'm going to focus on drill baby drill.

There you go, Bill. He's not going to do it, though. He's not directing them. So is that encouraging there, that slight moment of encouragement? I just I think that six sitting members of Congress should be jailed, but I'm not going to actually tell anybody to do it. How do you feel about that? Yeah, nor is he going to explain, I guess, and Kristen Welker should have asked him this. What should they go to jail for? I mean, usually one goes to jail or what is indicted with the threat of going to jail for a crime. What crime did they commit? Trump seems to get to say nothing.

I don't get to say, but he's the president-elect. I guess he says what he wants. But he says they should go to jail. And he doesn't get the follow-up question, which is what they should go to jail for. Maybe people are asking his people today, is there an actual statute? Are there these things called books that have laws in them and statutes that if you were convicted of X number of them, you get X penalty? And that's sort of the way it works in the U.S., supposedly, not him opining that these guys deserve to go to jail. I mean, the other point, Andrew Egger makes this point this morning in Morning Shots,

Is the Speaker of the House going to say anything about him threatening six members? I guess what? Is it six current members of the House? I can't remember. Three former members?

to go to jail for serving on a duly constituted committee of the House and having lawful proceedings and asking questions and so forth. I guess I don't expect Speaker Johnson to really object to what Trump said, though. Liz Cheney put out a response statement that Donald Trump's suggestion that members of Congress who later investigated his illegal and unconstitutional actions should be jailed as a continuation of his assault on the rule of law and the foundations of our republic.

It's good, correct statement. I think we were last together last Monday. I've been persuaded more against the idea of the preemptive pardons for people such as Liz Cheney. But obviously, when you have Trump saying something like that, and you have reporting from Jonathan Martin and others that the Biden administration is considering those pardons, that kind of interview will probably be pinging around to the White House Counsel's Office. So I'm wondering what your thoughts are on that.

after, you know, kind of a little bit more time to let it ruminate. Yeah, I remain pretty firmly against the preemptive part and certainly against a very broad swath of them. If there are individuals who are being targeted who, well, I'm against it. I'm for raising money and having an infrastructure to help people who are unfairly charged, especially people who aren't wealthy and aren't famous. And, you know, they go after some lawyers, GS-15s, who were assigned to work for Jack Smith, and those people don't have the ability to

you know, raise money as hopefully Liz Cheney does and don't have the fame to kind of rally people to their side. And they deserve support. So I know some lawyers who are working on that and others. I think that'll be in place. I prefer that. And I prefer an attitude of solidarity and sort of taking on Trump than the individual pardons, which will always leave some people out and some people therefore more vulnerable and some people would accept them. And I think it's kind of a mess.

People can individually appeal for preemptive pardons to Biden, I guess, the way people appeal privately to the Justice Department, the way people appeal for pardons for actual crimes. I'm not necessarily against individuals doing that who feel extremely vulnerable. I think Liz Cheney's attitude is more bring it on. And I actually think she should say yes.

What's the crime? Let's have a debate about it. Let's have a discussion about this. You and I appear on the next Sunday's Meet the Press. You tell me what crime people who served on that committee committed. And I'll tell you what crimes you committed as president of the United States. I just think that attitude would be the right way to confront this.

I concur. I mean, initially, like I had an emotional reaction to it that was like, yes, they should he should do this. The president should this like pardon, be aggressive, you know, protect. And it's just the more that I've thought about it, the more I just to your point, she didn't commit any crimes. So you're pardoning her for nothing to protect her from what? And if you're if you're worried that Kash Patel is going to trump up some reason to investigate her, he can do that.

based on things that happened in 2025 you know what i mean like that there's it's not like it's going to limit him if we're working from the theory that they're going to make shit up to go after liz cheney which is what they'd have to do because she hasn't committed any crimes well they could make shit up that happened after the pardons right like it's not like that would be any less credible than um than what they did on the january 6th committee okay i'm wondering what your other thoughts are about the meet the press was there anything that struck you big picture

I didn't see it. I skimmed through the transcript. I couldn't tell. Part of me thinks he sort of was careful. He tiptoed up to the line as he did in that, you know, encouraging that they deserve to be investigated and convicted, but that I'm not going to order the FBI director to do it. There were several issues where I thought he, on the dreamers, you know, where he's, well, we might have to go after all of them. Ultimately, as they were illegal. By the other hand, I really want to work it out with the Democrats. He, of course, vetoed deals with the Democrats that would have

arranged for protecting the dreamers who've been here a long time when he was president previously. But he's pretty, I mean, he remains kind of cunning in the way that he gives his more, let's put it this way, his more respectable supporters the excuse of saying, well, he's just, he's blustering. But at the end of the day, he indicated he might be willing to be okay with the dreamers. He said he's not going to order Kash Patel to do anything. So what's the problem, therefore, with he's not, you know, ordering an FBI director to break the law?

I thought he did a pretty good job from his point of view of straddling the line of red meat for the base and, you know, excuses for the,

for the high-toned excusers of him and apologists for him. I mean, having said that, this is like in Trump's universe. In the broader universe on Earth 2, the president-elect of the United States is threatening members of Congress to go to jail for no crime at all and threatening others, of course, as well, and talking about mass deportations, which might not be quite as mass as you thought they would be. We should not lose the ability to be astonished that this is happening at all.

The other things that he said about that were executive orders, I think were interesting. And he was pretty clear that he's going to pardon all the January 6th prisoners. He was like, we're going to look at them on an individual basis. So he kind of leaves the door open for, you know, maybe a couple of them that...

attacked the cops thought most aggressively might not get far. I don't exactly know. There was no specificity there, but he strongly suggested that's happening immediately. Similarly, suggested that birthright citizenship should be revoked via executive order, which is not legal on day one.

