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Hello listeners.

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Welcome to another episode of the Jacob Shapiro podcast.

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Back on the podcast is fan favorite and one of my personal favorites, Kamran bha.

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from The New Lines Institute, I brought Kamran in, not just to talk about the

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Middle East, but specifically to give a Pakistani perspective on what's

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going on between India and Pakistan.

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Still have a couple more voices that are gonna come on.

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last week I thought.

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something was imminent and it's still imminent, which tells you that

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things haven't happened, but Cran does a good job of giving us a sober

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perspective on that and some other things happening in the Middle East.

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we recorded Tuesday, May 6th, around 2:00 PM Central.

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This will be out quick, but if anything happens between now and

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when you listen to this podcast.

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That's why.

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Otherwise, you can email me at jacob@jacobshapiro.com.

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As always, if you have any questions, comments, concerns, book

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recommendations, et cetera, take care of the people that you love.

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Cheers, and see you out there.

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All right, come on.

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It is.

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Tuesday May 6th.

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It's 2:08 PM Central time.

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we are not gonna sit on this episode very long 'cause I don't know how

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long this episode's gonna stay current with the way things are going.

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we've got Pakistan and India still threatening each other with war.

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We've got, potential US Iran negotiations.

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We've got Israel threatening to basically take over the Gaza Strip.

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We've got the Houthis sending missiles to Tel Aviv airport and Israel responding.

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we've got developments in Syria.

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We've got spicy things according to you happening with

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Turkey and the United States.

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so no shortage of things to talk about, and you can take it to the

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wider angle if you want, but I did, we had an Indian analyst on the podcast

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last week, and I know you're not a Pakistani analyst, but you are Pakistani,

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or at least come from Pakistan.

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and if memory Serves was born there.

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Was born there and if memory serves family from the Kashmir area.

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Am I right?

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Did I remember that correctly?

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Yeah, we were one of those, the forefathers lived

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there for about a century.

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Okay, there you go.

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So I, at least wanted to start by asking you what your take is on

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the sudden uptick in, I don't know, tensions, aggressiveness, potential

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war between Pakistan and India.

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And then we can dive into all of these other earthquakes happening

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throughout, our favorite and most stable region of the world.

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but, start off by telling me from your point of view, What is going on?

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what happened in Kashmir?

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Who are the people that are behind this?

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is it a, I've seen some Pakistani say it's an Indian false flag

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operation to get the US on their side.

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it's, it seems very mysterious, so help us make, make sense of it all.

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let me start from where you left off.

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The US is already on India's side.

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So they don't need to get India.

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India doesn't need to get the US on their side.

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And the reason for that is India is part of the bigger strategic objective

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of the United States when it comes to meeting the challenge of China.

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India obviously has the role to play in maritime spaces, the

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Pacific, but those are like.

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Future effects.

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They, those are not going to materialize anytime soon.

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So those are future planning.

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But well before that, in the current moment where you have a tariff trade

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war going on and reaching boiling point, you want, the United States wants to

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reduce exposure dependency on China when it comes to manufacturing and imports.

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So the hope is that, or the hope has been that India would

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be one of those destinations we saw in the last couple of weeks.

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Apple announced that by 2026, I don't remember who was the beginning

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or the end, that they will shift a sizable amount of their manufacturing.

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to, India.

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Whether that happens or not remains to be seen, but I wanted to flag that as an

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example of, the broader dynamics that are happening from an Indian point of view.

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This is all great.

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And today, just today, the IMF announced that this year, I'm not sure at,

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what point I didn't read the details.

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India will overtake the Japan as the fourth largest economy of the world.

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So they're going from five to four and they're aiming for three.

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They know that the jump from replacing China is gonna take a long, time.

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'cause of the variance between the two economies is just so massive.

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So that's the Indian goal.

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In other words, India wants to play major league global level,

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geoeconomics, geotech, geopolitics, however you wanna describe it.

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and it sees the current moment of US China thing hitting up as a moment

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in which it can assert itself.

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Now this is the backdrop in which you have this attack on April 22nd, in

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the Indian controlled Kash town of be.

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To your listeners.

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I just wanna say I use the word controlled because I also say Pakistani controlled.

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I just don't want to get into, the semantics of occupation

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and non-occupational.

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So control is a neutral word anyway, so the attack takes place and I.

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There aren't a whole lot of suspects.

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Okay.

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Let's just be honest.

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Okay?

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Do, and I was on a Pakistani television show this morning and I knowing, how I

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would be savaged and whatnot, I still took the, liberty of trying to explain this.

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And I said, look, I. Whether it's non-state actors in Pakistan doing

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it on their own without official sanction, whether it was elements of

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the Pakistan state running their own little operation in, concert with

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the non-state actors, the proxies, these Islamist militants, or whether

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this was an officially commissioned strike, or hit, doesn't matter.

