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Good evening. It's Monday, April 1.
Tonight: Israel today substantially and dangerously elevated the risk of escalation in the Middle East—not only for itself but also for the United States—when it decided to bomb part of the Iranian embassy in Damascus, Syria, killing at least seven Iranian military officials. As Israel always does, it immediately claimed that its attack on the embassy was justified by the presence of irregular terrorist forces, converting, it said, what would otherwise be not only Iranian soil but also an inviolable diplomatic shelter into a legitimate military target. The Iranians, by contrast, denounced this bombing as a classic act of war and vowed retaliation, which they will almost certainly be required to impose now.
At the start of the Israeli attack on Gaza back in October, you remember President Biden deployed significant U.S. military assets, including aircraft carriers, in the region, with the explicit aim of protecting Israel from escalation. Therefore, any serious escalatory risk in the region threatens to involve not only Israel but its chief sponsors and Washington in this wider regional war, one that the U.S. is already involved in heavily through its bombing campaigns in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and more, all designed to protect Israel. We will examine the implications of today's events.
Then: Washington is currently all aflutter in its fanatical efforts to ensure that another $60 billion be sent from the U.S. Treasury to fuel the war in Ukraine. Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson has all but assured key factions in Washington that he will defy a major faction in his party and Donald Trump by bringing to the floor and then supporting a measure to ensure that Biden's $60 billion request for Ukraine is finally met.
That, in turn, requires that the level of fear and hysteria over Moscow be heightened even further. And that is the critical context for understanding a very lengthy and very melodramatic “60 Minutes” report on Sunday night that has to be seen to be believed. If you haven't seen it yet, it is really quite something. The report attempted to resurrect the long-discredited Havana syndrome fairy tale—the claim that the Russians had harnessed 23rd or 24th-century secret technology to injure the brains of dozens of American diplomats and intelligence assets around the world—and to do so, “60 Minutes” put together a series of claims so flagrantly unhinged and featured several people so flagrantly unwell. As always, the most extreme and destructive conspiracy theories come not from the darkest corners of the Internet, but from the brightest and most well-financed sectors of corporate media. And we will examine just this latest extreme example to demonstrate how that is done and the dangers that emerge from it.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.