Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief

RH 6.22.26 | Iran and the Middle East: Swiss Talks, Hormuz Heat, Lebanon Leverage

9 min · 22. juni 2026
episode RH 6.22.26 | Iran and the Middle East: Swiss Talks, Hormuz Heat, Lebanon Leverage cover

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👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] In today's Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief, Ryan and Glenn break down a huge Middle East episode where diplomacy, oil, sanctions, Hezbollah, Israel, Iran, and the Strait of Hormuz all collide in one very crowded geopolitical kitchen. The main event is the latest round of US-Iran talks in Switzerland, where Vice President JD Vance, Iranian officials, and mediators from Qatar and Pakistan tried to turn a fragile memorandum of understanding into something that might actually survive contact with reality. This episode digs into the big strategic question: is Iran genuinely moving toward a deal, or is Tehran trying to pocket early economic relief before making real nuclear concessions? The answer is complicated, and that is exactly why this one matters. Iran is pushing hard to front-load sanctions relief, oil and petrochemical export waivers, access to frozen assets, and relief from pressure in the Strait of Hormuz before the nuclear file becomes the center of gravity. That sequencing is not just bureaucratic fine print. It is leverage, and Tehran knows it. We also get into why Lebanon may be the real first test of the US-Iran framework. Iran is treating an end to Israel's operations against Hezbollah, and a potential Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, as a core condition for moving forward. Israel, meanwhile, is signaling that it has no intention of letting Washington's diplomatic calendar dictate its security posture. That puts the Trump administration in a tough spot, trying to negotiate with Iran while managing Israeli concerns, Hezbollah escalation risks, and regional pressure from every direction. Of course, no Iran episode is complete without Hormuz entering the chat like a Bond villain with oil futures. The Strait of Hormuz remains Tehran's fastest way to create global economic anxiety. Shipping slowed after Iran announced another closure, but traffic did not fully stop. Energy markets reacted fast, then calmed after signs of diplomatic progress. That is the whole point: Hormuz is not just a waterway, it is a pressure lever attached to global inflation, energy security, Gulf politics, and the credibility of US deterrence. This brief also covers Iran's domestic pressure after the war, including inflation, unemployment, elite maneuvering, and the regime's effort to turn wartime survival into political stability. Then we move through Gaza, the West Bank, Hezbollah, Israeli decision-making, and a fascinating strategic subplot: India and the UAE exploring defense deals involving BrahMos missiles and the Akashteer air defense system. That one is a quiet but important sign that Gulf states are diversifying their defense relationships after watching the region light up. If you follow Iran, the Middle East, sanctions, energy security, Israel, Hezbollah, great-power competition, military diplomacy, intelligence, or just want to understand what is actually driving the headlines before everyone else catches up, this episode is your fast lane. 👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] Get the daily intelligence brief Ryan and Glenn read covering Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, the Middle East, geopolitics, sanctions, military and intel operations. Save a few hours of your time getting ahead of the news cycle at restrictedhandling.com.

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episode RH 6.22.26 | Iran and the Middle East: Swiss Talks, Hormuz Heat, Lebanon Leverage artwork

RH 6.22.26 | Iran and the Middle East: Swiss Talks, Hormuz Heat, Lebanon Leverage

👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] In today's Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief, Ryan and Glenn break down a huge Middle East episode where diplomacy, oil, sanctions, Hezbollah, Israel, Iran, and the Strait of Hormuz all collide in one very crowded geopolitical kitchen. The main event is the latest round of US-Iran talks in Switzerland, where Vice President JD Vance, Iranian officials, and mediators from Qatar and Pakistan tried to turn a fragile memorandum of understanding into something that might actually survive contact with reality. This episode digs into the big strategic question: is Iran genuinely moving toward a deal, or is Tehran trying to pocket early economic relief before making real nuclear concessions? The answer is complicated, and that is exactly why this one matters. Iran is pushing hard to front-load sanctions relief, oil and petrochemical export waivers, access to frozen assets, and relief from pressure in the Strait of Hormuz before the nuclear file becomes the center of gravity. That sequencing is not just bureaucratic fine print. It is leverage, and Tehran knows it. We also get into why Lebanon may be the real first test of the US-Iran framework. Iran is treating an end to Israel's operations against Hezbollah, and a potential Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon, as a core condition for moving forward. Israel, meanwhile, is signaling that it has no intention of letting Washington's diplomatic calendar dictate its security posture. That puts the Trump administration in a tough spot, trying to negotiate with Iran while managing Israeli concerns, Hezbollah escalation risks, and regional pressure from every direction. Of course, no Iran episode is complete without Hormuz entering the chat like a Bond villain with oil futures. The Strait of Hormuz remains Tehran's fastest way to create global economic anxiety. Shipping slowed after Iran announced another closure, but traffic did not fully stop. Energy markets reacted fast, then calmed after signs of diplomatic progress. That is the whole point: Hormuz is not just a waterway, it is a pressure lever attached to global inflation, energy security, Gulf politics, and the credibility of US deterrence. This brief also covers Iran's domestic pressure after the war, including inflation, unemployment, elite maneuvering, and the regime's effort to turn wartime survival into political stability. Then we move through Gaza, the West Bank, Hezbollah, Israeli decision-making, and a fascinating strategic subplot: India and the UAE exploring defense deals involving BrahMos missiles and the Akashteer air defense system. That one is a quiet but important sign that Gulf states are diversifying their defense relationships after watching the region light up. If you follow Iran, the Middle East, sanctions, energy security, Israel, Hezbollah, great-power competition, military diplomacy, intelligence, or just want to understand what is actually driving the headlines before everyone else catches up, this episode is your fast lane. 👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] Get the daily intelligence brief Ryan and Glenn read covering Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, the Middle East, geopolitics, sanctions, military and intel operations. Save a few hours of your time getting ahead of the news cycle at restrictedhandling.com.

