Inside Strategic Communication
POLISTRATICS PODCAST – EPISODE 3
Guest: Matthew Bartlett
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In Episode 3 of the Polistratics Podcast, Nawaf Al-Thani turns inward—into Washington, into the Republican Party, and into the strategic communication machinery shaping how the United States understands and frames the war.
Recorded during the third week of the U.S.–Israel–Iran war, this episode moves beyond battlefield dynamics to examine how narratives are built, how political messaging influences policy direction, and how different factions within the Republican Party interpret the conflict and its trajectory.
Joining the conversation is Matthew Bartlett, a veteran strategic communicator and former political appointee at the U.S. State Department during the first Trump administration. With deep experience navigating Congress, messaging, and intra-party dynamics, Bartlett offers an insider’s perspective on how strategic communication shapes decision-making at the highest levels of government.
The discussion explores a critical dimension of modern conflict: not just how wars are fought, but how they are explained, justified, and sustained politically. From competing voices within the Republican Party to the broader communication strategy of the administration, this episode unpacks the internal lenses through which the war is being viewed in Washington.
The episode also touches on PEPFAR—the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief—a global initiative that has saved millions of lives and remains a key part of Bartlett’s professional legacy, offering a reminder of how American policy operates across both conflict and humanitarian domains.
This is a conversation about power, perception, and the role of strategic communication in shaping the course of war.