Reese Erlich, author of Inside Syria: The Backstory of Their Civil War and What the World Can Expect, discusses the deadly chemical gas attack/release in Syria’s Idlib province – which has been widely blamed on Assad’s forces – and Trump’s decision to launch dozens of missiles in response; and the similar chemical attack in Ghouta in 2013 that nearly prompted a major escalation from Obama.
04/10/17 – Matthew Hoh on the Afghanistan quagmire and the individual costs of war – The Scott Horton Show
Matthew Hoh, a Senior Fellow at the Center for International Policy and a former State Department official, discusses why he resigned his post in protest over Afghanistan policy in September 2009; the continuing futility of 16 years of US occupation in a country that never was an important terrorist safe-haven; the startling ignorance of super-hawks John McCain and Lindsey Graham; and how informal veterans groups are stepping up to help prevent suicides among their vulnerable peers, since the...
04/10/17 – Robert Murphy on the economy from an Austrian school perspective – The Scott Horton Show
Robert Murphy, an author, scholar, and professor, discusses the core premises of Austrian economics; the artificial business cycle of booms and busts; fractional reserve banking and the Federal Reserve System; and lending policy and business decisions.
04/07/17 – Jeffrey Carr on the pushback against CrowdStrike’s claims of Russian election hacking – The Scott Horton Show
Jeffrey Carr, an international cybersecurity consultant, discusses the low evidentiary standard the US government and media has used to make very serious accusations about Russian hacking of Ukrainian military software and, by extension, the DNC emails. Carr says that CrowdStrike’s cybersecurity report – the basis for all these accusations – is the worst he has ever read.
04/07/17 – Muhammad Sahimi on how “tough” US policy negatively influences Iranian politics, hurts moderates – The Scott Horton Show
Muhammad Sahimi, a Professor of Chemical Engineering at USC, discusses Iran’s upcoming presidential elections and why the Iranian “deep state” wants a reactionary hardliner to replace the current moderate President Hassan Rouhani. Sahimi says that sanctions and tough talk from American presidents help boost the economic and political fortunes of Iran’s military and theocratic hardliners – exactly the same people US political leaders claim to be fighting against.
04/06/17 – Philip Giraldi says IC-Military Doubt Assad Gas Narrative – The Scott Horton Show
Philip Giraldi, former CIA officer and Director of the Council for the National Interest, says that “military and intelligence personnel,” “intimately familiar” with the intelligence, say that the narrative that Assad or Russia did it is a “sham,” instead endorsing the Russian narrative that Assad’s forces had bombed a storage facility. Giraldi’s intelligence sources are “astonished” about the government and media narrative and are considering going public out of concern over the danger of...
04/03/17 – Andrew Bacevich on CENTCOM’s mission of overseeing the unofficial US empire in the greater Middle East – The Scott Horton Show
Andrew Bacevich, author of America’s War for the Greater Middle East: A Military History, discusses US Central Command leader General Joseph Votel’s charge-ahead mentality on the current counterterrorism plan, despite evidence that it is counterproductive and harmful to American security. Bacevich also laments the fact that there are no great antiwar leaders today of the caliber that opposed WWI.
04/03/17 – Patrick Osgood on Iraq’s present crisis and future prospects – The Scott Horton Show
Patrick Osgood, Kurdistan Bureau Chief for IraqOilReport.com, discusses the referendum on Kurdish independence, battling ISIS in Mosul and beyond, the impact of low oil prices on Iraq’s economy, and whether Iraq can become a cohesive functioning state without a perpetual US military presence.
04/03/17 – Peter Van Buren on his novel Hooper’s War and the US’s entanglement in current real wars – The Scott Horton Show
Peter Van Buren, a writer and retired US Foreign Service Officer, discusses his fictional account of an alternate WWII where the US invades Japan, in an exploration of how war creates moral injuries that never heal. He also discusses President Trump’s increasing use of drone strikes, why taking out ISIS won’t end Iraq’s problems, and the partisan stupidity that dominates American politics.
03/31/17 – Tom Woods on Trump’s Obamacare repeal failure, a debt-busting infrastructure rebuilding plan, and Russiagate – The Scott Horton Show
Tom Woods, an author, senior fellow of the Mises Institute and host of The Tom Woods Show, discusses the 2nd annual libertarian “Contra Cruise” in October 2017; why Trump is working with former nemesis Paul Ryan on reforming Obamacare instead of the conservative Freedom Caucus; Steve Bannon’s preference for big government programs instead of Austrian free market economics; the wisdom of letting individual states and private capital provide for infrastructure improvements; and the collapse of...
03/31/17 – Robert David English on repairing US-Russia relations by understanding US meddling in the 1990s – The Scott Horton Show
Robert David English, an Associate Professor of International Relations and Slavic Languages & Literature at the University of Southern California, is the author of the Foreign Affairs article “Russia, Trump, and a New Détente: Fixing U.S.-Russian Relations.” English discusses the Bill Clinton administration’s meddling in Russian elections in order to keep oligarch-friendly Boris Yeltsin in power, and why the foreign policy establishment has either forgotten the past, or steadfastly...
03/31/17 – Arnaldo Claudio on National Security Advisor Gen. H.R. McMaster’s human rights violations of Iraqis in 2005 – The Scott Horton Show
Arnaldo Claudio, a retired senior US Military Police officer, discusses his 2005 investigation of human rights abuses of detainees in Tal Afar, in a camp commanded by then-Colonel H.R. McMaster, whom Claudio threatened to arrest. According to Claudio, detainees were kept in overcrowded conditions, handcuffed, deprived of food and water, and soiled by their own urine and feces. A so-called “good behavior program” was implemented by McMaster, that held detainees indefinitely (beyond a rule...
03/29/17 – Ray McGovern on Russia hysteria, media madness, Trump hatred, and NSA spying – The Scott Horton Show
Ray McGovern, a CIA analyst for 27 years, discusses his article – co-written by NSA whistleblower Bill Binney – about President Trump’s legitimate concerns that senior US government officials (including himself) are being spied on by the NSA and the details leaked to his political and media opponents. McGovern laments that many formerly good journalists are so blinded by partisan hatred of all things Trump, that they don’t question the Russia-gate story or allow any dissenting opinions (like...
03/29/17 Paul Kawika Martin: the New Treaty to Ban Nuclear Weapons
Paul Kawika Martin, the Political and Communications Director for Peace-Action.org, discusses why the US and the world’s other nuclear powers are not participating in a UN conference aimed at eliminating nuclear weapons; and the very real danger and disastrous consequences of an accidental or regional (India and Pakistan) nuclear exchange.
03/27/17 – Nasser Arrabyee on the mass protests in Yemen as the US-backed Saudi war hits the two year mark – The Scott Horton Show
Nasser Arrabyee, a Yemeni journalist based in Sanaa, discusses the large Yemeni protests against the Saudi economic blockade and military aggression; and how President Trump is arming the Saudis far more than Obama was willing to, and enabling them to do whatever they please.















