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Global Faultlines
Global Faultlines
Author: The Hindu
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Global Faultlines is a deep-dive international affairs podcast that goes beyond breaking news to uncover the roots of global conflicts. From shifting borders to power struggles, it explores the forces that shape international events. With expert voices and sharp analysis, the show offers depth and clarity on the stories shaping our world.
16 Episodes
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Modern Iraq was not born in 2003. Its origins lie in the aftermath of the First World War, when the collapse of the Ottoman Empire led Britain to assemble a new state. The borders were drawn quickly. Building a stable political order proved far harder.
Under the British Mandate, Iraq inherited centralised institutions that concentrated power but struggled to accommodate its ethnic and sectarian diversity. Sunni Arab elites dominated the new state, while Shia Arabs and Kurds often remained politically marginalised, patterns that would shape Iraq’s politics for decades.
The 1958 revolution ended the monarchy and marked a turn toward military-led republicanism. The rise of the Ba'ath Party deepened authoritarian rule and ideological nationalism, culminating in the regime of Saddam Hussein.
By the late 20th century, Iraq had fought a devastating war with Iran, invaded Kuwait, and endured years of sanctions. The state remained intact, but it was weakened, centralised, and heavily securitised.
To understand why Iraq became the focal point of the 2003 invasion, it is essential to examine how the modern state was constructed, and how the fault lines embedded in its early formation continued to shape its trajectory.
In this episode of Global Faultlines, we trace the creation of modern Iraq and the foundations of its long instability.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research, Editing and Production: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Shivaraj S
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In late December 2025, Iran was hit by a nationwide uprising triggered by the collapse of the Rial and deepening economic distress. What began as anger over inflation and currency instability quickly broadened into political demands, with protesters challenging the authority of the Islamic Republic.
The state’s response was swift and forceful with mass arrests, reported fatalities, and a near-total internet blackout that has limited independent reporting. The scale of unrest across provinces suggests a moment of significant internal strain.
The crisis unfolds against mounting external pressure. The United States has revived elements of its “maximum pressure” policy while pursuing nuclear talks in Oman. Israel is recalibrating its regional strategy after the post–October 7 escalation. Meanwhile, the Strait of Hormuz remains a critical energy chokepoint, with any disruption carrying global consequences, including for India.
In this episode of Global Faultlines, we examine whether Iran’s current unrest marks a turning point for the regime, or another chapter in its long history of survival under pressure.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research, Editing and Production: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Shivaraj S
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Saudi Arabia is recalibrating its role in a region defined by protracted wars, shifting alliances, and declining faith in military solutions. After years of assertive intervention, Riyadh has begun to pull back from direct confrontation, opting instead for diplomacy, de-escalation, and strategic hedging.
The Yemen war exposed the costs of prolonged conflict, while attacks on Saudi oil facilities underscored the kingdom’s vulnerability to asymmetric threats. At the same time, the reliability of U.S. security guarantees has come under question, even as China’s diplomatic footprint in West Asia has expanded. These pressures have pushed Saudi Arabia to reopen channels with rivals, including Iran, and to position itself as a mediator rather than a belligerent.
This shift is unfolding as wars in Gaza and Ukraine reshape global alignments and energy politics, forcing Riyadh to balance its security interests with economic ambitions at home. Whether this marks a durable strategic reset or a tactical pause remains an open question.
In this episode of Global Faultlines, we examine why Saudi Arabia is changing its regional strategy, how its relationships with rivals and partners are evolving, and what this shift means for the future balance of power in West Asia.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research, Editing and Production: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Shivaraj S
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Saudi Arabia emerged from the collapse of the Ottoman Empire not as a colonial creation, but through conquest and consolidation, anchored in an alliance between political power and religious authority. This distinct origin shaped how the kingdom understood sovereignty, security, and its role in the regional order.
Oil transformed Saudi Arabia into a global energy power and, during the Cold War, tied it closely to Western interests, particularly the United States. The 1979 Iranian Revolution marked a decisive shift, sharpening Saudi threat perceptions and entrenching a rivalry with Iran driven as much by power and influence as by sectarian divides. In the decades that followed, Riyadh became involved—directly and indirectly—in conflicts across Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen, even as proxy wars and non-state actors complicated its security strategy.
By the end of the 2010s, Saudi Arabia faced a more fragmented and volatile region. The war in Yemen exposed the limits of military power, while attacks on its oil infrastructure revealed new vulnerabilities.
In this episode of Global Faultlines, we examine how Saudi Arabia became a regional power, how it has waged conflict, and what its trajectory reveals about power and insecurity in West Asia.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research, Editing and Production: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Shivaraj S
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The Islamic State emerged from years of war, political collapse, and sectarian violence in Iraq and Syria. Shaped by the aftermath of the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the chaos of the Syrian civil war, the group evolved from a local insurgency into the most powerful jihadist organisation of its time.
