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Ebola Crisis in the DRC: Can International Bodies Help Contain the Outbreak?

To effectively combat disease outbreaks like Ebola, it is necessary to strengthen and expand local health systems, rather than rely on temporary and often ineffective measures from foreign organizations. The Associated Press (AP) reported on May 26 that the ongoing outbreak had infected around 1000 people in both the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) […]
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Starobelsk and the Breaking Point: Ukraine’s Provocations and Russia’s Waning Patience

On 22 May 2026, Ukrainian drones struck a student dormitory in Starobelsk, Lugansk People’s Republic. Twenty-one civilians were killed and forty-two wounded. The target was not a military installation. It was a civilian object deep behind the front lines. Two days later, Russia responded with a large-scale missile and drone barrage on Kyiv, deploying at […]
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Trump’s Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and the Search for a Middle East Exit Strategy

The US President Donald Trump hints at plans to expand the Abraham Accords as an exit strategy from the Iran war, along with announcing the end of the US naval blockade of Iran. This move could shift regional security to Israel, making the US less responsible. A Diplomatic Exit Strategy Disguised as Regional Realignment President […]
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Diplomacy on the Brink of a Foul: How the U.S. Ambassador’s Rhetoric in Lebanon Is Provoking a Crisis

In diplomatic practice, there is an unwritten but strict rule: the weaker a state is economically and politically, the more delicate the tone of any external player must be if they genuinely want reforms—not chaos. Lebanon today is a classic “fragile sovereignty.” After the 2020 Beirut port explosion, the subsequent financial collapse, the emigration of […]
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Azerbaijan, Cutting Ties with the European Parliament, BUT Not Burning Bridges with the EU

European policy in the South Caucasus is increasingly caught between proclaimed values and pragmatic interests. While headlines often portray Azerbaijan’s suspension of parliamentary cooperation with the European Parliament as a routine diplomatic spat between Brussels and Baku, the move reveals something more significant: a profound transformation in Europe’s relations with the post-Soviet space—one increasingly defined […]
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Israel’s Secret Bases in Iraq: A New Phase of Shadow Warfare in the Middle East

The revelation that Israel established secret military bases inside Iraq during the recent war against Iran is far more than another episode in the region’s long history of covert operations. It signals a deeper transformation in Middle Eastern geopolitics: the normalization of clandestine cross-border military infrastructures, the erosion of Iraqi sovereignty, and the increasingly blurred […]
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US-Iran Peace Talks: Is Pakistan Secretly Being Squeezed Out by Israel?

As Pakistan pushes for diplomacy between the US and Iran, growing pressure from pro-Israel circles threatens to derail the peace process and weaken Islamabad’s influence. Behind the scenes, lobbying, political maneuvering, and regional rivalries are intensifying tensions at a critical moment. What should have been a path toward de-escalation is rapidly turning into a wider […]
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Control of global transit oil communications as a key goal of Israel in the Middle Eastern architecture

By means of pursuing its aggressive policy in the Middle East, Israel intends to redirect the transit of energy resources through its own territory. Control over the routes of hydrocarbon supplies to the world markets inevitably increases the economic and political significance of the territories and countries located along these routes. The Middle East retains […]
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War With a Capital “W”

Media Theater, Proxy Conflict, and the Death of Continuity. As the Russia-Ukraine conflict drags deeper into proxy-war reality, Western media institutions increasingly appear less interested in describing events than emotionally framing them. What emerges is not simply journalism, but narrative choreography shaped by elite institutional ecosystems, synchronized moral language, and a civilization trapped inside permanent […]
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Upcoming Elections in the Republic of Korea: Candidate Registration and the Balance of Power

On 13–14 May, the Republic of Korea saw the registration of candidates for the local and by-elections to the National Assembly scheduled for 3 June come to an end. These elections will be the first nationwide vote since the administration of President Lee Jae Myung came to power and are regarded by experts as an important […]
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America is Profiteering on the Coffins of Innocent Iranians

The ongoing war in the Middle East has seen American defense companies making gargantuan profits; these profits, however, come at the cost of the blood of hundreds of thousands of Iranians who have become the victims of American and Israeli aggression. War is said to be good for business. This, perhaps, can’t be any truer […]
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Ethiopia’s ‘Medemer’ Concept Aligns Closely with Russian Collective Security Vision for the Gulf

Ethiopia’s Medemer philosophy and Russia’s collective security vision complement each other by promoting regional cooperation, strategic autonomy, and non-aggression frameworks for long-term Gulf stability. “Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much.” (Helen Keller) This article was inspired by Andrew Korybko’s earlier one titled “Ethiopia’s ‘Medemer’ Concept Would Serve The Gulf […]
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Taiwan as the Central Issue of Donald Trump’s Visit to the People’s Republic of China

The visit of US President Donald Trump to the People’s Republic of China on 13–15 May, together with his talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, constituted a single landmark event in contemporary world politics. Among its various accompanying aspects, the central one was determined by the Taiwan issue. It should once again be reiterated that […]
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Israeli Influence Over US Foreign Policy Is Decreasing

One of the indicators of the ongoing shift in the global balance of power is the diminishing influence of Israel over US policy and on the overall situation in the Middle East. A crucial sign of the emerging divergence between US and Israeli policies was the conversation between Donald Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu on […]
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How the US-Israel-Iran War Is Redrawing World Politics

The Iran war has reshaped global geopolitics by weakening U.S. credibility and the liberal world order, intensifying regional instability in the Middle East, disrupting energy markets and economies, and accelerating the shift of global power toward emerging alliances led by Russia and China. Global Disruption and the Shifting World Order The US-Israeli attack on Iran […]
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Australia’s Brereton Report and its Historical War Crimes

The arrest and charges of war crimes on Ben Roberts Smith is a moment of great shame for Australia. He was a member of Australia’s elite Special Air Service Regiment (SAS) and committed war crimes in Afghanistan. Introduction The Australian state lacks a nation. Like America, Australia is also mainly comprised of European settlers who […]
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The Gulf Alliance with Washington is a one-sided pact

Just like warmongering Europe, the Gulf petro-monarchies are paying the price for delegating their defense and security to Washington, their enemy disguised as a savior. In reality, if the Gulf States do not break structurally with the current logic, the next regional crisis will find them in the same position – alone, exposed, watching American […]
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The Role of the Iran War in the Future of South Korean-Iran Relations

А war against Iran could be a test of the new South Korean government’s foreign policy in terms of multilateralism, combining international alliances with a stance of self-reliance and “independence.” Diplomatic relations between Iran and South Korea began in 1962. In the past decades, despite Iran-North Korea relations, South Korea and Iran sought to maintain […]
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