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Alan Sabrosky on Ever-Expanding Mideast War

Alan Sabrosky on Ever-Expanding Mideast War

Published 1 year, 3 months ago
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Alan Sabrosky, former Director of Strategic Studies at the US Army War College, discusses the genocidal Zionists’ latest atrocities and the Axis of Resistance’s efforts to counter them.

Excerpt from the interview:

Alan Sabrosky: My feet are not up on the desk, which would be insulting Islam, so we can go ahead.

Kevin Barrett: Putting your feet on a desk? I don't remember anything in the Quran against that.

Or it's throwing shoes, throwing shoes, I'm sorry.

Yeah, there you go, throwing shoes. I really thought that the Congresspeople ought to have been taking off their shoes and throwing them at Netanyahu. But I guess we're electing the wrong kinds of people to Congress. So, Alan, you mentioned how easy it is to hack into computers. The Iranians are saying that they hacked into some Israeli computers, along with firing a hypersonic missile right into the radar station and taking out Israel's air defense radars. That's why they were able to hit 90% of the targets that they targeted in their strike the other day. What do you think?

That's very possible. I don't have the kind of skills to do that, because among other things, I've never been interested in it. But there are some incredibly sharp and sophisticated young IT people out there, and a few not so young. The Israelis have a ton of them, and so do the Iranians, and so does almost everyone. There's some just incredibly skillful young people coming up.

You know Jeremy Rothe-Kushel, he's not a boy by any chance, but he is just incredibly good with computers. The downside of having gone so into the cybernetic AI field as we have—they’re almost a staple of our international communications and national communications for that matter—is that they can be circumvented and hacked.

Here is just a little aside that involves computers and also Iran. One of the more interesting exercises that I ran into a fairly short time ago involved a command post exercise. Every country does that. They have a lot of people and a lot of communications and not many actual forces, but they could use it because they're expensive to deploy and run. So they can use them to basically test war plans, test equipment, test tactics, test command, communications and leadership and all the rest of this.

Millennium Challenge 2002

And about 20 odd years ago, there was an exercise which was against a unnamed Persian Gulf power, but was obviously Iran. And a retired Marine Lieutenant General was put in charge, for the purpose of the exercise, of the Iranian forces. And he had to deal with the usual American carrier battle groups and land-based air and paratroops and Marines landing on Iran.

The understanding in these sorts of exercises is that what are called OPFOR, the opposition forces, are supposed to fight well and lose gracefully. Well, this Marine Lieutenant General, whose name is Riper, had no intention of losing gracefully. So he went through this and the usual bolt from the blue attack took place, which knocked out most of the Iranian air defense systems, aircraft, all the rest. A division of Marines and a division of Paratroopers landed in Iran. And the exercise proceeded, but at that point, it did not go as planned, because Riper looked at that and said…He understood that the systems would be compromised. He understood his air defense systems would be taken down. He understood his air force would be taken out because that's th

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