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Trump's 'Project Freedom'

In this Quick Take, Ian Bremmer unpacks a rapidly shifting US strategy toward Iran as tensions in the Strait of Hormuz continue to disrupt global shipping and raise the risk of further escalation.
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The explosion of prediction markets

Will the US and Iran reach a nuclear deal before 2027? Will the Cuban regime fall this year? Will France win the World Cup?

These questions are generating up to millions of dollars today on prediction markets — platforms where people wager on the outcomes of real-world events. If you’re right, you profit. If you’re wrong, you lose your stake. “Contracts,” or wagers, can be as cheap as $0.01, but as they become more popular, higher wagers are staked and the rare windfall from an accurate prediction can be massive.

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Japan weighs revising pacifist constitution, Europe talks collective security in Armenia, US to “help free up” ships in Hormuz

Will Japan rewrite its rules of war?

Fifty thousand demonstrators gathered in Tokyo on Sunday, the country’s Constitution Memorial Day, to protest Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's call for “advanced discussions” on revising Japan’s pacifist constitution. Since 1947, Article 9 has prohibited Japan from maintaining land, sea, or air forces and from waging war. It was reinterpreted in 2014 by Takaichi’s mentor, Shinzo Abe, to allow for “collective self defense,” but still prevents Tokyo from sending assistance to allies when Japan is not directly threatened. Takaichi cited the limitation in March when Japan declined to help the US in the Iran war. The revision would require both a two-thirds majority in Japan’s two houses of parliament and a simple majority in a national referendum, which Takaichi has vowed to hold “as soon as possible.” Polls show a range of opinions, setting up tests of Japan’s pacifism, attitudes toward the US, and Takaichi’s leadership.

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Putin's paranoia

Putin is increasingly paranoid, according to a Financial Times report out today. Security has been tightened, more time is being spent in underground bunkers, and the vast majority of his attention is being absorbed by Russia’s war with Ukraine. One reason of his concern is said to be Ukraine’s drone capabilities, which have demonstrated an ability to strike Russian airfields thousands of miles from Kyiv.

How to prepare the global economy for the age of AI

A rally in stocks tied to artificial intelligence today helped Asia’s stock benchmark erase the losses caused by the Iran war and climb to an all-time high. It’s part of a growing trend of AI-related stocks buoying stock markets despite the Iran war sending oil markets through the rough and spiking inflation in parts of the world.
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New Trump acronym on Wall Street, muchachos...

Apparently they really are saying this on Wall Street now. But are they SINGING it?

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At first glance, Hungary’s Prime Minister-elect Péter Magyar may appear to be the antithesis of the man he defeated in the April 12 election, Viktor Orbán. After all, the two were embroiled in a bitter campaign that featured accusations of sabotage, Russian interference, and blackmail over a sex tape.

Yet the pair might be closer than you think – both on policy and politics.

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China tries to sell Africa on its zero-tariffs approach

Starting today, China is scrapping tariffs on imports from 53 African nations. Yet Beijing’s zero-tariff policy is unlikely to narrow the continent’s growing trade deficit with China any time soon. Africa’s exports to China are primarily raw materials and critical minerals such as copper and cobalt, which are essential to making much of today’s technology. But China dominates the processing of these materials, meaning they are often exported back to Africa as finished products at a higher cost than the original inputs. While the move may have limited financial impact, it carries symbolic weight: China is positioning itself as a free-trade ally at a time when the US has used tariffs punitively. It is also worth noting the one African country that was not included on the list. China excluded Eswatini, the only African nation that maintains diplomatic ties with Taiwan.

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“Caracas? I’ve not seen that destination in a while,” one TSA worker said while looking at a departures board at the Miami airport on Thursday. The remark came as the first direct commercial flight between the US and Venezuela in nearly a decade took off that same day, as the two countries restore ties following the US ouster of Nicolás Maduro in January.

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

After drug kingpin Pablo Escobar was killed in 1993, his hippos were left to roam free. A last-minute rescue offer to house 80 of their descendants came from a rather glamorous source. Who offered to take in the hippos?

  • A) A Saudi prince, who wanted them for his show and tell
  • B) Anant Ambani, a scion of Asia's richest family, who offered refuge at his wildlife sanctuary
  • C) A consortium of European zoos that launched a "Hippos Without Borders" campaign

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

While the world has its eyes on the Strait of Hormuz, China’s gaze is fixed farther east: Taiwan. For decades, Beijing’s “One China” policy has asserted that there is only one sovereign Chinese state and that Taiwan is a breakaway province that must return to mainland control – peacefully if possible, but by force if necessary. Now, are the stars aligning for Beijing to advance that goal?

As US President Donald Trump prioritizes an “America First” trade and defense policy, and global attention shifts elsewhere, China sees an opening to make Taiwan’s resistance to reunification harder to sustain. With two weeks to go until Trump meets Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing, China is deploying a mix of carrots and sticks designed to pull Taiwan closer – without firing a shot.

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With the cocaine trade booming in the 1980s, Escobar decided to create a zoo at his Hacienda Nápoles akin to the one at Hearst Castle in California during the first half of the 20th century. The drug kingpin imported all kinds of animals from Africa, including hippos, zebras, and even an ostrich. However, after Escobar was killed in 1993, the hippos’ offspring were left to run wild, hurting the local ecosystem. There are now roughly 200 of them in Colombia. In a bid to limit the numbers, Colombia’s environment minister planned to slaughter at least 80 of them, but a scion of Asia’s richest family, Anant Ambani, has offered to give them refuge at his wildlife sanctuary in India.

Is Russia losing influence in insurgency-hit Mali?

The Russian-backed Malian army is starting to regain ground following coordinated attacks by terrorist insurgents and Tuareg secessionists over the weekend. On Wednesday, they wrestled back control of a town along the Niger border from Islamic State-linked insurgents. Calm has also returned to the West African state’s central region, as government forces step up their patrols. However, the strikes over the weekend – which only exacerbated Mali’s long-term security crisis – have raised questions about Russia’s ability to retain influence in mineral-rich parts of Africa. The general trade-off has been that Russia offers security protection in return for access to minerals (like gold and lithium). But with insurgents inflicting widespread damage in Mali – they also assassinated the defense minister on Saturday – is Bamako really getting its end of the bargain?

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Since returning to the White House last January, Donald Trump has antagonized most of the world’s major governments in one form or another. In particular, he has targeted Iran, Venezuela, Cuba, most of Europe, Canada, and even Greenland for various forms of coercion, and his tariffs have set teeth on edge pretty much the world over. More importantly, the president has redefined what the global superpower will and will not do – and might redefine it all again sooner rather than later.

The result? When it comes to Washington, governments are hedging bets on the future of American power and what it might mean for them.

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