By 2014, ISIS controlled major cities, erased borders, and declared a caliphate. It governed territory, raised revenue, and enforced its rule through extreme violence and sophisticated propaganda, attracting fighters from across the world and reshaping global perceptions of terrorism.
That territorial project collapsed by 2019 under sustained pressure from local forces backed by international air power. But the defeat of the caliphate did not end ISIS. The group adapted, shifting to insurgency, underground networks, and ideological influence beyond the Middle East.
Today, ISIS remains active in parts of Africa and Asia and continues to inspire attacks far from its former strongholds. Recent incidents labelled “ISIS-inspired” have highlighted the challenge of distinguishing between organisational links and ideological influence.
In this episode of Global Faultlines, we examine how ISIS rose, ruled, and survived — and what its evolution reveals about unresolved conflicts and the enduring consequences of war.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research, Editing and Production: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Shivaraj S
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By 2015, Syria’s civil war had reached a turning point. Russian military intervention reversed the regime’s fortunes, Iran entrenched itself through militias and economic networks, and the armed opposition steadily lost ground. ISIS was eventually defeated territorially, but its presence — and the conditions that enabled it — did not disappear.
As active frontlines stabilised, Syria entered a new and uneasy phase. Large parts of the country remained fragmented, millions of refugees were unable to return, and sanctions deepened an already collapsing economy. Regional powers that once backed rival sides began recalibrating, reopening diplomatic channels with Damascus and adjusting to a war that had no clear end.
At the same time, Syria witnessed a dramatic political shift. The fall of the Ba’athist order and the rise of a new leadership — shaped by years of jihadist conflict and international isolation — raised urgent questions about legitimacy, governance, and the country’s future. Who holds power in Syria today? And what kind of state has emerged from more than a decade of war?
In this second part of our Syria series, Global Faultlines examines the post-2015 phase of the conflict — from foreign intervention and the defeat of ISIS to economic collapse and a profound reordering of political power.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The HinduResearch, Script & Production: Sharmada VenkatasubramanianCamera: Shivaraj S
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On March 15, 2011, a small protest in Daraa ignited what would become one of the 21st century’s deadliest conflicts. But Syria’s crisis didn’t start overnight. Decades of authoritarian rule, sectarian tensions, and political repression had already set the stage.
The Assad family’s iron grip on power, combined with economic stagnation and deep social divides, left the country fragile. When peaceful protests erupted during the Arab Spring, a brutal regime crackdown and a divided opposition quickly turned unrest into full-scale civil war.
Regional powers, foreign fighters, and jihadist groups like Jabhat al-Nusra and ISIS exploited the chaos, further splintering the nation. By 2015, Syria was a patchwork of contested territories, millions were displaced, and entire cities lay in ruins.
In this first part of our two-episode series on Syria, Global Faultlines traces the country’s path from the early 20th century to 2015, examining the political, social, and regional forces that transformed a once-peaceful nation into a global crisis zone.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Shivaraj S
Edited and Produced by Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
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After the 9/11 attacks, Afghanistan became the frontline of America’s “War on Terror.” The U.S. invasion in 2001 aimed to dismantle al-Qaeda and remove the Taliban, but the mission quickly expanded into a far more ambitious nation-building project. Over two decades, billions were spent and new institutions were created. Yet corruption, weak governance, and a resilient Taliban insurgency steadily undermined those goals.
The Bonn Agreement sought to rebuild Afghanistan’s political system, but excluded key Afghan factions and helped entrench patronage networks. As international troops battled the Taliban across the countryside, the Afghan state struggled to gain public trust, even as elections and aid programs signaled progress on paper.
By 2020, the Doha Agreement shifted the war’s trajectory again, setting the stage for a U.S. withdrawal without securing a sustainable peace. In August 2021, the Afghan government collapsed with unprecedented speed, leading to the Taliban’s return and raising urgent questions about the cost and outcome of America’s longest war.
In this final part of the Afghanistan series at Global Faultlines, we trace the path from 9/11 to the fall of Kabul, examine why the U.S. mission failed, and explore what the Taliban’s comeback means for Afghanistan’s future.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Johan Sathyadas J
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The Taliban emerged in the mid-1990s amid the instability that followed the Soviet withdrawal and the civil war that devastated Afghanistan. Promising to restore order and justice, the movement drew support from war-weary Afghans and backing from sections of Pakistan’s military establishment. By 1996, it had captured Kabul and declared the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
The Taliban’s rule brought a measure of stability but imposed severe social restrictions. Its leadership enforced a strict interpretation of Islamic law, curtailed women’s rights, silenced dissent, and restricted access to education and public life, forcing Afghanistan into diplomatic and economic isolation.
During this period, the Taliban forged close ties with Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, turning Afghanistan into a base for global militant networks. These alliances heightened international alarm and culminated in the regime’s downfall after the September 11 attacks in 2001.
