What's coming Up Next Week In The World 2026.06.14 to 2026.06.20
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This week on The Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief's What's Coming Up Next Week in the World, we are rolling into a packed global calendar with the geopolitical equivalent of a five-screen sports bar: G7 leaders in France, EU ministers in Luxembourg and Brussels, NATO ships moving through the Baltic, central banks setting the macro mood music, and Russia doing what Russia tends to do whenever NATO is nearby - showing up with a megaphone, a grievance, and probably a naval drill.
The headline event is the G7 summit in Évian-les-Bains, France, where leaders from the United States, France, the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Japan, Canada, and the EU institutions gather with Ukraine, the Middle East, China trade tensions, sanctions, economic pressure, and global security all hovering over the table. This is the kind of summit where the public statement matters, but the side conversations may matter even more. Expect tight language, careful diplomacy, and plenty of behind-the-scenes maneuvering as leaders try to show unity on Russia, manage escalation risks tied to the Middle East, and keep China-related economic frictions from turning the room into a policy cage match.
We also break down the EU Foreign Affairs Council, where Russia's war against Ukraine, the Middle East, and EU-China relations land in the same ministerial meeting. That gives Brussels an early chance to frame the week before EU leaders gather later for the European Council, one of the most important forums on the calendar for Ukraine support, European defense, security policy, and the future direction of EU strategy. In plain English: this is where the sausage gets made, then reworded, then negotiated again until everyone can pretend they loved the recipe.
On the macro side, we cover the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, and the Bank of Japan, because geopolitics does not happen in a vacuum. Interest rates, inflation, bond purchases, energy risk, defense financing, and sanctions enforcement all connect. A central bank press conference may not have the cinematic flair of a NATO exercise, but these decisions shape the financial terrain leaders and militaries operate on.
And speaking of NATO exercises, BALTOPS 2026 continues across the Baltic Sea region, with U.S. 6th Fleet, Allied Joint Force Command Brunssum, and forces from 15 NATO countries involved. This is a live maritime deterrence signal in a region directly tied to Russia - and Moscow, true to form, is already in the neighborhood with its own brand of Cold War tribute-band signaling.
We also flag the watchlist: possible movement on the EU's proposed 21st sanctions package against Russia, the upcoming renewal cycle for Crimea and Sevastopol sanctions, follow-through after Xi Jinping's visit to Pyongyang, and additional Russia-NATO messaging around the Baltic.
If you follow Russia, China, Ukraine, NATO, the EU, the Middle East, DPRK, sanctions, global security, defense policy, central banks, or international affairs, this episode gives you the calendar before the chaos. Think of it as your no-hype, high-signal briefing on what matters next week - with just enough energy to keep the geopolitics from sounding like it was read aloud by a committee in a windowless room.
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