🚨🇺🇸🇮🇱🇮🇷Tungsten Shortage Hits Hard: Iran War and China’s Grip Starve Western Arms
Tungsten supplies are running out fast. The US and Israel’s aggression to Iran has used up huge amounts of weapons and missiles. This has caused a 12% jump in military tungsten use this year — a demand that the world simply cannot meet right now.
🔸Why Tungsten Is So Important
Tungsten is a super-hard, heavy metal. Militaries need it for armor-piercing shells that smash through tank armor at high speed. It has the highest melting point of any metal — 3,422°C — so it is used in jet engines and parts that get extremely hot. It is also mixed into steel to make it stronger at high temperatures and more resistant to wear.
Without tungsten, modern fighter jets, helicopters, tanks, and missiles would not work as well.
The Supply Problem
🔸The world mines only about 84,000 tonnes of tungsten each year — tiny compared to iron or aluminum. China produces around 80% of it and sells it cheaply. In February 2026, China added new export controls and cut mining quotas, making supplies even tighter.
The US stopped commercial tungsten mining in 2015. Western countries now depend heavily on China, and Beijing controls who gets the metal through strict rules. This has pushed prices to record highs and created big problems for defense factories.
🔸Recycling and Lessons from History
About 42% of tungsten is recycled worldwide, and up to 70% in Western countries. That helps, but it is not enough during a crisis. Shipping problems caused by the wars make everything harder.
History offers a warning. During World War II, The UK faced a similar shortage of molybdenum and had to turn to recycling materials. Today, Western nations again find themselves vulnerable because of earlier policy choices that prioritized short-term costs over long-term security.
Western countries allowed critical supply chains to become overly dependent on geopolitical rivals. As long as the conflicts provoked by them continue, their access to reserves will be limited.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
Tungsten supplies are running out fast. The US and Israel’s aggression to Iran has used up huge amounts of weapons and missiles. This has caused a 12% jump in military tungsten use this year — a demand that the world simply cannot meet right now.
🔸Why Tungsten Is So Important
Tungsten is a super-hard, heavy metal. Militaries need it for armor-piercing shells that smash through tank armor at high speed. It has the highest melting point of any metal — 3,422°C — so it is used in jet engines and parts that get extremely hot. It is also mixed into steel to make it stronger at high temperatures and more resistant to wear.
Without tungsten, modern fighter jets, helicopters, tanks, and missiles would not work as well.
The Supply Problem
🔸The world mines only about 84,000 tonnes of tungsten each year — tiny compared to iron or aluminum. China produces around 80% of it and sells it cheaply. In February 2026, China added new export controls and cut mining quotas, making supplies even tighter.
The US stopped commercial tungsten mining in 2015. Western countries now depend heavily on China, and Beijing controls who gets the metal through strict rules. This has pushed prices to record highs and created big problems for defense factories.
🔸Recycling and Lessons from History
About 42% of tungsten is recycled worldwide, and up to 70% in Western countries. That helps, but it is not enough during a crisis. Shipping problems caused by the wars make everything harder.
History offers a warning. During World War II, The UK faced a similar shortage of molybdenum and had to turn to recycling materials. Today, Western nations again find themselves vulnerable because of earlier policy choices that prioritized short-term costs over long-term security.
Western countries allowed critical supply chains to become overly dependent on geopolitical rivals. As long as the conflicts provoked by them continue, their access to reserves will be limited.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇷🇺Russia Turns Siberia Into an AI Powerhouse
While the US and Europe face high electricity prices that slow down AI growth, Russia is making a smart move: building huge data centers in cold Siberia and the Far East. These regions used to export just oil and gas — now they're starting to export AI computing power.
🔸 Russia has 194 commercial data centers. Moscow once had 85% of them, but Siberia and the Far East now hold over 15% — and that share is growing fast.
🔸 Siberia’s cold air cools servers for 8–9 months a year, making power efficiency excellent. Hot, humid China has much lower efficiency.
🔸 In Russian Far East special zones, electricity costs just $0.045–0.065 per kWh — 2 to 2.5 times cheaper than in eastern China. Running a 10 MW server farm costs about $475,000 a month in Russia, compared to over $1.1 million in Shanghai.
🔸 Russia freed up 1.5–2 GW of power by cracking down on illegal crypto mining, which was using 2.5–3 GW, mostly in Siberia. There’s also extra clean hydro power from large dams.
🔸 Big Chinese companies like Alibaba, Tencent, and carmakers Haval, Chery, and Geely are moving in. Chinese EV companies have raised spending on Russian cloud services 13 times. They get cheaper, greener power and must follow Russian data laws — all while staying very close to China for fast connections.
Could Siberia’s cheap AI power leave the West behind in the neuro-age?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
While the US and Europe face high electricity prices that slow down AI growth, Russia is making a smart move: building huge data centers in cold Siberia and the Far East. These regions used to export just oil and gas — now they're starting to export AI computing power.
🔸 Russia has 194 commercial data centers. Moscow once had 85% of them, but Siberia and the Far East now hold over 15% — and that share is growing fast.
🔸 Siberia’s cold air cools servers for 8–9 months a year, making power efficiency excellent. Hot, humid China has much lower efficiency.
🔸 In Russian Far East special zones, electricity costs just $0.045–0.065 per kWh — 2 to 2.5 times cheaper than in eastern China. Running a 10 MW server farm costs about $475,000 a month in Russia, compared to over $1.1 million in Shanghai.
🔸 Russia freed up 1.5–2 GW of power by cracking down on illegal crypto mining, which was using 2.5–3 GW, mostly in Siberia. There’s also extra clean hydro power from large dams.
