423 episodes

Conversations about conflict on an angry planet. Created, produced, and hosted by Matthew Gault and Jason Fields
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Angry Planet Matthew Gault and Jason Fields

    • News
    • 4.6 • 101 Ratings

Conversations about conflict on an angry planet. Created, produced, and hosted by Matthew Gault and Jason Fields
781951
Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/warcollege.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    What Happens to the World When China and the U.S. ‘Face Off’?

    What Happens to the World When China and the U.S. ‘Face Off’?

    Go here to listen to Face-Off
    Jane Perlez is a veteran foreign correspondent, the former Bejing Bureau Chief for The New York Times, and host of the new podcast “Face-Off.” She’s on Angry Planet today to talk to us about the show and her experiences reporting on China. “Face-Off” is all about America’s complicated relationship with China. Perlez says she started the show because she was tired of the hysterical conversations she hears about Beijing in Washington.
    In this episode we learn …

    Why On the Beach is Perlez’s favorite nuclear war movie.
    What it’s like to visit China for the first time at the height of the Cultural Revolution.
    What “Communism” means in a country with a growing bourgeoisie.
    What it takes for someone to lead China.
    When Mao and Khrushchev Went Swimming
    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/warcollege.

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    • 1 hr 2 min
    The Origins of Haiti’s Gangs and What Comes Next

    The Origins of Haiti’s Gangs and What Comes Next

    Violence thrives in countries where political solutions to conflict have failed. On this episode of Angry Planet, Jeffsky Poincy comes on the show to walk us through the origins of Haiti’s gang problems and lay out the complicated history that gave rise to them.
    Poincy, who is Haitian, is a program manager at PartnersGlobal, an NGO that helps foster democratic conflict resolution. Poincy’s perspective on the violence in Haiti is that it will require complicated and lengthy political solutions. The gangs thrive, he says, because of their place in a complicated transnational criminal network. It’s a local problem that requires local solutions. A thousand Kenyan soldiers on the ground in the devastated country won’t provide long term relief. Real political change will.
    Recorded 4/5/24
    Angry Planet has a Substack! Join to get weekly insights into our angry planet and hear more conversations about a world in conflict.
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    • 44 min
    TEASER: Haiti. Life in Empire's Shadow

    TEASER: Haiti. Life in Empire's Shadow

    Sign up at angryplanetpod.com to get instant access to the full episode.

    Recorded 4/4/24
    The U.S. State Department has been working hard to get Americans out of Haiti. The island nation’s government is in shambles and gangs run much of the urban center of Port-au-Prince. Haitians have struggled for hundreds of years at the hands of gangs, brutal authoritarian dictators, and colonial rule. One of its biggest problems has always been its nearest Imperial neighbor: America.
    On this episode of Angry Planet, we get America’s side of the story. Keith Mines is the Vice President for Latin America at U.S. Institute of Peace. If you’ve never heard of the USIP, you aren’t alone. As Mines says in the show, it is bad at branding. Part of a Congressional initiative from 1984, the USIP was founded to pursue peaceful resolutions to worldwide conflict.
    Mines has a storied career of government service. He’s worked for the State Department and been all across the world. His unique point of view gives listeners a window into the mind of a member of the U.S. political establishment. Mines has a deep knowledge of Haiti and a deeper understanding of how badly America has screwed up its efforts to help.
    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/warcollege.

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    • 10 min
    TEASER: The Shockingly Sophisticated Arsenal of the Houthis

    TEASER: The Shockingly Sophisticated Arsenal of the Houthis

    Yemen has become a battlefield of technological firsts. The Houthis have turned the Red Sea into a proving ground for Iranian weapons, and Tehran is learning what works and what doesn’t. It’s become a place where the Khamenei and his crew can test new technologies and new strategies. It’s a win for Iran and a win for the Houthis in the short-term, but missiles on their own don’t win wars.
    On this bonus episode of Angry Planet, Fabian Hinz of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London comes on to tell us about the technological capabilities of the Houthis.
    Recorded on 3/21/24

    A quick and dirty history of the Houthi movementIts mysterious founderJason learns about lasersMatthew learns about Manhattan allergiesSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/warcollege.

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    • 11 min
    How Palantir Is Using AI in Ukraine

    How Palantir Is Using AI in Ukraine

    Defense contractors and governments can run a thousand simulations, but the data they get will never be as good as what’s generated on a battlefield. When Russia invaded Ukraine, tech companies saw an opportunity. A land war in Europe presented a unique chance to test cutting-edge technologies. That’s why, a few months after the 2022 invasion, Palantir CEO Alex Karp drove into the capital to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. 
    TIME Senior Correspondent Vera Bergengruen is here on Angry Planet to tell the story. She traveled to Ukraine herself to see how tech companies have turned the country into a test bed for AI and other advanced technologies. As the war grinds on, Kyiv is singing the praises of the companies that help keep it safe. But wars aren’t forever and what becomes of some of the more invasive technology like facial recognition when the fighting stops?
    How Tech Giants Turned Ukraine Into an AI War Lab
    A Palantir-published tech demo
    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/warcollege.

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    • 58 min
    TEASER: War Literature as Culture War Fodder

    TEASER: War Literature as Culture War Fodder

    Sign up at angryplanetpod.com to get instant access to the full episode.
    Writing, even fiction writing, about war provides a clear-eyed and honest view of conflict that the best movies and television shows can’t replicate. Civilians and soldiers on all sides of conflicts have always turned to poetry and prose to express feelings that are hard to articulate any other way. 
    On March 10, the literary magazine Guernica published a personal essay from British-Israeli writer Joannna Chen about the Israel-Hamas War. After a backlash to the essay that came from both inside and out, Guernica pulled the piece.
    “Guernica regrets having published this piece and has retracted it. A more fulsome explanation will follow,” the literary magazine published in place of the essay. As of this writing, that more fulsome explanation has not arrived.
    On this bonus episode of Angry Planet, author, journalist, and veteran Matt Galagher comes on to the show to walk us through the Guernica dustup and the importance of war writing. He talks to us about his recent trips to Ukraine, his relationship with the literary world, and his new novel: Daybreak. In Daybreak, Gallagher tells the story of American veterans who travel to Ukraine looking to fight a war that isn’t their own.
    Recorded on 3/14/24
    “From the Edges of a Broken World,” republished by Washington Monthly. 
    “Looking Back on the Spanish Civil War” by George Orwell
    Buy Daybreak here.
    Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/warcollege.

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    • 12 min

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5
101 Ratings

101 Ratings

Strikeslip ,

Great content, poor guest audio quality

Just tried listening to the Dresden episode. It sounded very interesting but the audio quality of the guest was so bad it was almost unlistenable! The guest sounded as if he was Skyping from the dark side of the moon. I’ve noticed this on more than one episode, regardless if I’m listening through headphones, Bluetooth speaker, or in my truck.

Pass by this podcast ,

Screen your guests

Kevin Knodell: join Toastmasters and learn how to speak professionally. EVERY sentence was peppered with uhm’s/ah’s. It makes you sound like you don’t know what you’re talking about. If you disagree with me, use Udely to convert voice to text of your session to see the many hundreds, if not thousand+ filler words. You’re hard to list to and can do so much better. I deleted the podcast 1/3 through - couldn’t take it anymore.

akadaver ,

Usually Great, Uneven Guests

Sad to say the latest episode with Dr. Jerry Hendrix might be nadir of the show thus far — naked MIC boosterism with little analysis or thought-provoking dialog between guests and host. Extremely disappointing.

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