1 July 2026

Myanmar Reemerges as Frontline in India-China Rivalry

Geopolitical Monitor | Vijay Kumar Dhar

Myanmar's President, U Min Aung Hlaing, recently visited India and then China, signaling a new phase in geopolitical competition in South Asia and the Bay of Bengal. His India visit aimed to secure legitimacy and diversify strategic options, while the subsequent China trip underscored Beijing's enduring influence as Naypyidaw's primary partner.

Suppressing Just Dissent: Pakistan’s Authoritarian Face In Occupied Kashmir

Eurasia Review  |  A. Jathindra

The Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) protests in Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK) escalated significantly in June 2026, transforming from economic grievances into a broad-based movement against Pakistan's control. Initially demanding lower electricity prices and subsidized flour, JAAC's 38-point charter also sought to abolish 12 reserved assembly seats, challenging Islamabad's political strategy.

BRICS Facing Political Divergences, Suspends Its Future Expansion

Eurasia Review  |  Kester Kenn Klomegah

Russia’s Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov, announced on June 24 at the 12th Primakov Readings conference in Moscow that BRICS has suspended its future expansion plans due to political divergences and rising geopolitical perceptions among members. This decision follows BRICS's recent expansion from five to ten members and the creation of 'partner membership' status for 13 countries, which, despite being a significant achievement under Russia’s 2024 chairmanship, has become an obstacle.

Why are Hong Kong, mainland universities rising in global rankings as US ones fall?

South China Morning Post  |  William Yiu

The global higher education landscape has shifted significantly over the past five years, with universities in Asia, particularly Hong Kong and mainland China, climbing international rankings while over 70 per cent of US institutions slipped. UK-based education data firm Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) reported that excellence is no longer Western-dominated, attributing Chinese universities' improved performance to rising research funding and strategic investments.

If you think China needs to dethrone U.S. dollar, you don't understand how it is waging global currency war

CNBC  |  Dewardric McNeal

China is methodically building financial infrastructure to reduce global dependence on the U.S. dollar-centric system and create alternatives for other countries, a geopolitical strategy highlighted at the Lujiazui Forum. Chinese officials unveiled measures to expand offshore renminbi (RMB) finance, deepen Shanghai's role as an international financial center, create new liquidity facilities for foreign central banks, and expand cross-border RMB trading.

Just How Much is Too Much? The Defense Spending Dilemma

Foreign Policy Research Institute | Frank G. Hoffman

The President requested a record $1.5 trillion defense budget for next year, representing a roughly 50 percent increase over last year's baseline, significantly exceeding previous increases. This proposal addresses a deteriorating security environment, including a shrinking, aging, and overcommitted U.S. military unprepared for modern warfare. Key threats include China's significant military investment, particularly concerning Taiwan, and the "Axis of Upheaval" autocracies collaborating against Western interests.

Power Struggles In The Middle East And Ankara’s Corridor Strategy

Eurasia Review  |  Nejat Tamzok

The Middle East's critical chokepoints and vast energy resources make control over the region central to global power struggles, shifting from fossil fuels to new corridors and green energy. The U.S.-backed India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC), signed in September 2023 at the G20 Summit, aims to bypass traditional routes and counter China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) by connecting India, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Israel to Europe.

China removes 6 generals from legislature amid ongoing anti-corruption drive

South China Morning Post  |  Phoebe Zhang

China has removed six senior People’s Liberation Army (PLA) officers from the country’s top legislative body, signaling President Xi Jinping’s military anti-corruption campaign remains active and is not slowing down. The National People’s Congress Standing Committee issued a late-night notice on Friday, announcing the removal of 13 legislators, which included these six generals, a former top financial regulator, and the former Xinjiang Communist Party chief.

Gulf states can contain the threat from Iran and Israel. But they’ll need help

Chatham House  |  Rashid Al-Mohanadi

Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries face confirmed threats from Iran and Israel, both operating on a shared conviction that security requires regional subordination, fostering systemic instability. In 2019, drones and missiles struck Saudi energy facilities. By June 2025, US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites led to Iranian missile barrages on Qatar, mostly intercepted.

