Pete Hegseth is on the ropes, and the political class is finally asking the questions that should have been asked two months and 25 billion dollars ago. In this solo briefing, Paul Rieckhoff breaks down why the Secretary of Defense keeps comparing Iran to Venezuela — because he wants you to think it was a win — and why the next target on the board is Cuba. The polling hasn't moved. Americans don't support this war. Wars don't get more popular over time, and the man running this one served in one that proved it.
This is a no-BS look at how the forever war machine drives away our allies, threatens the bases in Germany and Italy that have kept America secure for generations, and leaves the homeland exposed to domestic terrorism while DHS sits shuttered. Paul lays out the math that actually matters in 2026: 27 percent Republican, 27 percent Democrat, 45 percent independent — and 60 percent of young people unaffiliated. The future is none of the above. From Graham Platner's open field against Susan Collins in Maine to gas at 4.30 a gallon, the angry middle is the battlefield, and this episode is the briefing on how to read it.
In this episode
- Why Hegseth keeps comparing Iran to Venezuela — and what the rhetorical sleight-of-hand is really setting up
- The breaking-news headline: Cuba is next on the target list, and the hearings should be happening now
- "You have to commit the country first before you commit the troops" — Afghanistan, Iraq, Vietnam, now Iran
- Two months, $25 billion, a dozen-plus Americans dead, and no end in sight
- Why pulling troops from Germany is a sucking chest wound for the framework that has kept America secure for generations
- The Italy base, the destroyers in Spain, the military hospital in Germany — what "driving away our allies" actually costs
- DHS shut down for two months while homegrown terrorism and Iranian proxy threats compound
- The real number that matters: 4.30 a gallon at the pump
- 27/27/45 — the math of the angry middle, and why 60 percent of young people are unaffiliated
- Maine as a test case: Graham Platner vs. Susan Collins and the battle for independents