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As Guadalajara prepares to welcome the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Mexican officials are working feverishly to project confidence, order, and control. Police patrols, flashy security vehicles, and public reassurances from the federal government are all meant to convey the same message: that the city is ready, safe, and capable of hosting one of the world’s most watched sporting events. Yet beneath this carefully managed spectacle lies a far darker reality. Guadalajara is not merely a vibrant cultural capital or an international host city; it is also the heartland of one of Mexico’s most powerful and ruthless criminal organizations, the Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación. The unsettling truth is that the city’s calm may owe less to state authority than to the strategic calculations of organized crime. This contradiction became impossible to ignore after the violent unrest that followed the reported killing of cartel leader Nemesio “El Mencho” Oseguera. The turmoil shattered, at least briefly, the illusion of stability that authorities have tried so hard to cultivate. Burning vehicles, shuttered businesses, and images of fear radiating from one of Mexico’s marquee World Cup cities raised an obvious and deeply uncomfortable question: who truly governs Guadalajara? Although the Mexican government responded with promises of massive security deployments and cross-border coordination with the United States and Canada, such assurances only partly address the deeper issue. In places where criminal power has thoroughly penetrated economic and social life, public order is often not the product of institutional strength, but of an uneasy equilibrium between official governance and cartel interests. That equilibrium appears to define Guadalajara today. The city enjoys what might best be described as a criminal peace: not true security, but a tense and conditional form of order maintained because the cartel itself has a vested interest in preserving the city’s prosperity. Guadalajara is financially indispensable. It is a place where illicit profits can be laundered, invested, and transformed into gleaming towers, upscale developments, nightlife, and commercial expansion. In that sense, the city is not simply a battlefield or a territory under threat; it is an asset. And assets must be protected. A successful World Cup promises an influx of tourists, money, consumption, and opportunity, all of which can enrich both legal and illegal economies alike. The cartel, like the government, stands to profit from a tournament unmarred by chaos. This is what makes the situation so morally and politically corrosive. The expectation of safety does not emerge from confidence in the rule of law, but from confidence in cartel rationality. Analysts and local officials alike appear to believe that the CJNG will avoid major disruptions not because it has been defeated, restrained, or marginalized, but because attacking tourists or provoking sustained international outrage would be bad for business. Such logic reveals a profound institutional failure. A state that must rely, even implicitly, on the self-restraint of criminal actors to secure a global sporting event is not demonstrating sovereignty. It is advertising its partial absence. The contradiction is made even starker by the human landscape of Jalisco itself. Guadalajara’s cosmopolitan image exists alongside a devastating crisis of disappearance, clandestine graves, and normalized terror. Posters of the missing paper the city’s walls; families and volunteer search groups continue to look for remains in areas disturbingly close to the sites that will soon host international crowds. This is not peripheral violence. It is not an aberration unfolding in some distant hinterland. It is part of the same civic reality that officials now hope to package as safe, modern, and inviting. The city may indeed be calm enough for football, but that calm rests atop layers of coercion, fear, silence, and impunity that have become disturbingly routinized. There is also a bitter irony in the economic optimism surrounding the tournament. Security analysts suggest that the millions of visitors expected in Guadalajara may be less likely to become victims of cartel violence than participants, witting or unwitting, in the criminal economy that flourishes around them. Drug sales, illicit goods, prostitution rings, and scams targeting foreigners are all expected to expand alongside the tournament’s commercial opportunities. In this sense, the World Cup risks becoming not just a global celebration hosted in cartel territory, but an event from which criminal structures directly benefit. The same influx of foreign attention and money that state officials welcome as proof of Mexico’s international stature may also furnish organized crime with new revenue streams and new legitimacy through invisibility. For residents, meanwhile, the promised security surge offers little reassurance. Heavily guarded tourist corridors and hotel zones do not alter the deeper architecture of insecurity under which ordinary people live. They merely redraw its boundaries, privileging foreign visitors and international optics over local vulnerability. This is often the logic of states preparing for mega-events under conditions of weak legitimacy: protect the spectacle, secure the visitors, and contain the image. What happens outside that frame becomes secondary. Guadalajara’s people are thus asked to endure the instability that accompanies cartel succession, retaliation, and criminal entrenchment, while the machinery of protection is concentrated where cameras will be pointed. The likely outcome is not necessarily a violent World Cup. Indeed, the tournament may proceed smoothly, and officials may well present that success as a triumph of planning and security coordination. But such an interpretation would miss the central point. If Guadalajara remains peaceful during the tournament, it will not automatically vindicate the state. It may instead confirm something far more troubling: that in parts of modern Mexico, order is not always imposed against criminal power, but negotiated around it. The result is a city suspended between spectacle and coercion, prosperity and disappearance, official sovereignty and cartel governance. More broadly, Guadalajara’s predicament is not an isolated anomaly but a damning reflection of Mexico’s wider security collapse. For years, successive governments have promised pacification, reform, and the restoration of public authority, yet vast stretches of the country remain shaped by cartel power, institutional weakness, and a culture of impunity that the state has proven either unwilling or unable to dismantle. The problem is no longer merely one of criminal violence, but of eroded sovereignty: when disappearances proliferate, mass graves are unearthed near major urban centers, and public safety depends as much on the strategic restraint of cartels as on the actions of the government, it becomes difficult to maintain the fiction that the state is fully in command. Mexico’s leaders may still excel at staging order, deploying troops, and reassuring foreign audiences, but spectacle is not control, and heavily patrolled tourist zones cannot conceal the deeper reality of a nation in which criminal actors continue to dictate the terms of everyday life far too often.
