Jacob Shapiro:

Hello listeners.

Jacob Shapiro:

Welcome to an emergency episode of Geopolitical Cousins Marco and

Jacob Shapiro:

I drop everything to talk about the burgeoning Israel Iran War.

Jacob Shapiro:

You can write to me at jacob@jacobshapiro.com if you

Jacob Shapiro:

want to get to me and Marco with any thoughts or anything else.

Jacob Shapiro:

Otherwise, uh, as you can tell by how fast I'm talking, I should slow down.

Jacob Shapiro:

I've had a lot of coffee and there's lots to do today.

Jacob Shapiro:

Take care of yourselves.

Jacob Shapiro:

We will see you out there.

Marko Papic:

I dunno how much time you have, but I have a full two.

Marko Papic:

I

Jacob Shapiro:

I've got one, but, um, okay,

Marko Papic:

let's crush it Deb.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's crush it.

Jacob Shapiro:

We are live.

Jacob Shapiro:

Go for it.

Marko Papic:

Alright, Jacob, we gotta talk about, um, a serious situation that I am

Marko Papic:

afraid we didn't really hit on right away.

Marko Papic:

The Holly button has struck again, I. And we now all expect

Marko Papic:

Oklahoma City thunder to retaliate.

Marko Papic:

And we have to see what that looks like.

Jacob Shapiro:

Marco, this is why we're cousins.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause I literally was thinking of introing the same way and guys, Marco

Jacob Shapiro:

was so excited, he was like, no, no, I wanna do the intro this time.

Jacob Shapiro:

And you did it so you could do that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Joking.

Jacob Shapiro:

I was gonna do that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes, we are.

Jacob Shapiro:

The pacers are up to one.

Jacob Shapiro:

What asymmetric means are the thunder going to use now that Yeah, I'm, I'm

Marko Papic:

totally none.

Marko Papic:

I mean, they're conventional, right?

Marko Papic:

It's the asymmetry that's winning anyways.

Marko Papic:

Okay, so we're here.

Marko Papic:

Emergency pod obviously because uh, Israel has struck Iran.

Marko Papic:

Uh, they have struck Iran's nuclear site to.

Marko Papic:

In singular sites.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sites?

Jacob Shapiro:

No, no, no.

Jacob Shapiro:

They, they also, it's not clear how much damage they did at four Dough,

Jacob Shapiro:

but it looks like four dough also, uh, incurred some damage as well.

Marko Papic:

That's interesting.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

So, uh, more than just Naans, naans appears to be, uh, the one

Marko Papic:

that will strike like heavily but

Jacob Shapiro:

heavily.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

We at least have video of smoke.

Jacob Shapiro:

We should say to the listeners, like, this is, it's Friday,

Jacob Shapiro:

June 13th, 10:04 AM Central.

Jacob Shapiro:

What is, is it 8:00 AM Pacific?

Jacob Shapiro:

It's 8:00 AM.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, we're gonna push, we're gonna push this out as quickly as we

Jacob Shapiro:

can, but this is the fog of war, so all the initial reporting will

Jacob Shapiro:

probably turn out to be wrong.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and some of the things that we talk about may even be overtaken

Jacob Shapiro:

by events, like by the time that you're listening to this.

Jacob Shapiro:

So like, take everything with a grain of salt.

Jacob Shapiro:

The hardest part of doing analysis at this part of, in this cycle of

Jacob Shapiro:

a, of a, of an attack like this is we don't even know what we know.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, so, but yeah, we'll try and parse through it.

Marko Papic:

That's true.

Marko Papic:

And I obviously agree with everything you say, but, uh, I do sometimes feel

Marko Papic:

that my first gut reaction is the best.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, no, I think there's something to be said for, um, I mean, I

Jacob Shapiro:

find gut and instinct is really important an an important tool in an analyst's, um,

Marko Papic:

tool.

Marko Papic:

Well, I think you know what it is.

Marko Papic:

I think because as, as the situation develops, oftentimes the two sides have

Marko Papic:

an interest in, uh, flagging that they could deviate from their constraints.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

That they, that they can do more than what you would've thought

Marko Papic:

at the onset of the crisis.

Marko Papic:

But the truth is that they can't, you know, and that's why sometimes day

Marko Papic:

one analysis is better than day five.

Marko Papic:

Obviously, day 30 is gonna be better.

Marko Papic:

I, I, I don't, I don't disagree with that.

Marko Papic:

But the difference between day one analysis and day five analysis

Marko Papic:

is often very, very profound.

Marko Papic:

And it's because over the next five days, you're likely to have

Marko Papic:

your fate in your framework shaken.

Marko Papic:

Think about April 2nd, reciprocal tariffs.

Marko Papic:

What happened over the course of the next five days?

Marko Papic:

I mean, most people said no.

Marko Papic:

I mean, they're serious.

Marko Papic:

They're not gonna negotiate.

Marko Papic:

Look, Peter Navarro's on TV is saying they're not.

Marko Papic:

That's because both sides at this point right now, Israel, Iran, us,

Marko Papic:

everybody has an interest in, um, fronting in saying, hold me back.

Marko Papic:

You know, I got more than you think I have.

Marko Papic:

Anyways, uh, sorry to interrupt on that, but like, let's, let's go

Marko Papic:

over everything that's happened.

Marko Papic:

So, um, yeah, there's reports that Israel used, actually a ground incursion.

Marko Papic:

There's reports that there were, uh, actually some Israeli commanders commandos

Marko Papic:

that they have might have taken some of the scientists, uh, from what I

Marko Papic:

understand, there's two, uh, very high ranking military officials in Iran.

Marko Papic:

They have been targeted for assassination.

Marko Papic:

Uh, several, uh, Iranian military bases were struck.

Marko Papic:

Um, multiple strikes in Tehran.

Marko Papic:

I'm not clear what, other than of course, some of the residential areas where, uh,

Marko Papic:

officials were living like scientists and, and, and military policymakers and so on.

Marko Papic:

Naans, Fordo, not the bushy hair and nuclear power plant

Marko Papic:

from what I understand.

Marko Papic:

Um, of course that one is legitimately for civilian use, although everything is

Marko Papic:

of course part of the nuclear program.

Marko Papic:

Um, I dunno, am I missing anything else on Israel's?

Marko Papic:

Oh yeah.

Marko Papic:

200 fighter jets were involved.

Marko Papic:

Doesn't seem that refueling, uh, planes were involved, but they probably were, I

Marko Papic:

think, uh, US has delivered one to Israel.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, there's a, there's a lot unclear about that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, well, so a couple things.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, the first is, um, so we have some confirmed deaths this morning.

Jacob Shapiro:

So the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces, Mohammed, I'm gonna, I'm

Jacob Shapiro:

not a Farsi speaker, I'm an a I'm an Arabic speaker, so I apologize for

Jacob Shapiro:

butchering these names, but Major General B Bhe, I think is his name.

Jacob Shapiro:

Then you've got General Hussein Salami, not Soleimani Salami, who is the

Jacob Shapiro:

new commander in chief of the IRGC.

Jacob Shapiro:

He is gone.

Jacob Shapiro:

Then you've got a Deputy Commander of the Armed Forces, um, a head of the airspace

Jacob Shapiro:

unit of the IRGC taken out, um, one, at least one politician has been taken out.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, Ali Shahani, who is an influential Iranian politician.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's a close confidant of the Supreme leader.

Jacob Shapiro:

He was overseeing the nuclear talks with the United States, which is kind

Jacob Shapiro:

of crazy when you think about it.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like not just an assault on Iran, but an an assault on the nuclear deal.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the negotiations itself on, on

Marko Papic:

diplomacy itself.

Jacob Shapiro:

I know, and like some nuclear scientists taken out as well,

Jacob Shapiro:

there has been some video on social media of Israeli refueling airplanes.

Jacob Shapiro:

It's not clear whether they're legit, it's not clear whether it's

Jacob Shapiro:

over Iranian airspace or over Syrian airspace or over Iraqi airspace.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, Marco, I dunno if you remember Sim Tac though.

Jacob Shapiro:

He was on my podcast a couple weeks ago and he talked about how when Assad fell,

Jacob Shapiro:

one of the things Israel did was it very quietly bombed the shit out of Syrian air

Jacob Shapiro:

defense so that Syria skies are basically open to Israel if it wants them to be.

Jacob Shapiro:

So part of me is thinking maybe what made this a little more realistic than

Jacob Shapiro:

even I would've given Israel credit for, is maybe they're able to refuel

Jacob Shapiro:

over Syria or maybe they're less worried about incurring things over Syria.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and then the other, the other part that I would, um, add to your summary

Jacob Shapiro:

of what happened is the sort of.

Jacob Shapiro:

I, I, I don't wanna say strange, but the US role in all of this, because the

Jacob Shapiro:

initial response last night when you and I were texting was from Marco Rubio.

Jacob Shapiro:

That was basically Israel took unilateral action.

Jacob Shapiro:

We are not involved with this.

Jacob Shapiro:

Iran should not attack us.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then you wake up to Trump on truth socials saying, I gave Iran a chance.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, they could still make a deal if they want, but there's more

Jacob Shapiro:

coming and Israel is like gonna, you know, basically destroy them.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and then you had Axios Wall Street Journal reporting this

Jacob Shapiro:

morning that, that not only.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, is, is the United States okay with this, but that the United States

Jacob Shapiro:

knew and that the United States participated in the deception to lull

Jacob Shapiro:

Iran into a false sense of security by telling them it's not gonna happen.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's gonna be more time here.

Jacob Shapiro:

United States is not for this.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't know quite how to run that down.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I think you're also right to point out that, um, there are multiple Israeli

Jacob Shapiro:

security sources that are talking about the Mossad being on the ground in Iran in

Jacob Shapiro:

much the same way that Ukraine was on the ground in Russia with their big attack.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, you know, precision guided.

