Kitbag Conversations - Proto Kitbag 21: Author Peter Maguire
Episode Date: May 2, 2024This week I was joined by Peter Maguire, an internationally accredited author who's work focuses on Cambodia, international crime, narcotics, surf culture and is now a professor at UNC Wilmington. We ...had an absolute fantastic conversation where we talked about: -His youth and early work -The War on Terror -Current and future projects -And the geo-political arena we currently find ourselves in If you would like to read his work, you can go to https://www.amazon.com/Peter-Maguire/e/B001H6P32G. Additionally, if you would like to read more, follow his substack at https://petermaguire.substack.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone and welcome back. This week I'm joined by Peter McGuire, an internationally
recognized author who focused on topics such as the Nuremberg Trials, International Criminal
Law, the Khmer Rouge, International Smuggling. He's a veteran of the Jocko podcast, a professor of UNC Wilmington and much, much more.
Peter, you have the most interesting resume I've seen so far and I would really like
to talk about a few things for the next hour or so.
All right.
Well, thank you.
Dive in.
All right.
So looking at your basic complete story, you came from a very interesting mother, father,
we're a hoodlum essentially as a teenager from what I guess you lived in Australia for a little bit where a drug smuggler got captured in Tijuana, a surfer for a little bit got interested in international conflict.
I'm just yeah, just from the beginning.
a lowball teen pot smuggler. That was it. And yeah, and got busted actually in New Mexico at 19 and had to have a serious reckoning looking at New Mexico state penitentiary. And luckily I held my mud and didn't get caught. And went on to
college and left that part of my life behind me. But yeah, it was limited just to marijuana.
And that was a big part of the culture I grew up in. And I wrote about it in my book, Tie
Sticks, Surfer Smugglers, surfer scammers and the untold story
of the marijuana trade.
And yeah, and again, it was part of our
Southern California culture.
And I moved past it and continue to surf and still surf.
But then I went on to surf and still surf.
But then I went on to college and graduate school and got my doctorate and wrote my PhD dissertation
on the Nuremberg trials.
And my advisor was the chief counsel at Nuremberg,
Brigadier General Telford Taylor.
My great grandfather had been a judge at Nuremberg, Brigadier General Telford Taylor. My great grandfather had been a judge at Nuremberg.
So at 28, I was one of the world's experts
on the law and theory of war.
At a time before the human rights industry and all that,
during really at the end of the Cold War.
And I then went to Cambodia to investigate the Khmer Rouge war crimes,
because in my mind, that was the real violation of the never again promise that not only had
the Khmer Rouge carried out genocide and killed 20% of their population in three years, 10 months and 20 days, the
world powers kind of stood idly by including the United Nations. And so I wondered how
did this happen if this was supposedly something that was never to happen again and came out
of it wiser and much more cynical.
The topic of the Khmer Rouge is one of those where everyone kind of like turns a blind eye,
where it's everyone knows about it, but no one really addresses it. So it's interesting to see
that you threw a considerable amount of time into the topic itself. And I understand that you were
there during 9-11, you spent a lot of time in Cambodia. I was there. The first time I went was in the beginning of 1994. And again, this was
as the war in former Yugoslavia was flaring. And when I was in Cambodia, I was watching Rwanda on television
at a French bar and looking at this. And it was very clear to me that this was the most egregious
case of clear genocide, you know, really since the Khmer Rouge or World War II.
And again, the UN was kind of talking in nice sonorous phrases, but not doing anything significant.
And in former Yugoslavia, the same.
I mean, I knew guys from DevGru and other elite units that were there and they were
told to stand down over and over
when it came to capturing war criminals,
when it came to bombing Serb positions.
So there was this kind of disconnect
between civilian and military leadership,
as there was in Cambodia,
where you had the French foreign Legion,
rapid reaction force, that British, I mean Australian SAS, you had really
top flight soldiers in country under UN command and the UN consistently wouldn't let them off the
off the leash. And so the generals Laurie Dan and Redue in the French generals in Cambodia,
they resigned and said, hey, you know, we're here to
fight. You don't want us to fight. Well, why are we here? So I, again, I became quite cynical about
this kind of Faustian bargain that, oh, we'll watch genocide televised as it was in Rwanda, as it was in former Yugoslavia, and will give you justice,
will have trials and truth and reconciliation and accountability, these very amorphous,
unquantifiable things. And I was like, why? So yeah, so that was the beginning of my education.
It's interesting you mentioned the French foreign legion because I think a lot of people
forget that the French just weren't in Vietnam.
They were in all of Indochina.
Oh yeah.
And so when it comes to something like the Khmer Rouge or West Africa, the French impact
and influence in the region was very strong and is still very strong today, especially
in Western Africa where someone like England just gives up their
territories like you want independence, fine, they leave. But then the French plan, we'll take our
name off the lease, but we're still living here. We're not going anywhere. Well, and an important
thing that most people don't know is that in order to get the French to join the European Defense Community Treaty, the EDC that evolves into NATO,
the bargain that's made is that
the United States will cover your retreat
or allow you to pull out of Indochina, Southeast Asia.
And so we begin to assume their burden,
especially after Dien Bien Phu.
And they're taking big losses.
And so in exchange to get the French to agree to EDC NATO,
we get sucked in to Southeast Asia.
