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Whose Liberation, Whose Loss? — The Pattern of Intervention’s Aftermath, From Baghdad to Tehran

  • Writer: Jeff Kellick
    Jeff Kellick
  • Apr 28
  • 1 min read

This contemporary application episode tests the central moral claim of American interventionism — that war can liberate populations — against the historical record of the past quarter century. Walking through Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, and Syria in narrative form, the episode documents the consistent pattern: ancient Christian communities devastated, women’s lives constrained or destroyed, moderates eliminated, countries economically and physically wrecked. It contrasts these cases with Tunisia, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia — countries where, without American military intervention, populations have made measurable progress on the very dimensions the cheerleaders for intervention claim to value. President Trump’s May 2025 Riyadh speech, which articulated this very thesis correctly, becomes the rhetorical bridge to Iran 2026, where the same pattern is unfolding in real time. The decapitation of Iranian leadership — including the assassination of the diplomatic figure Ali Larijani in March — has produced the very chaos the President now cites as a reason peace talks cannot proceed.

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