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Donald Trump is a repeat of the evil (neocon) George W. Bush.

Posted by: ericzuesse@icloud.com

Date: Saturday, 14 June 2025

https://ericzuesse.substack.com/p/donald-trump-is-a-repeat-of-the-evil

https://theduran.com/donald-trump-is-a-repeat-of-the-evil




Donald Trump is a repeat of the evil (neocon) George W. Bush.

New news confirms Scott Ritter’s “America is at war with Iran.”


14 June 2025, by Eric Zuesse. (All of my recent articles can be seen here.)


Late on June 13th, AntiWar.com headlined “Official: US-Israeli Deception Gave Iran False Security Ahead of Attack: An Israeli official said Tel Aviv received a ‘clear green light’ for the attack from Washington” and provided official sources confirming the truth of the conclusion that Scott Ritter had reached earlier in the day: “America is at war with Iran.”


According to Ritter, the U.S. now is actively engaged, and participating with Israel, in a regime-change war against Iran.


Here is a relevant interview of Scott Ritter from 2008, when the “regime-change” man, GW Bush was President, and which displays that Trump’s having campaigned as being the peace-alternative against Biden/Harris was mere lies by him, which had fooled millions to vote for Trump (as-if the U.S. Government isn’t a two-Party dictatorship by America’s political mega-donors):


——

https://shepherdexpress.com/news/features/bush-administration-knows-full-well-nuclear/

https://archive.ph/C4SEg

“The Bush Administration Knows Full Well That There Is No Nuclear”

A Shepherd Q&A with weapons inspector Scott Ritter

BY LISA KAISER, SEP. 12, 2008, copyright 2008 by The Shepherd Express newspaper

Before the United States’ invasion of Iraq in 2003, former United Nations weapons inspector Scott Ritter claimed that the vast majority of Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction had been destroyed or accounted for. Yet the Bush administration invaded anywayand found no WMDs.

Five years later, it’s deja vu all over again, only this time the target is Iran.

Ritter is concerned that the Bush administration will bomb Iran because it claims that Iran seeks to build nuclear weapons and therefore poses a threat to the United States.But, just like before the invasion of Iraq, inspectors have found no evidence to back Bush’s claims. Ritter says that the Bush administration has offered no proof, either.

Last week Ritter spoke in Milwaukee (sponsored by Peace Action Wisconsin) and at Fighting Bob Fest about Target Iran. Before his talk, he answered some questions about the Bush administration’s goals in the Middle East and what it means for the next president.

Shepherd: You’ve written that the war with Iran “is on,” that it’s already under way. I think people would be surprised to hear that the United States has gone beyond the planning stages to actually being at war with Iran.

Ritter: I ask all Americans, “What would constitute an act of war against America? What actions would a nation have to do before we said that’s war?” Again, I would imagine, if a nation sent commandos into our cities to blow up bridges, I would say that’s an act of war. If they sent terrorists in to assassinate our political leaders, I would say that’s an act of war. If they sent in proxy military forces to blow up trucks and kill soldiers, that’s an act of war. If they violated our airspace to gather intelligence that would be used in a military strike, we would say that’s an act of war. We’re doing all of this against Iran.

Shepherd: Why is the United States taking such an aggressive stance toward Iran?

Ritter: In the post-Sept. 11 world, the Bush administration has defined American interest in the Middle East as being one which involves what we call “regional transformation,” to transform the region into a manner which is more in keeping with the goals and the objectives of the United States. That includes regime change of nations that we deem to be incompatible with the United States’ vision of what the region should be like. Iraq fell into that category. Syria falls into that category. And Iran falls into that category. Iran is a nation that we have labeled a rogue nation. We have said that our policy against Iran is regime change. This is what’s going on. This is the larger picture in which the statement “we are at war with Iran today” should be viewed in. This isn’t something out of the blue where Americans can say, “Why would we be doing that?” Something has been going on for some time.

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Shepherd: The Bush administration is saying that Iran has a nuclear program and it must be stopped before it can develop nuclear weapons.

How accurate is that?

