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Home » Chas Freeman: World Disorder – Nuclear Weapons & World War (Transcript)

Chas Freeman: World Disorder – Nuclear Weapons & World War (Transcript)

Editor’s Notes: In this episode of Greater Eurasia Podcast, host Glenn Diesen is joined by former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense and Ambassador Chas Freeman to analyze the rapid unraveling of the global geopolitical order. The discussion covers the collapse of the Pax Americana, the waning influence of NATO, and the significant shifts in Middle Eastern security as Iran gains de facto control over the Strait of Hormuz. Freeman also highlights the growing push for nuclear proliferation as a means of survival in an age where international law and diplomatic expertise have largely eroded. The episode provides a sobering look at how regional powers like China and Pakistan are stepping into mediation roles while the West struggles to adapt to a new multipolar reality. (April 4, 2026)

TRANSCRIPT:

Introduction

GLENN DIESEN: Welcome back. We are joined today by Chas Freeman, a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense, the interpreter for Nixon during his China visit in ’79, also the former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, and yeah, one of the great diplomats and thinkers. So thank you very much for taking your time.

CHAS FREEMAN: Well, thank you for your excessive praise. Glad to be back.

The Unraveling of the International Order

GLENN DIESEN: Well, again, as we’ve discussed before, these are quite troubling times. The international order appears to be unravelling fast, both the distribution of power and the legitimacy which upheld it. And we see now these further escalations in Iran. The stakes are high. It appears we’re only going to go up this escalation ladder. And NATO is obviously fragmented, as we hear from the different speeches. And as Trump made it clear, the US might not come to the Europeans’ defence.

We also see Ukrainian drones entering, attacking the Russian Baltic coast from apparently what is the Baltic countries’ territories. And the whole system appears to be unravelling quite fast. I was wondering if you take a step back and assess the big picture, what do you make of this? What is it that you expect?

CHAS FREEMAN: Well, I think you’re right. Clearly the 5-century-long European domination of the world is over. Clearly the Pax Americana is dead. Clearly NATO is moribund, in the process of dying. The Atlantic Alliance doesn’t work. Donald Trump imagines that the purpose of NATO was to provide cannon fodder in support of American adventures abroad. Europeans have seen it correctly as a defensive alliance against external attack. But it is neither, it is performing neither role now. And so I think it’s on the way out.

We see European countries, starting with Spain, where you now are, deliberately denying the use of bases and airspace to the United States in support of our aggression against Iran. Now we have the French who don’t have American bases on their territory denying the use of their airspace. I gather Austria did that, although it’s not a member of NATO. It’s still relevant fairly early on. And we see the unraveling of the mutuality, the common values, interests, and commitments that made the NATO alliance so successful for so long.

The Gulf: War, the Strait of Hormuz, and Regional Realignment

CHAS FREEMAN: In the Gulf, the regional order is being rearranged by war. This war is going to end, and here I want to refer to the pathetic speech of Donald Trump the other night, belatedly trying to justify this war by depicting Iran as a ravenous monster about to take over the world and so forth. Not very convincingly, but he said something very significant in that speech, which I don’t think many people have paid attention to. He said effectively, “The United States understands we cannot open the Strait of Hormuz through the use of force. We’re not going to attempt to do it. If you are dependent on the Strait of Hormuz for your economic livelihood, because you import or export hydrocarbons from there, or fertilizer, or sulfur, or helium, or whatever, it’s up to you to go and open the strait.”

Well, so here you have a statement — the strait cannot be opened by the use of force — something which Macron has also said correctly. Well, you have to go and figure out how to get your cargo through. Well, there’s a way to do that, and that is to do an agreement with Iran. If you get an agreement with Iran, and you are not hostile to Iran, you are not sanctioning Iran, you are not facilitating attacks on Iran from your territory, then you can contact the IRGC, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, and apply for a permit to take your ship through the Strait of Hormuz.

They will come on board your ship. They will verify the ownership, the nationality of the personnel aboard, the cargo, where it was loaded and where it is destined to be unloaded. And if all of this passes muster, they will then give you a code with which you can signal the Iranian shore defenses and small boats as you go through the strait, and they’ll let you pass. Short of that, you don’t get through.

We also have news that Iran and Oman are busily working out a protocol for joint management of the Strait of Hormuz. What does this all mean? It means, in effect, first of all, the Gulf Arabs have no alternative but to negotiate with Iran because they cannot survive indefinitely with the Strait of Hormuz closed to their exports. Second, other countries have anticipated this. China, India, Japan, Turkey, I think Bangladesh, some others. I’ve gathered there’s a Korean vessel that’s gone through all right. They have worked out an appropriate agreement with Iran.

Iran’s Strategic Gains and the New Gulf Architecture

CHAS FREEMAN: So Iran has already gained two things in this war. One is the end of the embargo on its exports. The sanctions on oil from Iran have been lifted because of concerns about the impact on global prices and particularly the price of fuel in the United States as we go into midterm elections.