Luis

The Axis

News EN ↓ 15 episodes

The Axis is a weekly podcast that explores the shifting balance of global power. From Washington to Moscow, Beijing to New Delhi, each episode dissects the strategies, rivalries, and alliances shaping our world. Blending clear analysis with accessible language, The Axis connects breaking news with long-term geopolitical trends, helping listeners understand not just what is happening, but why it matters. 

Author

Luis

Category

News

Latest episode

Jul 10, 2026

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Episodes

The World Without a Centre 10.07.2026

The wars in Ukraine and the Persian Gulf appear to be separate conflicts, but what if they share the same underlying reality? In this episode of The Axis , we explore the emergence of an "empty centre" in international politics—a world in which no great power can fully impose a new global order. As authority becomes increasingly contested, wars no longer end with decisive victories. Inst...

America at 250: A Love Letter to a Wounded Republic 03.07.2026

A tribute to the United States on its 250th anniversary: not a sentimental celebration, but a symbolic reflection on a wounded republic. This episode explores America as promise, contradiction, empire, and unfinished sentence — from the Declaration of Independence to Lincoln, Roosevelt, Martin Luther King Jr., and the destructive nostalgia of MAGA. To admire America today is not to deny its crimes...

The Strait That Became a State: Hormuz, Iran, and the New Geography of Power 28.06.2026

In this episode of The Axis , we look at the deeper lesson of the Iran war: the rise of Hormuz as a political actor. The Strait of Hormuz is no longer just a route for oil tankers. It has become a symbol of the new geography of power, where control is no longer only about territory, but about circulation, delay, risk, and uncertainty.

The Architecture of Fear: Why the U.S.–Iran “Truce” Is Not Really a Truce 19.06.2026

In this episode of The Axis , we examine why the U.S.–Iran “truce” should not be understood as real peace, but as an architecture of fear. The agreement may stop direct confrontation for now, but it does not resolve the deeper causes of the conflict: Iran’s nuclear program, sanctions, the Strait of Hormuz, Israel’s military freedom of action, and the limits of American power. What appears as diplo...

Who Is Symbolically Winning the Conflict in the Persian Gulf? 12.06.2026

In this episode of The Axis , we ask a different question about the conflict in the Persian Gulf: not who is winning militarily, but who is winning symbolically. The United States may hold the stronger military hand, but Iran appears to be contesting something deeper: the rhythm, meaning, and political cost of the conflict. While Trump needs a visible victory—a deal, a signature, a scene of triump...

The Fantasy of Order: Kast’s First Public Account and the Authoritarian Desire 05.06.2026

In his first Cuenta Pública , José Antonio Kast does more than report on the state of the nation: he constructs a political fantasy of order. Chile appears as a wounded body, damaged by disorder, crime, migration, economic stagnation, and institutional weakness. Against this image, the State returns as a paternal force promising reconstruction, discipline, security, and national rebirth. This colu...

The Empty Barrel: Oil, Iran, and the Fragile Architecture of American Power 29.05.2026

In this episode of The Axis , we examine the U.S.–Iran oil crisis as a symptom of a deeper imperial fragility. The barrel of oil appears on market charts as a price, but behind that number lies a hidden architecture of sanctions, shadow fleets, military threats, diplomatic pauses, and strategic anxiety. The tentative ceasefire around the Strait of Hormuz does not signal true peace; it reveals a wo...

The Court of Permanent Departure: Trumpism After Gabbard 25.05.2026

This week on The Axis , we examine the symbolic meaning behind the departures of Tulsi Gabbard, Pam Bondi, and Kristi Noem from the orbit of Donald Trump. Beyond the headlines, the column explores what these resignations reveal about the transformation of Trumpism itself: the shrinking of its anti-war faction, the growing centralization of power around the sovereign figure, and the evolution of th...

The War Beneath the Map: Inflation, Secret Bases, and the Collapse of Symbolic Trust 19.05.2026

A psychoanalytic reading of the Iran war’s hidden grammar: inflation, Trump’s dismissal of Americans’ economic pain, and the reported Israeli clandestine outpost in Iraq are treated not simply as political events, but as symptoms of a deeper collapse in symbolic trust. Money still appears to measure value, borders still appear to define sovereignty, and leaders still appear to guarantee order — ye...

Trump Goes to Beijing: The Symbolic Value of the Xi Meeting 08.05.2026

A symbolic reading of the upcoming Trump–Xi meeting in Beijing, where diplomacy becomes theatre and power is performed as much as negotiated. The analysis argues that the summit matters not only because of possible agreements on trade, Taiwan, AI, rare earths, or Iran, but because of the image it produces: an American president traveling to the capital of the rival empire. Trump arrives with the l...

The Joke, the Shot, and the War Tongue 02.05.2026

A joke, a gunshot, and a president speaking the language of war: the Kimmel–Trump episode reveals how unstable the border between satire, symbolic injury, and political violence has become. Kimmel’s “expectant widow” joke did not simply offend Trump; it touched the fragile aura of power, age, marriage, and mortality. But after the attempted attack at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, the jok...

Signals, Symbols, and War: When Power Rewrites the Sacred 24.04.2026

In the aftermath of the Islamabad talks, diplomacy appears to proceed even as escalation deepens. This episode explores how negotiations, symbolic acts, and religious language operate within the same strategic field. Drawing on Max Blumenthal’s critique, Lacanian theory, and a striking visual incident involving a profaned religious image, the analysis shows how power does not eliminate the sacred—...

When God Blew the Wind—and When Drones Took the Sea 24.04.2026

This column draws a parallel between the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 and the challenges faced by modern naval power in asymmetric warfare. By linking religious symbolism, Lacanian theory, and contemporary geopolitics, it argues that the gap between symbolic belief and material reality has become a defining feature of modern conflict. Chicago-Style Bibliography Blumenthal, Max. “The Islama...

The New Chilean Administration and the Horror of Blindness 17.04.2026

Description This column explores how governments can become trapped in their own frameworks of rationality, losing sight of the realities they claim to manage. Drawing on Lacan, Bataille, and Alien , it argues that overconfidence in control blinds power to the forces that exceed it.

Iran and the Limits of Power: When the Story Stops Holding 17.04.2026

Description A clear and accessible analysis of the Iran conflict as a political and symbolic test for Trump. The piece argues that the issue is not immediate defeat, but a growing tension between his message of control and a reality that remains unresolved, contradictory, and resistant to simple outcomes. Bibliography  The New York Times. “Trump’s Iran War Tests the Limits of Control.” April 15, 2...

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