🔸 Big Chinese companies like Alibaba, Tencent, and carmakers Haval, Chery, and Geely are moving in. Chinese EV companies have raised spending on Russian cloud services 13 times. They get cheaper, greener power and must follow Russian data laws — all while staying very close to China for fast connections.
Could Siberia’s cheap AI power leave the West behind in the neuro-age?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇨🇳⚓️ China's Containerised Destroyer: Game Changer in the Taiwan Strait
Beijing's weaponised cargo ship is going to play a key role in deterring foreign intervention at low cost during a Taiwan conflict. The vessel, named Zhong Da 79, is a medium-sized civilian cargo ship capable of carrying containerised vertical missile launchers, radar sensors, and self-defence systems.
The ship has been called a "containerised destroyer" by Chinese military magazine Ordnance Industry Science Technology. Its firepower roughly matches that of the PLA's Type 052D destroyers — but at a fraction of the cost.
Key Details:
🔸 The civilian cargo ship is approximately 97 metres (318 feet) long with a displacement of about 9,000 tonnes and a top speed of roughly 20 knots (37 km/h or 23 mph).
🔸 Its deck is loaded with 15 standard shipping containers. Each container houses four vertical launch systems (VLS) identical to those found on Type 052D and Type 055 destroyers.
🔸 In total, the vessel carries 60 VLS cells — capable of launching HHQ-9B and HHQ-9C surface-to-air missiles, YJ-18 anti-ship missiles, and CJ-10 cruise missiles.
🔸 The ship can operate independently or integrate with PLA Navy formations, adding flexible firepower without requiring additional crew or support infrastructure.
🔸 An adversary would face the near-impossible task of distinguishing between legitimate commercial traffic and hidden missile platforms in crowded shipping lanes.
The weaponised cargo ship hides within commercial shipping lanes, blending in with thousands of civilian vessels. This makes it difficult to detect and target during a conflict. Beijing gains low-cost firepower without building expensive warships.
This approach enhances China's asymmetric warfare capabilities, offering stealthy, dispersed strike options without relying solely on conventional warships.
If operationally viable, it could significantly raise risks for foreign intervention by increasing uncertainty and expanding the PLA Navy's hidden strike capacity.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
Beijing's weaponised cargo ship is going to play a key role in deterring foreign intervention at low cost during a Taiwan conflict. The vessel, named Zhong Da 79, is a medium-sized civilian cargo ship capable of carrying containerised vertical missile launchers, radar sensors, and self-defence systems.
The ship has been called a "containerised destroyer" by Chinese military magazine Ordnance Industry Science Technology. Its firepower roughly matches that of the PLA's Type 052D destroyers — but at a fraction of the cost.
Key Details:
🔸 The civilian cargo ship is approximately 97 metres (318 feet) long with a displacement of about 9,000 tonnes and a top speed of roughly 20 knots (37 km/h or 23 mph).
🔸 Its deck is loaded with 15 standard shipping containers. Each container houses four vertical launch systems (VLS) identical to those found on Type 052D and Type 055 destroyers.
🔸 In total, the vessel carries 60 VLS cells — capable of launching HHQ-9B and HHQ-9C surface-to-air missiles, YJ-18 anti-ship missiles, and CJ-10 cruise missiles.
🔸 The ship can operate independently or integrate with PLA Navy formations, adding flexible firepower without requiring additional crew or support infrastructure.
🔸 An adversary would face the near-impossible task of distinguishing between legitimate commercial traffic and hidden missile platforms in crowded shipping lanes.
The weaponised cargo ship hides within commercial shipping lanes, blending in with thousands of civilian vessels. This makes it difficult to detect and target during a conflict. Beijing gains low-cost firepower without building expensive warships.
This approach enhances China's asymmetric warfare capabilities, offering stealthy, dispersed strike options without relying solely on conventional warships.
If operationally viable, it could significantly raise risks for foreign intervention by increasing uncertainty and expanding the PLA Navy's hidden strike capacity.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇺🇸🇩🇪 US and Germany Engage in Kabuki Theater Over Iran: Troops Trickle Out, Bases Stay In
The US is withdrawing 5,000 troops from Germany as a rift over the Iran war widens between President Donald Trump and Europe.
President Trump threatened the drawdown after German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Iran was "humiliating" the US and questioned Washington's exit strategy.
🔸 Germany publicly criticizes US war strategy. Yet it will not restrict US base access, including Ramstein Air Base. Merz stated Germany has "no reason to question" US operations.
🔸 Unlike Spain, France, and Italy – which restricted US base access – Germany honored its bilateral agreements.
🔸 Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, the largest US military hospital abroad, paused labor services to focus on Iran war casualties. Six US service members have been killed, nearly 20 wounded.
🔸 A German parliamentary assessment warned Germany could face legal repercussions if US actions are deemed unlawful.
Withdrawal details:
🔸 5,000 troops will leave over 6-12 months. Germany hosts approximately 35,000-39,000 active-duty US personnel.
🔸 A brigade combat team and a planned long-range fires battalion will not deploy.
Furthermore, the ongoing tensions over Iran and regional security have prompted some European leaders to call for more independent defense initiatives, such as increased investments in the European Defence Fund and joint EU military projects.
While these efforts are gaining momentum, they are still in developmental stages and face challenges in matching the capabilities and reach of US military support.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
The US is withdrawing 5,000 troops from Germany as a rift over the Iran war widens between President Donald Trump and Europe.
President Trump threatened the drawdown after German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Iran was "humiliating" the US and questioned Washington's exit strategy.