Dien Bien Phu is such a funny battle, because the Frenchmen land,
and they go, the only way we're going to lose
is if the Vietnamese can bring an artillery piece at the top of that ridge.
Impossible! Impossible! No, in General Jop and you know these are fierce, fierce, you know,
am I uncensored? Can I swear? Go right ahead. They're some fierce motherfuckers, you know,
and they fought the Chinese and interesting
little sort of footnote to the Khmer Rouge is that after, you know, the Khmer Rouge,
April 17th, 1975 to January 1979, then the Vietnamese chased their asses out and then the Chinese launch a kind of punitive invasion
against Vietnam because the Chinese, much to their chagrin and though they like to deny
it as they do everything today, they were the key sponsors.
They were the key intellectual architects of the Khmer Rouge. The Chinese had
their great leap forward. The Khmer Rouge had the ultra great great leap forward, kind of like the
ultra MAGA. But in any case, the Chinese, without them, the Khmer Rouge would never have done, you know, what
they had done, in my opinion.
And when the Vietnamese chased them out, you know, they launched this punitive invasion
into Northern Vietnam.
And the Vietnamese fought them, you know, I wouldn't say quite to a standstill, but
it was a very bloody
short war. And it was kind of resolved more or less diplomatically with like, okay, Vietnam,
you don't talk about that anymore. You just were going to move on now. And that's the
kind of tense piece that emerged from it. But during that time, 75, all the way into the early 90s,
you had a remarkable thing.
You had China, Thailand, the United States,
all supporting the Khmer Rouge that everyone knew
had committed genocide in the name of anti-communism. And
you had a really kind of interesting communist, the communist war. You had the Russian, you
know, uh, Marxist Leninists against the Maoists and, and so the key proxy for Vietnam were the East Germans. And so, yeah, so it was interesting
because at the time many people thought communism
was a monolithic force, it wasn't.
And so that division was really revealed in Cambodia.
Another conflict in Southeast Asia
that again is kind of overlooked is the melee emergency where
the Brits fought the Chinese back gorillas in Malaysia. Oh yeah. And it's and so but the
British won there and so there's yeah I'm sure you've read the book Learning to Eat Soup with
the Knife where the Brits won the Americans lost in Vietnam and two similar wars essentially but
the Brits won. Was there any indication that the Chinese, the surgeons went from like, Chinpeng and his little goons went from Malaysia into Cambodia to assist in the Chinese
operations since they spent so much time already fighting against the Western forks?
No, not that I know of. It was more, yeah, I mean, initially the Vietnamese supported the Khmer Rouge, you know, and so it was,
you know, the King Sihanouk of Cambodia was a fairly decadent, corrupt guy. And he had
walked this tightrope where he sort of tried to appease and please and play everyone off
of one another. And he fell off the tightrope. So much blame lies on,
on Cienok in that, you know, he allowed the Vietnamese to operate the Ho Chi Minh trail.
He allowed arm shipments to come into Cienok. Now, Cienokville, now the home of a giant
Chinese military base. And so the Chinese actually have really absorbed Cambodia
now in our lifetimes. And I watched it happen. And so, basically, I wouldn't say they left
for a time, but took a strategic pause as it were. But yeah but China is very firmly in control of much of that region,
you know, from, you know, even arguably Burma.
Under the Belt and Road Initiative of enslaving the ports and the airfields and building local
infrastructure in return for a debt they cannot repay.
So they, of course, the Chinese shot.
The Belt and Virus Initiative. Yeah.
Yeah. And also, I mean, I remember just seeing these gigantic skyscrapers and luxury condominiums and giant malls with Ferrari dealerships in Bangkok. And I'm saying like, who's what? Like,
who's buying all this crap and it made no sense
and so, you know, so now we're it's kind of like
which society is gonna collapse under its own weight first and
ours or China and the thing about China is with the dictatorship you have a lot more liberty
in in crushing dissent, in hiding unpleasant
economic statistics as they recently did. This is a regime I absolutely don't trust and don't believe any official figures that come out and I'm not a fan of theirs and they're not a fan of mine.
When did you leave Cambodia in the early 2000s?
Because the question I have is,
was it like a really rapid,
America starts pivoting to the Middle East
or like after 9-11,
so the Chinese start to kind of sink their fingers in.
Absolutely, yeah.
Well, it's interesting because yeah, 9-eleven occurs and
And then yeah, the whole focus is on the Middle East
But what also happens is Jamaa Islam and the radical cells
start to migrate to Southeast Asia and so
You know, I'm in there, you know
2003 four or five and you and these giant mosques are popping up, being built with Saudi money and the Bali bomber is hiding out there. And so,
you begin to see foreign forces coming in and trying to radicalize the Cham Muslims,
the Cambodian Muslims, who I had great relations with and just really trusted with my life
and went through a lot with different translators and drivers and stuff like that.
And I honestly preferred the Chan Muslims on some level because they didn't drink,
they didn't gamble, they were very straight. And my Buddhist friends were fun, but I would pay them
and then they would disappear and they would say, oh Bong, I'm
so sorry. My brother-in-law and I went and played cards and I was winning and the Buddha
was winning it. And so when it became all Islam, Muslim is bad and kind of trying to vilify the whole thing.
It was very hard for me.
