19 February 2026

A Quarter Century of Nuclear South Asia: Nuclear Noise, Signalling, and the Risk of Escalation in India-Pakistan Crises

Moeed Yusuf and Rizwan Zeb

The May 2025 crisis between India and Pakistan was their sixth militarized crisis since the two countries tested nuclear weapons in 1998.1 It both affirmed and debunked cliches about South Asia being the world’s most dangerous nuclear flashpoint. ‘We stopped a nuclear conflict. I think it could have been a bad nuclear war’, U.S. President Donald Trump trumpeted as he celebrated the ceasefire his administration helped broker at the end of the recent crisis.2 While the sense that South Asia is always at the brink of a major catastrophe has lingered among many observers of the India-Pakistan rivalry, these neighbours have escaped escalation to a major war since they acquired nuclear weapons capability. This paper examines nuclear signalling between these two rivals during the most prominent crises since the turn of the century, focusing primarily on Pakistan’s crisis behaviour. ‘Signalling’ encompasses allusions to the potential for nuclear war and gestures like sabre-rattling that are intended to motivate the antagonist and, in South Asia’s case, third parties to de-escalate the crisis on terms acceptable to the signaller. While nuclear signals typically refer to actions or statements that directly involve the manipulation of nuclear fear and risk, we cast the net wider by situating Pakistan’s nuclear signalling within its overall crisis management posture, focusing both on threatening messages as well as passive ones where leaders reassure audiences that they want to de-escalate or terminate a crisis. This is because signals transmitted in the examined crises do not follow the pattern of bilateral nuclear brinkmanship the world was accustomed to during the Cold War. South Asia’s crisis signalling must be seen as a tool of broader crisis diplomacy and can often be characterized more aptly as ‘communications’.

Hard Road Ahead For Post-Election India-Bangladesh Relations

P. K. Balachandran

Outstanding issues and attitudinal obstacles stand in the way of a true rapprochement

The parliamentary elections in Bangladesh held on February 12, have marked a significant shift, with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), led by Tarique Rahman, securing a landslide victory. Official and reported results indicate the BNP and its allies won around 212 seats out of roughly 299-300 directly elected seats, giving it a commanding majority or two-thirds control in the Jatiya Sangsad.

The Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami and its allies performed strongly emerging as the main opposition, securing approximately 68-77 seats (a historic high for Jamaat), while the student-led National Citizens’ Party (NCP) and others picked up smaller numbers.

World forgot how ancient India shaped it, William Dalrymple tells Fareed Zakaria



India, the birthplace of the game of chess, the concept of zero, and the idea that the Earth revolves around the Sun, has long been the source of some of humanity's most revolutionary ideas.

Yet, as historian William Dalrymple argues in his new book The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World, the country's pivotal role in shaping global civilisation has been overlooked for centuries. Far from being a passive corner of the ancient world, Dalrymple paints India as its beating heart, a crossroads of trade, intellect, and spirituality whose influence stretched from Rome to China.

Speaking to Fareed Zakaria on CNN's GPS, Dalrymple said his book seeks to recover the "enormous Indian influence throughout Asia," describing ancient India as "the cultural superpower of Asia". He explained that over half the world today lives in countries that were once shaped by Indian religions or philosophies such as Buddhism and Hinduism.

The return of millions of Afghans from Pakistan and Iran pushes Afghanistan to the brink, UN warns

ELENA BECATOROS and JAMEY KEATEN

GENEVA (AP) — The return of millions of Afghans from neighboring Pakistan and Iran is pushing Afghanistan to the brink, the U.N. refugee agency said on Friday, describing an unprecedented scale of returns.

A total of 5.4 million people have returned to Afghanistan since October 2023, mostly from the two neighboring countries, UNHCR’s Afghanistan representative Arafat Jamal said, speaking to a U.N. briefing in Geneva via video link from Kabul, the Afghan capital.

