30 June 2026

Pakistan Has Never Looked So Important

Persuasion  |  Rashmee Roshan Lall

Pakistan has emerged as an indispensable intermediary in the U.S.-Iran ceasefire, brokering the April 8 agreement and subsequent talks in Switzerland on June 21, 2026, resulting in the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding. This mediation has significantly elevated Pakistan's international standing and goodwill, fulfilling its founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah's aspiration to be "the pivot of the world."

Welcome to ‘Xizang’: China is quietly, permanently trying to erase Tibet

The Hill  |  Brahma Chellaney

China is implementing a systematic campaign to erase Tibetan culture, language, and identity by targeting children on the Tibetan Plateau. While international attention focuses on China’s mass internment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, a quieter, more permanent campaign is unfolding in Tibet. Over one million Tibetan children, almost four out of every five, have been forcibly placed into state-run, Mandarin-language boarding schools, often taken from families at ages four or five.

The Great Mineral Realignment: The G7’s Supply Chain Alliance And Turkey’s Strategic Crossroads

Eurasia Review  |  Dr. Nejat Tamzok

Critical minerals are replacing fossil fuels as the new key resource shaping global power and geopolitics, leading to a fierce struggle for control. The G7, led by the United States, is actively forming an alliance to dismantle China’s overwhelming monopoly on critical mineral processing and refining. This initiative, formalized at the G7 Summit in Evian, aims to reduce dependency on a "single supplier" outside the G7 to below 60% by 2030, backed by 195 projects totaling €64 billion.

Just How Much is Too Much? The Defense Spending Dilemma

Foreign Policy Research Institute | Frank G. Hoffman

The President requested a $1.5 trillion defense budget for next year, a record 50 percent increase over last year's baseline, surpassing previous defense buildups. This proposal addresses a deteriorating US security posture, with an aging, overcommitted military unprepared for modern warfare, amidst rising challenges from China and an "Axis of Upheaval" of authoritarian states.

With the war’s end in sight, the questions it raised demand answers

Atlantic Council  |  Tressa Guenov

The United States and Iran have reached an agreement to extend their fragile ceasefire and prepare for reopening the Strait of Hormuz, despite significant unresolved questions regarding the Israel-Hezbollah conflict and nuclear negotiation timelines. This development creates a complex global defense landscape where Europe and the Gulf states face the common challenge of recapitalizing defense capabilities amid production scarcity and evolving threats.

N.S.A. Lost Access to Powerful A.I. Model Amid Anthropic Dispute

The New York Times  |  Dustin Volz, Julian E. Barnes

The National Security Agency (N.S.A.) has lost access to a powerful A.I. model developed by Anthropic, U.S. officials confirmed, due to the Trump administration’s dispute with the start-up. This action deprived the N.S.A. of a critical tool highly effective at identifying software weaknesses. The Trump administration imposed export controls on Anthropic this month, citing national security concerns, which forced the company to halt the release of its advanced models, Mythos 5 and Fable 5.

As Death Toll Spikes, Venezuela’s Earthquakes Test U.S. Disaster Relief

Council on Foreign Relations  |  Sam Vigersky

Two powerful earthquakes struck northern Venezuela on June 24, 2026, with magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5, the latter being the strongest to hit the country in a century. The quakes caused 164 reported deaths and over 1,000 injuries, with the U.S. Geological Survey estimating a potential death toll between ten thousand and one hundred thousand people.

Why Rules-Based Orders Fail

Council on Foreign Relations | Benn Steil

The rules-based international order, largely established by the United States post-World War II, is inherently susceptible to failure due to internal contradictions, drawing parallels from Douglas Hofstadter's work on recursive systems. Kurt Gรถdel's incompleteness theorem demonstrates that complex rules-based systems inevitably confront questions their rules cannot answer, leading to contested norms.

Russia’s Oil Bottlenecks Far More Serious than Just Refineries and Ports

The Jamestown Foundation  |  Paul Goble

Ukraine’s successful drone attacks on Russian refineries and ports have significantly reduced Moscow’s ability to meet domestic needs and sell oil abroad, highlighting serious bottlenecks in Russia’s critically important oil sector. These chokepoints reflect the fragility and lack of redundancy in Russia’s oil pipeline network, making concentrated infrastructure near its few ports tempting targets.

