Kyle Anzalone Show

CHIEF DENNIS FRTIZ : The Fantasy MOU

37 min · 18. juni 2026
episode CHIEF DENNIS FRTIZ : The Fantasy MOU cover

Beskrivelse

A “deal” with Iran that isn’t a treaty is still enough to scramble Washington’s priorities and expose who’s truly invested in perpetual conflict. Karen Kwiatkowski fills in for Kyle and sits down with retired Command Chief Master Sergeant Dennis Fritz to unpack the reported Iran Memorandum of Understanding, the backlash from neoconservative media, and the constitutional arguments that appear only when peace is on the table. Dennis draws on his time working around the Pentagon and on a declassification team reviewing pre-war documents tied to Iraq and Afghanistan. We talk through what that history teaches us about today’s US-Iran showdown, why the JCPOA remains a practical baseline even when politicians refuse to say its name, and why diplomacy collapses without mutual respect and real compromise. We also challenge the storyline that Iran is negotiating because it’s “terrified” of US military power, looking instead at ballistic missiles, damaged regional basing, and the Strait of Hormuz as real constraints that shape what’s possible. From there, we zoom out to the bigger political fight: Israel’s demand to steer outcomes, the risk of escalation traps, and the push to bind US and Israeli intelligence and weapons systems more tightly, potentially through NDAA-adjacent legislation with far less public visibility. If Americans are “last to know,” transparency becomes national security, not a slogan. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00 Introductions And Dennis’s Backstory * 3:51 The Iran MOU And Neocon Panic * 9:18 Why “Strength” Claims Don’t Add Up * 17:29 False Flag Fears And Great Power Stakes * 22:48 The Seven-Country Plan And Today’s Bind * 27:18 Secretive Israel Integration Bills In Congress * 31:58 Trump Versus Netanyahu And What Comes Next * 35:42 Media Blind Spots And A Cautious Hope Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

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162 Episoder

episode COL Karen & Matt Hoh: Trump Surrenders to Iran - Will Israel honor the MOU? cover

COL Karen & Matt Hoh: Trump Surrenders to Iran - Will Israel honor the MOU?

The “Iran MOU” sounds like another headline until you run the numbers on oil, reserves, and the fragile logistics that keep the global economy from snapping. We walk through why the most revealing Trump comments aren’t about toughness, but about scarcity and constraint and what that implies for a US empire that’s stretched thin and running out of easy options. Matt Hoh (former Marine and former State Department officer) helps us separate theater from leverage: what it means to unfreeze a country’s assets, how sanctions overreach teaches the world to distrust the dollar system, and why “taking money and not giving it back” isn’t strategy, it’s a long-term self-own. From there we connect the Iran track to a bigger pattern: escalation followed by negotiations, the politics of “legacy,” and the risk that winding down one conflict simply pushes momentum and funding into another, including Ukraine. We also spend time where many shows look away: Gaza and southern Lebanon. We talk about what’s happening on the ground, the targeting of journalists and medical workers, and how Israeli leaders describe turning Lebanon into “Gaza” as a deterrent model. Then we react to JD Vance’s unusually direct warning to Israel’s cabinet and ask if we’re witnessing the early stages of a real US Israel rift or just sharper rhetoric. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:29 Welcome And The Iran MOU * 2:50 Oil Reality And Empire Limits * 5:53 Sanctions Overreach And Frozen Assets * 9:17 Hormuz, Hubris, And Cabinet Fallout * 15:19 Legacy, Afghanistan, And Ukraine Spillover * 19:09 Gaza, Genocide, And What We Saw * 27:02 Lebanon Threats And Israeli Supremacy * 32:18 Vance’s Warning And A US Israel Rift * 38:47 What Washington Does Next * 45:53 Party Realignment And Anti-Imperial Hope * 46:10 Final Takeaways And Farewell Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

