Geopolitics Daily: Global News Briefing

Oil Spike, IRGC Strikes & NATO's $70B Ukraine Pledge | Jul 8-9

4 min · 9. juli 2026
episode Oil Spike, IRGC Strikes & NATO's $70B Ukraine Pledge | Jul 8-9 cover

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(00:00:00) Oil Spike, IRGC Strikes & NATO's $70B Ukraine Pledge | Jul 8-9 (00:01:05) Iran Retaliates on US Regional Bases (00:02:17) Expanded Strike Targets Signal New Phase (00:03:01) NATO Locks In Ukraine Aid at Ankara (00:03:57) What to Watch in the Next Twenty-Four Hours The geopolitics of the past 24 hours turned on one chokepoint. Trump declared the Iran ceasefire dead on July 8, ordered strikes on roughly ninety Iranian military targets, and threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz — through which twenty-one percent of global oil supply transits daily. Brent crude jumped 5.7 percent. WTI added nearly six percent. Markets are now pricing a risk they haven't priced in years. Iran didn't wait. The IRGC launched coordinated drone and missile strikes on US bases in Kuwait and Bahrain — including Camp Arifjan, Ali Al Salem, Shaikh Isa Air Base, and the Fifth Fleet headquarters at Juffair. Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf made Iran's framing explicit: Hormuz is a card Tehran holds, not just a threat it faces. Complicating the picture further, new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has not appeared publicly since February, raising questions about whether IRGC actions reflect coordinated top-level strategy or institutional momentum. US strike targets have also expanded geographically. A railway bridge at Aqqala — roughly nine hundred miles from the Strait — was hit, the first non-coastal target, signalling a widened targeting logic. Trump has additionally threatened Iranian power and water infrastructure, territory with significant implications under international law. Meanwhile, at the NATO summit in Ankara, the alliance committed seventy billion euros in military assistance to Ukraine for 2026, with more than seventy billion planned for 2027 — a binding pledge, not a statement of intent. An EU Russia sanctions package is expected July 13. No diplomatic off-ramp is publicly active on either front. Three things to watch: whether Hormuz moves from threat to implementation, whether IRGC strikes continue, and what the EU sanctions package actually targets. This episode includes AI-generated content.

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episode Oil Spike, IRGC Strikes & NATO's $70B Ukraine Pledge | Jul 8-9 artwork

Oil Spike, IRGC Strikes & NATO's $70B Ukraine Pledge | Jul 8-9

(00:00:00) Oil Spike, IRGC Strikes & NATO's $70B Ukraine Pledge | Jul 8-9 (00:01:05) Iran Retaliates on US Regional Bases (00:02:17) Expanded Strike Targets Signal New Phase (00:03:01) NATO Locks In Ukraine Aid at Ankara (00:03:57) What to Watch in the Next Twenty-Four Hours The geopolitics of the past 24 hours turned on one chokepoint. Trump declared the Iran ceasefire dead on July 8, ordered strikes on roughly ninety Iranian military targets, and threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz — through which twenty-one percent of global oil supply transits daily. Brent crude jumped 5.7 percent. WTI added nearly six percent. Markets are now pricing a risk they haven't priced in years. Iran didn't wait. The IRGC launched coordinated drone and missile strikes on US bases in Kuwait and Bahrain — including Camp Arifjan, Ali Al Salem, Shaikh Isa Air Base, and the Fifth Fleet headquarters at Juffair. Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf made Iran's framing explicit: Hormuz is a card Tehran holds, not just a threat it faces. Complicating the picture further, new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has not appeared publicly since February, raising questions about whether IRGC actions reflect coordinated top-level strategy or institutional momentum. US strike targets have also expanded geographically. A railway bridge at Aqqala — roughly nine hundred miles from the Strait — was hit, the first non-coastal target, signalling a widened targeting logic. Trump has additionally threatened Iranian power and water infrastructure, territory with significant implications under international law. Meanwhile, at the NATO summit in Ankara, the alliance committed seventy billion euros in military assistance to Ukraine for 2026, with more than seventy billion planned for 2027 — a binding pledge, not a statement of intent. An EU Russia sanctions package is expected July 13. No diplomatic off-ramp is publicly active on either front. Three things to watch: whether Hormuz moves from threat to implementation, whether IRGC strikes continue, and what the EU sanctions package actually targets. This episode includes AI-generated content.

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episode Iran Ceasefire Declared Dead, Hormuz Spike & NATO Under Strain | Jul 8 artwork

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Yesterday4 min
episode F-35s for Turkey, Greenland Pressure & NATO's Billion-Dollar Demo artwork

F-35s for Turkey, Greenland Pressure & NATO's Billion-Dollar Demo

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episode Putin Calls, Missiles Fly & EU Enlargement Shifts | Geopolitics Briefing artwork

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episode US Armor Out, Germany In & Iran's Hormuz Play | Jul 4-9 artwork

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