Jacob Shapiro:

Weapons located next to Iranians, surface to air missile systems, um,

Jacob Shapiro:

drones, uh, actual commando units going after scientists, things like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and I think part of that, there, there's two parts of that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Number one, and I, I was just talking to an Iranian security

Jacob Shapiro:

expert for, for my other podcast.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, it's a sophisticated social media and publicity campaign too, because Israel

Jacob Shapiro:

is all over Persian social media, putting out things about how this is an assault

Jacob Shapiro:

on the regime, not on the Iranian people.

Jacob Shapiro:

That the, the Iranian regime has been attacking you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Israel is attacking this and sort of sowing those seeds of doubt.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, but yeah, obviously a huge intelligence operation that

Jacob Shapiro:

had to come forward there too.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then the last thing I would just add to the summary, and I'm curious,

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, I'm curious for your takes on all of this, um, uh, Marco,

Jacob Shapiro:

but in some ways, one of the most.

Jacob Shapiro:

Blunt statements about what Israel has done thus far.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause if you like the French, I dunno if you saw Macron's statement,

Jacob Shapiro:

he was like, we condemn Iran and its nuclear program, like relatively softy

Jacob Shapiro:

from some of these other countries.

Jacob Shapiro:

But Saudi Arabia, I will quote, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia's, ministry

Jacob Shapiro:

of Foreign Affairs expresses its strong condemnation in denunciation of

Jacob Shapiro:

blatant Israeli aggression against the brotherly Islamic Republic of Iran,

Jacob Shapiro:

which undermines sovereignty and security and constitute a clear violation,

Jacob Shapiro:

right, of international law and norms.

Jacob Shapiro:

So the Saudis that's at least rhetorically, like slapping the

Jacob Shapiro:

Israelis on the wrist, maybe behind the scenes Mohammad bin Salman, is like

Jacob Shapiro:

popping the champagne on the yacht.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't know, but, uh, yeah, that, that's at least my list of things.

Jacob Shapiro:

Also, to add to what you said,

Marko Papic:

well we should probably start with the last one.

Marko Papic:

I know that our listeners might think that's bizarre, uh, to start with

Marko Papic:

the Saudi statement, but the Saudi statement is the most important one.

Marko Papic:

I mean, if you're listening to this and wondering what's gonna happen

Marko Papic:

to your retirement, what's gonna happen to the global economy, it's

Marko Papic:

really the Saudi Iran relationship that matters more than anything.

Marko Papic:

I've said many times.

Marko Papic:

Um, by the way, I think our second podcast was about this.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

It was about war in Iran.

Marko Papic:

Um, so the, I've said many times this year and last year,

Marko Papic:

Iran and Israel can go at it.

Marko Papic:

They can do whatever they want to each other, and nothing will

Marko Papic:

happen to the rest of the world.

Marko Papic:

So this is a very important point.

Marko Papic:

Iran and Israel can have a full out war for the next two years, and

Marko Papic:

it may be like a tree that falls in the forest that nobody hears.

Jacob Shapiro:

Tree falls in the oasis or the desert, I don't

Marko Papic:

know.

Marko Papic:

In the desert.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

The date tree falls over.

Marko Papic:

So why, why?

Marko Papic:

Because, um, look, Iran has to, uh, close the straits of MOUs for this to be taken

Marko Papic:

seriously by anybody listening to this.

Marko Papic:

I'm assuming that Iranian regime is not listening to this.

Marko Papic:

You know, you guys should take this seriously.

Marko Papic:

Israel is going at it.

Marko Papic:

Um, but other, other than that, I mean, look, um, the way that this conflict

Marko Papic:

articulates itself in oil prices, in gold prices, in stock prices is that Iran

Marko Papic:

has to close the straits or for moose.

Marko Papic:

And if the Houthis can close the Red Sea, you know, uh, if the Houthis can

Marko Papic:

do that to the Red Sea, I mean, Iran could do that to the Straits of Remus.

Marko Papic:

And I just wanna explain this because this is kind of complicated.

Marko Papic:

Iran cannot really conventionally retaliate successfully, at least

Marko Papic:

against Israel or really anyone.

Marko Papic:

Uh, it can, you know, shoot some ballistic missiles and drones.

Marko Papic:

You know, that's unfortunate for people on the receiving end, but it's not tragic.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, and, and to, to that point, apparently Iran

Jacob Shapiro:

sent its first salvo of drones.

Jacob Shapiro:

Israel warned its population to get ready and then sent out a, we got them all.

Jacob Shapiro:

Don't worry, you can go back to your life.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, I mean, just like laying it on

Marko Papic:

for a while.

Marko Papic:

But you know what, that also shows multiple things.

Marko Papic:

Jacob.

Marko Papic:

It, it means that Iran did not have a plan to retaliate, like ready to go.

Marko Papic:

Like, you know, you know, this is one of those things, like this

Marko Papic:

is something that might happen.

Marko Papic:

Like I live in California, we may have a huge earthquake.

Marko Papic:

I have rubber boots, I have water, I have supply of food, like I have flashlights

Marko Papic:

this, like, if there's an earthquake right now, my family and I are now

Marko Papic:

like, oh, well let's send some drones.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't know, like,

Marko Papic:

no, like why isn't there a ballistic attack?

Marko Papic:

Why isn't there, you know, why isn't there a huge salvo?

Marko Papic:

Like, why are they not ready?

Marko Papic:

Instead, it's like some hundred drones.

Marko Papic:

Like it's, it's very, Imma amateurish, but let's leave that aside.

Marko Papic:

I mean, look, the point is, while Iran's military is incredibly dilapidated.

Marko Papic:

There's an asymmetry to it in that closing, a shipping lane doesn't

Marko Papic:

require that much sophistication.

Marko Papic:

You can do it with drones.

Marko Papic:

You are attacking civilian tankers, okay?

Marko Papic:

They're undefended.

Marko Papic:

So you can, you can really make it difficult for ships to transit

Marko Papic:

with very low sophistication.

Marko Papic:

Houthis have proven that, and so while Iran has no ability to conventionally

Marko Papic:

fight a war with really Israel or c conventionally to threaten American

Marko Papic:

forces in the region, they just don't.

Marko Papic:

They have enough sophistication to close shipping causal oppresses to

Marko Papic:

go up, but they haven't done it.

Marko Papic:

Why?

Marko Papic:

Because, because of two reasons.

Marko Papic:

One, that will invite massive retaliation from the United States of America,

Marko Papic:

the kind that turns you into a parking lot.

Marko Papic:

Iran has no way to defend against that.

Marko Papic:

So it's kind of crossing the Rubicon that is the nuclear option.

Marko Papic:

Actually, it's not nuclear weapons.

Marko Papic:

It will be closing the streets of, once you do that, you know it's fair game.

Marko Papic:

At that point, even China's like, Hey America, please can

Marko Papic:

you turn Iran into a parking lot?

Marko Papic:

So that's the first issue.

Marko Papic:

The second issue is that it would tip the scales of conflict in the

Marko Papic:

region so vastly against Iran because it would invite Saudi participation.

Marko Papic:

As you point out, Iran is holding on to some very nice

Marko Papic:

juicy assets for the long term.

Marko Papic:

One of them is Iraq.

Marko Papic:

It's holding on to Iraq because the Saudis effectively seeded Iraq to Iran

Marko Papic:

when they negotiated their 2022 Deante.

Marko Papic:

And so there's a quid pro quo.

Marko Papic:

Saudi Arabia said to Iran, you can have Iraq, you can control it

Marko Papic:

through your proxies, political and militant, but you leave us alone.

Marko Papic:

No more drone attacks against our energy facilities.

Marko Papic:

And notice that this Detant has held from October 7th, 2023 onwards.

Marko Papic:

It's held through the Iranis Israel missile strikes in 2024.

Marko Papic:

They were unprecedented and the people thought would cause oil

Marko Papic:

prices to go through the roof.

Marko Papic:

They didn't.

Marko Papic:

It's held throughout the Houthis who are allied with Iran, not proxies,

Marko Papic:

allied throughout the HTI drone campaign against shipping in the Red Sea.

Marko Papic:

Notice how all the drones went south, as if their joystick controls

Marko Papic:

are stuck in the south position.

Marko Papic:

None of them went north to Saudi facilities or Persian Gulf.

Marko Papic:

Why not?

Marko Papic:

I mean, hey, Houthis, if you wanna make a big splash about what's going on in

Marko Papic:

Gaza, shut down the streets of ous.

Marko Papic:

It's kind of equidistant to the Red Sea.

Marko Papic:

So why haven't the Houthis done that?

Marko Papic:

Because Iran told them not to.

Marko Papic:

Iran and Saudi Arabia have a Deante, and it's a very important

Marko Papic:

one, and it's the most important part of this story to today.

Marko Papic:

It's not about Israeli capabilities or cool special forces or the

Marko Papic:

next movie that will be directed about like their incursion.

Marko Papic:

Like everyone's like obsessing about silly little military stuff.

Marko Papic:

The most important question is what will happen in terms of Iranian retaliation

Marko Papic:

and will they rip off the bandaid?

Marko Papic:

Will they cross the Rubicon, whatever analogy you want, and

Marko Papic:

attack Saudi facilities and shipping through the per of Gulf?

Marko Papic:

And my answer is no.

Marko Papic:

And that's why that Saudi statement is so important because the Saudis

Marko Papic:

are saying like, look guys, like this is between you Actually,

Marko Papic:

no, they're not even saying that.

Marko Papic:

They're actually saying like, yo, Israel, Israel is the bad guy.

Marko Papic:

They're straight up saying Israel's the bad guy.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Uh, which is not that much of a shift.

Marko Papic:

I mean, they've been saying that really since October 7th, uh, and

Marko Papic:

throughout 2024, although they did participate allegedly in shooting

Marko Papic:

down some projectiles that were flying over Saudi territory.

Marko Papic:

And, you know, uh, the way they justified that to Iran is like, Hey man, like.

Marko Papic:

You don't need to fly over Saudi Arabia to hit Israel, you

Marko Papic:

know, like, look at a map, bro.

Marko Papic:

Like, so please don't, you know, like, like, yeah, we're

Marko Papic:

gonna defend our airspace.