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Continuing Conflicts
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Europe
The continued detention of DW correspondent Alican Uludag is a bleak reminder that in Turkey, the legal system has long ceased to function merely as an arbiter of justice. It has instead become, in too many cases, an instrument of political discipline. Uludag has now spent six weeks in pre-trial detention on charges including “insulting the president,” “public dissemination of misleading information,” and “denigrating institutions of the state,” with a possible sentence of up to 19 years. That the trial itself has not even begun only sharpens the absurdity. He remains imprisoned not after conviction, but in the indefinite limbo of a system that appears increasingly comfortable using process itself as punishment. What makes the case especially revealing is the procedural disorder surrounding it. Although Uludag lives in Ankara, the case was opened in Istanbul, where he was arrested, and an Istanbul court has now ruled that it lacks jurisdiction while simultaneously accepting the charges and ordering an investigation. The contradiction is glaring. A court cannot coherently declare that a case belongs elsewhere while continuing to advance it. Yet this sort of incoherence is precisely what allows politically sensitive prosecutions to drag on in Turkey: uncertainty becomes useful, delay becomes punitive, and the accused is left trapped in a judicial maze while the state preserves the appearance of legality. Uludag’s lawyers have argued that his detention violates not only his personal liberty and right to a fair trial, but also core protections for freedom of expression and freedom of the press. Their case is compelling. He is an experienced court reporter with nearly two decades of professional work behind him, not a fugitive or a threat to evidence. By all available accounts, there is no meaningful legal basis for treating him as a danger requiring prolonged detention. Even more telling is the substance of the allegations, which reportedly stem from social media posts critical of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his journalism, including a profile of Turkey’s justice minister. In other words, the state is not responding to violence or conspiracy, but to criticism. This is why the case matters far beyond one journalist. It reflects a broader pattern in which Turkish authorities use vaguely framed criminal statutes to transform dissent into prosecutable misconduct. Laws against insulting the president or spreading misleading information are especially useful in this regard because they allow political speech to be recast as a threat to public order or institutional dignity. The aim is not always to secure a dramatic conviction. Often, the greater value lies in the warning sent to everyone else. A single detention can chill hundreds of voices. A prosecution does not need to end in prison to succeed as intimidation if the arrest itself has already done the work. That dynamic is precisely what press freedom groups and rights advocates have warned about for years. The detention of Uludag, alongside the recent arrest of other government-critical reporters such as Ismail Ari, underscores how journalism in Turkey is being treated less as a public service than as a suspicious activity to be monitored, constrained, and punished when it strays too close to politically sensitive terrain. Demonstrations for press freedom have themselves been met with police force, reinforcing the sense that the Turkish state no longer sees independent scrutiny as a legitimate democratic function but as a challenge to authority that must be managed through fear. The deeper tragedy is that all of this unfolds through courts, indictments, and procedural language that attempt to clothe repression in legal form. This is how authoritarian drift often proceeds in the modern age. It rarely abolishes the vocabulary of law. Instead, it empties it out. Rights still exist on paper, appeals may still be filed, and constitutional arguments may still be made, but the lived reality is one in which the judiciary too often serves power rather than restrains it. In that environment, detention becomes a message, ambiguity becomes a tactic, and the boundary between prosecution and persecution grows dangerously thin. Uludag’s case is therefore not simply about one journalist awaiting trial. It is about the deliberate erosion of the idea that the press can investigate, criticize, and report without risking incarceration. A state confident in its legitimacy does not jail reporters for scrutiny and dissent. Only a government that fears exposure, and a judiciary willing to assist in that fear, turns journalism into a criminal offense.
