EPISODE · Apr 28, 2026 · 37 MIN
Ep 52: April 28, 2026: The Long Road to October 7 Part 2
from Conflict Uncovered with Elliot Chodoff (Another Rough Day in the Middle East) · host Eitan Rosenfeld
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
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Ep 52: April 28, 2026: The Long Road to October 7 Part 2
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