🔸 Germany publicly criticizes US war strategy. Yet it will not restrict US base access, including Ramstein Air Base. Merz stated Germany has "no reason to question" US operations.
🔸 Unlike Spain, France, and Italy – which restricted US base access – Germany honored its bilateral agreements.
🔸 Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, the largest US military hospital abroad, paused labor services to focus on Iran war casualties. Six US service members have been killed, nearly 20 wounded.
🔸 A German parliamentary assessment warned Germany could face legal repercussions if US actions are deemed unlawful.
Withdrawal details:
🔸 5,000 troops will leave over 6-12 months. Germany hosts approximately 35,000-39,000 active-duty US personnel.
🔸 A brigade combat team and a planned long-range fires battalion will not deploy.
Furthermore, the ongoing tensions over Iran and regional security have prompted some European leaders to call for more independent defense initiatives, such as increased investments in the European Defence Fund and joint EU military projects.
While these efforts are gaining momentum, they are still in developmental stages and face challenges in matching the capabilities and reach of US military support.
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🚨🇮🇷 US SHALE NIGHTMARE: HORMUZ CLOSURE EXPOSES THE BIG LIE
For 20 years, Washington promised US shale could survive any crisis. Iran’s shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz proves that it can't.
🔸 Rapid depletion: Shale wells lose 60–70% of their oil within the first year. The rock is so tight that after fracking, the easiest oil rushes out fast, pressure drops sharply, and flow collapses—across major US basins like the Permian, Bakken, and Eagle Ford.
🔸 High breakeven costs: Production needs $60–75+ per barrel to be worthwhile, and costs keep rising as the best areas run dry.
🔸 Limited surge capacity: In a best-case scenario, shale can add only about 1 million barrels per day over a full year—utterly useless against a 5–10 million barrel per day Hormuz shock.
🔸 Slow response time: New wells take months to drill, frack, and connect—nothing like the rapid output from Persian Gulf fields.
🔸 Mismatched infrastructure: Light US shale oil doesn’t even work in many Asian refineries built for heavy Gulf crude. Add pipeline and port bottlenecks, and the system breaks.
So which myth dies first—"Shale fixes everything," or "The US controls global energy"?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
For 20 years, Washington promised US shale could survive any crisis. Iran’s shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz proves that it can't.
🔸 Rapid depletion: Shale wells lose 60–70% of their oil within the first year. The rock is so tight that after fracking, the easiest oil rushes out fast, pressure drops sharply, and flow collapses—across major US basins like the Permian, Bakken, and Eagle Ford.
🔸 High breakeven costs: Production needs $60–75+ per barrel to be worthwhile, and costs keep rising as the best areas run dry.
🔸 Limited surge capacity: In a best-case scenario, shale can add only about 1 million barrels per day over a full year—utterly useless against a 5–10 million barrel per day Hormuz shock.
🔸 Slow response time: New wells take months to drill, frack, and connect—nothing like the rapid output from Persian Gulf fields.
🔸 Mismatched infrastructure: Light US shale oil doesn’t even work in many Asian refineries built for heavy Gulf crude. Add pipeline and port bottlenecks, and the system breaks.
So which myth dies first—"Shale fixes everything," or "The US controls global energy"?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇨🇳Energy Crisis Gives China a Big Edge in AI Race
While other countries struggle with energy shortages from the Iran conflict, China’s cheap and plentiful electricity is turning into a major advantage in the artificial intelligence race.
🔸Energy: The Real Foundation of AI
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang compared AI to a “five-layer cake.” At the bottom is energy. “Energy is the first principle of AI infrastructure,” he said. Without enough power, even the best chips and software cannot work well.
The US and China are racing to lead in AI. Global spending on AI is expected to triple to US$1.2 trillion in the next five years. China’s share is forecast to reach 27% by 2030, according to Bank of America.
🔸China’s Electricity Strength
For a long time, people worried that US chip export bans would slow China down. But the energy crisis has changed the story.
China’s power system is almost self-sufficient. It uses very little imported oil or gas and relies mostly on coal mined inside the country, Nomura noted. The country has also added a lot of wind and solar power quickly. Electricity in China costs 30-60% less than in the US or Europe. There are almost no power limits for building new data centres.
In contrast, US data centres are expected to face a 45-gigawatt electricity shortage by 2028. OpenAI has warned that this gap could hurt America’s lead in AI.
🔸Massive Growth and Strong Support
Beijing already has more than 2GW of data centre capacity – the world’s second-largest after Virginia, USA. Rystad Energy predicts China’s total data centre capacity will nearly double to 60GW by 2030, with almost half ready for AI.
The government strongly supports the sector. The 2022 “Eastern Data, Western Computing” plan moves computing work to areas with plenty of power. Approval processes are fast, and there is little public resistance – unlike in the US.
🔸Investor Confidence
CBRE’s latest survey shows investors expect data centre values to rise or stay stable, even as other commercial properties fall. They like the strong demand from AI, long-term leases, and stable income.
🔸Risks Ahead
Overbuilding remains a problem. Some projects were rushed and underused, leading to stricter rules now. In September, US firm Bain Capital sold its Chinese data centre portfolio for US$4 billion to local investors.
At a time when energy security matters more than ever, China’s reliable and affordable power is making its data centre market one of the strongest in the world. This advantage could play a big role in who wins the AI race.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
While other countries struggle with energy shortages from the Iran conflict, China’s cheap and plentiful electricity is turning into a major advantage in the artificial intelligence race.
