Episode

Ep. 179: Iran — Two weeks in

Podcast
Australia in the World
Published
Mar 15, 2026
Duration seconds
2881
Processing state
not_requested
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https://australiaintheworld.podbean.com/e/ep-179-iran-%e2%80%94-two-weeks-in/
Audio
https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/t67ueu56dn24nhpc/AITW_ep_179.mp3
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/australia-in-the-world-335013/episodes/ep-179-iran-two-weeks-in
Markdown
/podcast/australia-in-the-world-335013/ep-179-iran-two-weeks-in.md

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Summary

Two weeks into the US-Israeli war on Iran, Darren uses Robert Pape's cost-benefit framework to assess where things stand. The tactical achievements are real — two-thirds of Iran's missile launchers destroyed, its navy sunk, its leadership decapitated — but the probability of converting those gains into durable strategic outcomes is low, and the costs are mounting fast. On the military side, interceptor stocks are being depleted at unsustainable rates, and missile defence assets may be being redeployed from South Korea in a move that achieves what Chinese coercion could not. Economically, Iran's effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz has triggered what may be the largest oil supply disruption in history, with cascading effects through gas, fertiliser, and food markets arriving at the worst possible moment in the agricultural calendar. Strategically, Russia is profiting, China is learning, Gulf allies are furious, and the non-proliferation incentive structure has been inverted. Darren assesses the range of plausible outcomes — from a painful but temporary shock to a nuclear-armed Iran within eighteen months — and examines the factors that will determine how the war ends, including US-Israel divergence, Trump's contradictory signals, and Iran's determination to ensure this is the last time it is attacked. He closes with an observation about weaponised interdependence: that a sanctioned middle power with cheap drones and a narrow strait has exposed the gap between America's capacity to destroy and its capacity to control. Australia in the World is written, hosted, and produced by Darren Lim, with research and editing this episode by Hannah Nelson and theme music composed by Rory Stenning. Relevant links Robert Pape, Bombing to win (1996): https://www.goodreads.com/book/…