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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.

Pyongyang Rewrites the Logic of Dialogue
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un greets his citizens. (AFP)

Middle East War: Statistics

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Middle East War: Statistics

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Attacks

Casualties

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.

Egyptian AMOUN air-defense batteries have been deployed to Saudi Arabia to help secure Red Sea energy routes amid rising regional threats. Intelligence and military sources revealed that Egypt has sent AMOUN air-defense batteries to Saudi Arabia to protect facilities and routes linked to Saudi oil exports via the Red Sea.

There will be no Suez. No Saigon. No single humiliating frame for historians to seize upon. America’s retreat from Africa—a continent of 1.5 billion people and the minerals that power everything Washington claims to covet—is happening quietly. Troops are drawn down, aid is slashed, and diplomats are recalled to no fanfare.

The dilemma facing the United States is not one of overall firepower or operational readiness. It is whether its industrial base can scale production of the precision-guided munitions on which modern American deterrence depends.

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.

The dual blockade in the Strait of Hormuz signals a shift in how power is exercised at sea. Geography is reasserting itself as a decisive variable in global affairs. The recent maritime coercion fits within a structural transformation in which control of strategic chokepoints has become an operational lever of coercion.

Recent attacks on nuclear infrastructure suggest the emergence of a new form of calibrated coercion in which states generate psychological pressure and manipulate escalation dynamics without crossing the threshold into nuclear disaster. Attacks targeting nuclear infrastructure in Ukraine and the Middle East have expanded the scope of asymmetrical warfare.

For the Kremlin, the Iran war is not primarily a Middle East crisis but rather a critical opportunity to capitalize on the strategic exhaustion of the Western coalition sustaining Ukraine. Despite Moscow’s deep ties with Tehran, the conflict is a chance to test the West’s capacity. But it also unfolds under conditions beyond Russia’s control.

Britain’s elevated borrowing costs reflect more than short-term political instability. They signal growing market concern that weak productivity growth, demographic pressures, and a slowing economy limit the state’s ability to sustain commitments. As debt-servicing costs rise and growth stagnates, the gap between what Britain promises and what it can finance only widens.

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Geopolitical Analysis & Global Security Intelligence | Eagle Intelligence Reports

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