We'll see whether that happens. But Lindsey Graham was quick to come out in support of that idea. He posted that President Trump is right to end birthright citizenship by executive order on day one. So to me, those felt like, as far as news is concerned, actions that he said are coming that are, I mean, not unexpected, but also ludicrous. The other thing that struck me

Because of all the insane stuff, because you're talking about Hegseth and Patel and the pardons for prisoners, the actual functional first piece of legislation that is going to be coming up in the first 100 days, supposedly, he talks about a lot and more than he would on the campaign. When Welker asked him about the first 100 days, he really honed in on that extension of the Trump tax cuts.

which is something that kind of got lost in the debate during the campaign. I think probably because Biden and Harris didn't really want to take a side on it one way or the other. Frankly, they're going to negotiate it out. So it didn't end up becoming a huge campaign issue. But I don't know. I was just struck by the fact that he focused in on that over the tariffs when asked about the economy. And just thinking about the fact that it is not...

It can be very easy to get that done quickly. Like, you know, you have to go through reconciliation in the Senate. Then you have this narrow House majority. You're going to have the blue state House Republicans that want to deal with salt. You're going to have the crazy House Republicans that want to, you know, make sure that there are offsetting cuts. And maybe Trump can bully them all through, but they can't. They're not going to be able to afford to lose but a couple of votes. And so I don't know. To me, that struck me as like that might be more of a briar patch situation.

coming up in the beginning of the administration on like a substantive issue than people have expected.

Yeah. And if Congress works anything like it has traditionally worked, which is a question mark, I suppose, in the era of Trump, I mean, Congress does think they have a lot to say about tax bills traditionally. They actually mark them up in ways and means or in Senate finance. People have opinions and people have interest groups to represent. And you can't, it's this kind of, well, we're just going to update or whatever the word he uses is, you know, the Trump tax cuts. It's not that easy in some cases. I mean, you

it's a different time right and some of the stuff was a few years and some of it was for longer i don't think you can just xerox the bill from 2017 and stamp 2025 on it and say pass this for another five years you know and then of course as you say everyone wants to get in and add writers and stuff so i i kind of agree it'll and look paul ryan and rich mcconnell and others at the

committee chair level, did a lot of work on that in 2017. This was kind of their bailiwick and this was their whole, in fact, the way they ignored everything else horrible that Trump was doing was that this is what they focused on. We don't have that kind of leadership in either house. I haven't looked really closely at Ways and Means and Senate Finance and so forth, and very narrow majority too. So I agree, that will be interesting. I mean, they'll get some version of the Trump tax cuts through eventually.

I don't know. On tariffs, he was pretty bellic. Wasn't he pretty forward leaning on it, so to speak? He loves tariffs and all that nonsense. But yeah, we didn't see the actual number there. What happened to the 10% across the board tariff that was supposed to happen on day one? Yeah, exactly. I think that's what I noticed, too. I mean, sure, he was still pro-tariff.

But when it was on the substantive, what are your day one executive orders? What are you going to do the first 100 days? He was leaning more towards the tax cut bill, TBD. Okay, a couple other items from the weekend, a couple of hirings.

I really wanted to focus on this one in particular. It's not the director of policy planning at the State Department. It doesn't tend to be a big name or a position that everybody should have an opinion on, but I think in this case we probably should. That job announced this morning went to Michael Anton. Long time listeners of the pod will know Michael Anton. He was the author back when he was anonymous of the Flight 93 project.

article that made the case for Donald Trump in 2016 about how we had to storm the cockpit to prevent, I guess, Hillary from crashing a plane into American democracy. It was kind of a hard to exactly wrap your head around the argument, but that was Michael Anton's famous essay. But I wanted to focus on this. The day after the election in 2020, the day after, he wrote an article which had this headline, Game on for the coup. That was

That was his headline. Now we're saying game on for the coup day after the 2020 election. He wrote that one, we should challenge the late night fines in courts, scare quotes around fines. Two, he said we should hold rallies in contested states. Three, we should urge GOP officials in close states to expose shenanigans and if necessary, refuse to seat Biden electors in the event of a fake count. Four, we should mount a campaign to marshal grassroots public opinion in the president's favor.

All that happened in 2020. And he outlined the coup plan the day after the election in 2020. I think that it probably should have some limits on America's credibility around the world when the director of policy planning at the State Department was outlining

the plan for a coup here domestically. So I don't know if you, do you probably know Michael Anton a little bit, huh? I did back in the day. He was a political philosophy student and I voted for the weekly standard back in the, it was a Bush served in the Bush white house and a lower level, I believe it was the national security council there. And then he served the Trump national security council at a somewhat higher level. I knew him when he was a Bush Republican, not when, and haven't known him since he became a Trump Republican. He was very offended when I, I guess, harshly criticized his, his fight 93 essay in September of,

of 2016. Yeah, look, you know, you'd think being an election denier or even being a little more than a denier, being an election plotter or co-conspirator to overturn the election or an encourager. Thief. Yeah, encourager of the election. I've always disliked, in a way, the term election denier, which is a little too passive. It's sort of like, well, after the fact, you denied it. I mean, that's important, too, incidentally. Right. But

It's one cut more to have been in the middle of the planning to stage the coup. But of course, Kash Patel was, maybe even more than Anton, who was not part of the administration at that point. You think senators might raise this? I don't know. In confirmation hearings? I'm not sure policy planning is a Senate-confirmed position. I wonder if it's not, maybe. I think it has been sometimes. It hasn't been at other times.

