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Winners and losers of the Iran war, with Kori Schake



Operation Epic Fury may be over, but the Iran war is far from resolved. On this week's episode, American Enterprise Institute Kori Schake joins Ian Bremmer to discuss the conflict's global ripple effects.

With the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed to commercial shipping, the US finds itself in what Schake calls a Mexican standoff, unable to force Iran's hand without dramatic escalation, and unwilling to accept the humiliation of ceding control of one of the world's most critical waterways. Meanwhile, Washington's two biggest rivals are gaining ground. Russia is cashing in on higher oil prices at a moment when the Kremlin was under mounting financial pressure over Ukraine.

In Beijing, the Trump-Xi summit took place with the White House in a weakened position. The US needs China's help pressuring Iran, and Xi knows it. As Schake puts it: "It's an important measure of just how much President Trump has lost in starting the war in Iran and pursuing it in the way he has, that he's having to go appeal to China, America's most powerful potential adversary, for assistance in delivering us from a problem of our own creation."

The costs for US allies are adding up too. Partner countries are absorbing economic pain they had no hand in creating, with energy prices squeezing European economies. Schake also raises a harder structural question: with Patriot systems redirected from Europe to the Gulf and munitions stocks stretched thin, the war has laid bare the limits of the American defense industrial base, and what it means for the credibility of US commitments around the world..

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Why Trump can't find the exit ramp in Iran

A ceasefire is holding, barely, but the US blockade of the Strait of Hormuz isn't forcing real concessions from Tehran. Iran is betting Trump has no appetite for renewed war, and they may be right. Gas prices are climbing toward $5 a gallon and a global recession looms.

Meanwhile Russia is cashing in. Higher oil prices are refilling Kremlin coffers just as pressure over Ukraine was mounting. Patriot systems meant for Kyiv are now guarding Gulf infrastructure.

And China is playing it smart. With Trump heading to Beijing needing Xi Jinping's help to stabilize the Strait, Beijing has leverage on trade, minerals, and fentanyl, and it knows it. Ian Bremmer explains why the president who promised quick victories looks increasingly trapped.

Hard number: Seeking owners

It’s not known whether these works were among the hundreds of thousands that the Nazis looted – especially from Jews – during their time in power, but in displaying these pieces, the museum hopes that the public can identify their original owners. Perhaps the most famous lost painting of this kind was Gustav Klimt’s “The Woman in Gold”, which was rediscovered in 2006. It now hangs in New York City’s Neue Galerie. France has faced criticism for being too slow to return artworks that were stolen by Nazis.

CIA director goes to fuel-starved Cuba, Czech-German clash over “Sudeten” Congress, Rough week for LatAm’s right

Cuba has run out of fuel, and the CIA director is there for it.

US spy chief John Ratcliffe traveled to Havana yesterday just hours after the communist-run island said it had run out of fuel due to the ongoing US energy blockade. Ratcliffe, the highest ranking Trump administration official to visit, went to reiterate his boss’s vision of a “deal”: if Cuba opens up its economy and cuts ties to Russia and China, the US will engage with the regime economically. With the island out of fuel and Washington choking out any further supplies, the island’s already-chronic blackouts will widen – people are reportedly using charcoal and wood for cooking. Although Cuba has no organized political opposition, shortages have recently prompted small protests. The coming days are among the most crucial in revolutionary Cuba’s nearly seven-decade history. Will the regime capitulate to Trump?

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Why the US-China summit changed very little

Ian Bremmer breaks down the high-stakes summit between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping in Beijing, one of the most consequential meetings between the two leaders in years, but one that produced remarkably few concrete outcomes.

Ian explains why that may actually be good news. With Trump politically weakened at home and facing mounting pressure over Iran and the economy, the risk of major concessions or destabilizing rhetoric was significant. Instead, both sides largely avoided escalation, especially on Taiwan.

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You vs. the News: A Weekly News Quiz - May 15, 2026

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

Latin America’s right has been on a winning streak recently, thanks to which issue?

  • A) Rising anti-immigration sentiment fueled by US policies
  • B) Security, as voters are increasingly frustrated with organized crime
  • C) Economic collapse following the left's failed fiscal policies

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

For many years, mutual concern about Iran helped to paper over deeper disagreements between Saudi Arabia and the UAE. The two powerful and ambitious Sunni Gulf monarchies have been on opposite sides of the civil wars in both Sudan and Yemen, as well as in fierce competition for regional dominance in AI.

But two months into the so-far unresolved Iran war – which has exposed both countries to retaliatory attacks from Tehran – those differences have become a full scale rupture. The starkest moment of divorce was probably April 28th, when the Emiratis announced that they would be leaving the Saudi-dominated OPEC oil cartel after nearly seven decades.

