The Iran war has catalyzed the formation of a new Saudi-led bloc in the Middle East, comprising Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, Pakistan, and Turkey, notably excluding the United Arab Emirates. This grouping emerged as some member states became "clear winners" or developed "new resilience," despite the conflict inflicting substantial pain on Persian Gulf states through declining exports and a diminished sense of safety.
Indian Strategic Studies
7 July 2026
BIMSTEC, Northeast India, and an Overlooked Pillar of the Act East Policy
Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a 21-point action plan at the 6th BIMSTEC Summit in Bangkok on April 4, 2025. Two less-noticed memoranda of understanding (MoUs) were signed: one between India’s Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region (MDoNER) and Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and another between India’s North Eastern Handicrafts Development Corporation (NEHDC) and Thailand’s Creative Economy Agency (CCAT).
Troubled Straits: Analyzing Trade Chokepoints in the South China Sea
The South China Sea is the world’s most consequential maritime corridor, handling trillions of dollars in goods annually, with geopolitical tensions threatening global commerce. New CSIS analysis provides granular insight into trade flows through eight chokepoints, challenging existing notions of their importance. In 2024, nearly $6.4 trillion worth of goods transited these straits, with the Malacca and Taiwan Straits each moving over $2.4 trillion, representing 21 percent of global maritime trade.
Myanmar to Push Ahead With Suspended Myitsone Dam Project, Officials Say
Myanmar's new military-backed government plans to revive the controversial China-backed Myitsone dam project, expecting completion within roughly eight years. This $3.6 billion project, located in Kachin State at the confluence of the Mali and N’Mai rivers, was suspended in 2011 due to widespread public opposition. Concerns centered on significant environmental and social impacts, alongside reports that 90 percent of the generated electricity would be exported to China.
While America Drained Its Oil Reserve Fighting Iran, China Quietly Sat on 1.4 Billion Barrels — and Won the War Without Firing a Shot
The Iran War's outcome saw China emerge as a principal strategic beneficiary, despite being the world's largest energy importer. Beijing utilized its vast Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), which held 1.4 billion barrels of oil in December 2025, to comfortably withdraw from global oil markets for two months as prices spiked.
China’s EUV Lithography Progress: Parsing Signal From Noise
Reuters reported in December 2025 that researchers in Shenzhen secretly built a prototype for an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machine, a critical piece of equipment for producing advanced semiconductors. This development sparked debate on when China can overcome this last obstacle to manufacturing its own advanced chips.
Charting the course: developments in China’s PLAN aviation
China has significantly advanced its carrier aviation capabilities under President Xi Jinping, commissioning the Liaoning and two additional carriers, with more planned, including a nuclear-powered Type-004 by 2035. This development, a prestigious part of China's military modernization, involves prioritizing carrier aviation through unit transfers and expanding carrier air wings with advanced aircraft like low-observable combat aircraft and ASW helicopters.
What to Know About Chinese AI Models
Chinese open-weight AI models, including Qwen, DeepSeek, GLM, and Kimi, are rapidly expanding global market share, surpassing U.S. models in downloads on platforms like Hugging Face. This rapid diffusion threatens American technological leadership by establishing de facto technical dependence on Chinese model families across Europe, Southeast Asia, and Latin America.
What Hormuz and Chinese Sources Reveal About Beijing’s Energy Strategy
China's energy system, despite being the world's largest in electricity production, renewable technologies, and EV markets, exhibits a critical paradox: increased vulnerability to external energy shocks. Over 70 percent of its oil consumption, significant natural gas supplies, and expanding nuclear sector uranium depend on foreign imports. The Hormuz crisis starkly exposed this reliance on external energy resources and supply chains beyond Beijing's control.
China Is Practicing ‘Sinking’ US Carriers—but Doesn’t Like Japan Doing the Same
China has constructed an elaborate test range in Xinjiang, featuring a full-size 3D mockup of a US Navy Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer, for anti-ship practice. This development comes despite Beijing's public outrage over Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) drills simulating an attack on China's Type 001 CNS Liaoning aircraft carrier.
New Syria, Old Lebanon: Absence of the State
U.S. President Donald Trump, on June 16, 2026, proposed that Syria "take care of Hezbollah" in Lebanon during a G7 summit meeting with Qatar's emir, aiming to reduce Iran's influence and leverage over Lebanon. This initiative, which included discussions with Syria's President Ahmad al-Sharaa and a review of Syria's state sponsor of terrorism designation, sought to replace Israel as Hezbollah's nemesis and neutralize the group.
Geopolitical Europe Needs Air-Conditioning
Western Europe is currently facing a third extraordinary heat wave since May 27, exposing its profound unpreparedness for climate change and creating a significant geopolitical vulnerability. This systemic resistance to quick, wholesale transformation, exemplified by raging debates over air-conditioning and widespread infrastructure failures, undermines the continent's ability to assert power and deters adversaries.