I går47 min
episode CHIEF DENNIS FRTIZ : The Fantasy MOU cover

CHIEF DENNIS FRTIZ : The Fantasy MOU

A “deal” with Iran that isn’t a treaty is still enough to scramble Washington’s priorities and expose who’s truly invested in perpetual conflict. Karen Kwiatkowski fills in for Kyle and sits down with retired Command Chief Master Sergeant Dennis Fritz to unpack the reported Iran Memorandum of Understanding, the backlash from neoconservative media, and the constitutional arguments that appear only when peace is on the table. Dennis draws on his time working around the Pentagon and on a declassification team reviewing pre-war documents tied to Iraq and Afghanistan. We talk through what that history teaches us about today’s US-Iran showdown, why the JCPOA remains a practical baseline even when politicians refuse to say its name, and why diplomacy collapses without mutual respect and real compromise. We also challenge the storyline that Iran is negotiating because it’s “terrified” of US military power, looking instead at ballistic missiles, damaged regional basing, and the Strait of Hormuz as real constraints that shape what’s possible. From there, we zoom out to the bigger political fight: Israel’s demand to steer outcomes, the risk of escalation traps, and the push to bind US and Israeli intelligence and weapons systems more tightly, potentially through NDAA-adjacent legislation with far less public visibility. If Americans are “last to know,” transparency becomes national security, not a slogan. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00 Introductions And Dennis’s Backstory * 3:51 The Iran MOU And Neocon Panic * 9:18 Why “Strength” Claims Don’t Add Up * 17:29 False Flag Fears And Great Power Stakes * 22:48 The Seven-Country Plan And Today’s Bind * 27:18 Secretive Israel Integration Bills In Congress * 31:58 Trump Versus Netanyahu And What Comes Next * 35:42 Media Blind Spots And A Cautious Hope Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

18. juni 202637 min
episode Larry Johnson: Fearing the Israel Lobby, Congress Caved on Iran War. Now Neocons Want In. cover

Larry Johnson: Fearing the Israel Lobby, Congress Caved on Iran War. Now Neocons Want In.

A “peace deal” that might not be legally binding, a missing US text, and a 60-day clock that could run out right when Washington goes on vacation. Karen Kwiatkowski fills in for Kyle and asks Larry Johnson to unpack what we actually know about the Iran memorandum of understanding, why it’s being framed as an MOU instead of a treaty, and what could blow it up before the ink is even dry. We talk about the real leverage points, the quiet incentives behind a rushed signature, and why “we’ll sort it out later” can be the most dangerous clause of all.  We also zoom out to the power politics underneath the headlines: China’s interest in stabilizing energy routes like the Strait of Hormuz, the possibility of a shifting Middle East security architecture, and the way market optimism can ignore physical reality like damaged LNG infrastructure, delayed oil deliveries, and cascading supply impacts. From there we get blunt about Washington, where constitutional talk suddenly returns when it can be used to block a deal, even after Congress stays hands-off during the march toward an undeclared war.  Then we pivot to the claim that should trigger bipartisan oversight immediately: reported long-standing US government funding for more than 120 biolabs in over 30 countries, including dozens in Ukraine, with allegations involving hazardous pathogens and gain-of-function research. We wrestle with what “special access” secrecy does to accountability, why biosecurity risk is not theoretical, and how trust collapses when public statements do not match documented programs.  If you find this useful, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review. What part deserves the first real investigation: the deal terms, the war powers failures, or the biolab oversight gap? CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00 Welcome And What’s At Stake * 1:53 Warner’s Warning On The Deal * 7:40 China’s Push And Hidden Damage * 10:50 A New Middle East Security Bloc * 12:15 Congress Oversight And Treaty Claims * 19:32 The 60-Day Clock And Economic Reality * 22:33 Israel’s Options And False Flags * 26:47 The Biolab Network And Genetic Targeting * 36:27 Wrap-Up And What To Watch Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

16. juni 202637 min
episode COL. Lawrence Wilkerson : Trump's Iran Deal - Is it real or FANTASY ? cover

COL. Lawrence Wilkerson : Trump's Iran Deal - Is it real or FANTASY ?

