Conflict Uncovered with Elliot Chodoff (Another Rough Day in the Middle East)

Eitan Rosenfeld

Welcome to ”Conflict Uncovered,” hosted by renowned military and strategic analyst Elliot Chodoff. This podcast delves deep into the complex and often misunderstood conflicts in the Middle East, providing listeners with a comprehensive understanding of the region’s current events and historical contexts. Episode Formats: Current Events Episodes: Stay informed with our timely updates and analyses of the latest developments in Gaza, Lebanon, and beyond. Elliot Chodoff offers expert insights into the ongoing conflicts, military strategies, and geopolitical shifts that shape the Middle East toda

  1. 2d ago

    Ep 58: June 18th, 2026: Why Western Negotiators Misread Iran

    Episode Description In this episode of Conflict Uncovered, Elliot Chodoff examines the strategic and ideological problems at the heart of negotiations with Iran. The discussion focuses on a recurring failure in Western diplomacy: treating agreements as if both sides understand truth, obligation, compromise, and long-term interest in the same way. Iran’s regime does not approach negotiations like a normal state seeking stable coexistence. It operates from an ideological framework in which deception, delay, ambiguity, and tactical concessions can serve long-term revolutionary goals. That does not mean diplomacy is meaningless. It means diplomacy becomes dangerous when negotiators ignore the nature of the regime across the table. Elliot explores how Western assumptions about agreements, verification, incentives, and trust often break down when applied to a regime that views negotiations as another arena of conflict. The issue is not simply whether Iran signs a deal. The issue is what Iran believes a deal is for. The episode also looks at the historical temptation to believe that adversaries can be moderated through paper agreements, economic incentives, or diplomatic recognition. From Munich to later arms-control failures, history shows that agreements with ideological regimes are only as strong as the enforcement mechanisms behind them. At the center of the conversation is a hard question: what happens when one side sees diplomacy as a path to peace, while the other sees it as a tool for buying time, gaining legitimacy, and advancing its strategic position? This episode is for listeners interested in Iran, U.S. foreign policy, Israel’s security concerns, nuclear negotiations, deterrence, diplomatic failure, and the deeper cultural and ideological assumptions that shape international conflict. Show Notes In this episode of Conflict Uncovered, Elliot Chodoff analyzes the risks built into Western negotiations with Iran, especially when diplomats assume that the Iranian regime shares Western ideas about compromise, credibility, and the purpose of agreements. The episode argues that the core problem is not only technical — centrifuges, inspections, sanctions, cyber violations, or enrichment levels. Those matter. But the deeper problem is strategic and ideological: Iran’s regime has repeatedly treated negotiations as a means of preserving options, exploiting ambiguity, and advancing long-term objectives while reducing pressure in the short term. Main Themes Why Western negotiators often misread Iran’s intentions The difference between a normal diplomatic agreement and a tactical pause How ideological regimes use ambiguity, delay, and deception Why verification matters more than promises The danger of assuming Iran wants stability in the same way the West does The role of nuclear negotiations in Iran’s broader regional strategy How historical analogies like Munich still shape debates over appeasement and deterrence Why agreements without enforcement can become strategic cover The problem of projecting Western political logic onto a revolutionary regime What flawed Iran diplomacy means for Israel, the United States, and regional security In This Episode Elliot examines the gap between Western diplomatic culture and the strategic culture of the Iranian regime. In Western politics, an agreement is often treated as a sign of progress: a framework for trust, gradual normalization, and mutual benefit. But with Iran, an agreement may function very differently. It can reduce pressure, divide opponents, create time, preserve infrastructure, and generate international legitimacy without requiring a real change in long-term objectives. The discussion also addresses deception as a strategic tool. Iran’s regime has a long record of concealment, denial, and selective compliance. That record matters because arms-control agreements are not judged by the elegance of their language. They are judged by whether violations are detected, punished, and prevented from becoming irreversible. Elliot also looks at the Western tendency to believe that adversaries can be moderated by incentives. Economic relief, diplomatic engagement, and international recognition may influence behavior, but they do not automatically change ideology. When a regime’s legitimacy is tied to revolutionary goals, hostility toward Israel, regional influence, and opposition to the United States, negotiation alone cannot be assumed to transform its strategic identity. The episode frames Iran diplomacy as a test of realism. The question is not whether diplomacy should exist. The question is whether diplomacy is being used with clear eyes, hard verification, credible consequences, and an accurate understanding of the regime involved. Key Questions Why do Western negotiators repeatedly assume Iran will behave like a normal state actor? What does Iran gain from negotiations even when it does not fully comply? How can ambiguity in agreements benefit the side willing to cheat? Why are inspections and enforcement more important than diplomatic language? What lessons should policymakers draw from past negotiations with ideological regimes? How does Iran’s worldview shape its approach to nuclear talks? What are the risks for Israel if the West misreads Iran’s intentions? Can diplomacy work without credible deterrence behind it?

