Truth is the first casualty of war, and this week we're watching it die in real time. Paul Rieckhoff delivers a no-BS briefing on Trump's second swing at Iran — a strike that his own intelligence community is signaling fell short of the objectives Marco Rubio publicly laid out. Where is the enriched uranium? Where are the missile sites? If the administration can't show us, we can't believe them. And while the spin machine ramps up to attack the press and call dissenters traitors, Iran can become a sucking chest wound for the United States — with 41% of the Navy in the Gulf, the Army forced to cut training, and Hegseth on the Hill asking for a $1.5 trillion blank check Congress never authorized.
The real winner this week isn't in Tehran or Washington — it's in Beijing. Rieckhoff lays out why China holds the strong hand as America gets sucked deeper into a fight with no off-ramp, why NATO and Israel are quietly recalculating, and why Trump's collapse with independent voters — barely 24% approval — is a down-ballot disaster for Republicans heading into 2026. He also unpacks the rise of independent veteran candidates like Dan Osborn in Nebraska, where Democrats are now dropping out to clear the field. If you're in the angry middle and exhausted by the rigged two-party system, this is the briefing you need.
In this episode
- Why "truth is the first casualty of war" — and why we can't trust the Iranian regime or the Trump regime right now
- The four objectives of the Iran strike — and the missing enriched uranium nobody can account for
- 41% of the Navy in the Gulf, 50,000 troops tied down, and the Army cutting training to cover the bill
- Hegseth's $1.5 trillion blank check ask — for a war Congress never authorized
- Why China is the big winner of the week while America punches itself out
- Zelensky's daily scoreboard vs. Trump's "take my word for it" approach to military results
- The independent voter math: Trump at 24% approval with independents — a down-ballot catastrophe
- Who today's independents actually are: 60% of young people, more than half of veterans
- 10,000 people a week leaving both parties — and not crossing over
- Dan Osborn in Nebraska: the steamfitter veteran turning red-state races upside down