Marko Papic:

Like that's, so that wasn't really, like a lot of people in the West

Marko Papic:

thought that this was pro Israeli.

Marko Papic:

It's not, uh, they're defending their airspace.

Marko Papic:

So I think this is why Jacob, my hot take on this is Iran does have the

Marko Papic:

capability to disrupt shipping and cause oil prices to go up a hundred dollars.

Marko Papic:

But there's two things that if they do that, there's two bad

Marko Papic:

effects that will happen to them.

Marko Papic:

America, American military is not as hot as people think it is.

Marko Papic:

But let me be very, very clear.

Marko Papic:

There's one thing that the United States of America does better

Marko Papic:

than any country in history.

Marko Papic:

I mean, and, and not better.

Marko Papic:

Like it's number one, it's like number one, 2000.

Marko Papic:

Nobody pulverizes you from 30,000 feet like the US Air Force, when America

Marko Papic:

doesn't care about in invading, when America doesn't care about putting,

Marko Papic:

uh, boots on the ground when it doesn't care what you do to your own people,

Marko Papic:

when it doesn't care about turning you into Wisconsin and making sure

Marko Papic:

you have like Wendy's on every corner.

Marko Papic:

When America just wants to flatten you, it's, it's unrivaled.

Marko Papic:

And so if Iran crosses that Rubicon, it will be punished.

Marko Papic:

And then the second issue is that if they cross it, if they get on the bedside

Marko Papic:

of Saudi Arabia, they tilt the regional balance vastly against themselves.

Marko Papic:

Basically Saudi resources, but also Saudi intelligence capabilities in Iraq.

Marko Papic:

Will they be activated against Iranian interests?

Marko Papic:

And then, you know, it's really game over for a little semblance

Marko Papic:

of hegemony that Iran still has.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, well first of all, you uh, you betrayed your lack of knowledge of the

Jacob Shapiro:

geopolitics of the Midwest because it wouldn't be a Wendy's on every corner.

Jacob Shapiro:

It would be a Culver's.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I hope that the five Wisconsin listeners that we have really appreciate

Jacob Shapiro:

that call out from yours truly.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause I've eaten enough of those cheeseburgers and I'm on a perpetual

Jacob Shapiro:

quest as a Jew to find the greatest cheeseburger in the history of the world,

Jacob Shapiro:

which is, you know, you as you know, funny for lots of different reasons.

Jacob Shapiro:

We can get into that another time.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, well, I, I have two or three things I wanna say in response to what you said.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause I, I can get along with most of what you said, but I, I, I wanna,

Jacob Shapiro:

I wanna think about it also from a different angle, which is, um, it seems

Jacob Shapiro:

to me analytically, or one of the things I'm trying to parse is, was this an

Jacob Shapiro:

attack on Iran's nuclear capability?

Jacob Shapiro:

To set it back or to wipe it out, or is this really an attempt at regime change?

Jacob Shapiro:

Because Israel has also said, look, this is not a one day thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

We're ready to go for the next two weeks, and the Israeli population

Jacob Shapiro:

is ready to endure whatever it has to do for the next two weeks.

Jacob Shapiro:

We took out.

Jacob Shapiro:

All those guys that I mentioned in the first wave, you also

Jacob Shapiro:

saw what we did to Hezbollah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the unsaid thing there is supreme leader ham hamani.

Jacob Shapiro:

Where are you?

Jacob Shapiro:

Do you feel safe where you are President of Iran, where are you?

Jacob Shapiro:

Do you feel safe where you are?

Jacob Shapiro:

You shouldn't.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, and this is the other thing I, uh, that's sort of part of this,

Jacob Shapiro:

which is, um, you know, Iran's military dilapidated fine, but this

Jacob Shapiro:

is not just about an inability to, um, to have conventional offensive.

Jacob Shapiro:

Counter attack capability.

Jacob Shapiro:

It looks like Israel has just decimated their ability to defend themselves.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, at, at least here on June 3rd at 10 o'clock in the morning like this, I,

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't wanna say it's a little cavalier for me to say that Iranian skies belong

Jacob Shapiro:

to Israel, but Israel is hitting whatever it wants, however, often it wants with

Jacob Shapiro:

fighter jets that I know can't, like, you know, these are long distance flights

Jacob Shapiro:

that the Israelis are having to take.

Jacob Shapiro:

So unless they're secretly going off a carrier, a US carrier, or

Jacob Shapiro:

out of Azerbaijan or something like that, aggregators, I'm not

Jacob Shapiro:

saying that's what happened.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm just saying unless there's some secret here we don't know about.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, you know, they're going along, along sort distance.

Marko Papic:

Don't think we're, I don't think we're big enough

Marko Papic:

to be aggregated, but Jacob.

Marko Papic:

Couple, well, we, we

Jacob Shapiro:

might be after this times of crisis or when,

Jacob Shapiro:

or when people listen in.

Jacob Shapiro:

But the reason I bring that up is because, um, well, it's twofold, number

Jacob Shapiro:

one, like you're right, as long as this Iranian regime stays in place,

Jacob Shapiro:

but what if, and it's a huge gamble and I'm not sure they're gonna pull it off.

Jacob Shapiro:

What if this is the end of the Islam?

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

So public I would have to, and that's a whole big thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then the second thing I just wanna say, and then you can take the

Jacob Shapiro:

wheel, is, you know, you said the nuclear option was a straight of whom.

Jacob Shapiro:

This now gets to the question of how far advanced is Iran

Jacob Shapiro:

with a nuclear weapon itself?

Jacob Shapiro:

Because if it's advanced enough to where.

Jacob Shapiro:

The supreme leader was just saying, don't do the final screws, because I want to

Jacob Shapiro:

be able to have this negotiation process.

Jacob Shapiro:

But if it could be very simply just sort of, Hey, let's complete

Jacob Shapiro:

the process really fast and have a bomb, the thing that strikes me is

Jacob Shapiro:

Iran's back is against the wall.

Jacob Shapiro:

Their, their conventional defenses have failed.

Jacob Shapiro:

They have no legitimate counter attack that they can go to any attack that they

Jacob Shapiro:

do on, you know, Persian Gulf shipping.

Jacob Shapiro:

Anything else like that is gonna bring down the goat of long-range

Jacob Shapiro:

bombardment on them, or is gonna break the Saudi thing, which is the goat.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, it would be really nice to have a nuclear deterrent right now.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is the whole reason they want the nuclear deterrent.

Jacob Shapiro:

Their proxies, by the way, are also gone.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hezbollah's sitting it out.

Jacob Shapiro:

Houthis know where to be found.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're not gonna affect this.

Jacob Shapiro:

So if you could have a nuke, like now would be the time to show it off

Jacob Shapiro:

and say, okay, if you keep coming at us, like here's a dirty bomb for you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, we will go this far.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like I, I was sort of having that crazy thought that I was as I was

Jacob Shapiro:

thinking about all that anyway.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, that's not crazy at all.

Marko Papic:

No, that's not crazy at all.

Marko Papic:

So, uh, first I think, um.

Marko Papic:

I don't think regime change is possible, like Israel has not been

Marko Papic:

able to do regime change in Gaza.

Marko Papic:

Why would it be able to do it in Iran

Jacob Shapiro:

if it can assassinate the Hezbollah leadership?

Jacob Shapiro:

And if let's say they take out the president of Iran and the Supreme leader,

Marko Papic:

I, I think that that just replaces them, right?

Marko Papic:

I mean, we've seen this story play out in with Hezbollah and Hamas as well.

Marko Papic:

Syria.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

But, but those are like little JI groups that hide in bunkers.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is a state that governs 80 plus million people, a large swath of whom

Jacob Shapiro:

want nothing to do with these guys.

Marko Papic:

So, but isn't Well, yeah, I mean maybe, you know, um, there is also

Marko Papic:

the circling of the wagons that happens.

Marko Papic:

I mean, while vast majority of Iranians don't want to follow their leadership,

Marko Papic:

they're also anti-Israeli, you know, so.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

It can backfire and the difference the counter that you should, you should.

Marko Papic:

Send at me.

Marko Papic:

The country is Syria.

Marko Papic:

Right?

Marko Papic:

But Syria, Syria was a country.

Marko Papic:

It's a great example of what happens when you completely isolate yourself.

Marko Papic:

Uh, Syria had Turkey against Assad.

Marko Papic:

You had Saudi Arabia raid.

Marko Papic:

I mean, Israel, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and the United States, America we're

Marko Papic:

all on the same side, you know?

Marko Papic:

So that's, that's a good example of what happens, why you

Marko Papic:

don't wanna isolate yourself.

Marko Papic:

There's also actual militants on the territory of Syria.

Marko Papic:

So this isn't, I, I, I've heard this regime change theory a lot

Marko Papic:

today, and I just, you know, I don't think that that's where Israel is

Marko Papic:

able to go, but it doesn't matter.

Marko Papic:

Look, let's, let's, let's array some of the things that you've said.

Marko Papic:

Um, in terms of military capabilities, Israel has some refueling capacity.

Marko Papic:

Boeing seven oh sevens, they haven't received the kc uh, uh, kcs yet.

Marko Papic:

Uh, which, uh, they, they've had an order since 2020, so, uh, that

Marko Papic:

hasn't been delivered actually yet.

Marko Papic:

So they have some domestic ones, but it's not.

Marko Papic:

It's not as, uh, sophisticated as what the Americans would give them if they

Marko Papic:

actually delivered, uh, the US airplanes.

Marko Papic:

So they, they're gonna have to do this in waves of fighter jets.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

The problem with fighter jets is that they're, uh, vulnerable to air defenses.

Marko Papic:

And this is where your point is so critical.

Marko Papic:

Where is Iran's vaunted?

Marko Papic:

S3 hundreds?

Marko Papic:

They've clearly been disabled.

Marko Papic:

Last year's attack that Israel performed, if you remember, it was a

Marko Papic:

single strike and everybody was kind of confused what the single strike was.

