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International

How shared river agreements prevent conflict

Shared Water Resources: Preventing Disputes with Agreements

Rivers cross political borders more than any modern idea of territory can contain. More than 150 countries share transboundary river basins, and well over 260 international river and lake basins drain across political boundaries. When water is scarce or unevenly distributed, competition can escalate into political tension or even military posturing. Conversely, well-designed shared river agreements act as instruments of cooperation, turning a potential flashpoint into a platform for stable, mutually beneficial management. This article explains how and why these agreements prevent conflict, with examples, data, and practical lessons.Primary hazards linked to unregulated transboundary riversUncoordinated use of a shared river…
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Who controls data and why that equals power

The Power of Data: Who’s in Charge?

Data is not neutral raw material; it is a strategic asset. The entity that collects, stores, analyzes, and governs large, high‑quality data sets gains economic advantage, political influence, and operational control. That concentration of capability — to predict behavior, set markets, shape information flows, and make decisions at scale — is what turns data into power.Primary stakeholders responsible for managing dataBig technology platforms: Companies spanning global search, social networks, cloud ecosystems, and ecommerce services accumulate vast volumes of behavioral, transactional, and location-based information derived from billions of users and activities.Governments and regulators: States gather identity, taxation, health, telecom, and surveillance…
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Trump’s damage is done. Democrats – and Europe – are struggling to define what’s next

Trump’s Lingering Effects: Democrats & Europe’s Quest for What’s Next

At the Munich Security Conference, several high‑profile Democrats quietly hinted at presidential aspirations while confronting a stark warning from Europe: the transatlantic bond may never fully revert to what it once was. With global partnerships strained by resurgent nationalism and intensifying geopolitical competition, unresolved doubts about America’s future leadership cast a long shadow over the 2028 campaign.The annual gathering at the Munich Security Conference has long served as a proving ground for aspiring statesmen. For decades, American presidents and would-be presidents traveled to the Bavarian capital to affirm Washington’s commitment to Europe and to reinforce the idea that the United…
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Trump the ‘demolition’ man of world order, European security experts warn

Trump’s World Order Shake-Up: European Perspectives

The international framework that has supported decades of relative stability is under growing strain, with a new global security assessment cautioning that forceful political upheaval, largely propelled by US leadership, is hastening the decline of established rules, alliances, and collective norms.According to the Munich Security Report 2026, the world is now experiencing what it labels “wrecking-ball politics,” a governing style in which forceful disruption takes precedence over stability and collective agreement, and the report contends that this shift is putting unprecedented pressure on the postwar international order, exposing it to its most significant challenges since its inception and generating repercussions…
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Why power grids are a bottleneck for clean energy

Power Grids as a Clean Energy Barrier

The move toward low‑carbon electricity depends on grids being able to transfer, regulate, and oversee far greater and more unpredictable energy volumes than they were originally designed to handle, and these systems are repeatedly constrained by technical limits, entrenched practices, regulatory hurdles, and societal pressures. This article describes how that bottleneck functions, highlights real examples that reveal its impact, and presents practical ways to accelerate meaningful progress.How the grid’s physical design collides with clean generationGeography and resource mismatch. The best wind and solar sites are often far from demand centers. Offshore and remote wind farms, desert and high-sun regions create…
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How a distant conflict can raise the price of everyday goods

Understanding the Link: Remote Conflicts & Price Increases

A war or political conflict thousands of miles away can raise the price of everyday goods at home through a chain of economic and logistical links. Modern supply chains are tightly interwoven, and essential inputs such as energy, metals, food, and shipping capacity are concentrated in a relatively small number of producing regions. When conflict disrupts production, trade flows, insurance, or finance in those regions, the cost of inputs rises and producers pass those costs on to consumers.Key transmission channelsCommodity supply shocks — Conflicts that disrupt the export flow of oil, gas, wheat, fertilizers, or metals cut global availability and…
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Why energy keeps getting used as a geopolitical tool

Energy’s Geopolitical Leverage: A Deep Dive

Energy extends far beyond fuel and electricity, serving as the foundation for industry, transportation, household well-being, and military strength. Because of this central role, it becomes a particularly powerful instrument in international affairs. Governments, corporations, and nonstate actors leverage supply, pricing, infrastructure, regulation, and technological oversight to pursue strategic objectives. This behavior endures due to four persistent factors: the uneven global distribution of resources, the long lifespan of infrastructure and contractual arrangements, the rapid economic strain caused by supply disruptions, and the wide-ranging ripple effects on alliances and domestic political dynamics.Core mechanisms of energy geopoliticsSupply manipulation: producers may restrict or…
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Italians furious over deployment of ICE agents to bolster US security at Winter Olympics

Italy Fumes Over ICE Agents at Winter Games

The presence of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) personnel in Italy ahead of the upcoming Winter Olympics is raising heightened concern among both lawmakers and the wider public, as debates intensify over jurisdictional authority, security methods, and previous incidents reported in the U.S.The Italian government faces mounting attention after reports surfaced that ICE officers are set to assist with security at the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, a development that has revived debates over the presence of foreign law enforcement in Italy, especially in light of recent violent episodes tied to ICE activities in the United States.The U.S. Department of Homeland…
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Information Manipulation’s Impact on Democratic Stability

Information Manipulation’s Impact on Democratic Stability

Democratic stability depends on citizens who remain well-informed, institutions capable of earning public trust, a shared foundation of widely acknowledged yet continuously debated facts, and transitions of power conducted with order. Information manipulation — the deliberate shaping, distorting, amplifying, or suppressing of material to influence public attitudes or behavior — gradually erodes these foundations. It weakens them not only by spreading falsehoods, but also by reshaping incentives, corroding trust, and transforming public attention into a lever for strategic gain. This threat functions at a systemic level, producing compromised elections, polarized societies, reduced accountability, and environments in which violence and authoritarian…
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Meet the trusted diplomat tasked with turning the US-backed ceasefire into peace for Gaza

Diplomatic Push for Gaza Peace Post-Ceasefire

Bulgaria’s Nickolay Mladenov, a veteran diplomat, has stepped into one of the most demanding roles of his career: supervising the sensitive rollout of a US‑brokered initiative aimed at stabilizing Gaza and shaping its governance. His background, network, and standing will face significant scrutiny as he maneuvers through the region’s intricate political landscape.Mladenov’s journey to this point has been marked by decades of diplomatic service. Early in his career, he held key positions in Bulgaria’s government, including defense minister at 37 and later foreign minister. His international experience expanded with appointments to the European Parliament and as the UN’s Special Representative…
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