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Tehran has slipped into a wartime hush, with an unnervingly clear skyline above a city that flinches at every new detonation, while highways fill with families trying to outrun the next strike. After a wave of heavy aerial attacks hit the capital, residents described an atmosphere of sulphur, broken glass, and sudden flight: shops shuttered, checkpoints multiplied, and whole neighborhoods reduced to the practical rituals of survival, sweeping debris, finding petrol, locating cash, deciding whether to stay or go. The dominant emotion is not rage or euphoria, but a stunned kind of fear, as if the city is listening for the next sound that will rearrange it. The assault has become a political rupture as much as a military one. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is reported killed along with senior commanders, an event that shattered the regime’s symbolic center while leaving the public caught between shock and a dangerous uncertainty about what comes next. The state’s response is control and choreography: armed patrols on main arteries, plainclothes officers redirecting traffic away from blast zones, armored vehicles stationed in visible places, and a sudden seven-day public holiday framed as national mourning. Yet Tehran’s streets also reveal the fracture lines the regime has spent years trying to repress. Some opponents reportedly celebrated from windows, while loyalists gathered in sanctioned mourning processions, waving flags and holding portraits. The city’s political split is no longer an abstract argument, it is audible and spatial, with commemoration becoming the only permitted mass activity while ordinary life is suspended. Even the architecture of mourning seems to overlap with earlier trauma: mosques and public spaces still marked by damage from January’s protests now repurposed as venues for ritual solidarity with the state. The civilian experience has been defined by constrained movement and anxious logistics. Exit routes were reportedly turned into one-way corridors flowing north and east as authorities urged those who could to leave, and those who remained largely stayed inside. Public spaces closed except for essential food outlets. Petrol lines lengthened. ATMs became unreliable. The central bank doubled ceilings for online transfers and promised continued cash supply, while officials issued reassurance about food, medicine, and even baby formula, an unusually specific sign of how quickly panic can turn to hoarding when the social contract feels thin.
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Continuing Conflicts
Kabul woke to explosions and gunfire before sunrise, as Taliban officials claimed they had engaged Pakistani jets over the capital, an escalation that drags the Afghanistan-Pakistan confrontation from remote border valleys into the psychological core of the Afghan state. Pakistan has acknowledged striking targets inside Afghanistan, including Kabul and Kandahar, and the Taliban’s response in the skies signals a dangerous shift: what was framed as cross-border “counterterror” action is now inching toward a direct state-on-state air confrontation, with both sides trying to prove they can impose costs without triggering a full war. The immediate facts are stark, even as clarity remains thin. Blasts were heard across parts of Kabul and were followed by bursts of gunfire. Taliban officials urged residents not to panic, insisting the detonations were tied to air-defense fire directed at Pakistani aircraft. Reports also point to strikes near the Bagram area, once a U.S. strategic hub, adding a symbolic charge to the violence. By evening, security tightened in central Kabul with intensified vehicle checks, a familiar authoritarian reflex: when control is challenged from above, it is enforced below. This flare-up is described as the heaviest cross-border fighting in years, entering a fourth day with no ceasefire secured despite mediation efforts attributed to regional actors. The underlying dispute is the same grim loop that has poisoned the relationship for decades: Afghanistan accuses Pakistan of killing civilians and violating sovereignty; Pakistan insists it is striking militants and accuses the Taliban-led government of sheltering extremists who stage attacks inside Pakistan. Each side denies the other’s claims, but both behave as if the worst is true, because in this rivalry, suspicion is treated as sufficient cause. The war of numbers reveals the propaganda battle running alongside the artillery and airstrikes. Pakistani officials presented casualty figures that portray overwhelming success and minimal losses; Taliban officials offered sharply different totals and claimed captured posts. These dueling tallies are not merely about morale, they are about legitimacy. Both governments are trying to convince their publics, their soldiers, and their regional partners that they are not being humiliated, that escalation is controlled, and that victory is measurable. In practice, such claims often signal the opposite: that the conflict is moving faster than either side can comfortably narrate. What makes this moment uniquely dangerous is the geographic significance of both countries. Afghanistan and Pakistan share a long, contested border where insurgent movement, refugee flows, and cross-border strikes have become routine. But when violence reaches Kabul’s airspace, the confrontation acquires a different gravity. Capitals are not just cities; they are statements. An aircraft over Kabul is not only a military asset, it is a claim about who can intrude and who can respond. If both sides normalize that intrusion-response cycle, escalation becomes self-sustaining.