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The point is there, the origin of these attacks historically.

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Has been from Pakistan.

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And so this idea of a false flag operation, I get it.

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Why?

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That's the Pakistani narrative.

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Do I agree with it?

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No.

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so the Indians are looking at this and saying, okay, that there

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are two things that they see.

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One is that.

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We're trying to play a major league and we're still being sucked into

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this old rivalry within, Pakistan that we are trying to leave behind.

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That's one perspective in India, but because of nationalism, religious

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nationalism and Pakistan has become this emotional thing in India over the years.

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your reason tells you don't be distracted.

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Okay?

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This is gonna happen.

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You are gonna do your little thing, but don't make this the focus

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point or the focal point of your efforts on the foreign policy front.

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'cause it could distract you from the bigger goal.

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And I think this is what the vice president, if I had to guess,

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probably said, to his, counterparts and people he met in India that.

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We get it, that this is happening, but do what you have to do,

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but keep your eye on the ball.

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this is distraction.

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and there's much more to be achieved.

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Look at the current moment, and we know you want it.

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So I think the American challenge is how to take the Indian imperative and say,

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okay, we'll do both at the same time.

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The reason why both cannot happen.

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Because if, and there's another element to it.

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The other element is since 2016 under this Prime Minister Renda Modi, India

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moved from this idea that we will threaten military action but will not cross the

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border and do, strikes inside Pakistan.

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So you remember, you and I, think at the time were.

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FI think, when the, 2016, special Forces operation was mounted,

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it was called Surgical Strikes.

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Pakistanis denied it.

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They called it firing across the border.

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My suspicion is that there were some forces that went across the border,

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short-lived operation, quick and dirty.

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You hit and you basically, withdraw all back.

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That set up an expectation that, hey.

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That's the dividing line between the Indian response to

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Pakistan based, militant attacks in Kashmir and India proper.

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And so there's a whole history, and I don't want to get into that,

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but that was the turning point.

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Now, what that did was that okay, the next time this

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happens, we have to do something.

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Vigor.

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So this was like a, if this was like a ho a pen trick,

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next time it happened to vigor.

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And that's what happened in 2019 when we had the suicide

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bombing of the Paramilitary Forces Bus in Obama, in Kashmir.

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We had the Indians for the first time since the 1971 war,

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this side to do airstrikes.

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And not just in Pakistani controlled Kashmir, but Pakistan.

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in the town of Balakot, which is in, the Northwestern province called the

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Dominated, majority, majority, province.

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Anyway, so what the Pakistanis did is they retaliated, by striking,

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at a brigade headquarters on the Indian side of the line of control.

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Now, that led to a dog fight.

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The Indians at Pakistanis were able to shoot down and make 21.

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The pilot was captured.

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We were given tea and sent back home.

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That was it.

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So we haven't had anything since 2019 February.

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And then in 20 19th of August, the Indians decided that, you know what?

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One of the ways to solve this problem is to end the autonomous status of

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Kashmir that we're in control of.

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Mind you, there is the Pakistani control Kashmir, and there are good chunks

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of Kashmir that are Chinese control.

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So this is a complicated battle space.

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so what they did is the area that they controlled, they basically divided it up.

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A, they took away the autonomous status of the old state of Jamin Kashmir B.

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They divided it up into two.

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Federally administered Union territories, one J and K, the Jamin Kashmir, the

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other Lada, Laak being ethnically different, religiously different than

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j and K, which is Muslim majority.

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LADA is also on the Chinese border, not on the Pakistani side of border.

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So they did that.

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That created more tensions between India and Pakistan.

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Nothing happened.

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but the Indians thought that they had solved this problem.

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They, there was a massive security crackdown and, normalization had

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begun over the past year or so.

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There was covid in between.

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So all sorts of things were going on.

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Finally, you, think from the point of view of the Modi government, Hey,

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we think we've, got a handle on this now, and then this thing happens.

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So now the question is, okay, last time you did airstrikes,

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what are you gonna do this time?

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And there's a public expectation and there is also that sort of strategic expectation

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where adversaries lock themselves into, a spiral, no, escalating spiral.

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So this is why I think, we're now more than 12 days past, the attack

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from, April 22nd, I say 12 days.

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Because the last time this happened with the airstrike that I just mentioned,

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that was 12 days after the attack.

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So this time we're seeing all sorts of activity.

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There's missile test firing out in the Arabian Sea.

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There's Air Force, drills taking place in,

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Southeast, Southwestern part of India.

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Near the Pakistani border today, there are drills taking place in the

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desert province, or state of Stan.

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There's a lot of mobilization happening, and plus there's civil

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defense drills happening in case.

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The Indian struck and the Pakistanis did strikes on the other side.

