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What the rise of a trillionaire reveals about the American Dream

In this episode of "ask ian," Ian Bremmer looks at what the rise of Elon Musk as the world’s first trillionaire reveals about wealth, innovation, and the future of the American Dream.

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AI, jobs, and the next generation

As AI reshapes the future of work, its impact will depend on the choices we make today. In this new blog, Brad Smith reflects on how graduates are calling for technology that supports human judgment, expands opportunity, and strengthens the role of people in shaping the future.

As AI adoption accelerates, the focus must remain on building skills, creating meaningful work, and ensuring its benefits are broadly shared across society.

Read the full blog here.

Netanyahu’s re-election chances may worsen, Hungary’s Orbán can’t return to office, China gives boost to Myanmar’s leader

US-Iran deal could spell disaster for Netanyahu

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was already struggling in polls ahead of elections later this year, but his situation might get worse after Washington and Tehran agreed to a deal (pending its signing on Friday). Why the issue with ending the war? Israel ploughed resources into the war, its people suffered regular bomb threats from Iran, and still Netanyahu didn’t achieve his war goal of regime change. Meanwhile, tensions with its allies in Washington have risen to the point where Israel hasn’t even received a copy of the US-Iran accord (the Israeli leader also rebuffed the US, pledging to keep troops in Lebanon). With Netanyahu failing to achieve his war objectives in Iran, will Israelis punish him at the polls?

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Cape Verde’s keeper goes viral

The 40-year-old’s stunning display against Spain has earned him plaudits worldwide, as Cape Verde managed to draw 0-0 with European champions in Atlanta yesterday. It’s an astonishing achievement for the tiny African island of 500,000 people, which is ranked 64th in the world (Spain, which has 50 million people, is 3rd). Vozinha’s saves have also put Cape Verde – one of Africa’s most functional democracies – on the map.

What’s the role of the G7 in a G-Zero world?

Leaders of the G7 are meeting this week in Évian-les-Bains, France, for their 52nd official summit. When the forum was created in 1975, amid the collapse of the Bretton Woods monetary system and oil shocks of the 1970s, it brought together the world’s industrial democracies to manage global crises. Over the following decades, it helped coordinate responses to challenges like the end of the Cold War, terrorism, climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the war in Ukraine.

But the international community looks very different today. In 2026, the G7 finds itself operating in a “G-Zero” world – with no clear leader. The United States has retreated from its role as global policeman, instead pursuing an “America first” agenda that has isolated itself from its allies. At times, the group can seem less like a G7 and more like a G6+1.

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Why national teams spark culture wars at the World Cup

Who gets to represent a nation? In this clip from GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, Financial Times columnist Simon Kuper explains why national soccer teams have become flashpoints for debates over immigration, race, and national identity.
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For the first time in World Cup history, there will be four sets of brothers playing in this year’s tournament who don’t represent the same countries. Yes, you heard that right: four families, eight players, zero shared jerseys between the brothers: Guéla Doué (Côte d’Ivoire) and Désiré Doué (France), Iñaki Williams (Ghana) and Nico Williams (Spain), John Souttar (Scotland) and Harry Souttar (Australia), Brian Brobbey (Netherlands) and his half-brother Derrick Luckassen (Ghana). It’s a figure that reflects just how global the “global game” has become – one shaped by migration, diaspora communities, and opportunities abroad.

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In his latest Quick Take, Ian Bremmer says the US and Iran’s memorandum of understanding to end the fighting and reopen the Strait of Hormuz marks progress, but warns it falls far short of resolving the broader conflict.

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Is the US-Iran deal the real deal?

The United States and Iran said Sunday that they had reached an interim agreement that could end the months-long war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Officials are expected to sign the deal in Switzerland on Friday, following the G7 summit in France. If signed, it would mark the biggest diplomatic breakthrough since the war began. Keep in mind, the agreement is a roadmap rather than a finalized deal: it extends the fragile 60-day ceasefire and gives the Trump administration and Tehran time to address major unresolved issues. The biggest is Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium and the future of its nuclear program – the latter took nearly two years to negotiate under a 2015 nuclear deal signed by US President Barack Obama, which US President Donald Trump withdrew from during his first term. It’s unclear right now what the agreement means for fighting in Lebanon. Iran wants an end to hostilities there, while Israel said today it intends to keep the territory it seized while fighting Hezbollah.

Ian Bremmer breaks down what the agreement between the two sides means in his latest Quick Take. While the memorandum of understanding is a positive sign for diplomacy, Ian explains the world should until the signing takes place on Friday to feel “confident” that the war is headed toward a finale. Watch the video here.

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The UK government announced a ban on young people’s access to most social media platforms, along with livestreaming and chat features on certain gaming platforms. The ban is expected to begin early 2027, joining similar efforts by other countries like Australia, Canada, Greece, and Indonesia. But will the plan work? Last week, it emerged that Australian children are easily circumventing Canberra’s social media ban.

The World Cup unites billions of people every four years. But it also serves as a stage for debates over identity, nationalism, and political power.

In this episode of GZERO World with Ian Bremmer, Financial Times columnist Simon Kuper explores how the tournament became far more than a soccer competition. From debates over immigration and national identity to FIFA's immense power and lack of accountability, the World Cup has become a stage where politics and sport are impossible to separate.

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In this episode of GZERO Europe, Carl Bildt considers what the collapse of the joint French-German-Spanish fighter aircraft project means for European defense.

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The World Cup is often described as a global sporting event. In reality, it's also one of the world's biggest political stages. For more than a century, countries have used the tournament to project power, express national identity, and settle symbolic scores that extend far beyond the pitch.
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