
Bannon`s War Room Episode 5241: In Some Form This War Will Continue In Iran
Mar 24, 2026
Eric Bolling, political and markets commentator who analyzes military moves and energy markets. Kurt Mills, conservative journalist and geopolitical analyst focused on U.S.-Iran policy. They debate military options, deployments and CENTCOM tactics. They examine diplomatic tracks, who Washington might negotiate with, and how oil markets and force majeure claims react to conflict.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
U.S. Looks To Inside Figures Rather Than Exiles For Talks
- The White House is considering internal Iranian figures, not exiled leaders, for talks and possible postwar partners.
- Options include the Speaker of Parliament and former IRGC commanders seen as pragmatic inside players.
Iran's Asymmetric Tools Are The Real Strategic Threat
- Iran's strength lies in asymmetric tools: drones, proxies, sleeper cells, and regional militias rather than conventional ships or planes.
- The regime has spent decades preparing for conflict with the U.S., making asymmetric warfare its core strategy.
Keep Military Leverage While Negotiating Diplomatically
- Maintain military pressure while pursuing diplomatic tracks to preserve leverage in talks.
- Stephen K. Bannon notes CENTCOM continues a methodical 'defanging' campaign even as negotiations proceed.
