Home / TOPICS / Geopolitics (page 21)

Geopolitics

Why the Liberation of Kurdistan Could Be the Key to Ending Iran’s Ayatollah Regime

Hadi Elis For more than four decades, the Islamic Republic of Iran has stood as one of the most entrenched anti-American regimes in modern geopolitics. Since the 1979 revolution that brought the Ayatollahs to power, Washington has repeatedly attempted—through sanctions, diplomatic pressure, and strategic containment—to weaken Tehran’s grip …

Read More »

War Without a Center: Iran’s Mosaic Defense

Dr. Cherkaoui Roudani For decades, modern warfare has been understood through the logic of the center of gravity—the belief that destroying an adversary’s political or military core can produce rapid strategic collapse. Yet some contemporary strategic architectures appear deliberately designed to survive the disappearance of that center. The …

Read More »

Hormuz and the Return of Energy Panic

The world does not need a formal oil embargo to feel an energy shock. It only needs a prolonged crisis in the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow corridor that carries a huge share of the planet’s oil and gas. In recent days, IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva warned …

Read More »

How the Iran War Is Destabilizing the Global Economy

The war launched by U.S. President Donald Trump and backed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu against Iran is often framed as a military confrontation or a strategic gamble in the Middle East. But its most immediate battlefield may not be Tehran or the Gulf. It is the …

Read More »

Gulf States Bear the Fallout of a War They Didn’t Start

The war triggered by strikes from the United States and Israel against Iran is increasingly exposing tensions between Washington and its Gulf Arab partners, as governments across the region grapple with the economic and security consequences of a conflict they say they neither initiated nor supported. According to …

Read More »

How the Iran War Tests China’s Middle East Strategy

Sana Khan The war involving the United States, Israel and Iran represents one of the most significant geopolitical crises confronting China’s Middle East policy in recent decades. For Beijing, the conflict is not merely a regional security crisis but a structural challenge to a strategy that has relied …

Read More »

Can Türkiye Prevent a Wider Middle East War? A Conflict at Risk of Regional Expansion

Enes Batu Hez The Middle East does not drift toward war. It gets pushed. And right now, the pushing is coming from multiple directions simultaneously—which is precisely what makes the current moment different from the crises that preceded it. The confrontation between Israel, the United States, and Iran …

Read More »

Europe Gas Recovery Faces Setback

Europe began 2026 with a surge in gas-fired electricity production, raising hopes among liquefied natural gas exporters that the region was regaining its previous appetite for natural gas. Utilities in the largest European markets increased generation to multi-year highs during the early months of the year. Despite this …

Read More »

Russia Is Not Watching Iran — It Is Exploiting It

Ivan Turulin The bombing of Iran by the United States and Israel did not produce an instant collapse of the ayatollah regime and has created the risk of a prolonged escalation in the Middle East, with no clear U.S. exit strategy from this conflict. Russia, for which Iran …

Read More »