“This is massive, and the speed and scale of these returns has pushed Afghanistan nearly to the brink,” Jamal said.

Pakistan launched a sweeping crackdown in Oct. 2023 to expel migrants without documents, urging those in the country to leave of their own accord to avoid arrest and forcible deportation and forcibly expelling others. Iran also began a crackdown on migrants at around the same time.

The Gatekeepers: How Pakistan’s Bureaucracy Enforces Elite Capture


This investigation, the third in a series examining Pakistan’s elite capture, documents how the administrative state operates not as a public service but as a gatekeeping mechanism. Through analysis of government procedures, service delivery data, regulatory frameworks, and testimony from citizens and officials, a consistent pattern emerges: Pakistan’s bureaucracy functions as an enforcement arm of oligarchic control, where access to basic services, property rights, business licenses, and justice itself depends not on law or entitlement but on power, connections, and wealth.

The numbers tell the story with brutal clarity. Pakistan ranks 108th out of 190 countries in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Index, 126th in the Corruption Perceptions Index, and according to Transparency International Pakistan’s 2023 National Corruption Perception Survey, 38% of citizens who interacted with government departments reported paying bribes. But these aggregate statistics obscure the operational reality: the system is not broken. It is working exactly as designed.

The $10 Trillion Fight: Modeling a US-China War Over Taiwan

Jennifer Welch and Maeva Cousin

The island at the center of the artificial intelligence boom—and increasingly the global economy—lies on geological and geopolitical fault lines. Taiwan, the producer of most of the world’s advanced semiconductors, faces intensifying pressure from mainland China and growing uncertainty about US support. War doesn’t appear imminent. If it were to erupt, though, the shock to the global economy would be seismic.

In this report, Bloomberg Economics sets out five possible paths for how tensions in the Taiwan Strait could unfold—from war to rapprochement—and models their economic impact. In the most extreme case, a US-China conflict over Taiwan would cost the global economy about $10.6 trillion, roughly 9.6% of global gross domestic product, in the first year alone, eclipsing the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and the 2007-09 global financial crisis.

China remains undeterred in the grey zone

Sam Mullins

The final days of 2025 saw Taiwan surrounded by Chinese warships, aircraft and coast guard vessels in what the Chinese Ministry of Defence described as a serious warning to ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist forces and foreign interference. ‘Justice Mission 2025’, the sixth major military exercise to simulate a blockade of Taiwan since 2022, came closer to the island’s shores than previous drills, reflecting China’s strategy of creeping escalation.

In 2025, Chinese incursions into Taiwan’s air defence identification zone reached their largest number yet — more than 3700 — coupled with record-high cyberattacks. The year was further marked by continued allegations of espionage and cutting of undersea cables, reports of rising disinformation and the first instance of Chinese law enforcement opening an investigation into a sitting Taiwanese lawmaker for ‘criminal activities aimed at splitting the nation’.

Leaked technical documents show China rehearsing cyberattacks on neighbors’ critical infrastructure

Alexander Martin
Source Link

China appears to be using a secret training platform to rehearse cyberattacks against the critical infrastructure of its closest neighbors, according to a cache of leaked technical documents reviewed by Recorded Future News.

Beijing has long been accused of running extensive offensive cyber campaigns by Western officials and cybersecurity researchers, with those allegations usually based on intelligence assessments and technical forensics obtained following a hack. The leaked materials, which include source code, training information and software assets, provide rare documentary insight into the preparation that could support such attacks before they take place.

The internal files describe the training platform as part of a large integrated system called “Expedition Cloud” designed to allow attackers to practice hacking replicas of “the real network environments” of China’s “main operational opponents in the South China Sea and Indochina directions.”

Targeting Taiwan Under Xi: China’s Military Forest Flourishing Despite Toppling Trees

Andrew S. Erickson, 

Continuing removals of military officers and defense industry officials up to the highest levels have caused some to question the People’s Republic of China (PRC)’s ability to seize Taiwan. But while record personnel churn doubtless brings significant challenges, the actual track record of military preparatory exercises through the end of 2025 shows real determination and progress regarding China’s military capability. Observers should focus on this flourishing “forest” of capabilities, not simply on the felling of individual “trees.”