    33 min
  2. Jun 9

    Ep 57: June 9, 2026 The Long Road to Oct 7 Part 7

    The Long Road to Oct 7, Part 7 Gaza, Disengagement, and the Limits of Defensive Thinking Episode Description In Part 7 of The Long Road to Oct 7, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan continue tracing the strategic path that led to October 7 by focusing on Gaza, disengagement, and the assumptions that shaped Israeli security thinking in the early 2000s. This episode looks at the period between the Second Intifada, the Gaza disengagement, and the gradual transformation of Israel’s defense posture. The discussion is not about one missed warning or one failed unit. It is about the deeper strategic pattern: Israel increasingly tried to reduce friction, shrink its military footprint, rely on barriers and technology, and manage hostile territory from the outside. Elliot and Zev examine how the Oslo process, the collapse of Camp David, the violence of the Second Intifada, and the Gaza withdrawal all fed into a larger security dilemma. Israel wanted to reduce exposure and lower the cost of controlling Gaza. But the withdrawal also created new operational problems: less intelligence presence on the ground, fewer points of direct control, a heavier reliance on perimeter defense, and a growing belief that threats could be contained rather than defeated. The episode also digs into the IDF’s shrinking force structure and the pressure placed on active-duty and reserve units during the early 2000s. Israel faced multiple fronts, terrorism, Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, and a changing regional threat environment, while also trying to become more efficient. That push for efficiency created hard tradeoffs. A leaner army may look smarter on paper, but it has less margin when a crisis breaks the model. A central theme is the danger of projecting your own logic onto your enemy. Israeli leaders often assumed that adversaries wanted stability, economic improvement, or political compromise in ways that mirrored Israeli priorities. But Hamas and other actors operated from a different worldview, with different incentives and a different definition of success. This episode connects Gaza disengagement to the broader road to October 7: the shrinking of Israeli control, the weakening of conventional readiness, the rise of defensive assumptions, and the belief that a hostile enemy could be managed behind fences, sensors, and periodic operations. Show Notes In this episode of Conflict Uncovered, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan continue their series on the road to October 7 by examining Gaza, the legacy of Oslo, the Second Intifada, the 2005 disengagement, and the IDF’s changing force posture in the early 2000s. The episode focuses on how Israeli security policy evolved from direct control and forward presence toward separation, perimeter defense, technological monitoring, and periodic military action. Elliot and Zev argue that this shift reduced some immediate burdens but also created long-term vulnerabilities. Main Themes Why October 7 cannot be understood only as an intelligence failure How Oslo and the failed peace process shaped later Gaza policy The relationship between the Second Intifada and Israeli security assumptions Why the Gaza disengagement created new strategic and operational dilemmas The danger of projecting Israeli assumptions onto Hamas and other adversaries How withdrawal reduced friction but also reduced direct control The IDF’s shrinking force structure in the early 2000s The strain placed on active-duty and reserve forces Why efficiency can become dangerous when it reduces military depth How defensive systems can create a false sense of containment The link between Gaza policy, border defense, and the road to October 7 In This Episode Elliot and Zev begin by placing October 7 inside a longer historical sequence. They look at the years after Oslo, the breakdown of negotiations, the violence of the Second Intifada, and the strategic choices Israel faced in Gaza. The discussion then turns to disengagement. Leaving Gaza was not only a political decision. It changed Israel’s military geometry. The IDF no longer operated inside Gaza in the same way. The intelligence picture changed. The border became more important. Defensive systems, surveillance, barriers, and rapid-response assumptions carried more weight. The episode also examines the practical limits of Israeli military capacity at the time. Israel was dealing with Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, terrorism, reserve mobilization pressures, and a changing regional environment. The IDF was being asked to cover more with less, while political and military leaders pushed for efficiency and reduced force size. A major point in the conversation is that strategy cannot be built on what you want your enemy to want. Israeli thinking often assumed that adversaries would respond to incentives in predictable, rational, state-like ways. Hamas did not necessarily define rationality, victory, or cost the same way. By the end of the episode, Gaza disengagement appears not as an isolated policy choice, but as part of a larger pattern: fewer troops, less direct control, more reliance on barriers, more dependence on technology, and growing confidence that hostile territory could be managed from the outside.

