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China closely watching Strait of Hormuz’s closure, Foreign interference roils Slovenia’s election, Ukraine lends drone defense to the Gulf

China wants the Iran conflict to end – but could it still benefit?

Given that China is the world’s top oil importer, and oil prices continued to surge this week as energy facilities in the Middle East were struck, it’s no surprise that Beijing again called for an end to the Iran conflict on Friday. That doesn’t mean that the CCP won’t gain anything from this war. First, the US is draining its military resources and shifting some air defense systems away from South Korea – which is near China. What’s more, Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz could provide Beijing with a preview of what would happen if it blocks Taiwan in the future. “China is learning how Taiwan is responding to a potential energy shortage,” said Eurasia Group’s regional expert Ava Shen. “And the closure of the Strait of Hormuz really highlights Taiwan’s energy vulnerability.”

Slovenia isn’t the main character of its own election

The 1.7 million registered voters of Slovenia, a small country in the Balkans, will head to the polls this Sunday for the parliamentary elections. However, the contest is as much about other countries as it is about Slovenia. Liberal Prime Minister Robert Golob argues that former PM Janez Janša, a right-wing populist who is Golob’s main challenger, poses a threat to the European Union – he would potentially side with Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán amid his standoff with the bloc. Janša, meanwhile, depicts the incumbent as corrupt, citing recordings allegedly obtained and released by a private Israeli intelligence firm that appear to show leading Slovenian officials discussing illegal lobbying and the misuse of state funds. Golob’s allies say it shows that Janša is collaborating with foreign entities to reclaim power, a claim he denies. The former PM is currently the favorite to win: he leads in polls by a hair.

Ukraine helps its friends, but can it help itself?

Ukraine dispatched over 200 drone experts this week to help US allies in the Gulf fend off Iranian attacks. Ukraine says European allies have also requested support to defend their interests in the Middle East. Helping its friends by leveraging its battle-tested knowledge of how to cheaply produce and deploy drones is one thing, but whether Ukraine has anything to gain from this assistance is another. Kyiv could leverage its expertise by brokering agreements that strengthen its defense industry, a strategic move at a time when Russia is benefiting from a revenue boost from the shock to energy prices caused by the Iran war. Ukraine’s assistance may also strengthen its relationship with the US amidst ongoing trilateral peace talks.

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Putin’s gamble in Cuba

What is Vladimir Putin thinking? It’s certainly not the first time we’ve asked the question: for 25 years, the wily ex-spy has shown a penchant for testing geopolitical limits, wrongfooting his opponents, and craftily antagonizing his adversaries. The latest episode is taking place on the high seas, where a tanker laden with some 730,000 barrels of Russian oil appears to be steaming towards Cuba.

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Hard numbers: Colombia’s president under US investigation, Chad to send security forces to Haiti, Eid celebrations in the midst of war, Terrorism deaths rise in Nigeria

2: The number of US federal prosecutors’ offices currently investigating whether Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro has connections to drug traffickers, per The New York Times. In the past, US President Donald Trump has alleged Petro has ties to the drug trade in Colombia, a country that is one of the US’s closest allies in Latin America and where cocaine production has surged in recent years. Similar investigations were conducted in the lead-up to former strongman Nicolas Maduro’s ousting from Venezuela by the US earlier this year.
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Rahm Emanuel: Trump doesn’t know “friend from foe” on Russia

Rahm Emanuel says the arrival of Russian oil tankers in Cuba is a direct test of whether President Trump can distinguish between political theater and a real strategic threat.

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You vs. the News: A Weekly News Quiz - March 20, 2026

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

The global K-pop group BTS released its 10th album after a few years’ hiatus. Why were they on a break?

  • A) Paternity leave
  • B) Silent retreats
  • C) South Korean military service

Take the quiz to see if you guessed correctly!

Trump asks for $200B to fund Iran war

In this Quick Take, Ian Bremmer says the Trump administration’s push for $200 billion in supplemental funding for the war in Iran is a sign that the conflict is getting more expensive, more entrenched, and harder to contain.

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AI is here to stay, but who is missing out?

The potential to accelerate economic growth remains a central promise of AI investment, but many countries and communities are at risk of getting left behind. Particularly in the Global South, where data centers are scarce and local training almost nonexistent, the technological divide is growing. Between skilling, infrastructure, and access, there are still many hurdles that stand between today’s workforce and the goal of real AI diffusion. How do we bridge the ever-widening gap?

Join us on Wednesday, March 25th at 12pm ET for the live premiere of our Global Stage panel, “The AI Divide: From Warning to Action,” where we’ll convene a panel of experts and policymakers at the United Nations to discuss AI equity and responsible deployment.