22. juni 20269 min
episode RH 6.22.26 | China: Hormuz, AI, Rare Earths & Taiwan artwork

RH 6.22.26 | China: Hormuz, AI, Rare Earths & Taiwan

👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ China is having a week, and this episode of The Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief gets right into it. Ryan and Glenn break down how Beijing is trying to turn the aftermath of the US-Iran war into a strategic win, using diplomacy, energy resilience, and a very convenient "we told you so" message aimed at the Global South. While Washington and Tehran work through the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, China is sitting on full oil tanks, keeping its strategic reserves untouched, and showing the world that it prepared for exactly this kind of disruption. This episode covers China's energy position after the Iran conflict, including why Beijing cut oil imports by roughly a third during the war and why it may not rush back into Persian Gulf markets even if shipping resumes. We also get into the bigger economic picture, from oil prices and refined fuel shortages in Asia to how Standard Chartered is looking at Asia ex-Japan markets, Taiwan, China, AI investment, semiconductors, gold, and global equities. Then we move into the US-China supply chain fight, where Beijing is once again using export controls like a diplomatic crowbar. China targeted US defense and rare earth firms, including MP Materials and USA Rare Earth, while also tightening scrutiny around indium, a niche metal that matters a lot for AI data centers and high-speed optical chips. Translation: the rare earth fight is not just about rocks. It is about missiles, magnets, chips, cloud infrastructure, and the future of industrial power. The AI segment gets spicy. Zhipu's GLM 5.2 is making noise as China's most capable open-source model, narrowing the gap with US frontier models and giving Beijing a fresh talking point about "radical openness" after US restrictions on Anthropic's Fable 5. The episode looks at what China's AI progress really means, where the US still has an edge, and why cheap tokens do not always mean cheap performance. We also cover Taiwan's five-day Immediate Combat Readiness Exercise, growing PLA pressure around the island, China's public messaging around the DF-17 hypersonic missile, Liaoning carrier drills, and reported progress on a possible nuclear-powered Type 004 carrier. The focus is not just what moved or launched. The real story is what Beijing wants Washington, Taipei, Tokyo, and the region to believe about China's future military reach. Finally, we close with China's Ministry of State Security pushing counterintelligence warnings about foreign recruitment, pop-up ads, data collection, and digital targeting. Because apparently even sketchy internet ads are now part of the spy war. Honestly, that tracks. This is your fast, sharp, and readable daily intelligence brief on China, Iran, Taiwan, AI, rare earths, energy security, sanctions, supply chains, military modernization, and the geopolitics shaping the next 24 hours. 👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ Get the daily intelligence brief Ryan and Glenn read covering Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, the Middle East, geopolitics, sanctions, military and intel operations. Save a few hours of your time getting ahead of the news cycle at restrictedhandling.com.

22. juni 20269 min
episode RH 6.22.26 | Russia's Fuel Crunch, Crimea Squeeze, Donbas Pressure artwork