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Belgium has just boarded and seized a tanker suspected of carrying Russia’s sanctioned oil under a false identity. The vessel, the Ethera, was intercepted in the North Sea in Belgium’s exclusive economic zone during a nighttime operation involving Belgian special forces and French helicopters, then escorted to Zeebrugge for formal confiscation. Prosecutors say the ship was falsely flying Guinea’s flag, the captain, identified as a Russian citizen, is being questioned, and investigators suspect forged documents were used to disguise the ship’s status and route. This is not only a law-enforcement move; it is a signal that the rules of maritime enforcement are tightening. Europe has spent two years trying to constrain Russia’s oil revenue without triggering open confrontation at sea. The “shadow fleet” model, (aging tankers operating through shell companies), reflagging, opaque ownership chains, and thin insurance, has allowed Moscow to keep crude moving to buyers, where it can be refined and resold with its origins blurred. The mechanism is designed to exploit the seams of global shipping: jurisdictions, paperwork, and the sheer volume of vessels that can be made to look ordinary until they aren’t. What changes when a ship is seized is not merely the fate of one tanker, but the credibility of the enforcement perimeter. Boarding at gunpoint with helicopters and special forces sends a message to operators and brokers that paperwork games are no longer a low-risk nuisance. It also signals a shift from passive surveillance to coercive interdiction—an escalation that Russia predictably frames as “piracy,” because that framing serves its broader strategy: delegitimize enforcement as aggression, so every sanction becomes a provocation and every inspection becomes an act of war by another name.
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Asia
The North Korean propaganda machine is staging the perilous succession question as theater, allowing the world stare at the 13-year-old girl beside Kim Jong Un and wonder whether the dynasty has already chosen its next face. At this week’s party congress, there was no formal anointment. But Ju Ae’s growing visibility, her careful positioning in state imagery, her repeated appearances at weapons tests and military spectacles, and the reverential language that increasingly surrounds her, has pushed the possibility of a fourth-generation Kim closer to something that can be plausibly imagined, and therefore politically prepared. What matters in Pyongyang is not a Western-style announcement but the slow manufacture of inevitability. In a system built on ritual and hierarchy, proximity is policy. Ju Ae has not been introduced as a child in the ordinary sense; she is presented as an object of state attention, a figure placed close to the military, the regime’s true foundation, and framed with words that, in North Korean political grammar, signal sacred status. When senior generals are shown leaning toward her as if briefing her, the regime is not documenting reality; it is teaching the audience how to behave in the future. There is a practical reason to begin early. Kim Jong Un inherited power on a compressed timeline, and the regime has always feared a contested transition more than an external enemy. Introducing a successor while the ruler is still alive reduces the danger of a vacuum and gives the elite time to align their incentives. It also allows the state to test public reception and adjust the script without admitting uncertainty, an invaluable privilege in a dictatorship where even the hint of succession anxiety can be destabilizing. The obstacle, at least on paper, is gender. Defectors and some analysts argue that North Korea’s political culture remains deeply patriarchal, especially within the officer corps, where credibility is fused with masculinity and command. In this view, a female heir could produce elite unease, or even tempt ambitious figures to imagine the unthinkable. Yet North Korea is not a normal patriarchy; it is a hereditary cult. “Bloodline” is not a metaphor but an organizing principle, and the system has repeatedly shown it can bend social norms when the dynasty’s survival demands it. There are also signs of a quieter social shift that complicates easy assumptions. The famine era forced many women into informal markets and survival entrepreneurship, and over decades that has changed how authority and competence look at the household level, even if the state remains rigid at the top. If the dynasty declares Ju Ae the successor, many ordinary citizens are unlikely to oppose it openly; they have been trained not to. The real question is whether the elite can be made to treat her as inevitable, and inevitability, in North Korea, is something the propaganda system knows how to build.
