Fault Lines podcast artwork

PODCAST · news

Fault Lines

Fault Lines is a clear-eyed series of conversations about security, resilience and preparedness in a changing world. Rod Whiting cuts through the noise to explore what this means for Britain — and how ready we are for what lies ahead.Drawing on four decades in broadcasting, including 25 years with the BBC, Rod brings a calm, questioning approach to complex issues — focusing not on alarmist headlines, but on the forces shaping events and their real-world consequences.Each episode features informed, measured conversations with experts in defence, intelligence, emergency, and related fields. The aim is not to alarm, but to understand: what’s changing, where the risks lie, and how individuals, communities, and institutions might respond.Fault Lines is produced alongside Rod’s Fault Lines Substack, where you’ll find further analysis and commentary exploring the same themes in more depth. 👇https://rodwhiting.substack.com/

  1. 1

    "Caught With Our Pants Down" - Britain's Resilience Gap, With Edward Lucas

    In this episode of Fault Lines, Rod Whiting speaks with broadcaster and Times columnist Edward Lucas, with more than four decades of experience covering European and security affairs, about a question the UK can no longer avoid: how prepared are we, really?Drawing on decades covering Russia and European security, Lucas argues that Britain has spent too long assuming threats would remain distant - and that this complacency has left the country dangerously exposed.From drone attacks launched close to home, to sabotage risks beneath the sea, to the quiet reality of ongoing “active measures” against the UK, this conversation explores the gap between perception and preparedness - and why closing it may now be far more difficult than many assume.But this isn’t just a warning.Lucas sets out where resilience can still be built - from strengthening cooperation with more threat-aware allies - such as the Nordics, Baltics, and Poland - to practical steps individuals can take now to be better prepared for disruption.The discussion covers:What “national resilience” actually means in 2026Why public awareness still lags behind the threatThe role of information, disinformation, and public disengagementWhat the UK can realistically learn from countries like FinlandWhy resilience must be built both at the national and individual levels.Measured, grounded, and at times sobering, this is a clear-eyed look at Britain’s resilience gap - and, even at the eleventh hour, the steps that could still make a difference. Share your thoughtsFor more analysis like this, visit Fault Lines on Substack: 👇https://rodwhiting.substack.com/Contact: [email protected]

  2. 0

    Britain’s Security Reality: What Are We Facing - and Are We Prepared?

    In the first episode of Fault Lines, Rod Whiting speaks to former British Army intelligence officer Sam Olsen about Britain’s changing threat landscape, the erosion of resilience, and why security is no longer just a military issue.How exposed is Britain in a world of hybrid warfare, fragile infrastructure and shifting alliances? In this opening episode of Fault Lines, Rod Whiting speaks to Sam Olsen of Sibylline about Russia, China, deterrence, resilience, and the uncomfortable gap between the risks we face and the readiness we actually have.Sam is a geopolitics expert with the global private intelligence organisation Sybilline. You can follow more of his work on Substack: 👇https://samolsen.substack.com/ Share your thoughtsFor more analysis like this, visit Fault Lines on Substack: 👇https://rodwhiting.substack.com/Contact: [email protected]

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Fault Lines is a clear-eyed series of conversations about security, resilience and preparedness in a changing world. Rod Whiting cuts through the noise to explore what this means for Britain — and how ready we are for what lies ahead.Drawing on four decades in broadcasting, including 25 years with the BBC, Rod brings a calm, questioning approach to complex issues — focusing not on alarmist headlines, but on the forces shaping events and their real-world consequences.Each episode features informed, measured conversations with experts in defence, intelligence, emergency, and related fields. The aim is not to alarm, but to understand: what’s changing, where the risks lie, and how individuals, communities, and institutions might respond.Fault Lines is produced alongside Rod’s Fault Lines Substack, where you’ll find further analysis and commentary exploring the same themes in more depth. 👇https://rodwhiting.substack.com/

HOSTED BY

Rod Whiting

CATEGORIES

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Fault Lines have?

Fault Lines currently has 2 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Fault Lines about?

Fault Lines is a clear-eyed series of conversations about security, resilience and preparedness in a changing world. Rod Whiting cuts through the noise to explore what this means for Britain — and how ready we are for what lies ahead.Drawing on four decades in broadcasting, including 25 years with...

How often does Fault Lines release new episodes?

Fault Lines has 2 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Fault Lines?

You can listen to Fault Lines on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Fault Lines?

Fault Lines is created and hosted by Rod Whiting.
URL copied to clipboard!