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In the United Kingdom, there's already a big demand from overseas. Demonstration in Stockholm—protest against the war in Vietnam, which turned out to be more of a protest by the Greek community against the new regime in Athens. In Greece, the new national government, as it calls itself, was formed immediately after the military takeover, a new government which it seems is regarded fairly favourably by the king. Anyhow, it's led by Mr. Constantine Collias as prime minister facing the camera, and it's composed of six members of the Supreme Court, six military members, and seven civil servants. In the words of the new prime minister, the army has taken over the country to avert bloodshed, chaos, and civil war. In the words of his critics, it was a takeover at the expense of democratic liberties. A new line of merchandise at Covent Garden.

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Fighting continues with tanks, bombs, and guns, resulting in casualties.

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The transcript describes footage of Ayatollah Khomeini on a plane returning to Iran from Paris, with an interview by Peter Jennings. Jennings asks how Khomeini feels about his triumphant return. Khomeini reflects, noting the question about whether the French are their friends. The discussion then questions why the Ayatollah would be sent back to Iran to inherit a deadly anti-American revolution if that wasn’t America’s intention, and answers that this is what America wanted. It is stated that the CIA and the State Department advised Jimmy Carter that “we know this guy. Khomeini, he’s not so bad. He was part of a Shiite group that we helped to agitate against Mohammed Mosaddegh back in ’53. We can work with him.” The transcript ends with a claim that a State Department official, William Sullivan, compared Khomeini to Mahatma Gandhi.

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Speaker 0 explains that he never called the operation Viking Hammer; it was a name crafted afterward by people who didn’t conduct the operation. CENTCOM told him his mission was to work with the Kurds, but he asserts, “My mission is to stop Saddam from going south. My method is to work with the Kurds.” He describes a tactic to persuade the city that there are more soldiers than there actually are, by signaling to another Iraqi unit that they could be killed at any time, but that they are choosing not to. He characterizes this as a lucky strike and says, “We can kill all of them at any time we want,” but that they “want them to take the surrender message,” and are “trying not to” actually kill them. He notes that Iraqi units began panicking and backing up to each other. Kirkuk was the first city in the North to be taken, and it was taken “completely without coalition of American forces,” and it was handed over in “pretty good condition.” The transcript then moves to a request to walk through how it went on his end, followed by a partial response beginning with “Yeah,” and “So, like,” indicating further elaboration would follow.

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Armored vehicles and soldiers engaged in a violent conflict, causing casualties among civilians. The situation was intense, with people being hit and injured. The government's actions were met with fear and anger from the locals. Ukrainian forces took control of the central police station but faced hostility from the furious crowd. In an attempt to protect themselves, the soldiers fired shots above the crowd's heads, ultimately destroying the police station. This event signifies the town's determination to resist surrender. The toll has been heavy, with hundreds dead and many more injured. The once calm city is now filled with barricades and anger. James Mate reporting from Mariupol, Eastern Ukraine.

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The King David Hotel in Jerusalem, site of the largest and most audacious attack on the British Mandate Forces. The building was used by the British as their administrative and military headquarters. On 07/22/1946, a huge explosion demolished the entire southwest side of the hotel. Ninety one people were killed. The attack was carried out by Ergen, the Jewish paramilitary group. The King David Hotel was not to be their last target. On 03/01/1947, Ergen blew up the British officers club at Goldsmith House in Jerusalem. Sixteen persons die and 13 others are injured as extremists blow up the officers club in an unremitting campaign of violence. Universal's cameraman on the scene minutes after the explosion records the stunned and shaken victims as they are carried from the wreckage.

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Speaker 0: For a fact that he's poisoned his own people. He doesn't believe in the worth of each individual. We must do everything we possibly can to stop the terror. Now watch this drive. The tyrant has fallen, and Iraq is free.

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The city of Tikrit in Northern Iraq, once held by Saddam Hussein loyalists, is now under American control. However, Iraqi resistance fighters remain defiant, vowing to drive out the Americans. One member criticizes the use of subtitles, claiming fluency in English. The conversation becomes disjointed as they struggle to communicate. The rebuilding efforts in Northern Iraq continue amidst the tension. Translation (if needed): The city of Tikrit in Northern Iraq was once controlled by Saddam Hussein loyalists, but is now under American control. However, Iraqi resistance fighters are still determined to drive out the Americans. One member criticizes the use of subtitles, claiming fluency in English. The conversation becomes disjointed as they struggle to communicate. The rebuilding efforts in Northern Iraq continue amidst the tension.

