『The Reckoning - Iran, America, Israel, and War Podcast』のカバーアート

The Reckoning - Iran, America, Israel, and War Podcast

The Reckoning - Iran, America, Israel, and War Podcast

著者: thereckoning
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For nearly one-half of a century, the Islamic Republic of Iran made war, on different levels, against Israel and America. The war was conducted surreptitiously and overtly, boldly and timidly, militarily and non-militarily, conventionally and, usually, uncoventionally. The attacks came from guns and bombs and words and funding. But the attacks continued. The Reckoning podcast examines the men and women behind this drama. What is Iran's argument with Israel and America? Why such passion? All this and more is the subject of this podcast.

Copyright 2026 All rights reserved.
イスラム教 スピリチュアリティ 世界 政治・政府 政治学
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  • The Reckoning - Monica Witt - A Traitor's Love Poem to Iran and More
    2026/06/02
    Hello from Jihad and the World – a podcast that explores the intersection of Western and Islamic cultures. The author is Mark Silinsky of Kensington Security Consulting, and today’s episode will examine the strange case of Monica Witt – from all-American girl to a traitor for Iran. Here is an update to a podcast I made a few months ago. . So, an all-American girl joins the Air Force, becomes an intelligence analyst, learns Persian, and defects to Iran. It doesn’t happen often. Generally, defections go the other way, from autocracy to freedom. There are, of course, exceptions. Kim Philby and the other Cambridge spies skedaddled to Moscow when their cover was blown. A few Americans hightailed it to Cuba. But this was rare. Rarer still was defecting to Iran. Some Iranians who lived in the West for a while returned to Iran. Maybe they have very aged parents, saw business opportunities, or were seized by religious conviction. But they were not defectors. However one was, and her name is Monica Elfriede Witt. Witt was born in Texas, raised in Florida, served competently in the Air Force, earned an advanced degree at a top university, and then she defected. She claimed to use her intelligence background, knowledge of tradecraft, and personnel to support a higher purpose—serving the Islamic Republic of Iran. She was indicted by a federal grand jury for conspiracy to deliver national defense information to the Iranian government; prosecutors say Witt provided highly classified secrets to Iranian intelligence and helped them target operations after she defected to Tehran. She remains at large, with a $200,000 bounty from the U.S. Department of Justice. So, What Happened? Well, she didn’t like it in the Air Force. Years after her service and speaking on Iran's Press TV, Witt criticized a "boy's club atmosphere" and widespread sexual harassment that she claimed was systemic in the U.S. military. In June 2008, she left the Air Force and earned a degree from the University of Maryland. With her security clearance and bachelor’s degree, she was well-positioned to work for national security contractors, a role she held for several years. From November 2008 to August 2010, she worked as a Middle East Desk Officer in Virginia. She later worked for a nonprofit organization that connected Middle Eastern students with Fulbright scholarships. She enrolled at George Washington University and partially paid her tuition through an Iraq Fulbright scholarship. You think she would be happy, but she wasn’t. In choppy English, she published an article in the university’s International Affairs Review that was very critical of the United States. . She, like many other university students, was openly critical of the United States, and at first her anti-American rhetoric was indistinguishable from that of other graduate students. Many Middle East studies departments have been highly hostile to the policies of successive administrations. They are also well-financed by Middle Eastern states. But the key here is that she began to show signs of disloyalty to the United States, and these signs were noted but not reported. Something similar happened with an Army psychiatrist, Major Nidal Hasan. He began to turn away from his country and embrace radical Islam. He unleashed his fury on his fellow American soldiers as they were preparing to deploy to Afghanistan. On a rampage, he shot at anything that moved, killing 14 and wounding and crippling others. It is vital to note that both Hasan and Witt were ostentatiously disdainful of America, and their fellow students were concerned. But they were also worried about being tarred as a bigot or Islamophobic. Referring to Monica Witt, a fellow student at George Washington, later recalled, 'There weren't warning signs in terms of 'go to authorities' warning signs.' One student recalled that “everyone just kind of sat and watched” as Witt expressed strong opposition to American foreign policy in class. No one, it seems, pushed back with even a limited defense of America. According to some accounts, Witt was haunted by what she claimed were American war crimes in the Middle East. A classmate recalled that she said she had difficulty sleeping and reconciling her participation in the war effort. Witt would mention drone strikes, extrajudicial killings, and atrocities against children, all of which she claimed her colleagues in the military would brag about. She appeared distressed by what she called ‘gross incompetence’ by her superiors. Well, they were certainly not competent enough to catch on to her. And I am very dubious about her alleged war crimes. The Hollywood Conferences 2012 and 2013 Her journey toward becoming an agent for the Iranian government took a significant step in 2012, when she ...
