48. Season IV, Episode VI: Petroleum and Progress in Iran (Gregory Brew)

Oil runs the world. From our cars to our houses, most of us can’t live without it. From the 1940s to the 1960s, though, oil played another specific role as a central part of conflict and diplomacy during the Cold War. It was during this era that Iran developed into the world’s first “petro-state”: a nation whose state revenue, industrializing economy, military, and growing middle class all depended on the growth of the oil industry. This all occurred alongside major Cold War developments, including the regime of the Iranian shah, the coup d’etat of 1953, and more. Centering our analyses of these Cold War moments around the role of petroleum casts the histories of the Iranian and US governments in an entirely new light.

Joining our conversation this week is Dr. Gregory Brew, a leading expert on the relationship between Iran, the US, and oil during the Cold War.

Guest:

A man with glasses and a gray jacket smiles into the camera.

Gregory Brew is a historian and author specializing in U.S. foreign relations, oil, and the modern Middle East. He has authored two books on the Iranian “petro-state” and contributed to numerous peer reviewed publications.

Gregory Brew is a historian of oil, U.S. foreign relations, and the modern Middle East and Iran. His work explores the connections between the formation of a global oil economy, the geopolitics of the Cold War, and the contemporary energy transition. After receiving his doctorate from Georgetown University in June 2018, he served as a post-doctoral fellow at the Jackson School for Global Affairs at Yale University from 2021-2023. Currently, Dr. Brew is an Analyst at Eurasia Group, covering energy and Iran.

He is the author of The Struggle for Iran: Oil, Autocracy, and the Cold War, 1951–1954 and Petroleum and Progress in Iran: Oil, Development, and the Cold War.

Follow him on Twitter @gbrew24 and visit his website gregorybrew.com.

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48. Season IV, Episode VII: Charlie Brown’s America (Blake Ball)

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48. Season IV, Episode V: Japanese American Incarceration (Stephanie Hinnershitz)