To better understand the tensions between Abu Dhabi and Riyadh, as well as the fallout of the UAE’s decision to “OPEC-xit,” GZERO spoke to one of the top analysts of the Gulf: Eurasia Group’s very own Firas Maksad. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

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A court in Hangzhou ruled that companies are not permitted to fire employees or reduce their salaries because their positions are being automated or replaced by AI. The case was brought by a worker who was initially offered a 40% pay cut and a demotion when his job as a quality assurance supervisor was automated. After he refused the reduced salary, the company fired him, but the court sided with the employee and awarded him 260,000 yuan (about $38,000). While China is quickly adopting automation across its workforce, the country faces a youth unemployment rate close to 17%, raising concerns that increased AI adoption could make it even harder for young people to find jobs.

Xi warns Trump on Taiwan despite friendly start to meetings

US President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday exchanged friendly toasts and reiterations of commitment on the first day of a Beijing summit flush with pageantry. The friendly tone suggests that both sides hope to maintain the current status quo of fragile detente in a relationship marked by deep differences over trade, technology, and China’s regional ambitions in the Pacific. The only moment of slight tension so far came on the topic of Taiwan – Xi warned of a “clash” if the issue was “handled poorly.” Ahead of the meeting experts had wondered whether Trump might soften long-standing US support for the self-governing island, which Beijing considers its own, in exchange for Chinese concessions on trade. So far there is no indication that this has happened. Trump, accompanied by a delegation of CEOs and business leaders, will continue meetings in China until Friday afternoon, including another working lunch with Xi.

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As women’s wealth and spending power rise, so does their impact on sports. Increased investment, sponsorship, and fan engagement are fueling long-term growth and redefining the economics of the industry.

Discover the growth of women’s sports with Bank of America Institute.

Anthropic's Claude had been integrated into the Pentagon's Maven Smart System and deployed on classified networks since July 2025. With LLMs on board, the US military could process five times as many targets per day. But as the Pentagon tried to renegotiate the terms of that arrangement, it ran into Anthropic's red lines: no fully autonomous weapons, and no mass domestic surveillance.

Bloomberg reporter Katrina Manson, author of a new book on Project Maven, breaks down what actually happened when Anthropic and the Pentagon fell out over the terms of Claude's military deployment. Manson says the dispute had a performative dimension on all sides, but it highlighted a real tension around the creation of guardrail for military use of LLMs.

As the Pentagon pushed to loosen those restrictions, Anthropic drew lines it wasn't willing to cross. Anthropic had separately applied to use LLMs in voice-controlled autonomous drone swarming technology, suggesting it was willing to go quite far, just not all the way to full autonomy.

Trump touches down in Beijing ahead of Xi meeting

When US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping last met in October, the main topics – as they were in prior meetings – were trade, trade, and trade. When the two leaders meet again tomorrow, it won’t be the only issue this time, as Taiwan and the Iran war are also set to form part of the talks. Trump will seek Beijing’s assistance in ending the Iran war and reopening the Strait of Hormuz – a shared interest, as China relies on the waterway for many of its crude supplies, though Beijing’s vast oil reserves have allowed them to mitigate the impact of skyrocketing energy prices. Meanwhile Xi is expected to press the US to cut or delay weapons sales to Taipei. Though he is unlikely to attain this goal, the fact that the Chinese president will encourage such a move reflects his more bullish views about China’s place in the world.

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Watch:The Panic in Central Park” from Girls on HBO. The episode, which premiered 10 years ago this month, is a classic and has appeared on countless lists of the greatest TV episodes ever made. Yes, that’s a sweeping and subjective claim, but the story of a relationship that swings from bad to good to bad again perfectly captures the angst (and maybe cringesness) of millennials circa 2016. To paraphrase show creator Lena Dunham’s own character in the show: Dunham may not be the voice of a generation, but she is certainly a voice of a generation. Natalie J.

Watch:Avatar: The Last Airbender” on streamers. Ahead of this fall’s release of a new Avatar movie, get excited by watching the original three seasons. Aang’s adventures still resonate, and Uncle Iroh’s wisdom is more relevant than ever: “In the darkest times, hope is something you give yourself. That is the meaning of inner strength.” So good! – Justin K

Read: True Nature: The Pilgrimage of Peter Matthiessen” by Lance Richardson is a compelling biography of the late and great Peter Matthiessen, unpacking his extraordinary life as a writer, CIA agent, fisherman, founder of The Paris Review, environmentalist, and much more. At the heart of all of Matthiessen’s pursuits was an underlying quest: the search for the cure to his “deep restlessness.” Richardson lays out a compelling account of Matthiessen’s journey, capturing the highs and lows of a man trying to do it all. It’s a long read, but well worth your time! – Will F.

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