It's a bit of a consolation prize for him, too. He wanted to be deputy national security advisor. He was in the running for that. He didn't get it. Some people say he didn't get it because he refused to serve with Seb Gorka. I guess they have some deep hatred for each other. It is kind of fun when the

you know, different little sects or pods of authoritarians getting turned out to hate each other and to get in fights with each other and, you know, undercut each other. Let's hope there's quite a lot of that actually in the Trump, the Trump administration, that would be good. It seems to me like the senators are circling the wagons.

And we've seen some, I think Tom Cotton commented over the weekend about how he thinks all of Trump's nominees are getting through. We weren't really holding out hope for Tom Cotton in any of these situations. But like when you start to think about the Tulsi Gabbard of the world, like who would be the ones to go with Murkowski and Collins and maybe McConnell to, you know, oppose her? You would think that somebody like Tom Cotton, who...

disagrees with her, I assume in every way about her foreign policy views might be one. But for him to be out there today saying he was going to support, it felt like there was momentum after Gates for a moment for the senator showing some spine. And I'm sensing that momentum dissipating. I don't know about you.

I think that's right. My only caveat would be it could undissipate if new things come out about these different nominees. And there will be presumably FBI checks and people haven't really looked at, you know, have been confronted with the things Tulsi Gabbard said over the years. I mean, God knows they're capable of ignoring this confrontation. But are a few people, the Mike Rounces of the world and others who have shown some signs of being willing to not, you know, Joni Ernst, to not simply cave in, will they ultimately, you

You know, find an excuse to say, well, I hope to be for that person. I hope to support the president, but it's just too hard to go to a privately with five senators, as happened with Gates and say we can't support him. So I'm a little hopeful that one or two of them go down still. It's always been a good thing to bet against Trump.

Republicans hanging in there. They're always tougher on the first day. I mean, let's put it this way. That's certainly been the pattern from January 7th, 2021 on that. Well, of course, during the administration as well, they indicate a little bit of, gee, that's kind of a problem. I am alarmed actually. And a week later, it's kind of less alarmed. And two weeks later, it's a great nomination. And I just look forward to seconding it on the floor of the Senate. So we might be in that circumstance. I mean, if I could say, you're going to talk about Syria later with Michael Weiss. I mean,

To have Gabbard and Hegseth, one thing to have them in, it's pretty horrible anyway, in a kind of quiet world, I guess you might say, to have them in in the world that Trump administration will be facing in January 20th, in Europe, in the Middle East, in Asia. I mean, it's really appalling. I got to say, just a matter of basic responsibility to have competent people.

sane, sober people running these, qualified people running these departments. I was with a lot of Republicans in Iowa on Friday. You're the Joni Ernst type Republicans, staffers and former staffers. It was intriguing to me that the consensus view among everybody was essentially that

We hope that Joni will do the right thing with Hexeth. We think that she's doing something good now, which is like creating some space maybe for other people to come forward or maybe for Hexeth to drop out if more bad information comes out. But when push comes to shove, you know, and I'd ask them, do you think she would really vote him down in the Armed Services Committee?

I didn't find anybody who's thought yes. And I think that that is like pretty reflective of like the state of play, right? Like if they, if they can do the right thing without too many negative consequences politically for themselves with the base voters, they will or try. But when push comes to shove, you know, it's not going to be there. So I don't know. I would love to be proven wrong, but that was the sense for Ernst. Yeah. That's very interesting. I mean, they've,

I haven't followed this super closely, but my sense is the Wall Street Journal editorial page, the enablers of the sort of upscale enablers of quote respectable Republicans, they haven't really taken a strong view one way or the other. Maybe they've grumbled a little about a couple of these appointments, but they published Hex's op-ed. They published a piece by Trump's first term national security advisor, Robert O'Brien, defending the appointment of Patel. They've given their readers a

which is like Republican donor class and upper middle class voter class and people who talk to Joni Ernst's friends and donors, plenty of cover to sort of say, well, I think these attacks, they said some foolish things in the past. Hexathet is slightly misspent youth. But, you know, I think they're up to it. I mean, they've given plenty of cover for these senators to do the wrong thing.

One other hiring note at the White House. We got to shout out Trump's defense attorney, Alina Haba, who has received the role that Kellyanne Conway had in the first administration, counselor to the president. I was looking at her bio.

And it's like, it is insane that this person is the counselor to the president. She was working in fashion until not too long ago and then did go back to law school but has had very few actual trials. I was reading a list of some of the cases that she has actually reported.

represented. I want to read a couple of them to you now. In July 2021, she represented Siggy Flicker, a former member of the Real Housewives of New Jersey, who alleged that Facebook had disabled her account for wishing Melania Trump a happy birthday.

Habbo wrote a letter to Facebook, which Facebook appeared to ignore. Later that month, Habbo represented Cesar de Paco, a vitamin supplement entrepreneur, in a federal court case where she filed a lawsuit against Portuguese journalists for revealing his close connections to the far-right Chega party in Portugal. I mean, this is not your father's counselor to the president. This is no James Baker type resume here for Alina Habbo.