Panelists:

  • Lisa Monaco, President of Global Affairs, Microsoft
  • Doreen Bogdan-Martin, Secretary-General, ITU
  • Harish Parvathaneni, Permanent Representative of India to the UN
  • Tony Maciulis, Global Chief Content Officer, GZERO Media (Moderator)
This panel, “The AI Divide: From Warning to Action,” is an event produced in partnership between the United Nations Office for Partnerships, and GZERO Media’s Global Stage series, sponsored by Microsoft.

Tune in at gzeromedia.com/globalstage

Set a reminder:

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.

Can JD Vance save Orbán?

US President Donald Trump’s allies have taken a major interest in European politics over the last 18 months, attempting to boost far-right leaders in Albania, Germany, and Poland. Now, Vice President JD Vance is aiming to boost MAGA’s closest ally on the continent: Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. Vance reportedly plans to visit Hungary in the coming days. However, with the election barely three weeks away, Orbán’s reelection campaign seems to have stalled: he continues to trail the pro-EU, center-right opposition leader Péter Magyar in polls. With European gas prices surging, and 2024 elections showing how inflation is kryptonite for incumbents worldwide, Vance has his work cut out if he wants to rescue Hungary’s far-right leader.

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Air defense batteries moved out of Asia. Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. Growing domestic frustration with the Trump administration. Formula 1 races in the Gulf canceled.

The secondary effects of the US-Israel war with Iran have been expansive. But no specific issue has perhaps been more pressing for governments than the fuel shortages prompted by the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the 30-mile-wide waterway through which roughly one fifth of the world’s oil and liquified natural gas supplies passed before the war began.

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700: The tons of fuel and liquefied natural gas aboard a Russian tanker that is currently floating around the Mediterranean Sea unmanned, after a drone attack earlier this month prompted the crew to abandon ship. Russia blames Ukraine for the attack. Italy, France and other EU members have warned that the ship, which is now floating into Libyan waters, poses a risk of major ecological disaster.
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Three weeks into the US-Israeli war against Iran, the list of losers is unusually long. Iran is getting devastated. The United States is trapped in an asymmetric conflict it can't exit. Gulf states are absorbing infrastructure damage they never signed up for. The developing world is facing food and energy crises. I could keep going.

Washington and Tehran may yet declare victory, but the biggest geopolitical winner is sitting in Moscow, and he didn’t have to do anything but watch.

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Iran conflict has Asia looking for coal

Much as Europe did when Russia began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine four years ago, Asia is turning to a retro, highly-polluting fuel source as the Iran conflict limits the supply of liquefied natural gas: coal. The continent relies heavily on natural gas for its electricity, much of it imported – in the form of liquefied natural gas – from countries in the Persian Gulf. But with the Strait of Hormuz virtually shut, supplies from the region are no longer available. To alleviate these shortages, Bangladesh is increasing its coal consumption, South Korea is preparing to boost coal-fired power generation, and the Thai government has ordered its coal-fired power plants to operate at full capacity. The fear in Asia now, though, is that these energy disruptions outlast the Iran war.

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3: The number of runs scored by Venezuela’s national baseball team in their stunning upset of top-seeded USA in the World Baseball Classic final in Miami last night. In an epic game fraught with geopolitical overtones – the US government abducted Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro in January – the arepa-powered pitching staff held the fearsome US lineup to just two runs, winning the tournament for the first time ever. To all our Venezuelan readers, ¡Felicidades!

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See or Read: “The Fever,” a one-man gut punch written and performed by Wallace Shawn. You’ll instantly recognize him from his memorable roles in “The Princess Bride” and “Young Sheldon,” but Shawn is also an accomplished playwright. Written decades ago, but eerily relevant today, “The Fever” follows a well-meaning traveler whose privileged worldview unravels in a far less comfortable corner of the globe. The performance is part monologue, part moral reckoning, and fully the kind of theater that sticks with you long after you’ve left your seat. It’s on stage now in New York, but you can also read the script and imagine for yourself the vivid and unsettling reality he describes. – Tony

Read:The Kite Runner.” Khaled Hosseini’s epic 2003 novel follows a boy called Amir as he tries to navigate the horrors of the Afghan-Soviet war that began in 1979. Stories like these remind us of the human tragedies that citizens face when their country is at war. While it would be erroneous to make any clear-cut comparison between the Soviet-Afghan war and the current conflict in neighboring Iran, we should be acutely aware of the devastation that some Iranians face while the Islamic Republic goes to battle with the US and Israel. This book may provide some clues. – Zac

See: Paintings by UK-based artist Jess Allen. If you need a small dopamine hit during the day, I highly recommend taking a few minutes to marvel at Allen’s colorful (and now online) exhibition, “We Want to Believe in Impossible Things” that showed in London last year. – Natalie J.

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