Geopolitics Daily: Global News Briefing
(00:00:00) 13 Ships Through Hormuz, China's Desert War Drills & Ukraine Coalition Breaks (00:00:58) Global Oil Reserves Nearly Gone (00:01:45) Iran Strikes, No Exit Ramp (00:02:19) European Ukraine Coalition Fractures (00:03:01) China's Desert War Rehearsal (00:03:27) Sudan Sanctions and Somalia Veto (00:04:10) Closing Watchpoints Only thirteen ships passed through the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday — down from a pre-crisis average of one hundred and thirty. That near-total shutdown of the world's most critical energy chokepoint is the dominant story in today's briefing, but it's far from the only one. Five days after the Islamabad ceasefire collapsed, the US and Iran are trading escalating threats with no visible diplomatic channel open. Trump has threatened to strike Iranian power plants and bridges next week. Iran has responded by naming Hormuz an unbreakable red line and threatening Gulf state energy infrastructure. Strategic oil reserves — already drawn down by three hundred and sixty million barrels between March and May — are now largely depleted, according to the IEA. The first tanker has been disabled under the reimposed blockade. Fifteen thousand Indian sailors are stranded west of the strait. Elsewhere, the NATO Ukraine coalition fractured publicly this week. Bulgaria refused continued military support. Slovakia rejected a seventy billion euro commitment. The US simultaneously pulled its own pledge. Multiple governments breaking formally and publicly from a shared commitment is qualitatively different from routine alliance disagreement. Satellite imagery has confirmed China built full-scale replicas of US naval vessels, American military bases, and Taipei government buildings in the Taklamakan Desert, connected by a twenty-three mile rail system designed to simulate moving naval targets — purpose-built infrastructure for a Taiwan conflict scenario. Finally, the EU banned Sudanese gold imports this week, and the Trump administration vetoed UN funding for the African Union's Somalia peacekeeping mission — a move that meaningfully raises the risk of al-Shabab's resurgence. The next seventy-two hours around Hormuz are the most consequential near-term watchpoint. This episode includes AI-generated content.
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