Russia Could Be the Biggest Winner of the Iran War

俄罗斯可能是伊朗战争的最大赢家。

Big Take

2026-03-17

16 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

As the war in Iran draws in more countries, it’s had unlikely benefits for one of Iran’s key allies: Russia. President Trump has eased some sanctions on Russian oil in his efforts to alleviate the oil squeeze created by the conflict. Meanwhile, the allyship between Russia and Iran has deepened as both countries have shared battlefield intelligence. On today’s Big Take podcast, host Sarah Holder talks with US defense and intelligence reporter Natalia Drozdiak about how Russia could benefit from the Iran War — and what it could ultimately mean for Russia’s war in Ukraine. Read more: Putin’s ‘Hidden Hand’ Guides Iran’s Strikes in Widening War Hosted by Sarah Holder; Produced by David Fox; Reported by Natalia Drozdiak; Edited by Naomi Shavin. Fact-checking by Eleanor Harrison-Dengate; Engineering by Katie McMurran. Senior Producer: Naomi Shavin; Deputy Executive Producer: Julia Weaver. Executive Producer: Nicole Beemsterboer. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • I'm Anna Navarro, and on my new podcast, Bleep with Anna Navarro,

  • I'm talking to the people closest to the biggest issues happening in your community and around the world.

  • Because I know deep down inside right now, we are all cursing and asking what the bleep is going on.

  • Every week I'm breaking down the biggest issues happening in our communities and around the world.

  • I'm talking to people like Julie K.

  • Brown, who broke the explosive story on Jeffrey Epstein in 2018.

  • The Justice Department, through we counted four presidential administrations, failed these victims.

  • Listen to Bleep with Adam Navarro on the iHeartRadio app,

  • Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.

  • Hello, I'm Stephen Carroll.

  • I'm in Brussels, where many of Europe's biggest decisions get made.

  • And I'm Caroline Hepker in London.

  • We're the hosts of the Bloomberg Daybreak Europe podcast.

  • We're up early every weekday, keeping an eye on what's happening across Europe and around the world.

  • We do it early so the news is fresh, not recycled,

  • and so you know what actually matters as the day gets going.

  • From Brussels, I'm following the politics,

  • policy and the people shaping the European Union right now.

  • And from London, I'm looking at what all that means for markets, money and the wider economy.

  • We've got reporters across Europe and around the globe feeding in as stories break.