🔸Energy: The Real Foundation of AI
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang compared AI to a “five-layer cake.” At the bottom is energy. “Energy is the first principle of AI infrastructure,” he said. Without enough power, even the best chips and software cannot work well.
The US and China are racing to lead in AI. Global spending on AI is expected to triple to US$1.2 trillion in the next five years. China’s share is forecast to reach 27% by 2030, according to Bank of America.
🔸China’s Electricity Strength
For a long time, people worried that US chip export bans would slow China down. But the energy crisis has changed the story.
China’s power system is almost self-sufficient. It uses very little imported oil or gas and relies mostly on coal mined inside the country, Nomura noted. The country has also added a lot of wind and solar power quickly. Electricity in China costs 30-60% less than in the US or Europe. There are almost no power limits for building new data centres.
In contrast, US data centres are expected to face a 45-gigawatt electricity shortage by 2028. OpenAI has warned that this gap could hurt America’s lead in AI.
🔸Massive Growth and Strong Support
Beijing already has more than 2GW of data centre capacity – the world’s second-largest after Virginia, USA. Rystad Energy predicts China’s total data centre capacity will nearly double to 60GW by 2030, with almost half ready for AI.
The government strongly supports the sector. The 2022 “Eastern Data, Western Computing” plan moves computing work to areas with plenty of power. Approval processes are fast, and there is little public resistance – unlike in the US.
🔸Investor Confidence
CBRE’s latest survey shows investors expect data centre values to rise or stay stable, even as other commercial properties fall. They like the strong demand from AI, long-term leases, and stable income.
🔸Risks Ahead
Overbuilding remains a problem. Some projects were rushed and underused, leading to stricter rules now. In September, US firm Bain Capital sold its Chinese data centre portfolio for US$4 billion to local investors.
At a time when energy security matters more than ever, China’s reliable and affordable power is making its data centre market one of the strongest in the world. This advantage could play a big role in who wins the AI race.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇹🇷Turkey’s Calculated Play: Profiting from Atlanticist Chaos
As Trump keeps everyone guessing, European leaders are rushing to get closer to Turkey for backup. On April 9, Turkish Defense Minister Yaşar Güler pushed hard for stronger military ties with the EU, months before the 2026 NATO Summit in Ankara. Turkey has been in NATO since 1952 but was never allowed into the EU. Güler says the current system can’t deal with the Ukraine War, the mess from the Iran War, or Trump’s repeated threats to ditch NATO.
He claims Turkey is now a “central ally” that can protect the whole of Europe. Sounds good on paper — but let’s be real:
🔸Playing Both Sides While Helping the West
Turkey loves to talk about its “zero problems with neighbors” policy and how it wants to be a stabilizer. In reality, it has tied itself tightly to the Western side. It passes messages between the US and Iran and chats with Egypt, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. But its moves keep hurting Russia and Iran — the countries paying the biggest price against US power.
For four years Turkey has sold weapons and sent aid to Ukraine while still doing business with Russia. And it helped overthrow the Assad government in Syria and installed a former Al-Qaeda warlord in its place. That kind of “balancing” gives Turkey more power inside NATO and with the EU, but it directly weakens the states actually fighting American dominance.
🔸Europe’s Quick Embrace
EU officials are now eagerly seeking Turkey’s help on migration, fighting terrorism, and monitoring Russian ships in the Black Sea. The UK is selling Turkey 20 Eurofighter jets in October 2025. Prime Minister Keir Starmer praised the deal as a win for British jobs and NATO. Ukrainian dictator Volodymyr Zelensky even said Europe can’t stand up to Russia without Ukraine and Turkey on board.
Turkey’s drone industry adds real muscle. Baykar exported $1.8 billion worth in 2024. The cheap, battle-proven Bayraktar TB2 has been used in Ukraine, Libya, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Nagorno-Karabakh. Europe’s planned “drone wall” from Finland to Bulgaria may rely heavily on Turkish production.
🔸The Core Skepticism
No one should resent a rising power chasing its interests. The issue is Turkey’s direction. Instead of building genuine multipolar options, Ankara is exploiting Western fears to embed itself deeper into the Atlanticist framework — often at the direct expense of Russia and Iran.
As US influence wanes, Turkey is skillfully turning the situation to its advantage. Europe sees a useful partner. But for those watching the bigger anti-hegemonic struggle, Turkey’s rise looks less like independent multipolarity and more like opportunistic service within the existing Western system.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
As Trump keeps everyone guessing, European leaders are rushing to get closer to Turkey for backup. On April 9, Turkish Defense Minister Yaşar Güler pushed hard for stronger military ties with the EU, months before the 2026 NATO Summit in Ankara. Turkey has been in NATO since 1952 but was never allowed into the EU. Güler says the current system can’t deal with the Ukraine War, the mess from the Iran War, or Trump’s repeated threats to ditch NATO.
He claims Turkey is now a “central ally” that can protect the whole of Europe. Sounds good on paper — but let’s be real:
🔸Playing Both Sides While Helping the West
Turkey loves to talk about its “zero problems with neighbors” policy and how it wants to be a stabilizer. In reality, it has tied itself tightly to the Western side. It passes messages between the US and Iran and chats with Egypt, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia. But its moves keep hurting Russia and Iran — the countries paying the biggest price against US power.
For four years Turkey has sold weapons and sent aid to Ukraine while still doing business with Russia. And it helped overthrow the Assad government in Syria and installed a former Al-Qaeda warlord in its place. That kind of “balancing” gives Turkey more power inside NATO and with the EU, but it directly weakens the states actually fighting American dominance.