I mean, I guess counselor means anything they want it to mean. And so she won't do the legal stuff. I guess the White House counsel, who I think is problematic himself, and certainly will organize that. But it just means, I do think it just means PR flack for the president, especially on Fox News and all other right-wing outlets. I mean, that seems, I mean, Kellyanne actually said,

knew a little bit more about real politics and probably was involved in some of the strategy sessions, who knows how much, honestly. But she was mostly also a PR person. But I assume that's what Alina Hava will do. But I realize what I just said was kind of stupid because, of course,

To say that someone there is only a PR person or is only involved in the actual counsel's office doesn't stop them from giving substantive advice and, for that matter, legal advice. And if Dan Scavino can be shaping policy, why can't Alina Haba? It's going to be a great second term, really fantastic. It's going to be the mix of sort of Trumpian chaos and idiocy and unqualified people and then ferocious –

somewhat intelligent and knowing what they're doing, authoritarian ideologues, that's Vaught and Miller, I would say, especially, and J.D. Vance to some degree. I mean, I guess that's what characterizes a lot of authoritarian governments, right? Sort of a certain amount of idiocy and showmanship and chaos and a certain amount, unfortunately, of actual steely determination to deprive us of our civil liberties and centralize all and personalize all power in Donald J. Trump. Yeah.

Well put. I don't have anything to add to that. I will say to your point that Hava, yes, even if she's just the PR person at the beginning, that's up until Trump's actual White House counsel gives him advice he doesn't want. And then he's got a backup lawyer around who can tell him what he wants to do. So we will, of course, continue to monitor that.

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Speaking of authoritarian regimes, I want to get your two cents on what is happening in Syria. You tweeted this, that Trump said the U.S. should have nothing to do with it. Let it play out. Do not get involved. That was Trump on Syria. You write, does Trump even know we have 900 troops in Syria, that we have real interest in the fall of Assad and a defeat for Russia and Iran and in shaping as much as possible what follows? I'm curious what you have in mind on that front.

I mean, just a couple of points. And Michael, I've seen Syria in much more detail than I. Well, three points, I guess I'll make maybe. One, you know, the Russians and Hezbollah and Iran did not come to Assad's defense at all. People noted that and noted the irony that the Russia and Putin invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Hamas, Iran.

backed by Hezbollah and Iran and supported after the fact, at least by them, attacked Israel on October 7th, 2023. And, you know, kind of poetic justice or something or irony of history, Assad, who was buddies with Putin and buddies with Hamas and Hezbollah and Iran, gets deposed in December 24. So I think there is a little bit of poetic justice there. But it's also the case that the reason Putin is not strong enough to have helped Assad, the reason Hezbollah has been so

decimated is because the Ukrainians and the Israelis fought back. I mean, they do deserve some credit for this. And it's kind of a little reminder that if you fight against dictators and authoritarians and terrorists, you

in one part of the world or in one front, maybe you help weaken them on another front. I think that's really a kind of, but anyway, I want you to just pay tribute, especially to the Ukrainians. I mean, for all the talk of how, and they are in some trouble and they're not as big as Russia and so forth, but Putin is weaker. This is a big blow to Putin. He invested a lot in Syria as his entree back into the Middle East, first in 2013, especially in 2015. So we shouldn't lose sight of the

This was a victory not just for the Syrian people, I think it was for them, but for people fighting dictators everywhere, really. On the second front, just quickly on the Syrian people, I don't know what's going to happen. And some of my friends are more alarmed about the people who are going to come to power. Other of my friends think it's very fluid. It's hard to tell. I'm slightly on the fluid, hard to tell side.

But final point, we can help shape this. This is why Trump is so wrong to say we have no stake in this and we should just stay out. I mean, we can't perfectly shape it. Things can go awry, God knows. But, you know, if we have troops there, we certainly have an interest in destroying and removing the chemical weapons. We have an interest in weakening further, weakening Hezbollah and not letting Iran move back in if they kind of find their nerve again and try to cause more trouble as the troubles that understate for Syria.

So I think the outcome now is very fluid and variable. And I would prefer to have the U.S. have the attitude of we're going to do our best to shape things there within certain limits, obviously, of what we could do, as opposed to

sending a signal that it's hands off. That signal, maybe Putin and Hezbollah wait a month and decide, okay, you know what? We can go back in and cause more trouble or others, Taliban can go back in and decide to help HDS, the more Sunni fundamentalist group and so forth. So I think it's a very, it's hopeful. I mean, we should be grateful when a dictator like Assad gets deposed, but I think it's

And Trump's tweet or whatever it was, was a sign that his instinct is to go in the wrong direction. Can members of Congress do something on this? But can members of his own administration who know much, much better push him to be less irresponsible? That was a question in the first term. It'll be a question in this term.

I want to close with you. We do a little feelings talk. For Friday's newsletter, I wrote about just something kind of concerning that I've noticed out in the world, particularly among my friends, my Democratic friends and some of our readers. And that is...

falling into kind of a nihilistic world mindset. There were a lot of Republicans in 2016 who used this phrase, LOL, nothing matters. Like after Trump won, it's like, this is so absurd. This is so ridiculous. I have no choice to just assume that none of the rules matter. None of the norms matter. My behavior doesn't matter. I might as well just go along and get money, do whatever job I can do, get whatever access there is, or

that I just need to check out of this. This is stupid. This all doesn't matter. And I've noticed that feeling percolating among Democrats now, a same idea. The Trump winning again means that none of this, none of the things that we had valued actually have value and that we should just blow it up. You know, I think that there's a big fuck it mindset out there on the left. And I think that is, I'm concerned about it. And so I wrote to

trying to encourage people to guard against that, encourage them not to become what Donald Trump says they are. Don't be what Donald Trump says you are. He wants everybody to be like him because his theory of the case is that everyone is like him. And I understand that it's sometimes challenging to guard against it. But I think that there is a way to do that while still fighting aggressively, pushing back on him, et cetera. So anyway, I was wondering if you had any thoughts along those lines for about a month out

whether you've descended into nihilism. Do you have any other wisdom for us on that? I thought your piece was very well said. It seemed to have gotten a huge response. I think it hit a nerve and was important to say that. Look, I mean, after the defeat, for Trump to be elected twice in 2016 and then 2024 is not, I mean, people are entitled to a little bit of temporary nihilism and temporary, you know, I don't know, wanting to just give up, I suppose.

