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. 1 MAY

    We Burned Through Half Our Missiles in Seven Weeks... Now What?

    In the first 72 hours of Operation Epic Fury, the U.S. Navy fired roughly 400 Tomahawk cruise missiles into Iran. More than the total number produced over the previous five years. Seven weeks later, we'd burned through half our Patriot interceptors, half our THAAD missiles, 30% of our Tomahawks, and 45% of our precision strike missiles. The Pentagon is now asking for a 1,327% increase in Tomahawk procurement. And it takes 24 months to build a single one. So what does it actually mean to run out of bullets - and what happens next? Mike and Neal break down the real numbers behind America's munitions crisis, why the defense acquisitions system is so broken that a weapon built on 40-year-old technology somehow costs $2.6 million per shot, and what a startup-driven defense economy might actually look like. They also get into the part nobody's talking about: China is watching all of this very closely, and the stockpile we just burned through is the same one standing between Taiwan and a very bad day. Plus: the Iran war isn't ending anytime soon and the administration doesn't have the negotiators to close it, off-lease EVs just got shockingly affordable, and the White House Correspondents' Dinner shooting - why political violence is never the answer, full stop. And yes, they read the harshest listener comment they've ever received. MarkStuber4731, this one's for you! Got a take? Email us: hardpoints.show@gmail.com Follow Hardpoints wherever you get your podcasts.

    44 min
  2. 27 APR

    The AI That Taught Itself to Hack — And What Happens When China Gets It

    Anthropic built an AI so dangerous they refused to release it. Mythos taught itself to find vulnerabilities, chain them together, and take down entire systems — autonomously, in minutes. No human in the loop. No patch fast enough to stop it. By Anthropic's own assessment, left unchecked it could dismantle a Fortune 100 company and disrupt large parts of the internet before your IT team finishes their morning coffee. So instead of releasing it, they handed it to 12 companies — Apple, Google, Microsoft, JP Morgan, and yes, the NSA — under a classified program called Glasswing. The idea: give the defenders a head start before attackers get the same capability. Here's the problem. Dario Amodei, Anthropic's own CEO, says open-source Chinese models will hit Mythos-level capability in 6 to 12 months. This was never really a technology story. It's a geopolitical one — and we're not sure the people in charge are equipped to handle it. Mike and Neal break down what Mythos actually does, why your power grid is the most terrifying target on the map, and how AI-powered phishing attacks are already hitting small businesses with click-through rates that should scare the hell out of you. They also get into where the real startup opportunity lives inside all of this — because defense tech is about to have a moment, and the window won't stay open forever. Plus: California's battery grid quietly hits a landmark milestone, the data center bubble shows its first real cracks, and the goods, bads, and others — including Neal's travel hell, a birthday, and Mike's feelings about the Baltimore Orioles. This is the stuff that's actually shaping your world. Let's get into it. Got a take? Email us: hardpoints.show@gmail.com Follow Hardpoints wherever you get your podcasts.

    40 min
  3. 23 APR

    The Underwater War Nobody's Talking About

    95% of all international internet traffic — every email, financial transaction, and military communication crossing the ocean — runs through undersea cables that are almost entirely unguarded. Russia and China figured this out. And they're using it. - Why dragging an anchor across a cable is legal under international maritime law — and why that's exactly the point - A Swedish submarine commander's assessment from this week's NATO meeting: "We're not at peace, but we're not at war" - How the U.S. did this first in 1971 — Operation Ivy Bells — and why our Cold War underwater surveillance infrastructure (SOSUS) has since atrophied - Neal's Ramadi 2005-2006 insurgency parallel: why a smaller, nimbler force doesn't need to win, it just needs to be a pain in the butt - The asymmetric defense problem: cables are thousands of miles long, unbuilt for hardening, and one cut takes out the whole line - Where the startup opportunities actually are: undersea drone fleets, cheap mesh sensor networks, faster cable repair — and why NATO has money for this - Why distributed wind and solar might be the real answer to energy infrastructure security — and why Mike and Neal are already talking to the DoD about it Hardpoints is hosted by Mike Smith (CEO of Aclymate, former U.S. Navy FA-18 pilot) and Neal Rickner (CEO of Airloom, former Marine Corps FA-18 pilot). Every week: energy security, national security, and the startup economy.

    38 min
  4. 8 APR

    Ghosts in the Grid: China’s Sleeper Access, a Plan With No Plan, and America’s Energy Security Gap

    "This episode of Hardpoints tackles a threat that sounds hypothetical—but isn’t: Chinese military-linked operators are already inside parts of the U.S. power grid, quietly mapping systems, learning terrain, and waiting. Mike and Neal break down what the grid actually is (spoiler: not one single system, but a patchwork of 3,300 utilities, co-ops, regional operators, and vulnerable infrastructure), and why the distinction between IT systems and OT systems matters so much. They explain how modernization brought efficiency—smart meters, remote monitoring, digital control—but also opened doors that used to stay shut. Enter Volt Typhoon, the Chinese unit with the coolest name and one of the most chilling missions: not stealing data, but preparing the battlefield. The conversation gets into the real strategic implications: - Why grid access is less about theft and more about temporary denial of capability - How turning off power at the wrong moment could disrupt fueling, command and control, logistics, and military response in a Taiwan scenario - Why even a short disruption could cause civilian panic and economic paralysis far beyond the battlefield - What Ukraine and Russia have already shown us about cyber + physical attacks on critical infrastructure - And why replacing damaged grid hardware—especially transformers—is nowhere near as simple as flipping a switch They also go hard at the institutional failure behind it all: the federal office responsible for grid cybersecurity published its first strategic plan after six years of existence. Mike and Neal ask the obvious question: what exactly were they doing the whole time? And even where the goals sound right—hardening infrastructure, protecting defense-critical energy assets, improving energy delivery—the funding contradictions are glaring. Also in the episode: - A mailbag note on Iran, oil, EV adoption, and the politics of high gas prices - Goods, bads, and others: spring break anticipation, deep pessimism about the U.S. position in Iran, wildfire fears in Colorado, Neal’s new e-bike commute, podcast platform glitches now fixed, and the still-unfinished saga of SBIR reauthorization Hardpoints is the podcast about energy security in the startup economy—what’s changing, what it means, and why it matters."

    41 min
  5. 2 APR

    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

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.