Russia Expanding Soft Power in Georgia via Culture and Language

The Jamestown Foundation  |  Beka Chedia

Russia is actively expanding its soft power in Georgia through cultural diplomacy and language promotion, highlighted by two 2026 visits from Special Representative Mikhail Shvydkoy. Moscow has intensified efforts to promote Russian culture and language via theater, concerts, and educational programs, aiming to foster narratives of shared history and closer ties.

Ukraine’s Deep-Strike Campaign Imposing Rising Costs On Russia Far Beyond The Battlefield

Eurasia Review  |  Can KasapoฤŸlu

Ukraine's deep-strike campaign is increasingly imposing significant costs on Russia, extending far beyond the immediate battlefield and stressing its rear areas. Kyiv's strikes have reached targets in Moscow, including the Kapotnya Refinery, which was hit twice in three days in June, causing large explosions and fires. This campaign also targets Russia's occupation of Crimea, aiming for a "logistics lockdown" by striking fuel supply, rail access, power grids, air-defense networks, and rear-area military movements.

Israel deliberately targeting children in ongoing genocide against Palestinians, UN commission finds

CNN | Zeena Saifi

An independent United Nations Commission of Inquiry has found that Israeli forces continue to commit genocide against Palestinians by deliberately targeting children in the Gaza Strip. Its Tuesday report states Israeli military operations cause "unprecedented death, injury and trauma" to Palestinian children, identifying this as genocidal intent, even post-October 2025 ceasefire.

Ukraine’s New Air-Power Paradigm

The Wall Street Journal  |  Jillian Kay Melchior

Ukraine's Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov announced on May 27 that Ukraine is "scaling middle-strike operations to systematically destroy enemy logistics and supply lines," aiming for a "logistics lockdown" for the Russian army. This strategic shift directly challenges Vladimir Putin's assertion that Russia's battlefield advances are unstoppable and that outnumbered Ukrainians cannot win a war of attrition, thereby forcing Kyiv to settle and surrender regions like Crimea, Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia.

The Iran Deal Comes at a Cost to Israel. The White House Hasn’t Acknowledged It.

Council on Foreign Relations  |  Elliott Abrams

The memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the United States and Iran has significantly sidelined Israel, a critical U.S. ally, on issues directly impacting its core security interests. Israel was excluded from negotiations, leading to an MOU that mentions Lebanon three times and declares "immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon" without referencing Israel.

Who Is Winning Africa’s Drone Wars? Ukraine Isn’t the Only Battlefield Shaping Autonomous Warfare

Foreign Affairs | Nate Allen, Rida Lyammouri

On June 22, 2025, fiber-optic first-person-view drones operated by the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), a Tuareg rebel group, struck a convoy of Russian Africa Corps and Malian armed forces vehicles in northern Mali, demonstrating how rebel groups with limited resources are deploying cutting-edge drone technology. This incident highlights a significant shift in Africa's drone warfare landscape, where the state's traditional air dominance is eroding as nonstate actors acquire and effectively deploy inexpensive, widely available uncrewed systems.

Crude Awakening: Iraq Weighs An OPEC Exit

Eurasia Review  |  Arman Sidhu

Iraq threatened to exit OPEC on June 25, 2026, unless granted a higher production ceiling, a demand quickly retracted but highlighting deep fractures within the group. This move follows recent departures by Qatar, Ecuador, Angola, and the UAE, with Iraq, as OPEC's second-largest producer and a founding member, presenting a significant challenge.

Lesson Learned From Iran War: Reduce Reliance on Strait of Hormuz

The New York Times  |  Peter Eavis

When Iran shut down the Strait of Hormuz during its war with the United States and Israel, countries and companies responded effectively, preventing oil prices from reaching stratospheric levels and shielding most economies from major shocks. More oil was pumped through pipelines, and nations globally released their oil reserves, mitigating a global shortage.

AI Has a Memory Problem

Center for Strategic and International Studies | Shruti Sharma

Memory manufacturers are increasingly shifting production towards AI-oriented products, directing a growing share of global memory capacity to data center applications. This trend has led to concerns among U.S. trade associations, representing telecommunications, automotive, and medical device industries, which urged the Trump administration in June 2026 to address emerging memory chip shortages.

