Boardroom Statecraft cover art

Boardroom Statecraft

Boardroom Statecraft

Written by: Ross Hill and Dr Treston Wheat
Listen for free

About this listen

Welcome to Boardroom Statecraft—the podcast that helps business leaders understand and respond to the strategic realities of geopolitics.Ross Hill and Dr Treston Wheat Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Ep 26. Surprised but not shocked - Venezuela, US Strategy, and the Limits of Regime Change
    Jan 7 2026

    In this episode, Ross Hill and Dr Treston Wheat examine the US operation against Nicolás Maduro and what it reveals about contemporary American strategy in the Western Hemisphere. The discussion focuses on how long-running strategic signals, including shifts in US national security doctrine, hemispheric security priorities, and the designation of narco-terrorism, shaped an intervention that stopped short of full regime change.

    The episode explores why this operation aligns with the Trump administration’s preference for rapid, decisive action without occupation, drawing comparisons to historical precedents such as Panama in 1989. Ross and Treston assess the geopolitical drivers behind the move, particularly the desire to constrain Chinese and Russian influence and deny access to critical resources, rather than humanitarian or democratisation objectives.

    Finally, the conversation turns to implications for business and markets. The episode unpacks the realities of Venezuelan oil production, infrastructure decay, and long-term investment risk, alongside the likelihood of continued US pressure through counter-narcotics operations. The key takeaway is strategic rather than tactical: corporate risk increasingly sits downstream of geopolitical bargaining, not domestic reform.

    Music for this episode is by @barleysentient on Suno

    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • Ep. 25 - Geopolitics and Disinformation
    Dec 19 2025

    In this special episode of Boardroom Statecraft, Ross Hill is joined by Insight Forward intern Sofia Bohan to discuss her research into modern disinformation and why it has become a core feature of geopolitical competition. The conversation explores how misinformation and disinformation campaigns evolve from online narratives into real-world political and security consequences, drawing on examples such as QAnon in the United States and state-led influence operations by Russia and Iran. Sofia outlines how social media dynamics, psychological vulnerability, and perceived credibility allow false narratives to spread rapidly, particularly during periods of uncertainty and crisis.

    The episode then turns to the implications for corporations. Ross and Sofia examine how disinformation increasingly targets companies and executives, shaping consumer behaviour, investor sentiment, and physical security risk regardless of factual accuracy. They discuss how state and non-state actors exploit polarisation, influencer networks, and emerging technologies such as generative AI and deepfakes to erode trust and control narratives. The discussion concludes with why monitoring information environments is now a strategic necessity for businesses operating in a fragmented and contested geopolitical landscape.

    You can read the full report at https://www.insightforward.co.uk/reports/

    Show More Show Less
    31 mins
  • Ep. 24 - Gray-Zone Conflict and the Corporate Frontline
    Dec 10 2025

    In this episode of Boardroom Statecraft, we examine how the traditional boundaries between peace and conflict have collapsed, pulling corporations into the centre of geopolitical competition. What was once the domain of states and intelligence services is now a contested battlespace where private companies are targeted, leveraged, or coerced through cyberattacks, sabotage, supply chain disruption, and information operations.

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins
No reviews yet