But I did see, you know, these other forces, particularly from Saudi Arabia coming in,
trying to stir the pot, trying to radicalize what had before been, you know, victims of
genocide under the Khmer Rouge.
What about the Filipino Muslims out of like
Mindanao in that entire region? Were they ever in Cambodia?
No, and pretty heavy guys. I don't know that neck of the woods as well, but I know that,
but that's always been a hotbed, really since 1898 and the US war in the Philippines, some like in my opinion, absolute dipshit,
Max Boot, who I don't know how still even gets his articles printed, but is I think
the grand poobah, the council on foreign relations. He's cited that as the model for the war on terror, that we should be just
like the U.S. in the war on the Philippines. And that at the time to me was just astonishing.
Oh, yes. Shock and awe just in your face, never relent.
You know what? There is no penalty in being consistently wrong in American letters and commentary. I mean,
we see the same, you know, the same people bubbling up with the same tired non-oppositional
ideologies and strategies. And if you don't go along with it, you're somehow a subversive
or a sympathite of whoever, you know, and I was, you know, I was writing
critically of US foreign policy while working as a defense contractor, working on combat rescue
stuff. So it was it's been a strange road. I'm sure you're not a fan of Savage Wars of Peace,
then. No, no. Yeah, it's almost the gold standard for like a young analyst
in the military. Yeah, and you know, and he was, the guy's just been wrong about everything, and
he again, you know, he's still there banging on. And what was interesting to me was the convergence
of the neoconservatives and the neoliberals liberals after 9 11. I mean, uh,
not after 9 11 when Trump got elected so that many of the neo conservatives got to redeem
themselves by being never Trumpers anti Trumpers and they were absolved of their sins. And,
and in my opinion, they will never be absolved of their sins. And they can go to
Walter Reed and they can ask for absolution from the one-legged veterans, the veterans
with traumatic brain injuries, the veterans that they sent out on the crusades. So it's
very easy for civilians like Booth, who have never been in a fistfight, much less a firefight,
to talk tough and suffer nothing.
And so that's my problem.
One of my favorite books that I read when I was an analyst in the Marine Corps was Counter
Insurgency by General Petraeus and General Amos, which was how to win a counterinsurgency
in 90 days, essentially.
And you're like,
well, here we are 16 years later and we lost.
So it's-
Yeah, it's like-
But now Petraeus is yapping on to look to the press,
the French newspaper saying,
we need American boots on the ground in Ukraine.
They can't win once the ground freezes, blah, blah, blah.
So Petraeus, like, you know, thanks for coming
out. Like, you know, you. Yeah, I mean, I, I have people that I like and respect who
are very close to him, but but not him.
It's like, when it was a General McChrystal got fired after talking shit about Obama to Rolling Stone magazine,
and every soldier in Afghanistan was very happy because he closed all the Burger Kings in like
Bagram. They're like, fuck that guy. These Marines and soldiers have too much time on their hands
while they had Burger King, close them. It's like, okay. No, it's all very confused, you know? And yeah, I don't,
you know, that whole thing of, I had a, you know, a Marine from, I think, the one nine, who was in
the first invasion of Iraq. And he's a good friend from martial arts.
And he said that, you know, 18 years old,
you know, in the invasion.
And he said, yeah, you know, as we're driving out
after we supposedly win, all I see are these like pop-up,
these semi-tractor trailers with like pop-up,
Burger King and 24-hour fitness
and all this stuff coming in and he's like what oh my cats coming to join me
you got something important to say beat it and so uh so anyway um you know and
then he and then he said yeah and then my next tour we were fighting the guys
that I was allies
with on my first tour.
And I was 20 and pretty dumb and a kid from Georgia, but even that didn't seem to make
sense to me.
And so, yeah, the whole, the idea that you're going to send soldiers to fight a war, but
you're going to transport your culture to a war zone.
And you're going to have combat soldiers talking to their wives on that. To me,
doesn't make much sense. You know, like war is a serious business and you want to,
you want your warriors to be focused on the war and not not half there and half not there.
Another good book is, you know, War is a Racket by Smedley Butler,
two Medal of Honor's veteran.
But as soon as he gets out of the Marine Corps, writes this huge book about how much
it was like everything we did was wrong.
You're like, well, it's OK to say that after you've already done everything.
You've made your millions.
It's now you're in this cushion where you start talking shit.
But yeah, but my you know, my favorite Marine is Senator Jim Webb.
And Jim is a great guy.
And sadly, he isn't in a senior leadership position
in the US military or the US government.
And we have some great people in the US military, but
what I see in my experience is that the best guys get frozen at, you know, Lieutenant Colonel
and rarely make Colonel because they actually say what they think or speak unpleasant truths. And I recently read an article about midiots, where it was like
mid-level idiots that know how to go along and get along and navigate the political winds and
things like that. And I think that's really where we have an overabundance of them, both in government and the military,
and we're suffering as a result.
And one of those where I remember last year
when the US was leaving Afghanistan
and the West was pulling out and just rapid
and it was in your face and everyone was watching
the people fall off the planes
and the telegram channels with ANA fighters
and Afghan Special Forces fighters who worked
with the US for 20 years, they went, 9-11-2 is going to hurt because you really messed
this one up.
Oh, yeah.
