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TOPICS

Hegemony Is Not a Business: The Diplomatic Cost of American Power

Arthur Micelino Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 21, 2026, Donald Trump announced he was seeking “immediate negotiations” to acquire Greenland from Denmark, arguing that “it’s the United States alone that can protect this giant mass of land, this giant piece of ice.” After …

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Italy Draws a Line on Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ — and Exposes a Western Fault Line

Italy’s decision to decline participation in U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposed “Board of Peace” is more than a procedural refusal. It is a revealing moment in the evolving relationship between Europe and an increasingly personalized American foreign policy. According to reporting by Corriere della Sera, Rome’s objections are …

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Venezuela and the Petrodollar Question: What Currency Power reveals about Today’s Geopolitics

Hiba Malik The US military operation in Venezuela on January 3, 2026, has been framed by the former as a narrow counter-narcotics and democratic enforcement measure. But its subsequent control over Venezuela’s oil strongly suggests that energy imperatives and finances are central to U.S. strategy. The international backlash …

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Why the Kurdistan Region of Iraq Is America’s Energy Anchor in Post-War Syria

  Dr. Ruwayda Mustafah President of the KRI Nechirvan Barzani’s quiet diplomacy could secure Syria’s northeast, protect US energy interests, and prevent regional spillover. Since the rapid twelve-day offensive that took over Damascus in late 2024, President Ahmed al-Sharaa has sought to reassert central government authority across Syria’s …

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Europe Between a Rock and a Hard Place

Arctic brinkmanship over Greenland, NATO in chaos, and Putin’s calculated silence. In the latest episode of Russia Decoded, hosts Andy Kuchins and Chris Monday unpack how Russian state media frames the fragmenting West. January 2026 may well be remembered as the moment the post-1945 international order finally began …

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Hawaii Was the Greenland of the 19th Century

James Holmes In the late 1890s, naval theorist Alfred Thayer Mahan made a compelling argument for the United States’ possession of Hawaii. Those interested in the annexation of Greenland might take note. Once upon a time, an eminent American full-throatedly espoused annexing a strategically situated, lightly populated island …

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A Canadian Solution to the Greenland Problem

Damjan Krnjevic-Miskovic Canadian prime minister Mark Carney has charted a realist course for Canada. Can he put it to use and help strike a US-Denmark deal over Greenland? Canadian and European political leaders of various stripes seem to be tripping over themselves to articulate a sensible position on …

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Markets Face Renewed Threat from Geopolitics, Tariffs

As President Donald Trump begins the second year of his second term, there is renewed volatility in the markets linked to geopolitical tensions and trade issues. Investors are concerned that this time the repercussions could be more severe and long-lasting compared to previous events. On Tuesday, volatility across …

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Greenland is not for sale, but the global order might be

Kurniawan Arif Maspul Sometimes foreign policy speaks not through treaties or tanks, but through theatre. When Donald Trump revived the idea of acquiring Greenland in early 2026—this time with hints of coercion rather than commerce—the point was never the island itself. Greenland became a language; a signal, carefully …

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