Marko Papic:

It apparently targeted the Raider installations for the S3 hundreds sending

Marko Papic:

a message to Iran that we can blind you.

Marko Papic:

So, um, it appears that that's what's happened.

Marko Papic:

So it's fine.

Marko Papic:

Like Israel now has control over skies, as you said.

Marko Papic:

The problem for Israel is that its tools for navigated Iran's skies are

Marko Papic:

still, uh, limited attacking with fighter jets, there's a problem.

Marko Papic:

You have to, they have to be fully loaded with fuel.

Marko Papic:

Which means they cannot carry as much ordinance and the ordinance that they

Marko Papic:

carry is limited, particularly because the US as is now very much known and has been

Marko Papic:

known for decades, the US has not provided Israel with the bunker buster technology

Marko Papic:

that's required to fully damage Fordo.

Marko Papic:

Fordo is 40 meters underground, some say half a mile.

Marko Papic:

Uh, I didn't know that.

Marko Papic:

I thought it was just 40 meters.

Marko Papic:

Doesn't matter.

Marko Papic:

Many of the tunnels are 90 degree angles.

Marko Papic:

You know, bunker buster technology can't deal with that.

Marko Papic:

You need what the Americans have, which, which can completely destroy much

Marko Papic:

deeper, much wider range of penetration.

Marko Papic:

That's not what Israelis have.

Marko Papic:

So, um, this attack ultimately is not going to completely

Marko Papic:

destroy Iran's nuclear program.

Marko Papic:

I think that there's limits to how much Israel can do, and that's why

Marko Papic:

I think that ultimately we have to also consider that both sides

Marko Papic:

are limited in what they can do.

Marko Papic:

And that's where the US is so important.

Marko Papic:

In a way Israel wants to draw Americans in.

Marko Papic:

This is all, this has been for a long time a theory like what if Israel just done

Marko Papic:

ki does kind of like a halfway attack, hopes that Iran retaliates in a way that

Marko Papic:

matters to America, like attacks the base.

Marko Papic:

The air base in Qatar attacks the Fifth Fleet headquarters in Manama, Bahrain.

Marko Papic:

You know, the military bases in Iraq are, I think, fair game at this point.

Marko Papic:

It's fine.

Marko Papic:

Iran has attacked them before many times.

Marko Papic:

Uh, but if Iran retaliates against the US or shipping interest in the streets

Marko Papic:

of MOUs, then this attacks from a strategic perspective for Israel is a win.

Marko Papic:

If it doesn't, it's kind of like not a win.

Marko Papic:

In fact, it probably accelerates the nuclear program, as you pointed out,

Marko Papic:

um, where Iran needs that breakout capacity as soon as possible.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I mean, and maybe the precedent was already set.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like I can, I can hear an Israeli strategist telling me I'm gonna, I'm a

Jacob Shapiro:

weenie for what I'm about to say, but I mean, this is a preemptive strike.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, while the, while Iran was negotiating with the United States like, and yes,

Jacob Shapiro:

Israel is from a, from a technological capacity, military capacity is so far

Jacob Shapiro:

advanced than all of the rivals that are around it in the Middle East,

Jacob Shapiro:

that nobody can compete with them.

Jacob Shapiro:

But that's not always gonna be the case.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like we, we did our geopolitical power ranking a couple of episodes ago, and

Jacob Shapiro:

I left Israel off the top 20 because I said, I mean, they're there today, but 20,

Jacob Shapiro:

30 years from now, like, we don't think that some of these other countries are

Jacob Shapiro:

gonna be able to develop either nuclear weapons or drone technologies, or do

Jacob Shapiro:

the things that Israel is doing to Iran.

Jacob Shapiro:

And now Israel's done it first.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, you know, like if, if you, if you are Iran, or let's say you're Turkey or some

Jacob Shapiro:

jihadist group in the future, like the precedent has, al has already been broken.

Jacob Shapiro:

So I don't know, maybe people don't care about precedents, but the continued

Jacob Shapiro:

breakdown of international norms, which is also part of that Saudi

Jacob Shapiro:

statement, like the, the rules are gone.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, it's okay, fine.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like go, go like bomb Iran.

Jacob Shapiro:

There's gonna be no like consequences, like nobody's going to punish you for it.

Jacob Shapiro:

And well Iran, nobody's gonna see like,

Marko Papic:

yeah, Iran if they

Jacob Shapiro:

can, but it's

Marko Papic:

up to Iran to punish, you know, like, and if they can't

Marko Papic:

then they probably should have, uh, not supported Hezbollah us.

Marko Papic:

I mean, you know, like these are consequences to what Iran does as well.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

And that's where, that's where I think, you know, you can understand this attack

Marko Papic:

by Israel, even if they cannot actually hurt fordo, which is where all the

Marko Papic:

enrichment fci, uh, all the important centrifuges are for the enrichment.

Marko Papic:

So I, I don't think that Israel has managed to overcome technological.

Marko Papic:

Deficiencies that it has.

Marko Papic:

Of course, the nuclear program is also more than just centrifuges.

Marko Papic:

It's

Jacob Shapiro:

people, it's also humans.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're going after people and they've been going after people for a while,

Marko Papic:

for a while.

Marko Papic:

That's, that's all, that's, that's fine.

Marko Papic:

You know, like, I mean, but here's, but here's the issue though.

Marko Papic:

We also have to consider domestic politics of Israel as well.

Marko Papic:

There's clearly pressure on Netanyahu, uh, to basically, uh, you know, continue with

Marko Papic:

aggressive foreign and military policies, whether in Lebanon, in Gaza or Iran.

Marko Papic:

Um, he can't survive without that.

Marko Papic:

There has to be a perpetual war for him to stay in power.

Marko Papic:

And the reason I say that is not to criticize him.

Marko Papic:

I mean, God bless him.

Marko Papic:

He can do whatever he wants, you know, that's, that's his, that's his choice.

Marko Papic:

The issue though is that he does over the long term, it,

Marko Papic:

it doesn't, like his domestic political logic is likely not this.

Marko Papic:

It, it is not as beneficial for Israel in the long term.

Marko Papic:

And that is something I, I would point out as well.

Marko Papic:

I mean, if oftentimes domestic political logic will impede the geopolitical goals

Marko Papic:

over the long term, and I think one of the, one of the problems here is that,

Marko Papic:

um, it's not clear to me that regime change would change anything for Israel.

Marko Papic:

Iran, Iran.

Marko Papic:

In Iran.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

And, and, and, and I think, I think any country in this region is likely

Marko Papic:

going to want to have a nuclear weapon like after this attack.

Marko Papic:

That's,

Jacob Shapiro:

yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean that, that I think is already true.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think you're underplaying the potential significance of regime change.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I actually think we're seeing this play out right now with Syria.

Jacob Shapiro:

I dunno if you saw like a week or two ago, Netanyahu basically said We want

Jacob Shapiro:

the United States to broker peace talks with the new Syrian government.

Jacob Shapiro:

And Syria seems to be open to it.

Jacob Shapiro:

Is, uh, I mean, Israel's wanted, you know, some kind of, you know, Jordan or

Jacob Shapiro:

Egypt level relationship with Syria since literally the 1970s and hasn't been able

Jacob Shapiro:

to get it because Assad was, you know, sort of sticking to those old things.

Jacob Shapiro:

So if you can, and you know, now Syria is led by some former Jihadists, uh,

Jacob Shapiro:

and like, they're gonna be willing to sit down with Israel to reach some

Jacob Shapiro:

kind of agreement, probably, yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause they don't want to keep getting bombed by their

Jacob Shapiro:

more sophisticated neighbor.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're gonna play a longer game going forward.

Jacob Shapiro:

But I think if you, if you could take down like the theocratic, you know,

Jacob Shapiro:

thuggish element that runs Iran, and if you could get secularists and

Jacob Shapiro:

power, I mean, that would be pretty powerful for, for Israel, I think.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think that would be a really big deal.

Marko Papic:

I think, I think that is the conventional view.

Marko Papic:

I think that is the Israeli view, and I think that, uh, in a way

Marko Papic:

that's going to probably allow the regime in Iran to survive longer.

Marko Papic:

Because again, it's not Lebanon, it's not Gaza, it's a place,

Marko Papic:

it's a very large place.

Marko Papic:

You can hide in a lot of different places.

Marko Papic:

The idea that Israel is gonna be able to take a, I just don't see that.

Marko Papic:

But you know, I could be wrong o obviously.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, I don't know, but like, let, let's say that they,

Jacob Shapiro:

let's say for the sake of argument that they can, like if, let's say

Jacob Shapiro:

they assassinate the supreme leader and the president in the next strike.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm not saying it, you find other.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, do you find other ones or do or or do people rise

Jacob Shapiro:

up and say, we're replacing?

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause there's already factions waiting for this, waiting to fight

Jacob Shapiro:

it out when the supreme leader dies.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like there's internal incoherence Yes.

Jacob Shapiro:

Within the Iranian political establishment already.

Marko Papic:

He's very old.

Marko Papic:

Ands sick.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

And you know, the, and he's also been trying to, you know,

Jacob Shapiro:

put his son forward to replace him, which is like, wow, like the Iranian

Jacob Shapiro:

revolution only took 40 years to die.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, the whole idea was we're not gonna have monarchies in the Shah

Jacob Shapiro:

passing things down to his stupid son.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

So now the Supreme leadership passes down, like through hereditary means.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, which, which has gotten a lot of pushback there as well.

Jacob Shapiro:

But also think back to the Rouhani government and how Rouhani was trying

Jacob Shapiro:

to take the reins away from the IRGC and he got his sort of hand slapped on it.

Jacob Shapiro:

I was also, I was talking to this, uh, Iranian security expert

Jacob Shapiro:

before we got on, and he talked about to him one of the most.

Jacob Shapiro:

Impressive things about what Israel was doing was a sophisticated

Jacob Shapiro:

social media campaign in Persian going after Iranian social media.

Jacob Shapiro:

And he said there were basically two like feelings on Iranian social media.

