Hardpoints

VALOR Media Network

Every week, former fighter pilots and current entrepreneurs Neal Rickner & Mike Smith provide unfiltered insights into the biggest stories in startups, energy, and national security.

  1. 3 HRS AGO

    Iran, China, Russia: The Oil Chessboard

    "In this episode of Hardpoints, Mike and Neal zoom out from the daily headlines to unpack the big geopolitical logic of oil war—and why the U.S. may be repeating one of history’s most dangerous patterns. Starting with the often-overlooked role the U.S. oil embargo played in pushing Japan toward Pearl Harbor, they ask a sharp question: when great powers weaponize energy, do they actually gain leverage—or just create the conditions for a bigger disaster? That history becomes the frame for the present. The U.S. is squeezing Iranian oil, seizing Venezuelan oil, and trying to contain Chinese access to energy flows—while at the same time easing pressure on Russian oil to keep prices from spiking at home. The result is a strategic picture that feels less like grand strategy and more like a contradiction machine: China gets pressured, but not panicked; Russia gets boxed in, then handed new revenue; and Iran keeps enough leverage to make the Strait of Hormuz a lasting pain point. Mike and Neal break down the central tension in plain English: energy is not just another commodity. It’s what militaries move on, what economies run on, and what gives states room to maneuver. That means embargoes and sanctions are never just financial tools—they are strategic pressure campaigns, and history shows that countries under extreme pressure do not always back down. Sometimes they lash out. Sometimes they adapt. Sometimes they find new partners and wait for you to blink first. The conversation then turns to China’s position, and why Beijing may be in better shape than many Americans realize. Thanks to years of aggressive investment in EVs, solar, wind, and industrial policy, China is less vulnerable to oil disruption than it would have been a decade ago. It still needs massive imports, but it has built more resilience, more domestic energy leverage, and more strategic patience. In Mike’s view, that means China can afford to let the U.S. absorb more of the economic and political pain while it waits for the right moment to tighten the leash on Iran—or not. From there, the discussion gets even more uncomfortable: is the U.S. accidentally helping Russia? By loosening pressure on Russian oil to manage domestic fuel prices, Washington may be helping refill the Kremlin’s war chest even as Russia continues its assault on Ukraine. Neal frames Ukraine as the key domino in the current global order: if the U.S. signals that borders can be changed by force and allies are conditional, the second- and third-order effects spread far beyond Eastern Europe. They also dig into what this means for Israel, Iran, and the wider Middle East. If this conflict doesn’t produce regime change in Tehran—and both hosts are skeptical that it will—then what exactly stabilizes? More Marines? More strikes? More sanctions? Or just a region that is now even harder to settle, with fewer off-ramps and more actors incentivized to keep the pressure on? Mike argues that the medium- and long-term picture looks bleak: the U.S. may have weakened Iran militarily in the short run, but at the cost of worsening its strategic position over time. The episode closes by widening the lens one more time. This is not just about oil prices, tankers, or one regional conflict. It is about whether the U.S. is giving up the role of global hegemony without admitting it, and whether China is quietly doing what rising powers do best: making fewer mistakes while the incumbent power burns energy, money, credibility, and lives. There’s also reader mail, some March Madness energy, baseball talk, weather weirdness, and a little catharsis about why Twitter still feels like voluntarily walking into a sewer. If you want an episode that connects history, energy markets, war, China, Russia, and America’s shrinking strategic discipline, this one does exactly that."

