Geopolitical Economy Hour

The Deal Israel Feared Most Came To Life | Interview With Mohammad Marandi

1 h 10 min · I går
episode The Deal Israel Feared Most Came To Life | Interview With Mohammad Marandi cover

Beskrivelse

As more information about the content of the Memorandum of Understanding between the US and Iran emerges, the full scale of Iran’s resounding victory is becoming clear. This interview with the renowned Professor Marandi, we explore the scale of the defeat of the US and Israel, the vindication of the Islamic Republic’s historic support for the oppressed and downtrodden of the world, the direct result of this victory in empowering the people around the world, in particular in the West Asian region, where imperialism has supported autocracy for over a century and used them as supports for Zionism, and even in the US, where popular revulsion against the war played a critical role in forcing Trump to end the War. Resources mentioned by Mohammad Marandi: 1. Going to Tehran by Flynt Leverett 2. Resistance: The Essence of the Islamist Revolution by Alastair Crooke 3. Manufactured Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare by Gareth Porter 4. A Dangerous Delusion: Why the West Is Wrong about Nuclear Iran by David Morrison and Peter Oborne

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Alle episoder

17 Episoder

episode The Deal Israel Feared Most Came To Life | Interview With Mohammad Marandi cover

The Deal Israel Feared Most Came To Life | Interview With Mohammad Marandi

As more information about the content of the Memorandum of Understanding between the US and Iran emerges, the full scale of Iran’s resounding victory is becoming clear. This interview with the renowned Professor Marandi, we explore the scale of the defeat of the US and Israel, the vindication of the Islamic Republic’s historic support for the oppressed and downtrodden of the world, the direct result of this victory in empowering the people around the world, in particular in the West Asian region, where imperialism has supported autocracy for over a century and used them as supports for Zionism, and even in the US, where popular revulsion against the war played a critical role in forcing Trump to end the War. Resources mentioned by Mohammad Marandi: 1. Going to Tehran by Flynt Leverett 2. Resistance: The Essence of the Islamist Revolution by Alastair Crooke 3. Manufactured Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare by Gareth Porter 4. A Dangerous Delusion: Why the West Is Wrong about Nuclear Iran by David Morrison and Peter Oborne

I går1 h 10 min
episode The West Couldn't Break North Korea And Now They're Afraid | Keith Bennett and Radhika Desai cover

The West Couldn't Break North Korea And Now They're Afraid | Keith Bennett and Radhika Desai

President Xi Jinping followed up his summits with Presidents Putin and Trump with his first foreign trip of the year. The destination – North Korea, or the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, a nation of some 26 million normally portrayed in the Western media as a dangerously authoritarian state, an economic basket case, worthy of attention only for its nuclear weapons – may seem a surprise to many. However, as veteran Korea observer, Keith Bennett and Radhika Desai discuss, neither the destination nor the timing should surprise anyone with a sense of the intertwined histories of the Chinese and Korean revolutions (not to mention the Soviet) and the continuing cooperation between the two countries, founded on socialist solidarity. Nor should it surprise them that, amid the chaos unleashed on the world by a declining West, China and North Korea are quietly renewing their relations for a new phase of history, and their common history. Keith and Radhika discuss the socialist foundations of one of the most enduring international relationships of the modern era, the myths Western journalists and scholars perpetuate about North Korea, and the unexpected twist the matter of Korean reunification has taken.

16. juni 20261 h 4 min
episode How Can a $1.5 Trillion Military Keep Losing? | US Military Analysis By KJ Noh & Radhika Desai cover

How Can a $1.5 Trillion Military Keep Losing? | US Military Analysis By KJ Noh & Radhika Desai

Is the US military worth the $1.5 trillion being spent on it? President Biden called the US militarily ‘the most powerful nation in the history of the world.’ On the campaign trail Kamala Harriss called it the ‘strongest most lethal fighting force in the world. President Trump has called it ‘the strongest military on the face of the earth’. Events, however, have belied this cross-party consensus. The Iran is clearly failing. The international relations specialist Stephen Walt today called on Trump to ‘just admit defeat’. And this most recent failure is not an exception. The ignominious defeat in Afghanistan recalled that in Vietnam, Iraq became a quagmire within a couple of years. Apart from overrunning tiny countries like Grenada and Panama, the US has no military successes to name. Before Vietnam, Korea ended in stalemate. How can such an astronomically expensive military fail so abysmally? That is the question I discuss with K J Noh, the superbly informed scholar, journalist and activist with a knack for excellent analogies…..

15. juni 202654 min
episode The End of NATO? The West Is Splitting Over War and Empire | Interview With Werner Rügemer cover

The End of NATO? The West Is Splitting Over War and Empire | Interview With Werner Rügemer

The relationship between the United States and Europe is often portrayed as a partnership of equals. But has Europe instead become subordinate to American financial, political and military power? In this interview, German left-wing intellectual Werner Rügemer examines the historical foundations of U.S. dominance over Europe, drawing on his book Fatal Friendship: How the USA Conquered Europe. The conversation explores Wall Street’s role in reshaping Europe after the world wars, the growing influence of firms like BlackRock and Vanguard over European capitalism, NATO and EU expansion, the confrontation with China, and the deeper crisis of the transatlantic order. At a moment of intensifying geopolitical conflict and economic instability, this discussion asks whether Europe still acts in its own interests or increasingly in Washington’s.

10. juni 202655 min