
On this episode of The Wide Lens Podcast, we sit down with retired naval officer Per Provencher, a man whose career unfolded at the fault lines of modern history. Over more than two decades in uniform, Per moved through some of the most consequential military moments of the late twentieth and early twenty first centuries, not as a distant observer but as someone standing watch in the middle of it all.
Per takes us from the tense final days of the Iran and Iraq conflict, where he escorted tankers through hostile waters, to the flight decks and ready rooms of Gulf War era carriers, to the Pacific command ships where he served as the world reeled from the attacks of 9/11. His story offers a rare, firsthand look at the global events that shaped a generation.
What makes Per’s journey so compelling is not only the operations or the geopolitics, but the human side of service. It is the quiet professionalism, the unseen decisions, and the responsibilities that never make headlines. From nuclear shipyards to forward deployed fleets in Japan, Per’s experiences reveal the complexity, pressure, and humanity behind the uniform.
This conversation traces the full arc of his life in service, beginning with the early influences that nudged him toward the Navy and continuing through the unexpected opportunities that changed his trajectory. We explore the conflicts that tested him, the moments that defined him, and the lessons he carried into the work he does today.
It is a story of duty, timing, and steady leadership, the kind that rarely gets told but deserves to be heard.
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