Skip to content
Home » Prof. John Mearsheimer: Trump’s Flawed Gaza Plans (Transcript)

Prof. John Mearsheimer: Trump’s Flawed Gaza Plans (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of international relations scholar Prof. John Mearsheimer’s interview on Judging Freedom Podcast with host Judge Napolitano on “Trump’s Flawed Gaza Plans”, October 2, 2025.

Russia as a “Paper Tiger”

JUDGE NAPOLITANO: Hi everyone. Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Thursday, October 2, 2025. Professor John Mearsheimer will be here with us in just a moment on the Donald Trump, Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner, Benjamin Netanyahu, deeply flawed Gaza plan.

Professor Mearsheimer, thank you for joining us today. Thank you for accommodating my schedule. Before we get to your analysis of what I know you have called this flawed so-called Gaza peace proposal, what is your take on President Trump’s public reference to Russia as a “paper tiger”? Do you think this was a slip of the tongue, something he just thought of off the top of his head, or as part of some sophisticated effort to negotiate with President Putin?

PROF. JOHN MEARSHEIMER: No, I think it was a slip of the tongue and he’s walked it back. He understood shortly after making that comment that it did not make sense to argue that the Russians are a paper tiger. He wishes the Russians were a paper tiger. Then he’d have his peace agreement. But they’re anything but a paper tiger.

JUDGE NAPOLITANO: The day before he made the paper tiger comment, he rather ostentatiously authorized the American intelligence community, civilian and military—so CIA and DIA and whatever else there is—to aid the Ukrainian military in aiming American weapons to reach deep inside Russia. I would think normally a finding or an authorization like this wouldn’t be made public, but he made it public. Is the United States at war with Russia?

An “Almost War” with Russia

PROF. JOHN MEARSHEIMER: It’s what I call an “almost war.” I mean, we’re obviously not doing the actual fighting. We don’t have trigger pullers out there on the ground, but we’re about as close as you can get to participating in this war without formally being in it. The Russians basically think we’re at war with them.

But anyway, back to providing intelligence for missiles to hit inside of Russia—for that to really matter, we have to give the Ukrainians missiles and then we have to give them permission to use those missiles. And just to take the famous ATACMS, which we once gave to the Ukrainians, Trump stopped giving the Ukrainians ATACMS and he’s not giving them permission to use those ATACMS.

So today when we talk about giving intelligence to the Ukrainians, we think about it in the context of giving the Ukrainians Tomahawk missiles. Trump has made no decision to give them Tomahawk missiles. And even if he does give them Tomahawk missiles, it’s not clear that he’ll give them certainly blanket permission to use them. But even in selected instances, it’s probably going to be the case that he won’t let them use the Tomahawks.

So I think that there is escalatory potential here if he were to give the Ukrainians lots of Tomahawks and give them blanket use. But I just don’t think that’s going to happen.

The Risk of Nuclear Escalation

JUDGE NAPOLITANO: So if he gives the Tomahawks and one of our guests—who’s not a military person but is a very, very astute journalist—said, “Okay, you’re a Russian lieutenant looking at a radar screen. The colonel is a few rows behind you and you go, ‘Colonel, there’s some Tomahawks coming at Moscow. I don’t know if they have nuclear warheads on them. What do we do, Colonel?'” Is that realistic?

PROF. JOHN MEARSHEIMER: It is realistic. There’s no question about that. I mean, you have all sorts of weapons in the inventories of countries like the United States, China and Russia that have a dual-use capability. They can be used conventionally or they can be used with a nuclear warhead on them.

A good example of this, by the way, is when people talk about fighting a possible war between the United States and China and the United States starts attacking Chinese military equipment and weaponry. The problem that you run into is a lot of the missiles and planes that you think you’re destroying, that you think are conventional weapons, may have nuclear warheads on them. And the command and control systems that the Chinese have are used for both nuclear war fighting and conventional war fighting.

So if you start tearing those command and control systems apart, it influences the nuclear balance, not just the conventional balance. So you run into the risk of inadvertent nuclear escalation, which would be a disaster. And then if we go back to the Russian case, if you’re the Russians and you see a Tomahawk missile coming at you and you know they can have either a conventional warhead or a nuclear warhead, there will be at least a few people who think worst case and think it may be a nuclear warhead on that missile.

JUDGE NAPOLITANO: So if President Trump is not sending ATACMS anymore or the Tomahawks, without getting too technical, have we given the Ukrainians weapons that can reach inside of Russia—weapons which, either for practical or national security purposes, need to be armed and aimed by American personnel?

PROF. JOHN MEARSHEIMER: Well, there’s no question of that. I mean, you saw it with the ATACMS that we have given them. But the question is, how many weapons do you give them? And I think in an important way, the key issue is how effective those weapons are.

For example, if we were to give the Ukrainians, let’s say, 25 Tomahawk missiles and the Russians were able to just shoot them down routinely, it wouldn’t matter that much. But if you give them 250 Tomahawks and those are deadly effective weapons that they simply can’t shoot down, that’s a very different story. The potential for escalation in that second story is much greater than it is in the first story.

So I think even if Trump were to give the Ukrainians Tomahawks, my guess would be that he would really limit when they could use those Tomahawks, and he would limit how many they could use, because Trump, like Biden before him, understands that we are always flirting with the possibility of nuclear war when we up the ante vis-à-vis the Russians.

Secretary Hegseth’s Lecture: A Lack of Gravitas

JUDGE NAPOLITANO: In your undergraduate years at West Point and your time in the US Army and in your time in the United States Air Force, did you ever receive a lecture the likes of which Secretary Hegseth gave to 800 generals and admirals the other day at Quantico, Virginia?

ALSO READ:  Lawrence Wilkerson: New World - Iran Ceasefire Fails, NATO Is Dead & the U.S. Risks Civil War (Transcript)

PROF.