Andrea Carboni from ACLED Data comes on the show to talk about their casualty estimates for the war in Yemen. “10,000” is the number that has been used for the last few years, but that’s exactly why it can’t possibly be right. ACLED estimates that there have actually been at least 50,000 combatant plus civilian deaths, but that is a very conservative estimate and the number is likely much higher, perhaps around 80,000. Of course, accurate counts are difficult, particularly in remote and rural...
11/9/18 James Carroll on Trump’s Planned Withdrawal from the INF Treaty
James Carroll discusses President Trump’s intent to withdraw from the INF treaty, which he thinks could usher in a new age of nuclear expansion. The INF helped reverse the buildup of nuclear weapons that was taking place between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, and its reversal might mean a return to the same kind of arms race we saw during the cold war. Most alarmingly of all, nobody in the mainstream seems to care about this and no media outlets will give it much attention. Discussed on the...
11/9/18 John Glaser on Iran and North Korea
Cato’s John Glaser joins the show to talk about the new oil sanctions on Iran. He and Scott discuss what this means for U.S. relations with Iran, beginning with the fact that sanctions only achieve the policy desired by the imposing nation about 30% of the time, and a dismal 5% of the time when the concern is security, as opposed to economic. In general, says Glaser, President Trump has taken the wrong approach to negotiating with foreign countries, even though his instincts are often good. He...
11/9/18 Arnold Isaacs on Remembering the Vietnam War
Arnold Isaacs joins the show to discuss the flawed ways the Vietnam War is remembered and commemorated. All too often, he explains, American crimes are whitewashed or left out altogether. If we don’t face up to the deeds of our military and government in previous wars though, we risk repeating the same mistakes in future ones. Discussed on the show: “8/1/18 Arnold Isaacs on Fake Islamophobia in America” (Libertarian Institute) “Tomgram: Arnold Isaacs, Misremembering Vietnam” (Tom Dispatch)...
11/9/18 Brian McGlinchey on the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act
Brian McGlinchey talks about the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act and the lobbying campaign by the Saudi government against it. The Saudis spread a false narrative among American veterans that this type of legislation could open up American soldiers for prosecution under foreign laws, when in reality it would do no such thing. This act was President Obama’s only overridden veto. Discussed on the show: The 28 Pages S.2040 – Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act Jamal Khashoggi...
11/9/18 Sheldon Richman on Voting
Sheldon Richman shares his election day experience, one where he got to choose exactly the outcome he wanted and take home real products afterward—namely, he went to the grocery store. Richman contrasts the voting of the marketplace that we do every day with our dollars, with the political system that supposedly gives each citizen a vote but in reality provides only a pointless display of participation and consent without real effect. Richman’s latest article in the TGIF series explores real...
11/9/18 Grant Smith on U.S. and Israeli Intelligence
Grant Smith comes on the show to talk about his latest article on the close ties between the U.S. and Israeli military intelligence communities. He reveals that not only do American agencies share pretty much all their intel with their counterparts in Israel, but also how the U.S. agencies supplement their budgets with funding from the activities they’re supposedly helping to prevent, like drug and arms sales. Discussed on the show: “Israel and the Trillion-Dollar 2005-2018 US Intelligence...
11/9/18 Hassan El-Tayyab on Efforts to Stop the War in Yemen
Hassan El-Tayyab talks about various movements to stop the U.S.-backed war in Yemen, and what we can all do to help. Tayyab explains that millions of civilians there are on the brink of the worst famine in 100 years. So far political will has not really been behind ending the war, but following the murder of Jamal Khashoggi things may finally be changing. Tayyab’s organization is tracking the progress of two congressional resolutions that would invoke the War Powers Act to end American...
11/5/18 Danny Sjursen on a New Iraq War Report
Major Danny Sjursen comes back on the show to talk about the many errors of the various American wars in Iraq. Sjursen has written a new article discussing a recently leaked report that was commissioned during and about Iraq War 2, but was deliberately stymied and kept from the American people. Discussed on the show: “The Army Stymied Its Own Study of the Iraq War” (Wall Street Journal) “Will Iraq Become Another ‘Lesson Lost’ Like Vietnam?” (The American Conservative) Pentagon Papers Raymond...
11/08/18 Q&A Show
Scott talks with Eric Schuler about yall's questions.
11/5/18 Scott Paul on Yemen
Scott Paul joins the show to talk about recent developments in the war in Yemen, where new casualty estimates claim at least 50,000 deaths just from direct violence. Oxfam estimates that the there are over 100 additional deaths from cholera and deprivation per day, and that when all is said and done hundreds of thousands of civilians will have been found to have died because of the war. Paul reminds us that there is plenty of room to negotiate peace, since most Yemenis hardly care at all about...
11/5/18 Stephen Walt on a Realist Foreign Policy
Professor Stephen Walt comes on the show to talk about his new book on American foreign policy. He explains the doctrine of “foreign policy realism,” which tries to objectively evaluate the consequences of military endeavors, and not focus excessively on the morality of stopping bad people across the world. For example, if the United States keeps trying to remake the Middle East, the unintended victims tend to want retribution, no matter how noble the intentions of spreading liberalism were....
11/4/18 Nasser Arrabyee With an Update on the War in Yemen
Frequent Scott Horton Show guest Nasser Arrabyee comes back for an update on the current situation in Yemen. He explains that Coalition goals there simply can’t be realized, and that the U.S. should just end its support for the Saudis as soon as possible. If America withdraws, he believes Saudi Arabia will soon follow suit. Arrabyee also talks about how the casualty reports from the New York Times and other sources, namely 10,000 deaths, can’t possibly be right, given all the deliberate...
New Media and the Terror Wars
Presented at the 2018 Mises Institute Symposium with Ron Paul: "We Need Alternative Media" in Lake Jackson, Texas, on 3 November 2018. Includes an introduction by Jeff Deist.
10/31/18 Conn Hallinan on the Syrian Chessboard
You are listening to the Scott Horton Show. 10/31/18 Conn Hallinan on the Syrian Chessboard















