Explaining History Podcast

Category: Military History

Explaining History Podcast

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Military History

September 29, 2025
/ Military History, Military Strategy
  • Nations in Arms: How Armies Forge Societies in Their Image

    Nations in Arms: How Armies Forge Societies in Their Image

    September 29, 2025
    Military History, Military Strategy

    Armies are one of history’s great paradoxes. They are institutions of immense power, capable of creation and destruction on a continental scale, yet we often fail to see them as what they are: distinct historical phenomena, born of specific crises and ideas, that profoundly shape the societies that create them. An army is not just a tool of the state; it is often a mirror, a crucible, and a motor of social and political change. This is the central theme of a fascinating conversation on the Explaining History podcast with Barney White-Spunner, a former senior British Army commander and author…

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  • Uzbekistan and Central Asia in transition

    Uzbekistan and Central Asia in transition

    September 25, 2025
    Asian History, Economic History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Asian History, Political History

    Unveiling Uzbekistan: A Nation at the Crossroads of History and FutureJoin host Nick as he welcomes back acclaimed journalist and author Joanna Lillis to the Explaining History podcast. Seven years after her last appearance to discuss her book on Kazakhstan, “Dark Shadows,” Joanna returns to shed light on the enigmatic nation of Uzbekistan, the subject of her new book, “Silk Mirage.”This episode delves into the complexities of a country that was, for 25 years, one of the world’s most brutal dict

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  • The Holocaust and the General Government in occupied Poland

    The Holocaust and the General Government in occupied Poland

    September 22, 2025
    Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: World War II, Political History, World War II

    In this episode, The Explaining History Podcast explores the dark and complex evolution of genocide during the Second World War. Drawing on the foundational research of Nikolaus Wachsmann in his seminal work, “KL: A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps,” and the broader “functionalist” school of historical thought, this episode traces the path to the Holocaust.The discussion will move away from a simplistic view of a pre-meditated plan for mass extermination and instead delve into the radical

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  • The United States and the First Indochina War: From Non-Intervention to Active Support

    The United States and the First Indochina War: From Non-Intervention to Active Support

    September 20, 2025
    CIA, Cold War, Communism, Coups, Decolonisation, First Indochina War, Ho Chi Minh, Imperialism, Military History, USA, Vietnam, War

    Introduction The United States’ involvement in the First Indochina War represents a crucial chapter in the history of American foreign policy, marking the initial phase of what would become deep military commitment in Southeast Asia. This period witnessed the fundamental transformation of American policy from relative disinterest to substantial engagement, establishing patterns that would characterize later involvement in Vietnam. The evolution of American policy during this conflict reveals the powerful influence of Cold War mentality on foreign policy decision-making, the tensions between anti-colonial traditions and containment imperatives, and the early manifestations of what would later be termed “mission creep” in…

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  • Social Democracy and the Splintering of the 60s left

    Social Democracy and the Splintering of the 60s left

    September 16, 2025
    Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History

    In the post war decades huge strides were made across the world to address the worst aspects of social deprivation using the coordinated power of the state. Often the resulted showed working class communities that those deciding their fate were indifferent as to the actual results. In Tony Judt’s penultimate book Ill Fares The Land, he explores the crises of social provision and the fragmentation of the old and the new left of the 1960s on the issues of collectivism and individualism.Go Deeper: 

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  • Vo Nguyen Giap and Revolutionary Warfare: The Viet Minh’s Military Doctrine

    Vo Nguyen Giap and Revolutionary Warfare: The Viet Minh’s Military Doctrine

    September 15, 2025
    Decolonisation, Ho Chi Minh, Imperialism, Military History, Military Strategy, revolution, Vietnam, War

    Table of Contents 1. Introduction: The Architect of Victory In the military history of the 20th Century, few figures have a legacy as significant and complex as General Vo Nguyen Giap. The principal military commander of the Viet MinhViet Minh Full Description:The Viet Minh (League for the Independence of Vietnam) was the primary political and military organization resisting French colonial return. Unlike a standard political party, it operated as a “united front,” prioritizing national liberation over class struggle during the early stages of the conflict. This strategy allowed them to rally peasants, intellectuals, and workers alike under the banner of patriotism. Critical…

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  • Iran’s White Revolution 1963-77

    Iran’s White Revolution 1963-77

    September 9, 2025
    European History, Middle Eastern History, Military History, Podcast, Podcast: Middle Eastern History, Political History, World War II

    During the Second World War Mohammad Reza Pahlavi took to the throne of Iran, placed into power by the British and the Soviets to depose his Nazi backing father. The Shah was able to break from the constitutional limitations upon him in 1953 after the British and Americans overthrew Iran’s Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh. A decade later, the Shah began to radically transform Iran socially and economically, but in doing so built up powerful revolutionary tensions. For more on Iran, you can read

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  • An American retreat from Asia

    An American retreat from Asia

    September 8, 2025
    American History, Asian History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: American History

    A seismic shift in US global strategy appears to be confirmed. In this explosive episode, we dissect the leaked draft of the Pentagon’s latest National Defense Strategy, which signals a historic reversal of decades of American foreign policy.We delve into the news that the US is formally de-prioritizing the “deterrence of China” in favor of a new focus on the homeland and the Western Hemisphere. What makes this shift so remarkable is its author: Elbridge Colby, the renowned strategist and author

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  • Gorbachev’s diplomacy 1985-88

    Gorbachev’s diplomacy 1985-88

    September 5, 2025
    American History, Cold War, Economic History, European History, Military History, Podcast, Podcast: Cold War

    In this episode of Explaining History, we explore Mikhail Gorbachev’s bold diplomatic strategy during the mid-1980s. Between 1985 and 1988, Gorbachev sought to end the crippling arms race with the United States and ease the immense economic burden of Cold War militarisation on the Soviet Union.We examine the key moments of his diplomacy: the Geneva and Reykjavik summits, his pursuit of arms reduction agreements with President Reagan, and the wider goal of redirecting Soviet resources away from m

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  • What Plato can teach us about the crises of the 21st Century

    What Plato can teach us about the crises of the 21st Century

    August 26, 2025
    Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Modern History, Political History, Social & Cultural History

    What Plato Can Teach Us About the Crises of the 21st Century — with Professor Angie HobbsIn this special episode of Explaining History, I’m joined by Professor Angie Hobbs to discuss her new book Why Plato Matters Now. Together we explore Plato’s life and thought, and the urgent relevance of his ideas in today’s world. From the dangers of oligarchy and the corruption of language, to the decline of truth, the rise of the demagogue, and the path to tyranny, we trace Plato’s insights into politics,

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