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    23 分
  • The Reckoning - Iran, America, Israel and War - Crossroad of Hate - Episode Five
    2026/06/01
    Hello and welcome to The Reckoning – Iran, Israel, America, and War. This podcast explores the relationships among these countries and the events that led to war in 2026. Crossroads of Hate is a five-part series examining Western influences on Iranian anti-Semitic propaganda. This has been part of Iran’s information warfare against both Israel and the United States. The author is Mark Silinsky. This is the fifth and final episode. Beyond Holocaust Denial - Anti-Semitic Themes Holocaust deniers in Iran claim that Jews manipulate international relations so subtly and successfully that very few people are aware of their betrayal. M’bala M’bala, in one of his frequent Iranian television appearances, stated that most slave traders were Jews. Further, "They have organized all the wars and organized all the disorders on this planet." Robert Faurisson attributed many of the world's difficulties to Jewish control. "Whatever is said, there would be no Syrian war without Zionism, no 'war on terror,' no Suez crisis, no Chechnian bombings in Russia. We can go further; there would be no Tea Party of warmongers and extremists in the U.S. without the Zionist money behind them." Though David Irving is not as openly antisemitic as others, he implicitly put the onus on Jews for their misfortune. "They (Jews) should ask themselves the question, 'Why have they been so hated for 3,000 years that there has been pogrom after pogrom in country after country?' and it's the one question they seem to be very shy of?" Irving said. Keven Barrett promotes a wide range of all-encompassing Jewish conspiracy theories. In May 2020, he explained on Press T.V. that Germany designated Hizbullah a terrorist organization because Germany is under "Israeli occupation." According to Barrett, so is Washington. He claimed that Israeli operatives filmed President Trump and other senior Americans having sex with children. He also castigated Arab leaders as corrupt elites who "steal the money and the resources of their countries and hand them over to their Zionist banker-masters who rule the West and grovel before the feet of their colonialist overlords." Other Europeans receive accolades from Iranian leaders. Iranian cartoonists have borrowed grotesque cartoon imagery from earlier epochs and distant continents. Descheemaeker is one of many cartoonists critical of Jews and Israel, and there are many entrants around the world competing in Iran’s cartoons contests. Antisemitic cartoons proliferate in many other countries around the world, including the United States. In April 2019, the New York Times published a caricature of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu serving as a guide dog wearing a Star of David and leading President Donald Trump, who is wearing a skullcap. Responses Some European leaders, such as Jeremy Corbyn, have been equivocal about Iran’s Holocaust denial. Others, such as German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, have loudly condemned Iranian Holocaust Denial. In 2009, he said of then-president Ahmadinejad, “With his intolerable tirades, he is a disgrace to his country.” Prominent Western intellectuals have also been outspokenly critical of Iranian antisemitism and of Europeans who are passive to it. Many have tread carefully after Khomeini issued a fatwa against Salman Rushdie for mocking Mohammed. But some have been vocal. Plucky and glamorous Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci interviewed Khomeini in the first year of the revolution. When Khomeini suggested, "If you do not like Islamic dress, you’re not obliged to wear it . . ." she responded by saying, "I’m going to take off this stupid, medieval rag right now” and bolted the interview. Wracked by cancer at the end of her life, she declared her disgust “with the antisemitism of many Italians, of many Europeans” and “ashamed of this shame that dishonors my country and Europe.” Like Fallaci, Christopher Hitchens made an intellectual journey away from the left-wing politics of his early adulthood. An atheist born to a non-practicing Jewish mother, he became a strident critic of political Islam. He was not a friend of Israel, but he spoke loudly against Iran’s regime and its hatred of his coreligionists. Douglas Murray, a gay British conservative gadfly, mocked Iran’s antisemitic notions, particularly the claim that Zionists try to control the world by spreading homosexuality. Murray cackled, “How can you dominate the world through gays?’ Summary Western anti-Semitic tropes flourish in Iran's state-owned media and among the academic, religious, and cultural elite. On Iranian television, in radio broadcasts and newspapers, and in college classrooms, screeds against Jews and Israel pour forth. These lurid canards include the belief that Jews destroy ...