You guys leadership was so incompetent.
Yeah.
I mean, I completely concur.
And people said, oh my God, it's like the evacuation of Saigon.
And I said, no, no. And actually I sent a
piece I wrote on my Substack Sour Milk to Jim Webb. And Jim, and I said, this isn't
Saigon. This is Phnom Penh. This is when the Khmer Rouge marched in. And we, you know, we abandoned our allies who we said we would never abandon.
And, and they were, you know, they were basically dragged out of the French embassy and taken to
the country club across the street and decapitated on the tennis courts. And, and so I, I really believe that Phnom Penh and Cambodia was the analogy, not Saigon. It was
much worse. And then I had friends from the professional military who had navigated their
way through the ranks and stuff, and they kind of poo-pooed me. Oh, well, you know, geez, you know, we were never there,
we did what we needed to do in Afghanistan.
And I was like, man,
I believe that impressions are often more important
than empirical facts in international politics.
And my professor, Robert Jervis, wrote a great book about this and
basically argued that, you know, people take facts and then they shape them to fit, you know,
their preexisting beliefs. And I really thought that the visuals out of Afghanistan
were horrific for American power and prestige.
And it was all forgotten in not really,
not to our former allies, but in Washington
and the mainstream news and everything else.
And then we're off to our next, you know, unopposable war in Ukraine.
And I kind of said very early on, like, look, George Kennan said Ukraine as a part of NATO,
like this is a red line. This is not, you know, a Victoria Nuland. I absolutely distrust
and our whole neocon family. So let's take a couple of
deep breaths. Let's take a look at 2014. Let's take a look at, you know, the leaked audio of her
rigging that election and everything else. And man, I took rounds for that. And, you know, like,
I'm the great subversive or something, and I'm not
patriotic or whatever. It was somewhat astounding. But I did continue to write, I think I wrote
about five more pieces on Ukraine. And a lot of people loved them and would contact me
off the record, behind the scenes, thanks for saying that, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah. But it was not a popular position.
And I was surprised by how much flack I took
for questioning the idea that we would push Russia
into China's lap, that we would risk World War III,
that we didn't have a clear
and obtainable political objective, which
is Clause Fitts 101. And we still don't really have a clear and obtainable political objective.
It went from, you know, freeing the Ukrainian territories, and now it's a regime change war. And now, and that's the part that's,
that, you know, and that's serious.
I mean, that's, you know, now the Saudis,
we basically lost.
Now we have a whole-
Oh yeah, they're running off, yep.
Yeah, we have a whole new geopolitical calculus
that we ignore at our own peril. And I don't know who the
grownups are anymore. I don't see, I see a bunch of public relations, spinsters, and
I watched the great Miss Jean-Pierre, I forget her first name in the press conferences. And, you know, she reminds
me of like one of my undergraduates who didn't do her reading. And it's, it's not, it's not
comforting. You know, I feel like we don't, we don't really have leadership at the moment.
One second here.
I absolutely agree with what you're talking about. Just the leadership general direction of what does it mean to win is completely...
You could absolutely obliterate an entire regiment or something with artillery, but I don't see any McDonald's in Hanoi or Kabul or anything. So we really didn't win. It's exactly. So that's like, when it comes to the
Russians, it's their war is more ideological, it's cultural. It's, they see it as more a reintegration
of the former themselves. It's bringing the family back. But in the West, we can look at that as,
oh, they're infringing on their national identity of being an independent state. We're just like, all right, well,
if they don't wanna be a Russian, let them figure it out.
Like it's-
But this is a kind of silly cultural imperialism
that's, you know, it was why we lost Afghanistan.
Oh, okay, let's not just focus on getting, you know,
Dashdum and the remnants of Masood's gang and running the al-Qaeda
guys out. Like easy day. Like the Saudis, you know, they paid their way in there. There
would have been an easy deal to be made with the various entities in Afghanistan to rid them of that presence once and for all. But instead
it turned into a nation building exercise. And we have to convert this culture that's
been this way since time immemorial into something that looks like America. And it's one or the
other. Do you want to win or do you want to get involved in this
kind of, you know, nation building real social work exercises? And we, that's where we tried
and we failed grossly. And even worse, those who really stuck their necks out for us are now in grave jeopardy and if they haven't left already.
So, you know, it's worse, you know, it's worse than just kind of like a, you know, a mistake or
tactical error. It's really setting your allies up for something truly catastrophic.
Mm-hmm.
When it comes to...
As the ANA guys like, yeah, oh yeah, we're going to be here for you guys and all that.
And then it's like, oh geez, thanks for coming out.
As the ISI guys are going door to door checking cell phones and you know, they're shit out
of luck.
They can't even, you know, they can't even get into the United States.
They'd been better off flying to Tijuana
and coming across the southern border with everybody else
than trying to go to the US government
and expect anything.
I mean, that was truly shameful.
When it comes to the idea of nation building,
it's in tactical terms,
if you can't kill them, we can't convert them,
then it's like, what are we doing there, number one. So it's like, unless you're making them an American
or the 51st state, and everyone says Americans are an imperial estate, which number one, yes,
empire of bases, of course, but the number two is, but the nation building, where if the analysts
come out and say it's going to take a thousand years for Afghanistan to get to the Bronze Age,
and they go, I guess we're staying a thousand years. And then it's just a flip switch where it's like if the Brits tried, the Russians tried,
the Russians were brutal and it's peaceful of all three. And then it's almost like,
I'm sure you remember earlier this year, after the US withdrew from Afghanistan last year,
the Russians started putting their troop build up in Central Asia to fill that power vacuum
because they understood that. Chinese came right in.