Jacob Shapiro:

One was, this is not good.

Jacob Shapiro:

We don't wanna be attacked by Israel.

Jacob Shapiro:

You, you know, sort of rally around the flag thing.

Jacob Shapiro:

But the second aspect he said was there was also this very real undercurrent

Jacob Shapiro:

of, well, we don't care if the IRGC commander gets got, he was killing

Jacob Shapiro:

young Iranian protesters in the streets as recently as a couple of months ago.

Jacob Shapiro:

And this supreme leader guy who's trying to basically put the Shah back on top

Jacob Shapiro:

of us, except with Shiite theocratic, you know, antiquated ideas, eh, like

Jacob Shapiro:

would we really be that sat like, yes, we'll have our problems with

Jacob Shapiro:

Israel, but like there's also like some level of, okay, like this is okay.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, it's not like we love this regime that much and that there

Jacob Shapiro:

aren't internal tensions there.

Jacob Shapiro:

And for, for Israel, if you could just, like, I'm not saying you're

Jacob Shapiro:

gonna make Iran your best friend, but if you could at least get it from.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hey, you're the great Satan.

Jacob Shapiro:

We're gonna wipe you off the face of the earth to little.

Jacob Shapiro:

Hey, we're not friends.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's have negotiations.

Jacob Shapiro:

Little Satan.

Jacob Shapiro:

Let's be,

Marko Papic:

let's be clear.

Marko Papic:

But listen, yeah, little I hear, I hear all that.

Marko Papic:

It's just that that's just not the way the world works, though.

Marko Papic:

It does in the long term.

Marko Papic:

It does in the long term.

Marko Papic:

But like, I would have to dig deep into the historical bag to

Marko Papic:

find a case where something like that happens during the conflict.

Jacob Shapiro:

You don't think Syria qualify?

Jacob Shapiro:

I guess Syria was a longer thing over

Marko Papic:

time.

Marko Papic:

It just doesn't, it's been like, first of all, Asad didn't have control

Marko Papic:

over more than 50% of the territory.

Marko Papic:

It was, there was a civil war, there was a militant group.

Marko Papic:

Um, it's not like Israel caused regime change in Syria.

Marko Papic:

You know, they aided it.

Marko Papic:

They were great participant in it, but there was clearly a civil war since 2011.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, so what about, what about Japan?

Jacob Shapiro:

1945.

Marko Papic:

Okay, fine.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

Great example, Jacob.

Marko Papic:

I will, I will concede once Israel nukes Iran and invades it with a million men.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

So this is, this is my point.

Marko Papic:

Like, but but listen, but listen, here's, here's a counter.

Marko Papic:

Here's a counter.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

They kind of both supports my view and your view.

Marko Papic:

1999 NATO air campaign against Serbia.

Marko Papic:

Hmm.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

I can tell you it definitely did not in the moment incite and any anti

Marko Papic:

mil sentiment, even pro-democracy, liberal people in Belgrade were

Marko Papic:

standing on bridges with little targets saying to Nate Obamas right.

Marko Papic:

But basically 12 months later, you know, when you took stock of the situation

Marko Papic:

and said, what was all this for?

Marko Papic:

There was the revolution in October of 2000.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So my, but, but that's, that's a different situation too.

Marko Papic:

I mean, like, you know, Serbia took on the entire alliance of nato

Marko Papic:

and NATO can do a lot of damage.

Marko Papic:

Israel can't, Israel cannot do that level of damage.

Marko Papic:

So my, my question, unless,

Jacob Shapiro:

unless it nukes them,

Marko Papic:

right?

Marko Papic:

Well, yeah.

Marko Papic:

Okay.

Marko Papic:

Yes.

Marko Papic:

Uh, but, but my, my point, my point is that even in that situation, it took

Marko Papic:

some time before people took that stock of like, Hey, what was this all for?

Marko Papic:

So I'm not saying that regime change can't come as a result of this.

Marko Papic:

I just think it will be sometime later.

Marko Papic:

This is one of the many moments in Iran's story that lead to the

Marko Papic:

realization by the vast majority of the people in that country.

Marko Papic:

Like, this is stupid.

Marko Papic:

Like, we can't, we can't even retaliate against Israel.

Marko Papic:

So what's the whole point of all this?

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

And I think that that's, that's possible.

Marko Papic:

I just, I, I would rather kind of focus, I. Because it's a more of a longer term

Marko Papic:

team and it's not gonna happen overnight.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Um, Iran is a more sophisticated political system than like Gaza or Hezbollah.

Marko Papic:

And I, and I just feel a lot of commentary today.

Marko Papic:

It's like if they just put some page of bombs in pagers, you know, like, no, it's,

Marko Papic:

it's gonna be more difficult than that.

Marko Papic:

Nonetheless, for all their sophistication, size, strength, inherent kind of

Marko Papic:

geopolitical value, like their S3 hundreds are clearly completely useless.

Marko Papic:

Their air defense system, the surface to air LS three hundreds

Marko Papic:

they got from Russia fairly sophisticated, has not ha made a dent.

Marko Papic:

As you pointed out, Israel can pretty much fly in and out, you know, it can

Marko Papic:

be just like a routine flight for their fighter jets, you know, across the region.

Marko Papic:

Um, and that's a real problem because what do you do at this point?

Marko Papic:

They're kind of like North Korea, Iran is kind of like North Korea,

Marko Papic:

and let me explain what I mean.

Marko Papic:

There's very few ways to retaliate in limited way.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, you, you either, you know, fly some drones to Israel,

Marko Papic:

which Israel just destroys.

Marko Papic:

Or you go for broke and you shut down the streets, or for most, and then, yes, we

Marko Papic:

should talk about regime change because once the US starts using something that

Marko Papic:

Israel does not have, which is long range strategic bombers, you're cooked, you're

Marko Papic:

completely and utterly cooked, and at that point you are risking regime survival.

Marko Papic:

You can block off the straits of ramus while done, you know, because

Marko Papic:

civilian shipping, again, can't really evade anti-ship cruise missiles,

Marko Papic:

which Iran has, can't really evade.

Marko Papic:

Even little dinghies, you know, little zodiac boats with like a dude with

Marko Papic:

a, with a shoulder launch surface to air missile, like whatever, like,

Marko Papic:

you know, it's, it's a real problem.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, well, but, so I, I think that survive an important question.

Jacob Shapiro:

Survive.

Jacob Shapiro:

I think that's an important question that you just landed on.

Jacob Shapiro:

So let me rephrase it back at you because one of my clients this morning

Jacob Shapiro:

asked me, you know, what are American options today after what's happened?

Jacob Shapiro:

And I said, okay, there's basically four they can join in and completely

Jacob Shapiro:

wipe out Iran and lead to regime change.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like that's one, um, they can covertly support it, but not

Jacob Shapiro:

sort of publicly be there.

Jacob Shapiro:

So try and, you know, let, let Israel take as many licks as

Jacob Shapiro:

they want, but not get involved.

Jacob Shapiro:

They can stay out of it.

Jacob Shapiro:

They can be truly isolationist.

Jacob Shapiro:

And, you know, the, the Rubio statement or.

Jacob Shapiro:

Uh, maybe the donnall is angling for his Nobel Peace Prize.

Jacob Shapiro:

They come in as the great peacemaker.

Jacob Shapiro:

They say, we have made peace between Iran and Israel.

Jacob Shapiro:

We're gonna tariff both of you unless you stop throwing the missiles

Jacob Shapiro:

and the drones at each other.

Jacob Shapiro:

Sit down against the table and figure this out.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm asking you the question there is, where do you think the

Jacob Shapiro:

United States goes from here?

Jacob Shapiro:

Do you think the United States wanted this and like, wanted the

Jacob Shapiro:

excuse that Israel's opening for it?

Jacob Shapiro:

Or do you think that the United States was like, okay, we'll use Israeli

Jacob Shapiro:

aggressiveness to get to what we really wanted, which is a deal with this regime?

Marko Papic:

I mean, I trust President Trump where he, when he tweets, sorry.

Marko Papic:

I do.

Marko Papic:

So I don't think that he wanted this, 'cause he said

Marko Papic:

that, and that is a problem.

Marko Papic:

That's why his tweet, that's why his statements today are so aggressive.

Marko Papic:

Marco Rubio's statement when this happened was very terse like,

Marko Papic:

no statement about supporting Israel's rights to self defense.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Zero, zero.

Marko Papic:

It was like, Hey, America was not participant in this.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

The, the French statement was friendlier towards Israel

Jacob Shapiro:

than Marco Rubio's statement.

Marko Papic:

Right.

Marko Papic:

And then the next day Trump is saying like, aha, I told

Marko Papic:

you so better make a deal.

Marko Papic:

And it's like, eh, I don't like, that's bravado.

Marko Papic:

Right?

Marko Papic:

Because this is embarrassing for the US actually.

Marko Papic:

It shows it can't control its vessels, you know?

Marko Papic:

And Israel is effectively saying, we're not your vessel.

Marko Papic:

You know, we're gonna do whatever we want.

Marko Papic:

And that's

Jacob Shapiro:

you.

Jacob Shapiro:

You don't believe the, the conspiracy theory that actually, like the United

Jacob Shapiro:

States wanted Israel to do this secretly,

Marko Papic:

one of, one of the greatest Salt Park episodes

Marko Papic:

is the one about nine 11.

Marko Papic:

It's when the boys find out that nine 11 was an inside job.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

And.

Marko Papic:

They pursue this to, to, to its core and George W. Bush and the cabinet

Marko Papic:

basically imprisons them because they find out that it wasn't an inside

Marko Papic:

job, but they find out that the US government is propagating the myth.

Marko Papic:

The day blew up the Twin towers.

Marko Papic:

And so the, the boys confront George W. Bush in the episode and they're

Marko Papic:

like, why are you propagating the rumor that you did this?

Marko Papic:

And George W. Bush says, an incredible statement.

Marko Papic:

And by the way, if you're a conspiracy theorist, you have to watch this to

Marko Papic:

cleanse yourself of that stupidity.