Russia’s UAV Campaign Over Europe
Russia conducted a UAV campaign over Europe between August 2024 and February 2026, likely enabled by shadow-fleet vessels, exposing critical gaps in allied air defences, legal authority, and political cohesion. The campaign operated with substantial impunity across the airspace of a dozen NATO member states and Ireland, disrupting commercial aviation and penetrating sensitive defence installations, including nuclear-sharing sites and France’s ballistic-missile submarine base at รle Longue.
‘NATO 3.0’ Needs More Manpower
The upcoming NATO Summit in Ankara, following Secretary General Mark Rutte’s visit to Washington, aims to lock in European defense spending momentum. While the summit will focus on defense spending and industrial cooperation, a critical unaddressed issue is NATO's ability to generate sufficient manpower to provide military credibility to these investments.
Russia’s $11 Billion Soft Power Gamble
The Russian government’s $11 billion soft power investment in hosting the 2018 FIFA World Cup has been entirely erased by President Vladimir Putin’s military aggression and subsequent economic isolation. This massive expenditure originally aimed to project a modern, developed image of Russia to hundreds of thousands of international visitors.
'Most massive' Russian attack on Kyiv kills at least 30
Russian forces launched a major drone and missile attack on Kyiv overnight into Thursday, killing at least 30 people and injuring 91, in what Mayor Vitaly Klitschko described as the "most massive attack" on the Ukrainian capital. This barrage deployed the largest number of weapons on Kyiv, hitting locations over a wide area, including a high-rise block of flats and an ambulance station.
How the Iran War Boosted Central Asia’s Middle Corridor
The United States and Israel struck Iran on February 28, 2026, causing crude oil prices to jump nearly 10 percent overnight and disrupting commerce through the Strait of Hormuz. This event transformed the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route, known as the Middle Corridor, from a geopolitical aspiration into a structural necessity, intensifying competition among the states that control it.
Beyond ‘blood gold’: understanding the spectrum of illicit gold conflict
Illicit gold economies are increasingly driving transnational conflict networks, allowing armed groups, organized crime, and militarized regimes to bypass legitimate supply chains and finance violence. In countries like Sudan, Colombia, and Myanmar, the high portability and easy convertibility of gold make it an ideal medium for sustaining insurgencies and evading international sanctions.
The Strategy Behind the Battle for Crimea
Ukraine's recent offensive targets Crimea, focusing on disrupting Russian supply lines to the peninsula and occupied southern Ukraine. Since early April, Ukrainian drones have incapacitated the critical 390-mile "Highway of Death" coastal route along the Sea of Azov, which runs from the Russian supply hub of Rostov-on-Don. This route now features hundreds of burned-out wrecks of tractor trailers, tanker trucks, and military transports.
Winning the AI Race Isn’t Enough
Pope Leo XIV's encyclical, Magnifica Humanitas, asserts technology reflects its builders, a claim reinforced by the Intelligence Community's 2026 Annual Threat Assessment identifying China as the leading AI competitor to the U.S. China's "intelligentized warfare" doctrine, developed over a decade, integrates AI into command, control, intelligence, and strike, aiming for "human-out-of-the-loop" decision cycles.
How NATO is facing mounting cybersecurity challenges
NATO faces significant cybersecurity challenges from criminal and state-executed operations and uneven cyber force development among allies. The Alliance, which declared cyber a domain of warfare in 2016, updated its Cyber Defense Pledge in 2026. This pledge mandates cybersecurity maturity assessments for critical infrastructure, standardized 24-hour incident reporting, joint cyber exercise participation, and transparent resource allocation reporting for all member states.
Air Power Just Failed Its Biggest Test: What the Iran War Proved About Winning Wars
The United States, Israel, and Iran tested in summer 2025 whether air power alone can compel a hostile government, with Operation Epic Fury demonstrating its limitations. This concentrated air campaign, one of the most intense since the Gulf War, reaffirmed that air power does not win wars or change regimes by itself because air supremacy does not equate to control of ground.
Ukrainian Robotic and Drone Warfare: A Harbinger of Maneuver in the Machine Age — Analysis and Implications for U.S. Leadership
Ukrainian forces captured a fortified Russian position in Kharkiv Oblast in 2025 (publicized April 2026) using only aerial drones and unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs), achieving the objective without infantry commitment or casualties. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced this unprecedented event on April 13, 2026, highlighting the deployment of systems like Ratel, Termit/TerMIT, Ardal, Rys, Zmii/Zmiy, Protector, and Volya/Volia.