    34 min
  3. Jun 7

    Ep 56: June 7, 2026 The Long Road to Oct 7 Part 6

    In this episode of Conflict Uncovered, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan continue their series on the long road to October 7 by looking at the period from Israel’s Lebanon withdrawal through the Second Intifada and into the security-barrier era. The conversation focuses on how Israeli leaders, the public, and the defense establishment interpreted withdrawal, deterrence, terrorism, and defensive infrastructure. It also examines how those interpretations shaped later assumptions about Gaza. Main Themes Israel’s withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000 and its long-term consequences How Hezbollah interpreted Israeli withdrawal The failure of the “security zone” concept in southern Lebanon The outbreak of the Second Intifada after failed diplomacy The rise of suicide bombings and mass-casualty terrorism How 9/11 changed global perceptions of terrorism The copycat effect in terrorist strategy The strengths and limits of Israel’s security barrier Why fences can reduce attacks without solving the underlying threat The difference between tactical protection and strategic victory How defensive thinking influenced later policy toward Gaza The danger of confusing containment with security In This Episode Elliot and Zev begin with the end of Israel’s presence in southern Lebanon. The withdrawal was popular among many Israelis, who saw Lebanon as a draining and open-ended conflict. But the regional interpretation was more complicated. Hezbollah presented the withdrawal as proof that Israel could be worn down through persistent pressure. The episode then turns to the Second Intifada, the failed peace process, and the eruption of organized violence against Israeli civilians. Elliot and Zev discuss how suicide bombings changed Israeli security thinking and pushed the country toward aggressive counterterror operations and physical separation. The discussion also places 9/11 inside the broader evolution of terrorist tactics. The point is not that 9/11 caused the Israeli-Palestinian terror war, but that mass-casualty terrorism became part of a global strategic vocabulary. Terrorist organizations observed each other, copied each other, and learned how spectacle, fear, and media attention could multiply the effect of violence. A central section of the episode deals with barriers. Israel’s security barrier helped reduce certain types of attacks, especially suicide bombings. But the episode argues that barriers can also distort thinking. They can make a threat feel managed even when the enemy is adapting, rearming, and preparing for the next method of attack. That lesson becomes especially important in the context of Gaza. The belief that withdrawal, fencing, surveillance, and deterrence could contain the threat became one of the assumptions later exposed on October 7.

