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Home » Transcript: Col Doug Macgregor: Trump Warns Iran – Daniel Davis / Deep Dive

Transcript: Col Doug Macgregor: Trump Warns Iran – Daniel Davis / Deep Dive

Read the full transcript of retired colonel and political analyst Col Doug Macgregor’s interview on Daniel Davis / Deep Dive Podcast on “Trump Warns Iran”, October 7, 2025.

The Anniversary of October 7th and Rising Concerns

DANIEL DAVIS: While much of Washington, D.C. and American people today are paying attention to the commemorations of the second anniversary of the October 7th terrorist attacks against Israel, and we’re trying to figure out whether there’s going to be peace or whether there’s not going to be peace, what’s kind of lost in all the hubbub is about what else may be going on in the Middle East and could there be the potential for a renewed war against Iran?

Now, President Trump has gone to length to give himself credit for having ended that war and the 12-Day War and bringing peace to the Middle East. He wants to bring eternal peace, et cetera. But when you look at the actual actions and what some of the people are doing and what the U.S. is saying, one is not so clear that that’s not in the offing for another round against Iran.

Try to help us make sense of what is going on. We have back with us the ever popular Colonel Douglas MacGregor, Defense and Foreign Policy analyst, former advisor to the Secretary of Defense, highly decorated combat veteran and huge friend of the show. Doug, welcome back.

COL DOUG MACGREGOR: As always, happy to be here. Thanks.

Skepticism About “Eternal Peace”

DANIEL DAVIS: Well, let’s just jump right into it. Even before we get to the Iranian stuff, I just kind of wonder what your thoughts are on all this alleged rush to peace in the Middle East, eternal peace, as Trump put it, especially to end the Israeli war. How do you see that?

COL DOUG MACGREGOR: Well, anytime someone uses the word “eternal” frightens me. We’ve had lots of treaties that were deemed the beginning of eternal prosperity, harmony and goodwill. I could go back and research them, but we’ve had a lot of them in Eastern Europe. If you go back to the 13th century forward, I think it’s all unfortunately unlikely.

I know that there are lots of people who say, “Well, you’ve got to be positive. You got to at least see that something good is happening.” Well, I’m looking and I haven’t seen it yet. And I don’t see any alternative to what the Israelis are doing if they are going to accomplish their objectives. And I don’t think their objectives have changed, regardless of what is said or stated.

They want the Greater Israel Project to move forward and they feel they have an opportunity now that they will not have in the future. And they’re probably right. In the meantime, the world, despite protests to the contrary, doesn’t seem to be too terribly exercised over the mass murder and expulsion of a couple of billion people from Gaza or for that matter, increasingly from the West Bank.

Iran: Unfairly Demonized?

DANIEL DAVIS: Well, hard to argue with any of that. And you talked about Israel’s objectives. I suspect that they go beyond just the Gaza Strip and they actually look north towards Iran. There was an interview on here recently with Professor Mohammad Marandi, who seems to think that things are moving in that direction. And first of all, he says this about the situation with Iran:

“For almost five decades, the collective West has been demonizing Iran. They cannot tolerate Iran. But this demonization that has worked so well for five decades, I mean, there’s no denying that this narrative has influenced views on Iran across the world. Why is it that only this evil country is opposing genocide? Why is it that no other country in this region is sanctioned? So people are waking up to that.”

Well, what do you make of that? Is Iran being unfairly demonized or have they earned it?

COL DOUG MACGREGOR: Look, no one’s perfect. And all of us, every country in the world, has committed acts of aggression from time to time that in retrospect, no doubt were regretted. But Iran is hardly this evil incarnate by any stretch of the imagination.

We have to look at Israel and understand that they are treating virtually the world for 1,000 kilometers in any direction as effectively a bombing range. They struck targets in Lebanon quite recently. They continue to attack in Syria. They’ll attack whomever they decide to attack, whenever they decide to attack.

Iran, however, poses a new kind of problem for them. Iran is actually capable of responding and increasingly capable of defeating their strikes with their own integrated air defenses. So I think if we look at the movement of U.S. forces, particularly the rebalancing of munitions and missiles and rockets and so forth, the movement of naval power into the region, it looks a lot like we’re headed into another confrontation with Iran.

And I don’t know what the trigger will be, how it will be unleashed, and it probably doesn’t make much difference. But if you are Prime Minister Netanyahu right now, you look at the region, you look at the United States and you say, “I’ve got to use what I’ve got now. I’ve got to take maximum advantage of the United States and its military power because given the change in opinion towards Israel and what they’re doing, I could actually lose support in the months ahead.”

So there is no incentive for him to suddenly back off, sign an arrangement that would effectively, in his mind, restore the status quo ante. Anything that leaves the Palestinians in charge of Gaza or the West Bank in perpetuity, at least insofar as the treaty is concerned, is absolutely anathema. They have to be removed. They must go. He’s made that very clear.

The Israelis believe that the only holdup he would admit to, I think, is the presence of hostages in the hands of Hamas.