Trump says the Iran war is over and a deal is done but the claims keep changing by the hour, and the details never seem to solidify. We sit down with Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson to sort signal from spin: what would real diplomacy with Iran actually look like, why third-party intermediaries can muddy the story, and why announcing “peace” isn’t the same thing as negotiating a verifiable agreement on the Iran nuclear program and regional de-escalation.  We also get blunt about the spoiler problem. Wilkerson argues you cannot separate an Iran ceasefire from the Lebanon front, because Israel’s operations against Hezbollah and Israel’s presence in Lebanese territory shape what Tehran will accept and what it will reject. Even if a U.S. president wants to force restraint, the political incentives in Israel and the realities on the ground can keep the conflict alive, especially when leaders signal they won’t abide by restrictions.  Then we widen the lens to Washington. We talk about how Congress can hardwire U.S.-Israel intelligence sharing and defense cooperation through the NDAA and related authorization language, narrowing any president’s ability to use leverage in a crisis. From the Strait of Hormuz to oil prices to contradictory goals across theaters, this conversation becomes a case study in U.S. foreign policy, national security decision making, and the limits of American power when strategy is incoherent.  If you found this useful, subscribe for more, share the episode with someone who follows the Iran war and U.S. Middle East policy, and leave a review so more people can find the show. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00 Welcome Back And Schedule Update * 1:20 Trump Claims Iran War Ends * 2:55 Why Wilkerson Says No Deal * 6:02 Netanyahu Lebanon And The Ceasefire Problem * 8:58 Congress Locks In Israel Support * 11:58 Conflicting Deal Narratives And Stalling * 16:25 Military Options Secrecy And Real Losses * 19:40 Limits Of American Power And Strategy * 26:55 Huckabee Israel Influence And Closing Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

12. juni 202630 min
episode Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski: How Many US Bombs Will It Take to Get a Deal with Iran? cover

Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski: How Many US Bombs Will It Take to Get a Deal with Iran?

“We’ll negotiate with bombs” is the kind of line that’s meant to sound decisive, but it also exposes a bigger problem: when war becomes messaging, reality does not cooperate. We take apart the latest Iran war rhetoric coming from Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, and we ask what actually holds up when you look past the press statements and watch how the US military behaves. We start with the Pentagon lockdown story and use it to talk about competence, confidence, and leadership inside the Department of Defense. From there, we dig into why coercion rarely produces a durable peace agreement, why international legitimacy matters, and why credibility is not a vibe, it’s earned through experience and judgment. We also test Trump’s repeated claims that Iran has “no air defenses” against what operational caution suggests about Iranian capability and resilience. Then we widen the lens: Karg Island returns as a strange fixation that points to a 1991-style fantasy of easy victory, even as today’s constraints look very different. We weigh whether there is any real US Iran deal on the table, why Israel and a Lebanon ceasefire are central to Iran’s position, and how analysts like Trita Parsi frame the long-term cost when Washington cannot sustainably restrain partners. We close with the Gulf Arab states’ perspective and what a new Middle East security architecture could look like as trust in the United States erodes and alternatives like Russia and China gain room to maneuver. Subscribe, share this with a friend who follows geopolitics, and leave a review with the one question you think Washington still refuses to answer. CHAPTER MARKERS * 0:00. Vacation Plan And Guest Host * 1:40 Pentagon Lockdown And Leadership Trouble * 4:05 Negotiating With Bombs Falls Apart * 7:17 Why Hegseth Fails The Job * 12:40 Trump’s Bombing Claims Versus Reality * 15:42 Karg Island And The 1991 Fantasy * 19:55 The “Deal” With No Details * 22:43 Israel, Lebanon, And U.S. Leverage * 29:11. Parsi On Credibility And Restraint * 31:17 Lavrov And A New Gulf Security Plan * 36:29 Next Show Preview And Subscribe Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

11. juni 202638 min