Lebanon’s Sovereignty Gamble: A Deal That Rewards the Occupier

A formal meeting of Lebanese government officials seated around a large conference table with the Lebanese flag in the background.

Despite ceremonial promises of peace, the new US-brokered agreement between Lebanon and Israel reveals a troubling framework. By conditioning Israeli withdrawal on Lebanon’s ability to disarm Hezbollah—a task the state has failed to achieve for decades—the deal may effectively cement an indefinite occupation rather than securing true independence.

Israel’s Election Cannot Rebuild Democracy With Those Who Broke It

A street scene in an Israeli market with a person holding a political campaign sign featuring Benjamin Netanyahu.

As Israel approaches its October 2026 elections, the call for national unity faces a moral crisis. Can a democratic renewal succeed if it includes parties that have normalized genocidal rhetoric and eroded institutional trust? This piece examines the deep structural divide defining Israel’s most consequential political turning point.

AI’s Power Hunger Is Outpacing the Grid’s Ability to Cope

An artistic representation of a humanoid robot plugging a power cord into an electrical outlet near power lines.

As AI infrastructure demand skyrockets, it threatens to overwhelm an aging power grid, risking a repeat of historical municipal bond defaults. With forecasts highly uncertain, policymakers are now scrambling to shift the financial risk of this energy expansion away from ordinary ratepayers and back onto the developers themselves.