Forwarded from Two Majors - English Channel
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
❤69🥰21🫡8🤗3🦄2
Forwarded from Slavyangrad (J Asbery)
—❗️🇺🇸/🇮🇷 NEW: Strait of Hormuz traffic falls to the lowest since the first two days of the war
@Middle_East_Spectator
@Slavyangrad
@Middle_East_Spectator
@Slavyangrad
🤣64🍾14👍9😁9🔥4❤1
Forwarded from SouthFront: Analysis & Intelligence
The Invisible Shockwave: How The War Around Iran Is Affecting Kenya And Tanzania
While global attention remained fixed on the evolving dimensions of the Iran conflict – its military dynamics, diplomatic fallout, and implications for the United States and Europe – another, less visible crisis began to take shape far from the epicenter. Beyond the immediate theater of confrontation, the ripple effects of instability were already propagating through the arteries of the global economy. In particular, developing regions with high exposure to external trade and energy imports found themselves increasingly vulnerable to shocks they neither initiated nor could directly influence. This secondary layer of impact has received comparatively little attention, yet it may prove to be one of the most consequential in the long term. Should the fragile truce between the United States, Israel, and Iran deteriorate, these pressures are not only likely to persist, but to intensify, compounding existing structural weaknesses in already fragile economies.
Nowhere is this dynamic more apparent than in Kenya and Tanzania – two East African nations geographically distant from the Persian Gulf, yet deeply embedded in the global systems now under strain. Their experience underscores a critical reality of modern economic interdependence: distance no longer serves as a buffer against geopolitical risk. Instead, exposure is determined by integration – into supply chains, energy markets, and financial flows. For both countries, the consequences of the conflict are not theoretical or delayed; they are immediate, material, and increasingly systemic. What is unfolding is not a localized disruption, but a transmission of instability through interconnected networks that bind distant economies together. In this context, Kenya and Tanzania serve as early indicators of how external shocks can translate into domestic economic stress, revealing the hidden vulnerabilities of globalization in an era of geopolitical uncertainty.
👉 Read more HERE
While global attention remained fixed on the evolving dimensions of the Iran conflict – its military dynamics, diplomatic fallout, and implications for the United States and Europe – another, less visible crisis began to take shape far from the epicenter. Beyond the immediate theater of confrontation, the ripple effects of instability were already propagating through the arteries of the global economy. In particular, developing regions with high exposure to external trade and energy imports found themselves increasingly vulnerable to shocks they neither initiated nor could directly influence. This secondary layer of impact has received comparatively little attention, yet it may prove to be one of the most consequential in the long term. Should the fragile truce between the United States, Israel, and Iran deteriorate, these pressures are not only likely to persist, but to intensify, compounding existing structural weaknesses in already fragile economies.
Nowhere is this dynamic more apparent than in Kenya and Tanzania – two East African nations geographically distant from the Persian Gulf, yet deeply embedded in the global systems now under strain. Their experience underscores a critical reality of modern economic interdependence: distance no longer serves as a buffer against geopolitical risk. Instead, exposure is determined by integration – into supply chains, energy markets, and financial flows. For both countries, the consequences of the conflict are not theoretical or delayed; they are immediate, material, and increasingly systemic. What is unfolding is not a localized disruption, but a transmission of instability through interconnected networks that bind distant economies together. In this context, Kenya and Tanzania serve as early indicators of how external shocks can translate into domestic economic stress, revealing the hidden vulnerabilities of globalization in an era of geopolitical uncertainty.
👉 Read more HERE
🙏36⚡8❤7👏3🤷2
🇪🇺⚔️🇷🇴🧵 The EU Wages War on Democracy: How Brussels Used Mass Censorship to Rig the Elections in Romania and Across Europe
In 2024, Romania had its presidential elections. The first round was won by Călin Georgescu, an anti-establishment outsider who was directly at odds with NATO and the European Union, both of whom became increasingly worried about his impending second round victory.
FULL THREAD AVAILABLE ON JASON’S TELEGRAM
🎙Subscribe @TheIslanderNews
Donate - Support Our Work
Author: Jason Zaharis
ZaharisJason on X
Active Measures on Telegram
Support and Donate to Jason’s Work
In 2024, Romania had its presidential elections. The first round was won by Călin Georgescu, an anti-establishment outsider who was directly at odds with NATO and the European Union, both of whom became increasingly worried about his impending second round victory.