    30 min
  4. May 18

    Ep 55: May 15, 2026: The Long Road to October 7 Part 5

    The Long Road to Oct 7, Part 5 Technology, Mass, and the Limits of the “Small Smart Army” Episode Description In Part 5 of The Long Road to Oct 7, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan examine one of the central assumptions behind modern Israeli military planning: that a smaller, leaner, more technologically advanced force could replace the need for mass, depth, and redundancy. For decades, Israel moved toward a model built around elite units, precision intelligence, airpower, surveillance, advanced sensors, and rapid response. The logic was clear: technology would compensate for size, shorten wars, reduce casualties, and allow Israel to do more with less. But October 7 exposed the limits of that approach. A military can be highly advanced and still be vulnerable if its systems are too thin, too centralized, too optimized, or too dependent on assumptions that the enemy has already learned to exploit. This episode looks at the tension between technology and mass in modern warfare. Elliot and Zev discuss how budget cuts, efficiency reforms, and confidence in high-tech capabilities reshaped Israel’s force structure over time. They also explore why older military realities never disappeared: territory still has to be held, borders still have to be defended, soldiers still have to arrive in time, and low-tech tactics can still defeat expensive systems when used intelligently. The conversation also places Israel’s experience in a wider strategic context, including parallels with American post-Cold War military thinking. After decades of technological dominance, many Western militaries came to believe that information, precision, and speed could reduce the need for large formations and conventional depth. The battlefield has repeatedly challenged that belief. This is not an argument against technology. It is an argument against technological overconfidence. Drones, sensors, cyber capabilities, precision weapons, and intelligence platforms matter enormously. But they do not eliminate friction, surprise, manpower, logistics, or the enemy’s ability to adapt. Part 5 asks a hard question: did Israel build a military optimized for the wars it preferred to fight, while becoming less prepared for the kind of war its enemies were preparing to launch? Show Notes In this episode of Conflict Uncovered, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan continue their series on the long road to October 7 by examining Israel’s reliance on technology, efficiency, and the concept of a smaller, smarter army. The discussion focuses on how advanced military systems can create both strength and vulnerability. Technology can increase precision, awareness, and speed, but it can also create dangerous dependency when leaders assume it can replace manpower, readiness, logistics, and conventional military depth. Main Themes The promise and limits of a small, high-tech military How budget cuts and efficiency thinking reshaped Israeli defense planning Why technology cannot fully replace mass, depth, and redundancy The danger of assuming advanced systems will always work under pressure How enemies adapt to high-tech militaries with low-tech tactics Why large formations and ground forces still matter in modern war The relationship between Israeli military thinking and American post-Cold War doctrine How October 7 exposed gaps between technological confidence and battlefield reality The difference between innovation and overreliance Why resilient militaries need both advanced systems and old-fashioned capacity In This Episode Elliot and Zev explore how Israel’s defense establishment increasingly leaned into the idea that technology could offset size. Surveillance systems, intelligence platforms, precision weapons, elite units, and rapid-response assumptions became central to the country’s security model. That model had real advantages. It made Israel faster, more precise, and more capable in many types of operations. But it also created vulnerabilities. When a system is built to be lean, it often has less slack. When it is built around technology, it can become brittle if that technology is disrupted, bypassed, overwhelmed, or misunderstood. The episode also examines the role of adversary adaptation. Enemies do not stand still. They study the system, look for seams, and develop ways to neutralize expensive advantages with cheaper tools. In that environment, low-tech methods can become strategically powerful. A key part of the discussion is the continuing importance of mass. Modern warfare may be shaped by drones, sensors, and precision weapons, but wars are still fought in physical space. Armies still need troops, vehicles, reserves, logistics, command structures, and the ability to absorb shock. A force that is too small or too optimized may perform well in controlled operations but struggle when the battlefield becomes chaotic. The episode also connects Israel’s experience to broader Western military trends. After the Cold War, the United States and other advanced militaries often emphasized speed, precision, and networked warfare. Those tools remain critical, but recent conflicts have shown that technology does not remove the need for scale, endurance, and redundancy. Key Questions Can a small, technologically advanced army replace the need for military mass? Where does efficiency become a liability in national defense? How did Israeli military planning become shaped by confidence in sensors, intelligence, and rapid response? What happens when adversaries learn how to bypass or overwhelm advanced systems? Why do older military fundamentals still matter in the age of drones and precision weapons? Did Israel become optimized for limited operations at the expense of full-scale readiness? What does October 7 reveal about the risks of technological overconfidence?

