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Saturday, June 6, 2026

A Dangerous Game: U.S. and Iran Test the Limits of Their Ceasefire

The ceasefire was supposed to change everything. When the United States and Iran announced their agreement back in April 2026, there was a collective sigh of relief across the Middle East and beyond. Finally, it seemed like the long-standing tensions between Washington and Tehran might be easing. But here we are, just a few months later, watching the same old patterns play out once again.

Earlier this week, the U.S. military carried out strikes on Iranian radar sites in the Gulf. The reason? Iranian drones operating too close to the Strait of Hormuz. U.S. officials were quick to call the action defensive a necessary step to protect regional maritime traffic after what they described as an immediate threat. But let's be honest here: when one side launches strikes and the other responds with accusations, it feels less like peace and more like a temporary pause.

Friday, June 5, 2026

Has Pakistan Also Won Over Putin? What Russia's Changing Tells Us About South Asian Dynamics

There was a moment at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum that probably didn't make headlines everywhere, but it should have. 

When an Indian journalist tried to paint the China-Pakistan Comprehensive Strategic Partnership as something Moscow should worry about, Russian President Vladimir Putin didn't exactly embrace the premise. 

His response was telling in its dismissiveness: "Pakistan is a large country, and it has multifaceted ties with different countries. They need to take into account cooperation with China, but everyone is developing relations with China."

On the surface, it might sound like a routine diplomatic non-answer. But anyone who watches Russia-South Asia relations closely knows something shifted here. The subtext was clear Moscow isn't losing sleep over India trying to make Pakistan's China ties into some sort of threat vector. Instead, Russia appears to be recalibrating its entire approach to the region, and Pakistan finds itself in an interestingly different position than where it stood even a few years ago.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

The Middle East’s Great Paradox: Why Is Washington Still Listening to the Usual Suspects?

If you want to know who really whispers in Washington’s ear when it comes to Middle East policy, you might be looking at the wrong map. 

For years, we’ve been told to look toward the Gulf at those polished, oil-rich nations that seem to play both sides of the fence with expert precision. They’re the ones who benefit from their proximity to the chaos in Tehran while simultaneously providing a PR platform for voices sympathetic to groups like Hamas and Hezbollah.

But as of June 2026, the "Middle East puzzle" has started to look less like a complex geopolitical strategy and more like a long-running, cynical stage play.