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Gas prices don’t care about political talking points, and neither do missiles, shipping lanes, or hard deadlines on the battlefield. We sit down with Kyle Anzalone, opinion editor at Antiwar.com and news editor at the Libertarian Institute, to sort signal from noise as Ukraine slips off the front page and the Iran war dominates everything.
We start with the Ukraine ceasefire headlines and the scramble for credit around Victory Day. Kyle walks through how Russia and Ukraine announced their own unilateral pauses, how the timing mismatch fueled instant accusations, and why US media framing can turn a messy reality into a feel-good diplomatic story. From there we dig into why decorum and historical memory matter in negotiations, and why ignoring them makes off-ramps harder to find.
Then we shift to the Middle East: Iran’s posture on nuclear negotiations, sanctions relief, and the Strait of Hormuz, plus the problem of Lebanon as a dealbreaker. We pressure-test the claim that the US “doesn’t need” Hormuz against global energy markets, allies’ dependence, and the vulnerability of Fifth Fleet in Bahrain. Finally, we examine Israel’s expanded Hasbara spending and why propaganda may be accelerating the backlash it’s meant to stop.
If you want sharper context on US foreign policy, Iran sanctions, the Strait of Hormuz, and the Ukraine war narrative battle, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your take: what would a realistic off-ramp look like?
By Produced and Distributed by OMG Media Partners, LLC.Gas prices don’t care about political talking points, and neither do missiles, shipping lanes, or hard deadlines on the battlefield. We sit down with Kyle Anzalone, opinion editor at Antiwar.com and news editor at the Libertarian Institute, to sort signal from noise as Ukraine slips off the front page and the Iran war dominates everything.
We start with the Ukraine ceasefire headlines and the scramble for credit around Victory Day. Kyle walks through how Russia and Ukraine announced their own unilateral pauses, how the timing mismatch fueled instant accusations, and why US media framing can turn a messy reality into a feel-good diplomatic story. From there we dig into why decorum and historical memory matter in negotiations, and why ignoring them makes off-ramps harder to find.
Then we shift to the Middle East: Iran’s posture on nuclear negotiations, sanctions relief, and the Strait of Hormuz, plus the problem of Lebanon as a dealbreaker. We pressure-test the claim that the US “doesn’t need” Hormuz against global energy markets, allies’ dependence, and the vulnerability of Fifth Fleet in Bahrain. Finally, we examine Israel’s expanded Hasbara spending and why propaganda may be accelerating the backlash it’s meant to stop.
If you want sharper context on US foreign policy, Iran sanctions, the Strait of Hormuz, and the Ukraine war narrative battle, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your take: what would a realistic off-ramp look like?