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** NEW MERCH ** Jackets & Sweatshirts, Thermo Mugs!! Daniel Davis Deep Dive Merch: Etsy store https://www.etsy.com/shop/DanielDavis... The discussion argues that a war with Iran would be long, destructive, and fundamentally different from limited U.S. actions elsewhere (like Venezuela). While U.S. leaders publicly suggest a show of force might avoid conflict, the guest—Alastair Crooke, a former British diplomat and MI6 officer—contends this is dangerously misleading. Key points: Iran is not Venezuela: Unlike a quick “snatch and grab” operation, Iran is vast, mountainous, heavily populated, and deeply militarized. U.S. naval power is constrained: Iran’s coastline is saturated with anti-ship missiles, submarines, and fast attack boats, forcing U.S. carriers to operate far from effective range and under constant threat. Missile limits: Even hundreds of Tomahawk missiles would not cripple Iran as a state; they are relatively slow, limited in penetration, and insufficient for a country Iran’s size. Air defenses remain intact: Previous Israeli/U.S. successes relied on one-time ground sabotage by infiltrated cells—methods Iran has since neutralized. Past clashes were negotiated, not deterrence: The June attacks were prearranged and calibrated to avoid escalation, including Iran removing uranium in advance and both sides limiting damage. Future conflict would escalate fully: According to Crooke, Iran has made clear that any new attack by the U.S. or Israel would trigger all-out war, not a symbolic response. Western assumptions are dangerous: Claims that Iran would not retaliate for fear of regime collapse are dismissed as unrealistic; Iran has already demonstrated it can penetrate defenses and strike meaningful targets. Overall, the argument is that the U.S. and its allies are underestimating Iran’s capabilities and resolve, and that drifting toward war risks a major, uncontrollable regional conflict rather than a quick or decisive victory.