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The gritty spy thriller Homeland has a way of incorporating very real elements — like the fake-news phenomenon, tension between a president and the intelligence community, and the war on terror — into its high-drama story lines.

The show’s seventh and penultimate season, which premieres on February 12 in UAE, looks like more of the same ripped-from-the-cable-captions action.

We chatted with showrunner, writer and producer Alex Gansa about how he (sometimes) nails the details of intelligence-gathering, filming this season in Richmond, Virginia, and the unexpected thing he has in common with President Donald Trump.

What was in the news when the show was being written?

So much has happened, my God! It is astonishing. Not only terrifying that it’s all real, but terrifying to try to parallel on our show, and we’re worried that the news will outpace the story. We started to think about the season in late April. That’s when we take our annual field trip to Washington DC, and sit down with all our consultants and people in the intelligence community and a number of journalists.

In previous years, we’ve had people who work in the White House and State Department, although we weren’t privy to that this time around. Donald Trump had been president for a couple of months and when we were sitting down in Washington DC, at that moment, and North Korea was really on the table. North Korea doesn’t figure in to our story this year, but there was a tremendous amount of concern about what the administration was planning on the North Korean Peninsula.

So what are the ways in which current events have found their way into the new season?

You have an embattled and isolated president believing that the ‘deep state’ is against him. In our story, we have a president who feels the same way.

The main way is this antagonism between a newly elected president and the people that populate the government — the people who are there from one administration to the next. It’s that essential conflict between these two camps that has really influenced the show. And just how divided and polarised America is right now. When you find democracy split down the middle like that, it becomes a very vulnerable target for other countries who might want to weaken us. So that’s also become a big part of the story this season.

Tell me a little bit more about these field trips.

We go for five days — we bring all the writers, we bring Lesli Linka Glatter, who is our executive producer, and we bring Mandy Patinkin and Claire Danes. It’s about 10 to 12 people, and we take up residence in an old club in Georgetown and we entertain people from nine to six every day.

It could not have been more different this year than in the past. In the past, we’d have people from the intelligence community brief us and then we’d have a famous Washington Post reporter or a famous New York Times reporter come in and completely and utterly take up a counter-position to what we’d just heard. For the first time this year, in a strange way, the intelligence community and the Fourth Estate were on the same page. Two distinct communities that believe themselves to be fact-oriented had aligned in a way we hadn’t seen during the last four years we’d done this. Clearly, there was a lot of leaking going on to journalists from the intelligence community and that was a partnership we had not witnessed before this year.

Actually, it lends a little credibility to the paranoia inside of the Trump White House that there were major forces allied against him.

In the past, we’d be searching around for a story to tell. Like in season four when we wanted to put Carrie in a case officer position overseas, what we were asking in the room was, ‘If you were going to be posted, where would you want to be posted?’ And at the time, everyone said Afghanistan or Pakistan, and that’s where we set the story.

In season six, since we knew we would be airing during the transition, we learned a lot about the transition from one presidential administration to the next. The time we spend in DC could not be more influential.

You have lots of high-profile fans in the government, like former presidents Obama and Clinton, and in the intelligence world — to what extent does that make you feel pressure?

It is a little intimidating to know that those people are watching. But we can’t help but get things wrong. The dramatic license we have to take will be met with eye rolls from some of our consultants. But what is most rewarding to us is that we are confident that although we might not get the letter of this stuff right, we are most often getting the spirit of it right. That’s where we draw the line.

Where does the show go from here?

We’re doing one more season, and we’ve already started thinking. We’d love to take Homeland back to where it started. Will that be feasible? We’ll have to see.

Don’t miss it!

Homeland airs in the UAE on OSN First HBO HD on February 12 at 11pm.