Topic: Paul Wolfowitz

9 chapters across the catalog

Keyboard Warrior
Episode 1807 10:01 - 15:39

1807: Keyboard Warrior

USS Liberty, Neoconservative Middle East Policy

A deconstruction of claims regarding Israeli influence on U.S. military policy highlights the 1967 USS Liberty incident and General Wesley Clark's "seven countries in five years" memo. The analysis argues that Middle East destabilization was driven by American neoconservatives like Paul Wolfowitz and Dick Cheney rather than at the behest of Bibi Netanyahu. Historical clips of Wesley Clark describe a "policy coup" within the Pentagon following 9/11.

Helloo!
Episode 1704 2:16:37 - 2:21:31

1704: Helloo!

Neoconservative Influence in the State Department

The "commanding heights" of the U.S. State Department were populated by neoconservative protégés of Senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson, including Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle. This group established a policy of permanent worldwide war and visceral opposition to Russia and Islamic states. The discussion posits that current officials like Antony Blinken and Victoria Nuland are the ideological heirs to this archaic Cold War-era framework.

e-Safety
Episode 1654 23:00 - 27:15

1654: e-Safety

Wesley Clark, Seven Countries in Five Years

An extended clip of General Wesley Clark from 2007 is played, detailing a 2001 Pentagon memo that outlined plans to "take out" seven countries in five years. Clark recounts a 1991 meeting with Paul Wolfowitz where the strategy for Middle East destabilization was discussed following the Soviet Union's collapse. The countries listed included Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Iran.

Honorifics
Episode 1597 31:18 - 38:32

1597: Honorifics

General Wesley Clark and the Seven Countries Strategy

A 2007 interview with General Wesley Clark is revisited, detailing a 2001 Pentagon memo that outlined plans to "take out" seven countries in five years, including Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Iran. The discussion links this historical strategy to current geopolitical maneuvers aimed at destabilizing the Middle East to counter Russian and Chinese influence. Claims are made that the ultimate target of the current escalation is Iran.

Let Them Speak #1
Episode 993 30:17 - 34:05

993: Let Them Speak #1

Post-9/11 Intelligence Failures and Neoconservative Criticism

Pieczenik voices deep disdain for the CIA and the Bush administration following the September 11 attacks. He accuses figures like Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz of being "cowards" who avoided military service yet pushed for unnecessary wars. He claims to have taught "false flag" and "stand down" operations at the War College and views the Iraq War as a criminal enterprise.

Death Bus
Episode 1205 50:11 - 56:48

1205: Death Bus

Wesley Clark, Seven Countries in Five Years

General Wesley Clark's famous account of a 2001 Pentagon memo is revisited, detailing a plan to "clean up" seven countries in five years, ending with Iran. Clark recounts a 1991 conversation with Paul Wolfowitz, who stated the U.S. had a window to eliminate Soviet client regimes in the Middle East while the Soviet Union was unable to intervene.

Hunger Stones
Episode 1066 2:45:38 - 2:49:47

1066: Hunger Stones

Chuck Todd and Paul Wolfowitz on Iraq War Intelligence

A 2016 clip features Chuck Todd interviewing Paul Wolfowitz about the failure of Iraq War intelligence. Todd frames the issue as "everyone believed" Saddam had weapons of mass destruction, effectively absolving the media of its failure to investigate the claims. The hosts point out that Todd parrotted the administration's narrative at the time and is now surprised that the public no longer trusts his reporting.

White House Moat
Episode 671 2:23:12 - 2:27:27

671: White House Moat

Wesley Clark and the Seven Countries Plan

A 2007 clip of General Wesley Clark is revisited, where he describes a Pentagon memo from 2001 detailing plans to "take out" seven countries in five years. Clark attributes this policy coup to neoconservatives like Paul Wolfowitz and Dick Cheney, who aimed to destabilize the Middle East before Russia or China could regain power.

Johnson's Johnson, Jump!
Episode 609 43:15 - 46:48

609: Johnson's Johnson, Jump!

Saudi Intelligence Shifts and Prince Bandar Dismissal

Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the long-time head of Saudi intelligence and a key link to the Bush administration, has been removed from his post. This shift occurs amid a quiet visit by President Obama to Saudi Arabia. The hosts speculate on the influence of neoconservative figures like Paul Wolfowitz and the lack of transparency regarding these high-level diplomatic meetings.