AI-Powered War Is Coming. This Fight Over a Data Center Just Made That Case

Cnet | Katelyn Chedraoui

The US government intervened in a federal court case concerning xAI's Colossus 2 data center in Memphis, Tennessee, arguing its closure "directly threatens" national security. The NAACP filed a class action lawsuit alleging the data center's 27 gas turbines in Mississippi violate the Clean Air Act, posing health risks to nearby Black communities.

Iran Is a Bigger Defeat Than Vietnam

Foreign Policy  |  Paul Musgrave

U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to launch a campaign against Iran has resulted in a strategic calamity for Washington, surpassing the U.S. defeat in the Vietnam War. This "Gulf war," a war of choice, has led to a reversal marking a greater strategic disaster, fulfilling Trump's hope for a consequential event.

The U.S. Won the War With Iran

Foreign Policy  |  Matthew Kroenig

The United States, despite an emerging conventional wisdom suggesting a catastrophic loss in its war and memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Iran—a defeat characterized as worse than Vietnam and comparable to...—actually won the conflict, according to the article's primary headline. This victory, while "not a knockout blow," saw Washington "prevail on points," indicating a nuanced strategic success rather than a decisive military triumph.

Epic Fury and the Strategic Failure Looming Behind the Tactical Success

Vaberet

The United States achieved tactical and operational success against Iran during Operation Epic Fury, but simultaneously created conditions for a strategic failure of historic consequence. The operation suffered from undisciplined political design, characterized by shifting and aspirational objectives that ranged from preventing an imminent Iranian nuclear threat and regime change to destroying ballistic missiles and restoring Gulf stability.

Europe Goes Its Own Way: Drifting From America, the Continent Is Rearming and Reordering Itself

Foreign Affairs | Kacper Pempel

Europe is rearming and reordering itself, drifting from the United States following perceived humiliation and disparagement by the Trump administration since 2025. Europeans now recognize surrounding dangers, leading to increased investment in military resources and a willingness to serve in armed forces, forging a new grand strategy. Polling shows 77 percent of Europeans view Russia’s war in Ukraine as a direct threat, and only 11 percent across 15 surveyed countries consider the U.S.

As the Tide Turns Against Putin, Beware the Drowning Man

Foreign Policy  |  Peter Frankopan

Russian President Vladimir Putin's "special military operation" in Ukraine, launched in 2022 with an initial goal of a few days, has now extended beyond the duration of both the Soviet fight against Nazi Germany and World War I. Russian forces have ceased making significant battlefield gains, even losing territory in April and May, incurring enormous costs.

The Next Russia Threat

Foreign Affairs  |  Michael Kofman

Russia's military, despite visible struggles in the fifth year of the Ukraine war, is projected to reconstitute its combat power faster than anticipated, posing an enduring primary threat to European security and NATO within five to seven years. Even if defeated in Ukraine, Moscow will field a larger force with enhanced drone, deep-strike, and personnel capabilities, maintaining high defense spending and industrial production.

A Critical Moment for Russia

Geopolitical Futures  |  George Friedman

Ukrainian military drone strikes against Russian oil refineries and storage tanks, including one in Moscow, represent an escalation of Kyiv's campaign to limit Russia's oil revenue amid a global shortage. These attacks are strategically impactful, forcing Russian leaders to discuss a response and signaling a potential weakening of any political understanding from the Trump-Putin summit.

Zelensky should learn from Netanyahu’s mistakes

The Hill  |  Dov Zakheim

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky faces a critical juncture, potentially mirroring the strategic missteps of Czechoslovakia's Eduard Benes in 1938 and Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu in a recent US-Iran negotiation. Czechoslovakia, despite a formidable military, capitulated to Hitler after being excluded from British and French negotiations that codified German demands, leading to its full seizure within a year.

