CounterCheck Podcast

Ideas: Tested.

People and issues at the heart of the headlines, or that ought to be. From industry leaders and subject matter experts to former guerrilla fighters, army generals and civil society advocates, we want to know what’s happening, why it matters, and whether it all really adds up. countercheckpod.substack.com

Épisodes

  1. Battle for the Police

    9 AVR.

    Battle for the Police

    The Solomon Islands may not be the first location that you think of as a “theatre of strategic competition.” The tiny archipelagic nation, consisting of almost a thousand islands with a population of around 800,000 people, sits in the Pacific Ocean off the east coast of Papua New Guinea and about 2000km northeast of Australia. Yet the Solomon Islands has been a focal point of strategic competition between China and Australia as both countries seek to exert influence and win over the allegiance of this important foothold into the Pacific. Today we are talking to Gordon Peake who has spent most of his professional life working on-the-ground in the Pacific Islands. Gordon offers important insights into the challenges that the Solomon Islands have faced this century and the contrasting approaches of China and Australia in their efforts to build stronger bilateral ties with Honiara, and the complex and unforeseen legacies of well-intentioned interventions. Read Gordon’s latest analysis below and be sure to subscribe to his channel for more frontlines coverage from Antarctica, the Pacific Islands, and his many other journeys. Gordon’s Latest Work * ‘Hard to say who’s winning’: China and Australia battle for influence in Solomon Islands policing, The Guardian * Postcard from Solomon Islands: The legacy of RAMSI, The Interpreter * Our man in Honiara, DevPolicy Blog This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countercheckpod.substack.com

    24 min
  2. Terrorism Strikes Europe

    25 MARS

    Terrorism Strikes Europe

    As the war in Iran has escalated over the last few weeks, a spate of attacks has targeted both American government buildings and Jewish communities across Europe. On March 8th, an explosion struck the U.S. embassy in Oslo, leaving no casualties. Norwegian police later said they were investigating whether the attack was carried out on behalf of a foreign government. The next day, on March 9th, an explosion hit a synagogue in the city of Liege in Belgium, causing significant damage to the temple and surrounding buildings. The Belgian government has since deployed soldiers to reinforce security at Jewish sites across the country. Later that week, on March 13th, a synagogue in the Dutch city of Rotterdam was also targeted in an arson attack. The following day, an explosion targeted a Jewish school in Amsterdam, and is being investigated by Dutch authorities for possible Iranian involvement. And, just a few days ago on March 23rd, four ambulances belonging to a Jewish community charity in London were set on fire in another arson attack. British counter-terrorism police are reportedly leading the investigation. This followed news that two Iranian men were arrested and charged in the UK with alleged surveillance of Jewish targets on behalf of Iran. A new group calling itself Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia, or The Islamic Movement of the Companions of the Righteous, has since claimed responsibility for these attacks. The group’s social media activity is reportedly directed through channels linked to militia groups aligned with Iran and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the IRGC. However, it is still unclear what formal connections this group has, if any, to Iran and its proxies. What is clear is that further escalation in the Iran war is likely to produce more plots and violence in coming days and weeks, with local communities paying the price. We spoke to former US counterterrorism official Michael Jacobson about how the United States led global efforts to counter precisely these types of terrorist threats for years. Mike oversaw the international coordination and planning wing of the U.S. Department of State’s Counterterrorism Bureau until 2025. Since then, the Trump administration has withdrawn the United States from several international counterterrorism organizations earlier this year. We spoke with Mike about the impacts of this decision, and how the United States went from a position of global counterterrorism leadership, to a position of leadership in decline. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countercheckpod.substack.com

    3 min
  3. Road to War: Four Key Milestones in US-Iran Relations

    23 MARS

    Road to War: Four Key Milestones in US-Iran Relations

    On 28 February 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated military strikes on the Islamic Republic of Iran. In Operation Epic Fury’s first 72hours, United States Central Command reported that over 1,700 targets had been struck in the most significant US military operation in the Middle East since the Iraq war. As the war enters its fourth week, it is clear that Iran’s military capabilities have been significantly weakened, and many of Iran’s most senior military, intelligence and security leaders – including Iran’s Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – have been killed. Yet, so far, there have been no major defections from either Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (the IRGC) or from Iran’s Army (known as the Artesh). Iran’s missile and drone attacks across the region have also continued and its proxies, such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, may increasingly attempt to mobilise in Iran’s defence. It is too early for predictions that Iran’s theocratic regime is on the verge of surrender. Instead, let’s pause and look back at the history of US-Iran relations. That context is important for not only understanding how we got to this point but it’s also useful for thinking about how things may play out in the coming weeks and months. The history of US-Iran relations since World War II is extraordinarily complex and tumultuous. But there are events that, in important practical and symbolic ways, capture the broad trendlines that have characterised different phases in that relationship. So, here are four milestones in the history of US-Iran Relations that can help us to better understand the present. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countercheckpod.substack.com

    10 min
  4. The US, Iran, and the Future of American Counterterrorism

    11 MARS

    The US, Iran, and the Future of American Counterterrorism

    For much of the quarter century since al-Qaida’s attacks on New York and Washington DC on September 11, 2001, counterterrorism has been the top national security and foreign policy priority for the United States. US leadership has been central to global efforts to confront terrorist threats, but, like so many aspects of US domestic and foreign policy, that has changed under the second Trump administration. We sat down with Michael Jacobson - senior fellow in The Washington Institute for Near East Policy’s Jeanette and Eli Reinhard Program on Counterterrorism and Intelligence. Mike’s professional career has been almost entirely spent working in counterterrorism roles for the US government, including in the US State Department’s Counterterrorism Bureau from 2010-2025, the US Treasury Department’s office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, the 9-11 Commission, and in the FBI. Under the second Trump administration, the United States has fundamentally transformed how it engages with the world. On counterterrorism, where the United States has traditionally adopted a central leadership role globally for well-over two decades, that is changing too. Here we talk to Mike Jacobson about the pivot in US policy that has probably received less attention but it’s a policy area with major implications for global security and stability. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countercheckpod.substack.com

    25 min

À propos

People and issues at the heart of the headlines, or that ought to be. From industry leaders and subject matter experts to former guerrilla fighters, army generals and civil society advocates, we want to know what’s happening, why it matters, and whether it all really adds up. countercheckpod.substack.com