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The other words, I think both sides are preparing for something they,

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I know I've taken a lot of time, but I just wanted to set the stage.

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thank you for laying out the context, but it, leads directly to, a question that

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I don't understand, which is, so what was the motive behind the attack itself?

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Do you think it was just a couple of randos?

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is there any reason that Pakistan wants to drag India back in?

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I, don't really understand the motive on Pakistan's side behind

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wanting to do this now of all times,

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you and I are not fans of randomness, so I wouldn't go to go into that.

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Look.

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there's a context here, and this is a context that is, it's not

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something that I came up with.

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It's.

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Being said in both countries or being talked about the, there is

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this view that the Pakistanis had to come out and retaliate for a number

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of things that have been happening.

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and this is just think of it as an imperative and, without getting into

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whether, the normative side of things, I'm just looking at it empirical.

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So what has been happening?

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the backdrop to this is the Pakistanis believe, that the insurgency that

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is picking up steam in Stan inside pa, in Western Pakistan and the

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Taliban insurgency that also is picking up steam simultaneously, is

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being backed by Indian intelligence.

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That is something we haven't seen any evidence of that, the Pakistanis

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have not provided evidence, but they keep talking about it.

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the Indians have been talking about how they have been, they support or should

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support or would support, the Baloche.

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They don't say they support the TTP, but.

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There is some warming of relationships between India and the

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Taliban government in Afghanistan.

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So the Pakistanis use that to have, say, look, they, it is through this

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medium, this channel that the Indians are actually also fueling the Taliban

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rebellion as well in the northwest.

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On top of that, you've had I would say at least a half a dozen unusual targeted

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assassinations of militant leaders from various Kashmiri groups on Pakistani sort.

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And they have been blamed on, again, on Indian intelligence.

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And there's a lot that's written out there for the listeners who

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want to get deeper into this.

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So you can just Google or use chat CPT.

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but there is enough material out there.

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This is the logic in which,

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for those who say that Pakistan had to strike back, these

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are the sort of the buildup.

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So the, Pakistanis were getting hit and they needed to basically say, Hey, if

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you hurt us in this area, then we can hurt you here, knock it off, or whatever.

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And so there is that narrative that's floating out there now, is it true?

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what is the evidence?

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no, this is in the realm of sort of speculation or, inferring based

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on rumor intelligence, if you will.

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So beyond that, I don't know how else to explain it.

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why there, there's another thing that I wanna mention is.

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In 2021 then Army Chief.

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This was when Imran Han was Prime Minister, then Army Chief, general

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Kammer Bais said, Hey, you know what?

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We want to end this nonsense with India.

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we have to deal with our Western flank.

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This was well before the Taliban took over, a Afghanistan and the US withdrew.

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They were seeing that coming and they said, Hey.

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we don't have any interest in, firing up anything with India.

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let's just keep it cool there so we can focus on the Western plank.

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So he went out and he established a ceasefire on the

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line of control in early 2021.

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It held, he also tried to improve relations.

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There were discussions that, or at least there were reports that.

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perhaps the Prime Minister of India could come on a visit to Pakistan.

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and, but those, all, the, government of Prime Minister, Imran Han

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did not want any part of it.

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So they quashed it, and that thing didn't go anywhere, but the ceasefire held.

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And so from the Pakistani point of view.

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They say, Hey, we haven't done anything and we, have no interest.

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We have problems.

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we have an economic, financial meltdown.

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We have political instability of unprecedented proportions,

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so on and so forth.

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And so we have no reason to do this.

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but there is this backdrop that we need to factor in, which is the

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targeted assassination of multiple militant liters, on Pakistani soil.

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The latest incident, which was the, hijacking of a train by Balo rebels that

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was carrying, troops and their families from one part of Bastan together called,

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it was called the Jaffa Express, and was, there was a hostage situation.

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there were, lots of casualties and fatalities.

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and that was, that happened only a few months ago.

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And After that the Pakistani, state came out and said, Hey, and this

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is from the official spokesperson of the military that we're gonna

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ch change the rules of the game.

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So a lot of people cite that and say, this is what they meant by changing

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the rules of the game, is that they are going back to this militancy

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in Kashmir, if that makes sense.

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Yeah, it makes sense.

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so before we get into regional context and how this connects to the big web of things

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that are happening everywhere, else, what do you think is gonna happen next?

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Do you think this is gonna be a relatively contained escalation and that India will

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just do what it has to do in order to try and reestablish some level of deterrence?

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Are you concerned about a bigger conflagration, like

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on, on the level of previous.

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even India, Pakistan wars are relatively small compared to most wars.

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But are we talking about one of the three wars that have happened in recent history?

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Like how, worried are you about what's gonna happen next?

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I think that it all depends on what kind of, kinetic action.

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The Indian state, they, as I said earlier, they've locked themselves

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into a situation where they can't do what they did last time.