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There are few regimes in the modern world so committed to theatrical absolutism as North Korea, where even childhood can be conscripted into the service of dynastic survival. The latest spectacle is as grotesque as it is revealing: Kim Jong-un’s young daughter, Kim Ju-ae, shown apparently driving a battle tank while her father rode above her, smiling for the cameras. In any other country, such imagery would be read as absurd, even horrifying. In North Korea, it appears to be something more deliberate, a carefully staged installment in the regime’s long campaign to naturalize hereditary rule and prepare the public for yet another transfer of power within the Kim bloodline. The appearance has intensified speculation that Kim Ju-ae is being groomed as her father’s successor, a possibility that now carries greater weight after South Korea’s intelligence service reportedly concluded that she has in fact been chosen. The significance of this is not simply familial. North Korea is not a monarchy in name, but it has functioned as one in practice for decades, cloaking dynastic inheritance in the language of revolutionary legitimacy. Ju-ae’s increasing visibility, at missile tests, arms factories, military exercises, and diplomatic encounters, suggests that the regime is no longer content merely to preserve the myth of the Kim family. It is actively curating its next chapter. What makes this process especially notable is Ju-ae’s gender. North Korea remains a deeply patriarchal political and military system, one built on hypermasculine imagery, martial prowess, and the near-sacral authority of male leadership. For a girl to be presented as the future supreme leader requires not only succession planning but ideological conditioning. This helps explain why the regime has wrapped Ju-ae in the symbolism of war almost from the outset. She is not being introduced to the public through softness, domesticity, or sentimental family life alone. She is being shown with rifles, missiles, generals, and tanks. The message is unmistakable: if she is to inherit power, she must first be seen as capable of commanding violence. This is how authoritarian regimes manufacture legitimacy when organic legitimacy is weak or impossible. They choreograph it. They flood the public sphere with imagery designed to compress political transition into emotional familiarity. A daughter becomes a military prodigy. A child becomes a stateswoman. Repetition does the rest. By the time the formal question of succession becomes unavoidable, the answer has already been planted through years of visual indoctrination. North Koreans are meant to see not an unsettlingly young heir, but an inevitable one. There is, too, something particularly chilling in the use of a child for this purpose. Kim Ju-ae is believed to be around 13 years old, yet she is already being transformed into a vessel for state mythology. Her public image is not her own. It belongs to the regime, which is exploiting her youth to soften and extend the dynasty’s appeal while simultaneously initiating her into its cult of militarism. What should be a private adolescence is instead being weaponized as propaganda. In this sense, the tank image is more than a succession signal; it is a declaration that in North Korea, even the ruler’s child is not exempt from political instrumentalization. The broader purpose is clear. Kim Jong-un may not be nearing the end of his rule, but authoritarian systems built around one family are perpetually haunted by the question of continuity. The regime cannot afford uncertainty. It must reassure elites, discipline rivals, and acclimate the population to the next embodiment of absolute rule. That Ju-ae has at times even been positioned more prominently than her father in official imagery only underscores how intentional this process has become. Such symbolism would not survive internal scrutiny unless it had been explicitly authorized at the very top. Ultimately, this is not a story about a father proudly teaching his daughter to drive. It is a story about the grotesque normalization of dynastic dictatorship. North Korea continues to ask its people—and the world—to accept the fiction that political authority can be inherited like a family heirloom, sanctified through blood and spectacle rather than consent, competence, or law. The image of Kim Ju-ae in a tank is therefore not merely strange propaganda. It is a warning. A regime that survives by mythmaking is already hard at work manufacturing the next generation of obedience.