In this second part of the Afghanistan series at Global Faultlines, we trace the Taliban’s first rise to power, explore the nature of their rule, and examine how it shaped Afghanistan’s trajectory in the decades that followed.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Shivaraj S
Editing and production: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
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Afghanistan has long held a pivotal place in regional geopolitics, its strategic location making it a prize and a battleground for competing powers. From the 19th-century “Great Game” between Britain and Russia to the Cold War proxy wars of the 20th century, external influence has continuously shaped its trajectory.
Following independence in 1919, successive governments sought to modernise while balancing tribal, religious, and regional interests. Yet instability persisted, deepened by ideological divides and foreign interventions.
The 1970s marked a turning point, from ending King Zahir Shah’s monarchy in 1973, to the Soviet invasion in 1979. What followed was a decade-long conflict that drew in the United States, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia, leaving the country fractured after the Soviet withdrawal in 1989.
In this first part of our three-part series on Afghanistan, we trace the country’s transformation from a buffer state to a theatre of global rivalries, and examine how decades of intervention and internal division have shaped the nation it is today.
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Iran today stands at a crossroads, acting as both a stabilising and destabilising force in one of the world’s most volatile regions. Its influence extends through a network of allies and proxies, from Hezbollah in Lebanon to the Houthis in Yemen, while its diplomatic and strategic moves continue to draw global attention.
In this second part of our two-part series on Iran, we examine the country’s foreign relations and regional strategy. We look at Tehran’s rapprochement with Saudi Arabia in 2023, its growing partnerships with China and Russia, and the ongoing tensions with the United States following the collapse of the 2015 nuclear deal. We also explore how India navigates its ties with Iran, balancing economic engagement with broader regional considerations.
This episode unpacks how Tehran’s alliances, rivalries, and strategic calculations shape West Asia and beyond, asking critical questions about the sustainability of its partnerships and the long-term implications for regional and global stability.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu.
Video: Shivaraj S
Research, Editing and Production: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
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Iran has been a key force in East Asian politics for decades, influencing regional conflicts, global diplomacy, and international security. From the 1953 coup against Prime Minister Mossadegh to the transformative 1979 Islamic Revolution, Iran’s history has shaped a political system that blends elected institutions with the authority of a Supreme Leader.
In this first part of our two-part series on Iran, we explore the country’s regional ambitions, its backing of groups like Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis, and the long-standing pursuit of a nuclear program that has triggered international sanctions and scrutiny. We also delve into the Iran-Saudi rivalry, often seen as sectarian, but deeply rooted in geopolitical strategy and power dynamics.
This episode unpacks how Iran’s history, politics, and regional strategies continue to influence East Asia and keep the country at the center of global attention.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Video: Shivaraj S
Edited and produced by Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
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In the first two episodes of this three-part series, we traced the roots of the Israel–Palestine question - from the legacies of colonialism and partition in 1948 to the cycles of displacement, violence, and negotiations that followed. In this third and final episode, we shift the lens to the present, asking how the rest of the world is responding to a crisis that refuses to fade.
While the United States continues to offer unwavering support to Israel, parts of Europe have moved towards recognizing Palestinian as a state. India has attempted to walk a fine line, balancing its historic solidarity with Palestine and its growing strategic ties with Israel.
Through these faultlines, one theme emerges clearly: the Israel–Palestine question is no longer confined to the region. It has become a test of international order, reshaping diplomacy, alliances, and public opinion across the world.
Expert: Stanly Johny
Video: Shivaraj S
Research and production: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
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In the previous episode, we revisited the history of the Israel Palestine conflict, until the creation of Israel in 1948. However, 1948 was not the end, but the beginning of a turbulent new chapter in the region. In the decades that followed, the region was repeatedly reshaped by wars, occupations, and resistance. Borders shifted, cities changed hands, and generations came of age knowing little beyond conflict.
In this episode, we examine the major wars that followed 1948, asking difficult but necessary questions: What triggered them? What was each side trying to protect — or to gain? And why did every ceasefire feel less like a resolution, and more like an interlude in a continuing struggle?
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Research: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Produced by Sharmada Venkatasubramanian and Shivaraj S
Camera: Shivaraj S
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Why does the Israel–Palestine conflict remain one of the most intractable crises of our time? To understand today’s headlines, we need to go back to where it all began.
In the launch episode of Global Faultlines, we trace the roots of the conflict up to the creation of Israel in 1948. The discussion unpacks the competing nationalisms, religious significance of the land, colonial interventions, and the promises made — and broken — along the way.
This historical lens reveals why the choices made decades ago continue to cast a long shadow over the present.
Expert: Stanly Johny, International Affairs Editor, The Hindu
Anchor: Sharmada Venkatasubramanian
Camera: Shivaraj S, Johan Sathya Das Jai
Produced by Sharmada Venkatasubramanian and Shivaraj S
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