FULL THREAD AVAILABLE ON JASON’S TELEGRAM
🎙Subscribe @TheIslanderNews
Donate - Support Our Work
Author: Jason Zaharis
ZaharisJason on X
Active Measures on Telegram
Support and Donate to Jason’s Work
🤬53🤯5❤3👍2
Forwarded from Slavyangrad (J Asbery)
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
"It's not about attack—no, no. I'm talking exclusively about defense," Zelensky said, describing his plan to create NATO 2.0 with Ukraine.
You mentioned NATO a couple of times, and now Trump is saying that, in his view, NATO is, to some extent, a failed project. Will Europe be able to fill the potential defense gap if the Americans leave?
If the US seriously considers leaving NATO and we've heard such statements even from officials, and publicly then all of Europe's security will rely solely on the EU
For ex., we want to be part of the EU, and I'm sure we will be. But, in my opinion, the EU is currently in a situation where it needs certain countries: the UK, Ukraine, Turkey, Norway. Frankly, the UK, Ukraine, and Turkey—together they will form an army that will be stronger than Russia's.
Here's the answer: without Ukraine and Turkey, Europe will not have an army comparable to Russia's. And with Ukraine, Turkey, Norway, and the UK, maritime security can be controlled—and not just at one sea.
@Slavyangrad
You mentioned NATO a couple of times, and now Trump is saying that, in his view, NATO is, to some extent, a failed project. Will Europe be able to fill the potential defense gap if the Americans leave?
If the US seriously considers leaving NATO and we've heard such statements even from officials, and publicly then all of Europe's security will rely solely on the EU
For ex., we want to be part of the EU, and I'm sure we will be. But, in my opinion, the EU is currently in a situation where it needs certain countries: the UK, Ukraine, Turkey, Norway. Frankly, the UK, Ukraine, and Turkey—together they will form an army that will be stronger than Russia's.
Here's the answer: without Ukraine and Turkey, Europe will not have an army comparable to Russia's. And with Ukraine, Turkey, Norway, and the UK, maritime security can be controlled—and not just at one sea.
@Slavyangrad
🤣58💊29🤪13❤5🌚3⚡1👍1🔥1😁1🐳1💅1
The Islander
🇪🇺⚔️🇷🇴🧵 The EU Wages War on Democracy: How Brussels Used Mass Censorship to Rig the Elections in Romania and Across Europe In 2024, Romania had its presidential elections. The first round was won by Călin Georgescu, an anti-establishment outsider who was…
🇪🇺⚔️🇭🇺🧵 THE HUNGARIAN ELECTIONS: A WAR BETWEEN EU GLOBALISM AND NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE
On Sunday, the Hungarian people will head to the polls and cast their ballots in what is certainly the most consequential European election this decade and probably in the 21st century. And the European Union has waged war on Hungary’s national sovereignty, taking direct aim at Viktor Orban, the country’s immensely popular Prime Minister who has ruled Hungary since the conservative populist Fidesz-KDNP coalition returned to power in 2010.
Since his return to power, the Hungarian Prime Minister has been a massive thorn in the side of the globalist interests of the European Union and George Soros’ Open Society Foundation. The most notable areas of disagreement have been his rejection of the EU’s open borders migration policies, its embrace of LGBTQ degeneracy, and its support for the Ukrainian Neo-Nazi regime in its war against the Russian people.
FULL THREAD AVAILABLE ON JASON’S TELEGRAM
🎙Subscribe @TheIslanderNews
Donate - Support Our Work
Author: Jason Zaharis
ZaharisJason on X
Active Measures on Telegram
Support and Donate to Jason’s Work
On Sunday, the Hungarian people will head to the polls and cast their ballots in what is certainly the most consequential European election this decade and probably in the 21st century. And the European Union has waged war on Hungary’s national sovereignty, taking direct aim at Viktor Orban, the country’s immensely popular Prime Minister who has ruled Hungary since the conservative populist Fidesz-KDNP coalition returned to power in 2010.
Since his return to power, the Hungarian Prime Minister has been a massive thorn in the side of the globalist interests of the European Union and George Soros’ Open Society Foundation. The most notable areas of disagreement have been his rejection of the EU’s open borders migration policies, its embrace of LGBTQ degeneracy, and its support for the Ukrainian Neo-Nazi regime in its war against the Russian people.
FULL THREAD AVAILABLE ON JASON’S TELEGRAM
🎙Subscribe @TheIslanderNews
Donate - Support Our Work
Author: Jason Zaharis
ZaharisJason on X
Active Measures on Telegram
Support and Donate to Jason’s Work
🔥39❤17👍12🙏6😁2⚡1🤔1