🔸Europe’s Quick Embrace
EU officials are now eagerly seeking Turkey’s help on migration, fighting terrorism, and monitoring Russian ships in the Black Sea. The UK is selling Turkey 20 Eurofighter jets in October 2025. Prime Minister Keir Starmer praised the deal as a win for British jobs and NATO. Ukrainian dictator Volodymyr Zelensky even said Europe can’t stand up to Russia without Ukraine and Turkey on board.
Turkey’s drone industry adds real muscle. Baykar exported $1.8 billion worth in 2024. The cheap, battle-proven Bayraktar TB2 has been used in Ukraine, Libya, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Nagorno-Karabakh. Europe’s planned “drone wall” from Finland to Bulgaria may rely heavily on Turkish production.
🔸The Core Skepticism
No one should resent a rising power chasing its interests. The issue is Turkey’s direction. Instead of building genuine multipolar options, Ankara is exploiting Western fears to embed itself deeper into the Atlanticist framework — often at the direct expense of Russia and Iran.
As US influence wanes, Turkey is skillfully turning the situation to its advantage. Europe sees a useful partner. But for those watching the bigger anti-hegemonic struggle, Turkey’s rise looks less like independent multipolarity and more like opportunistic service within the existing Western system.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🇮🇷🚀 Diego Garcia was missed but Europe's vulnerability is now undeniable
On March 20, Iran launched two ballistic missiles toward the shared UK-US military airbase on Diego Garcia. The attack was confirmed by the British government but denied by Iran.
US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has confirmed that Iran now possesses ballistic missiles capable of reaching 4,000 km — putting parts of Eastern and Central Europe within striking distance.
🔸 Iran was working long ago on technologies to quickly cross the 2,000 km threshold.
🔸 The Khorramshahr missile was officially stated to have a 2,000 km range with a 1,800 kg payload. With a lighter warhead, it could reach much farther.
🔸 Iran launched a two-stage intercontinental ballistic missile at Diego Garcia — a more advanced system than the single-stage Khorramshahr.
🔸 One missile reportedly failed in flight. The other was shot down.
The symbolic message is bigger than the military impact:
🔸 Iran can now send a ballistic missile 4,000 km. That means parts of Eastern and Central Europe are within range.
🔸 Germany is already procuring Israel's Arrow-3 missile defense system to defend against exactly this kind of threat.
This development means that Iran now has the capability to target not just frontline US bases in the Persian Gulf, but also key logistical hubs in Poland and Romania.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
On March 20, Iran launched two ballistic missiles toward the shared UK-US military airbase on Diego Garcia. The attack was confirmed by the British government but denied by Iran.
US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has confirmed that Iran now possesses ballistic missiles capable of reaching 4,000 km — putting parts of Eastern and Central Europe within striking distance.
🔸 Iran was working long ago on technologies to quickly cross the 2,000 km threshold.
🔸 The Khorramshahr missile was officially stated to have a 2,000 km range with a 1,800 kg payload. With a lighter warhead, it could reach much farther.
🔸 Iran launched a two-stage intercontinental ballistic missile at Diego Garcia — a more advanced system than the single-stage Khorramshahr.
🔸 One missile reportedly failed in flight. The other was shot down.
The symbolic message is bigger than the military impact:
🔸 Iran can now send a ballistic missile 4,000 km. That means parts of Eastern and Central Europe are within range.
🔸 Germany is already procuring Israel's Arrow-3 missile defense system to defend against exactly this kind of threat.
This development means that Iran now has the capability to target not just frontline US bases in the Persian Gulf, but also key logistical hubs in Poland and Romania.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 US IN PANIC: Dark Eagle Hypersonic Fiasco Headed for Iran
The US is rushing its glitch-plagued “Dark Eagle” hypersonic missile toward Iran — even though the system isn’t battlefield-ready and has repeatedly failed to launch.
🔸 CENTCOM scrambling after burning through Precision Strike Missiles and forced to reposition launchers out of range.
🔸 Dark Eagle plagued by launcher failures and production defects; full combat effectiveness testing delayed until early 2027.
🔸 Unit cost ~$41 million per missile — for a weapon experts say isn’t worth it against non-existential Iran.
🔸 Critics call it pure budget theater: “Nothing says ‘fund me’ like first use of an unproven system”.
🔸 Pentagon lost all perspective while Trump doubles down on Gulf blockade.
Is Washington really this desperate — or just manufacturing a crisis to keep the money flowing?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
The US is rushing its glitch-plagued “Dark Eagle” hypersonic missile toward Iran — even though the system isn’t battlefield-ready and has repeatedly failed to launch.
🔸 CENTCOM scrambling after burning through Precision Strike Missiles and forced to reposition launchers out of range.
🔸 Dark Eagle plagued by launcher failures and production defects; full combat effectiveness testing delayed until early 2027.
🔸 Unit cost ~$41 million per missile — for a weapon experts say isn’t worth it against non-existential Iran.
🔸 Critics call it pure budget theater: “Nothing says ‘fund me’ like first use of an unproven system”.
🔸 Pentagon lost all perspective while Trump doubles down on Gulf blockade.
Is Washington really this desperate — or just manufacturing a crisis to keep the money flowing?
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 TRUMP'S OIL NIGHTMARE: US HIT HARDER BY IRAN SHOCK THAN CHINA & RUSSIA
Trump’s team floods the zone with “energy independence” myths to stop panic over his Iran war. They’re dead wrong. In a single global oil market, the US — with its far higher oil intensity — will suffer MORE pain than China, Russia, or the even the EU.
