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Watch our Global Stage live premiere from the Munich Security Conference

National defense is no longer a question of just geographic borders or physical artillery. In a world of VPNs, advanced AI, and sophisticated cybercrime, governments must protect themselves against the ever-evolving threat of digital sabotage. Online criminal groups can imperil domestic institutions like businesses or bureaus, but nation-states also engage in cyber-warfare against their enemies to gain valuable resources or subvert democracy, inventing new ways to breach both firewalls and city walls.

This form of "hybrid conflict," as seen in the war in Ukraine, poses a significant risk to Europe and its allies abroad. Worse yet, the widespread adoption of AI has opened a Pandora’s Box of unanticipated dangers. How can European institutions stay secure? Don't miss our Global Stage live premiere this Saturday from the sidelines of the 2026 Munich Security Conference, featuring a panel of experts in policy, technology, and geopolitics.

Tune in to this year's Global Stage: Live from Munich on Saturday, February 14th at 12 pm ET/6pm CET at gzeromedia.com/globalstage.

Participants:

  • Benedetta Berti, Secretary General, NATO Parliamentary Assembly
  • Ian Bremmer, President & Co-founder, Eurasia Group & GZERO Media
  • Brad Smith, Vice Chair & President, Microsoft
  • David Sanger (Moderator), National Security Correspondent, New York Times

This livestream is the latest in the Webby-nominated Global Stage series, a partnership between GZERO and Microsoft that examines critical issues at the intersection of technology, politics, and society.

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Building community-first AI infrastructure

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Read the full blog here.

What We’re Watching: Israel expands West Bank control, Orbán’s opponent publishes manifesto, Ethiopia trains Sudan’s rebel soldiers

Israel expands control in the West Bank

The Israeli government unilaterally passed measures that allow Jewish settlers to purchase land in the West Bank, overriding past laws that effectively banned the sale of property there to anyone other than Palestinian residents. Critics say the measures mark another step toward annexing the West Bank and violate international law. A US official criticized the move, noting that President Donald Trump rejects Israeli annexation. The measures come after a two-year period in which Israeli settlers established a record number of outposts in the West Bank, a development that has drawn relatively little attention as the world’s focus was instead on Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza during that time.

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Hard Numbers: Indonesia to deploy troops in Gaza, Signs of a crypto crash, Arrests at pro-Palestinian protest in Australia, Italian-style carbo-loading at the Olympics

8,000: The maximum number of troops that Indonesia is set to deploy to Gaza, making it the first country to lend soldiers to the international peacekeeping efforts in the enclave. The move is a risky one for Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto, as citizens of the world’s largest Muslim-majority country oppose overt engagement with Israel.
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Venezuela’s window is open – but only a little

Juan Pablo Guanipa, a former Venezuelan lawmaker close to opposition leader María Corina Machado who had been imprisoned for months, stepped out of prison on Sunday into a caravan of cheering supporters. His release – alongside several other high-profile opposition figures – marked what looked like a breakthrough moment in a broader wave of liberations after the United States captured Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro.

Hours later, unidentified armed men intercepted him in Caracas and took him away. By dawn, authorities announced he would be placed under house arrest for allegedly violating release conditions. In the span of a night, Guanipa’s brief taste of freedom became a snapshot of Venezuela’s fragile opening: progress that is real but can be contested.

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Venezuela’s new reality

In this “ask ian,” Ian Bremmer addresses the aftermath of the US military operation that captured Nicolás Maduro, calling the results so far “pretty successful.”

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In this Quick Take, Ian Bremmer weighs in on the politicization of the Olympics after comments by Team USA freestyle skier Hunter Hess sparked backlash about patriotism and national representation.
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135 million: The number of viewers of Bad Bunny’s performance at the Super Bowl halftime show in Santa Clara, California, on Sunday. Early estimates suggest it was the most-watched halftime show of all time. The Puerto Rican superstar infused politics into the performance, delivering a roll call of every country in the Americas and emblazoning “The only thing more powerful than hate is love” on the stadium megatrons.

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Are Starmer’s days numbered?

In July 2024, Keir Starmer won the United Kingdom’s election in a landslide. It has been downhill ever since, with Starmer’s premiership sullied by economic stagnation, intraparty fighting, and a lack of vision for the country. Then, last week, more files on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein dropped, revealing his close friendship with Peter Mandelson, whom Starmer had appointed as UK ambassador to the United States. The backlash has been thunderous. Starmer’s Chief of Staff (and right-hand man) Morgan McSweeney resigned Sunday for his role in picking Mandelson, and Downing Street’s director of communications soon followed out the door. Calls for Starmer to quit have grown louder. Even Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar urged the PM to resign – he’s the most senior party figure yet to do so. For Starmer, the writing appears to be on the wall.

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Meanwhile in the oval office #PUPPETREGIME

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Violence is once again scorching Nigeria. On Sunday, gunmen killed three people and took several hostages, including a Catholic priest, during an early morning attack in the northern state of Kaduna. The attack came days after jihadist fighters killed over 150 people in two majority-Muslim villages in the western part of the country, allegedly for villagers’ refusal to attend prayers led by the insurgents.

The escalation has not gone unnoticed in the United States, which last week quietly deployed a small special forces team to Nigeria. While there are few details about the size and scope of the mission, it follows a meeting last month in Abuja of the inaugural Nigeria-US Joint Working Group to boost cooperation, and came weeks after joint US airstrikes on Islamic State targets in the northwest part of the country in December. The strikes were reportedly timed to take place on Christmas Day to send a message to Christians who Trump claims are victims of “genocide.”

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New international org just dropped #PUPPETREGIME

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We’re moving toward a world where roads don’t just move traffic — they enable services and transactions. Mastercard is working with Volvo and the North Carolina Turnpike Authority on a pilot that explores in-vehicle toll payments without transponders, signaling how V2X connectivity can make infrastructure a platform for data and payments. This future of connected transportation aims to make travel safer, smoother and smarter.

Read the full article here.

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