scroll to top arrow or icon

What We’re Watching: Violence roils Mexico after killing of cartel leader, Cuban security forces exit Venezuela, Somalia seeks to appease US

Killing of Mexican cartel boss sparks uprisings

In a major victory for its efforts to diminish cartels, the Mexican government said Sunday that it had killed the leader of one of the country’s most powerful cartels, with intelligence support from a new US military-led task force. Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho,” led the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, which produced and sold drugs, extorted local businesses, and terrorized Mexican citizens nationwide. Cartel operatives across the country have sought revenge, blocking roads and setting fire to buildings and cars in several of the country’s 32 states. The fear in Mexico is that the violence will metastasize into an all-out conflict between the government and the cartels, as it did following the killing and seizure of other cartel leaders in 2009 and 2019, respectively. President Claudia Sheinbaum urged citizens to remain calm.

Read NowShow less

Latest

Has US–Iran diplomacy reached its end?

In this Quick Take, Ian Bremmer warns that US military strikes on Iran are “looking increasingly imminent” as diplomacy appears to stall.
Keep reading...Show less

Hard Numbers: Winter Olympics a winner on the small screen, Blizzard hits parts of US, Brazil and China are the apparent winners of US tariff upheaval, Armed man tries to enter Mar-a-Lago

⅔: The share of Italians who reportedly watched the Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina, which ended yesterday. More Italians consumed these Winter Games than the previous three combined. Audience numbers also jumped outside the host nation, with broadcasters in Europe, the UK, the US, and even Brazil reporting huge growth. The ice hockey rivalry between two “friendly” neighbors didn’t hurt, either.

Keep reading...Show less

Has social media reached a tipping point?

When social media debuted in the early 2000s, it was hailed as a way to stay connected to family and friends, share milestones, and create new communities. But over time, as engagement grew exponentially, many young users began reporting higher levels of anxiety, body image issues, screen addiction, and, in the worst cases, self-harming behavior. Now, some governments are attempting to turn back the clock, pushing to keep kids off the platforms altogether.

Keep reading...Show less

How cybercrime is becoming a threat to economic growth

Cybercrime is no longer just an IT issue – it’s an economic one. New research from the Mastercard Economics Institute shows how digital attacks can disrupt supply chains, shift consumer behavior, and ripple through GDP.

After ransomware attacks on Asahi Group and Colonial Pipeline, anonymized spending data revealed stockpiling, shortages, and sustained shifts in purchasing patterns. As threats grow more sophisticated, strengthening cyber resilience and public-private collaboration will be critical to economic stability.

Read the full analysis here.

How Europe is moving on from Trump's America

As Washington walks away from its postwar, European leaders—from Emmanuel Macron to Friedrich Merz—signaled something unexpected: they may be ready to move forward without the United States.

On GZERO World, Ian Bremmer sits down with former US Ambassador to NATO Ivo Daalder to unpack what could be a historic turning point in the transatlantic alliance. “No, it’s not going to be the same as it’s been in the past decades,” Daalder says. “That’s gone.” But he argues this isn’t the end of the relationship, it’s a rebalancing that Europe should have begun years ago after what he calls decades of “unilateral disarmament.”

Keep reading...Show less



Listen: At the Munich Security Conference, European leaders signaled a quiet but unmistakable message: they are ready to move forward, even as Washington’s role grows uncertain. Former US Ambassador to NATO Ivo Daalder explains why this moment represents a permanent rebalancing of responsibilities, after a long-standing reliance on the US for defense. “No, it’s not going to be the same as it’s been in the past decades,” he says. “That’s gone.”

The conversation explores the Russian threat looming over the continent, from a battle-hardened army emerging from Ukraine to shortfalls in Western weapons production. Daalder also highlights the political and ideological dimensions: a potential ceasefire in Ukraine could be a “trap” driven by domestic US politics, and European officials are increasingly concerned about MAGA-aligned movements undermining unity across the continent.

From NATO’s evolving role to Europe’s own strategic reckoning, Ian Bremmer and Daalder examine whether Europe can stand alone, and what leadership will look like in the West in the near future.

Subscribe to the GZERO World Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or your preferred podcast platform, to receive new episodes as soon as they're published

Europe is facing a moment of reckoning. Ian Bremmer reports from Germany on how the US, under President Trump’s second term, has shifted from guarantor of the postwar order to a disruptive force, leaving allies questioning who will defend democracy and global stability.
Read NowShow less

The Supreme Court has struck down President Trump’s use of the national emergency clause to impose sweeping tariffs around the world.

Ian Bremmer explains why this ruling was predictable and why it’s a major setback for Trump’s trade strategy.

Read NowShow less

“For India, AI stands for all inclusive,” reads the billboard outside this week’s AI Impact Summit in New Delhi organized by the Indian government, the first major gathering on the subject in the Global South. Alongside the slogan is an image of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whose ambitions for the country of 1.5 billion people are clear: to become a technological superpower.

Big Tech executives and an array of political leaders have gathered in the Indian capital for the third summit in a global series on AI governance and development, with side events co-hosted by the United Nations. The heads of Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic are all there. India is looking to position itself as a prime destination for investment in data centers, AI infrastructure, as well as research and development in the technologies that will shape the future. As part of its push, the Indian government believes shifting towards AI will help fight poverty in a country where the one in four people live below the poverty line for developing countries.

Read NowShow less

US Supreme Court strikes down bulk of Trump’s tariffs

In a massive blow to US President Donald Trump’s trade and foreign policy agenda, the US’s top court ruled that the president overstepped his authority when he used the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose tariffs. The decision was 6-3.

Trump was the first US leader to invoke this 1977 law to enact tariffs, even though the law doesn’t specifically mention, “tariffs” nor “taxes.” The US president initially used IEEPA in April to impose duties on about 90 US trading partners, but has since made several trade deals with these countries– the White House had warned that the ruling could nullify those agreements.

The ruling didn’t address whether the US government will have to pay back the billions in revenue it’s already collected, although many companies had already initiated efforts to secure refunds for the tariffs they paid before the ruling – Trump had repeatedly boasted about raising billions of dollars from the tariffs. The US leader’s tariffs that didn’t rely on IEEPA, like his sectoral ones, will remain in place.

Read NowShow less

Think you know what's going on around the world? Here's your chance to prove it.

The New York Times wrote about GZERO’s Puppet Regime this week, but which British comedy show – according to puppet master Alex Kliment – is one of the inspirations for the show?

  • A) Blackadder
  • B) Spitting Image
  • C) I’m Alan Partridge

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

$90 billion: The amount of revenue that Russia has reportedly made from smuggled crude oil exports, after 48 companies worked together to help disguise the origin of the oil and circumvent sanctions that have been imposed since the full-scale war on Ukraine began. The total is likely much more. Details of the scheme were revealed due to an IT blunder. Three EU officials told the Financial Times the findings could be grounds for further Russian oil sanctions.

Read NowShow less

65: The age of former South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, who was sentenced to life in prison on Thursday after being found guilty of plotting an insurrection when he declared martial law in 2024. When deciding whether or not to give him the death penalty, the judge said he took into account his age and the fact that no lethal force was used under martial law.

Read NowShow less

Most Popular Videos