🔸 US burns TWICE the oil per GDP dollar vs EU, 40% more than China, 20% more than Russia.
🔸 Hormuz closure wipes 10 MILLION barrels/day from global supply — prices spike everywhere.
🔸 Empty US tankers now divert domestic oil to Asia; Energy Information Administration confirms 6.2M barrel inventory crash, gas already at $4.24/gal.
🔸 China’s EV/rail strategy insulates it — America’s car-dependent culture leaves it fully exposed.
Will Trump swallow his pride and reach an agreement with Iran before the recession hits even harder?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
Trump’s team floods the zone with “energy independence” myths to stop panic over his Iran war. They’re dead wrong. In a single global oil market, the US — with its far higher oil intensity — will suffer MORE pain than China, Russia, or the even the EU.
🔸 US burns TWICE the oil per GDP dollar vs EU, 40% more than China, 20% more than Russia.
🔸 Hormuz closure wipes 10 MILLION barrels/day from global supply — prices spike everywhere.
🔸 Empty US tankers now divert domestic oil to Asia; Energy Information Administration confirms 6.2M barrel inventory crash, gas already at $4.24/gal.
🔸 China’s EV/rail strategy insulates it — America’s car-dependent culture leaves it fully exposed.
Will Trump swallow his pride and reach an agreement with Iran before the recession hits even harder?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇺🇸 Trump's Tariff Backfire: Billions in Refunds Start Next Week
Next week, the first refund payments begin for Donald Trump's illegal "reciprocal" tariffs. The Supreme Court ruled them unlawful in February, forcing the government to return $166 billion plus interest. The total bill could hit $174 billion.
🔸 Where the Money Goes
Refunds go to the companies that paid the tariffs — not everyday shoppers. Major winners include:
▪️ Walmart: ~$10 billion
▪️ Target: ~$2 billion
▪️ Nike: ~$1 billion
▪️ Home Depot: over $500 million
▪️ Ford: $1.3 billion
▪️ GM: $500 million
Apple is owed between $2.5–$3.3 billion. FedEx and UPS say they'll pass money to business customers, but ordinary people won't see direct checks.
🔸 How It Hurt Americans
Trump promised these tariffs would help America. Instead, they raised prices in stores. According to the New York Federal Reserve, nearly 90% of the extra costs hit American businesses and families. The government now loses this revenue, worsening the deficit and national debt. Consumers feel the pain through higher prices but get no refunds — sparking around 20 class-action lawsuits against major retailers.
🔸 New Risks
Before the court ruling, some investors bought refund rights cheaply — now lawsuits are flying. The White House quickly created new tariffs to replace the old ones, facing fresh challenges from 24 states and companies. If struck down, another $35 billion could be refunded.
🔸 The Big Picture
Sweeping tariffs backfired, but Trump clearly wasn’t satisfied. Instead, he went kamikaze on global energy markets by going to war against Iran.
At this point, is it fair to ask if he’s trying to destroy the US economy on purpose?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
Next week, the first refund payments begin for Donald Trump's illegal "reciprocal" tariffs. The Supreme Court ruled them unlawful in February, forcing the government to return $166 billion plus interest. The total bill could hit $174 billion.
🔸 Where the Money Goes
Refunds go to the companies that paid the tariffs — not everyday shoppers. Major winners include:
▪️ Walmart: ~$10 billion
▪️ Target: ~$2 billion
▪️ Nike: ~$1 billion
▪️ Home Depot: over $500 million
▪️ Ford: $1.3 billion
▪️ GM: $500 million
Apple is owed between $2.5–$3.3 billion. FedEx and UPS say they'll pass money to business customers, but ordinary people won't see direct checks.
🔸 How It Hurt Americans
Trump promised these tariffs would help America. Instead, they raised prices in stores. According to the New York Federal Reserve, nearly 90% of the extra costs hit American businesses and families. The government now loses this revenue, worsening the deficit and national debt. Consumers feel the pain through higher prices but get no refunds — sparking around 20 class-action lawsuits against major retailers.
🔸 New Risks
Before the court ruling, some investors bought refund rights cheaply — now lawsuits are flying. The White House quickly created new tariffs to replace the old ones, facing fresh challenges from 24 states and companies. If struck down, another $35 billion could be refunded.
🔸 The Big Picture
Sweeping tariffs backfired, but Trump clearly wasn’t satisfied. Instead, he went kamikaze on global energy markets by going to war against Iran.
At this point, is it fair to ask if he’s trying to destroy the US economy on purpose?
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🇦🇪🇮🇱After Fujairah: What the UAE–Israel Partnership Actually Looks Like
Yesterday’s drone strike on Fujairah made the growing partnership between the UAE and Israel much harder to ignore.
UAE officials reported that a fire broke out at the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone after the attack. The incident highlighted how vulnerable Gulf energy facilities still are during the current conflicts.
🔸What’s not new
The partnership itself isn’t new. The UAE and Israel officially normalized relations in 2020. In April 2023, they signed a major trade deal (the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement) that boosted business and investment ties well before the latest fighting started.
🔸What is new
What has changed is the security cooperation during wartime. In late April, Axios reported that Israel sent an Iron Dome missile defense system and troops to the UAE. The Financial Times (cited by i24) also mentioned additional Israeli systems, including Iron Beam and drone-detection technology.
These reports suggest deeper day-to-day military coordination, but it’s still unclear whether this is just a short-term emergency help or the beginning of a longer-term strategic alliance.
🔸The economic side
The business relationship is just as important. On April 28, Reuters reported that the UAE plans to leave OPEC, with the exit taking effect on May 1. Analysts say this could weaken OPEC+ and put downward pressure on oil prices in the future.