No defenestrations have been more dramatic than the announcement on January 24, 2026, that Central Military Commission (CMC) members Generals Zhang Youxia and Liu Zhenli are under investigation for “serious violations of discipline and law.” In the PRC system, such a formal declaration represents a premeditated verdict from which the accused typically cannot recover.

Who Are China’s Diplomats? Beyond “Wolf Warrior” Hype


Diplomats from the People’s Republic of China (PRC) have attracted considerable attention and notoriety because of combative rhetoric and aggressive actions. This has led to Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) personnel being labeled “wolf warrior diplomats.” How accurate is this term? Who are China’s diplomats? Quantitative studies of contemporary PRC diplomats are surprisingly rare. In this report, Professor Andrew Scobell, Dr. Yi Li, and Allison McFarland identify and describe the key characteristics of two tiers of PRC senior officials with primary responsibility for China’s diplomacy under Xi Jinping.

The first tier of diplomats are top echelon political leaders charged with supervising the work of the MFA and career officials responsible for managing PRC embassies around the world. These are individuals who were actively engaged in the formulation and execution of PRC foreign policy in 2023. We label this group “diplomats-in-chief.” The second tier examined consists of ambassadors operating on the frontlines of PRC diplomacy. While detailed biographical information on MFA personnel is not readily available, Beijing’s ambassadors serving in embassies around the world are the exception. This report taps a unique data set of 169 PRC ambassadors compiled by the authors and draws the following key takeaways:

As Rubio tries to make amends, China looks to woo Europe

Simone McCarthy

Minutes after top diplomat Marco Rubio proclaimed that the United States and Europe “belong together” in a conciliatory speech at the Munich Security Conference, his Chinese counterpart took to the stage with his own pitch. “China and the EU are partners, not rivals,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told his audience, speaking from the same stage Saturday.

“As long as we firmly grasp this point, we will be able to make the right choices in the face of challenges, prevent the international community from moving toward division and promote the continuous progress of human civilization.” The Rubio-Wang double bill came as an overhaul of US foreign policy has shaken up America’s longstanding bonds with Western allies, who now openly declare that the era of US-backed global security and rules is over.

Cognitive Warfare Masterclass: China’s Doctrine for Strategic Narrative Superiority

Athena Tong

Athena Tong analyzes China’s actions in the Western Pacific as strategic, consistent, and systemic. The objective is to compress the operational and political space of states Beijing treats as challengers and to entrench new “normalities incrementally.” Tong frames this pattern as the practical application of the PLA’s “Three Warfares,” amplified through FIMI, where narrative dominance, psychological pressure, and legal framing reinforce one another.

In the Philippines (Scarborough Shoal/Second Thomas Shoal), she shows how maritime incidents—collisions, blockades, water-cannon attacks—are first shaped through information operations to secure interpretive advantage and cast China as a rule- and environment-protecting actor. Presence and calibrated escalation then impose immediate pressure on decision-making and rules of engagement. This is coupled with legal framing that shifts the reference point: environmental and development claims are used to support asserted jurisdiction and to push sovereignty and self-determination principles into the background.

Deep in China’s Mountains, a Nuclear Revival Takes Shape

Chris Buckley and Agnes Chang

In the lush, misty valleys of southwest China, satellite imagery reveals the country’s accelerating nuclear buildup, a force designed for a new age of superpower rivalry. One such valley is known as Zitong, in Sichuan Province, where engineers have been building new bunkers and ramparts. A new complex bristles with pipes, suggesting the facility handles highly hazardous materials.

