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Home » Lawrence Wilkerson: Israel Bet Everything on War With Iran – and Lost (Transcript)

Lawrence Wilkerson: Israel Bet Everything on War With Iran – and Lost (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson’s interview on Greater Eurasia Podcast, June 9, 2026.

Editor’s Note: In this interview, Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson joins host Glenn Diesen to analyze the escalating tensions between Israel, Iran, and the United States, arguing that current strategies are failing to address the core issue of Palestinian statehood. He contends that U.S. policy is becoming dangerously intertwined with Israel’s military objectives, potentially alienating global partners and risking broader conflict.

Israel, Iran, and the Escalating Middle East Crisis

GLENN DIESEN: Welcome back. We are joined again by Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, the former Chief of Staff to the US Secretary of State. Thank you for coming back on. I wanted to ask you today about what’s happening now with Israel, Iran, and the United States.

We’ve seen something quite remarkable, I think, in that Iran has essentially extended its deterrence to Lebanon. It attacked Israel because it had attacked Lebanon. I mean, this is, I guess, on some level, quite extraordinary. That is, Israel didn’t have to attack Iran directly, and Israel appears to refuse to accept this extended deterrence. But again, it doesn’t seem to get a vote, so it can only go to war. How are you assessing the situation now?

Netanyahu Caught Between a Rock and a Hard Place

LAWRENCE WILKERSON: Getting worse with every minute. Just to note, Ehud Barak, whom you know, former Prime Minister of Israel, said, “Neither military pressure nor flattening southern Lebanon can topple Hezbollah.” You’re right, former Prime Minister.

But he’s caught — Bibi’s caught — between a rock and a hard place. The hard place, if you will, being Trump, and the rock being those people who are campaigning against him on the very issue that he’s not tough enough on Israel’s national security. And oh, by the way, bows to President Trump. So he can’t win for losing, and I think he’s going to lose. I think he’s looking at his first dramatic loss in his long-lived political career.

So it’s become, as my students used to say, as much if not more a domestic issue for Israel and a personal political issue for Netanyahu, as it is an issue of either the US or Israel’s, or for that matter Iran’s, security.

The Real Issue: Palestine

And in all this — I was just on another podcast and this came up — all of this misses the real point in this entire struggle, in this particular aspect of it. The struggle is about a Palestinian state and about what Israel has done in the interim to the Palestinians. And I don’t just refer to what started on October 7th or October the 8th. But the whole history of the Nakba and the relationship between Israel and the Palestinians, increasingly one of occupied and occupier, which has, as you know, a very distinct set of rules and regulations that goes along with it, which Israel is absolutely ignoring and has ignored for the entire time this situation has existed.

So if we can’t get to that issue — we don’t seem to want to get to that issue. In fact, what’s happening right now is the Palestinians are dying at the rate of about 30 to 35 a day still, and they’re dying of all manner of reasons. They’re dying from bullets and bombs and brutality, but they’re also dying because Israel’s got a humanitarian situation that it is supporting that is everything from mafia-like and costing the Palestinians $250 for a dozen eggs, for example, and making lots of people, including many Egyptians, rich in the process.

And all this is just over there on the sidelines. We’re looking at Hezbollah, we’re looking at Dariya, we’re looking at Beirut, we’re looking at what Israel’s doing in Lebanon, which is unconscionable. Of course, it always is when Israel does it, especially to Lebanon or the Palestinians. And we’re being distracted from what is, I think, the real issue here, which is summed up in that Haaretz headline I used to like to quote: “All Iran has to do to win is not lose. All the United States and Israel have to do — and this includes Bibi Netanyahu’s future, I think, in jail or a hero — win spectacularly.” And we’re not going to do that. We’ve already lost, really. In effect, we’ve already lost.

Iran’s Three Nuclear Weapons

No matter how much Bradley Cooper disputes it, no matter how many new reverse-engineered drones he buys for attacking Iran with them, no matter how many bombs he calculates dropping, we’ve lost. There’s another piece out in the Jerusalem Post which belabors the Mackinder theory, if you will, but nonetheless makes some points.

It says Iran doesn’t have one nuclear weapon, it has three. The first nuclear weapon it has is the Strait of Hormuz, and we’ve demonstrated conclusively we don’t know how to handle that weapon. The second weapon it has is its relationship, Mackinder-like, with the heartland power — Russia and China. On top of that, talk about the heartland. And then the third nuclear weapon is the nuclear weapon it probably is making right now, or has already made and could test at any moment, or that Pakistan may have given it, depending on whose version of the rumor you believe.

Domestic Disaster and the Ukraine Blind Spot

So where are we in all of this? We’re at the point where President Trump makes a statement that he never said he was the president who wouldn’t start a war. Are you kidding me? I mean, your lies are many and replete with every issue you speak about. But this one, it’s just baffling.

And I don’t think we have — at the same time, I have to mention the domestic situation here in this country. We’re headed for disaster, I think, with regard to the midterms. And I have no idea what he’s going to do for that disaster.