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Title: War of the Worlds
Approx. Reading Time: 11 minutes
Author: Peter Kingsley

Long Read

War of the Worlds

A patchwork of inconsistent and often contradictory narratives about the war in the Middle East fails to capture the emerging reality: this is a systemic conflict. The main actors are deeply interconnected and exposed to existential risks, yet they have failed to anticipate the consequences of the US and Israel’s decision to go to war. They are, in effect, sleepwalking—without a map, a compass, or direction. As Peter Kingsley argues, they also lack a shared understanding of the fragile interdependencies linking global security, AI-driven warfare, energy, finance, insurance and supply chains. The conditions are set for cascading conflicts, if not a wider global war and deep economic crisis.

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Briefing

The Implications of the Iran War for Ukraine

The US–Israeli attack on Iran disadvantages Ukraine while offering short-term relief to Russia’s budget, but it has not yet altered battlefield or negotiation dynamics. Its significance lies in second-order effects: pressure on the supply of air defence systems, especially anti-ballistic missiles, and the economic consequences of higher oil, gas, and fertiliser prices. The longer and more disruptive the conflict—particularly for Gulf energy production and European economies, or through deeper US involvement—the more adverse the implications for Ukraine.

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Briefing

The Economics of the Middle East Crisis

The US president will find it difficult to extricate himself from the crisis he has set in motion. The world now faces an inflation shock and a blow to an already fragile global economy. Crucially, major supply shocks tend to generate far-reaching consequences across the short, medium, and long term—many of them unforeseen. Risks do not remain contained but interact, reinforce, and amplify one another; shocks can cascade into systemic failure.

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Resilience in an Era of Accelerating Climate Change

Climate and geopolitical shocks are exposing a persistent failure to anticipate and build resilience into modern economies. As global warming accelerates—potentially reaching 0.35°C per decade—impacts are arriving faster and more severely than expected. With further shocks looming, including a strong El Niño, risks are intensifying. Yet responses are emerging—notably distributed renewables, which offer a ‘triple win’ by strengthening energy security, reducing emissions and enhancing resilience in an uncertain world.

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Running AMOC in National Security

Governments are beginning to treat the collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) as a security risk rather than a scientific concern. Iceland’s designation of AMOC as a security issue reflects research indicating tipping points may be closer and more dangerous than assumed. Though welcome, responses remain insufficient. Decision-relevant risk analysis, faster decarbonisation, contingency planning and coordinated international action are urgently needed to manage what is becoming one of the defining systemic risks of the climate era.

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Recent

Long Read Overview

Title: Can Trump “Fix” the Midterms?
Approx. Reading Time: 9 minutes
Author: Mat Burrows

Long Read

Can Trump “Fix” the Midterms?

With slim congressional majorities and low approval ratings, Trump risks losing control in the midterms, paralysing his administration. Mat Burrows examines whether Republicans could use security forces—National Guard deployments, ICE operations, or even the Insurrection Act—to deter Democrats from voting; whether Republican gerrymandering of electoral districts will be offset by equivalent Democratic efforts; and the likelihood of Republicans refusing to accept the results. He concludes that any attempt to forcibly change the electoral outcome would split the country and likely trigger civil conflict.

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Long Read Overview

Title: Trump, Greenland, Transatlantic Relations and Geostrategy
Approx. Reading Time: 9 minutes
Author: Sir Adam Thomson

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Trump, Greenland, Transatlantic Relations and Geostrategy

Trump’s tariff and military threats over Greenland crossed a line for Europeans, and such brinkmanship will recur. Sir Adam Thomson argues that the episode was not severe or prolonged enough to force rupture or decoupling, but will accelerate European de-risking from the United States as far as it can militarily, in trade, and in other domains while still hoping and working for better from Washington. Russia and China benefit from a weakening of the West, but uncertainty about how the US would react to their territorial aspirations tempers their advantage.