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Africa
The reported killing of M23’s spokesman Willy Ngoma in a Congolese drone strike is more than the removal of a public face, it is a signal that this war is tilting upward, from trench-and-hilltop fighting into an escalating contest for the skies. Security sources describe a predawn strike near Rubaya in North Kivu that killed Ngoma and other rebel officers, at a moment when mediators were expecting calm after renewed ceasefire calls. The immediate consequence has been renewed movement on the ground; the deeper risk is that aerial capability is becoming the new lever of advantage, the one tool that can abruptly rewrite front lines without the slow attrition of infantry warfare. Kinshasa’s shift is visible in method. Over recent days, drone strikes have reportedly increased around Rubaya, an area whose mineral wealth makes it both a battlefield prize and a financial artery. The Congolese state, long constrained by an under-resourced ground force, appears to be leaning on airborne pressure: unmanned systems and Sukhoi aircraft used to hit concentrations, disrupt command nodes, and blunt the rebel advantage in rural maneuver. In practical terms, drones are an equalizer for a government that often loses in close combat but can still punish from altitude, especially at night, when strikes reportedly come in the early hours and targets have the least time to scatter. The symbolism of Ngoma’s death matters because he was not just a spokesperson; he was part of the movement’s operational identity, public proof of M23’s discipline, territorial administration, and confidence. Removing that figure undercuts messaging, but it also invites retaliation, particularly when the strike is perceived as an assassination-by-technology rather than a conventional battle loss. M23’s internal narrative has long emphasized regeneration, the ability to disappear, reorganize, and return stronger after lulls. A precise aerial killing challenges that mythology by implying that leadership is now trackable, targetable, and vulnerable even behind lines. /
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Middle East
Iran is using mass-produced attack drones, which are cheap, hard to intercept, and launched in waves, to puncture Gulf security, overwhelm air defenses, and export economic disruption far beyond the blast sites. Over the weekend, Tehran reportedly launched large drone salvos at Gulf Arab states, striking airports, ports, towers, and even U.S. facilities, not because drones are the most destructive tool in Iran’s arsenal, but because they are the most repeatable. Missiles are precious; drones are replenishable. One can surmise that the strategy is borrowed from a war Iran has studied closely: the Russian campaign in Ukraine, where cheap, mass-produced attack drones have been used to exhaust defenses, wear down civilian morale, and impose economic costs that ripple far beyond the crater. Iran’s advantage is geography as much as technology. The Gulf sits close enough that warning time shrinks; the decision window narrows; and even sophisticated systems struggle to sort targets quickly when the sky is crowded. The point is not to defeat air defenses outright, but to overload them, forcing defenders into impossible choices about what to protect, what to sacrifice, and how much money they are willing to spend to intercept something that costs far less than the interceptor. Drones also puncture something the Gulf has marketed for years: the appearance of effortless safety. A missile strike is a geopolitical event; a drone strike is an intrusion, an attack that slips past the psychological architecture of “secure city” branding and turns normal life into a sequence of alerts, diversions, and closures. Once airports and seaports are no longer assumed to be inviolable, the conflict expands beyond military logic into commercial panic. Travel disruption, shipping anxiety, insurance premiums, investor nerves, this is the soft underbelly Iran is targeting, because it’s the part that transmits pain outward. Tehran doesn’t need to sink fleets to threaten the global economy; it only needs to make key nodes feel unreliable. However, the deeper danger is scale. Drones are easier to manufacture than missiles and faster to regenerate after losses. They can be launched from land or sea, tuned in small iterations, and deployed in waves that teach the attacker as much as the defender. Every successful penetration becomes data; every interception becomes a lesson in how to fly lower, swarm differently, or arrive when radars are saturated. This is why “limited damage” can be strategically decisive: the battlefield isn’t only buildings, it’s adaptation speed and react-ability.
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Americas
. In Lima, consumer prices jumped to 2.21% year-on-year in February, up from 1.70% in January, and rose 0.69% month-on-month, a sharper acceleration than markets expected. For more than a year, inflation hovered below the central bank’s preferred “comfort zone” near the midpoint of its 1%–3% target band. Now it is back where policymakers said it would go, only it got there faster, and with a jolt. On paper, this is not a crisis number. Peru still sits among the lowest inflation performers in emerging markets, and its policy rate at 4.25% remains relatively restrained for the region. But the February print changes the tone of the next decision cycle. A central bank that spent months promising inflation would drift back toward target midpoint now has to decide whether the move is a healthy normalization, or the start of a more stubborn upswing that could feed expectations and wages. The timing is awkward because Peru’s political system is currently transforming through instability and recent top-down leadership changes. A rapid leadership turnover, with an impeachment, a new president, cabinet reshuffles, has kept investors watching for policy drift even when macro indicators look steady. Peru’s currency resilience and historically credible central bank have insulated it from the full cost of political turbulence, but credibility is not a shield you can spend forever without replenishing. If inflation rises while politics remain unstable, the country’s reputation for “boring stability” becomes harder to defend.
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