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So you go back to your point about insurance.

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insurance was established, but then it fell apart.

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So how you reestablish insurance, logic says you have to do

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something where you raise the cost.

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So what is it that you can do that is more painful on the Pakistani side

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without triggering a counterstrike?

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So in other words, let's say the Indians hit and they hit relatively hard.

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The Pakistanis will hit back.

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And the, and Indians understand that.

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And you see this, in, in some of the more, if you will, sophisticated talk shows.

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otherwise Indian media is as jingoistic as Pakistani, if not more.

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but the point is that you can see Indian analysts talking about

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this, that look, if you strike big, then they can strike back at you.

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Then, so where do we go?

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So are we then compelled to hit that again?

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In other words, how many rounds are we looking at before we end it or

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this thing escalates out of control?

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So that is the fear right now.

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And, I don't think, hey, if it happens like an hour after we record

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this, then you know I'm wrong.

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But.

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The fact that it hasn't happened so far, and we're day 13, I'm pretty

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sure, on the math about that.

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but if it hasn't happened so far, it means the Indians are trying to calibrate

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something that will be substantive, but not break the norm, if you will.

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And so I don't have a model for you and that I can't say, Hey,

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this is what it's gonna look like.

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What, how do you rate the importance of the suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty?

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Do you feel like that is a big deal, little deal, or no deal?

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that is a big deal because, that treaty is from 60 19 60.

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It was, the world, Bank got involved.

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Basically played a role in getting that treaty off the ground and

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the treaty has held, yes, there's been noise made, in recent years

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it's not working for Pakistan.

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There needs to be renegotiation.

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It's not working for India, so on and so forth.

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But it's hell all throughout, all the tensions, all the wars,

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65 War, 71 War, 99 Cargill War, and then all the flashpoints that

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have occurred, 2001 two, 2008 by attacks, et cetera, et cetera.

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The Indians have never said, Hey, let's tamper with the in this Waters treaty.

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This is unprecedented.

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And obviously, This isn't okay, we're just gonna stop the water of Pakistan.

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It's leverage.

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It's trying to gain leverage and to force Pakistan into, a certain behavior.

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so the question is, will this lead to a renegotiation at some

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point when things calm down?

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Or is this something that's going to linger on and could actually become

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like a catalyst for more confrontation?

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Because the Pakistani see this as okay, and they've said it, this is like a

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tantamount to a declaration of war.

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and so

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it's not really clear where they're gonna go.

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there is the issue of, okay, are you gonna build dams and what, can

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you tamper with the water supply?

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Do you really want to go there?

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What happens and everybody's operating from a worst case scenario.

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So this is, this further makes this moment very different than everything

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we've seen in recent memoral.

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Yeah.

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if you were advising the Pakistani government, what would you tell them?

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Oh, please.

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What can I say that, I would basically say, look,

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there are always back channels, I'm told, and this is what we've learned.

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There are always back channels.

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So go through one of them and stop this from blowing up beyond what it already is.

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So is can they do that?

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Can the Pakistanis actually say, okay.

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Let me use my call.

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By the way, the, director general of military operations, on both

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sides had their call a few days ago.

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the readout to the media was that this was about, keeping things calm on the LOC.

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Indian Indians told the Pakistanis stop firing or something like that, but there

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was a call, and that's an official call.

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So if there's an official call at a military level, then you would think that.

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Back channels are easier to operate is, they're secret.

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Nobody knows about them.

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You can discuss things without having to go to the media.

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Maybe you can, do something there.

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I don't know.

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I think we're, significantly up an escalatory ladder that

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it becomes difficult to climb down, but not impossible.

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I don't know.

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By all accounts, Pakistanis are bracing for incoming, and I don't know if

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anything can be done before that.

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I think that there, there is this round that perhaps has to happen.

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I, never say that it's a hundred percent inevitable, but I think where things

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are, we should be looking at some form of kinetic action and hoping that.

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It'll remain confined within certain parameters from

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where you can go back to the.

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Negotiating, take

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one.

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Underplayed.

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Part of this, I think is, the role of Bangladesh and Bangladesh, India

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relations have not been great of late.

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is there any opportunity for Pakistan to reach out to Bangladesh

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to try, I'm really stretching here.

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I'm just trying to think of worst case scenarios.

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But should India be worried about that?

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Is there a world in which India finds itself surrounded on both sides, or

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at least has two fronts going on?

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I'm really stretching.

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I know, but I'm, just trying to get the sense of where.

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Bangladesh is here.

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no, you're not actually stretching.

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but I would reframe the question and say, could there be some Chinese

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assistance to Pakistan in the case of some escalation Bangladesh itself?

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Yes.

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It's the Pro India government of the former Prime Minister.

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She Hasina Isan.

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And this new military led setup is.