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Long Read Overview

Title: Trump’s National Security Strategy: built on flawed assumptions
Approx. Reading Time: 9 minutes
Author: Mat Burrows

Long Read

Trump’s National Security Strategy: built on flawed assumptions

The Trump National Security Strategy shows a certain frankness in acknowledging the limits of American power, but Mat Burrows argues it fails to explain how a world without a hegemon could remain stable. Its rejection of multilateral institutions leaves unanswered who will protect the global commons or how the US can defend its interests without allies and friends. Nor does it show how the US and China can coexist when elites on both sides seek dominance. With no guardrails proposed to keep competition from tipping into conflict, the strategy reflects Trump’s tendency to dismantle rather than build a foreign-policy approach with bipartisan support.

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Long Read Overview

Title: The COP That Burned Down
Approx. Reading Time: 8 minutes
Author: Laurie Laybourn

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The COP That Burned Down

COP30 did little to accelerate climate action, but it is nonetheless celebrated as a multilateral success in challenging times. This contradiction stems from the strategy established by the 2015 Paris Agreement: to induce action not through legal requirements but using norms and expectations. However, this strategy is unravelling because norms are losing their power, and because it has been impossible to deliver material action of the scale and pace needed. Climate destabilisation will now reach the global scale. Laurie Laybourn shows why a new strategy will be necessary to guide international cooperation in this emerging context.

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Briefing

Reality Bites Back

It is a truism that world leaders dominate information wars. They set agendas, frame media coverage and exert control and power through performative narratives and nostalgia. Above all, they impose their imagined futures on the world. This is nothing new. Yet when political self-interest, fantasies and myth lose contact with reality there is only one possible outcome: catastrophe. Reality bites back. History tells us that catastrophe can be the catalyst of renewal. The next year, particularly in the US, will test that theory.

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Briefing

The Intensifying Trade-off Between Growth and Security

There is a steepening trade-off between productivity growth and economic security as the taboo on territorial acquisition breaks down and countries increasingly weaponise control over commodities, technology and digital infrastructure. Interdependence is no longer a risk-free route to rising productivity. The challenge of strengthening security while minimising the damage to productivity is most acute for those countries that embraced globalisation most deeply and possess few natural resources, notably in Europe.

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Briefing

Letter From Davos

Davos was dominated by Trump, who arrived with a huge delegation and set the tone. US business leaders were cautious, avoiding overt criticism, while the rest of the world appeared increasingly at a loss over how to deal with a deeply unstable and erratic Washington. As Mark Carney argued, a new order is needed—but the obstacles are formidable. Weak growth, disruptive technological change, widening inequality and accelerating climate risks all demand greater global cooperation at precisely the moment it is least likely to materialise.

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Briefing

Asset Values—Are We Fooling Ourselves?

Investor sentiment toward US equities remains broadly optimistic, despite mounting concerns. Bears warn that markets may be complacent, while bulls argue that structural change, productivity gains and resilient growth justify higher valuations. The difficulty is that many downside risks are hard to quantify or time. As history shows, genuine economic transformations can still give rise to market excess, leaving investors exposed and making the right moment to exit notoriously hard to judge.

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Briefing

Nature is Now a National Security Issue

Climate and environmental disruption are now material threats to our collective security, yet official government risk assessments have lagged behind reality. A newly released UK government assessment marks a major shift, recognising nature as foundational to security. Yet the politics surrounding its delayed and partial release reveal a persistent reluctance to confront uncomfortable truths. This “delayed disclosure trap” risks weakening resilience precisely when honesty and preparedness are most urgently needed.

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Ukraine: Diplomacy to the Fore?

Wars today rarely end in decisive military victory, and the conflict in Ukraine is unlikely to be an exception. If it is resolved at all, it will be through diplomacy rather than force. Indeed, despite acute tensions between Europe and both Russia and the US, the odds of a diplomatic outcome are increasing. The terms of any agreement could profoundly shape Europe’s future and have significant geopolitical consequences.