    44 min
  2. 25 MAR

    When War Planning Fails: The Iran School Strike

    In Episode 37, Mike and Neal tackle one of the darkest and most consequential questions to come out of the Iran strikes: who killed 175 schoolgirls at a girls’ elementary school near the Strait of Hormuz? Early official narratives tried to muddy the waters, but the evidence points to a grim possibility—a U.S.-made Tomahawk cruise missile hit the school three times. So how does something like that happen? Drawing on their firsthand military experience, Mike and Neal break down how a strike like this is actually planned. From the targeting cycle and collateral damage assessments, to prebuilt strike packages and Tomahawk mission planning, they explain the machinery behind modern warfare in terms normal people can actually follow. This is not abstract punditry—it’s two former military aviators walking through the process and showing where the chain may have broken down. The core of the conversation is accountability. If this was not intentional, then what failed? Was outdated intelligence pulled off the shelf? Was a military facility converted into a school without the targeting package being updated? Did planners miss obvious visual cues in overhead imagery that should have identified the site as civilian? Mike and Neal argue that while war is chaotic, this kind of mistake is still preventable—and the standard for the most capable military in the world has to be higher. They also get into the information war that followed. Why did the White House try to suggest Iran had somehow bombed its own school? Why do false narratives appear so quickly after high-casualty events? And what happens when political leaders default to spin instead of admitting error and learning from it? The episode draws a sharp line between the tragic fog of war and the refusal to tell the truth afterward. From there, the discussion widens to the broader campaign. Mike explains why Tomahawks were likely used early in the strikes before air superiority was established, and why stand-off weapons change the nature of target verification. Then the focus shifts to the Strait of Hormuz: if one of the Navy’s basic missions is to keep sea lanes open, why is the strait still effectively closed? The guys unpack the strategic incentives facing Iran, the limits of convoy operations, the risks to merchant shipping, and why neither markets nor navies can simply wave a wand and make global energy chokepoints safe again. The episode also includes reader mail, a quick debate over how long the Iran war may last, and the usual goods, bads, and others—from Neal dodging a DC trip for one more week, to Mike worrying that winter itself may be dying in the American West. This one is blunt, technical, and morally serious. If you want a grounded conversation about military targeting, strategic deception, accountability in war, and the real-world consequences of getting it wrong, Episode 37 is one of the heaviest Hardpoints conversations yet.

    36 min
  3. 18 MAR

    Operation Epic Fury: Iran Strikes, Hormuz Tightens, and the Old World Order Cracks

    In this episode of Hardpoints, Mike and Neal break down the opening days of a rapidly escalating war with Iran. Following Operation Epic Fury - coordinated U.S. and Israeli strikes targeting Iran’s nuclear sites, missile infrastructure, and regime leadership—the conflict expands across the region. As of March 2 (the recording date), Khamenei is dead, four American servicemembers have been killed, Iran is striking back against U.S. bases, and the fight is spilling into Lebanon. Neal (a former Iraq war pilot) and Mike (a former targeteer) walk through what most headlines miss: what daylight strike operations mean for risk, how air defenses and “pucker factor” shape the first hours, and why tactical dominance doesn’t automatically translate into strategic success. They dig into the hard questions: - If Iran built a deep succession bench, what does “regime change” even mean operationally? - Does the “80% oppose the regime” theory translate into action - or does pressure cause the population to rally around the flag? - What happens if there’s no viable alternative power structure and Iran slides toward failed-state chaos? - What does this conflict mean for the Strait of Hormuz, regional basing access, and global energy markets? - And what lessons are China and Russia drawing - especially as U.S. credibility and the post-WWII order feel increasingly fragile? The episode closes with a mailbag note on defending nuance in energy debates, plus goods/bads/others - from an 86-year-old father being honored for building community college foundations, to winter beach weather in February, to the U.S. government escalating pressure on Anthropic, and the accelerating reality of AI writing its own code - raising unsettling questions about where humanity fits in the intelligence spectrum as the world changes faster than we can absorb. Hardpoints is the podcast about energy security in the startup economy - what’s changing, what it means, and why it matters.

    48 min
  4. 18 MAR

    EPA Pulls the Jenga Block: The Endangerment Finding Falls and Climate Policy Enters a New Era of Uncertainty

    Episode 34 tackles a seismic shift in U.S. climate policy: the administration’s February 12 move to strike down the EPA’s 2009 Endangerment Finding—the legal foundation underpinning nearly every major federal climate regulation for the past 17 years. Mike and Neal break down what the Endangerment Finding actually did (and why it mattered), what its removal means for tailpipe rules, methane limits, power plant standards, and the broader regulatory framework—plus the real near-term impact: years of courtroom battles and massive uncertainty for businesses trying to plan, invest, and build. They debate whether this change will meaningfully alter emissions trajectories in the short term, why state-level leadership (and global market forces) may keep climate action moving anyway, and what this moment signals for founders and investors navigating climate and energy startups. Neal argues it’s a collective action gut-punch; Mike counters that it’s a reminder people and companies still have agency—and that “in spite of” can still drive progress. Also in this episode: A mailbag note from the drone world on “not invented here” culture—and why requiring a flight medical for FPV competition feels like innovation going backwards Goods, bads, and others: startup teams showing up on a Saturday, geopolitical posturing near Iran, Mike’s dog becoming his walking buddy, ICE warehouse spending, and why the accelerating pace of AI-written code has huge implications for careers, parenting, and the future