And individuals can make up their own minds about what they do over the next four years, obviously. But look, he won by a point and a half in the popular vote. He won the swing states by a couple of points. It was bad. He's got a Congress Republican House that's going to go along with him and enable him, which is bad. But it's, of course, by a very tiny margin. So what do you think? I kind of think denialism recedes at this point. Maybe your piece will help.

push it along. Obviously, individuals at different stages of life and different responsibilities will make different choices. I had dinner with my friend Jay Norlinger last night who said he really was demoralized the next day and spent basically three weeks reading 20th century literature that he hadn't read before and discovered Stefan Zweig, who I've never read, who he says is really fantastic, incidentally. But he's now back in the fight. So maybe that'll become kind of the people are entitled to a little break, but not to four years of nihilism.

People are entitled to reading some literature about mid-20th century authoritarians or to read sad fiction or whatever. People are entitled to all that. I have also participated.

But I don't know. I do worry about it, though, Bill. I think that the but he fights element of Trump, the Democrats like we just need somebody like that who doesn't care about the rules, who just fights back, who just, you know, says screw it all. And this ties to me to some of the things I've been seeing online about this assassination of the health care executive, the United Health Care executive, where there is like it was a New York magazine had a headline the other day that was like,

I don't have the exact headline in front of me, but it was essentially like it was inevitable that this was going to happen because people are so mad. I don't know this like mindset of this is a revolutionary moment. I underestimated how easily that took hold on the right in 2015. And I'm not saying that there is a parallel to that right now at all. But I don't I think we should at least monitor it and guard against it and push back on on it when we see it. Yeah.

That's really a good point. And I'd say the comparison, I suppose, might be after Romney lost in 2012. And honestly, I was disappointed. But, you know, life went on and Republicans won the Senate in 2014 and so forth. And, you know, I didn't like Obama's second term, but we lived through it.

But I think I underestimated at the time, just to really, I think, confirm and strengthen your point. I very much underestimated at the time how radicalizing that was for the Republican right. Rush Limbaugh said, I think, the day after the 2012 election, it's not our country anymore or something like that.

And that became pervasive, obviously, by 2015. And we got Trump. So I guess what you're suggesting maybe is that they would be bad if this became the equivalent on the on the left and got more widespread among Democrats. I guess I've assumed it stays kind of on the marginal left, but I could be wrong. So I think you're right that you're right to fight back against it. Maybe a little more than I've really been focused on.

Yeah, I'm not trying to make a parallel just as far as, obviously, there are a lot of other factors and the media environment on the right. I've been a little disquieted by the degree, both online and in my personal life, of people that have just really started to say some things about how to push back against this that have echoed some of the things that I've said.

some of the things that i that i heard nine years ago so anyway don't do that don't let them take your soul people that's it we can fight we can kick them in the balls from time to time but don't don't let them don't let them take your soul and some norms are good not all we don't have to save all the norms either by the way but like the good ones we should keep so anyway that's my that's my final message bill we'll be discussing this more next monday i'm looking forward to uh

a full debrief on the fall of Assad from Michael Weiss up next. So thanks much, Bill. We'll see you soon.

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All right. We are back with Michael Weiss, editor of The Insider, a Russia-focused independent media outlet. He's also the host of the Foreign Office podcast. Long time no talk, brother. Was it like three days ago?

Yeah, it feels like it. I don't know. It was last week, I think, that we had you on. And in the ensuing couple of days, we had the Assad regime be toppled by the Turkish-backed rebels, HCS. And Assad is now in Moscow, presumably preparing for his new role, shoveling snow at the Kremlin.

A remarkably fast defeat, though I think things were on this trajectory when we last spoke. But I'm wondering what you think are the implications of all this. And maybe we'll just kind of tick through the geopolitical ones and we'll sort of tick through them one at a time. Well, the first set of implications, I think the most important, which is before we get into what happens now or how it's going to change the landscape of the region, is for the first time in 50 years, quite a lot of people are able to breathe easily.

Yeah, I mean, I've been watching over the past 72 hours, horrific footage from Sednaya prison, which was this kind of not even a prison doesn't describe it. I mean, it's a sort of a complex of dungeons within dungeons in the Damascus outskirts where all of the political prisoners of this regime, some going back decades, you know, Hafez al-Assad,

was still president when they went in, have been, in a sense, just sort of abandoned by the world, buried alive in some cases. Women detainees who had been raped by prison guards and given birth, having to live with their children in these squalid cells. I mean, it's Third Reich stuff. And I think we need to appreciate that. You know, in the West,

We had a moment, perhaps with the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, and then a little bit with the invasion of Iraq in 2003 of celebrating, you know, the blossoming of democracy and all that. We got a little too high on our own supply and a little too eager and happy. But it has to be said, I mean, this was a brutal totalitarian dictatorship, right?

that, I mean, destroyed the lives, destroyed the families of so many people, including those who were not necessarily political looking for the overthrow of the Assad dynasty, but simply, you know, wanted a little bit of liberalization or the ability to say what they wanted to say. So just on that point, I think let's just give the Syrians their due here. They're celebrating for a reason.