Marko Papic:

And George W. Bush looks at the little boys and says, if people

Marko Papic:

don't think that we did it, they'll think we're incompetent.

Marko Papic:

If they find out that a bunch of dudes in caves.

Marko Papic:

Destroyed the Twin Towers in New York City.

Marko Papic:

They'll think that we, the US government is incompetent.

Marko Papic:

So yes, we're propagating these rumors.

Marko Papic:

So this is South Park.

Jacob Shapiro:

South Park is truly the brothers car of, of our time.

Jacob Shapiro:

This is basically the grand inquisitor updated with to, uh, you know, when I

Jacob Shapiro:

was doing my things that are happening

Marko Papic:

right now.

Marko Papic:

Listen, Jacob, when I was doing my PhD, I, I kept referencing South Park so

Marko Papic:

much in my, uh, PhD philosophy class.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

I had to take philosophy, you know, for political science, PhD. And, uh, my

Marko Papic:

professor was just like, can you make me a DVD of like the greatest hits?

Marko Papic:

'cause clearly I've missed this in my, in my academic studies, like, so I agree

Marko Papic:

with you, but, but here's what I'm saying.

Marko Papic:

Of course Trump is gonna say, and of course the, the media machine

Marko Papic:

in America is gonna say like, oh, we knew ha ha, yeah, we've been

Marko Papic:

in on this planet from day one.

Marko Papic:

That's the whole thing.

Marko Papic:

We're not incompetent.

Marko Papic:

Our ally, Israel didn't just do something behind our back

Marko Papic:

embarrassing us, quite frankly.

Marko Papic:

'cause we were about to meet with Iranians on Sunday.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So I, I believe none of these rumors, and I don't care.

Marko Papic:

Like we could have Marco Rubio on this podcast.

Marko Papic:

You'll be like, no, Marco, you don't know.

Marko Papic:

I'm like, shut up.

Marko Papic:

I do know.

Marko Papic:

Fuck off.

Marko Papic:

Of course.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Oh yeah.

Marko Papic:

You guys were like in on it.

Marko Papic:

No, you weren't.

Jacob Shapiro:

You got spoiled.

Jacob Shapiro:

That would be fun actually, to have to have little Marco.

Jacob Shapiro:

And you can be big Marco.

Jacob Shapiro:

I guess.

Marko Papic:

I guess I could, I mean, by, I guess so.

Marko Papic:

I don't know.

Marko Papic:

I, I don't think he's that little.

Marko Papic:

I think that's unfair.

Marko Papic:

But listen, here's my point.

Marko Papic:

Of course,

Marko Papic:

of course.

Marko Papic:

They didn't know.

Marko Papic:

They got caught completely unaware.

Marko Papic:

So what do you think is gonna happen the next day?

Marko Papic:

Like, uh, no.

Marko Papic:

They're gonna be like, yeah, we were, of course we knew, like, remember

Marko Papic:

what Trump was like, heads up.

Marko Papic:

Heads up.

Marko Papic:

Well, and I, and I think Trump, we do

Jacob Shapiro:

Trump to, to, you know, a point we've made over and over

Jacob Shapiro:

again, like Trump has many faults.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's a master at social media and positioning.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

He's positioned, you know, the United States to make it seem like he knew

Jacob Shapiro:

what was going all along and this was good, but like now he has a choice.

Jacob Shapiro:

Does he use that to, at least in his truth, social post, it was

Jacob Shapiro:

about all right, like you have to negotiate or else you're gonna die.

Jacob Shapiro:

Well,

Marko Papic:

the problem with that, you know what the problem with that is?

Marko Papic:

What the problem with that Jacob is, if I'm Iran, I'm like, bro, come on man.

Marko Papic:

I just listened to geopolitical cousins and Marco is right.

Marko Papic:

You didn't know.

Marko Papic:

And if you don't know, how can you guarantee to me that you can stop Israel?

Marko Papic:

If I make a deal with you, deal with you, oh, okay, cool.

Marko Papic:

We're gonna make a deal and I'm gonna get to keep my nuclear

Marko Papic:

program for civilian uses.

Marko Papic:

What if it's not there?

Marko Papic:

Because Israel, your vassal state keeps bonding me.

Marko Papic:

Like if you cannot control Israel, so this is the problem for the

Marko Papic:

US if they cannot control Israel.

Marko Papic:

How can they make a deal with Iran?

Marko Papic:

And so that's why this is not just a, a, a funny little question,

Marko Papic:

you know, where we're like, Hey, like, hey, what did America know?

Marko Papic:

Oh, watch South Park, you know?

Marko Papic:

No, I mean, it's actually very critical to this whole situation.

Marko Papic:

Israel is fronting as if they're gonna continue this

Marko Papic:

operation for the next two weeks.

Marko Papic:

That's what Netanyahu said.

Marko Papic:

This is not a one day operation.

Marko Papic:

And the US is supposed to meet in musket in Oman, with Iranian officials.

Marko Papic:

And by the way, the, the, the hilarious part of this is us,

Marko Papic:

is like, we're still coming.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the Iranians were supposed to come, might be dead, they might not be alive.

Jacob Shapiro:

How

Marko Papic:

do I get to musket, bro?

Marko Papic:

Like I, if I get in a plane, am I gonna land in Oman?

Marko Papic:

Like, you know, like there's, Israelis are buzzing around me, like hornets.

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna get in the plane and go to Oman.

Marko Papic:

You can't, you don't know what's going on in the region, America.

Marko Papic:

This is what I, I'm now being Iran, right?

Marko Papic:

Like America, you don't, you have no idea what's going on here.

Marko Papic:

You want me to get on the plane and cross the Persian Gulf and land in Oman?

Marko Papic:

In Musco?

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So I can meet with you.

Marko Papic:

For what reason?

Marko Papic:

You can't control Israel.

Marko Papic:

Why would I continue these negotiations?

Marko Papic:

And this is where, this is where what Israel did is truly pernicious

Marko Papic:

from an American perspective.

Marko Papic:

And I do think so when we think about this from a profound level, like

Marko Papic:

what's profound about this attack, it's the break between Israel and the us.

Marko Papic:

I don't buy for one second.

Marko Papic:

The US was aware of this operation for weeks.

Marko Papic:

Now there's a talk how it lulled Iran to sleep by continuing to negotiation.

Marko Papic:

Shut up again.

Marko Papic:

Watch South Park episode.

Marko Papic:

This is America just trying to make itself look like they weren't completely

Marko Papic:

unaware of what was gonna happen.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, now it is.

Jacob Shapiro:

I don't mean, I think, I think credit to the Israelis, like there was a

Jacob Shapiro:

psychological warfare aspect where they lulled the Iranians to Yeah,

Marko Papic:

for sure.

Marko Papic:

I, I, you know, obviously, but they loved Americans as well, and I think

Marko Papic:

the problem now is how can you be a credible negotiator, you know?

Jacob Shapiro:

Mm-hmm.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah, I have, I have two lighthearted points and then a more serious one.

Jacob Shapiro:

The first is when you were talking about Israel, like wanting to bring the

Jacob Shapiro:

United States in, it's ironic because that's basically the reverse Al-Qaeda,

Jacob Shapiro:

like that was Al-Qaeda's strategy, like bomb the World Trade Centers,

Jacob Shapiro:

and then you're gonna invite a bigger response and then people are gonna

Jacob Shapiro:

overthrow the regime that you don't like.

Jacob Shapiro:

So funny to see the Israelis taking a pic, uh, page out of Osama's, uh, book.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then also have, have you, has it struck you that like Israel is

Jacob Shapiro:

the real MAGA actor in the world?

Jacob Shapiro:

Like in the last week they've bombed the shit out of Iran and have arrested Greta

Jacob Shapiro:

Thunberg and embarrassed her and then like, you know, sent her back to Sweden

Jacob Shapiro:

without her lunch money or whatever.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, I think they're the ones that are really doubling down on this.

Jacob Shapiro:

But the, the deeper point I wanted to say was, and this is the part that makes me

Jacob Shapiro:

nervous about what, what happens next?

Jacob Shapiro:

Um.

Jacob Shapiro:

Because I, I, I think we're in agreement, I think on most of the things that

Jacob Shapiro:

we talked about, but it seems to me that Iran's back is against the wall.

Jacob Shapiro:

They have no good options.

Jacob Shapiro:

They're screwed.

Jacob Shapiro:

And to your point, they can't, even, the negotiation with the United States

Jacob Shapiro:

is not something they can credibly do.

Jacob Shapiro:

To your point just now about Israel, you can't control, you

Jacob Shapiro:

know, your dog is off the leash.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like, there's this, this Israeli actor that's just gonna keep bombing us.

Jacob Shapiro:

Why should we make any deal?

Jacob Shapiro:

And it seems to me that if they're truly desperate and if they have

Jacob Shapiro:

any nuclear material to go with, or any kind of last ditch effort, like,

Jacob Shapiro:

can they just really sit, maybe they sit there and take the punishment.

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe I'm like underestimating that as a potential choice.

Jacob Shapiro:

It, it

Marko Papic:

depends.

Marko Papic:

I mean, yes, I, I hear you.

Marko Papic:

I think it depends what the US now offers them and how much, uh, you

Marko Papic:

know, look, I think, I think that this was 80% domestic politics, 20%

Marko Papic:

strategy, to be honest with you.

Marko Papic:

Hmm.

Marko Papic:

On Israel's part.

Marko Papic:

So that's, you know, that's my view.

Marko Papic:

Uh, I think that Benjamin Netanyahu had to do this for domestic political reasons.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, he, you know, he had some, his far right religious partners were

Jacob Shapiro:

talking about leaving the coalition.

Jacob Shapiro:

So you're not, you're on firm ground, you're on terra

Jacob Shapiro:

firma there, and he, and if

Marko Papic:

he, if he loses power, who knows what happens to him.

Marko Papic:

So I think that, you know, like I, I buy that conspiracy theory, if you will.