Another valley is home to a double-fenced facility known as Pingtong, where experts believe China is making plutonium-packed cores of nuclear warheads. The main structure, dominated by a 360-foot-high ventilation stack, has been refurbished in recent years with new vents and heat dispersers. More construction is underway next to it. Above the Pingtong facility entrance, a hallmark exhortation of China’s leader, Xi Jinping, appears in characters so large they are visible from space: “Stay true to the founding cause and always remember our mission.”

Is China Leading the Robotics Revolution?

Hugh Grant-Chapman, Leon Li, Brian Hart, Bonny Lin, Truly Tinsley, Feifei Hung

In the mountain metropolis of Chongqing, China, a dimly lit factory assembles a new car every 60 seconds. Its secret? Robots. The sprawling Chang’An Automobile Digital Intelligence Factory is home to over 2000 robots and autonomous vehicles operating in tandem with surgical precision. When it opened in 2024, the facility claimed the title of Asia’s largest “dark factory,” so called because it is so thoroughly automated that it can theoretically operate in the dark without any human labor. More impressive still is that through this automation technology, the factory can produce cars at 20 percent less cost than traditional methods.

The Chang’An Auto factory is emblematic of a wave of robotics-fueled automation that is transforming China’s industrial landscape. This and other recent achievements are the latest strides in a decade-long push to boost robotics adoption throughout China’s economy, particularly its manufacturing sector. Advanced automation has helped Chinese manufacturers cut costs, climb global value chains, and outcompete foreign competitors. Now, China’s robotics leaders are pioneering new robotics innovations and eyeing new markets. If this trajectory continues, manufacturing rivals around the world will face tough decisions as they scramble to remain competitive.

As War with China Looms, It Is Time to Restart Large-Scale Military Exercises

Robert Peters

The United States faces the potential prospect of war with a great power in the coming years, with the most likely prospect being the People’s Republic of China. China is increasingly confident in its own military capabilities, regularly harassing its neighbors and engaging in massive, joint military operations in and around Taiwanese waters and airspace that look for all the world like a full-scale dress rehearsal for invasion.1 Indeed, former Indo–Pacific Commander Admiral Phil Davidson said that he believes the Chinese military has decided it must be ready for an invasion of Taiwan by 2027, even if opposed by a U.S.-led coalition.2

At the same time, the world is witnessing the emergence of new military technologies, and old technologies applied in innovative fashion. In Ukraine, small, tactical drones (different from the large Predator and Reaper family of drones employed by the United States in the War on Terror) have become ubiquitous on the battlefield.3

Ukraine’s War of Endurance: The Fight for Advantage in the Conflict’s Fifth Year

Michael Kofman

On February 24, the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine will reach a grim milestone, grinding into its fifth year. For Ukraine, this war is a continuation of Russia’s 2014 invasion. For Russia, what was branded as a “special military operation” has now gone on longer than even the Soviet Union’s “Great Patriotic War” from 1941 to 1945 and has cost hundreds of thousands of lives. The 2022 invasion started as a failed Russian attempt to quickly subjugate Ukraine but has become Europe’s largest conventional conflict since World War II. A war initially defined by maneuver, in which Russian forces tried to leverage

Munich Security Conference and Europe’s Future

George Friedman

Representatives from more than 115 countries gathered over the weekend for the annual Munich Security Conference. Little of substance usually emerges from this meeting, save that it provides a lens for what is foremost in the minds of those who attend. Sometimes, this involves a wide range of issues. Other times, there is only one fundamental issue on the table.

The fundamental issue this year is the shift in how the United States views its place in the world. In a way, this was a crisis meeting. It’s not that the world is facing catastrophe; it’s that the geopolitical system is profoundly changing, as U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in his speech, and that many see those changes as an American betrayal.

Bitcoin Mining And The Electricity Grid: A Quiet Savior

Joakim Book

With all eyes on the winter storm raging through America last month, a silent hero was working in the background to keep the lights on. And I don’t primarily mean the emergency workers or the teams of electricians, foresters, and engineers that keep the power lines up and ice-free; these guys operate very much in the foreground, the public well aware of their critical work.

