• Negotiating_Peace_With_Deep_Strike_Missiles
    Jun 12 2026
    Episode DescriptionHas diplomacy in the war in Ukraine reached a new breaking point, or are negotiations simply entering a more militarized phase?

    In this episode, we examine Sergey Lavrov’s response to the joint document signed by the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Ukraine. The E3 statement combines calls for a ceasefire and legally binding security guarantees with plans to strengthen Ukraine’s air-defence, anti-ballistic, and deep-strike capabilities.For Kyiv and its European partners, military support is considered essential to prevent future negotiations from becoming a tactical pause that Russia could exploit. For Moscow, however, the same strategy appears to confirm that Europe is not preparing for peace, but for a longer and more sophisticated confrontation.

    The central issue is therefore not simply whether negotiations remain possible, but under what conditions they could take place. Deep-strike capabilities, frozen Russian assets, multinational security guarantees, and Europe’s growing defence-industrial cooperation with Ukraine are becoming part of the negotiating architecture itself.

    The real danger lies in the widening gap between the two sides’ perceptions: what Europe describes as deterrence, Russia interprets as escalation; what Kyiv considers a minimum security guarantee, Moscow views as the permanent transformation of Ukraine into a Western military platform.An episode designed to separate verified facts from strategic narratives, understand why Lavrov has questioned the credibility of the European negotiating framework, and assess whether the conflict is moving toward armed diplomacy, managed stalemate, or a new escalation threshold.
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    19 mins
  • The_2026_Financial_Siege_of_Cuba
    Jun 12 2026
    Is Cuba truly on the verge of a military confrontation with the United States, or are we witnessing a new pressure strategy designed to bend Havana without firing a single shot? In this episode, we examine the latest cycle of tension between Washington and Cuba: the tightening of sanctions, the island’s energy and financial crisis, U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s visit to the Guantánamo Bay Naval Base, and reports—still not fully verified—of weapons allegedly being distributed to Cuban civilians. The real danger may not be a planned invasion, but rather the accumulation of military signals, social fragility, and hostile perceptions capable of triggering a dangerous miscalculation. Between economic coercion, internal mobilization, and migration risks, Cuba is once again becoming one of the most sensitive geopolitical flashpoints in the Western Hemisphere. An episode designed to separate verified facts from political narratives, understand Washington’s objectives, and assess the scenarios that could turn a frozen crisis into a wider regional escalation.
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    19 mins
  • Why_China_slashed_its_oil_imports
    Jun 2 2026
    In global energy markets, oil is never just oil. It is movement, industry, transport, military readiness, political stability, and strategic time. And nowhere is this more evident than in China.For years, Beijing has been the world’s most important oil buyer: a giant industrial engine whose demand can push prices, reshape shipping routes, and influence the calculations of producers from the Gulf to Russia, from Africa to Central Asia. When China buys more crude, markets usually read it as a signal of growth, industrial activity, and confidence. But when China buys less, the meaning becomes much more ambiguous.Is it a sign of economic slowdown? Is it a reaction to higher prices? Is it the result of weaker refining activity? Or is it something deeper: the use of accumulated oil reserves as a geopolitical shock absorber?This is the Chinese oil paradox.In the spring of 2026, Chinese crude imports fell sharply, while the global energy system was already under pressure from instability around the Strait of Hormuz — one of the most important maritime chokepoints in the world. The numbers are striking, but the real question is not simply how much oil China is importing. The real question is how long Beijing can afford to import less.Because in an energy crisis, the country with no reserves is forced to buy when prices are high, routes are vulnerable, and markets are nervous. But a country with enough strategic depth can wait. It can reduce its exposure, absorb the shock, test the market, and decide when to return
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    20 mins
  • The_end_of_America_s_European_security_guarantee
    Jun 2 2026
    For more than seventy years, Europe’s security has rested on one central assumption: when the crisis comes, the United States will be there. Not only with troops, but with bases, logistics, intelligence, airlift, command structures, deterrence, and political reassurance.But what happens when that assumption begins to change?Recent reports suggest that Washington may be preparing to accelerate the withdrawal of part of its military presence from Europe, including a previously announced reduction of around 5,000 troops from Germany. At first glance, this may look like a technical military adjustment. In reality, it touches one of the deepest questions in European security: can Europe defend itself if the American presence becomes smaller, more selective, and more conditional?
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    20 mins
  • Ukraine_s_Associated_EU_Membership_Paradox
    May 28 2026
    The podcast examines the diplomatic proposal attributed to Friedrich Merz to establish an associated membership for Ukraine, conceived as an intermediate phase to integrate Kyiv into European institutions without waiting for the lengthy timeline of formal accession. The episode explores the possibility of offering Ukraine active political participation and the extension of the mutual defence clause, while raising substantial doubts about the legal solidity of such an institutional hybrid
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    22 mins
  • Production_Capacity_Is_the_New_Deterrence
    May 25 2026
    This episode of IARI International Podcast explores the deep transformation of the global defense industry in 2025, highlighting the shift from a conventional arms market to a true regime of strategic production.The analysis shows that deterrence today no longer depends only on defense spending, but increasingly on industrial depth: the ability of states and companies to turn budgets into real operational capabilities quickly and effectively.At the center of the discussion are the so-called industrial nodes of sovereignty, where control over critical technologies — missiles, sensors, space systems, and advanced platforms — defines the strategic leverage of states in an increasingly competitive international environment.The episode provides an analytical framework to understand how geopolitical tensions, supply chain vulnerabilities, and the return of high-intensity conflict are forcing a global reorganization of defense production.The key question is no longer simply who spends more on defense, but who can produce faster, adapt better, and sustain military power over time.IARI International Podcast — understanding global security, one strategic shift at a time.
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    21 mins
  • Japan_s_Rare_Earth_Standoff_With_China
    May 25 2026
    A new episode of IARI International Podcast explores the growing rivalry between Japan and China, a confrontation that is no longer limited to diplomacy but increasingly shaped by maritime security, industrial autonomy, and strategic deterrence.At the center of this dossier are Taiwan, Japan’s southwestern islands, and Tokyo’s evolving defense posture in the First Island Chain. The episode also examines Japan’s critical dependence on Chinese rare earths and how economic coercion may become a central instrument of geopolitical pressure.Through a data-driven and intelligence-based analytical approach, the episode outlines possible future scenarios, including a phase of managed hostility in which military deterrence and economic pressure become ordinary tools of competition.The core question is simple but decisive: can an advanced economy maintain deep commercial ties with a strategic rival while preparing for a potential escalation in one of the most sensitive theaters of the Indo-Pacific?Listen now to IARI International Podcast.
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    18 mins