The author works at Afghanistan’s Forensic Science Organization and teaches at Gawharshad University, Kabul. He graduated by the Department of International Relations, South Asian University, New Delhi.
The author works at Afghanistan’s Forensic Science Organization and teaches at Gawharshad University, Kabul. He graduated by the Department of International Relations, South Asian University, New Delhi.
The author works at Afghanistan’s Forensic Science Organization and teaches at Gawharshad University, Kabul. He graduated by the Department of International Relations, South Asian University, New Delhi.
An Al Jazeera documentary shows that Islamic State of Khorasan (ISK), the ISIS branch active in Afghanistan and Pakistan, trains children above three years...
Maduro’s capture signals a grim shift: power over law. From Venezuela to Gaza and Ukraine, force is normalised, sovereignty erodes, and multilateral institutions hollow out—ushering a dangerous might-makes-right world order.
Sanctions revived Russia’s Far East as a pivot to Asia, but China ties remain extractive. Without diversification—energy, digital, tourism—the region risks staying a resource periphery, not a Northeast Asian gateway.
AI’s real power isn’t abstract—it’s silicon and data. Tiny chips now shape geopolitics, supply chains, and sovereignty. The AI race is a struggle over who sets the rules of our digital lives.
Japan’s F-2 shows co-development fails when power is asymmetric. Today, Japan–South Korea symmetry and shared threats create a rare chance to jointly build real deterrence—quietly, modularly, and beyond symbolism.
Greenland is no longer just a partner—it’s a test. U.S. appointments signal an Arctic turn from consent to power, forcing Denmark, Europe, and Nuuk to defend self-determination against strategic coercion.