In terms of how all this went down, I mean, the last time we spoke, Aleppo had fallen. I kind of explained the dynamics of how that transpired. I think I might have used the phrase catastrophic success. So just as a small recap, you know, every country in the region was normalizing with Assad, right? A month ago,

he ain't going anywhere. He's, he's won the war. He's the king of Damascus and even the United States under the Biden administration, although now they're trying to change their tune about this, they were sort of facilitating normalization and rapprochement. Well,

watering down the Caesar sanctions bill, trying to kill the anti-normalization bill, allowing all kinds of weird diplomatic overtures with the Emiratis who have emerged as his sort of dead enders and his great defenders, even though at one point they were very much opposed to him. It looked like he was sitting pretty. There was one problem, one holdout in this scenario, which was rapprochement with Turkey.

And the Turks were saying, look, you know, we'll do a deal with you. We'll recognize your government. We want refugees, 3 million plus of them to return to Syria, but we want them to return safely. Don't put them to the sword, throw them in Sidniya. And also our big issue is with the Kurds, right? I won't,

bore your readers with the history of how the Assad family has used the PKK, which is the Kurdish militia, still technically a designated terrorist organization by the U.S. and the EU. They used them as leverage with their relations with Ankara for decades. But suffice to say, when ISIS came into Syria and the U.S. intervened,

We propped up the PKK and created for them a protectorate slash statelet right on Turkey's southern border, pissing off the Turks like no other, right? Turkey wants the Kurdish issue solved, and they're going to do it in a military fashion. And they saw the writing on the wall. Donald Trump is elected. He wants out of the region. Syria is a place of what? Death and sand, I think he once called it. Not enough oil to interest him.

The idea, the conventional wisdom is he's simply going to hand off America's responsibility in Syria to the Turks. So they were kind of rubbing their hands with glee. And it couldn't get to yes with Assad. So HTS, I wouldn't call them Turkish-backed. They're Turkish-enabled, Turkish-protected, Turkish-empowered. But Turkey has its own Janissary. Did I use that word the last time? Yeah, we're back to the Janissaries. HTS has been begging Erdogan.

put us in, coach. Let us have at it. The regime is bombing us. The Russians are bombing us. You're not getting what you want with Assad. Let us sort of put military pressure on him. And the Turks said, sure, go for it. They told them no in October, November, they said yes. And the idea was a limited offensive that would creep up into the Aleppo outskirts and then stop. And then suddenly let's restart the negotiations. Well,

It's like they put their finger through a husk and the husk just simply collapsed into dust, right? I mean, there was no regime. The Syrian army melted away. There's footage of guys, or at least photographs of the aftermath of guys who took off their army uniforms, put down their guns and melted back into society, right? And HTS said, well, let's keep going. And they took Aleppo. And they took Aleppo almost without shots being fired.

And suddenly, I think the Turks realized, okay, I mean, maybe we can get what we want now through regime change, and very easily so. And they didn't rein HTS in, if they could have at that point, I don't know. And now all of a sudden, Assad is toppled in Damascus. And here's the important thing.

This was not a military fight for Damascus. Damascus was abandoned. It was ceded to the opposition in lieu of a pitched battle, which is absolutely extraordinary. If you're watching this take place in real time of the last 13 days, it was like, okay, they took Aleppo pretty easily, but now the battle for Hama commences. There was fighting, but not such a battle for Hama. Oh, okay, they got Hama, but they'll never get home so easily. That's going to be the real Stalingrad.

I woke up and homes had fallen. I was asleep. And then all of a sudden, they're in Damascus. And it's not just HTS here. The actual first elements that reached Damascus, funnily enough, the Southern Front, which was a consortium of reconciled rebel groups, were...

Russia did the reconciling. But so the idea was you put down your arms and we'll let you kind of run your little autonomous zones. But really, you know who the new master is. It's Assad, it's Hezbollah, it's Iran. These guys never liked the regime. And they were obviously now we know lying in wait all the time to take up arms again and press the fight forward. A lot of these rebel groups in the south, like near the Jordanian border, are former assets of the CIA and Jordanian intelligence. So they're known to the west. They reached Damascus first.

Anyway, it's not just HTS here. I keep trying to get a credible number of how many fighters does HTS have. And the number I keep getting from Western stakeholders is probably between 60 and 80,000. 60 and 80,000 is not enough.

to hold all of free Syria. Yeah, they're going to have to do deals, there's going to be bargaining. And in fact, there already is, I mean, local administrations popping up in these liberated cities, other rebel groups that are, you know, they're with it for the revolution, but at some point, maybe they're not going to be so amenable to Jolani's new governance or leadership. So it's so early days, I can't make any predictions as to what may happen. I just follow the reporting. And so far, the reporting is,

Okay, cautiously optimistic, happy for the Syrian people, but deeply, deeply terrified that Syria becomes ungoverned space or a new safe haven for, I don't think people in the West are concerned necessarily about jihadism in Syria. They're concerned about transnational jihadism.

The rise of ISIS again, Al Qaeda, other new groups that might feel empowered who want to not keep it within the borders, but start exporting terrorism abroad. And Jelani so far, and again, you don't have to be a babe in the wood and you have to trust this guy. And there's plenty about him not to trust. I mean, he's a deeply Machiavellian figure, but he's a shrewd person.

politician as well. So far, he's being pragmatic. He's cutting deals with the Russians, so say the Russians, to allow their forces safe passage out. It may well end up being the case that the Russians don't have to abandon their naval base in Tartus or their air base in Latakia because HTS has reached some kind of accommodation with them. He did outreach to the Iraqi government, don't send your forces in, we have no quarrel with you, even though they're the Shia. And he comes from an organization pre-Al Qaeda. He was a member of

what was known as the Islamic State of Iraq, which soon became the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. You know, this is a guy who used to belong to a genocidal terrorist organization telling Shia, we have no quarrel with you. We want to build a...

pluralistic, multi-ethnic. I'm joking with my friends who studied this. I'm like, you know, you got MAGA guys in the West are like, oh, we just gave Syria over to Al-Qaeda. Wait till they find out what DEI jihad looks like. I mean, this guy is, I mean, he's far more progressive than a lot of elements we have here, at least in terms of the rhetoric. You know, I mean, so he has reinvented himself or trying to reinvent himself as somebody who can be let alone. He doesn't want foreign intervention destroying what he's doing, much like the Taliban.