Before and during winter storms, the electricity supply becomes strained and household demand spikes—think space heaters, heat pumps requiring more juice, more lights turned on, and the natural gas system requiring more electricity for ordinary functions. In Econ101 lingo, the grid is hit with a simultaneous leftward shift in supply and rightward shift in demand, explaining why electricity prices and natural gas prices shot up in recent days.

The Economic Case For The US-Israel Partnership

Zineb Riboua

Discussions of the United States–Israel relationship tend to focus on security assistance, as though the partnership were primarily an exercise in strategic patronage. However, this framing overlooks that Israel is a significant economic and innovation power whose deep integration into the American industrial, technological, and capital ecosystems bolsters the US economy. Further, Israel’s capacity for innovation is indispensable to building and maintaining America’s military and economic advantages.

After October 7, 2023, credit agencies, foreign investors, and geopolitical commentators assumed that Israel’s economic resilience would buckle under the weight of a prolonged, multifront war. One agency, Moody’s, downgraded Israel’s credit rating in 2024. Capital outflows, a spike in defense expenditures, and the mobilization of hundreds of thousands of reservists from the civilian workforce gave credence to the view that the so-called start-up nation had pushed its small economy to the brink. Some observers concluded that isolation, war fatigue, and fiscal strain would erode the foundations of Israeli economic power. Others went further, pointing to perceived fragility and casting doubt on the strategic logic behind the US-Israel partnership.

Al Jazeera Centre for Studies: Academic Veneer Normalizing Terrorism

Toby Dershowitz

Is Al Jazeera using its “academic” arm, the Al Jazeera Centre for Studies (AJCS), to normalize Hamas’s atrocities, while hiding behind the veneer of a purportedly rigorous research institution? From February 7 to 9, an AJCS-sponsored forum in Doha, Qatar, gave pride of place to figures such as Hamas leader Khaled Meshal under the banner of academic discourse.

AJCS is one of at least a dozen parts of the Al Jazeera Media Network’s ecosystem, funded and run by the Qatari ruling family, and used as soft power tools to amplify anti-Western and pro-Islamist narratives. Established to provide research support to Al Jazeera’s news channels, AJCS also serves to integrate the network into academic spheres. Those connections allow AJCS to enjoy a patina of academic credibility to launder and legitimize the violent ideas espoused by figures like Meshal and Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.

AI drives shift to persistent, low‑level cyber conflict

Catherine Knowles

Recorded Future warns that cyber operations have become a routine tool of geopolitical competition, with constant, fragmented activity replacing the high-profile attacks that often dominate headlines.

In its 2026 State of Security Report, the threat intelligence firm describes a shift in which cyber activity now sits alongside physical conflict, coercion, and espionage as a practical way to gain leverage.

The report cites geopolitical fragmentation and wider use of artificial intelligence as key drivers of instability. It argues that persistent activity is now the norm, rather than waves of discrete incidents.
"Uncertainty is no longer episodic-it's the operating environment," said Levi Gundert, Recorded Future's Chief Security & Intelligence Officer.
"As geopolitical norms weaken, state objectives, criminal capability, and private-sector technology are increasingly reinforcing one another, compressing warning timelines and expanding plausible deniability. AI is accelerating that dynamic not through autonomous attacks, but by scaling deception and eroding trust inside decision-making processes. In 2026, cyber risk will be defined less by singular events and more by persistent, fragmented pressure that reshapes competition, escalation, and stability over time."

Hacktivists, State Actors, Cybercriminals Target Global Defense Industry, Google Warns

Eduard Kovacs

Hacktivists, state-sponsored threat actors, and profit-driven cybercrime groups have been targeting the defense industrial base (DIB) sector, according to an analysis published on Wednesday by Google Threat Intelligence Group (GTIG).

Google warns of escalating, multifaceted cyber threats targeting the global DIB, including contractors, suppliers, and personnel supporting military capabilities.

