Kyle Anzalone Show

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Kyle brings his in depth knowledge of geopolitics twice a week.  The Kyle Anzalone Show features guests each week breaking down world conflicts and US foreign policy. Kyle is also the opinion editor of Antiwar.com and a contributing writer at the Libertarian Institute.

  1. 1 HR AGO

    [GUEST] DaveDeCamp : Israel’s Ceasefire and the CIA’s Hit List

    A ceasefire can fail quietly. We open on Gaza, where the most sensitive piece of the truce isn’t a line on a map but the painstaking recovery of hostage remains under mountains of rubble. Dave DeCamp walks us through what the signed deal actually requires, why immediate repatriation was never feasible, and how aid bottlenecks violate the letter of the agreement. We examine the political pressure inside Israel—from families who fought for a pause now pushing to escalate—and the practical signals that would indicate real de-escalation: sustained aid at the promised scale, heavy equipment to clear debris, and temporary housing to keep people alive while the digging continues. Then we turn south to Venezuela, where a calculated leak suggests the CIA now has lethal authority against Nicolás Maduro. The stated pretexts—fentanyl and “emptying prisons”—don’t stand up to public record or intelligence briefings. We connect the dots to Florida politics, opposition lobbying, and a step-ladder strategy of bounties, designations, and naval shows that drifts toward open conflict. If the United States is edging toward regime change, Congress should debate and vote. Instead, we’re offered “self-defense” as a legal catch-all for strikes in another hemisphere. That’s not just bad law; it’s bad strategy. Ukraine brings the conversation full circle: talk of a new offensive, long-range strikes inside Russia, and even Tomahawk missiles as leverage against Moscow. We stress the constraints—dwindling European transfers, limited U.S. inventories, and the scarcity of ground-launched options—while exploring a parallel diplomatic track that could culminate in a Trump–Putin meeting in Budapest. Hovering over it all is New START’s ticking clock. Letting the last U.S.–Russia arms control pact expire would remove caps and inspections at the worst possible time. If you value clear-eyed analysis over talking points, this one’s for you. Follow, share with a friend who tracks world events, and leave a review telling us: where do you see the biggest risk of escalation—and the best chance for real de-escalation? CHAPTERS: 0:36 Welcome And Global Agenda 1:30 Israel’s Ceasefire And Hostage Remains 6:50 Aid Cuts And Ceasefire Compliance 12:25 How Long Can The Truce Hold 16:03 Why The Deal Happened At All 16:47 Venezuela: CIA Lethal Authorities 22:05 Pretexts, Drugs, And Political Drivers 27:12 Congress, Law, And War Powers 28:47 Ukraine Offensive Talk And Diplomacy 33:00 Arms Limits And Tomahawk Reality Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/kyle-anzalone-show/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

    36 min
  2. 9 OCT

    [GUEST] Harrison Berger : Deal or Deception? The Truth Behind Israel and Hamas Talks

    A ceasefire headline sounds simple: hostages freed, troops pull back, peace on the horizon. We pull the thread and find the knots beneath—enforcement that never quite arrives, side assurances that pre-authorize escalation, and a phase-based plan that moves leverage one way the instant captives are released. We walk through the January precedent, the reported U.S. guarantee to back Israel if Hamas is deemed non-compliant, and how “temporary pauses” can function as rest cycles, not roadmaps. From there, we go where most U.S. outlets won’t: the split-screen between Israeli and American narratives of October 7. Inside Israel, journalists and citizens are pressing for state inquiries, revisiting stand-down orders, and reporting on the Hannibal Directive. In the U.S., moderation and stigma narrow the conversation to a single moral frame that treats causality as taboo. We connect that information choke point to policy consent—why extreme stories stick, how debunked claims linger, and what that means for public support of an open-ended war in Gaza. We also talk power at home. A rare on-record account from Capitol Hill lays bare how donor ecosystems script Middle East positions, why dissent feels “off-limits,” and what it means when Americans detained in international waters meet silence from their own government. Add the push for VR exhibits and influencer campaigns, and you see the long game: not just winning the moment but rewriting the memory. Leadership swaps in Jerusalem won’t answer the structural questions that matter—freedom of movement, equal rights, and credible restraints on force. If you care about honest policy, demand verifiable benchmarks, not press releases. Listen, think with us, and tell a friend who’s still on the fence. Subscribe, leave a review, and share your take: is this a path to peace—or another reset before the next round? Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/kyle-anzalone-show/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

    24 min
  3. 24 SEPT

    [GUEST] Andrew Day : Trump Says Ukraine Can Win the War

    How did we end up with "forever enemies" and is there another way? Senior editor at The American Conservative, Andrew Day, joins Kyle Angelo to challenge our most fundamental assumptions about American foreign policy. The conversation begins with a deep dive into Trump's recent statements about Ukraine, where he surprisingly called Russia a "paper tiger" and suggested Ukraine could win the war. Day provides crucial context: "Trump changes his position depending on who he most recently talked to," noting Trump's shift from previously acknowledging Ukraine would need to cede territory to now making optimistic claims about Ukrainian victory prospects that even Antony Blinken wouldn't endorse. We explore the gap between rhetoric and reality, particularly the $58 billion funding gap between what Ukraine says it needs and what Europe has pledged. This practical concern makes talk of Ukrainian territorial gains seem increasingly disconnected from battlefield realities. The most fascinating segment examines Day's thesis that countries labeled as America's adversaries—China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, and Venezuela—have repeatedly shown willingness to cooperate when Washington extends an olive branch. "Each of these countries would be willing to make deals with us," Day argues, providing specific examples where cooperation was possible but undermined by hawkish impulses or institutional inertia. Day persuasively explains how the "democracies versus autocracies" framework becomes a dangerous self-fulfilling prophecy: "When Biden comes into office and frames foreign policy as defending democracy globally against autocratic countries... those countries, especially the smaller, weaker ones, think 'I better improve my relations with China.'" These countries aren't naturally allied with one another beyond responding to perceived Western hostility. The episode concludes with a provocative discussion of Tucker Carlson's claim that Netanyahu "controls" Trump, with Day noting the paradox of America's submissive relationship with Israel despite the enormous power differential and billions in aid provided annually. Whether you're seeking fresh perspectives on international relations or concerned about America's endless conflicts, this conversation offers a roadmap toward a more pragmatic foreign policy based on genuine national interests rather than ideological crusades. Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/kyle-anzalone-show/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

    35 min

About

Kyle brings his in depth knowledge of geopolitics twice a week.  The Kyle Anzalone Show features guests each week breaking down world conflicts and US foreign policy. Kyle is also the opinion editor of Antiwar.com and a contributing writer at the Libertarian Institute.

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