    35 min
  5. May 8

    Ep 54: May 8th 2026: The Long Road to October 7 Part 4

    The Long Road to October 7, Part 4 Systemic Failure, Strategic Complacency, and the Illusion of Readiness Episode Description In Part 4 of The Long Road to October 7, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan continue examining how Israel reached one of the most catastrophic security failures in its history. This episode moves beyond the question of what happened in the final hours before the attack and focuses on the deeper issue: how a military and intelligence system with decades of battlefield experience became vulnerable to a failure of this scale. The conversation looks at October 7 as the result of accumulated systemic decay rather than a single bad decision. Elliot and Zev discuss how decades of relative conventional quiet, peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan, counterterrorism routines, political assumptions, and efficiency-driven reforms changed the way Israel thought about war. The IDF remained active, but activity is not the same as readiness. Managing borders, running operations, and maintaining deterrence are not the same as preparing the whole system for large-scale war. A central theme of the episode is the difference between appearing prepared and being prepared. Large organizations often measure what is easy to count: budgets, personnel structures, equipment inventories, exercises completed, procedures followed. But war tests what cannot be faked: command judgment, logistics, training quality, operational memory, leadership under pressure, and the ability of different systems to work together when the assumptions collapse. Elliot and Zev also explore the psychological and cultural factors that shaped Israeli decision-making before October 7, including confirmation bias, groupthink, institutional confidence, and the tendency to interpret new threats through old frameworks. The failure was not simply technical. It was cultural, organizational, and strategic. The episode draws comparisons to other military systems, including lessons from World War II and the development of American military leadership, to ask a harder question: how does an army preserve professional competence when it is not being tested by the kind of war it may eventually have to fight? This is not an episode about conspiracy theories or individual scapegoats. It is about how successful institutions can become brittle, how peace can create dangerous habits, and how national security failures often begin years before the crisis itself. Show Notes In this episode of Conflict Uncovered, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan continue their series on the long road to October 7 by examining the systemic failures that accumulated inside Israel’s defense establishment over decades. The discussion focuses on how readiness erodes when a military shifts from preparing for major war to managing a long-term security routine. The episode explores how peace treaties, political assumptions, efficiency measures, weakened exercises, logistics gaps, and institutional culture all contributed to a false sense of security. Main Themes October 7 as a systemic failure, not a one-day failure How strategic complacency developed over decades The difference between military activity and true wartime readiness Why peace treaties changed Israel’s threat perception How efficiency measures can weaken combat effectiveness The decline of large-scale exercises and full-system readiness testing The role of logistics in national defense Why successful institutions often become overconfident Confirmation bias, groupthink, and institutional blind spots Lessons from World War II military leadership and professional development Why blaming individuals alone misses the deeper organizational problem In This Episode Elliot and Zev examine the failure of Israel’s security system in the hours leading into October 7, while placing that failure inside a much longer historical pattern. They argue that the disaster cannot be understood only through intelligence warnings, missed signals, or last-minute decisions. Those matter, but they sit on top of a deeper structure. The episode looks at the way Israel’s military posture changed after decades without a major conventional war. Peace with Egypt and Jordan reduced the likelihood of the kind of multi-front armored conflict that had defined earlier Israeli military planning. At the same time, Israel became increasingly focused on counterterrorism, border control, deterrence, and limited operations. That shift created a new problem: the IDF was constantly active, but not necessarily training and organizing for the worst-case scenario. Over time, large-scale readiness, logistics planning, reserve competence, and full-system exercises became easier to neglect. A key part of the conversation is the distinction between efficiency and effectiveness. Efficiency asks whether a system is lean, cost-controlled, and administratively clean. Effectiveness asks whether it can fight, move, supply, command, adapt, and survive under real pressure. October 7 exposed the danger of confusing the two. The episode also addresses the psychological side of failure. Institutions do not only fail because people lack information. They fail because they interpret information through assumptions. Confirmation bias, groupthink, professional culture, political expectations, and previous success can all make warning signs easier to explain away.

    32 min
  6. May 1

    Ep 53: May 1, 2026: The Long Road to October 7- Pt 3

    Reserves, Logistics, and the Cost of Peacetime Thinking Episode Description In this episode of Conflict Uncovered, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan continue tracing the long institutional road that led to October 7. The focus shifts from intelligence failure as a single event to the deeper military systems that had been weakening for decades: reserves, logistics, training, professional standards, and the slow corrosion that sets in when an army spends too long preparing for the wrong kind of war. The discussion begins with the Israeli reserve system, once one of the IDF’s greatest strategic advantages. In Israel’s early wars, reserve forces gave the country depth, scale, and flexibility that a small standing army could not provide on its own. But over time, the same system became harder to maintain. Reduced training, shifting threat perceptions, and budgetary choices all changed the relationship between readiness on paper and readiness in reality. Elliot and Zev also examine the development of Israel’s armored corps, including the role of figures like Israel Tal in professionalizing tank warfare. What appears inevitable in hindsight was often the result of individual initiative, hard-won experience, and the gradual institutionalization of practices that did not exist at the beginning. The episode then moves into the post-1982 era, when Israel entered a long period without the same kind of large-scale conventional war that had defined its earlier decades. Peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan changed the strategic landscape. So did counterterrorism, border security, and lower-intensity operations. The IDF remained active, but the nature of its activity changed. That shift created a dangerous illusion: that a military can remain sharp without repeatedly testing the full system under wartime strain. A central theme of the episode is the difference between efficiency and effectiveness. In peacetime, organizations often reward clean metrics, lean processes, and budget discipline. In war, what matters is whether ammunition, equipment, manpower, vehicles, communications, and command structures actually work when everything is under pressure. October 7 exposed what happens when bureaucratic efficiency is mistaken for combat readiness. This is not a conspiracy story. It is a systems story. It is about how militaries drift, how logistics decay, how professional standards become uneven, and how an army with a record of success can still carry unresolved weaknesses into the next war. For listeners interested in military history, Israeli security, organizational failure, or the gap between reputation and readiness, this episode offers a detailed look at the institutional problems that shaped Israel’s response before and after October 7.

