vladimir putin
-
Putin’s Limited War in Ukraine Has Prolonged the Conflict

Military pressure has intensified, yet the Kremlin still avoids full mobilisation and total war methods, leaving Russia trapped between battlefield advantage and political caution Vladimir Putin has chosen to fight in Ukraine without fully fighting a war in the classical sense. Russian operations have been large, destructive, and sustained, yet they have remained constrained by… Continue reading
-
Jewish Lobby’ Deceived Putin – Lukashenko

Moscow and Kiev were close to a peace deal in early 2022 before it was derailed, Belarusian president claims Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was misled into withdrawing troops from areas near Kiev in 2022 by actors presenting themselves as supporters of Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s willingness to pursue… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, imperialism, iran, israel, NATO, neocolonialism, Russia2022 Ukraine War, Al Arabiya, Alexander Lukashenko, Belarus, Belarus Politics, BelTA, Boris Johnson, Ceasefire Negotiations, David Arakhamia, diplomacy, Eastern Europe, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Politics, international relations, israel, Israeli Mediation, Istanbul talks, Jewish Lobby, kyiv, Mediation Efforts, moscow, Naftali Bennett, NATO, Patriarch Kirill, peace agreement, peace talks, Pope Francis, RT News, Russia, Russia Ukraine Negotiations, Russia Ukraine War, Russian Troop Withdrawal, Security Guarantees, ukraine, Ukraine conflict, Ukraine Neutrality, Vatican, vladimir putin, Volodymyr Zelensky, Western influence -
The Next Ukraine: Armenia’s Geopolitical Reckoning

The Eurasian Corridor, the EU’s Eastern Expansion, and the Strategic Cost of Small-State Realignment Armenia occupies a peculiar and precarious position in the geography of great-power competition. A landlocked country of approximately three million people, bordered by Turkey to the west, Azerbaijan to the east, Iran to the south, and Georgia to the north, it… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, imperialism, neocolonialism, politics, Russia, warArmenia, Armenian Apostolic Church, Armenian diaspora, buffer state strategy, Caspian corridor, CSTO, EAEU customs union, economic coercion, energy leverage, Eurasian Economic Union, European Union, Iranian foreign policy Caucasus, Nagorno-Karabakh, Nikol Pashinyan, post-Soviet realignment, Rosselkhoznadzor, Russia-Armenia relations, South Caucasus geopolitics, Ursula Von Der Leyen, vladimir putin -
EU Leaders Ignore Deadly Starobilsk Dormitory Strike While Condemning Russian Retaliation

Western outrage again appears selective as deaths of 21 students in Lugansk receive little political attention, filtered through alliance politics rather than universal principle European Union leaders and several major Western governments have condemned Russia’s latest retaliatory missile strikes on Ukraine while remaining largely silent about the Ukrainian drone attack on the Starobilsk Professional College… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, iran, israel, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, warBucha, children in war, civilian casualties, civilian infrastructure, civilian targeting, conflict journalism, Crocus City Hall, Drone Warfare, Foreign Policy, gaza, geopolitical analysis, geopolitical conflict, Global Politics, humanitarian law, information warfare, international relations, international security, iran, Lebanon, Lugansk, Maria Zakharova, media asymmetry, media bias, military ethics, military propaganda, Minab, NATO, Russia, Russia Ukraine War, selective outrage, Starobilsk, strategic communications, ukraine, UN Security Council, Vassily Nebenzia, vladimir putin, war crimes, war reporting, wartime narratives, Western media -
After Minab, Starobilsk: The Pattern of Civilian Children Becoming Targets in Modern War