The analysis highlights a “relentless barrage” of cyber operations from state-sponsored actors linked to China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea; pro-Russia and pro-Iran hacktivists; and cybercriminals, particularly groups launching ransomware attacks on manufacturing.

China-nexus cyberespionage dominates in volume, often exploiting edge devices and zero-days for long-dwell intrusions into aerospace and defense entities. Groups conducting such operations include UNC4841, UNC3886 (blamed for the recent Singapore telecom attacks), and UNC5221.

Holding Back the Sky: Ukraine's Air Defense Campaign, 2022-2025


Ukraine’s air defense campaign represents the most intensive real-world stress test of integrated air defense in modern warfare. For four years, Ukrainian forces have defended cities, bases, and critical infrastructure against continuous waves of missiles and drones at a scale few modern militaries have experienced. Under constant pressure, they have adapted in real time, stretching limited stocks of interceptors, integrating new Western systems, and innovating cost-effective ways to defend against mass attacks.

This report examines how Ukraine built, adapted, and sustained its air defense system since the beginning of Russia’s full-scale invasion. Drawing on operational experience, interviews with air defense personnel, and open-source data, it traces the evolution of Ukraine’s air defense from fragmented legacy systems to a layered, adaptive architecture operating under extreme resource constraints.

Hefei’s Fusion Sector Drives New Approach to Development

Shijie Wang

On October 18, 2024, General Secretary Xi Jinping visited the city of Hefei, where he encouraged officials to pursue a new framework for the research and development of nuclear fusion. He called for a “deep integration of innovation, industrial, capital, and talent chains” (ๅˆ›ๆ–ฐ้“พ、ไบงไธš้“พ、่ต„้‡‘้“พ、ไบบๆ‰้“พๆทฑๅบฆ่žๅˆ), a policy that has since been abbreviated as the “four chains integration” (ๅ››้“พ่žๅˆ). Xi described the framework as a “critical deployment” (้‡่ฆ้ƒจ็ฝฒ) for the “accelerated implementation of the innovation-driven development strategy” (ๅŠ ๅฟซๅฎžๆ–ฝๅˆ›ๆ–ฐ้ฉฑๅŠจๅ‘ๅฑ•ๆˆ˜็•ฅ), and said that it serves as a tangible manifestation of the so-called “advantages of the new-type whole-of-nation system” (ๆ–ฐๅž‹ไธพๅ›ฝไฝ“ๅˆถไผ˜ๅŠฟ) (CCP Members Net, October 16, 2022; CCTV, October 19, 2024). [1] Xi had made similar calls in the past, and this specific model, which involves leveraging social financing (via local government financing vehicles) to drive innovation, was standardized as a national initiative by the Party in October 2022 (Shaanxi Provincial Government News Bureau, December 12, 2024). But until now, take-up has been slow. [2]

Interpol backroom warriors fight cybercriminals 'weaponizing' AI

Martin ABBUGAO

From perfectly spelled phishing emails to fake videos of government officials, artificial intelligence is changing the game for Interpol's cat-and-mouse fight against cybercrime at its high-tech war rooms in Singapore.

Their foe: crime syndicates, structured like multinational firms, which are exploiting the fast-evolving technology to target individuals, states and corporations for billions of dollars.

"I consider the weaponization of AI by cybercriminals ... as the biggest threat we're seeing," says Neal Jetton, Interpol's Singapore-based director of cybercrime.

"They are using it in whatever way they can," added Jetton, who is seconded to Interpol from the U.S. Secret Service, the federal agency in charge of presidential protection.

18 February 2026

Happy Birthday, T-90S: India Celebrates 25 Years with Iconic Russian Tank

Peter Suciu

The Indian-specific variant, the T-90S “Bhisma,” was initially built in Russia, with the first indigenously-produced tank completed in 2009. Today, more than 1,100 Bhisma tanks are in service with the Indian Army. Beyond enhancing the capabilities of the Indian military, the adoption of the MBTs was described as a “lifesaver for Russian tank manufacturing,” which had struggled throughout the 1990s and early 2000s amid a broader economic downturn.

