Category: Russia

Exterior of a Russian currency exchange office with large dollar, pound, and yen symbols on the glass door.

Russia Wants the Dollar Back — and BRICS Should Be Worried

Russia is quietly considering a return to the dollar system, reversing years of anti‑dollar rhetoric. Economic strain, slowing growth, and dependence on China are driving the shift. If Moscow abandons de‑dollarization, the BRICS project looks less like an alternative order and more like leverage — exposing the limits of the bloc’s monetary ambitions.

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Two soldiers in full white winter camouflage gear, including white face masks and helmets, standing side-by-side and holding black assault rifles equipped with advanced scopes and tactical attachments.

NATO’s Arctic Sentry: Deterrence Without Guardrails

NATO’s new Arctic Sentry unifies allied operations in the High North, but it emerges amid tensions triggered not by Russia, but by Trump’s threats to annex Greenland. The buildup expands deterrence without communication channels, raising the risk of accidents in a nuclear‑sensitive region. With Russia unengaged diplomatically, even a minor incident could spiral into unintended conflict.

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A dense memorial field filled with hundreds of small yellow and blue Ukrainian flags, interspersed with framed portraits of soldiers and colorful funeral flowers.

Four Years of War in Ukraine Expose the Cost of Western Hesitation

Western hesitation has prolonged a brutal stalemate in Ukraine, where massive casualties, slow aid, and delayed weapons have strengthened Russia’s attritional strategy while forcing Kyiv to innovate militarily and Europe to rearm unevenly, leaving the war’s outcome tied to political will rather than battlefield shifts.

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A wide-angle view of a massive open-pit mine with several large yellow haul trucks driving on dirt roads carved into the reddish-brown earth.

Resource Nationalism in Chaos: When Dangerous Materials Trump International Order

Niger’s 2025 nationalization of the Somair mine and the subsequent contested transport of 1,150 tons of uranium signal a breakdown in international resource governance. By defying arbitration and seeking Russian partnerships, the junta illustrates how strategic minerals now drive a fragmented global order where resource sovereignty outweighs established non-proliferation norms.

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A wide shot of a heavily damaged industrial power plant in Ukraine, showing collapsed roofs, charred metal structures, and debris scattered across the site.

Ukraine War Exposed the Failure of Western Deterrence Assumptions

In January 2026, the strategic fallout from the Ukraine war has fundamentally dismantled the “post-Cold War” playbook. Western leaders now operate under a new, grimmer set of assumptions: that war is a contest of industrial stamina, not just initial tech; that economic ties can be weapons of coercion; and that “red lines” mean nothing without the munitions to back them up.

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Donald Trump in a blue suit and red tie walking alongside Volodymyr Zelenskyy in a black sweatshirt through a modern hallway.

Trump’s Transactional Approach: Negotiating an End to the Ukraine War

Trump’s 2025 peace push centers on a transactional deal trading Ukrainian NATO aspirations for long-term U.S. security guarantees. The framework involves potential territorial concessions in Donbas and a national referendum, shifting away from previous demands for full Russian withdrawal to prioritize a rapid, comprehensive end to the war.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin speaking at a press conference, with a backdrop focused on strategic defense and nuclear deterrence.

Russia Nuclear Modernization: Coercive Deterrence and Strategic Messaging

In a December 2025 address, Vladimir Putin declared Russia’s nuclear forces “92% modernized,” showcasing high-tech weapons like the Oreshnik, Burevestnik, and Poseidon. With the New START treaty nearing expiration and Oreshnik missiles now deployed in Belarus, Moscow is leveraging strategic uncertainty and doomsday capabilities to deter Western interference and gain diplomatic advantage in Ukraine.

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A jigsaw puzzle where the pieces show the American flag, with a missing piece being replaced by a dark piece featuring a map of the Middle East

Business Entanglements Shape American Foreign Policy Execution

The intersection of commercial interests and diplomatic decision-making is a defining feature of current American foreign policy, as evidenced by dropped prosecutions, controversial pardons, and Gulf investments. These cases highlight the influence of personal business relationships on international relations, raising questions about conflict of interest, transparency, and strategic coherence.

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