    38 min
  5. 18 MAR

    “No U.S. Parts”: Lessons from the Munich Security Conference

    Neal’s back from Munich with a ground-truth readout from the security ecosystem surrounding the Munich Security Conference—and the headline is simple: in Europe, Ukraine isn’t one topic among many. It’s the topic. Speaker after speaker, conversation after conversation, the tone is existential: how does Ukraine win, how does Europe sustain support, and what does the continent do if American leadership keeps wobbling? From there, the conversation widens into what might be the most uncomfortable “vibe shift” Neal heard in real time: a defense company pitching “secure supply chain” on a slide… and proudly listing “no U.S. parts” right alongside “no Chinese parts.” The guys unpack what that implies—trust, procurement risk, political whiplash, and the slow-motion reality that allies can’t build their security posture around a partner they can’t predict. They also dig into the major themes orbiting Munich: talk of strengthening a European pillar in defense, large-scale joint procurement, and the incentives (and resentment) that could drive Europe to build more capacity at home rather than defaulting to American primes forever. Then it gets even thornier: the push for AI governance in security, including the principle of humans in the loop for lethal decisions. Mike and Neal wrestle with the hard tradeoff—war rewards speed and tight OODA loops, and machines will always outpace people—so what would it take to make human-in-the-loop rules real instead of ceremonial? Are we headed toward a world of automated “murder TV” at scale, and if so, is there any realistic version of arms control that can slow it down? Finally, Munich’s lens expands beyond Europe: the Global South becomes a strategic battleground, especially as China’s Belt & Road investments build infrastructure, influence, and supply-chain leverage. And in a moment of peak irony, climate change gets elevated as a primary security threat—right as U.S. policy trends in the opposite direction. The episode wraps with listener mail (including a bleak emissions fact that hits hard), plus the weekly goods/bads/others: ski week plans get rained out, baseball hope springs eternal, and Aclymate feels like it’s catching a tailwind. If you’ve been looking for a clear, candid snapshot of how Europe is thinking about security right now—and what that means for alliances, defense industry, and the next phase of geopolitics—this one’s for you.

    46 min
  6. 18 MAR

    Drones, Darkness, and Disruption: Ukraine’s Energy War and the Startup Response

    Ukraine’s power grid has become a frontline target—and drones are the weapon of choice. In this episode of Hardpoints, Mike and Neal continue the new shorter-format series with a focused look at drone warfare, energy infrastructure, and the Ukraine defense startup surge. They break down how Russia’s winter missile-and-drone campaigns are designed to do more than destroy hardware—aiming instead for strategic pressure: cutting heat and power, degrading communications, and testing morale at national scale. From Mike’s experience in cruise missile targeting and “systems effects” thinking, the conversation explores how attacks on energy infrastructure ripple outward into command-and-control, intelligence exposure, and operational paralysis. Neal then connects the dots to the rapid innovation cycle happening inside Ukraine—where startups, specialized funding, and battlefield iteration are accelerating the drone/electronic-warfare cat-and-mouse game from months to days. They also debate what this means for the future of U.S. force structure—especially the role (and vulnerability) of high-value assets like aircraft carriers in an era of cheap, scalable drone threats. Plus: a new listener mailbag segment, a heartfelt tribute to John McCain’s legacy, and a candid “goods, bads, and others” close. Have thoughts or questions? Email hardpoints.show@gmail.com and you might hear it on a future episode.

    41 min
  7. 18 MAR

    $2.3 Trillion on the Table: Batteries, Power, and the New Energy Arms Race

    Global energy investment just hit $2.3 trillion—and batteries are at the center of it all. In this episode of Hardpoints, Mike and Neal kick off a new, tighter format by unpacking what that staggering number actually means for energy security, national competitiveness, and the startup economy. They dig into why battery technology has become critical infrastructure, how the Inflation Reduction Act reshaped (and didn’t fully reshape) the market, and why critical minerals now sit at the intersection of climate policy and national defense. The conversation spans: Why batteries are becoming as geopolitically important as oil The Trump administration’s critical minerals stockpile and what it gets right—and wrong Domestic mining vs. environmental protection Battery recycling, reuse, and the economics behind it China’s dominance in battery manufacturing and the CATL–Ford controversy National security risks hidden in battery firmware and supply chains How tariffs, regulatory uncertainty, and politics are slowing real progress The episode closes with reflections on current political unrest, civil liberties, and what it means when institutions fail to protect both security and democracy. As always, Hardpoints connects the dots between energy, national security, and the startup economy—cutting through headlines to explain what’s changing, why it matters, and what comes next. Have thoughts or questions? Email us at hardpoints.show@gmail.com and we may feature them in a future episode.

    36 min

About

Every week, former fighter pilots and current entrepreneurs Neal Rickner & Mike Smith provide unfiltered insights into the biggest stories in startups, energy, and national security.