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In Jerusalem, Jews and Arabs coexist in times of peace, but tensions simmer beneath the surface. The recent terrorist attack at the Wailing Wall has left 65 dead, with little hope for the 58 missing. The King David Hotel, housing British Army headquarters and Palestine government offices, was targeted by the Jewish terrorist organization, Irgunzweil. The British government vows to find a just solution to the Palestine problem despite acts of violence. President Truman condemns the terrorism and discusses plans with Britain to implement the Anglo American Palestine Committee's report. The people of Britain anxiously await a policy announcement to prevent further loss of innocent lives.

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"A shadow of things to come were these anti Castro pickets who heckled Jewelle Goulart as he returned to Brazil in 1961 to assume the presidency." "It was Goulart's leftist leanings on the fear that he would turn Brazil into a Castro state that led to an army revolt and his downfall." "Goulart had begun his regime as a middle of the rotor, but runaway inflation and worker discontent led him to institute land reforms and move to legalize the Communist Party." "He had also invited the Soviets to hold a trade show in Brazil, and he consistently wooed the red block after his country was unable to pay foreign debts to Western powers." "The deposed president fled to neighboring Uruguay, and it appears that the new rebel government will find quick recognition abroad."

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After 9/11, a general told me the decision to go to war with Iraq was made without evidence linking Saddam to Al Qaeda. Plans were revealed to take out 7 countries in 5 years, starting with Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Iran. Military operations began in Iraq and Syria. The situation in Syria was discussed, acknowledging the distressing images coming out of the country.

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"The first to be attacked was Guatemala, one of the small countries of Central America known dismissively as Banana Republics." "In fact, most of the people of Guatemala are not of Spanish descent. They're indigenous Mayan people and very poor." "In the nineteen fifties, 2% of the population of Guatemala controlled the natural wealth in collusion with giant US corporations like the United Fruit Company, which dominated banana growing." "On the board of United Fruit was John Foster Dulles, who happened to be US Secretary of State. His brother, Alan, happened to run the CIA." "Both were Christian fundamentalists who regarded any opposition as the work of communism and the devil." "In 1950, this man, Jacabo Abenz, became the first Guatemalan leader to be democratically elected by a majority of his people who saw in him the hope of social justice."

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I never expected to see confirmed images of terrorists beheading children, but there are countries in the region, including Arab nations, trying to provide assistance.

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Iranians took to the streets in January to demand an end to the Islamic Republic’s rule, but they were met with bullets. The crackdown that followed killed tens of thousands, with the true toll unknown. As protests grew, the regime pushed a familiar claim that the demonstrations were not spontaneous but engineered by foreign intelligence services, notably the Mossad and the CIA. New analysis from the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI) shows how this foreign-coup narrative was built, amplified, and circulated online, transforming a domestic uprising into the appearance of a foreign conspiracy. The process, according to NCRI, was not organic but deliberate: first, regime-aligned media framed protests as foreign sabotage; second, online influencers across political camps adopted and propagated that claim; third, engagement surged, often surpassing official state media; and finally, Iranian officials cited the online discourse as validation. The narrative then traveled outward and returned with legitimacy. NCRI identified high-engagement voices across diverse political spectrums who converged on the same conclusion about Iran: different politics, one narrative. Among the notable accounts involved were Nick Fuentes, pro-Kremlin amplifier Megatron Ron, Network Node, Atom Media, progressive commentator Omar Badar, gray zone journalists including Aaron Mate and Max Blumenthal, and Iranian regime-aligned commentator Mohammed Manadi. One year and a half earlier, an essay described as Homine’s Soft Power in America discussed the influence the regime had created in academia, media, and cyber actors who operate in a coordinated and diffused manner, sowing doubt about casualty numbers and who is responsible for killings. Two provocative posts acted as catalysts: a Farsi-language Mossad account and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Both posts were rapidly weaponized as proof that the protests were foreign-backed. The largest engagement surge occurred after January 8, precisely as protests expanded and the crackdown intensified, with the same language and accusations repeated across networks. As violence unfolded inside Iran, a second online operation shifted blame away from events on the ground. The regime deployed “attribution warfare,” reframing a domestic uprising as foreign aggression, thereby blurring moral clarity and weakening international response. In modern information warfare, control over who gets blamed may matter as much as control over the streets.

