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The Ceasefire Nobody Wants By every indication, the Gulf is heading toward another round of military action. Grim as it is, there is a logic to this. The ceasefire, now almost a month old, burdens both sides because none of the problems that started the war has been resolved. In effect, the situation has reproduced the outcome of last year’s 12-day war, only in a more acute and heavier form. No one is satisfied. For Iran, the status quo is probably more dangerous. By blocking Iranian oil exports, the United States is slowly strangling the country’s economy. Tehran has no real answer to this. Blowing up the situation and forcing it back into a military phase is, to some extent, a way out. Iran did not lose the previous round of armed confrontation. It forced its opponents to confront an unpleasant fact: either Iran cannot be defeated militarily, or the price of doing so is unacceptable. The risks for Iran are rising as well. Each next stage is more dangerous than the last, if only becau...
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ANALYTICAL ASSESSMENT OF TRUMP'S LETTER TO CONGRESS SUBJECT: Analytical Deconstruction of the May 1, 2026, War Powers Notification Source:  https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/05/01/trump-iran-congressional-deadline/   I. LOGICAL INTEGRITY & STRUCTURAL FALLACIES The document presents itself as a straightforward legal notification, but a forensic linguistic scan reveals profound logical contradictions deliberately engineered to maximize Executive power. 1. The "Equivocation of Termination" Fallacy The Text: The letter formally reports the "termination of hostilities" regarding Operation Epic Fury. However, Paragraph 4 states the military continues to "update its force posture... to deter Iranian aggression." Logical Failure: This is a classic equivocation fallacy. In international law, "termination" implies a cessation of armed conflict and a return to peacetime posture. The doc...
ANALYTICAL EVALUATION REPORT SUBJECT: RAND - “The AGI Rideout Strategy for Reducing Strategic Risk and Promoting Stability in the Transition to Artificial General Intelligence” DATE: 29 April 2026 ASSESSMENT TYPE: Structural, Strategic, and Analytical Evaluation ASSESSMENT The RAND paper “TheAGI Rideout Strategy” is a serious, intellectually disciplined, and strategically valuable contribution to emerging AGI-national-security discourse. Its core contribution lies in challenging simplistic “winner-take-all” assumptions surrounding the race to artificial general intelligence and in emphasizing strategic resilience, deterrence stability, and geopolitical hedging over reckless accelerationism. The report correctly identifies that many destabilizing dynamics associated with AGI competition arise not from AGI itself, but from state beliefs regarding first-mover advantage (FMA), strategic eclipse, and the fear of irreversible geopolitical inferiority. However, despite its sophisti...
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The End of the Maritime Age   Trade Routes and the Distribution of Power The universal spread of maritime trade and the myth of its advantages are synonymous with Western dominance in global politics. The deeper states became integrated into maritime commerce, the more rigidly they were assigned a specific place within the global “food chain.” If we truly accept that the world has entered the most fundamental period of transformation not merely in the past century, but in the past five hundred years, then we must also be prepared for the disappearance of things that appear natural and eternal. It cannot be ruled out that the prolonged saga surrounding the Strait of Hormuz is the first signal of radical changes in the entire architecture of global trade - above all in its spatial organization and in the advantages traditionally enjoyed by maritime transportation. This is hardly surprising. If one accepts the inevitability of the collapse of the West’s monopoly on force in world ...
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The Nuclear Club Expands - Starting with Iran The End of Nuclear Containment One of the stated goals of U.S. action against Iran is to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons. The bitter irony is that the leadership of the Islamic Republic will now almost certainly make that its number one priority. Others may follow Iran’s example. According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, as of May 2025 Iran possessed more than 400 kg of uranium enriched to 60 percent, which, with further enrichment, would be sufficient to produce several warheads. At the same time, there are grounds to believe that Tehran was not planning to cross the nuclear threshold. In 2015, the country’s leadership supported the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, under which Iran agreed to abandon the pursuit of nuclear weapons in exchange for sanctions relief and assistance with integration into the global economy. The agreement functioned for several years until the first presidency of Donald Trump, who ...
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  Exit That Won’t Happen No Way Out of NATO European leaders have privately acknowledged that NATO is effectively falling apart and paralyzed by threats from U.S. President Donald Trump to withdraw the United States from the alliance, Politico reports. According to the outlet, the EU is already seriously working through response scenarios in case Washington exits the bloc. Recall that on April 1, Trump said he was considering pulling the United States out of NATO over allies’ refusal to help unblock the Strait of Hormuz. In addition, Secretary of State Marco Rubio sharply criticized NATO, accusing it of failing to meet its obligations and calling it a “one-way street.” Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth stated that the question of NATO’s future will be decided by the president after the conflict with Iran ends. In reality, however, Trump’s wishes - even those of his entire administration - are not enough. Under NATO’s charter, any country can leave the alliance by giv...