Absolutely. I believe they both understood that there is an insane power right here that the US just gave them all their cool toys.
And so there was this weird coalition of the willing between Pakistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and I think Kazakhstan or something where they said we need to contain Afghanistan. It's, yeah, there was definitely a lot of,
and like you said earlier, no one really addressed it
after we watched these cool news reels
and everyone's like, all right, what else is going on?
So. Yeah.
No, no, it was, yeah, it was,
on some level it was probably too painful
for people to try to quantify and we just sort of turned a blind
eye to it. And we're like, well, that's all over. And we did what we did and we never
plan, you know, and we just kind of revised our political objectives. But for me, who,
you know, had a lot of friends who were there and fought there and some died
there. And I had friends who fought the Russians as well. And, and as you correctly point out,
the level of brutality that the Russians threw at the Mujahideen in their war, if they couldn't break them with that, what were we expecting?
Of course, and you could look at Ukraine today, we see videos of Bukha and all these things
with the mass rape of women, and then you can go to World War II, look at the mass rape
of women all the way up into the Berlin Wall and go, I'm pretty sure if you go to multiple
villages in Afghanistan, you're just going to see ginger Afghans. It's, Oh yeah.
Most of their dads are Russians. And so if they couldn't break them psychologically that
way, that is America showing up saying I'm here to help. Wasn't going to help. If the
doctrinal end States did not fluctuate every administration that every six months in general
would show up. It was, yeah, it's definitely one of those topics where everyone could look back and go. Oh if I was there
I would have done this but it's
It's the forever war of what are we doing?
No, no exactly and you know, and that's a very important point and that's the incoherence of American foreign policy because
We
Every four to eight years we do a 180 or, you know, and so there's no, there's no
real coherence. We don't have a kind of professional diplomatic corps. We get, you know,
the used car salesman who raised a bunch of money for a candidate, suddenly he's the ambassador.
And suddenly, you know, yeah,
the stories I can tell you about some
of those political appointees,
it's just, it's embarrassing for all of us as Americans.
And, and I'm not that big a fan
of the State Department either.
So I don't know, maybe that used car salesman
is an improvement upon some of them.
We need this non Washington outsider to figure something out. Yeah, no, I call it duty and hearts of iron. Come on.
Yeah. No, it's funny, because I just I consistently see great people, you know, defense attaches here and there, this and that.
You know defense attache is here and there this and that and they're just frozen because they're
proactive they're forward-thinking they're
Opinionated in a good way and there's just no room for them and that's that's the idiots the mid-level idiots these are the people running the show and these are the you know, these are the
kickball captain and the, you know,
class president and, you know, and they, they go along and they get along and they, they're
consensus builders and they don't want to rubble feathers, but, but they'll stick a
shiv in your back and the, you know, in the back room when you're not there.
So and they, and they speak in that kind of lilting way where every affirmative statement ends like it's a question.
And so it's a deception.
It's looking at, say, the British after Suez, they got absolutely crushed by the Egyptians, by us and the Russians said,
hey, play nice, you're not allowed to do this anymore.
And then us after Vietnam, there was that syndrome of, oh yeah, nobody respects us internationally. The Brits got it back after the Falklands in 82
and us after, one can argue Grenada, but it was really Gulf War I, where we annihilated the fourth
largest army in the world in a hundred hours. And so looking at how the Russians have strategically
biffed their invasion of Ukraine and the Chinese having like this internal,
almost turmoil or stagnation.
It's almost like America may have a lightning war
in West Africa or something here soon
to kind of flex their muscles of,
yes, we're still a legitimate power.
Oh, so are the Brits and everyone else in NATO.
So.
Yeah, but I, you know, again.
But then again, who would it be?
It's, we need And also, you know,
our, you know, the recruiting goals, the military is at an odd crossroads now and, and depleted.
I mean, as a former contractor, um, you know, just the resource, so many of the resources going to Ukraine and, um, and having real difficulty
meeting recruiting goals and stuff like that, that it's no, it's interesting to see both
the more American right and left meeting in the middle of going, why are we still supporting
Ukraine? It's because they see the $80 billion going to Ukraine, but then they say, you couldn't
give us $30 billion to save small businesses over the last two years.
And so a lot of the average American is getting very upset about what's going on in the government
and their handling of Ukraine.
How was the squad's letter that went out just, and it wasn't even that extreme, basically
the progressive Democrats saying like, well, you know, and McCarthy
basically said the same thing. This shouldn't be an open ticket. This isn't an open checkbook.