You know, he's looking to kind of model it on a slightly softer version of their authoritarian rule. That's kind of my question. I was hoping you were to come on and give the 13 keys for Jelani to maintain power within Syria, Lichtman style. But if you're not willing to do that, make predictions. I am just like just on this scale from...

I guess, what is the range? Is the scale, this could end up anything kind of like Turkey, where it's sort of an Erdogan model, all the way to, this could be like the Taliban in Afghanistan? Or like, what is the, what are the comps, what people are thinking might be possibilities? Turkey is going to have a huge say in this. They've been dealing with HTS for decades.

I mean, you know, their corner of Idlib where they started to really ply their trade in terms of governance and state building and, you know, everything from, you know,

enforcing traffic rules to COVID relief plans to all of this stuff. I mean, that, that was done at the pleasure of the Turks. There's Turkish garrisons in Italy, protecting them with artillery. All of the cross-border commerce was, was through Turkey money aid. You know, so, so they have leverage here. They have skin in the game. And I think the United States is now, I mean, there was a New York times article. The Biden administration is doing an assessment on who and what is HTS and what is their relationship with Turkey and,

If it turns out that the Turkish relationship is even profounder than we thought in terms of intelligence coordination and infiltration, then the West has some skin in the game here because they will use Turkey as their kind of intermediary with HTS.

People are starting to talk about delisting HTS. The Brits are kind of mulling it over. Well, if they're the de facto government, we don't want Syria to become a failed state. We don't want them sanctioned up the wazoo. We're going to have to deal with them in some way. Early days yet. Early days. Let's not get ahead of ourselves. But the bottom line is America still has, what, 800, 900 soldiers in eastern Syria. The Syrian Democratic Forces have also bitten off more than they can chew because the regime and the Russians pulled out.

Just yesterday, the U.S. was able to bomb ISIS camps in Badia in areas that had been governed above by Russian air power and below by this regime.

this hollow SAA force, the Assad regime. And suddenly ISIS is getting their clock cleaned in the East. So, you know, it's not as bad as it may seem because, you know, there are players on the ground, including American allies that will have eyes and ears and they'll have some influence and leverage now. Yeah. Yeah.

The other question that I had, just listen to your kind of description of the husk that collapsed. Like the big reason why it collapsed, right, is what you just said, like the Russian backing, right? Like the Russian and Iranians have been weakened based on what's happening in other theaters. And it just they didn't have the interest, I guess, in intervening. I mean, wouldn't that have been the way for Assad to hold power? He would have needed them to intervene one over the other.

I mean, you know, there are two moments that I would love to have been, well, more than two, but in recent years, two moments I'd love to have been a fly on the wall as Putin was getting his briefings. The first is when

The Russians invaded Ukraine and Kyiv not only did not fall in three days, but they ended up getting booted out of Kyiv and then a lightning counteroffensive in Kharkiv and then Kherson. Where's the Russian intelligence assessment of the Ukrainian fighting capability? Similarly, now, who's the guy who had to tell Putin that Assad and his army were

melted away, didn't put up a fight, melted away. And in the space of what, not even two weeks, it all just fell apart and crumbled such that Putin said, screw it. I'm not, I'm not coming to the rescue this time around. And the Iranians too, what a busted flush this guy is, you know, all the blood and treasure invested by two, one regional power, one nuclear armed hyperstate in Europe now invading its next door neighbor over the course of a decade.

more than a decade. And the guy simply just collapsed. And he didn't even, I mean, he didn't put out the last fight. He just boarded a plane and flew to Russia. I mean, you know, he and Yanukovych can do a kind of new version of The Odd Couple, can stream it on Netflix. I mean, you know, two asshole dictators. Send him to Siberia. Yeah, yeah. I mean, so if you're the Russians and the Iranians,

And there might even be a creeping sense of relief, like finally, we don't have to, we don't have to prop up this, you know, this paper tiger, the human toothbrush, as Christopher Hitchens used to call him.

I want to be a fly on the wall when Assad has to go have dinner with Putin at one of those long tables. And here's what's interesting, and this is also – Food checker? Exactly. The questions I have are the speed with which the Russians just pulled out, not from, again, their purchase in the coast, but all of the other forward operating bases, air bases that they had occupied.

That suggests to me, perhaps not just exasperation with Assad, but more of a vulnerability weakness on the Russian side than we have yet fathomed, right? I mean,

possibly because of the attrition that they're suffering in Ukraine. I mean, even Donald Trump tweeted the other day that Russia has suffered more than 600,000 fatalities slash casualties, which tracks more or less with what the Brits had put out publicly. And remember, Trump is now getting intelligence briefings. So is he basically declassifying through X as is his want? I don't know. But the Russians are weaker than they were. Iran is...

I don't know. It's like that scene in Rocky when Apollo is completely exhausted and just everybody's covered in blood. Iran has nothing left here. Hezbollah was completely decimated. Shura Council wiped out. Their arsenal wiped out, if they even had the arsenal that

They were said to have had 150,000 rockets. What's left to say here? The Iranians are already talking to HTS. The Russians are talking to HTS.