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He poisoned his own people, showing he doesn't value individuals. We must stop the terror. The tyrant has fallen, and Iraq is free. Now watch this drive.

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Taking out the Soviet Union/PLO and Saddam's regime would cause international terrorism to collapse and have enormous positive reverberations on the region, respectively. Regime change is desired in both Iran and Iraq. The question is not if Iraq's regime should be taken out, but when. Victories build upon each other; Afghanistan makes Iraq easier, and Iraq will make the next victory easier too. In the Middle East, Iran's axis of terror confronts America, Israel, and Arab friends. This is a clash between barbarism and civilization.

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Tanks are thanked for their attack. There was fighting. Inside a house, 15 people were burned, including eight babies, because they were blocked in. The speaker says they need to conquer back the whole settlement, and this couldn't happen without the tanks. Tanks are thanked for their attack. There was fighting.

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The speaker emphasizes that to understand the situation, we should consider what Jack Keane is saying. We have one aircraft carrier strike group, plus land-based air power and a lot of air defense missiles on the ground, and a lot of air power there, but there are no ground troops. Don Rumsfeld had about 300,000 total ground troops at his disposal, and we went in on the ground and defeated the regime in about a month. There was a profound amount of air power, much more air power than exists in The Gulf right now, and altogether there was a lot more air power then, yet we still underestimated them. We defeated them militarily in about a month, but then an insurgency rose up afterward because you can’t kill everybody, which is what happened. Jack Keane, Dan Raisin Cain, and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff—the man Trump has talked about—are highlighted as significant military leaders. The question is how many ground troops does he have available? Nada. And you are talking about destroying the civilian and military leadership the way Don Rumsfeld successfully did. He did...

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Alastair Crook discusses with the host the evolving US strategy toward Iran, the credibility of Iran’s deterrence, the role of Israel and Gulf states, and what is known about Iran’s domestic unrest. - Trump’s strategy toward Iran has shifted. Initially, he sought a big, quick victory with minimal entanglement, including a possible attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities in June and assistance from Israel to identify a gap to exploit. Crook says Trump hoped for a toppling of the Iranian leadership via a “Maduro-style” operation that could be quickly achieved with outside support. Over time, outcomes did not align with those hopes, and the plan became far more complicated. - The naval armada near Iran was intended as a pressure point but, from the Pentagon’s view, is more of a liability. The armada is loaded with Tomahawk missiles rather than air defense missiles; estimates suggest 300-350 Tomahawks among two destroyers and one carrier. Iran has countermeasures: anti-ship missiles along the coast, submarines (including mini-submarines) with anti-ship missiles, and fast attack craft. Drones threaten the fleet, and the air defense burden would be high if a drone swarm attacked. Hormuz could be shut by Iran in the event of war, a long-term strategic lever that Iran has signaled. - Iran’s deterrence has matured: any attack by Israel or the US could trigger full-scale war and Hormuz closure. Symbolic exchanges were proposed by intermediaries (an empty IRGC building and an attack on a US base), but Iran rejected such symbolic moves, insisting on a broader, sustained response if attacked. - Israel’s posture and constraints: Israel has told the US it does not view the nuclear issue as the sole determinant, but instead urges action to destroy Iran’s ballistic missile system and deter future threats. Netanyahu, meeting with Whitlock, indicated opposition to any nuclear deal if the US does not secure certain Israeli demands, warning that without Israeli endorsement, a US deal would fail. Israel insists on conditions that make a broader deal nonviable for the US. - The Arabs’ restraint: Gulf states, especially Saudi Arabia and the UAE, do not want direct involvement in an attack on Iran, including airspace use or refueling. Several factors influence their position: fear of Iranian retaliation, concerns about broader regional instability, and shifts in regional alignments. Saudi Arabia has grown more anti-Israel, viewing Israel as destabilizing and expressing concerns about the region’s security order. There is also a fear that a major war could trigger an Arab Spring-like upheaval in Gulf monarchies. - Iran’s internal unrest: The insurrection in Iran involved trained insurgents (MEK operatives trained by the Americans in Armenia and Kurds trained in Northeastern Syria) and some Baluch participants. Corridors through Turkey and Kurdish groups facilitated their entry into Kermanshah Province. The strategy aimed at creating chaos to provoke a Western intervention, with reports that attackers were paid (roughly $5-$10) to inflame violence, burn buildings, attack ambulances, and kill. The Iranian government reports nearly 3,000 killed during the protests, with about 150 more unidentified; the majority of casualties were security forces due to exchange of fire. The narrative contrasts with outside accounts, noting the opposition did not lead to defections from key state institutions, and Israeli intelligence assessment reportedly concluded the unrest did not threaten the regime’s collapse. - Regional and great-power dynamics: Russia and China have signaled opposition to letting Iran be pressured by the United States, with discussions in Russia about offering a nuclear umbrella or naval support for Iran, though official policies are unclear.Originally planned joint exercises near Hormuz were paused; there are ongoing considerations of Chinese/Russian involvement that would complicate US options. A Chinese-Russian naval presence near Iran could limit US maneuvering. A recent drone shot down by the USS Lincoln reflects continued attempts at signaling and potential negotiation. - Overall assessment: Trump faces a dilemma between projecting strength and avoiding a costly escalation, with Israeli opposition complicating any potential US move. The US cannot easily sustain pressure without risking market turmoil and broad regional and great-power entanglements. The likely trajectory involves continued “negotiations about negotiations” rather than immediate, decisive action, while Iran’s deterrence and regional recalibrations constrain what any use of force might achieve.