Marko Papic:

Um, so here's what's gonna happen.

Marko Papic:

I think, um, there is a path here.

Marko Papic:

It's a narrow one, but I think that, um, if he did enough, you

Marko Papic:

know, then he can tell the Americans like, okay, go make a deal.

Marko Papic:

Like, I'll, I'll tone this down.

Marko Papic:

Like, I'll be amenable now, now that I've done this and maybe a couple

Marko Papic:

more days of like some targets, I'm amenable to being put back into the box.

Marko Papic:

And that opens up a chance for, uh, Iran to retaliate against Israel.

Marko Papic:

Um, nobody will care about that.

Marko Papic:

By the way.

Marko Papic:

Nobody like us is not gonna care.

Marko Papic:

Like that already happened.

Marko Papic:

We already set the threshold for caring.

Marko Papic:

It's pretty low.

Marko Papic:

Like Israel is going to be under attack by Iran for the next

Marko Papic:

like, couple weeks and you know, everyone's gonna move on from that.

Marko Papic:

The question is, well,

Jacob Shapiro:

in part, everybody's gonna move on.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause Iran can't seem to do anything.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like even last.

Jacob Shapiro:

Can't seem to

Marko Papic:

do.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

So like, why not?

Marko Papic:

You know, like last time I think they attacked Israel.

Marko Papic:

They killed a, like a badin.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

The negative, right?

Marko Papic:

They, they, that that's what happened.

Marko Papic:

Like a, a piece of shrapnel hit a poor guy in, in, in the desert.

Marko Papic:

So what I would say is, it really depends.

Marko Papic:

If it's 80 20 domestic politics, then Benjamin Yahu walks away from this

Marko Papic:

looking tough and concedes to the US the grounds to negotiate with Iran.

Marko Papic:

Like, okay, fine, I did what I need to do.

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna stay in power.

Marko Papic:

I'm gonna continue with, uh, you know, securing Israel in my own way.

Marko Papic:

You guys go deal with Iran now.

Marko Papic:

But that requires, of course, restraint from Iran.

Marko Papic:

And so far we've seen it.

Marko Papic:

Uh, the first statement by Iran after this event happened included America.

Marko Papic:

The, the state media also said that US is responsible.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

That's what happened right after the attack.

Marko Papic:

The statement today by the foreign minister clearly focused on Israel,

Marko Papic:

the drones that have attacked Israeli, uh, territory in retaliation.

Marko Papic:

Of course, it's just the first retaliation, but they could have easily

Marko Papic:

diverted some to us installations.

Marko Papic:

They didn't.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Or us, you know, naval vessels in the Persian Gulf.

Marko Papic:

Like there's all sorts of things they can do.

Marko Papic:

To me, to me, the threshold for Iran and what will tell us whether they're

Marko Papic:

open for negotiations or not, is this, this is what you need to watch.

Marko Papic:

If they don't attack naval vessels in the Persian Gulf that are just

Marko Papic:

floating around either American or civilian tankers, that's important.

Marko Papic:

The second is, uh, Saudi energy facilities, which I highly doubt they

Marko Papic:

will, but I'm just putting it out there.

Marko Papic:

And then, as I said, the air base in Qatar that the US shares with the

Marko Papic:

Qatari military and then the Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain in Manama.

Marko Papic:

So that, that to me, if, if they attack those, I think

Marko Papic:

that they're going for broke.

Marko Papic:

You know, if they don't, if this is just about Israel and maybe

Marko Papic:

some symbolic attack against some American facilities in Iraq.

Marko Papic:

Now, the reason I say that that's not part of the threshold is our listeners should

Marko Papic:

remember that on January 3rd, 2020, the US assassinated general Soleimani mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Of the IRGC, Iran retaliated by attacking American facilities

Marko Papic:

in Iraq with cruise missiles.

Marko Papic:

And the US did not retaliate.

Marko Papic:

In fact, Donald Trump tweeted something like I. You know, I respect this.

Marko Papic:

Like I know they had to retaliate.

Marko Papic:

I now consider this matter over Vice President Harris actually brought that

Marko Papic:

statement up in her debates with Trump to illustrate that he was cavalier

Marko Papic:

about American servicemen injuries.

Marko Papic:

This actually, you know, I

Jacob Shapiro:

hadn't, I hadn't thought about her yet.

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm glad you brought her up.

Jacob Shapiro:

Do you remember her 60 minutes interview?

Jacob Shapiro:

Of course, I do.

Jacob Shapiro:

Take 60 minutes where she said Iran was the biggest foreign policy

Jacob Shapiro:

threat to the United States course.

Jacob Shapiro:

Man, maybe Israelis would've liked her better than uh, Trump.

Marko Papic:

No, but one thing I would say, Jacob is in my annual forecast in

Marko Papic:

December of 2024, and I hate saying, uh, you know, like I was right.

Marko Papic:

But like, because of that, because of that 60 minute interview, because of that

Marko Papic:

60 minute interview that Harris gave and because of the increase in enrichment,

Marko Papic:

this was the easiest call to make maybe in my career, to say that kinetic action

Marko Papic:

against Iran is the greatest risk in 2025.

Marko Papic:

In fact, I went as far as to say that, uh, annual outlook, that it

Marko Papic:

would happen on January 21st, that the day after Trump's inauguration,

Marko Papic:

he would begin conflict with Iran.

Jacob Shapiro:

And if it, if it had been up to be Benjamin Netanyahu,

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm sure that would've happened.

Marko Papic:

And I caveated it by saying rhetorical or kinetic, you know.

Marko Papic:

But what's interesting is that for six months he kind of, you know, put

Marko Papic:

an egg on all of the hawk's faces.

Marko Papic:

Not hawks.

Marko Papic:

I'm not a hawk, but like a bear.

Marko Papic:

Whatever you wanna call me.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

Like somebody alarmists, alarmists, he really kind of like took us for a ride

Marko Papic:

there for six months negotiating with Iran much more in a much more conciliatory

Marko Papic:

ma way than he he usually does.

Marko Papic:

And I would say that in a way he's to blame for this.

Marko Papic:

In that he should have applied his seven steps to maximum pressure.

Marko Papic:

He should have been a lot harder.

Marko Papic:

He should have actually done what I said and been very aggressive on January 21st.

Marko Papic:

Killed someone right away like he did with General Soleimani.

Marko Papic:

Yeah, just boom, drone off Somebody just to send a message to Iran.

Marko Papic:

Hey man, I'm serious.

Marko Papic:

You can't drag me along the way you deal with Biden, with his negotiations.

Marko Papic:

And I think that the problem is Donald Trump almost proved why his

Marko Papic:

own negotiating style works and whatever he's been doing for the past

Marko Papic:

six months with Iran doesn't work.

Marko Papic:

You know, like he lost control of these negotiations because he was a little bit

Marko Papic:

too establishment, a little bit too CFR.

Marko Papic:

You know, he, he, he wasn't Donald Trump enough.

Marko Papic:

Uh, remember just a, a little reminder for everyone listening on January 3rd, 2020

Marko Papic:

when they killed Soleimani, the US was negotiating with Iran at the time in Oman,

Marko Papic:

they just killed this guy as a, what's up?

Marko Papic:

That's, that's what Donald Trump did.

Marko Papic:

I firmly believe that had he won the 2020 election, there would've

Marko Papic:

been a deal with Iran right away, because Iran was like, oh my God.

Marko Papic:

And I think that they themselves were like, oh, look at this.

Marko Papic:

This guy wants peace and he wants low oil prices, so he's not gonna bomb us.

Marko Papic:

You know?

Marko Papic:

And I think they, they, they took that narrative, that meme too far.

Marko Papic:

In fact, I had several clients say to me, but Donald Trump wants to low oil prices.

Marko Papic:

And I'm like, look, he does, but he's not myopic.

Marko Papic:

He doesn't need them tomorrow.

Marko Papic:

If oil prices go to 120 bucks for a month, like the world's not gonna end.

Marko Papic:

It's not

Jacob Shapiro:

Well, yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

And they're not going, I mean, they were up 11% when I went to sleep last night.

Jacob Shapiro:

They were up six and a half percent this morning.

Jacob Shapiro:

So, well, because

Marko Papic:

Iran is, because Iran is following.

Marko Papic:

The pattern of last year because it's not retaliating against, you know,

Marko Papic:

ways that oil prices will go up.

Marko Papic:

Yeah.

Marko Papic:

One last thing I wanna say.

Marko Papic:

I do also hear a lot of people say, but wait a minute.

Marko Papic:

What does this mean for inflation?

Marko Papic:

And so on?

Marko Papic:

Don't worry about it, just do not worry about it.

Marko Papic:

And I'll tell you why.

Marko Papic:

There's absolutely no way that any inflationary spike because of

Marko Papic:

conflict in the Middle East, is gonna lead to central banks around

Marko Papic:

the world raising interest rates.

Marko Papic:

Are you nuts?

Marko Papic:

Jay Powell is not gonna like do the bidding of the supreme leader.

Marko Papic:

He's not gonna like raise interest rates to slow down the pace of

Marko Papic:

the economy as some robot, some automaton, like, oh, energy prices

Marko Papic:

rising, must raise interest rates.

Marko Papic:

No, bro, like Iran is attacking global shipping.

Marko Papic:

No, we're not.

Marko Papic:

Like they're not gonna raise interest rates.

Marko Papic:

Not even considerate.

Marko Papic:

And that's why I would definitely like fading oil.

Marko Papic:

On day one of this is dumb.

Marko Papic:

You should definitely not do that.

Marko Papic:

But fading the market move, you absolutely should do this.

Marko Papic:

There's no way that this is gonna be negative for, uh, stocks.

Marko Papic:

And by the way, it's right now, uh, noon, New York time on Friday the

Marko Papic:

13th and s and p 500 is down point 44.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, it's good for defense stocks literally everywhere.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, I I I'm glad that you brought up Soleimani 'cause that might be a

Jacob Shapiro:

good way to, to land the plane here.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, because the Soleimani thing gets to the, the point about

Jacob Shapiro:

Iranian domestic politics.

