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Game Theory in Geopolitics: How Countries Make Strategic Decisions in Conflict

Published 5 months, 2 weeks ago
Description
Why do weak countries sometimes beat superpowers in conflicts? Casey breaks down the surprising psychology behind international warfare using game theory, revealing how nations with fewer options can actually hold more power. On Pattern Break, we explore how countries like Iran use strategic chokepoints to their advantage, controlling the Strait of Hormuz where 21% of global oil passes daily. You'll discover why the US military's 7,000-mile supply lines to the Persian Gulf create unexpected vulnerabilities, learn how having fewer strategic options can make your threats more credible, and understand why modern missile defense systems - despite intercepting 90% of projectiles - still leave nations exposed. Casey walks through real scenarios showing how weaker opponents manipulate stronger powers by understanding escalation psychology better than their enemies do. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Introduction with Casey [01:30] Game theory basics in geopolitics [04:00] Iran's chokepoint strategy at Hormuz [07:00] Why fewer options equal more power [10:00] Modern warfare and supply chain vulnerabilities [12:00] What this means for current conflicts 🔍 Topics: game theory, geopolitics, military strategy, Iran conflict, international relations, strategic decision making ⭐ Think your friends need to hear this? Follow Pattern Break and leave us a 5-star review - it genuinely helps other people find these conversations. New episodes drop daily, so we'll catch you tomorrow with another pattern worth breaking!

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--- Keywords: cycle analysis, social dynamics, human behavior, ancient history, behavioral psychology

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