To succeed in overthrowing the Iranian regime, an uprising would likely require a unifying leader, an effective organization, and the support of whatever remains of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, writes Alan Pino.
To succeed in overthrowing the Iranian regime, an uprising would likely require a unifying leader, an effective organization, and the support of whatever remains of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, writes Alan Pino.
The United States “must heed the lessons of history and avoid conflating the temporary satisfaction of decapitation strikes with a coherent strategy that will weaken cartels,” writes Charlotte Bertrand.
Iran’s decision to target the UAE, Qatar, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and other countries in the Gulf will have far-reaching consequences, writes Allison Minor.
Read more:
Worried about how the Iran conflict could impact oil prices?
“Now is not the time to hyperventilate over oil,” says the Atlantic Council’s Landon Derentz.
The United States, he writes, should first focus on ensuring Iran does not emerge from the conflict “with a viable nuclear weapons program.”
FAST THINKING: Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in a US-Israeli bombing campaign on Saturday.
Atlantic Council experts assess the significance of the development for Iran and the broader region:
FAST THINKING: On Saturday morning, President Trump announced a “massive and ongoing” attack on Iran.
With the goals, duration, and outcome of this emerging war still unclear, our experts make sense of the conflict’s early hours:
#UkraineAlert – As Russia’s war against Ukraine enters its fifth year, Moscow is increasingly relying on African recruits to prevent its battlefield losses from destabilizing the country, writes Katherine Spencer.
📈 Media organizations are increasingly treating prediction markets as authoritative signals.
Policymakers should treat them as dual-use infrastructures that require deliberate guardrails, writes Matthew Wein.
🔴 What will the world look like in 2036?
We asked 447 geostrategists and foresight experts to share their insights.
🇨🇳 China leads economically
🪖 Russia’s war in Ukraine freezes
🚀 More countries go nuclear
🤖 AI surpasses human capabilities
Explore the survey’s ten biggest findings:
The Trump administration’s seizures of “shadow fleet” vessels evading US sanctions raise several crucial legal and logistical questions, writes Stephanie Connor.
Read more:
The tentatively planned resumption of US-Iran nuclear talks this week does not mean US military action is off the table, writes Nate Swanson.
Read more in Dispatches:
By focusing on shared interests on counternarcotics and Venezuela, Tuesday’s Oval Office meeting between the US and Colombian presidents can put the two nations’ bilateral relations on a better path, writes Kevin Whitaker.
🎙️ Introducing Guide to the Global Economy podcast, from our GeoEconomics Center.
In the premiere episode, Josh Lipsky and Charles Lichfield discuss: what happens when a central bank loses independence?
🎧 Watch or listen now 👇
YouTube: https://bit.ly/4r8vHqI
The India-EU free trade deal announced on Tuesday is “one of the most dramatic markers yet of how the global system is reorganizing itself in the time of Trump,” writes Frederick Kempe in #InflectionPointsToday.
Read more:
A new entity controlling TikTok in the US is being sold as a step toward addressing foreign influence and data security concerns, writes Kenton Thibaut.
But China’s influence campaigns and access to data on Americans do not rely on TikTok.
Trump’s ‘shock therapy’ approach to Europe has “broken decades of strategic complacency and forced long-postponed decisions on defense, trade, and autonomy,” writes Frederick Kempe in #InflectionPoints.
Trump’s willingness to engage in brinkmanship with Europe over Greenland will have a lasting impact on how the continent’s leaders approach relations with Washington, write Jorn Fleck and James Batchik.
FAST THINKING: The Justice Department is undertaking a criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
Our chair of international economics Josh Lipsky explains how this could impact US and global markets:
Delcy Rodríguez's role as Venezuela's acting president is an impossible balancing act: satisfy Trump's demands, maintain support from the Chavista coalition, and keep alliances with China, Cuba, Iran, and Russia.
www.atlanticcouncil.org/dispatches/d...
@atlanticcouncil.bsky.social
Canada's defense industrial base will struggle to deliver in its current state says Jason C. Moyer with the @atlanticcouncil.bsky.social
www.atlanticcouncil.org/in-depth-res...
In my latest piece I argue that the survival of #NATO is at stake if the United States intervenes to seize #Greenland, and that such a development would be contrary to #US national interests.
Read the article⬇️
@atlanticcouncil.bsky.social
www.atlanticcouncil.org/dispatches/t...
In a new article for @atlanticcouncil.bsky.social, SIS scholar @yerevansaeed.bsky.social discusses Iraq’s political future, examining why transfers of power are critical to long-term stability.
https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/menasource/iraqs-pathway-to-stability-relies-on-transfers-of-power/
Venezuela’s new acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, must satisfy Washington’s demands while maintaining sufficient support among the Venezuelan elite to avoid a regime fracture, writes Iria Puyosa.
If the United States intervenes to seize Greenland, the future of NATO would be at stake. Such a development would be contrary to US national interests, writes Anna Wieslander.
Many US analysts view the ouster of Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro as benefiting the US at China’s expense, but two big factors make this less of a win for Washington and less of a loss for Beijing, writes Melanie Hart.
In responding to recent rhetoric from the White House about “taking” Greenland, European leaders need to look beyond the legal infeasibility, writes Justina Budginaite-Froehly.
“Ultimately, what’s needed in Venezuela is a partner government that allows for the freedom of its people, respects foreign investment, and that advances US and Venezuelan security and economic interests,” writes Jason Marczak.
On Wednesday, the US Senate passed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for fiscal year 2026. The bill authorizes more than $900 billion in spending and covers all corners of the defense policy landscape.
Below, Atlantic Council experts dig into the details. ⬇️