Shockwaves From The Gulf: The Iran War And Its Impact On The Global Economy And Energy Markets

Eurasia Review  |  Mohamed Chtatou

The 2026 Iran War, initiated by a United States–Israel coalition on February 28, 2026, and Iran's subsequent closure of the Strait of Hormuz, triggered an unprecedented energy and economic shock. This conflict removed approximately 20 million barrels per day of oil and significant volumes of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from global markets, representing about 20% of global supply, as confirmed by the IEA, IMF, and Federal Reserve.

Is Libya Quietly Becoming the Biggest Oil Prize the West Can’t Afford to Ignore?

OilPrice.com  |  Simon Watkins

Libya has boosted crude production to a 13-year high of nearly 1.5 million bpd, targeting 2.1 million bpd within three to five years, supported by OPEC's stronger long-term oil demand outlook. Western energy majors, including Eni, BP, TotalEnergies, Shell, and KBR, are expanding investments in Libya, driven by the post-Ukraine war need to source new oil and gas supplies.

Can the US military preserve decades of wartime experience?

Military Times | Natalie Oliverio

The U.S. military faces a critical challenge in preserving the judgment, leadership experience, and combat intuition gained over two decades of post-9/11 wars as thousands of veterans approach retirement eligibility. Army Col. Peter Mansoor's 2004 Karbala improvisation exemplified experience beyond doctrine, a crucial asset now at risk. While knowledge and procedures are teachable, judgment develops through years of high-pressure decision-making and learning from consequences, according to Mansoor, retired Marine officer Ben Connable, and Army operations leader Aaron Welch.

Would Claude Refuse an Illegal Military Order?

The Atlantic | Shane Harris

The Maven Smart System, a military platform, integrates AI like Claude to fuse intelligence from satellite imagery, drone feeds, and communications intercepts, enabling officers to rapidly identify enemy unit locations, select weapons, and determine attack angles. This system, which can generate target lists in minutes, exemplifies Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's "AI-first" warfighting strategy.

Is the Iran War America’s Winter War?

National Interest | Arman Mahmoudian

The recent memorandum of understanding between Iran and the United States has prompted analysts to question if Washington's terms were overly favorable to Tehran, potentially encouraging adversaries to test US power. This concern draws parallels to the Soviet Union's 1939–40 Winter War against Finland, which, despite territorial gains, severely damaged the Red Army's reputation and led Nazi Germany to miscalculate Soviet military strength, contributing to Operation Barbarossa.

Replicating Ukraine’s drone success requires culture shift first

Asia Times  |  James Horncastle

Ukrainian drone strikes are devastating Russian communities, with Sevastopol, Russian-occupied Crimea, recently losing power due to attacks on energy facilities on June 18, 2026. This disruption holds immense symbolic value given Crimea's importance to both nations. Ukraine's domestic drone industry, now among the world's best, has provided considerable advantages, initially disrupting Russia's 2022 invasion with Turkish-made Bayraktars and later its own advanced technology.

Iran Claims Sole Control Of Hormuz Strait As Truce Begins To Unravel

Eurasia Review

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi claimed Tehran had regained sole control over shipping in the Strait of Hormuz for 30 days, warning against bypassing Iranian-approved routes, as a fragile US truce frayed on June 28. This declaration coincided with renewed missile, drone, and air strikes across the Persian Gulf, with Iran targeting US military sites in Kuwait and Bahrain, including facilities linked to the United States Fifth Fleet.

30 June 2026

Pakistan Has Never Looked So Important

Persuasion  |  Rashmee Roshan Lall

Pakistan has emerged as an indispensable intermediary in the U.S.-Iran ceasefire, brokering the April 8 agreement and subsequent talks in Switzerland on June 21, 2026, resulting in the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding. This mediation has significantly elevated Pakistan's international standing and goodwill, fulfilling its founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah's aspiration to be "the pivot of the world."

Welcome to ‘Xizang’: China is quietly, permanently trying to erase Tibet

The Hill  |  Brahma Chellaney

China is implementing a systematic campaign to erase Tibetan culture, language, and identity by targeting children on the Tibetan Plateau. While international attention focuses on China’s mass internment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, a quieter, more permanent campaign is unfolding in Tibet. Over one million Tibetan children, almost four out of every five, have been forcibly placed into state-run, Mandarin-language boarding schools, often taken from families at ages four or five.

