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Today, Morgan, Jamil, Les, and Andy examine Russia's deepening involvement with Iran as Moscow's list of reliable partners shrinks. With Assad ousted from Syria, Maduro sidelined, and Cuba caught in an American vice grip, Russia is losing friends fast. Russia and Iran have exchanged weapons, intelligence, and military technology — including Iranian drones now being built in Russia and provided back to Iran. Meanwhile, Russia has reportedly positioned itself for short-term economic gains in Iran's energy sector, even as the war with Ukraine grinds on.
How sustainable is America's strategy of isolating Russia? Can Russia be trusted as an ally to anyone, given its pattern of abandoning partners when it becomes inconvenient? Is Russia's relationship with Iran a genuine strategic alignment or simply a marriage of convenience that will fracture under pressure?
Check out the answers to these questions and more in this episode of Fault Lines.
@morganlroach
@lestermunson
@jamil_n_jaffer
@andykeiser
Like what we're doing here?
Be sure to rate, review, and subscribe.
And don't forget to follow @faultlines_pod and @masonnatsec on Twitter!
We are also on YouTube; watch today's episode here: https://youtu.be/bLxROWvvkd4
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By National Security Institute4.4
4141 ratings
Today, Morgan, Jamil, Les, and Andy examine Russia's deepening involvement with Iran as Moscow's list of reliable partners shrinks. With Assad ousted from Syria, Maduro sidelined, and Cuba caught in an American vice grip, Russia is losing friends fast. Russia and Iran have exchanged weapons, intelligence, and military technology — including Iranian drones now being built in Russia and provided back to Iran. Meanwhile, Russia has reportedly positioned itself for short-term economic gains in Iran's energy sector, even as the war with Ukraine grinds on.
How sustainable is America's strategy of isolating Russia? Can Russia be trusted as an ally to anyone, given its pattern of abandoning partners when it becomes inconvenient? Is Russia's relationship with Iran a genuine strategic alignment or simply a marriage of convenience that will fracture under pressure?
Check out the answers to these questions and more in this episode of Fault Lines.
@morganlroach
@lestermunson
@jamil_n_jaffer
@andykeiser
Like what we're doing here?
Be sure to rate, review, and subscribe.
And don't forget to follow @faultlines_pod and @masonnatsec on Twitter!
We are also on YouTube; watch today's episode here: https://youtu.be/bLxROWvvkd4
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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