This strategic corporate brief breaks down how a fragmented post-war environment accelerates multipolar security alliances, destabilizing unipolar trade.
Browsing: Realignment
This critical executive brief details how regional actors must navigate the complex landscape of necessity and circumstance to forge lasting stability.
Turkey is quietly shifting back toward NATO after years of drifting closer to Russia—driven by economic collapse and missile threats.
Iran security partnership could replace expensive Gulf alliances. A long-term deal reduces US burdens and rebalances Middle East strategy against China.
Knežević argues that the collapse of global ambiguity has turned a series of isolated crises into a moment where US power reasserts itself by necessity.
Saudi Arabia is shifting regionally, distancing from the UAE and maintaining detente with Iran, as a profound realignment unfolds.
Iraq must secure its Syrian border and balance U.S.-Iran pressures as Assad’s fall reshapes regional alliances and threats.
The analysis identifies a structural recalibration: Arab leaders now perceive Israel’s overt pursuit of regional hegemony as a greater danger than Iran. This, combined with Iran’s diminished power and economic risks, drives their diplomatic restraint and closer ties with Tehran.