Jacob Shapiro:

We've talked a little bit about the US and about Israel, but if you think

Jacob Shapiro:

about Iranian domestic politics, I mean, you're right, it's really complicated.

Jacob Shapiro:

So we're not gonna be able to treat it with the nuance that it deserves.

Jacob Shapiro:

But think of it in terms of hard liners like the IRGC and who believe

Jacob Shapiro:

in the revolution and everything else, versus the pragmatists

Jacob Shapiro:

Rouhani, really the most recent one.

Jacob Shapiro:

But you know, who wanna have their cake and eat it too?

Jacob Shapiro:

They want Iran to be part of the global economy.

Jacob Shapiro:

They wanna relax some of the religious restrictions.

Jacob Shapiro:

But okay, you can have the revolution and these two factions sort of

Jacob Shapiro:

squaring off against each other.

Jacob Shapiro:

And I. One of the strategic reasons to off soleimani, not just that you're

Jacob Shapiro:

sending a message, you're also getting rid of the leader who is on the

Jacob Shapiro:

hardliner side, the one who was gonna be opposing negotiations tooth and nail.

Jacob Shapiro:

So if you can empower the pragmatist to some extent and then, uh, to

Jacob Shapiro:

your, I'm just like butchering your point about there probably would've

Jacob Shapiro:

been a deal because getting rid of soleimani and throwing the IRGC into

Jacob Shapiro:

chaos, maybe you can make an argument that now you're giving some power.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, to the pragmatists, uh, going forward.

Jacob Shapiro:

But just, just to say that like, there's also an internal Iranian issue here,

Jacob Shapiro:

and I think when we're thinking sort of as you said profoundly about what

Jacob Shapiro:

happens next, um, I, I think there's a lot to be said about like Israel getting

Jacob Shapiro:

short-term benefit, but at what long-term cost the, the changing nature of war.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like another example of intelligence and drones and technology enabling

Jacob Shapiro:

things that even 10 years ago might not have been possible.

Jacob Shapiro:

And then like, what does this mean for the future of Iran long term?

Jacob Shapiro:

Because eventually Iran is going to come in from the cold, and when

Jacob Shapiro:

it does, it will be one of the greatest frontier opportunities ever.

Jacob Shapiro:

I mean, like, it's, it's an incredible country with incredible

Jacob Shapiro:

human capital and resources and all these other sorts of things, and

Jacob Shapiro:

it will not be isolated forever.

Jacob Shapiro:

Um, so I, I'm always sort of waiting from that perspective, but

Marko Papic:

one, one, I think

Jacob Shapiro:

we'll be waiting a lot longer.

Marko Papic:

Well, since we're, yeah, since we're doing kind of closing

Marko Papic:

statements, here's what I would say.

Marko Papic:

I would say that geopolitics is a funny thing, you know?

Marko Papic:

Um, and we as humans, we desensitize.

Marko Papic:

We're, we're starting to desensitize to what I've been saying is a

Marko Papic:

multipolar world since 2011.

Marko Papic:

That's been my call.

Marko Papic:

Think about it, 10 years ago, if you told me just that Israel and Iran

Marko Papic:

would exchange Christmas of fire fire, which is what happened last year.

Marko Papic:

Mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

I would've said, oil prices are 150 right away, and here we are.

Marko Papic:

Not only has Israel been attacked by a massive terrorist attack supported

Marko Papic:

by Iran in some capacity, even to gently on October 7th, not only

Marko Papic:

have we lived through that, but that happened almost two years ago.

Marko Papic:

Since then, Israel and Iran have exchanged cruise missile fire, and now Israel has

Marko Papic:

attacked Iran and might attack it again.

Marko Papic:

And SAP 500 is down 0.4%, which is like a random day.

Marko Papic:

Oil prices are up more than they've ever been up intraday.

Marko Papic:

I think we hit significant increase in oil prices, so no doubt there,

Marko Papic:

but you know, they're like 6% and the world's not ending.

Marko Papic:

And people are like, yeah, I mean, it is, I guess Iraq is gonna retaliate

Marko Papic:

against Israel, like, you know, whatever.

Marko Papic:

Like it is what it is.

Marko Papic:

This is the world we live in.

Marko Papic:

I mean, a couple of weeks ago, India and Pakistan exchanged fire.

Marko Papic:

You and I barely got to squeeze them in between the NBA finals and like the,

Marko Papic:

the fiscal bill in the United States.

Marko Papic:

This is very interesting to me and I think it's something for everyone

Marko Papic:

on this call to who's listening.

Marko Papic:

If you're an investor, this is really important for you.

Marko Papic:

But if you're just a regular person, like listening to our podcast,

Marko Papic:

trying to figure out what's going on with the world, this is the world.

Marko Papic:

It doesn't mean that the world is descending into chaos and

Marko Papic:

there there's gonna be World War III at the end of the rainbow.

Marko Papic:

This can just be our world for the next 50 years.

Marko Papic:

This is what the 19th century looked like, and it's considered

Marko Papic:

the longest period of peace.

Marko Papic:

The long peace, 1812 to 1914, a hundred years of what we consider peace was

Marko Papic:

interspersed with conflicts that just did not blow out of their region.

Marko Papic:

You know, and I think that's what I would end it on.

Marko Papic:

This is interesting.

Marko Papic:

We had India, Pakistan, we have this, we had Russia, Armenia, sja, Russia, Ukraine.

Marko Papic:

Like things are, things are cooking here.

Marko Papic:

There, there's a lot of pots on our stove of geopolitics, but none of

Marko Papic:

them are really, uh, overflowing.

Marko Papic:

And that is what multipolarity is like.

Marko Papic:

It sucks because it means people will die more so than when somebody's in charge.

Marko Papic:

On the other hand, it doesn't mean that every conflict immediately has

Marko Papic:

to become a regional configuration.

Marko Papic:

And I don't think a lot of people have really, uh, wrapped their

Marko Papic:

brains around that fact 'cause they just don't know enough.

Marko Papic:

History and human history is about multipolarity.

Marko Papic:

It's not about hegemony or by.

Jacob Shapiro:

Yeah.

Jacob Shapiro:

Or wrap their brains around the fact at how geopolitically insignificant

Jacob Shapiro:

the Middle East has become.

Jacob Shapiro:

The Middle East was important in the latter half of the

Jacob Shapiro:

20th century for two reasons.

Jacob Shapiro:

Number one, oil, number two, it was a proxy battleground between the

Jacob Shapiro:

United States and the Soviet Union.

Jacob Shapiro:

So between Exactly.

Jacob Shapiro:

Cold Wars over, there's no China doing battle with the United States over.

Jacob Shapiro:

No.

Jacob Shapiro:

They had be the proxies via Iran.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like it's all the same.

Jacob Shapiro:

So that's gone.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, and oil, nobody gives a frack every, literally, ah, you like that.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like the United States has oil Nice.

Jacob Shapiro:

And the Chinese are building reactors and Europe's doing hydrogen.

Jacob Shapiro:

Like they're on borrowed time.

Jacob Shapiro:

That's why that's the, is building, you know, Neo in the middle of the desert.

Jacob Shapiro:

'cause they're on borrowed time.

Jacob Shapiro:

Just to,

Marko Papic:

just to be clear, they would, if Iran had the minerals, the balls

Marko Papic:

to attack I, uh, the, the facilities.

Marko Papic:

But Saudi Arabia has moved on.

Marko Papic:

You know, and the other issue, the other issue that I don't think, we also have

Marko Papic:

wrapped our brains around US taxpayers by supporting the Fifth Fleet in Bahrain.

Marko Papic:

Are defending Chinese strategic interests.

Marko Papic:

Let me say that again.

Marko Papic:

If you're an American listening to this, you're paying taxes in parts of China

Marko Papic:

can be safe because it's not US oil supply that the fifth fleet is guarding.

Marko Papic:

It's the rest of the world.

Marko Papic:

And that's maybe the one vestigial part of Unipolarity mm-hmm.

Marko Papic:

Of hegemony that America still performs.

Marko Papic:

I know you gotta go so we can wrap it on this.

Marko Papic:

All I would say is that Chinese and American interests are not that misaligned

Marko Papic:

when it comes to the Middle East.

Marko Papic:

Uh, and Chinese statement, uh, after this conflict was pretty muted.

Marko Papic:

They didn't really just support Iran.

Marko Papic:

They kind of said, Hey, both sides need to calm down.

Marko Papic:

Um, and I think that that's interesting as well.

Marko Papic:

I think that's a very nuanced point you're saying, Jacob.

Marko Papic:

In other words, this Soviet Union in the US had clearly delineated interests.

Marko Papic:

It's not that clear anymore.

Jacob Shapiro:

No, and I guess like it's shame on us for leaving it on this

Jacob Shapiro:

and only bringing them up now because for me the real question is, okay

Jacob Shapiro:

President Erdogan, what's your move?

Jacob Shapiro:

Because if this is your backyard, if this is the neo Ottoman Empire, if

Jacob Shapiro:

all these powers are like whatever, like this is Turkey's backyard and now

Jacob Shapiro:

you've got Israel and Iran like with blows, and maybe that's good for you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Maybe you want to break out the popcorn and deal with

Jacob Shapiro:

whoever is left over afterwards.

Jacob Shapiro:

But like said it, Turkey is the quiet one that is like, we should all be watching

Jacob Shapiro:

how they react because that's probably gonna define this more than anything

Marko Papic:

else.

Marko Papic:

You took your very high in our draft, so you took Turkey.

Marko Papic:

Sorry, Turkey high in the draft.

Marko Papic:

So let's see it.

Marko Papic:

I did let, let's see.

Marko Papic:

That potential.

Marko Papic:

Let's it,

Jacob Shapiro:

I'm waiting.

Jacob Shapiro:

Alright.

Jacob Shapiro:

Alright.

Jacob Shapiro:

Thank you.

Jacob Shapiro:

Alright.

Jacob Shapiro:

Cheers.