“The Kremlin did not sow this harvest, but it will most likely reap it.”
Browsing: geopolitics
China may offset U.S.-Israeli war achievements by helping Iran rebuild its military after the war, shortening Tehran’s recovery path in return for oil.
Iran war markets reflect “geopolitical put option”: time and uncertainty drive pricing. Policy can reduce both.
Iran frames existential war: Hormuz closed, oil surges, new leader signals independence amid Western fractures.
Iran strikes Azerbaijan, targeting east-west corridor bypassing Russia. US now calls Baku “partner”—geopolitics shift.
Ethiopia’s sea access pursuit and internal crises collide with Israeli moves, as regional powers compete for influence.
Trump’s energy dominance policy has boosted U.S. production, but global markets may not comply; allies are diversifying, and renewables grow.
The transfer of ISIS prisoners from Syria to Iraq may relocate—not resolve—the threat, reflecting geopolitical rivalries and legal gaps.
The convergence of China’s military centenary, Taiwan’s election cycle, and shifting naval power dynamics marks 2027 as a high-risk window for global geopolitical destabilization.
A competitor seeks to outperform you; an adversary seeks to destroy you. This is a contest over whether free societies remain free.