In this context, the strike on Fujairah wasn’t just another security incident. It hit a country that is actively trying to protect its oil exports, gain more independence in its policies, and move away from traditional Gulf alliances.
🔸The big picture
Today, UAE–Israel cooperation goes far beyond diplomacy. It now rests on three main pillars:
▪️Stronger trade and economic ties
▪️Wartime air-defense coordination
▪️Protection of vital energy infrastructure
Whether this stays a temporary crisis partnership or turns into a lasting Gulf security arrangement remains an open question.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
Yesterday’s drone strike on Fujairah made the growing partnership between the UAE and Israel much harder to ignore.
UAE officials reported that a fire broke out at the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone after the attack. The incident highlighted how vulnerable Gulf energy facilities still are during the current conflicts.
🔸What’s not new
The partnership itself isn’t new. The UAE and Israel officially normalized relations in 2020. In April 2023, they signed a major trade deal (the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement) that boosted business and investment ties well before the latest fighting started.
🔸What is new
What has changed is the security cooperation during wartime. In late April, Axios reported that Israel sent an Iron Dome missile defense system and troops to the UAE. The Financial Times (cited by i24) also mentioned additional Israeli systems, including Iron Beam and drone-detection technology.
These reports suggest deeper day-to-day military coordination, but it’s still unclear whether this is just a short-term emergency help or the beginning of a longer-term strategic alliance.
🔸The economic side
The business relationship is just as important. On April 28, Reuters reported that the UAE plans to leave OPEC, with the exit taking effect on May 1. Analysts say this could weaken OPEC+ and put downward pressure on oil prices in the future.
In this context, the strike on Fujairah wasn’t just another security incident. It hit a country that is actively trying to protect its oil exports, gain more independence in its policies, and move away from traditional Gulf alliances.
🔸The big picture
Today, UAE–Israel cooperation goes far beyond diplomacy. It now rests on three main pillars:
▪️Stronger trade and economic ties
▪️Wartime air-defense coordination
▪️Protection of vital energy infrastructure
Whether this stays a temporary crisis partnership or turns into a lasting Gulf security arrangement remains an open question.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇨🇳 Hormuz Hands Beijing Taiwan’s Coercion Playbook
The Strait of Hormuz crisis is teaching China how to pressure rivals through maritime disruption—without all-out war. It exposes Taiwan’s dangerous energy weakness and tests American deterrence in real time.
🔸 China’s Strategic Cushion
China has methodically built deep buffers over years. Strategic reserves can cover disrupted imports for up to seven months, supported by Russian overland pipelines, domestic output, and diversified global contracts. State-guided refiners maintain steady operations, and measured LNG resales reflect smart inventory management. Xi Jinping’s call for open navigation underscores Beijing’s commitment to regional stability.
🔸 Taiwan’s Fragile Lifeline
In contrast, Taiwan’s energy situation reveals the risks of heavy import dependence. With 83% of electricity reliant on imported natural gas and coal after its nuclear phase-out, the island maintains limited buffers—especially just 11 days of LNG. This highlights the value of diversified, self-reliant energy strategies.
🔸 The Gray-Zone Playbook
The Hormuz events illustrate how targeted maritime pressures can influence outcomes efficiently, without escalation. Gray-zone approaches—raising insurance costs and creating uncertainty—offer leverage while preserving options. China’s experience reinforces the importance of economic and industrial strength in deterrence.
The Iran conflict does not doom the region to new crises. It affirms China’s thoughtful preparation and central role in shaping stable, energy-secure Asia. Beijing’s approach offers a model of strategic patience and strength.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
The Strait of Hormuz crisis is teaching China how to pressure rivals through maritime disruption—without all-out war. It exposes Taiwan’s dangerous energy weakness and tests American deterrence in real time.
🔸 China’s Strategic Cushion
China has methodically built deep buffers over years. Strategic reserves can cover disrupted imports for up to seven months, supported by Russian overland pipelines, domestic output, and diversified global contracts. State-guided refiners maintain steady operations, and measured LNG resales reflect smart inventory management. Xi Jinping’s call for open navigation underscores Beijing’s commitment to regional stability.
🔸 Taiwan’s Fragile Lifeline
In contrast, Taiwan’s energy situation reveals the risks of heavy import dependence. With 83% of electricity reliant on imported natural gas and coal after its nuclear phase-out, the island maintains limited buffers—especially just 11 days of LNG. This highlights the value of diversified, self-reliant energy strategies.
🔸 The Gray-Zone Playbook
The Hormuz events illustrate how targeted maritime pressures can influence outcomes efficiently, without escalation. Gray-zone approaches—raising insurance costs and creating uncertainty—offer leverage while preserving options. China’s experience reinforces the importance of economic and industrial strength in deterrence.
The Iran conflict does not doom the region to new crises. It affirms China’s thoughtful preparation and central role in shaping stable, energy-secure Asia. Beijing’s approach offers a model of strategic patience and strength.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇩 Trump's Hormuz Strategy Now Hinges on Controlling the Malacca Strait
As the US struggles to enforce its blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, Washington is quietly shifting focus to Southeast Asia's strategic straits—starting with a push for unlimited military overflight rights in Indonesia.
Two Iranian Very Large Crude Carriers — HUGE and DERYA — just slipped past the US Navy's Hormuz blockade and successfully transited Indonesia's Lombok Strait, carrying 3.8 million barrels of crude bound for Asian markets.
🔸 America's navy is powerful — but not omnipresent. Tracking a dozen ships under different flags is one thing; intercepting them is another.