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    7 分
  • The Reckoning - Iran, America, Israel and War - Crossroads of Hate - Episode Four
    2026/05/24
    Hello and welcome to The Reckoning – Iran, Israel, America, and War. This podcast explores the relationships among these countries and the events that led to war in 2026. Crossroads of Hate is a five-part series examining Western influences on Iranian anti-Semitic propaganda. This has been part of Iran’s information warfare against both Israel and the United States. The author is Mark Silinsky. This is the fourth of five podcasts on this subject. In this podcast, we look at some prized anti-Semites who are friends of Iran. Robert Faurisson Born in 1929 in Surrey, England, to a Scottish mother and a French father, Robert Faurisson became a literature professor and a prominent Holocaust denier. Le Monde published his article, The Problem of the Gas Chambers, or the Rumor of Auschwitz, in 1978, though the newspaper later expressed regret for doing so. Linguist Noam Chomsky promoted one of his books, which boosted his prestige and shielded him from charges of antisemitism. Chomsky called Faurisson "a voice of conscience against injustice." He served as a professor of literature at the University of Lyon but was dismissed in 1990 when the French parliament voted to criminalize Holocaust denial. He sued to have his tenure restored, but he lost that case, as well as a 40-year legal battle with the French newspaper Le Monde. In that case, a Paris Court of Appeal called Faurisson a "professional liar," a "falsifier," and a "fabricator of history." Holocaust survivors also delivered broadsides against him. When Faurisson emphasized the scant number of photographs of Nazi gas chambers, an Auschwitz survivor snickered at him, saying she was sorry she had forgotten to bring her camera to the camp. In 1980, he told a French radio station that the "lie" of the Holocaust "opened the way to a gigantic political and financial fraud of which the principal beneficiaries are the State of Israel and International Zionism, and the principal victims the German and the entire Palestinian people." In 2012, Iran's then-president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad awarded Faurisson a prize for his "courage, resistance, and fighting spirit" in contesting the Holocaust. Until his death, Faurisson repeated the refrain that Nazis and Jews conspired to create Israel. "The Nazis never said that the Jews should be annihilated. Such a thing never happened. Hitler never gave an order to massacre the Jews merely because they were Jews." David Irving David Irving is one of the most prominent Holocaust deniers in the world. Many other deniers have offered little original, well-written commentary based on extensive research. But Irving has long been a public speaker and was initially praised by mainstream historians for obtaining primary sources unavailable to other historians. In 1977, he published Hitler's War, which earned some positive reviews from esteemed historians. However, in that book and subsequent manuscripts, he argued that there is no evidence linking Hitler to the gas chambers. He later moved to outright Holocaust denial, dismissing claims that gas chambers existed at Auschwitz. As his reputation collapsed outside Holocaust-denier circles, his bitterness toward his critics grew, and most of his historical commentary lost its remaining credibility. University students shouted him down at public speaking venues, and Jewish advocacy groups campaigned against his speaking tours. He was imprisoned in Austria for Holocaust denial and could not attend Holocaust conferences in Iran that had invited him to speak. In his stead, he sent a London-based associate. In 2016, the unsuccessful 1996 libel trial of historian Deborah Lipstadt was adapted into a film. In the film, the presiding judge admonished, "Irving was motivated by a desire to present events in a manner consistent with his own ideological beliefs, even if that involved distortion and manipulation of historical evidence." David Irving lost the case. In response, the Iranian paper Tehran Times portrayed Irving as a victim and hero who gallantly lost his battle for freedom and truth. The Times opined, "One of the biggest frauds of the outgoing century which has dragged into the new millennium is the story of the Holocaust made up by the Zionists to blackmail the West." Kevin Barrett Keven Barrett is an American who frequently appears on Iran's Press TV. Barrett taught at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, where he earned a doctorate. Barrett has repeatedly questioned the Nazi German murder of six million Jews. He brazenly proclaims on his website, "Today is as good a day as any to admit; I am holocaust (sic) denier . . . And I deny that the German murders of Gypsies, Slavs, handicapped people, communists, Jews, and others during World War II constitute a holocaust...
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    8 分
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