politics
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The Invisible Architecture of Power Behind The Global Conflicts

How Transnational Oligarchs, Class Interests, and Strategic Narratives Guide Military, Financial, and Political Decisions Shaping the Modern World A transnational concentration of economic power, largely centred in the United States, is advancing a strategy aimed at consolidating global dominance by weakening sovereign rivals such as Iran, Russia, and China, while deepening Europe’s structural dependence. The… Continue reading
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U.S. Financial Losses Signal Market Breakdown and Risk of Economic Contraction

Energy disruption, inflation, rising debt costs, and global repricing of U.S. assets place sustained pressure across the entire economic system A sharp break in United States financial markets during the final week of March 2026 raised the risk of a broader economic contraction extending beyond equities into the core functions of the economy and its… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, warbond yields, capital flows, currency movements, economic contraction, energy crisis, federal reserve, Financial markets, geopolitical risk, global economy, inflation, interest rates, Iran conflict, labour market, layoffs, Lebanon conflict, liquidity, market volatility, Oil Prices, stagflation, stock market decline, Strait of Hormuz, systemic risk, Treasury market, US dollar, US economy -
𝗜srael 𝗦cales 𝗕ack 𝗪ar 𝗔ims in Lebanon

The IDF aims have shifted from disarmament and deep territorial control to maintaining a shallow security zone after resistance proved stronger and regional actors continued effective counter-pressure Israeli military planning has shifted from an advance toward the Litani River to a reduced objective focused on a narrow buffer zone along the Lebanese border. Government statements… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, warattrition dynamics, attrition warfare, buffer zone strategy, hezbollah, Hezbollah resistance, Houthi missile strikes, Houthis escalation, IDF goals shift, Iran conflict 2026, Iran war miscalculation, Iranian missile response, Israel Lebanon war 2026, Israeli military objectives, Lebanon security zone, Middle East conflict, military analysis, miscalculation Hezbollah neutralization, multi‑front conflict, operational constraints, regional escalation, short war expectations, strategic failure analysis., strategic reassessment -
The Purge of the Generals: How Loyalty is Replacing Judgment in the U.S. Military

Senior US military officers are being removed as the political Epstein Class, consolidates power amid America’s most unpopular war of choice. US Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, a religious fanatic, just fired more military generals, David Hodne and William Green Jr alongside Army Chief Of Staff Randy George. Over a dozen Generals have now been… Continue reading
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Turkey and India Lead $82 Billion Dump of U.S. Treasuries

As foreign central banks dump U.S. bonds to defend their own economies, rising yields and shrinking demand threaten to destabilize the financial system underpinning American power. A financial shock is moving through the global system as foreign central banks offload tens of billions of dollars in U.S. Treasuries in a matter of weeks in favor… Continue reading
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Turkey and India Lead $82 Billion Dump of U.S. Treasuries

As foreign central banks dump U.S. bonds to defend their own economies, rising yields and shrinking demand threaten to destabilize the financial system underpinning American power. A financial shock is moving through the global system as foreign central banks offload tens of billions of dollars in U.S. Treasuries in a matter of weeks in favor… Continue reading
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System Disruption as Strategy: Trump’s Infrastructure Warfare on Iran

The Evolution of Targeting in the Iran Campaign From Military Objectives to Civil Networks A strike on the B1 Bridge along the Tehran-Karaj northern bypass marks a documented expansion of targeting into civilian infrastructure with no established military function. The structure formed part of a major urban transport project designed to ease congestion across a… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, NATO, politics, warAdditional Protocol I, airstrikes, civilian infrastructure, conflict analysis, distinction principle, economic pressure, education systems, energy systems, Geneva Conventions, Gulf States, infrastructure warfare, international humanitarian law, iran, israel, Karaj, kinetic operations, legal exposure, medical networks, Middle East security, military targeting, national security, proportionality, resilience analysis, state capacity, strategic escalation, Syrian Civil War, systemic degradation, Tehran, transport infrastructure, war crimes risk -
How Lavrov’s 2025 Warning About a “Breakdown” in the World Order Is Playing Out Today

What the Russian foreign minister said at the Russian International Affairs Council in January 2025 and how recent global developments reflect his argument about rising competition, instability, and shifting power dynamics When Sergei Lavrov spoke at the Russian International Affairs Council on January 30, 2025, he laid out a stark view of global politics. He… Continue reading
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Diplomacy on Paper, War in Practice

London hosts talks on Hormuz while enabling the very conflict it claims to stand apart from The decision by the United Kingdom to convene a gathering of 35 countries to “explore” reopening the Strait of Hormuz carries the appearance of urgency and coordination, yet it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that it is largely… Continue reading
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Israel Operates As a Law Unto Itself

Repeated incidents involving UN personnel highlight a persistent tension between operational conduct, strategic imperatives, and the uneven application of international law. The argument that Israel operates as a law unto itself in its dealings with the United Nations and its personnel rests on a pattern of conduct that critics contend is neither incidental nor episodic,… Continue reading
