international political economy
-
China’s First Direct Rejection of U.S. Financial Jurisdiction

Why Beijing’s refusal to recognise American sanctions marks a structural shift in global financial power A legal border moved across the international system when China’s Ministry of Commerce instructed domestic firms not to recognise, enforce, or comply with United States sanctions against five Chinese refineries. Financial globalisation relied upon a silent assumption that American secondary… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, Health, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, warAnti-Foreign Sanctions Law, Belt and Road Initiative, blocking statute, China sanctions law, Chinese refineries, commodity security, cross-border finance, de-dollarisation, dollar hegemony, economic statecraft, energy geopolitics, energy security, extraterritorial jurisdiction, extraterritorial sanctions, financial coercion, financial decoupling, game theory in geopolitics, geopolitical economy, geopolitical risk, global financial order, global order transition, global supply chains, great power competition, international political economy, Iranian oil trade, legal sovereignty, multipolarity, realist international relations, sanctions compliance, sanctions enforcement, sanctions policy, sanctions resistance, secondary sanctions, sovereign jurisdiction, strategic autonomy, Strategic Competition, systemic rivalry, trade fragmentation, U.S. Treasury sanctions, U.S.–China relations, yuan internationalisation -
The UAE’s OPEC+ Exit – A Structural Gamble

An irreversible strategic shift in energy, security, and regional order The United Arab Emirates’ decision to quit OPEC+ represents a structural rupture in Gulf geopolitics, reshaping energy flows, fracturing regional alliances, and exposing the fragility of U.S. strategic guarantees. This manoeuvre is irreversible. By monetising its newly expanded oil capacity of five million barrels per… 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, South East Asia, warAbu Dhabi, asymmetric warfare, capital flight, energy strategy, Fujairah pipeline, Game Theory, GCC, global energy markets, Gulf geopolitics, international political economy, iran, Middle East energy, OPEC fragmentation, OPEC+, Persian Gulf, regional alliances, regional power shift, Saudi Arabia, strategic autonomy, U.S. security guarantees, UAE -
Iran War Blunder Seen Through the Law of Unintended Consequences

Strait of Hormuz disruption, sanctions blowback, and energy market chaos exposing the fragility of globalisation and accelerating geopolitical realignment Economic history repeatedly demonstrates the law of unintended consequences operating with particular force during military escalation and coercive sanctions regimes. The confrontation surrounding Iran now produces cascading disruptions across energy markets, alliances, shipping networks, and domestic… 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, Russia, technology, warenergy chokepoints, energy geopolitics, energy security, Geopolitics, global energy markets, globalisation critique, international political economy, international trade routes, LNG markets, oil markets, Russia energy trade, sanctions blowback, sanctions policy, Strait of Hormuz, strategic miscalculation, supply chain disruption, unintended consequences, West Asia conflict