The Geopolitics of SpaceX and Elon Musk

Foreign Policy  |  Ravi Agrawal

Elon Musk's vertically integrated empire, encompassing SpaceX, Starlink, X (formerly Twitter), and xAI (Grok, Grokipedia), has achieved a market value exceeding $2 trillion following SpaceX's recent blockbuster Nasdaq IPO. This immense size and dominance in space raise significant geopolitical questions, particularly concerning Starlink's ability to determine internet access for countries or warring parties in sensitive areas around the world.

How AI Could Be Turned Against Americans

Newsweek | Amanda Greenwood and Jasmine Laws

U.S. restrictions on Anthropic's Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models highlight Western intelligence warnings that AI poses an imminent threat to critical infrastructure, as these models are deemed national-security concerns capable of accelerating cyberattacks via advanced vulnerability identification. The Five Eyes alliance (U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, New Zealand) issued a June 22 advisory, stating AI rapidly transforms the cyberthreat landscape by lowering attack barriers, automating reconnaissance, and scaling operations.

AI is meant to speed up ‘kill chain,’ not control it, commanders say

Task & Purpose | Frank G. Hoffman

The U.S. military insists artificial intelligence, or AI, is not going to replace human decision-makers for military strikes, despite its increasing use in combat. During recent combat against Iran, the U.S. military utilized AI to deploy over 2,000 munitions to 2,000 distinct targets within 96 hours, as confirmed by Cameron Stanley, the Pentagon’s chief digital and AI officer.

Trump’s Smart Iran Exit

The Times of India  |  Jon B Alterman

President Trump ended the war with Iran by signing a 14-point agreement highly favorable to the Iranians, choosing to cut US losses after months of conflict. The US and Israel had failed to achieve victory despite dropping approximately 20,000 bombs and missiles and maintaining a trade blockade, underestimating Iran's ability to leverage nationalism, ideology, and repression to maintain power.

The case for a US Northeast Asia Command

Atlantic Council  |  Christopher Lee, Ben Blane, Markus Garlauskas

The United States must reform its military command-and-control structure in Northeast Asia by establishing a new US Northeast Asia Command (USNEACOM). This proposed sub-unified command under PACOM would encompass Japan, South Korea, and surrounding areas, addressing the current hub-and-spoke model's inadequacy for the critical subregion. USNEACOM aims to bypass political resistance hindering military coordination between Japan and South Korea, facilitate a "kill web" in the first island chain, and bolster deterrence against China and North Korea.

A growing missile threat to the US homeland and the emerging arms race

International Institute for Strategic Studies  |  Daniel Salisbury

US intelligence assessments project a more-than fivefold expansion of missile threats to the US homeland, to over 16,000 missiles by 2035 from 3,000. Adversaries are developing advanced long-range missiles and cheaper, expendable OWA UAVs to overwhelm US missile defenses. These projections, from President Donald Trump’s 2025 ‘Golden Dome’ initiative, include China’s ICBMs increasing from 400 to 700, and SLBMs from 72 to at least 132.

Iran Didn’t Win the War: Tehran Is Still Losing the Long Game

Foreign Affairs | James F. Jeffrey

The recent cease-fire deal following Operation Epic Fury, which culminated a three-year regional conflict starting with Hamas's October 2023 attack, has significantly weakened Iran and strengthened the United States and its partners in the Middle East. Iran's proxy network is largely in ruins, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is gone, and its conventional forces and defense/nuclear industrial base have been decimated, with over 1,500 air defense targets and 1,250 drone/ballistic missile facilities hit, causing an estimated $270 billion in damage.

29 June 2026

India’s Quiet Return To Afghanistan As Pakistan-Taliban Ties Fray

Eurasia Review  |  Saima Afzal

India has gradually re-emerged in Afghanistan, reshaping regional calculations as Pakistan-Taliban ties fray significantly since 2021. Contrary to initial assumptions, relations between Kabul and Islamabad have deteriorated due to persistent friction over Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) activities, cross-border security incidents, and border management. Tensions escalated by February 2026 when Pakistan launched coordinated strikes inside Afghanistan, which Kabul condemned as a sovereignty violation, deepening mistrust.

