War Desk
War Desk is an AI-native investigative series built to track the real risk of global war. With thousands of military reports, declassified government testimony, intelligence assessments, and verified conflict data now publicly available, the volume of information exceeds what any traditional newsroom can process. AI can.
This series leverages artificial intelligence at every layer of production. From custom-built architecture that ingests and cross-references thousands of primary source documents, to AI-generated audio that delivers findings in a consistent, accessible format, War Desk represents a new model for geopolitical journalism. What would take a team of defense analysts months to compile, AI can process in days, surfacing patterns, contradictions, and connections across theaters that would otherwise remain buried across separate headlines.
Each episode draws directly from primary sources: Department of Defense force posture statements, IAEA safeguards reports, Congressional testimony, think tank assessments from CSIS, RAND, and ISW, declassified intelligence estimates, and verified conflict databases. The AI architecture identifies relevant findings, cross-references claims across sources, and synthesizes them into episodes that make this information accessible to the public.
The series covers the five active flashpoints that could escalate to major war: the U.S.-Iran confrontation, the Russia-Ukraine war, the Taiwan Strait, the Korean Peninsula, and the global alliance structures that connect them. It examines the military deployments, the nuclear timelines, the economic consequences, and the decisions being made by specific people in specific rooms.
This is not sensationalized content. It is not political commentary. It is documented fact, processed at scale, and presented with journalistic rigor. The goal is simple: give the public the same quality of threat assessment that governments produce internally.
War Desk is politically neutral by design. Every side's claims are sourced and attributed. Adversarial media is labeled. No spin. No speculation. Every source for every episode is published at wardesk.fm so listeners can verify every claim themselves.
New episodes release daily, with AI enabling rapid analysis and production that keeps pace with a fast-moving geopolitical landscape. Journalistic standards guide the output. Every claim is tied to specific documents. The series clearly distinguishes between verified facts, official claims, and unresolved contradictions.
This is documented fact, processed at scale, presented for the public.
Episodes
107 episodes
Day 36: Iran Shoots Down US F15 and A10 Jets
Day 35: Trump Requests New Iran War Funding
Day 34: Israel Strikes IRGC-controlled compound in Tehran
Day 33: Israel Blocks 600K Lebanese From Border
Day 32: Germany to Repatriate 80% Syrians
Day 31: Houthis strike Israel; Gulf states face multi-front assault
Day 30: IRGC threatens universities; Israel claims nuclear program damage
Day 29: Israel strikes Iran nuclear sites; Iran hits Prince Sultan, 10 US wounde
Day 28: 10 Day Bombing Pause With No Deal in Sight
ECB Triggers Recession to Survive the Hormuz Oil Shock
Day 27: Iran Demands War Reparations, Rejects Deal
US Army Now Enlisting 42 Year Olds With Weed Records
Day 26: Iranian Warhead Hits Building Near Tel Aviv
Day 25: Missiles Near a Nuclear Reactor as Strikes Pause
Day 24: Both Sides Deny the Bombing Pause Is Real
Day 23: 48 Hour Ultimatum With Zero US Minesweepers
Day 22: Iran's Missiles Flew Double Their Known Range
Day 21: Iran Hit an F-35 for the First Time
Day 20: Oil Hits $150 After Israel Strikes South Pars
Pakistan Bombed a Kabul Hospital With 3,000 Inside
Day 19: One Strike Killed 300 Iranian Commanders
Zero US Carriers in the Pacific as China Eyes Taiwan
Ray Dalio: The Strait of Hormuz Will Break the Dollar
Day 18: UAE Shot Down 1,627 Drones in Two Weeks
Day 17: Iran's Drones Now Carry Heat Seeking Missiles