<![CDATA[FBI]]><![CDATA[Iran]]><![CDATA[Operation Epic Fury]]><![CDATA[The New York Times]]>Featured

NYT Publishes Op-Ed by Guy Who Lost His Security Clearance for Leaking to Iran – Twitchy

As we reported on Tuesday, Robert Malley, the U.S. special envoy for Iran during the Biden administration, had some thoughts about Operation Epic Fury. He said it was clear that the United States and Israel were “pyromaniacs” using Iran as “an arena for geopolitical and social experimentation.” He mentioned in his X bio that he is a lecturer at Yale, but something he left out, which plenty of people were happy to remind him about, was that he lost his security clearance under the Biden administration for leaking classified documents to Iran and is under investigation by the FBI.





Naturally, The New York Times saw fit to publish an op-ed about Iran co-written by Malley.

Malley and historian Stephen Wertheim write that it’s really the United States’ fault for treating Iran as an enemy for so long:

President Trump’s attack on Iran is astonishing in its audacity, aggression and lawlessness. Mr. Trump ordered strikes in the midst of negotiations with a nation that posed no remotely imminent threat to the United States. He did nothing to prepare his country for war. Now he’s offering a dizzying array of rationales and objectives, caught in a maelstrom of his own making.

Yet for all its Trumpian characteristics, this war is the logical conclusion of how the United States has long dealt with Iran. For decades, presidents have depicted the Islamic Republic not just as a pernicious presence in the Middle East but also as an intolerable danger to the United States that no diplomatic deal could redress. When politicians inflate a threat and stigmatize peaceful means of handling it, an enterprising leader will one day reach for a radical solution.

That day, as Mr. Trump’s unique attributes combine with the ordinary pathologies of American foreign policy, has come.

Nevertheless, this war has emerged from more than Mr. Trump’s hubris. Iran, of course, bears ample responsibility, especially for sponsoring violent groups across the region and building nuclear capabilities. But the United States cannot escape blame. One administration after another has made it an article of faith that Iranian activities were wholly unprovoked, threatened vital U.S. interests and justified the use of force. Each of these axioms is dubious. All possessed a bipartisan pedigree.

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That’s it on Iran? Well, yeah, they’ve sponsored terrorist groups that have killed hundreds of Americans and were pursuing nuclear capabilities. But let’s talk about the United States. Of course, Nicholas Kristof would repost this.

“Mr. Malley, a lecturer at the Yale Jackson School, served as U.S. special envoy for Iran from 2021 to 2023.” That’s it.

He’s a bigger Iran-lover than Ben Rhodes and John Kerry combined.





The New York Times gives an op-ed on Iran to a guy under investigation for spying for Iran, and they don’t disclose it. That’s not surprising.

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Editor’s Note: The mainstream media continues to deflect, gaslight, spin, and lie about President Trump, his administration, and conservatives.

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