The Syrian revolutionary flag is now flying over the Syrian embassy in Moscow. What a humiliation. The Russians allowed that to happen. So the extra star, we're adding a star. Is that the Syrian revolutionary flag? The independence flag. It's actually more of a historical flag than the, it's the pre-Bathys one. But anyway, I think that a lot of people are beginning to reckon or strike these new accommodations with dawning realities. Yeah.

that they pushed too far, they projected too much power, and now is the time for retrenchment, which is interesting. And also it poses, dangerously so, but nonetheless an opportunity for the West here. Not to do too much itself, but to start negotiating with different players to further weaken Iran's presence in the region. And frankly, if this culminates with Russia getting kicked out of the Eastern Mediterranean, that's going to put a damper on a lot of things, including their ability to intervene in Africa.

Because Khamenei Air Base is what they use for resupplies and so on to go from Europe to Africa. Otherwise, the supply routes are too circuitous. So, yeah, I mean, our enemies have kind of – they took a bloody nose. And the new guy, the new sheriff in town, he's saying he doesn't want to have a quarrel with us. Well, I've seen that movie before, but, you know. Yeah.

It can't be any worse than Assad, right? I guess we've been down that path before. Something can always be worse than what came before. I really want people to appreciate the depth of depravity and cruelty that this regime has inflicted, not just on its own people, but keep in mind – and this is what gets me about somebody like Tulsa Gabbard –

I can at least appreciate, I don't agree or necessarily respect, but I understand a sort of Kissingerian realpolitik. Well, he's an awful dictator, but we have to do business with him because the alternative is worse or we have bigger fish to fry and we need it, right? Whatever. I've heard that before. That's just IR theory 101. Yeah.

She goes to Damascus. She meets with this guy. He's not our enemy. Excuse me. Excuse me. He spent years importing foreign jihadists, including people who ended up joining Al Qaeda in Iraq, sending them into Iraq to blow up American and British and coalition forces, as well as Iraqi troops, as well as Iraqi civilians.

There's a great piece in The Guardian about how the Iraqi intelligence service, there were actually good actors in the Iraqi intelligence service, anatomized an operation plotted in Zabadani in Syria that consisted of al-Qaeda operatives and the Syrian Ba'ath Party.

to basically import explosives into Iraq and blow up the health ministry and Iraqi government institutions, killing hundreds of people. This is Assad. When he presents himself as secular, as the protector of minorities, no, that's propaganda and bullshit designed to persuade gullible actors in the West who are terrified of what may come if he's not in power anymore. But I see Christians celebrating his demise. Who to thunk it?

You know, to listen to J.D. Vance, they're going to be put to the sword immediately. So things are a little more complicated than they seem here, you know, and again, you have to take it day by day. And let's not project our own fantasies onto a part of the world that is hard enough to understand how it got to be the way it is, much less where it's going from here.

All right, last thing. You spoke powerfully at the beginning about just these prisons. It's horrible. And you're right. You could use the word depravity. Just the depths of depravity of Assad. It's like the most horrific regime in the world, probably, over the past decade. One of, for sure, yes. So one of those prisoners is American, Austin Tice. President Biden spoke briefly about the believing that he...

might still be alive. He was a freelance journalist and a veteran that was kidnapped, God, over a decade ago now. Do you have any sense for that or any other potential American interests? I don't. I know Austin. When I was covering Syria in 2011, it might have been the beginning of 2012, he and I connected over Twitter. I was actually leaving southern Turkey and he had just arrived and

And my fixer became his fixer. So he got into Syria, and then he and I were staying in touch. He was doing incredible reporting for McClatchy. And because of his military background, his reporting was even more powerful because he understood sort of the dynamics with air power and all the rest of the things that are foreign to me, or at least at the time were foreign to me. And I never believed that he was captured by jihadis. There was a video put out that he

showing him being taken up a hill. But the guys in the video for jihadis, I mean, it looked like they had their clothes freshly pressed at the dry cleaner. It was all very staged and artificial, right? And then lo and behold, it turned out the regime had captured him. I mean, look, I hope to God this guy is alive. He's a great journalist. He's a friend. He's been through hell.

You know, I don't know the state in which anyone's going to find him at this point, because you've seen some of the detainees, the prisoners, the hostages, really, of Sednaya. I mean, one was a medical student taken 13 years ago who has complete total amnesia, it seems. He's memory loss of everything.

Yeah, I have no, I mean, honestly, if I knew where he was, I would be talking to you about it. Yeah, I decided, you know, there's buzz, there's discussions, and I'm sure rumors, etc. No, for sure. And, you know, but again, you have this country that is honeycombed with torture facilities, dungeons, places to keep

human beings alive, such as it is. And I think everybody's now trying to scramble to figure out where these facilities, where these sort of pockets are. So, you know, it's again, it's too soon to tell. But I have no doubt if he's been kept by the regime, then he will be found.

Michael Weiss, thank you so much. Really appreciate it. Much happening. Much happening. As we have a transition into the next administration, I think that we will have much to discuss about foreign policy in the new year as well. So thanks for coming back on so quickly. And we'll be talking to you again soon. Okay. My pleasure. Thanks to Michael Weiss. Everybody else, we'll be back here tomorrow with another edition of the Bulldog Podcast. See you all then. Peace. Peace.

♪ I don't 23rd and think I'm naked and joking ♪ ♪ And when I come through swinging ♪ ♪ You can hear me singing ♪ ♪ Yeah, 'cause if you did ♪ ♪ And then wanna touch me, let me know ♪ ♪ When all my mind was slow ♪ ♪ That's when I was close to you ♪

The Bulwark Podcast is produced by Katie Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason Brown.

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