And they immediately walked it back. You know, the most left-wing Democrats and they fold it like a house of cards. And that was so telling to me. And I thought, Oh my,
your progressive values really, really showing and shining through. So, you know, again,
it's a non oppositional ideology. And that's a very troubling thing where there is no debate tolerated, whether it's, you know, and I don't,
I'm not saying I disagree, agree to have an absolute ironclad belief about it, but as
a democracy, we should be able to openly debate things like whether the Ukraine war and not having a political goal and having our goal morph into regime
change for Russia. And what are the implications of that with the world's largest nuclear arsenal
kind of going up into the wind and, you know, there's, yeah, serious implications or, you know, pushing Russia into China's arms or having, you know, Saudi Arabia make
us look like cheap fucking dime store tricks, you know, and us just saying like, oh, well,
please be nice to us before the election.
I mean, that was the most pathetic, you know, that letter that the Saudi prince or the Saudis released, I don't know, three weeks ago or
something, basically saying that we're going our own way.
Oh, and by the way, Biden came to us and begged to not slow down oil production.
That was humiliating.
If anybody has a hard time figuring that out,
I mean, that theoretically is our client state
with military that we pay for,
and frankly is not a very good military.
It is with our help and our resources,
but against their Middle Eastern peers,
they, I don't think they do so well.
I've heard horrifying stories from friends in the US military who have gone over to train
the so-called Saudi special forces.
The Yemenites have given them all that they can bargain for. So they've definitely, you know, kind of gone over the tips
of their skis and should be checked, power checked. And I don't think we should be taking any shit
from the Saudis. The Yemeni situation is another one where it's the largest humanitarian crisis on the planet.
The people have cholera, they have dysentery, the people are, it's I think, what, an eighth or
something like a fourth of the country is owned by al-Qaeda. They're still a thing. Everyone kind of
forgot about that. Oh, yeah. The Houthis are funded by Iran, who are funded by Hezbollah, who are kind
of indirectly supported by the Russians. And that entire region is, like you said earlier, where
Saudi Arabia is very wealthy and they could fund anything they would like
but you also have like Qatar or the UAE on both sides of the war in Libya who
also produced oil that went to Europe and so now the Russians secured the oil
fields and it's just a Niger below them with all the the French uranium
deposits were secured by the Russian mercenaries and when the French said that's why we're staying here and the West Africa said get out and then
the West is in a period of cultural stagnation of what to do next essentially.
But I mean, Qatar, UAE and the Saudis, we have serious leverage there and we could exercise it.
And I don't really know,
I don't know who's asleep at the wheel
or I don't know what.
I interviewed Andy Milburn from the Mozart group
not long ago on Sour Milk.
And I said, well, okay, you make a reasonable case,
but you know, the political leaders can't even really define a political objective. And he said,
because there is not the, you know, he said, you know, say what you will about Nixon and
Kissinger and this and that, but at least they understood
like veldpolitik, you know, these people understand public relations, Twitter, Instagram, and
like a 90 second news cycle. And so I get the feeling that they're making it up as they go along.
I don't get any Sullivan Blinken,
Blinken, the worst named diplomat in American history.
These are not people that inspire confidence in me.
And again, more people who have never been in a fist fight,
much less a firefight.
And they're very promiscuous with the blood of those who enlist and serve.
And I have a problem with that.
When it comes to America's low retention rates and issue and also recruitment's an issue
in the entire military where I know the Marine Corps is downsizing and they kind of meet
their goals because you know America doesn't want to or need a Marine Corps, they want
one, but it's the idea of, and I mentioned it earlier, like a potential war coming up,
which is you know if someone attacks us you got to be nationalist to protect your country,
go fight. But the idea of being nationalistic is supposedly bad these days. And so why would the
youth in America go, well why would I do that? Because I'm going to be labeled a Nazi or a terrorist by Twitter. So it's one of those weird cultural crossroads.
But I think it's a good point. And I think we're now reaping the bitter harvest for that.
So you send two generations of young Americans to go fight this you know, this open ended, like you said,
forever wars. And it isn't just the Bush administration, which I put a lot of blame on their shoulders,
but you know, Obama comes in and he has the opportunity for a full reset and he dives
right into Syria and Libya and is at every bit as incompetent.
Susan Rice, Samantha Powers, you know, utter buffoons.
And so same page.
And yet, you know, the young Americans who do three, four, five combat tours. You figure Vietnam War, one tour with two
R&R breaks. The Marines were more. I think they were a year and a half with an R&R break. But
to send even reservists tour after tour, single mothers, like people who really had no business on battlefields
that they could have found an intelligent way and place to use them in some other way. It was,
in my opinion, very cold and cruel. And it would make anybody think twice about thinking,
oh, I'm going to get to go to college for free. And, you know, yeah, you sign up. That's what you, you know, you sign up for. But,
but again, tour after tour in, in wars without political objectives. I mean, I'm beating
up on the Biden Obama folks, but you look at, you know, what were the political objectives of Bush
and Cheney was freedom and democracy. I mean, in places that had never existed, I mean,
it was just kind of childish. And, you know, again, and both sides are equally childish in that, you know, you need to kind
of come to obtain clear, definable and obtainable political objectives.
And without those, military force is wasted.
And like he said, too, you know, you can pound cities with howitzers and everything else,
but if you can't occupy them, if you can't control them, what does it matter?
Well, my story from my time in the military is I did a new boat tour to Northern Africa,
so Libya region, and we were doing this key leader engagement between the right and the
left or the east and the west that come in the middle. But our representative to bring them
together was a woman in a country that didn't believe women had rights. And also the only
person who had any stake in anything coming out of Libya was the Italians. So I said,
number one, she's absolutely not going to work here. Number two, why aren't the Italians
doing this? Like, why don't we facilitate this entire meeting at KLE on an Italian ship?