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The war in Sudan has long been sustained not only by its internal protagonists, but by the quiet decisions of neighboring states and ambitious regional patrons who have treated the country as a battlefield for their own strategic designs. The latest reporting on Ethiopia’s alleged support for the Rapid Support Forces points to something especially damning: not mere diplomatic sympathy or passive tolerance, but the apparent use of Ethiopian military infrastructure to facilitate a genocidal paramilitary campaign next door. Middle East Eye, citing satellite analysis by Yale’s Humanitarian Research Lab, reports that the Ethiopian army base at Asosa has functioned for months as a logistics and support hub for RSF operations in Sudan’s Blue Nile state, with technical vehicles, tents, cargo activity, and links to UAE-connected supply routes all visible from space. If true, this would mark a grave escalation in Ethiopia’s role. Reuters had already reported in February that Ethiopia was secretly hosting an RSF training camp in Benishangul-Gumuz, with multiple sources alleging Emirati financing, logistical support, and trainers, alongside satellite evidence showing major camp construction and expanded activity around Asosa airport. The newer Asosa reporting appears to deepen that picture, suggesting not only rear-area training but active operational support tied to cross-border offensives. This matters because it shifts the story from covert indulgence to direct participation in the machinery of war. The moral stakes are even higher because of who the RSF is and what it has done. In February, an independent UN fact-finding mission concluded that atrocities committed by the RSF in and around El-Fasher bore the hallmarks of genocide, documenting a coordinated campaign against non-Arab communities and identifying underlying acts of genocide. This is not a case of a regional power casually hedging its bets in a murky civil war. It is an allegation that a neighboring government may be materially aiding a force that the UN has linked to genocidal violence. Any state choosing to facilitate such an actor cannot hide behind the language of geopolitical necessity. The UAE’s shadow looms heavily over this entire affair. Both the earlier Reuters investigation and the new Asosa reporting describe a supply architecture in which Emirati influence, infrastructure, or financing appears repeatedly, whether through Berbera, alleged air cargo links, or broader military coordination with Ethiopia. Abu Dhabi continues to deny arming the RSF, yet Reuters has reported that accusations of UAE support have already been judged credible by UN experts and U.S. lawmakers. In the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea basin, the war in Sudan increasingly looks less like an isolated national collapse and more like a node in a wider contest of patronage, access, and coercive influence. For Ethiopia, the implications are profoundly corrosive. Abiy Ahmed’s government has spent years presenting itself as a state pursuing security, stability, and regional relevance under difficult conditions. But if Ethiopian territory and military bases are indeed being used to arm, house, refuel, or launch RSF-linked operations, then Addis Ababa is not containing instability. It is helping export it. Worse still, it would be doing so while Ethiopia itself remains deeply fragile, strained by internal conflict, militarization, and unresolved tensions from the Tigray war. A government that cannot fully pacify its own peripheries has apparently still found the capacity to intervene in a neighboring catastrophe. What emerges from all this is a familiar and ugly pattern: states in the region invoking sovereignty while hollowing out the sovereignty of others. Sudan’s war has become a marketplace of foreign meddling, strategic duplicity, and moral collapse. If Asosa was indeed serving as a covert support base for RSF operations, then Ethiopia has crossed from opportunism into complicity. And if the wider network described by investigators holds, then the destruction of Sudan is not simply the work of Sudanese actors alone, but of a regional order in which power is exercised through proxies, deniability, and the calculated abandonment of civilian life. /
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Middle East
For years, Iraq has tried to survive by presenting itself as a state balancing delicately between Washington and Tehran, absorbing pressure from both while avoiding full subordination to either. The new regional war has begun to expose how fragile that balancing act really is. Missiles and aircraft cross Iraqi airspace, U.S. facilities remain embedded on Iraqi soil, Iran-backed militias continue to operate with alarming autonomy, and Baghdad is left insisting on neutrality in a landscape it does not fully command. What is now being revealed is not simply the danger of regional spillover, but the extent to which Iraq’s sovereignty has become conditional, porous, and compromised. The central problem is painfully clear. Iraq bears the liabilities of a battlefield without exercising the authority of a fully sovereign state. Its government can issue statements, appeal for restraint, and denounce violations of its territory, but it lacks a monopoly on force and has long been unable to bring the most powerful armed actors under meaningful central control. This means that Baghdad is held responsible for attacks launched from within its borders even when it is not the actor making the decision. The state absorbs the diplomatic consequences, the economic damage, and the security blowback, while militias and foreign powers continue to set the outer limits of Iraqi policy. That contradiction has become especially stark in the current moment. The attacks on U.S. facilities in Iraq, along with the kidnapping of American journalist Shelly Kittleson in Baghdad, have underscored how quickly Iraqi territory can become a theater for intimidation, retaliation, and coercive signaling. Kittleson was later released, reportedly after pressure involving Iraqi authorities