How have drones changed the economics of war?
Drones dramatically lower the attacker's cost: a shaheed-type drone costs roughly $35,000 versus about $4 million for a Patriot interceptor, enabling attackers to expend many cheap platforms while forcing defenders to spend vastly more per engagement.
What does Zakaria mean by a 'new military architecture'?
He means an integrated system of cheap autonomous systems, AI-assisted targeting, commercial satellite imagery, resilient communications and cyber tools that compress find-decide-hit timelines and favor networked mass over individual high-end platforms.
Why is battlefield data important in this new era of warfare?
Combat generates annotated images and operational data (as in Ukraine) that train AI for pattern recognition and targeting, improving drone effectiveness and accelerating adaptation from frontline lessons into mass-produced systems.
Could the Iran conflict push Tehran to pursue nuclear weapons?
Zakaria warns it's a real risk: analysts on the program say political radicalization and pressure from hardline elements could prompt Iran to race toward a nuclear option, reversing past restraint.
Is there a diplomatic path to de-escalation?
Yes—Fareed notes mediation efforts (e.g., Oman, Qatar) and talks of a political 'offramp,' but he cautions that strikes on Iranian infrastructure could become a point of no return.