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Strait of Hormuz Alliance Shift: What Changed After the Trump–Takaichi Meeting
The Strait of Hormuz alliance shift did not emerge from a naval deployment, but from a recalibration in Washington. Japan and key European powers moved closer to U.S. strategic expectations, signaling alignment without full military commitment as the burden of securing Hormuz begins to redistribute.
Mar 21


Japan PM Sanae Takaichi Candid Test in Washington
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi heads to Washington promising candid talks with President Trump as the Iran war hits Japan’s economy, exposing the cost of alliance loyalty under energy shock.
Mar 13


Europe Finds Its Voice as Trump’s Pressure Begins to Backfire
Europe’s response to Trump’s pressure over Greenland marks more than a diplomatic dispute. It reflects a deeper shift in transatlantic relations, as trust erodes, strategic autonomy rises, and long-standing assumptions about American reliability are increasingly questioned.
Jan 26


World Leaders Split Over New Peace Board and UN’s Future
President Donald Trump launched the Board of Peace at the World Economic Forum in Davos, presenting it as a new vehicle for conflict resolution beginning with Gaza. But behind the ceremony, diplomats voiced unease over how the initiative may intersect with the United Nations’ authority and existing mandates. Several governments are now weighing whether the new body complements global diplomacy or complicates it.
Jan 22


Political Shockwave in Davos as Newsom Barred from American Pavilion
California Governor Gavin Newsom’s scheduled appearance at the World Economic Forum in Davos was abruptly canceled after he was denied access to a U.S.-affiliated venue, an incident his office says followed political pressure linked to President Donald Trump. The disruption has raised fresh questions about political interference in international spaces and the boundaries of executive power beyond U.S. soil.
Jan 22


At WEF in Davos, Trump Claims U.S. Boom and Signals Tougher Line on Allies
President Donald Trump used his return to the World Economic Forum in Davos to declare a dramatic U.S. economic revival and to revive one of his most controversial foreign policy proposals: renewed negotiations with Denmark over the future of Greenland. In wide-ranging remarks, he defended tariffs, attacked Europe’s energy policies, and claimed progress on Ukraine and Middle East diplomacy, while critics warned his rhetoric risks straining key alliances.
Jan 21


The Age of Managed Political Regime Reconfiguration
Washington is no longer pursuing dramatic regime change. It is reshaping power from within. Across Venezuela, Iraq, Afghanistan, and now Iran, the pattern is clear: exiled figures are sidelined while insiders with institutional control are favored. The goal has shifted from democratic idealism to stability and manageability. This approach may bring short-term order but risks delaying deeper political reckoning.
Jan 12


The Monroe Doctrine Returns: Trump, Maduro, and a Region Exposed
A doctrine revived: President Donald Trump, the Western Hemisphere, and the Caribbean energy corridor converge as U.S. power reshapes the region’s fragile energy balance. By Ahmed Fathi NEW YORK — When U.S. forces moved to capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in a cross-border operation on January 3rd, the White House described the action as a law-enforcement measure—part of a broader effort to dismantle what it characterized as a criminal state apparatus. But outsi
Jan 6


World Reacts as U.S. Strikes Venezuela, UN Sounds Alarm
World leaders are sharply divided after the United States carried out military action in Venezuela, prompting warnings from the United Nations that the move sets a dangerous precedent and raises serious concerns about respect for international law.
Jan 3


A National Security Strategy Caught Between America First and a Multilateral World
Trump’s 2025 National Security Strategy revives the Monroe Doctrine, reshapes the Western Hemisphere, and challenges the multilateral order the U.S. helped build. It casts migration as a threat, China as a systemic rival, and Europe as a civilization in decline. For the UN, collision is inevitable—but narrow paths for cooperation still remain.
Dec 5, 2025

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