RH 6.22.26 | Russia's Fuel Crunch, Crimea Squeeze, Donbas Pressure

👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] Russia is feeling the heat, and this episode of The Restricted Handling Daily Intel Brief gets straight into why. Ukraine's long-range strike campaign is no longer just a battlefield story. It is becoming an economic, energy, intelligence, and geopolitical pressure campaign aimed at the systems that keep Moscow's war machine running. In today's episode, Ryan and Glenn break down how Ukraine is squeezing Russia's fuel network, hitting refineries, stressing supply lines into occupied Crimea, and forcing the Kremlin's occupation authorities to do something they absolutely hate: admit there is a problem. Crimea's fuel restrictions, disruptions around the Kerch Strait, and pressure on Russian logistics are all part of a much bigger picture. Kyiv is making Crimea more expensive to hold, harder to supply, and less useful as a military platform. We also get into Ukraine's growing ability to reach deep into Russia, including the reported strike on the Tyumen refinery more than 2,000 kilometers from Ukraine. That is not just a technical milestone. That is a strategic message. Moscow can no longer count on distance, geography, or propaganda to keep the war away from the Russian public. Fuel shortages, airport disruptions, refinery damage, and nervous officials are now part of the domestic Russian storyline. This episode also covers the diplomatic chessboard. Ukraine is pushing to shape Europe's role in any future talks with Russia, while also pressing for licensed production of US-designed Patriot interceptors in Ukraine and Europe. That matters because air defense is no longer just about donations. It is about industrial capacity, alliance politics, and who can sustain a long war without running out of critical munitions. We dig into the growing tension between Ukraine and Poland over historical memory and military symbolism, a dispute Moscow would love to see spiral. We also look at Belarus, where Zelenskyy is warning Minsk over relay equipment allegedly supporting Russian drone strikes. Add in Belarusian fuel exports to Russia, and suddenly Lukashenko's "not involved" routine starts looking a little thin. There is also a sharp intelligence and internal-security thread today. Ukraine says it disrupted an alleged FSB plot in Kyiv. Russia says it detained a Ukrainian-linked agent in Voronezh. A Moscow mayor-linked Telegram channel was reportedly hacked with pro-Ukrainian messages. The spy-versus-spy layer is busy, messy, and very 2026. Plus, we hit the Donbas front without drowning you in map-room fog. Kostyantynivka is the key place to watch, not because of tactical trivia, but because its fall would put more pressure on Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, Ukraine's major remaining strongholds in Donbas. 👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] Get the daily intelligence brief Ryan and Glenn read covering Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, the Middle East, geopolitics, sanctions, military and intel operations. Save a few hours of your time getting ahead of the news cycle at restrictedhandling.com.

22. juni 20269 min
episode What's coming Up Next Week In The World 2026.06.21 to 2026.06.27 artwork

What's coming Up Next Week In The World 2026.06.21 to 2026.06.27

👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] What's coming up next week in global geopolitics, intelligence, and security? This episode breaks it all down in a clean, structured, no-noise briefing that walks you through the major scheduled events shaping the international system from Sunday through Saturday. From UN Security Council sessions on Ukraine and the Middle East, to high-level BRICS security meetings in New Delhi, to EU summits, NATO-aligned discussions, and North Korea's annual propaganda-heavy commemorations, this is the week where diplomacy, military signaling, and economic strategy all collide on the calendar at the same time. We walk through the key moments you need to track, including the Ukraine Recovery Conference in Gdańsk where Western governments and institutions are expected to outline funding, reconstruction plans, and long-term commitments tied to Ukraine's future. This is one of those events where the headlines are only half the story, and the real weight sits in the side meetings, investment pledges, and carefully worded joint statements. At the same time, BRICS national security advisers gather in India, offering a rare window into how China, Russia, India, and others are coordinating (or not coordinating) on global security issues like maritime stability, sanctions pressure, and regional conflict spillover. These meetings rarely produce dramatic breakthroughs, but they often reveal subtle shifts in alignment that matter more than the headlines suggest. On the European side, the EU–Moldova summit continues the slow but steady integration track between Moldova and the European Union, a process deeply shaped by the ongoing war in Ukraine and broader tensions with Russia. Meanwhile, EU energy ministers meet to discuss supply resilience and crisis planning, especially as global energy markets remain sensitive to geopolitical shocks. In the Middle East track, the UN Security Council cycle continues with Syria briefings, thematic debates on children and armed conflict, and reporting under Resolution 2334. These are not flashy moments, but they are the institutional backbone of how global diplomacy processes ongoing conflicts. Think of it as the world's longest running group chat where nobody really agrees, but everyone keeps typing anyway. And then there is North Korea, marking the anniversary of the Korean War outbreak with its usual mix of ideological messaging and state-driven narrative reinforcement. These events consistently serve as a reminder that Pyongyang's political calendar is tightly bound to historical symbolism, often amplified through strong rhetoric aimed at external audiences. We also highlight the watchlist for the week: follow-through announcements from Ukraine recovery discussions, potential shifts in BRICS messaging cohesion, and any escalation in DPRK rhetoric tied to its annual commemorations. If you want a fast, clean, intelligence-focused breakdown of what the world's major power centers are already scheduled to do next week, this episode gives you the full map in under one sitting. No fluff, no speculation, just the geopolitical agenda laid out so you can stay ahead of the curve instead of reacting to it after the fact. 👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] Get the daily intelligence brief breaking down Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, the Middle East, and global security developments before they hit mainstream cycles.

Yesterday4 min
episode RH 6.20.26 | Saturday Spy Stories Deep Dive artwork

RH 6.20.26 | Saturday Spy Stories Deep Dive

👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] A weekly deep dive into the latest spy stories and intelligence updates from across the globe. We spotlight the hidden dynamics driving security crises, geopolitical maneuvering, and covert operations—all with a sharp, unvarnished perspective. From cyber threats to clandestine influence campaigns, this episode pulls together the week's most critical developments, cutting through the noise and spin. Join us as we uncover the storylines shaping tomorrow's conflicts, power plays, and intelligence battles. 👉 Subscribe to The Restricted Handling Podcast https://www.restrictedhandling.com/ [https://www.restrictedhandling.com/] Get the daily intelligence brief Ryan and Glenn read covering Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, the Middle East, geopolitics, sanctions, military and intel operations. Save a few hours of your time getting ahead of the news cycle at restrictedhandling.com.

20. juni 20265 min