The Great Mineral Realignment: The G7’s Supply Chain Alliance And Turkey’s Strategic Crossroads

Eurasia Review  |  Dr. Nejat Tamzok

Critical minerals are replacing fossil fuels as the new key resource shaping global power and geopolitics, leading to a fierce struggle for control. The G7, led by the United States, is actively forming an alliance to dismantle China’s overwhelming monopoly on critical mineral processing and refining. This initiative, formalized at the G7 Summit in Evian, aims to reduce dependency on a "single supplier" outside the G7 to below 60% by 2030, backed by 195 projects totaling €64 billion.

Just How Much is Too Much? The Defense Spending Dilemma

Foreign Policy Research Institute | Frank G. Hoffman

The President requested a $1.5 trillion defense budget for next year, a record 50 percent increase over last year's baseline, surpassing previous defense buildups. This proposal addresses a deteriorating US security posture, with an aging, overcommitted military unprepared for modern warfare, amidst rising challenges from China and an "Axis of Upheaval" of authoritarian states.

With the war’s end in sight, the questions it raised demand answers

Atlantic Council  |  Tressa Guenov

The United States and Iran have reached an agreement to extend their fragile ceasefire and prepare for reopening the Strait of Hormuz, despite significant unresolved questions regarding the Israel-Hezbollah conflict and nuclear negotiation timelines. This development creates a complex global defense landscape where Europe and the Gulf states face the common challenge of recapitalizing defense capabilities amid production scarcity and evolving threats.

N.S.A. Lost Access to Powerful A.I. Model Amid Anthropic Dispute

The New York Times  |  Dustin Volz, Julian E. Barnes

The National Security Agency (N.S.A.) has lost access to a powerful A.I. model developed by Anthropic, U.S. officials confirmed, due to the Trump administration’s dispute with the start-up. This action deprived the N.S.A. of a critical tool highly effective at identifying software weaknesses. The Trump administration imposed export controls on Anthropic this month, citing national security concerns, which forced the company to halt the release of its advanced models, Mythos 5 and Fable 5.

As Death Toll Spikes, Venezuela’s Earthquakes Test U.S. Disaster Relief

Council on Foreign Relations  |  Sam Vigersky

Two powerful earthquakes struck northern Venezuela on June 24, 2026, with magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5, the latter being the strongest to hit the country in a century. The quakes caused 164 reported deaths and over 1,000 injuries, with the U.S. Geological Survey estimating a potential death toll between ten thousand and one hundred thousand people.

Why Rules-Based Orders Fail

Council on Foreign Relations | Benn Steil

The rules-based international order, largely established by the United States post-World War II, is inherently susceptible to failure due to internal contradictions, drawing parallels from Douglas Hofstadter's work on recursive systems. Kurt Gรถdel's incompleteness theorem demonstrates that complex rules-based systems inevitably confront questions their rules cannot answer, leading to contested norms.

Russia’s Oil Bottlenecks Far More Serious than Just Refineries and Ports

The Jamestown Foundation  |  Paul Goble

Ukraine’s successful drone attacks on Russian refineries and ports have significantly reduced Moscow’s ability to meet domestic needs and sell oil abroad, highlighting serious bottlenecks in Russia’s critically important oil sector. These chokepoints reflect the fragility and lack of redundancy in Russia’s oil pipeline network, making concentrated infrastructure near its few ports tempting targets.

Russia Expanding Soft Power in Georgia via Culture and Language

The Jamestown Foundation  |  Beka Chedia

Russia is actively expanding its soft power in Georgia through cultural diplomacy and language promotion, highlighted by two 2026 visits from Special Representative Mikhail Shvydkoy. Moscow has intensified efforts to promote Russian culture and language via theater, concerts, and educational programs, aiming to foster narratives of shared history and closer ties.