When Margaret Thatcher privatized British Aerospace in 1985, the government sold all its shares in the company except one. Numerically, the transaction left the UK holding a single share valued at one British pound in a company considered crucial to the nation’s defense.
Middle East War: Statistics
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Middle East War: Statistics
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Attacks
Casualties
The Lebanese Army is expressing reservations over any direct coordination with Israeli forces, while Berri and the Islamic Group move to restrict the implementation track of the U.S.-backed agreement and prevent its domestic repercussions.
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.
If war broke out tomorrow on the peninsula, South Korean forces would fight under an American general’s command. For 75 years, wartime operational control has rested with Washington, and Seoul has never taken it back. President Lee Jae-myung means to change that.
For a few days this May, Beijing became the diplomatic center of the world. China seized the opportunity to showcase its strategic dexterity. Within a week, Beijing hosted the leaders of the two countries most central to its foreign policy. Putin arrived on May 19, just four days after Trump’s departure.
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.
Russia lost Armenia’s election. That may not matter much. On June 7, 2026, Armenians handed Nikol Pashinyan another term with nearly 50 percent of the vote. It was the country’s first national vote since Azerbaijan seized Nagorno-Karabakh in 2023, and it looked like a verdict against Moscow.
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 Middle Corridor is rising rapidly in strategic importance, driven by geopolitical change and major investment in rail, ports, and infrastructure. Its emergence as a key alternative linking Asia and Europe is reshaping global trade and the geopolitical balance across Eurasia.