and powerful Shiite intermediaries, but that does not mitigate the underlying humiliation. A state in which armed groups can allegedly seize a foreign journalist off the street in broad daylight, and then bargain from a position of leverage, is not exercising stable control. It is negotiating within its own weakness. The militias themselves are behaving with a kind of calculated ambiguity that makes the situation even more dangerous. They have not fully surged into open war, but neither have they withdrawn from the field. Instead, they appear to be calibrating. This is often how semi-autonomous armed organizations operate when they are deeply invested in patronage, business, and political relevance at home but still ideologically tied to an external axis of conflict. They do not need mass mobilization to destabilize the country. A limited number of drone strikes, rocket attacks, or kidnappings is enough to invite retaliation, unsettle investors, raise insurance costs, and remind everyone that the Iraqi state remains secondary to the actors who can wield violence more freely than it can. The economic consequences are not peripheral. Iraq may benefit superficially from oil price spikes, but war does not enrich fragile states in any simple way. Disrupted airspace, rerouted flights, rising commercial risk, and the renewed perception of Iraq as a war-zone economy all threaten the very projects Baghdad has used to market a vision of recovery and connectivity. Even the Kurdistan Region, long treated as Iraq’s more stable and internationally legible enclave, is now vulnerable to the same erosion of confidence. When intimidation and insecurity begin to touch Erbil as well, one of the last remaining symbols of Iraqi predictability starts to fray. What makes this moment especially damning is that Iraq’s crisis is not the result of one sudden shock. It is the accumulated product of years of tolerated militia entrenchment, elite fragmentation, foreign dependency, and the normalization of divided authority. The war has merely stripped away the euphemisms. Iraq is not simply caught between two powers. It is constrained by the fact that those powers, and the armed networks aligned with them, possess more practical leverage over events on Iraqi territory than Baghdad itself often does. That is the essence of weakened sovereignty: not formal collapse, but the slow reduction of the state into a venue where others compete. In the end, Iraq’s tragedy is not only that it may be dragged deeper into a war it did not choose. It is that the current crisis has made visible a harder truth that Iraqis have long understood and foreign policymakers have too often preferred to blur: Baghdad does not fully control much of its own territory, its own armed landscape, or its own strategic future. So long as that remains the case, every regional confrontation will expose the same grim reality. Iraq is asked to perform sovereignty, while more powerful states and more autonomous militias continue to define its boundaries in practice.
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Americas
President Gustavo Petro’s latest move is being framed as an attempt to rescue Colombia’s budget. In reality, it also reveals something more troubling: a presidency increasingly willing to treat institutional resistance not as a constraint to be negotiated, but as an obstacle to be bypassed. Petro announced that his government would seek a new economic emergency decree and submit another tax reform bill to Congress in order to close gaps in the 2026 budget. More ominously, he warned that if Congress refused to comply, he would move ahead by decree. This is not occurring in a vacuum. Colombia’s fiscal accounts have deteriorated, Congress approved a 546.9 trillion peso 2026 budget that the government says does not meet the country’s needs, and Petro is revisiting emergency mechanisms after an earlier effort to raise revenue through extraordinary powers was provisionally suspended by the Constitutional Court in January. That history matters. It suggests that the current clash is not simply about public finance, but about the limits of executive authority and the increasingly strained relationship between the presidency and the institutions meant to restrain it. The standoff with the central bank only deepens that impression. Finance Minister Germán Ávila resigned from the bank’s board after a dispute over its decision to raise the benchmark rate by 100 basis points to 11.25 percent, a move that unsettled markets and intensified concerns about the government’s willingness to respect institutional autonomy when economic management diverges from presidential preferences. Analysts cited by Reuters warned that the rupture could cloud monetary policymaking and damage the bank’s credibility at a moment of broader macroeconomic fragility. Politically, Petro’s timing is also revealing. Colombia is in a transitional moment: the current Congress is nearing the end of its term, a newly elected legislature will be sworn in on July 20, and the country is heading into a presidential contest in late May, with a runoff possible in June. Analysts already doubt that the outgoing Congress will approve Petro’s proposals. Against that backdrop, the language of emergency begins to look less like technocratic necessity and more like a final effort to force through contested measures before the political ground shifts beneath him. There is a broader lesson here about democratic erosion by executive impatience. Fiscal stress is real, but so is the danger of normalizing rule by exception. When presidents begin to imply that legislative refusal can simply be overridden in the name of urgency, they weaken the very institutions that give democratic governance its legitimacy. Colombia’s problem is no longer only an unbalanced budget. It is the growing spectacle of a government that seems to regard checks and balances as intolerable delays rather than essential safeguards. That is a dangerous message in any democracy, but especially in one where institutional trust is already under strain.
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