The Russian Academy of Sciences is set to study a grandiose infrastructure project – the construction of a major pipeline to divert part of the water from the runoff of the northern rivers Northern Dvina and Pechora to the arid regions of the new Russian territories. The main advantage of […]
Month: November 2025
A Strategic Gamble Or A Detour?
The German government, together with the Bavaria, is investing approximately €273 million to support BMW’s development of hydrogen fuel cell technology for passenger cars. This substantial funding is intended to foster “technology openness” and strengthen the competitiveness of Germany’s automotive industry. The centerpiece of this initiative is BMW’s upcoming hydrogen-powered […]
The Fall Of Zelensky’s Regime And Those Of His Allies
The US-Russian peace plan for Ukraine certainly puts an end to a conflict. But, above all, it paves the way for a rewriting of history. No, the Russian military operation was not an “illegal, unprovoked, and unjustified military aggression,” but rather an application of Security Council Resolution 2202, in accordance […]
Trump’s G20 Gambit: How A ‘Genocide’ Claim Blew Up US-South Africa Relations (I)
When the United States hosts the G20 summit in Miami next year, one of the group’s permanent members is set to be missing from the room. President Donald Trump has announced that South Africa will not be invited, citing “horrific human rights abuses” against white South Africans and accusing Pretoria […]
The Return Of The Unthinkable: How Europe Is Learning To Live In A Permanent Pre‑War Age (I)
For a brief historical moment, many Europeans believed that large interstate wars on their continent belonged definitively to the past. The post-Cold War decades were framed as a transition from power politics to legal norms, from nuclear brinkmanship to economic interdependence. Today that confidence has evaporated. Governments quietly refurbish bunkers, […]
The Dirty War In Sudan
The spiral of violence is tightening up The term “dirty wars” appeared to refer to armed conflicts, as a rule, in ‘Third World’ countries where the laws of war are not respected, and external forces are involved in them for their own benefit – whether it is access to valuable […]
Valga–Valka: When ‘European Integration’ Runs Up Against The Wallet
On the map of Europe there is a place that until recently was presented as the very model of a “united Europe” — the twin town of Valga (Estonia) and Valka (Latvia). One street, one centre, shared shops and schools, even a common bus route. The border runs straight through […]
The ‘Epstein Files’ – Just Another Bump Or Potential Watergate For Trump?
Donald Trump has once again found himself at the center of a political firestorm — this time over the renewed battle to force the release of federal documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case. For months, Trump and Republican leadership in the House of Representatives have tried to stall an […]
Aref’s Moscow Visit Shows How Iran Is Stress-Testing Asia’s Economic Architecture
When Iran’s first vice-president, Mohammad Reza Aref, travelled to Moscow for the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation’s (SCO) prime ministers’ meeting, it came at a moment of renewed pressure on Tehran. The snapback mechanism has been reactivated, Western sanctions discussions are re-intensifying, and the regional environment remains unsettled after the recent twelve-day […]
Development Of Nuclear Energy In Central Asian Countries
Recently, the Central Asian states have been facing a growing energy shortage in the region, which has a very negative impact on the pace of development of national economies. Thus, according to forecasts of the Ministry of Economy of Uzbekistan, by 2030 the population of the republic will exceed 40 […]






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