“Rosoboronexport’s contract for the supply of T-90S tanks to India has become a lifesaver for the Russian tank industry, which in 2001 had a domestic order for only three vehicles. Furthermore, it has provided a major boost to the development of the country’s entire machine-building industry, which today employs over three million people,” Rosoboronexport, a subsidiary of Rostec, the Russian state-owned military-industrial conglomerate, said in a statement to Russian state news agency TASS on Friday.

Singapore: Rootkits, Zero-Day Used in Chinese Attack on Major Telecom Firms

Ionut Arghire

All four major telecommunications providers in Singapore were targeted last year by a Chinese APT, according to Singapore’s cybersecurity agency CSA and its development agency IMDA.

The attack, initially disclosed in July, was attributed to UNC3886, a cyberespionage group active since at least 2021, which is known for targeting vulnerabilities in Ivanti, Juniper, and VMware products.

“UNC3886 launched a deliberate, targeted, and well-planned campaign against Singapore’s telecommunications sector. All four of Singapore’s major telecommunications operators – M1, SIMBA Telecom, Singtel and StarHub – have been the target of attacks,” CSA says.

As part of the campaign, the agency notes, the APT deployed advanced tools, including a zero-day exploit in a firewall, to access a telco’s network and obtain a small amount of technical data.

UNC3886 was also seen deploying rootkits to evade detection and maintain persistent access to the compromised environments.

Tracking China’s Increased Military Activities in the Indo-Pacific in 2025

Bonny Lin, Brian Hart, Leon Li, Truly Tinsley

Overall: In 2025, China’s military activity increased in the Taiwan Strait, South China Sea, near Japan, and beyond the First Island Chain, reflecting an overall rise in operational tempo and geographic reach. Of the areas surveyed in this report, the only one to show a decrease in operational tempo is the China-Russia joint exercises. 

Taiwan Strait: In 2025, the PLA conducted a record-breaking level of air and maritime activity around Taiwan, sustaining the higher operational tempo of PLA activities that began following William Lai’s inauguration as Taiwan’s president in May 2024. This led to a marked increase in both average monthly PLA activities as well as a higher baseline of PLA activity. However, there was a minor year-over-year decrease in PLA activities in the latter portions of 2025, likely reflecting a temporary, tactical adjustment on China’s end. In 2025, China also conducted two large-scale military exercises around Taiwan, named Strait Thunder-2025A and Justice Mission 2025. 

The Objective Should Be a Secular and Moderate Iran

Frank Schell

The Islamic Republic of Iran has been wounded. And now, something has got to give.

President Trump has a historic opportunity to reverse decades of enmity toward “The Great Satan,” and end the exportation of terrorism to Europe, the United States, and Israel through the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — known to have provided weapons and training to the defeated Hamas and Hezbollah, and to other proxies in Syria.

Iran has been militarily and politically weakened. Some of Iran’s Russian and indigenously made air defense systems were destroyed by the Israeli Air Force last June, and later that month, American B-2 aircraft successfully struck and destroyed Iranian nuclear infrastructure in Natanz, Fordo, and Isfahan. Iran’s traditional allies, Russia, China, and North Korea, were observers on the sidelines. Moreover, the Islamist regime is afraid of its own people, having recently killed at least 30,000 demonstrators according to estimates appearing in The Guardian and Time, both quoting local health sources. (RELATED: US–Iran Talks Only Lead to Uncertainty)

Bombs, Bad Bunny, & The Biathlon

Richard Haass

Welcome to Home & Away. Some weeks there is one big thing to write about, others several smaller things. This week falls into the second category. So be prepared for a mezze rather than a main course.

Bomb Bomb Iran?

