Mine Print Hash
TL;DR: Energy corridors are the chessboard upon which major powers are competing. đ Summary Trans-Adriatic Pipeline & the Great-Power Chessboard Cameron Otsuka and Matt Dines open Mine Print Hash Week 18 by framing recent Trans-Adriatic Pipeline news as more than an energy story: it is a window into âpolitical maneuversâ and influence campaigns around strategic corridors (00:00:12). Matt says the region sits between the âbig fourâ spheres of influence â the U.S., China, Russia, and continental Europe/EU â and should be understood as a âchess gameâ where every move forces a response (00:02:14, 00:02:47). The throughline: pipelines, trade routes, currency blocs, and diplomatic summits are all part of the same contest over resources and influence. EU-Armenia Summit: Europe Moves Into the Caucasus Matt highlights the May 4â5 EU-Armenia summit in Yerevan, attended by 30+ European leaders plus Canadian PM Mark Carney, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (00:05:07). He views the summit as an attempt to pull Armenia further into the EU economic sphere through connectivity partnerships. Matt warns the move is âpushing the situation towards more instability, in my opinion, not lessâ because Armenia sits between Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey, and Iran â a sensitive corridor already shaped by decades of conflict (00:07:12). Resource Access Is the Prize The discussion turns to pipelines and the âaccess to resourcesâ framework from Daniel Yerginâs The Prize (00:09:48). Matt argues Europeâs shortage of energy access explains much of its geopolitical activity, as suppliers fight for access to demand markets and Europe tries to integrate east-west energy flows through Anatolia, the Balkans, and Central Europe. The proposed Trans-Caspian Pipeline is described as the âbig Kahunaâ because it would extend Europeâs energy integration across the Caspian toward Turkmenistan, tying into ânew Silk Roadsâ and the revival of land-based trade routes (00:23:19, 00:24:16). Information War & Russiaâs Warning Matt contrasts Austriaâs supportive reaction with Russiaâs negative reaction. Austria emphasizes fighting FIMI â foreign interference and misinformation â while Russia warns that Armenia is becoming a platform for the Kiev regime (00:14:38, 00:17:18). The episode connects this to modern influence campaigns: âthereâs a lot of spin on the ball out there,â so the hosts emphasize going directly to source material where possible (00:15:40). Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary: Stress on the EU Periphery The hosts broaden the lens to Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary. Bulgaria adopted the euro in January, but recent elections showed political pushback toward the EU-aligned path (00:09:14, 00:26:52). Romaniaâs government collapse and the Romanian leu weakening to record lows become the episodeâs financial chart, illustrating how countries between the EU and Russia absorb pressure from larger blocs (00:29:26, 00:30:14). Mattâs key point: the periphery is being âpulled apart and stressed and stretchedâ by heavyweight competition (00:38:02). U.S.-Iran Diplomacy & Chinaâs Role The final section shifts to U.S.-Iran negotiations. Matt contrasts the older JCPOA framework with a new 14-point MOU that is structured as a phased trust-building process rather than a âzero to one overnightâ deal (00:45:05, 00:47:16). China becomes a key actor, with Matt saying China âput its thumb on the scalesâ by pressuring the IRGC to cool tensions and by limiting loans to refineries buying sanctioned Iranian oil (00:49:07, 00:51:07). However, an attack on a Chinese oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz is framed as escalatory and a test of whether diplomacy can hold (00:55:26). đ Key Takeaways * Energy infrastructure is the surface story; resource access, currency alignment, and trade-route control are the deeper story. * Armenia is a critical hinge point in the Caucasus, and EU engagement there may force reactions from Russia, Turkey, Iran, China, and the U.S. * The Trans-Caspian / New Silk Road corridor could reshape 21st-century land trade and determine who captures value across Eurasia. * Peripheral European states like Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary are early signals of stress inside the EU-Russia tug-of-war. * The U.S.-Iran 14-point MOU is presented as the best hope for de-escalation, but actors inside Iran, China, and the region may still sabotage the process. * Mattâs closing frame: Eastern Europe through Ukraine, the Caucasus, Iran, Israel, and Syria is âa giant messâ and likely âthe story of the next five to ten yearsâ (00:57:16). đ± Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash [https://x.com/MinePrintHash] * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs [https://x.com/LeveredUSTs] * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka [https://x.com/CameronOtsuka] đ Links * đ§ Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss [https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss] * đ Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com [https://getbuilding.com] * â Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund [https://bfix.fund] * đ Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com [https://buildbitcoin.com] This is a public episode. 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