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Definitely gravitating more towards China.

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That's very public.

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and there are significant, signs of a realignment with Pakistan.

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but what can they do?

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Do they want, they're in a, they're in a transition themselves.

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and so they.

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They need to stabilize things on the home front.

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I don't think Bangladesh will get involved.

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The question is, what will the Chinese do?

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The reason I say that is because while the Chinese don't want to,

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see this thing get out of hand, but there isn't an interest here that

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if your Chinese, if you're a Chinese strategic thinker and you're looking

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at this and saying, okay, this is the.

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Main ally of the US and the, if it is bogged down in South Asia,

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then it can't be an ally to the us.

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So how do we get that going?

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there are risks involved.

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There is also the fact that since 2020, the Indian and the Chinese

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have sparred on their border.

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Since then, the Indians have been, thinking about a two

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front problem for themselves.

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Both the, line of control in Kashmir with Pakistan and the line of actual

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control, which runs from Kashmir all the way to the border with

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Neba, traversing to Nepal, andan.

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It's a long border.

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and From the Indian point of view, they have to factor in that if they

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go too big, then the Chinese could intervene in some shape or form.

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you as a military strategist, you're sitting in your deli.

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It's not possible for you to ignore that, however remote it

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might be, whatever calculus you, you do that has to be factored in.

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Now you may decide, I, We're not gonna let it go that far or we're prepared for it.

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Whatever the scenario is, they have to factor in the Chinese and

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the two front war because, in this piece of geopolitical real estate,

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it's not just India and Pakistan.

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The Chinese are stakeholders as well.

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So there you have it.

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What realistically do you think China's gonna do though?

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I would think that they wouldn't want any kind of conflict here.

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They don't want any kind of conflict, but.

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What they want.

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It's, one thing, but what is it that they will be forced to do?

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Should an Indian, should India do something significant because

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they're, this is their ally.

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Pakistan is their ally.

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Now there are problems between Pakistan and China and many problems.

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But you, if you are aspiring to be great power and you're telling

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Pakistan that, Hey, you didn't get much from the us, if you align with us.

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It's about Chinese credibility as well.

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and so China can just sit back and say, oh, they're fighting again.

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they have to do something.

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There's, will they provide assistance of some form?

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I don't know.

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it's, again, EI think the ball is in the Indian Cork.

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Everything depends on what the Indians do.

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This thing didn't play out in many rounds in 2019, but I'm sure the Chinese were

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watching that dog fight very closely, between Indian and Pakistani warplanes,

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even if it was just for, a couple of days.

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And, but it's not something that the Indians are oh, it's

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happening in some remote corner.

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No, it's not.

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here you have your ally and your biggest regional adversary, going at it.

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So you can't be I. Neutral.

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All right.

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you're actually making me feel better kamran.

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'cause it, it sounds to me like all signs point towards deescalation.

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So unless, I'm reading you wrong, you have your choice from the menu.

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Would you like to talk Iran?

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Would you like to talk Israel and Gaza?

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Would you like to talk Yemens, Syria, Turkey?

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What is your pleasure?

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I think that they're all part of a threat, a singular threat.

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We can talk about all of them and as part of a a, fabric that he called

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the Middle East, I. And it is not really in a good shape, but yeah,

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it's all part of the same logic.

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wh which part of the, thread do you wanna begin with?

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Do you wanna begin with US Iran, potential nuclear deal coming?

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Do you wanna deal with Yeah, let's start in Israel, or let's

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start there and, let's connect it to the Houthis because today, just a short

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while ago, sitting with the Canadian Prime Minister, the president said that

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he's got word that the hooky do not want.

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To be bombed and we will stop bombing them because they have

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promised to no longer attack ships.

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So that's a huge thing that just came out.

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So no longer to attack ships, they're just gonna bomb Tel Aviv airport and

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President Trump's gonna be cool with that.

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And that's the wrinkle and that

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is the question.

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And so I saw on Twitter, somewhere that, the report is that the Israelis

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were not taken into conference.

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They didn't know about this until they found out about it.

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From the media.

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So it wasn't like, there wasn't a discussion according to this report.

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And this report comes from Bar who's a pretty legit journalist.

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he's, high caliber.

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So, I'm taking it seriously.

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and so I think that, look, we've had three rounds of conversations

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between the president's Envoy, Steve Whitcoff, and the arrangements.

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I think one of them, with the exception of one, all of the

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rounds have taken place in ban.

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A fourth one is due this Sunday.

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I can't imagine they're just talking nukes and I can't imagine that

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they're talking to the Iranians.

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And then this Houthi thing comes out from nowhere.

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The Houthis are proxies of Iranians.

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And this had to factor in into the conversation because this isn't

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just about nukes, this is about Iran's ability to, do ingress into

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the Arab Bowl and, destabilize it.

