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The Polistratics Podcst

Author: Polistratics

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Polistratics .. Where we discuss policies, strategies, and tactics that impact the Middle East and the world. Polistratics.com

5 Episodes
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The conversation delves into the evolving strategic landscape of the war, the impact on global powers, and the implications for the Gulf region. It explores the unpredictability of the conflict and the potential for escalating danger.TakeawaysStrategic LimitationsGlobal Power DynamicsChapters00:00 Strategic Changes in the War09:52 The Gulf's Positioning and Vulnerabilities17:08 The Role of China and Russia25:16 Europe's Dilemma and Decision-Making37:29 Shifts in US-GCC Relations
The conversation with Lieutenant Colonel Dave Hayworth focused on combat search and rescue (CSAR) operations, the role of A-10 aircraft, real-time CSAR efforts, and the potential for diplomatic solutions in the current conflict. The discussion also covered the extended service life of A-10 aircraft, the impact of modern warfare on conflict dynamics, and the importance of intelligence assets in CSAR operations. Additionally, the conversation addressed the potential for escalation in the conflict and the level of harmony between political and military leadership in decision-making processes.TakeawaysCombat Search and Rescue (CSAR) OperationsMulti-Domain WarfareChapters00:00 Introduction and Background05:56 Aircraft Sorties and Conflict Dynamics12:22 Extended Service Life of A-10 and Intelligence Operations20:27 Harmony Between Political and Military Leadership
Polistratics Podcast – Episode 3Guest: Matthew BartlettIn Episode 3 of the Polistratics Podcast, Nawaf Al-Thani turns inward—into Washington, into the Republican Party, and into the strategic communication machinery shaping how the United States understands and frames the war.Recorded during the third week of the U.S.–Israel–Iran war, this episode moves beyond battlefield dynamics to examine how narratives are built, how political messaging influences policy direction, and how different factions within the Republican Party interpret the conflict and its trajectory. Joining the conversation is Matthew Bartlett, a veteran strategic communicator and former political appointee at the U.S. State Department during the first Trump administration. With deep experience navigating Congress, messaging, and intra-party dynamics, Bartlett offers an insider’s perspective on how strategic communication shapes decision-making at the highest levels of government. The discussion explores a critical dimension of modern conflict: not just how wars are fought, but how they are explained, justified, and sustained politically. From competing voices within the Republican Party to the broader communication strategy of the administration, this episode unpacks the internal lenses through which the war is being viewed in Washington.The episode also touches on PEPFAR—the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief—a global initiative that has saved millions of lives and remains a key part of Bartlett’s professional legacy, offering a reminder of how American policy operates across both conflict and humanitarian domains. This is a conversation about power, perception, and the role of strategic communication in shaping the course of war.
Inside the Escalation

Inside the Escalation

2026-03-2246:00

The Polistratics Podcast W/ Nawaf Al-ThaniEpisode 2 - Inside the EscalationEpisode guest: Dr. Andreas KriegEpisode DescriptionIn Episode 2 of the Polistratics Podcast, Nawaf Al-Thani sits down with Dr. Andreas Krieg in the third week of the U.S.–Israel–Iran war to examine how this conflict is escalating and where it may lead next.Framed in part by the shadow of Lyndon B. Johnson’s escalation ladder in Vietnam, this conversation explores a familiar strategic danger: the slow, incremental slide from limited involvement into a wider war with no clear end state. What begins as calibrated pressure can, step by step, become entanglement.Together, they unpack the escalation ladder in real time: how tactical moves can produce strategic consequences, how deterrence can blur into provocation, and how miscalculation can accelerate a conflict beyond anyone’s original intent. The discussion also looks at how regional actors, alliance commitments, and domestic political pressures are shaping choices in Washington, Tel Aviv, and Tehran.At the center of the episode is a critical question: how can the United States avoid repeating the logic that trapped it in Vietnam? From signaling and force posture to political credibility and the risks of gradualism, this episode examines what restraint actually requires and what happens when leaders convince themselves they are still in control of events.This is a strategic conversation about escalation, entrapment, and the dangers of entering a war one rung at a time.
Inside The War

Inside The War

2026-03-1549:56

The Polistratics podcast -S1E1 - Inside The War:On the first episode of this limited-run podcast series, we speak with Professor David Des Roches, Senior Non-Resident Fellow at the Council on International Mediation.Professor Des Roches is also a professor at the Thayer Marshall Institute and a senior defense and security expert with more than three decades of experience spanning U.S. Army operations, Middle East and Gulf security policy, defense cooperation, and international affairs. His career combines operational experience in special operations and airborne command with senior roles in U.S. Department of Defense policy, academic research, and deep regional expertise across the Arabian Peninsula, the Levant, South Asia, and the Mediterranean littorals. He is widely recognized as an analyst, author, and educator on Gulf security, arms transfers, and stabilization issues.We spoke with him on Day 15 of the U.S.–Israel–Iran war to take a deeper look inside the conflict: the strategies, the tactics, the decisions shaping the battlefield, and the possible outcomes. Most importantly, we ask the question everyone is now asking—how, and when, does this war end?
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