Israel’s Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu visited the White House this week for his seventh meeting with President Trump since he took office just over a year ago. Netanyahu’s goal this time was reportedly to underscore Israeli concerns with Iran’s ballistic missile program—and to persuade President Trump to do something about it.

It is not clear Trump is on the same page. After the meeting, Trump posted, “There was nothing definitive reached other than I insisted that negotiations with Iran continue to see whether or not a Deal can be consummated.”

The Clash of Civilizations Was an Inside Job

Josef Joffe

Samuel P. Huntington’s The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order turns 30 this year. The book was a worldwide hit in the late 1990s and has been published in some 30 translations, including in Arabic, Chinese, and Bengali. After 9/11, the first part of the title practically became a household phrase. Huntington had been an eminent political scientist at Harvard, but his 1996 book made him a global celebrity. (I first met him when I was a Ph.D. student at Harvard, and we later became friends.)

The gist of Huntington’s argument: The end of the Cold War did not mark the “end of history,” as the political theorist Francis Fukuyama had argued in a widely discussed article and subsequent book imagining that the collapse of the Soviet empire would virtually end the strife among states of millennia past and that liberal democracy and market economics would now rule.

The Age of Defensive Democracy

Nicholas Bequelin

Is the world condemned to autocracy?

U.S. President Woodrow Wilson’s famous justification for asking Congress to declare war on Germany in 1917—“the world must be made safe for democracy”—has long been criticized as having pushed the United States down the slippery slope of internationalism and a century of ill-advised foreign interventions.

Is the world condemned to autocracy?

U.S. President Woodrow Wilson’s famous justification for asking Congress to declare war on Germany in 1917—“the world must be made safe for democracy”—has long been criticized as having pushed the United States down the slippery slope of internationalism and a century of ill-advised foreign interventions.

Kari Lake is making Trump’s job harder in Iran

Marc A. Thiessen

She has gutted America’s ability to get good information to the Iranian people in a conflict.
February 13, 2026 Kari Lake, senior adviser for the U.S. Agency for Global Media, leaves a House committee hearing on Capitol Hill on Feb. 10.

If President Donald Trump takes military action in Iran, he will need help from the Iranian people. The U.S. military can decapitate the regime from the air. But what happens on the ground will be up to Iranians, who bravely took to the streets this winter to demand their freedom — and are now waiting for the bombing to return and finish the job.





Pentagon's use of Claude during Maduro raid sparks Anthropic feud

Dave Lawler, Maria Curi

The U.S. military used Anthropic's Claude AI model during the operation to capture Venezuela's Nicolรกs Maduro, two sources with knowledge of the situation told Axios.Now, the blowback may threaten the company's business with the Pentagon. The latest: After reports on the use of Claude in the raid, a senior administration official told Axios that the Pentagon would be reevaluating its partnership with Anthropic.

"Anthropic asked whether their software was used for the raid to capture Maduro, which caused real concerns across the Department of War indicating that they might not approve if it was," the official said.

"Any company that would jeopardize the operational success of our warfighters in the field is one we need to reevaluate our partnership with going forward."
An Anthropic spokesperson denied that: "Anthropic has not discussed the use of Claude for specific operations with the Department of War. We have also not discussed this with any industry partners, including Palantir, outside of routine discussions on strictly technical matters."

World's rules-based order 'no longer exists', Germany's Merz warns

Jaroslav Lukiv

The rules-based world order "no longer exists", the German Chancellor has warned at a major security summit. Opening the annual Munich Security Conference, Friedrich Merz told other world leaders that "our freedom is not guaranteed" in an era of big power politics, and that Europeans must be ready to make "sacrifice".

He also admitted that "a deep divide has opened between Europe and the United States".

The conference is taking place on the backdrop of US President Donald Trump threatening Denmark's sovereignty over Greenland by pledging to annex the Arctic territory and his tariffs on imports from European nations. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was listening to Merz and will deliver his own speech on Saturday, earlier spoke of a "new era in geopolitics".