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In Tehran early in the morning, thousands of people have gathered on a street to commemorate the great, the martyr Ayatollah Syed Ali Khamenei. The people of Iran and Tehran are here to seek revenge.

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An eyewitness-style summary describes a sudden, brutal incident with immediate military response and uncertain casualties. "Nobody could have imagined the horror that followed." "The bodies of the dying lay strewn on the ground." "Early reports said three people were killed and at least 18 others were injured." "The final figure could be higher." "US soldiers appeared on the scene almost immediately." "But for some, there was little they could do." "The grenade exploded about a mile from the city hall, and soldiers tried frantically to find out from which direction it had come."

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Bazaarists and ordinary citizens gathered to peacefully protest over rising costs and economic hardship, described as the direct result of America’s economic terrorism and unlawful sanctions designed to suffocate Iran. The demonstrations were presented as legitimate, constitutional, and recognized by Iran’s leadership, with authorities pledging to listen. Cities were quiet, police unarmed, and protesters marched peacefully until an operation was triggered. The Twelve Days War begins anew. American and Israeli officials admitted Mossad’s heavy involvement. Thousands of Starlink terminals were smuggled in and handed to terrorist cells inside Iran. These cells moved quickly, infiltrated crowds, and turned protest squares into killing fields. Civilians and law enforcement were slaughtered in gruesome, ISIS-like fashion. Eyewitnesses reported armed operatives issuing commands, moving with discipline, and some disguising themselves as police. Fake checkpoints appeared; civilians were stopped and executed at close range. Violence escalated as officers were ambushed, lynched, mutilated, burned alive, and severed heads were mounted on car roofs; bodies were dragged through streets in grotesque spectacles designed to terrify. The terror spread across capital and many cities, with drive-by shootings spraying bullets into crowds and at protesters and bystanders alike, each killing calculated to fracture society, with precious lives lost to foreign bullets rather than Iran’s law enforcement. The people described as totally unarmed. Public institutions were attacked—hospitals, banks, mosques, fire trucks, ambulances, and buses full of passengers were set ablaze, crippling essential services. The violence was described as the work of trained operatives, including beheadings, mutilations, coordinated arson, and synchronized executions. It was characterized as not spontaneous protest but organized terror, with tactics mirroring ISIS and Al Qaeda. Public executions, impersonation of authorities, symbolic destruction, and indiscriminate killing were said to follow the same doctrine and playbook. It was alleged this was not unprecedented, citing Syria and Libya as examples where terrorist cells infiltrated protests to escalate violence and fracture societies. Alongside the violence, a media war was launched: Western mainstream media outlets were accused of bias that blamed killings on the government, while executions by terrorists were blamed on security forces, and victims of terror recast as casualties of state repression. Social media influencers were reportedly paid generously to amplify distortion, demonizing Iran and paving the way for foreign intervention. Cyberattacks targeted infrastructure, networks were crippled, and the government was forced to shut down the Internet to protect citizens and disrupt terrorist communications. Yet the operation was said to fail miserably. Calm was restored, and millions marched in support of the state. Now the United States and the Israeli regime stand poised to launch a new war to engineer regional collapse. But Iran, described as the oldest continuous civilization on Earth, has survived millennia and will stand tall again, stronger and more prosperous, determined to decide its own destiny. The biggest foreign intelligence and terror operation in Iran is claimed to have failed.