    35 min
  7. Apr 28

    Ep 52: April 28, 2026: The Long Road to October 7 Part 2

    War is not just a sequence of violent events. It is a condition, a structure, and a long-term contest of will, power, and organization. In this episode, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan go beyond the headlines to examine what war actually is and why misunderstanding its nature leads to bad analysis, weak preparation, and dangerous assumptions. Using Israel’s military history as a case study, they trace the evolution of war from 1948 to the present, showing how conflict can persist for decades even when large-scale combat is absent. The discussion unpacks the difference between conflict and war, between open fighting and an ongoing state of hostility, and between dramatic battlefield moments and the deeper institutional realities that determine whether an army is ready when the moment of truth arrives. Elliot and Zev explore how Israel, a state born without a long-standing military tradition, had to build an army under extreme pressure. In its early decades, the IDF developed through necessity, improvisation, and battlefield experience more than through formal doctrine or professional continuity. That approach produced resilience and adaptability, but it also left behind structural weaknesses that became harder to ignore over time. The episode examines how those weaknesses deepened in the decades that followed, especially from the 1980s onward, as continuity eroded, professional development weakened, and organizational gaps widened. It also looks at the unique nature of Israel’s “people’s army,” and how that model shapes leadership, training, readiness, and military culture in ways that differ sharply from more professionalized systems like the U.S. military. This is not just a discussion about Israel. It is a broader examination of how armies evolve, how institutions drift, and how nations prepare for the kind of wars they expect while remaining vulnerable to the wars they actually get. To understand October 7, you have to understand not only intelligence failures or tactical mistakes, but the deeper question of what war is and how states convince themselves they are prepared for it. For anyone interested in military history, strategy, organizational failure, or the long arc of Israeli security thinking, this episode offers a serious and nuanced look at the realities behind modern conflict. Topics covered The difference between conflict and war War as a long-term state, not just a battlefield event How Israel’s military developed from 1948 onward The role of improvisation, experience, and battlefield adaptation in the early IDF Organizational weaknesses that emerged over time The impact of continuity, leadership, and doctrine on military readiness How Israel’s “people’s army” differs from the U.S. military model Why understanding the nature of war is essential to understanding October 7

    37 min
  8. Apr 26

    Ep 51: April 26, 2026: The Long Road to October 7, Part 1

    Most people misunderstand the story behind October 7 not because they lack intelligence, but because they are looking in the wrong place. The roots of the failure run far deeper than a single day, a single decision, or a single intelligence breakdown. In this episode, Elliot Chodoff and Zev Uslan examine the organizational culture, military assumptions, and historical patterns that helped set the stage for one of the most devastating failures in Israeli history. The conversation traces these problems back to the pre-state period, exploring how the legacy of the Palmach and the early militia culture shaped Israel’s military identity. What began as a survival-driven ethos of improvisation, boldness, and ideological commitment also carried hidden costs. Over time, those strengths hardened into institutional habits, myths, and blind spots that continued to influence the IDF long after the state was established. Elliot and Zev challenge simplistic explanations, including conspiracy-driven claims that October 7 resulted from a deliberate stand-down or secret orders. They argue that the real story is both more troubling and more instructive: large human systems fail not because of cinematic plots, but because of culture, assumptions, fragmentation, overconfidence, and the slow accumulation of unresolved weaknesses. In this episode, they explore the gap between the myth and reality of Israeli military readiness, the long shadow cast by early military culture, and the difficulty of preparing any nation or army for the chaos of modern conflict. The result is not just a discussion about October 7, but a broader look at how institutions drift, how warnings get missed, and how deeply embedded habits can shape battlefield outcomes. This episode is essential listening for anyone trying to understand Israel’s military failures beyond slogans, espionage theories, or partisan talking points. The road to October 7 did not begin on October 7. It began decades earlier. Topics covered The gap between Israel’s military image and institutional reality How pre-state militia culture shaped the modern IDF The Palmach legacy and its long-term organizational consequences Why conspiracy theories about a deliberate stand-down do not hold up How human systems fail under pressure What October 7 reveals about military culture, intelligence, and institutional blind spots

    30 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Welcome to ”Conflict Uncovered,” hosted by renowned military and strategic analyst Elliot Chodoff. This podcast delves deep into the complex and often misunderstood conflicts in the Middle East, providing listeners with a comprehensive understanding of the region’s current events and historical contexts. Episode Formats: Current Events Episodes: Stay informed with our timely updates and analyses of the latest developments in Gaza, Lebanon, and beyond. Elliot Chodoff offers expert insights into the ongoing conflicts, military strategies, and geopolitical shifts that shape the Middle East toda

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