And they went, you're not allowed to meet her.
I was like, good.
It's like, all right.
But that's, again, the investment
in the social justice ideology is greater
than the investment in the political objective and outcome.
And if that's the case, why are we even there? You know,
because, you know, on some level, I mean, I saw this in Cambodia that, you know, free and fair
elections, first it was end of the civil war, disarmament. And then that clearly was not, it wasn't that it wasn't possible, it was that the
UN was unwilling to do it. Then it became free and fair elections, women's rights, da-da-da-da,
all these very Western things. And the Cambodians were just looking at them like, okay, whatever,
you know? And in the end, they really got none of it. And so Cambodia is now, you know, in, I forget how many years of Hun Sen one party state, and they hold kind of elections, but, you know, opposition candidates have a bad, bad history of, you know.
Falling out of a window.
Yeah, not quite that bad. They're a little better at it than that, but, you know, they're there to make everyone play nice, but the Serbians are absolutely a puppet of the Russians.
And Kosovo is this weird little area where I guess we announced they're an active state, but also you have Bosnia who wants it.
And so it's the Croatians and like that whole area, just everyone put a bandaid on and we're like, let's go try to free Tibet before we come back to this one.
Oh yeah.
No.
And you know, there's, at a certain point in international politics, you have to make,
you know, triage decisions, which we clearly make, right?
We were really serious about, and I've said this for many years about human rights and
all that, blah, blah, blah. It would have started in the Congo, in Rwanda, where there's been this incredibly, just terrific civil wars
that shift and swirl and more brutality than pretty much anywhere on earth. And, you know, people just turn a blind eye to it.
And Africa was the test for us, and we failed that test.
And, yeah.
One of the other wars that I think is very proxy by association
is the Bush War in Angola between the South Africans and
the Cubans where it's oh yeah nobody liked the apartheid because they were like they were part
of us and they got really racist and then they broke off and then but also Cuba started with
the Russians but they're also fighting oh yeah Angola so we're like let's just you guys kill
each other I don't care who wins no no even better is you had Chevron paying the Cubans to protect
their refineries against us back Jonas Zivimbi. And, and so you had, you had Reagan freedom fighters
and, and Zivimbi was one of them, and as were the Khmer Rouge.
The Khmer Rouge reinvented themselves
as anti-communist Reagan freedom fighters.
And I have, yeah, I know you can't make it up.
And I have videotape of Ing Seri, Khmer Rouge guy
who has tried for war crimes saying,
oh yes, we are freedom fighters against communism now,
1980, a year out.
Like that's how cynical these guys were.
But yeah, that's what you had exactly in Angola.
And you had, you know, you basically had Chevron having to hire Cuban troops
to protect their refineries from US-backed insurgents.
And so...
But then those insurgents were backed by the Soviets,
where the other guys were backed by the Chinese.
So those two didn't like each other.
And then it's...
Yeah.
That whole...
Just southern Africa, like the Congo South,
is probably the most interesting post-World War II experiments.
Because like you said, there was the Congo,
but the Belgians left, fell into civil war.
And so international mercenaries reading Soldier of Fortune went, I'm going to go there.
I'm going to change my name for a few minutes.
Oh, yeah.
I'm going to have some fun.
I'm going to come back.
You had Rhodesia and Ian Smith.
And they were, yeah.
And now you have total mess.
And nobody wants to talk about it, but South Africa is hardly
a success story.
It was one of those, have a few beers and do a what if America went to South Africa
to help keep the apartheid coming instead of getting involved in Vietnam.
It definitely would be an insurgency because they were down there,
but it's like what would society look like today? What would the world look like?
I can't play counterfactual. I tell my students that. Not allowed. Yeah, red flag.
But going into your books, do you have anything up on like anything planned coming next?
Yeah, I want to write a book on the Mayaguez incident, the last battle of the Vietnam War
where three Marines were left behind and captured and killed by the Khmer. Captured after probably at least a week and then killed by the Khmer Rouge. Remarkable bravery in
that 24-hour battle from the Marines, the Air Force PJs, the Navy, an incredible political
cowardice from the Ford administration, Henry Kissinger. That's the book I'd really like to write, but you know, it's very
hard to get advances to write that kind of book. And it isn't the subject matter or anything. It's
just, there's, oh, the Vietnam War, nobody's interested in. And Jaco, you know, kind of beat
me up and it's like, well, I just published it. And-
Yeah, I did listen to the episode with Jaco. It was three and a half hours. It was dense.
Yeah, no, he did a great job. And he really did his homework. And that's the story that needs to
be told, you know, really for the sake of American soldiers, you know, Marines. And I will eventually tell it. I'm finishing a second Hicks and Gracie book right now,
the Jiu-Jitsu Champion.
And I really want to write a book on the famous wrestler,
Judo Gene LaBelle.
And so I'm chipping away at that.
Yeah.