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And a key tool, especially after the massive hit that Hezbollah took,

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last year, and the collapse of the.

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This is probably the sharpest tool, or most potent tool in the Iranian, arsenal.

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and therefore you have to have a conversation on the Houthis.

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And the Houthis are being, were being bombed.

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I. For many, days consistently by the, by US forces.

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And yesterday they struck at, Aviv Airport, and then the

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Israelis conducted a strike.

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So you can't not talk.

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you, those are not separate things.

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So I, if there is a deal that's happening, it's part of a broader conversation

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with the Iranians, and saying, okay.

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while we're discussing nukes, you, this has to, we have to solve this.

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and so I think there, I think that there is an, a conversation

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underway that is very serious.

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The big question about the Iranian nuclear negotiations is that, is this

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just going to be a little more than J-C-P-O-A, the Obama nuclear deal?

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I have a hard time believing that I don't think that this president

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can settle down on, okay, let's just put some bells and whistles on the

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same old deal and call it different.

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I think it's gonna be subsequently different.

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but, and, there's an opportunity to extract a bigger concession because of

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how desperate the ivanian situation is.

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they've lost the Levant.

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They're defensive posture in, in Iraq.

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Their most lethal ally, the Houthis are getting bombed.

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their economy isn't, tatters.

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They're going, they're approaching a political transition, which

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will, in my view, is gonna be a systemic tra transition.

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They need to sort this thing out.

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They need some sanctions, respite before.

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the funeral proce procession of Haman is taken out.

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because think about it, if you are the Iranian regime and the supreme leader

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has passed away, and obviously this is, there's gonna be a lot of public,

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ceremony, if you will, for a lack of better term public mourning.

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That's an opportunity for anybody who wants to come out and use

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that moment to do protests.

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I've been told that they're really worried about that.

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So they wanna be able to improve the public situation much,

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sooner than that before they get, they're deep into that position.

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You can't game this out 'cause someone somewhere in Tehran knows, what is the

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true status of the old man's health.

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But, you have to assume that he's 86 and He's not gonna be

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around for Bob, so whatever.

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So I don't know how much time they have, but it, the clock is ticking.

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So they have a situation where they need sanctions relief, they need a deal.

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What are they willing to give up?

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And I'm not saying they're going to just say, Hey, mothball our

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nuclear program and we're gonna do like a Gadda and Libya 2003.

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No, they're not gonna do that.

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But they, that's why I don't think it's just going to be J-C-P-O-A plus something.

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I think it's going to be a bit more substantive.

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Can we get a deal on the, ballistic missiles?

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I don't know.

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I haven't seen a whole lot on it.

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but this thing from the president saying the Houthis are ready to call

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it quits and throw in the towel,

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Makes me hopeful that, that there is some progression going on, but

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there will be something substantive.

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Now, how do you balance that with Saudi imperatives, Turkish imperatives, and

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Israeli imperatives more importantly?

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That's the big key because I think there are separate deals

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and arrangements taking place.

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just yesterday we had the news that, the president came out and, tweeted.

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About how great his conversation was with the Turkish, president, aan.

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And they talked about the Ukraine war, Gaza, Syria.

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so there's that thing happening.

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There's an Iranian conversation happening.

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There is also a, an understanding with Saudi, the president is

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about to go to Saudi on his first ever trip, and then there's ga.

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I don't think, the US ever wanted to take over Gaza.

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I think it was designed to put pressure on the Arab states

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to own the Palestinian issue.

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I think what's going on is the US and this is where the Abraham Accord framework

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comes in, is that you guys need to sort this out, this Palestinian issue, we

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can't give you a two-state solution.

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It's not even possible.

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But it's not our problem.

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This is your problem.

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You, need to own it.

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You've never owned it.

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You've always said the White House will do something and put pressure

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on Israel and bring it to the table.

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And at some point when you know things are right, stars aligned,

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we're gonna get a two state solution.

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that hasn't happened.

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It's not gonna happen.

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that moment has come and gone and it was a while back.

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So when, how you move forward, you say, okay.

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We get rid, they're gonna get rid of Hamas.

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Now, Saudi Arabia, you need to work with UAE, Egypt and Jordan to come up

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with a plan for a post-conflict Gaza.

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'cause otherwise, the only other option is the Israelis have to occupy it,

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indefinitely.

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And so I think that.

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Is being discussed behind the scenes.

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We have had some indication with proposals from, the Egyptians and

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the, and others that were neither here nor there about what their plan is.

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But I can't imagine that the, United States wants to pull back and it's

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just gonna let the Gaza thing fester.

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And so if you connect everything together, I think there are

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multiple deals in the making.

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That are part of a broader strategy of the United States

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to keep this place from further deterioration, if that makes sense.

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Sort of.