PACOM, the deeper meaning behind a dropped prefix

The Hindu  |  Suhasini Haidar

The United States military's decision to revert its naval command name from "US INDOPACOM" to "US PACOM" (United States Pacific Command), reversing a 2018 change, signifies a deeper shift in U.S. regional policy beyond a superficial name alteration. While the U.S. Department of War confirms US PACOM's area of responsibility, from "the waters off the West Coast of the United States to the western border of India," remains unchanged, the symbolic implications are significant.

Inside the Taliban’s New Military Formation on the Durand Line

The Diplomat  |  Sarah Adams

Taliban Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akhundzada approved the creation of the 4,000-member Hebati Unit, a new military formation deployed on the Durand Line, amidst a simmering conflict with Pakistan. This development follows Pakistan's shift to a more proactive campaign against militant networks operating from Afghan territory. Pakistani security forces have escalated efforts, targeting militant infrastructure with airstrikes in Nangarhar, Khost, and Paktika in February 2026, launching Operation Ghazab lil-Haq, and conducting precision strikes in Khost, Kunar, and Paktika in June 2026.

With the Military Ascendant, Is This the End for Imran Khan?

The Diplomat  |  Kunwar Khuldune Shahid

Pakistan's military leadership, under Field Marshal Asim Munir, has significantly consolidated power, leading to questions about the political future of former Prime Minister Imran Khan. The Election Commission Gilgit-Baltistan announced the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) won nine out of 21 seats in the June 7 polls, a result the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) alleges was rigged by the military, mirroring claims from the 2024 general elections.

China's PLA 'Manned + Unmanned' Battlefield

The PLA Brief

China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) is extensively integrating unmanned systems into combined arms tactical operations, moving beyond mere technological acquisition to focus on effective employment. PLA commentator Li Jiyong outlines four integration forms: "Linked Integration" (higher echelon assets), "Embedded Integration" (organic to infantry units), "Hand-in-Hand Integration" (dedicated unmanned units attached), and "Fusion Integration" (flexible human-machine groupings).

As Chinese Tech Pulls Ahead, U.S. Fears It Will Become Dependent

The New York Times  |  Ana Swanson

China is rapidly advancing in key technological sectors, leading to U.S. concerns about potential dependency. At Contemporary Amperex Technology Company Ltd. (CATL) in southeastern China, the world's largest and most advanced cluster of battery factories, robot arms produce batteries destined for cars and data centers globally. This site exemplifies a significant shift where China, once a manufacturing hub for U.S.

How China’s ‘Red Lines’ Are Quietly Shaping Global News Reporting

The Diplomat  |  Reza Hasmath

China's Communist Party (CCP), under Xi Jinping, has significantly expanded its control over political language, directly challenging journalism's fundamental task of accurate global reporting. News organizations increasingly face a stark trade-off between maintaining access to China and upholding editorial accuracy, leading to widespread self-censorship. For instance, Bloomberg's editor-in-chief Matthew Winkler spiked an investigation into the hidden wealth of China’s elite in 2013 to protect the company's interests.

Why the US remains ‘fragmented’ in a critical copper clash against China

South China Morning Post | Mia Nurmamat

The United States and China are engaged in a critical, albeit quieter, contest to secure copper, a metal central to advanced technology and defense systems, as part of their broader competition for leadership in AI, energy, and other strategic sectors. Washington's efforts to rebuild its domestic copper industry are directly colliding with China's established dominance in this critical global supply chain.

Army aims to sync two divisions using next-gen C2 by year’s end

Defense One  |  Lauren C. Williams

The U.S. Army plans to integrate its next-generation command-and-control (NGC2) system across two infantry divisions by the end of the year, aiming to digitally share key battle data. Anduril will lead this effort, bringing the 25th Infantry Division and the 4th Infantry Division to a common NGC2 configuration.

Another Top General Is Out at the Pentagon

The Atlantic | Nancy A. Youssef and Missy Ryan

General Chris “C. D.” Donahue, who led Army forces in Europe and Africa and was the last U.S. soldier to leave Afghanistan in 2021, is departing his post after 18 months. This abrupt exit is part of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s ongoing purge of senior military ranks, targeting leaders who do not align with his vision, including those involved in the 2021 Kabul withdrawal.