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Tariffs: what comes next with Paul Krugman and Scott Lincicome

Listen: While Washington has become more hostile to free trade, Americans continue to buy foreign goods in record numbers. Lincicome notes that economic nationalism is “about an inch deep,” with support collapsing when Americans face higher prices for domestic products.

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The Supreme Court checks Trump’s tariff power

The Supreme Court dealt a blow to Donald Trump’s tariff strategy, ruling 6–3 that the president can’t use emergency powers under IEEPA to impose sweeping tariffs. Even two Trump-appointed justices joined the majority.

But the tariffs didn’t stop. Within hours, the administration invoked the 1974 Trade Act to impose new ones—and Trump doubled down in his State of the Union. So what actually changed? And what does the fight over presidential power mean for US businesses, consumers, and the economy heading into the midterms?

Tehran's best and worst-case scenarios

According to Thomas Wright, the range of outcomes runs from unlikely political change to durable instability. The best-case scenario—though Wright says is quite unlikely—is the emergence of a more legitimate government in Tehran. Public dissatisfaction with the current leadership runs deep, and in theory, that pressure could produce a regime that is more responsive to its people, even if it falls short of full democracy. At the other extreme lies the worst-case scenario: fragmentation. If the state weakens too dramatically, Iran could splinter internally, creating a dangerous vacuum in an already volatile region. The most likely outcome may fall somewhere in between. The war could end with the regime still in power but significantly weakened—facing severe economic strain and struggling to provide basic services like electricity and energy. In that scenario, the Islamic Republic survives, but its long-term stability remains an open question.

For Hezbollah, is the writing on the wall?

Overnight, Israel’s military shifted part of its focus to a new front, one that isn’t Iran: it pummeled the Lebanese capital of Beirut with airstrikes, and issued more evacuation warnings across areas of the country controlled by the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah.

“The objective is to disarm Hezbollah,” Nimrod Novik, a fellow at the Israel Policy Forum and former senior adviser to the late Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, told GZERO.

The pretext came when Hezbollah – which is reportedly overseen now by members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – launched rockets and drones on Monday, in what was a meager strike. The militant group was itself under pressure from Iran to get involved in the conflict with the US and Israel, after an Israeli airstrike killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

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Iran conflict fueled food crisis, Rapper set to win in Nepal, US gives Russia sanction relief

Iran conflict could trigger a food crisis

Disruptions to a key Gulf waterway in the Iran conflict aren't just threatening the world’s oil and gas supplies; they could also cause a food security crisis. Roughly a quarter to a third of global raw materials used in fertilizer pass through the Strait of Hormuz. With tanker traffic in the strait largely at a standstill, shortages could follow, eventually raising costs for farmers and, in turn, grocery bills. Egyptian fertilizer, a global benchmark, is already up more than 25% just as farmers in the Western hemisphere prepare to plant spring crops, with no clarity on next year's input costs. The disruption echoes the surge in fertilizer prices and food costs in 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The impact could be acute in Gulf countries like Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, which import around 80% of their food.

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Hard numbers, in honor of International Women’s Day on March 8

27.5%: The share of parliamentary seats women hold worldwide, as of Jan. 1, 2026, per a report by the Inter-Parliamentary Union. It’s a modest gain – 0.3 points – from a year prior, but marks an overall slowdown since 2017. The Americas topped the list of regions with the highest share of female parliamentarians, with women making up 35.6% of members across all countries in the region.
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Washington appears to be exploring a familiar playbook: arming Kurdish groups to add pressure on the Iranian regime. But according to Brookings Senior Fellow Thomas Wright, the strategy is murky and potentially risky. Reports suggest the US may consider aiding Kurdish militants inside Iran, including PJAK, a group affiliated with the PKK. That connection alone could inflame tensions with Turkey, which views the PKK as a terrorist organization and a direct threat to its national security.

Any move that strengthens Kurdish armed groups could also disrupt the fragile peace process between Ankara and Kurdish militants. Without a clear plan for what comes after increased pressure on Tehran, actions meant to weaken the regime could destabilize the country instead—potentially fragmenting Iran and creating a geopolitical vacuum in the Middle East.

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

Roughly what share of the world’s total oil supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz each day?

  • A) 2%
  • B) 20%
  • C) 50%

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

Iran conflict hits new fronts

Two Iranian drones hit Azerbaijan, Iran’s northern neighbor, on Thursday, injuring four people and expanding the Iran conflict onto another front. The Azeris, who have a tense relationship with the Islamic Republic over their growing ties to NATO countries, have reportedly deployed troops to the Iranian border, which they say is out of defense. This comes after NATO shot down an Iranian missile that was headed toward Turkey – Tehran denied firing the missile. Meanwhile, Kurdish forces are reportedly readying armed units to cross from Iraq into Iran. The US and Israel want the Kurds – an ethnic group that spans Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Turkey – to get involved, possibly to act as ground troops for their coalition. The CIA even gave small weapons to Kurdish militias ahead of this conflict. Kurdish involvement in this conflict could present a major risk: if the Kurds were to be successful in helping to topple the regime, Iran could end up getting divided along ethnic lines.

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1,000: The maximum amount of gold, in kilograms, that Venezuela’s state-owned mining firm Minerven will send to US markets, in a deal reportedly reached between Washington and Caracas on Monday. It is the latest sign of growing commercial ties between the Trump administration and interim Venezuelan leader Delcy Rodriguez, only two months on from the seizure of Nicolás Maduro.

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While Iran fights in a new war against Israel and the United States, its neighbors to the east have been drawn into a conflict of their own. Growing violence between Pakistan and Afghanistan has escalated into “open war,” according to Pakistan's Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif. The United Nations says nearly 66,000 people have been displaced after a week of hostilities along the countries’ shared border.

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Over the weekend, the United States and Israel pulled off one of the most operationally impressive military campaigns in recent memory. In the span of 48 hours, they killed Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, decapitated much of the country's political and military leadership, destroyed its air defenses, decimated its naval assets, and degraded significant portions of its nuclear facilities and ballistic missile capabilities. Operationally, it was a clear success, executed with zero external constraints and little meaningful resistance. Strategically … maybe not so much.
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With the US leading production and China driving new reactor development, Bank of America breaks down the who, what, where, when, and why behind nuclear’s return.

Stay ahead of global energy trends with Bank of America Institute.

Could father-to-son succession return to Iran?

When the Islamic Republic’s senior clerics met yesterday to decide on the next supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei reportedly emerged as the favorite to succeed his assassinated father, Ali Khamenei. Mojtaba’s appointment would be viewed as a continuation of the previous regime, but it does present risks: he doesn’t have a major profile in Iran, he’s been tied up in a corruption scandal over the hefty purchases of property abroad, and he also has close links to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – so there’s a potential boon for the elite military unit. What’s more, the Islamic Republic came to power in 1979 with a promise to end patrilineal succession. The pledge, it would appear, has passed its statute of limitations.

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