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But the strategy feels like how to get outta Dodge, isn't the idea to pull

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back completely so that you can focus on the South China Sea and other areas?

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Or do you think that the Trump administration is invested in

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having an American presence in the region for the long haul?

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Ideally, I think they'd like to be able to withdraw.

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and because if you look at the grand strategy, and this isn't something that

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is just, this White House is strategy.

Speaker:

This has been in the making since the, early days of the Obama

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administration where, the US is saying, regional actors should take lead.

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We don't need to do the heavy lifting.

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No more boots on the ground.

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obviously this was in the backdrop of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars

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and the lessons learned from that.

Speaker:

But I think what this White House has done is said Russia is not a problem for us.

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Russia could not conquer all of Ukraine.

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Europe is much more prosperous.

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Let them take the lead.

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We'll still be there.

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We're not doing the heavy lifting, but I. This is the reality for that theater.

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East Asia, you don't have a nato, you don't have an EU equivalent.

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You have allies, you have South Koreans, the Japanese, the Philippines, you know

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the Taiwan and Australia and New Zealand, and you're trying to rope in India, what

Speaker:

is now called the in, but you don't have an architecture and it's maritime space.

Speaker:

And I think.

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What the United States is moving towards is we don't wanna get involved

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in land conflicts and we'll keep an eye on the oceans 'cause we are,

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native to both the two big oceans.

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And that's part of our national security strategy.

Speaker:

So we'll deal with that.

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And China, will also come at it through the tariffs and the

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geo-economic angle as well.

Speaker:

and in the Middle East, the problem is you don't have.

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You don't have a, you have a very fragile situation.

Speaker:

You don't, you have regional actors, but their interests run, at cross purposes.

Speaker:

They want it out.

Speaker:

So the Saudis and the, all things being equal, the Saudis and the

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Israelis should have cut a deal a long time ago, before October 7th.

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But the, you can't have that because, or you couldn't have

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that before October 7th, because,

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They needed something, the Saudis to say, Hey, we haven't thrown the Palestinian

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under the bus to embrace Israel.

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They were talking about that when October 7th happened, October 7th completely

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blew everything out of the water.

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And now you have a situation where, it's even more difficult.

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And so there is that, and this is the most, if you will.

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Friendly relationship or least hostile relationship between

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the Saudis and the Israelis.

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If you look at NDA other relationship, Turkey versus Israel and Syria,

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Turkey versus Iran, Iran versus Israel, Iran versus Saudi,

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they're all very adversarial.

Speaker:

And so that region that we called Middle East.

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Is therefore not conducive in the current moment for the strategy of well let the

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regional actors, figure it out and we'll.

Speaker:

Operate from behind the scenes.

Speaker:

I think the US will continue to have to do some heavy lifting.

Speaker:

Does that mean that it's going to be militarily involved heavily?

Speaker:

No, it doesn't have to be.

Speaker:

I'm not saying we're pulling the fifth fleet out of Bahrain.

Speaker:

I'm just saying, the aircraft carriers will keep coming and going.

Speaker:

The carrier strike groups there will, the facilities that exist will stay there.

Speaker:

We're, I think we're ready to say, Syria seems to have a logic

Speaker:

now, so we don't need to be there.

Speaker:

Iraq, we don't want to be there.

Speaker:

And so if we can read something on the, with the Iranians on that, and that's

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also part of the conversation with Iran, then maybe you know, these troops that

Speaker:

are here and there because those were placed because of the war against isis.

Speaker:

That's over with.

Speaker:

And so now you have a new dynamic.

Speaker:

So can these players, can.

Speaker:

Israel and Turkey deconflicted, Syria.

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do we need to be there to keep them apart?

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I don't think so, but we do need to be there diplomatic and use our sort

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of relationship play referee that doesn't require military presence.

Speaker:

So that's, my thinking.

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All right.

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Camran, I could talk to you forever, but let's get you outta here on this

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last question 'cause we've danced all around it and talked about

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everything that's around it, but.

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Yeah, the Assad regime fell only what, six months ago.

Speaker:

and then we've had, Israel being very aggressive on the Syrian border seizing

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towns thing, like things like that.

Speaker:

We've had the Syrian Kurds basically give up some measure of their autonomy,

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their sovereignty, in order not to get, not to piss off the Turks and

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have the Turks rolling through.

Speaker:

and otherwise, there was that first batch of violence after

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the fall of Assad, but it.

Speaker:

Syria has seemed eerily quiet to me thus far.

Speaker:

and in some ways it is the linchpin of the entire region.

Speaker:

So get us outta here on thinking about Syria in the context of

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everything that you're talking about.

Speaker:

It seems to be like the place where everybody's gonna compete, but, I'll,

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let you have the final word on it.

Speaker:

Syria from an Israeli point of view is the Northern flank.

