- May 13th, 2026
The latest remarks by Donald Trump questioning why major Asian economies have not stepped up militarily to secure vital energy corridors such as the Strait of Hormuz have stirred debate across diplomatic and financial circles. But beyond the political rhetoric,...
Japan’s quiet but consequential deployment of upgraded Type-12 surface-to-ship missiles marks a pivotal moment in its postwar security trajectory—one that signals a transition from strictly defensive doctrine toward a more assertive, operational counterstrike capability. While the movement of missile launchers...
The global financial system is once again staring into a familiar abyss — one shaped not by a single catastrophic failure, but by the convergence of geopolitical shock, hidden leverage, and fragile confidence. As the Iran war drives oil prices...
Fresh signals of China’s accelerating naval modernization have emerged from new footage and reporting this month, pointing to a potentially significant shift in how maritime operations could be conducted across the Indo-Pacific. According to a report by the South China...
Tensions between the United States and its European allies have intensified following reports that several European governments have declined Washington’s request to deploy mine countermeasure vessels to safeguard commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz—a critical artery for global energy...
The possibility that Iran could mine the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow maritime artery through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply flows—has long been one of the most feared scenarios in global security planning. Today, as tensions spiral...
The warning had become almost ritual among Western policymakers and market analysts: the world could not indefinitely absorb the scale of China’s industrial output. With exports surging and trade surpluses widening, the assumption was that global demand would eventually hit...
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