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Recovering Nature

Although the decline of natural ecosystems continues, there are an increasing number of positive stories of restored habitats and species in many regions around the world. If social movements gain momentum, forcing governments to fulfil their pledges and put in place the necessary policies, legislation and funding, we could see, by 2050, ecosystems restored, plants and animals flourishing again, and humans living in harmony with nature.

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Briefing

US Stocks: Defying Gravity?

US stock-market capitalisation now stands at around $70 trillion, or 225 percent of GDP and over 60 percent of global equity value. A host of factors could trigger a major correction, tipping the country’s economy into recession. The world’s unusually heavy exposure to US equities means any downturn would be transmitted worldwide, underscoring the risks of depending too heavily on a single country’s economic cycle and politics.

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Europe’s Economic Reckoning

Beneath the Commission’s optimistic forecasts lies a stark reality: Europe’s economic core is weakening. Germany remains stuck in stagnation, France faces deepening fiscal and political strain, and Europe’s industrial base faces an increasingly existential challenge from Chinese competition. A sense of decline now prevails, yet the reforms needed to restore competitiveness are stalled by political resistance and an EU governance system far too slow for the scale of the challenge.

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Briefing

Early Warning and Emergencies, Reimagined

What emergencies? Why do world leaders fail to recognise and act on warnings of existential risk in everything from climate and biosphere failure to runaway artificial intelligence and the collapse of the world order? Why do the stories so often end with ‘too little, too late’? Time to face reality and frame early warning as inter-systemic threats and runaway, cascading failure.

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Briefing

Navigating Algorithm Politics

The rapid rise of decentralised far-right networks—driven by platform algorithms that amplify misinformation, particularly on Elon Musk’s X—is transforming political mobilisation. Online networks now create parallel information spheres, elevating fringe figures into influencers and rapidly organising large real-world events. With governments wary of regulating platforms, mainstream politics is increasingly unable to keep pace, though Zohran Mamdani’s New York mayoral campaign shows how positive digital engagement can counter toxic online ecosystems.

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Briefing

Mania, Bubble, Pathways

There is growing realisation that the AI investment bubble will at some point burst, sending shockwaves through the fragile, highly interconnected global financial system. If they do, chances are the global collaboration that characterised the ‘rescue’ from the crises of 2007-2008 will not deliver a safety net. What is less well understood, however, is that AI mania is more than financial. The underlying technology problems of the dominant form of generative AI and LLMs can also be framed as bubble narratives.

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Briefing

Could Fiscal Pressure Trigger Capital Controls?

With revenues weak and spending demands rising, intensifying competition for capital could push up borrowing costs and deepen fiscal pressures. In response, governments may resort to debt monetisation and tighter control over capital, as suggested by growing pressure on central bank independence. This could evolve into financial repression—through interest rate caps, mandated debt holdings or directed credit—potentially requiring capital controls to prevent outflows to higher-yielding or less regulated markets.

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Briefing

Wildfires and European Climate Politics

EU climate leadership hit a low ebb this summer, with leaders unable to agree on new Paris Agreement targets even as Europe faced record-breaking climate impacts. These events make clear that Europe must chart a new course if it is to confront the realities of a world beyond 1.5°C. Climate leadership must now focus on protecting people from today’s escalating dangers, while also working to prevent even greater impacts in the future.

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Water Resilience Means Local

Amid climate change, resource scarcity and growing populations, technological advances are driving sustainable water management systems that supply, treat and recycle water closer to the point of use. Across much of the world, these more efficient systems are replacing outdated centralised infrastructures, cutting waste in cities and while extending fresh water access to remote rural communities.

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The Retreat from Sustainability?

For much of the 21st century, it was assumed that cultural change could steer economies onto a more sustainable path. That momentum has now stalled. As climate impacts intensify, a backlash driven by fossil fuel and agribusiness lobbies, allied with political forces and amplified by social media, is reshaping policy. The danger is not only that climate action is delayed, but also that faith in democratic institutions will erode, at a time when long-term thinking and sustainability are most needed.

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