As accusations and denials intensify, the central question remains unchanged: why do civilian children repeatedly become acceptable collateral in geopolitical conflict? The attack on the Starobilsk Pedagogical College in Russian-controlled Lugansk on 22 May entered public discussion through a familiar pattern of accusation, denial, and selective amplification. Russia’s representative to the United Nations, Vassily Nebenzia,… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, warBucha, children in war, civilian casualties, civilian infrastructure, civilian targeting, conflict journalism, Crocus City Hall, Drone Warfare, Foreign Policy, gaza, geopolitical analysis, geopolitical conflict, Global Politics, humanitarian law, information warfare, international relations, international security, iran, Lebanon, Lugansk, Maria Zakharova, media asymmetry, media bias, military ethics, military propaganda, Minab, NATO, Russia, Russia Ukraine War, selective outrage, Starobilsk, strategic communications, ukraine, UN Security Council, Vassily Nebenzia, vladimir putin, war crimes, war reporting, wartime narratives, Western media -
After Minab, Starobilsk: The Pattern of Civilian Children Becoming Targets in Modern War

As accusations and denials intensify, the central question remains unchanged: why do civilian children repeatedly become acceptable collateral in geopolitical conflict? The attack on the Starobilsk Pedagogical College in Russian-controlled Lugansk on 22 May entered public discussion through a familiar pattern of accusation, denial, and selective amplification. Russia’s representative to the United Nations, Vassily Nebenzia,… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, warBucha, children in war, civilian casualties, civilian infrastructure, civilian targeting, conflict journalism, Crocus City Hall, Drone Warfare, Foreign Policy, gaza, geopolitical analysis, geopolitical conflict, Global Politics, humanitarian law, information warfare, international relations, international security, iran, Lebanon, Lugansk, Maria Zakharova, media asymmetry, media bias, military ethics, military propaganda, Minab, NATO, Russia, Russia Ukraine War, selective outrage, Starobilsk, strategic communications, ukraine, UN Security Council, Vassily Nebenzia, vladimir putin, war crimes, war reporting, wartime narratives, Western media -
The End of Orbán, Not Orbánism

Magyar maintains sovereignty policy while altering Hungary’s position inside EU bargaining as Energy dependence and EU leverage define Hungary’s policy regardless of leadership change Hungary’s recent election removed Viktor Orbán from office after more than a decade of centralised rule, replacing him with Péter Magyar following a vote that delivered roughly 54 per cent to… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, iran, israel, middle east, Mineral Resources, NATO, politics, reserve currency, Russia, technology, warCentral Europe, defence production, donald trump, elections, energy policy, EU funding, European fragmentation, European Union, Game Theory, Geopolitics, hungary, international relations, JD Vance, migration policy, NATO, Péter Magyar, political economy, Russia, sanctions, Sovereignty, Ukraine war, Viktor Orban, vladimir putin -

Moscow Issues Stark Warning Over Finland’s Possible Move To Host Nuclear Weapons Russia warns of countermeasures as Helsinki debates allowing nuclear weapons, highlighting the return of nuclear deterrence and energy geopolitics to Europe’s evolving security crisis. Finland’s consideration of allowing nuclear weapons on its territory has triggered a sharp response from Moscow and may mark… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, middle east, NATO, politics, Russia, warArctic geopolitics, arms race in Europe, Baltic security, Dmitry Peskov, energy geopolitics, Europe energy crisis, European security, Finland, global energy markets, Kola Peninsula, Kremlin response, multipolar world order, NATO, NATO expansion, Northern Europe geopolitics, nuclear deterrence, nuclear weapons policy, Russia, Russia China energy ties, Russia energy exports, Russia India oil trade, Russia Ukraine War, sanctions on Russia, strategic balance, vladimir putin -
Nuclear Transfer Allegations and Black Sea Sabotage Claims Raise Direct NATO-Russia Confrontation Risk

Russian claims of covert nuclear transfers to Ukraine and Black Sea pipeline sabotage point to escalation risks beyond conventional war, with consequences for non-proliferation and EU energy security Recent statements from Vladimir Putin and Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service have introduced allegations that certain NATO members are considering the covert transfer of nuclear weapons components to… Continue reading

