The guns fell silent in Iran after a 60-day ceasefire was called on June 17 via a Memorandum of Understanding. But the pause should not be mistaken for peace. Given the repeated infractions, the ceasefire now looks less like a meaningful end to hostilities and more like a period of military regeneration under diplomatic cover.
Middle East War: Statistics
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Middle East War: Statistics
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Attacks
Casualties
A regional intelligence source told Eagle Intelligence Reports that Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi “Irro” survived an assassination attempt in the capital, Hargeisa, on June 23. The attempt came days after Irro returned from an official visit to Israel.
An informed Lebanese source told Eagle Intelligence Reports that Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun and the army command have agreed to reject a U.S. proposal to establish a special brigade within the Lebanese army, under Washington’s supervision, funding, and training, tasked with disarming Hezbollah.
The 2026 World Cup will bring the global game to three North American hosts: the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. In the U.S., it will arrive when the very meaning of hosting has become contested. In the background, another infrastructure is being prepared: the immigration and security apparatus that determines who enters the U.S.
On February 14, 2026, at the Munich Security Conference, Canadian Defense Minister David McGuinty signed a document no non-European nation had signed before. The agreement allowed Canada to join the EU’s Security Action for Europe (SAFE) program, a $175 billion defense procurement initiative central to Europe’s rearmament plans.
For more than half a century, North Korea insisted that the South was not a foreign country. It was the other half of one nation, split by war and awaiting reunification. Its constitution now says otherwise. References to national reunification, peaceful reunification, and great national unity have vanished.
Japan is entering the arms market through a narrow door. After decades of restraint, Tokyo is loosening its defense export rules—but not to become the next South Korea, China, or United States. The shift is less a bid for market share than a strategic adjustment shaped by Japan’s industrial history and built-in structural constraints.
Britain’s current impasse goes well beyond Keir Starmer’s fragile position against a rising right-wing challenge. Beneath the Westminster drama is a deeper structural problem: elevated borrowing costs are not just a reaction to political instability but a judgment on the long-term sustainability of the UK’s fundamental economic model.
The decisive question in Europe’s next security crisis may not be whether NATO can deter an external adversary, but whether the EU can defend a member state when the crisis itself involves a NATO ally. Amid Russia’s war in Ukraine, the Middle East war, and uncertainty surrounding long-term U.S. commitments, a quiet crisis is deepening.
South Korea is seeking to regain wartime operational control of its forces to strengthen its military autonomy amid growing doubts about the durability of U.S. security commitments. While Seoul remains committed to its alliance with Washington, it is trying to balance reliance on its American ally with the need to build stronger defense capabilities.