Ritter: I think that what the Bush administration is saying is that Iran has a nuclear program that the Bush administration contends is geared toward nuclear weapons.

There is no doubt that Iran has a nuclear program. Iran doesn’t deny that. Iran is permitted to have a nuclear program under the terms of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which Iran is a signatory power to. Iran has signed what’s called a Safeguards Agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA], which allows more nuclear inspectors to operate inside Iran to monitor Iran’s nuclear program.

So it’s not that Iran is trying to do something in secret. Iran has declared its program and has subjected it to international compliance inspections. And, indeed, the last technical report of the IAEA inspectors says that Iran is in full compliance with its obligation to the Safeguards Agreement.

The Bush administration, however, contends that there’s no justification for the Iranian nuclear program other than to develop technology that is used in a nuclear weapons program. […] The thing here, though, is that the Bush administration has produced no evidence whatsoever to back up its rhetorical claims. So we have a problem here.

As a longtime intelligence professional, one of the things we do to judge intent of any party is to examine past patterns of behavior. When you take a look at the Bush administration and the clear example of Iraq, where the Bush administration lied, exaggerated or misrepresented claims about Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction for the purpose of implementation of the policy of regime change against Saddam Hussein, I would say that today the same pattern is being repeated.

The Bush administration once again is lying, exaggerating or misrepresenting the data on Iran’s nuclear program, contending that it is a weapons program. Not because the Bush administration is concerned about Iran’s nuclear program. Believe me, the Bush administration knows full well that there is no nuclear weapons program in Iran. Just like they knew that there were no active WMD programs in Iraq. They’re simply using this as a cover for their broader policy objectives. In the case of Iraq, that was getting rid of Saddam Hussein. In the case of Iran, it’s getting rid of the theocracy.

Shepherd: Is Iran a threat to the United States?

Ritter: Iran doesn’t pose a threat to the United States in any way, shape or form. It has some ballistic missile programs. If I were an Israeli I might be concerned about Iran’s ballistic missile programs, just like Iran is concerned about Israel’s ballistic missile programs. There’s nothing illegal about Iran’s missile program. We can’t sit here and say that because Iran is developing a missile with the range to hit Israel at the same time that Israel has a complete arsenal with the range to hit Iran, that somehow it is Iran that is the global pariah.

I think the best thing to do about any nation’s arsenal in that region is to take measures to instill stability and confidence-building measures so that people don’t feel the need to build these expensive weapons pro grams. But the best thing the United States can do would be to seek to actually enter into discourse with Iran. Right now we’ve isolated Iran. We’ve refused to talk to Iran. This is absurd.

Shepherd: Many people argue that Bush won’t bomb Iran because he’s a lame duck. Do you agree?

Ritter: I go off-of past patterns of behavior. And we also have to talk about intent. It is the intent of the Bush administration to achieve regime change in Iran. They may not be able to achieve that in its totality in their remaining time in power. But that doesn’t mean that they don’t still have this objective.

I think the big concern right now isn’t that the Bush administration is going to launch this massive invasion of Iran. The big concern of the Bush administration is that come November the American people very well may pick a candidate who is going to deviate meaningfully from the track undertaken in the last eight years by the Bush administration. Again, this is where we have to take a look at past patterns of behavior. In 1993 the last executive order given by George Herbert Walker Bush was for the U.S. military to bomb Iraq. [So far as I can determine, that allegation was false. Other than in this instance, I have never found him to have fabricated an allegation.] The reason was that there was much concern in the outgoing Bush administration that the new Clinton administration would deviate meaningfully from the Bush administration’s Iraq policy of regime change. Bombing Iraq, a limited airstrike nevertheless, [would have] tied the hands of President Clinton so that the first action he had to deal with in regard to Iraq was war, was that we were bombing Iraq.

I’m very concerned that this same pattern may very well repeat itself if Barack Obama is elected president, that the last executive order of a lame duck president named George W. Bush might be for the military to launch a limited airstrike against Iran. Then Barack Obama now finds himself boxed in with limited maneuver room, having to view Iran as a threat and having to deal with the consequences. In 1993 there wasn’t much the Iraqis could do. If we bomb Iran, however, the Iranians can and probably will do some severe retaliation, which only expands the conflict, thereby guaranteeing that Barack Obama is not only trapped but will probably continue the policy objectives of the Bush administration. This is what concerns me.