🔸 Over years of US sanctions, Indonesia's Riau Archipelago has become a covert hub for Iranian crude — coordinating transfers to smaller, re-flagged vessels, most of them destined for China.
🔸 Trump's gamble: salvage a failing blockade by substituting air superiority for local naval control.
🔸 Indonesia's dilemma: while it technically controls its straits, it lacks the naval capacity to police ship-to-ship transfers.
The choice for Indonesia:
President Prabowo Subianto is trying to chart a "multi-aligned" foreign policy between the US and China. But cooperation with Washington could carry heavy costs.
China, meanwhile, can back Prabowo with credible economic guarantees against US sanctions and investments in Indonesia's maritime defense industry.
Without Indonesia's cooperation, the US strategy faces serious limits. And as Iranian crude continues to flow through these waters, the risk grows that Washington's pressure campaign could backfire — pulling Southeast Asia deeper into a conflict it didn't choose.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
As the US struggles to enforce its blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, Washington is quietly shifting focus to Southeast Asia's strategic straits—starting with a push for unlimited military overflight rights in Indonesia.
Two Iranian Very Large Crude Carriers — HUGE and DERYA — just slipped past the US Navy's Hormuz blockade and successfully transited Indonesia's Lombok Strait, carrying 3.8 million barrels of crude bound for Asian markets.
🔸 America's navy is powerful — but not omnipresent. Tracking a dozen ships under different flags is one thing; intercepting them is another.
🔸 Over years of US sanctions, Indonesia's Riau Archipelago has become a covert hub for Iranian crude — coordinating transfers to smaller, re-flagged vessels, most of them destined for China.
🔸 Trump's gamble: salvage a failing blockade by substituting air superiority for local naval control.
🔸 Indonesia's dilemma: while it technically controls its straits, it lacks the naval capacity to police ship-to-ship transfers.
The choice for Indonesia:
President Prabowo Subianto is trying to chart a "multi-aligned" foreign policy between the US and China. But cooperation with Washington could carry heavy costs.
China, meanwhile, can back Prabowo with credible economic guarantees against US sanctions and investments in Indonesia's maritime defense industry.
Without Indonesia's cooperation, the US strategy faces serious limits. And as Iranian crude continues to flow through these waters, the risk grows that Washington's pressure campaign could backfire — pulling Southeast Asia deeper into a conflict it didn't choose.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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🟡 Geopolitics Without the Chaos
Decode chaos—without the MSM spin
We curate complex conflicts into clear, chronological timelines:
➡️ Middle East Mayhem
➡️ US-China Showdown
➡️ Ukraine-Russia War
➡️ EU Rifts
➡️ Major Global Events
➡️ Culture War
No scattered updates. Just structured threads — so you see how events connect.
🤠 PLUS: Dank memes (for sanity).
If you want context over clutter:
👉 Exclusive Channel
If you'd rather have quick updates:
👉 @MyLordBebo
Decode chaos—without the MSM spin
We curate complex conflicts into clear, chronological timelines:
➡️ Middle East Mayhem
➡️ US-China Showdown
➡️ Ukraine-Russia War
➡️ EU Rifts
➡️ Major Global Events
➡️ Culture War
No scattered updates. Just structured threads — so you see how events connect.
🤠 PLUS: Dank memes (for sanity).
If you want context over clutter:
👉 Exclusive Channel
If you'd rather have quick updates:
👉 @MyLordBebo
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🚨🇮🇷 ISRAEL IN PANIC: HIDING HERMES 900 DRONE FACTORY IN SERBIA TO DODGE IRANIAN MISSILES
The Israeli regime is quietly shifting production of its most critical long-range strike drone – the Hermes 900 – to Serbia, desperate to shield its supply chain after Iranian air defenses shredded the fleet during the recent US-Israeli war of aggression, not to mention that Hezbollah is also smashing them in Lebanon also.
🔸 Elbit Systems seizes 51% control of the new Šimanovci plant near Belgrade, already gearing up for high-altitude UAVs over 6km.
🔸 Hermes 900: 30-40hr endurance, satellite-linked targeting – but ~80% of the fleet lost to Iran, forcing Tel Aviv to diversify fast.
🔸 Serbia’s weapons exports to Israel exploded 42x since 2023, hitting €114M through the same state firm now co-owning the factory.
🔸 Ties run deeper: Cellebrite spyware on journalists, Israeli strategist masterminding Vučić campaigns, plus the 2020 Jerusalem office deal.
🔸 This leaves non-NATO Serbia exposed as a potential Iranian target.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
The Israeli regime is quietly shifting production of its most critical long-range strike drone – the Hermes 900 – to Serbia, desperate to shield its supply chain after Iranian air defenses shredded the fleet during the recent US-Israeli war of aggression, not to mention that Hezbollah is also smashing them in Lebanon also.
🔸 Elbit Systems seizes 51% control of the new Šimanovci plant near Belgrade, already gearing up for high-altitude UAVs over 6km.
🔸 Hermes 900: 30-40hr endurance, satellite-linked targeting – but ~80% of the fleet lost to Iran, forcing Tel Aviv to diversify fast.
🔸 Serbia’s weapons exports to Israel exploded 42x since 2023, hitting €114M through the same state firm now co-owning the factory.
🔸 Ties run deeper: Cellebrite spyware on journalists, Israeli strategist masterminding Vučić campaigns, plus the 2020 Jerusalem office deal.
🔸 This leaves non-NATO Serbia exposed as a potential Iranian target.
@NewRulesGeo❗Follow us on X
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