Speaker:

you now have the makings of a state that is Sunni Islamist,

Speaker:

if you will, And so that's not good from an Israeli perspective.

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Israel has not had to deal with strong states in the Arab

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world for a very long time.

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Egypt was taken off the board with the Camp David Accords.

Speaker:

Syria was weak and Lebanon was a mess, and the Iranian were playing there and.

Speaker:

There was this unstated, if you will, understanding with the Assad

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regime that, Hey, we don't want you.

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We don't want you gone.

Speaker:

You don't want to piss us off.

Speaker:

Just keep Hezbollah in check.

Speaker:

That continued until the Arab Spring uprising, when the Assad regime

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went from actually being dominant in the Levan, became dependent on Iran

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and Hezbollah for its own survival.

Speaker:

So that threw out that.

Speaker:

Prior, if you will, arrangement.

Speaker:

Jordan has always had an unstated understanding with, with, Israel.

Speaker:

Syria is now changing.

Speaker:

There's going to be a new Syria and you don't know where it's going.

Speaker:

and it has a big backer called Turkey.

Speaker:

so in many waves.

Speaker:

Pushing Iran out of the Levant has had an unintended consequence of Turkey

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becoming the dominant tower there.

Speaker:

So I think what's gonna happen in Syria is what the Israelis and

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the Turks agree on or disagree on.

Speaker:

So I think that's where it is.

Speaker:

As far, the, as far as Saudi Arabia is concerned, I think that they

Speaker:

will have to find a way to work, and I think they all already are.

Speaker:

You can see it from the fact that the new Syrian president, Ahad Al Shara.

Speaker:

His first visit outside his country after becoming president was to Saudi Arabia.

Speaker:

and so I think there's an understanding between the Saudis

Speaker:

and the Turks as to where to go.

Speaker:

but the Saudis are an economic power.

Speaker:

They're not a military power.

Speaker:

The Turks are a military power, and, they have aspirations in the

Speaker:

full classic sense of being a great,

Speaker:

How does that work with Israel?

Speaker:

Can they reach a modest NDI for the short term?

Speaker:

those are things that we should be watching, and yes, Syria

Speaker:

is going to be important.

Speaker:

but I still think that the Saudis have to figure out the Palestinian

Speaker:

issue in order for them to be at ease.

Speaker:

They can't, the Saudis wish that there wasn't this problem that they had to deal.

Speaker:

they're probably very, Annoyed that the United States is not taking ownership of

Speaker:

this issue and saying you deal with it.

Speaker:

but this is a new reality that they will have to adjust.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I, don't think there are many things in the world I'm more cynical about

Speaker:

than the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Speaker:

and it seems to me that the Israelis will do whatever they're gonna do

Speaker:

with Gaza and that the rest of the.

Speaker:

Middle East will, I don't know, pay lip service to it, but that

Speaker:

nobody's really gonna care.

Speaker:

but maybe that's too cynical.

Speaker:

all of these conflicts, Israel, Palestine, Kashmir between India and

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Pakistan, it's just we'll probably be here in 10 years speaking about the

Speaker:

very same issues, don't you think?

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Hopefully not.

Speaker:

I wanted to end

Speaker:

on an optimistic note.

Speaker:

If you have one, please share it.

Speaker:

But it's hard to find.

Speaker:

I guess the optimistic note is that, we are probably gonna get

Speaker:

an Iran US deal of some sort.

Speaker:

It does seem like that is the future of that.

Speaker:

And if the, Olympians are, not busy crashing against each other than maybe

Speaker:

the smaller countries and smaller peoples in between them aren't gonna get crushed.

Speaker:

But as for the proximate conflicts themselves, I, it's

Speaker:

pretty hard to be optimistic.

Speaker:

No.

Speaker:

It is hard to be optimistic.

Speaker:

It's just that,

Speaker:

I feel like people have to get tired of onsets for so long, And,

Speaker:

I'm, I, remain optimistic about the human averseness to suffering.

Speaker:

but then again, there's the other part of the human condition, which are called.

Speaker:

The propensity to conflict.

Speaker:

So we'll see.

Speaker:

I hope.

Speaker:

I just hope we're not talking about these things in 10 years.

Speaker:

Yeah, unfortunately, I hope

Speaker:

we're talking about different things, have different problems.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

I hope we're talking about how Saudi Arabia has transformed into

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a liberal democracy in the middle of the desert and Neo is doing

Speaker:

everything and, everything is fine.

Speaker:

But, I don't know.

Speaker:

That feels

Speaker:

intelligence is running the place.

Speaker:

Alright, thanks Kamran.

Speaker:

It's always great to see you.

Speaker:

All right.

Speaker:

Cheers.

Speaker:

Thank you so much for listening to the Jacob Shapiro podcast.

Speaker:

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Speaker:

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Speaker:

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Speaker:

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Speaker:

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