Get UAVs Off Their Tails and Into the Fight
Tail-sitter unmanned aerial systems (UAS) are being fielded for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) and air defense, but hold significant untapped potential for distributed logistics and organic precision strike, crucial for expeditionary advanced base operations (EABO). Shield AI’s X-BAT, an AI-piloted VTOL fighter jet comparable to an F-16, is expected to begin flight testing this year, while Anduril’s Roadrunner has been operationally deployed for Combat Evaluation since January 2024.
Electromagnetic Denial Must Be a Primary Mission
The U.S. Navy must dominate the electromagnetic spectrum (EMS) to deter Chinese aggression, shifting its strategy from merely surviving network denial to actively denying EMS access to adversaries. China's People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) is numerically expanding and improving combat integration, posing a significant threat in the South China Sea, particularly concerning a potential Taiwan invasion or blockade.
6 July 2026
The Afghanistan Reckoning
Five years ago, the 20-year American war in Afghanistan came to an inglorious end. In April 2021, the United States began its final withdrawal, with the goal of pulling out the 2,500 U.S. troops that remained in the country by September. Within weeks of the first U.S. departures, the Taliban had swept up scores of positions as Afghan government forces melted away.
Who Is China?
China's ascent is widely recognized in the West as an undeniable reality, evoking comparisons to past admiration for Mao's era. Commentators, such as investor and columnist Steven Rattner, have lauded China's “model of state-directed capitalism” as the driving force behind its transformation into “the colossus that dominates global manufacturing.” Rattner specifically noted China's “extraordinary progress” in rapidly expanding, technology-focused sectors, areas historically dominated by American leadership.
China's SEAD Tactics & Doctrine
Modern air warfare necessitates suppression of enemy air defenses (SEAD) as a prerequisite for air superiority, a reality explicitly recognized by Chinese military thinkers. In a Taiwan contingency, the People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) ability to suppress Taiwan’s air defense network will critically shape the conflict's opening phase and subsequent operations like amphibious assault.
China’s Global Strategy: Using Port Infrastructure As A Tool Of Power – Analysis
China has invested approximately $24 billion between 2000 and 2025 in 168 ports across nearly 90 countries, establishing an extensive global network that links trade routes, mining operations, and logistics hubs. This strategic expansion, particularly prominent in Latin America with ports like Chancay (Peru) near Chinese-backed mining projects, aims to secure supply chain control and expand geopolitical influence.
Xi-Trump Meeting: How China Seized Control Of The Narrative And Agenda – Analysis
US President Trump’s state visit to China from May 13-15, though high on symbolism, signaled a reset in bilateral ties, with Beijing largely shaping the optics, agenda, and public communications. China presented the meeting as between equals but operated from an unspoken hierarchy, demonstrating an upper hand over a declining US.
Saudi Arabia Just Refused to Let America Use Its Bases Against Iran — and Quietly Killed a Major U.S. Military Operation
Saudi Arabia recently refused the Trump administration permission to use its bases for "Project Freedom," a U.S. counter-blockade operation against Iran in the Strait of Hormuz, critically undermining the mission's efficacy. This refusal, despite public claims of diplomatic progress, was the decisive factor in the project's ultimate collapse, severely impairing U.S.
Iran Lost Its Supreme Leader, Its Navy, and Its Missiles — and Still Found the One Card That Forces America to Negotiate
American and Iranian negotiators are slowly hammering out a tentative deal to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, despite Iran having been severely battered by the joint Israeli-American "Operation Epic Fury" which decimated its naval assets, missile and drone forces, and killed its Supreme Leader. However, Iran's theocracy has retained power amidst economic decay, leveraging its ability to close the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas.
NATO Isn't a Charity
President Donald Trump criticized NATO allies for insufficient defense spending, claiming the U.S. contributes $999 billion without benefit, portraying the alliance as a charity. The article refutes Trump's arithmetic, clarifying NATO's 2025 U.S. defense spending estimate is $980 billion, representing national defense budgets, not direct payments; the common-funded budget's U.S.
PERSPECTIVE: The West is Losing the Cognitive War Russia Never Stopped Fighting
Russia is effectively waging a cognitive war against the West, exploiting ideological fissures and weakening democratic confidence, while the West has dismantled its own information warfare capabilities. Moscow's intelligence continuity spans five centuries, consistently using surveillance, provocation, and manipulation to defend the center and control the periphery. The Soviet collapse did not end this operational culture, which views sovereignty as conditional and civil society as penetrable, demanding intelligence access from former Soviet states like Ukraine and Georgia.
Drone Flights Over NATO Sites Show Europe’s Vulnerability, Experts Say
Russia has conducted 144 incidents of suspicious drone flights over a dozen European countries from August 2024 to February 2026, revealing Europe's vulnerability and NATO members' ill-preparedness. A new report by the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies indicates these complex reconnaissance drones, likely launched from "Russian-linked vessels" in the North and Baltic Seas, represent a systematic campaign to probe defenses and gather information.