Intercepted Podcast: War Games
Trita Parsi confronts the propaganda from Israel and the White House on Iran. Christine Ahn looks at U.S. war crimes in Korea and Pyongyang's strategy.
Trita Parsi confronts the propaganda from Israel and the White House on Iran. Christine Ahn looks at U.S. war crimes in Korea and Pyongyang's strategy.
In the State of the Union, Trump attacked immigrant rights, vowed to keep Guantánamo open, and threatened North Korea. Naomi Klein analyzes the speech.
Systematic abuse of animals lies at the heart of U.S. industrial farms, which are protected by the government. Despite a crackdown on activists, the public is seeing the barbarism.
Historian Andrew Bacevich makes the case against war on Syria. Arundhati Roy discusses her new novel. Actor Wally Shawn talks about targeted assassinations.
Professor Harvey is one of the leading Marxist thinkers in the world and a leading authority on Marx’s “Das Kapital,” which turned 150 years old late last year.
Melissa del Bosque shows how turf wars between U.S. agencies jeopardize the overlapping investigations of the nation’s massive border security apparatus.
We hear analysis from Zimbabwe on Mugabe's ouster, Sen. Chris Murphy blasts the U.S. for its role in Yemen, and we take a look at the pandemic of sexual assault.
Jeremy Scahill gives a history of U.S. Iraq policy. Mehdi Hasan talks about “60 Minutes” fawning over the Saudi prince. Author Eve Ewing discusses her new book.
On this week’s Intercepted podcast, John Feffer, the director of Foreign Policy In Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies, takes a deep dive into how the U.S. got to a point of constant tension with North Korea.
Rep. Ro Khanna on Yemen. Col. Morris Davis discusses Bowe Bergdahl and the recent terror attack in New York. Nomi Prins explains the Paradise Papers.
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