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Home » Prof. Mohammad Marandi: FROM TEHRAN – Why Iran Risks War (Transcript)

Prof. Mohammad Marandi: FROM TEHRAN – Why Iran Risks War (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Professor Mohammad Marandi’s interview on Judging Freedom Podcast, June 11, 2026.

Editor’s Note: In this episode of Judging Freedom, Judge Andrew Napolitano speaks with Professor Mohammad Marandi from Tehran to discuss the ongoing tensions and recent military exchanges between the U.S. and Iran. The conversation explores the current status of diplomatic negotiations, the influence of the U.S.-Israel relationship, and Iran’s perspective on the regional conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon.

INTRODUCTION

JUDGE ANDREW NAPOLITANO: Hi everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom. Today is Thursday, June 11th, 2026. My dear friend, Professor Mohammad Marandi, joins us from Tehran. Professor Marandi, a pleasure. Thank you very much for joining us. Can you tell us what the U.S. bombed or attacked in the past 24 hours, and has it affected life in the capital of Iran?

Recent U.S. Attacks and Iran’s Response

PROFESSOR MOHAMMAD MARANDI: Thank you very much for inviting me, Judge. They did bomb areas near the Strait of Hormuz, and they also targeted places near Tehran, in the city of Karaj, which is a very large city that is close to Tehran. The damage was limited. I don’t think it was nearly as extensive as advertised. It was perhaps, they say, there was, I don’t know, 30% bigger in scope than the previous assaults. And the Iranian response was pretty heavy-handed as well.

Nothing has changed, of course. I heard that Western media claimed that there was a deal between Iran and the United States, an MOU, but that’s not true. The Iranians have said that their position on any potential agreement with the United States has not changed, and that Trump, if he wants a deal, he’ll have to accept those terms, which he almost did accept.

The negotiators, which sent messages back and forth, on paper have been acknowledging one thing, yet Trump in his public statements has been saying the opposite. On paper, they have more or less agreed to release Iran’s stolen assets, but Trump says he will not give Iran’s assets. On paper, they have more or less agreed, not in final, there’s no final text, but they more or less agreed to lift the siege. Trump says he’s not going to lift the siege. On paper, they more or less agreed that they would lift the sanctions for the period of the implementation of the agreement. Trump says he’s not going to do that.

So, his negotiators do one thing, he says something else, but until that framework, which both sides in general have agreed upon, until Trump acknowledges and accepts that framework, there won’t be a deal.

The State of Negotiations

JUDGE ANDREW NAPOLITANO: Are negotiations going on either as we speak or in general these days, and if so, does it consist in passing messages through the Pakistanis, or does it consist in anything else? It certainly doesn’t consist of what you observed when everybody was physically together in Islamabad.

PROFESSOR MOHAMMAD MARANDI: No, they’re not — their negotiations — all the messages go through Pakistan. I don’t think the Pakistanis really have a significant role to play because everything is written down. But recently, the Iranians have not responded because of the constant violations of the so-called ceasefire by the Americans over the past few weeks. They’ve been constantly bombing and raiding, and also because of the ongoing genocidal attacks in Lebanon.

So the Iranians have said that the Americans know their position. Their position is what was negotiated a few weeks ago, and it’s been discussed on your show by multiple guests. It’s nothing new that, as I said, the lifting of sanctions for the period of the deal, the releasing of Iranian stolen assets, a ceasefire in Lebanon and in Gaza, and an end to the war, and also the lifting of the siege. And Iran in return would allow and facilitate trade to normalize through the Strait of Hormuz. And also Iran would state that it does not pursue a nuclear weapon, which is something that Iran has always been saying. These, if I recall them all correctly, this is basically the framework, right?

Trump’s Bombing Strategy and Its Miscalculations

JUDGE ANDREW NAPOLITANO: Right. But Trump and his Secretary of Defense, who calls himself the Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, are of the view that the resumption of bombing will affect Iran’s negotiating posture. Doesn’t that just manifest an abject ignorance of the way the Iranians think and the way the government operates?

PROFESSOR MOHAMMAD MARANDI: Yes, and it makes Iranians think that the United States is increasingly similar to the Israeli regime and that all it likes to do is just bomb and kill. And so you sort of see that the two look more like one another, sort of like the end of Animal Farm.

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JUDGE ANDREW NAPOLITANO: Oh my God, you took the thought right out of my head. “And I looked from man to pig and pig to man and could hardly tell the difference.” I think that’s the way Animal Farm ends. That’s right. Yes, yes.

Has Iran altered its military strategy so as to become offensive preemptively and so as to respond with greater force than that which was visited upon it?

Iran’s Military Strategy and the Strait of Hormuz

PROFESSOR MOHAMMAD MARANDI: That’s a difficult question. In general, in order to initiate a war, the Iranians would never do that, and they would never start a war, and that goes against their religious principles. We are in war as we speak. The war has not ended. It’s over, well over 3 months. But I think the Iranians prefer not to initiate conflict. And every time it’s been the Americans who’ve broken the ceasefire.

In the case of this helicopter, the helicopter was in the Strait of Hormuz, which is, as you know, not international waters. It’s waters between Iran and Oman, and it’s not wide enough to be international waters.