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Read the analysis →Notably: The American strategic withdrawal from Europe advances under cover
Read the analysis →This week: The Strait of Hormuz will have returned to normal commercial traffic (no effective physica…
Read the analysis →— ACTE 01
On these topics, newsrooms around the world don't tell the same story. The higher the score, the wider the gap between angles.
— ACTE 02
What mainstream media misses, what's changing in their narrative, and the weak signals worth tracking.
The reassessment of US military presence in Europe, treated as an administrative announcement, is the most structuring signal of the week.
The interception of a shadow-fleet tanker and the warning shots from a Russian warship in the Channel mark a threshold: sanctions on…
Orbán is re-elected head of Fidesz 'despite defeat' — a telling detail: power is now kept at the party level even when…
— ACTE 03
4 dated predictions this week. Each one will be verified in public — right or wrong.
Hormuz closures announced by Tehran have historically been political signals rather than sustained blockades, with Iran itself exporting through the strait; the…
With a deal already declared 'in danger' and talks postponed on June 20, the dynamic is toward retraction; a two-week window is…
Israel has already broken with the EU and struck during the ceasefire; nothing indicates an external constraint capable of halting these operations…
A territorial acquisition requires the agreement of Denmark and Greenland, legally and politically out of reach in this timeframe; the 'campaign' remains…
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Western coverage treats Hormuz as an oil-price indicator and a geopolitical standoff, obscuring the exposure of crews, marine insurers and Asian importers who bear the real risk.
While the European deportation vote dominates, the deadly clashes in South Africa — same migration grammar, another continent — remain invisible outside local media, depriving the debate of its global dimension.
The destruction of a listed heritage site, with high mnemonic and legal stakes, is drowned in the flow of daily strikes; few newsrooms outside Eastern Europe make it an event in itself.