Bretton Woods Under Siege: Why Putin Flew to Beijing

Бреттон-Вудс под ударом: зачем Путин летал в Пекин

Official communiqués about "strategic partnership" and "deepening cooperation" are just the packaging. The contents matter more: Moscow and Beijing were not discussing bilateral relations — they were discussing the architecture of the world order. Specifically, who will govern the financial system that succeeds the current one, and on whose terms.

What This Story Is Really About

NATO in the Storm: Ryabkov Warns, Brussels Prepares

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When Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister uses a phrase like “a direct collision with catastrophic consequences” — and does so precisely as NATO’s chiefs of staff from all 32 member states gather at alliance headquarters for the first time in a long while — this is no random choice of day for an interview. It is a signal aimed at a specific audience: Brussels, Ankara, Washington.

What This Story Is Really About

Medical Checks at the Border: The State Accelerates

Медицинский контроль на въезде: государство ускоряется

When the flow of labor migration numbers millions of people per year, a three-day delay between a medical test and a deportation decision is no mere administrative detail. It is an epidemiological window in which a person carrying a dangerous infection has already integrated into the workplace, their household environment, and the transport network. New amendments close that window.

Context

Russia in 50 Years: Climate as Geopolitics

Россия через 50 лет: климат как геополитика

The world’s coldest country is warming faster than any other. Over the next half-century, Russia is set to gain an additional 2.5°C in average annual temperature. This is not an environmental statistic. It is a redistribution of resources, trade routes, and demographics. Climate change alters a nation’s geopolitical weight not through sudden catastrophes, but through a slow shift in where people can live, work, and do business.

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Taiwan and the Strait of Malacca: What Comes Next

Тайвань и Малаккский пролив: что нас ждёт дальше

Beijing has spent years openly rehearsing a naval blockade of the island. The "Joint Sword 2025" exercises and the subsequent 2026 maneuvers are not a show of force for its own sake — they are an accumulation of operational experience. The difference between a rehearsal and the real thing is a political decision, not a question of military readiness.

What This Story Is Really About

The Spy in the Glass World: When Intelligence Costs More Than It’s Worth

Шпион в стеклянном мире: когда добыча информации стоит дороже, чем она сама

Intelligence is returning to its central question: What does the other side actually think and decide? The answer cannot be obtained via satellite or intercepted communications. Only a human being inside the system truly knows. But gaining access to such people — in Russia, in China — has become fundamentally different from what it was twenty years ago.

What This Story Is Really About

Deportations by Faith: How Abu Dhabi Punishes Islamabad – And What It Means for Everyone Else

Депортации по признаку веры: как Абу-Даби наказывает Исламабад и что это значит для всех остальных

When a state begins deporting migrant workers based on their names – Ali, Hasan, Hussein – it’s no longer immigration policy. It’s a political message, packaged in arrest warrants. Nearly 15,000 Pakistani Shiite workers have been expelled from the UAE without charges, without access to their bank accounts, and without the right to appeal. For each one, a personal catastrophe. For the region, a new fault line.

What This Story Is Really About

Middle East: A War on Every Market at Once

Ближний Восток: война на всех рынках сразу, vigiljournal.com

Two news items from a single day — and the whole geopolitical picture is laid bare. Saudi Arabia and Kuwait lifted restrictions on the use of their bases by U.S. military forces. Secretary of State Rubio approved arms sales to five Gulf states worth $25.8 billion — three times the original sum. The numbers speak for themselves: Washington is repositioning for a long campaign, and the region is footing the bill.

Context: What’s Happening

Russia in Nicaragua: A Quiet Springboard at the Gates of the Western Hemisphere

Россия в Никарагуа: тихий плацдарм у ворот Западного полушария

On May 2, Vladimir Putin signed a federal law ratifying a military agreement with Nicaragua — a document originally signed back on September 22, 2025, in Moscow by Defense Minister Belousov and Commander-in-Chief of the Nicaraguan Army, General Aviles. No fanfare, no press conferences, no emergency briefings. Just a signature on the official legal portal — and Russia has officially cemented its presence in Central America.

What the Agreement Actually Contains