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The first commercial oil well was established in 1859 in Titusville, Pennsylvania, USA. By 1900, about 94% of the world’s oil came from the USA and Russia. During the same period, the British Empire—described as the “workshop of the world”—was powered by massive domestic coal reserves, controlling about 25% of the earth’s land surface and population but producing less than 0.5% of the oil. This created a major dilemma for the British Navy if it needed to switch from coal to oil. In 1901, a 60-year lease of 500,000 square miles in Persia was bought by a British millionaire. With support from the British government, the area—known for oil seeps since antiquity—was surveyed by British explorers for oil deposits. On May 8, British explorers struck oil in Masjidi Suleiman. In 1909, the Anglo Persian oil company was founded. In 1911, Winston Churchill converted the Royal Navy from coal to oil. In 1914, the British government bought 51% of the Anglo Persian Oil Company, making Persia strategically vital to the British Empire. In 1915, Britain promised Arab independence in exchange for help fighting the Ottomans, but later excluded Palestine from the deal. In 1916, Britain and France secretly claimed Middle East territories: the French zone was Syria, Lebanon, and Southeast Turkey; the British zone was Jordan, Iraq, and Haifa; and the international zone included parts of Palestine. In the Balfour Declaration of 1917, Britain promised a national home for the Jewish people in Palestine. In 1920, the League of Nations granted mandates of Iraq and Palestine to Britain, and Syria and Lebanon to the French. Leaders loyal to foreign governments were installed, and new arbitrary borders were created that ignored geography and divided ethnic and tribal groups. These boundaries were said to serve the West for “pirating oil fields” and to create a deep divide among locals. A coup d’état in 1921 led to British intelligence installing Reza Khan as Shah in 1925 and founder of the Pahlavi dynasty. Under British mandate administration, increased Jewish immigration and land purchases contributed to the formation of Jewish militias; a Palestinian uprising followed and was suppressed by British troops. During World War II, both Britain and the USSR invaded Iran to steal their oil. Reza Shah was forced to abdicate, and his son, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, was installed. In 1948, the United Nations created the state of Israel, and those who had lived there for generations were forced off the land or slaughtered. Approximately 700,000 Palestinians were displaced through flight, expulsion, and violence—an event Palestinians call the Nakba or catastrophe. Prime minister Mohammed Mosaddegh nationalized the Anglo Iranian oil company, taking Iran’s resources back from foreign invaders. In 1953, a coup d’état overthrew him, with the CIA and MI6 strengthening the shah’s authority. The resulting chaos and anti-Western sentiment contributed to the 1979 Islamic revolution led by Ayatollah Khomeini, described as “having the appearances of being a British MI6 agent.” The transcript then claims that installing the son of Mohammed Reza Shah, Reza Pahlavi, would be the “latest act of criminal theater” by “thieves who sway world governments.”

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In 1917, the February Revolution, a starting point of the Bolshevik Revolution, began. The Bolshevik Revolution was primarily piloted by Jews who hated Russia. On February 22nd, workers at the Putilov plant in Petrograd went on strike. By the next day, demonstrations demanded the end of Russian autocracy and Russia's involvement in World War 1. During the first week of events, no newspapers promoted the strikes. Foreign banking interests and revolutionary Jews sought to exploit the situation, denouncing the past instead of rebuilding the state. Media control promoted revolution. The Cadets newspaper announced that all Russian life must be rebuilt from its roots.

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The marines killed an Iraqi fighter and cheered, feeling good about it. They were excited and ready to do it again.
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