——


The always reliable Larry C. Johnson, at his excellent Sonar21 site, headlined on June 14th “The Silver Lining in the Dark War Cloud Over Iran”, and observed: “In the world of the so-called international rules-based order, Israel is guilty of an unprovoked attack, and Iran, in accordance with Chapter VII, Article 51 of the UN Charter, is retaliating appropriately. Yet, the West is condemning Iran and gaslighting the public regarding Israel’s claim that this was an act of self-defense. Bollocks!” He went on to say:


I think that Iran has an advantage over Israel when it comes to a sustained military campaign based on air and missile assets. Iran has more drones and more missiles than Israel. Israel, at least for now, is relying on hitting Iran with its squadrons of F-35s and F-16s. Here is the problem: Israel’s air capability will degrade over time as the jet aircraft suffer mechanical failures from extended use and normal maintenance.

As of the most recent data (2024–2025), the F-35 Lightning II requires about 10–14 hours of maintenance for each hour of flight time, depending on the variant and operating conditions. Despite improvements over the past few years, the F-35 still requires significantly more maintenance than legacy fighters like the F-16, which typically needs about 5–6 maintenance hours per flight hour. 


Here is an excellent summary of the current situation as-of the present moment:

https://theduran.com/iran-warns-us-trump-deception-but-wants-diplomacy-tucker-calls-out-warmongers-graham-warns-india/

“Iran warns US. Trump deception but wants diplomacy. Tucker calls out warmongers. Graham warns India”


A more in-depth summary, as-of now, comes from Alexander Mercouris, who makes clear that Iran is far better-equipped for a lengthy war with Israel than Israel itself is; so that if Israel is to win, that would need to happen soon; and he also mentions that all of the (Sunni) Gulf Arab Governments — despite their having had major disagreements with (Shiite) Iran — are blaming Israel NOT Iran for this war, which means that if Trump will “go all the way with Israel” on this, it will be done at enormous cost to the United States. However, I do not at all believe Mercouris’s allegation (at 39:11 to 40:00, and then extending all the way to 50:00) arguing (against the view by Scott Ritter and others) that there was no “supposed deception operation that um the United States and Israel launched against uh Iran which explained why Iran was caught by surprise by this Israeli attack.” It was over ten minutes of unpersuasive speculation unworthy of him. He went so far as to say there that Trump is not such a “Machiavellian character” as to do a thing such as that. Even a genius can be idiotic about some things, and I think that Mercouris is idiotic about Trump,  who actually is evil.


The main concern about this matter (the Israel-Iran war) is not merely which side will win this war, but whether it will escalate to WW3 between Russia and the U.S. The U.S. is already in the war alongside Israel, and publicly committed to the death of Iran’s Government, but Russia is not — yet — committed to the death of Israel’s Government. However, if BOTH countries turn out to be equally committed to opposite sides in this conflict, then that would mean WW3. This does appear to be a fight to the death now between Israel and Iran, but not yet clearly between America and Russia — which war then both would lose, because it would be WW3. This was, in any case — like George W. Bush’s 2003 invasion of Iraq was — a war of choice by the U.S. Israel would not have done it without America’s commitment to it. Iran and Russia are responding to it. The evil Governments in today’s world are the ones that are allied with America’s Government, which has taken on the mantle that Hitler’s Government had had in WW2.


Obviously, in the U.S. and its colonies (‘allies’), only a small percentage of the public recognize this reality, which had started on 25 July 1945.


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Investigative historian Eric Zuesse’s latest book, AMERICA’S EMPIRE OF EVIL: Hitler’s Posthumous Victory, and Why the Social Sciences Need to Change, is about how America took over the world after World War II in order to enslave it to U.S.-and-allied billionaires. Their cartels extract the world’s wealth by control of not only their ‘news’ media but the social ‘sciences’ — duping the public.


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