Who was, yeah, who Brad Pitt portrayed in
Once upon a time in Hollywood beating up Bruce Lee, which wasn't really the true story
Allegedly Gina or Tina movie. Yeah, and and allegedly gene
choked Steven Seagal unconscious on the set of his own movie when gene was like almost 60 and
I think I would, I would safely say Gene LaBelle is the, was the great, he died recently, was the greatest
American fighter of the 20th century and, and the true pioneer of mixed martial arts in America and was one of Ron Rousey's key coaches, Boss
Rutan, and just a remarkable, remarkable character who crossed so many lines and lived a bunch of
different lives. That's fascinating. I do want to ask you a question. Did you see the footage of
Steven Seagal training Russian soldiers in the Moitai or whatever in Belarus?
He was walking around in a leather jacket and snowboarding glasses like this is what you got to do.
And the Russians were eating it up.
I bet. Well, you know, it's yeah, no, he's just an Oliver.
Under Siege 2 Kiev. of like it's no he's just he is who he is and I you know I don't I don't know
him I've never met him he's really big but but beyond that I just don't know
much about him but I know that you know that he's no Jean LaBelle it Yeah, the footage came out of,
it was within the last 48 hours
of the Russians about to invade.
And there's just a picture of Steven Seagal
just walking around.
Everyone went, what?
But he's a self-proclaimed best friend of Putin.
But Putin says, I mean, I've seen his movies,
but it's what we call his best friends.
Yeah, and he was an agency agency operative and this and that,
and then, you know, it's endless. And yeah, you know, as you know, Gene LaBelle,
we, I got to train with Gene once and, and we said, you know, what's the story about Gene
with choking Steven Seagal out? and he said like, big fellow with a
ponytail makes more in a day than you and I'll make in our lives. And then he kind of looked and
smirked at us and he's like, I don't think I'll be working for him again. And yeah, and you know,
but I mean, Gene LaBelle was truly scary. I mean, he was, he was the referee in the Anoki Muhammad Ali fight. He yeah, he's like,
he's everywhere guys. Yeah. Well, and he was also Bruce Lee's martial arts teacher.
Because when Bruce Lee was on the green hornet, he was beating up on the stuntman.
So Gene was a stuntman and the stunt coordinator called him and said,
Hey, I got this guy from Hong Kong and he's like beating up my guys. Can you kind of sort
them out? And so Gene was a 1954 AAU judo champion, 1955 AAU judo champion, both his
weight category and unlimited. So 163, he beat everybody from every category.
Then after he won everything, he went to Japan and won 17 of 18 matches against the best
judo guys in Japan. The one match he lost was by a shady decision. Then he became a
crazy pro wrestler and his mother was the head promoter at the Olympic auditorium in LA.
So he grew up with Freddie Blassie, gorgeous George.
He was friends with Muhammad Ali.
And so he understood the fight game like nobody.
And yeah, and so Gene became this crazy pro wrestler
and kind of played that character.
But he had wrestled with Carl Gotch,
Lou Thes, Ed the Strangler Lewis.
And he had boxed with Sugar Ray Robinson.
I mean, he was also almost a pro level boxer.
So this guy truly was a mixed martial artist
and he fights Milo Savage, the number five at one time
middleweight contender in America.
He fights him in a no rules fight in 1963 in Utah
and chokes him unconscious.
And that's this guy.
Yeah. Yeah. That's phenomenal. Yeah. Do you still... That's this guy. Yeah.
That's phenomenal.
Yeah.
Do you still surf these days?
Lots, yeah.
Not to take away from the entire incredible story, but...
Yeah.
...recreationally, since you do all these crazy things with this amazing resume, and
it seems like, like, I read your work and what is this, your interview from the Surfer's
Journal.
Yeah.
So that's still an active component of your life.
I write for the Surfers Journal and I surf all the time. I surf usually two to four or five days
a week depending on the waves. But I body surf a lot. I'm in the ocean a lot. I like the ocean.
What beach do you go to? Surf City or something?
No, Wrightsville. Okay.
Yeah.
Cause I used to live on Lejeune and it was a, it's like kind of a hike to go surfing down
there, but...
Yeah, no, no, I'm in, just in Wrightsville beach and, um, yeah.
And the water's very warm here most of the year.
It's yeah, it's very pleasant.
Not, the waves aren't that big, but.
Yeah, I like that whole area. The waves aren't that big, but...
Yeah, I like that whole area. I think Wilmington was called the happiest city in America five years in a row or something.
There's no stress down there.
Until you Marines come in on Saturday nights downtown and just get up to no good.
Oh, yes. Definitely had many a good night down in a...
I told...
...that me, like, Pravda and all those cool bars.
I told Jim Webb's son, I said, Oh, yeah, oh, you're gonna be come on down to
Wilmott and he goes, I don't know, I think they're still worn out for me there.
I used to love going there every single Saturday in November, just see the Marines
in their blues and I would just like wear a beanie and say like, Oh, thank you for
your service, man. I would never be able to do this. They're like, I do you want to drink man? I do anything
for a civilian. I was like, thanks. But oh yeah, those were fun. But Peter has been an
absolute honor. This has been a fantastic conversation. Well, thank you for having me.
And yeah, call any time and come on. Come on down and visit. I'll take you for a surf and
on come on down and visit I'll take you for a surf and you can buy me a beer when I'm in in DC.
It sounds good.
Alright I really appreciate it.
Oh no sweat.
Thank you so much.
Okay.
Alright. So Thanks for watching!