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Glenn Greenwald: When I first started writing about politics and doing journalism, in 2005, one of the main focal points that almost everybody talked about was the toxic influence of neoconservatives. That was the first part of the George Bush-Dick Cheney administration and neocons like Douglas Feith and people who worked for Dick Cheney were extremely influential in the war in Iraq, the entire War on Terror as we came to know it. A lot of us thought that once George Bush and Dick Cheney were out of office, the discredited neocons would go away, and yet they never did. When Joe Biden was elected, people like Victoria Nuland were back in office, the neocons migrated to the Democratic Party, and now we have this increasingly dangerous war that is escalating as we speak, one that began in 2022, but that the United States played a great role in helping to provoke. As it turns out, the name of our next guest’s new book is “Provoked.”
Scott Horton is, I think, one of the best, if not the single best critic of neoconservatism over the years, but also of American foreign policy and its endless war machine. His book is about the obsession that the United States, for whatever reasons, has had with Russia, starting a new Cold War, and especially the catastrophe in Ukraine. Scott is a good friend of the show and we are always happy to have him on.
G. Greenwald: Scott, good evening. Thank you so much for taking the time to talk to us.
Scott Horton: Happy to be here Glenn. Thank you very much. Of course, I've been a big fan of yours since back in 2005.