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Bellum Acta - Intel, Urgent News and Archives ✝️ #FreeVenezuela
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Forwarded from The Global Eye
#NEWS | 🇮🇷 — Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi:
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We have the capability to produce missiles, but we have intentionally limited ourselves to below 2,000 kilometers of range because we don’t want to be felt as a threat by anybody else in the world.
We have not started any plan to increase the range of our missiles beyond what it is right now.
So there is no evidence, no intelligence, nothing to indicate that Iran is developing long-range missiles, let alone missiles that could reach the United States.
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@BellumActaNews
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Forwarded from Rerum Novarum // Intel, Breaking News, and Alerts 🇺🇸
🇫🇷🇬🇷🇨🇾⚡️- Emmanuel Macron will travel to Cyprus this Monday to meet his Cypriot counterpart alongside Greece's Prime Minister to discuss the island's security.
Forwarded from Grandmasters of Geopolitics
🚨🇳🇵 Who is Balen Shah: The first Gen-Z leader of Nepal
Balen Shah, currently serving as the mayor of Nepalese capital, Kathmandu has recorded landslide victory against the sitting Prime minister of Nepal, KP Sharma Oli.
▪️Shah's party Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) is heading for major victory, winning 102 direct seats out of 165 & leading in 22 other seats.
▪️Final counts confirm Shah secured 68,348 votes, more than triple the tally of Oli, who finished with 18,734, in his home constituency.
▪️Coming from a middle-class background, Balen balanced academics with creative pursuits and became known in Nepal’s underground music scene as a rapper who often addressed social inequality, corruption, and youth frustrations through his lyrics.
🔥 Political journey and prominence
▪️ Balen Shah entered politics as an independent candidate in the 2022 mayoral election of Kathmandu, challenging candidates from established political parties that had dominated Nepal for decades.
▪️Running on a platform of transparency and urban reform, he appealed to citizens frustrated with traditional party politics.
▪️His victory shocked the political establishment, as he defeated candidates backed by major parties such as the Nepali Congress and the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist), signaling a strong public demand for new leadership.
📈 Gen-Z support and rise to fame
▪️ Balen Shah’s rise coincided with growing frustration among Nepal’s youth over corruption, unemployment, and the dominance of the same political elites for decades.
▪️He was in the spotlight after the protests and was an undeclared leader of the youngsters who led the September protests.
▪️He also helped form the interim government of former Chief Justice Sushila Karki to oversee the vote.
▪️Through social media campaigns, youth activism, and grassroots mobilization, many young Nepalis rallied behind him as a symbol of change and accountability.
▪️His unconventional background as an engineer and rapper made him relatable to younger generations, transforming his campaign into a broader movement against political stagnation and helping propel him to national prominence.
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Balen Shah, currently serving as the mayor of Nepalese capital, Kathmandu has recorded landslide victory against the sitting Prime minister of Nepal, KP Sharma Oli.
▪️Shah's party Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) is heading for major victory, winning 102 direct seats out of 165 & leading in 22 other seats.
▪️Final counts confirm Shah secured 68,348 votes, more than triple the tally of Oli, who finished with 18,734, in his home constituency.
▪️Coming from a middle-class background, Balen balanced academics with creative pursuits and became known in Nepal’s underground music scene as a rapper who often addressed social inequality, corruption, and youth frustrations through his lyrics.
▪️ Balen Shah entered politics as an independent candidate in the 2022 mayoral election of Kathmandu, challenging candidates from established political parties that had dominated Nepal for decades.
▪️Running on a platform of transparency and urban reform, he appealed to citizens frustrated with traditional party politics.
▪️His victory shocked the political establishment, as he defeated candidates backed by major parties such as the Nepali Congress and the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist), signaling a strong public demand for new leadership.
▪️ Balen Shah’s rise coincided with growing frustration among Nepal’s youth over corruption, unemployment, and the dominance of the same political elites for decades.
▪️He was in the spotlight after the protests and was an undeclared leader of the youngsters who led the September protests.
▪️He also helped form the interim government of former Chief Justice Sushila Karki to oversee the vote.
▪️Through social media campaigns, youth activism, and grassroots mobilization, many young Nepalis rallied behind him as a symbol of change and accountability.
▪️His unconventional background as an engineer and rapper made him relatable to younger generations, transforming his campaign into a broader movement against political stagnation and helping propel him to national prominence.
Chat | GG Movies channel | Boost us!
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Forwarded from Tupi Report 🇧🇷 • #FreeVenezuela
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Protesters chanted slogans such as: “We don’t want electricity, we want freedom.” In addition to complaints about the power outages, the protests reflect growing rejection of the regime amid a context of deterioration and the collapse of public services in Cuba.
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Forwarded from Eurointel+
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🇺🇦 - In Lviv, Ukraine, feminists started fight with the local police while protesting about changes in the law that they consider women rights-unfriendly.
Forwarded from QVINTA ÆTAS
"The Russian-Polish security dilemma will likely serve as the impetus for fully unleashing and properly managing the capabilities of European NATO as a whole per the US’ National Defense Strategy.
RT drew attention in late January to a report by Izvestia about the West’s alleged plans to launch a “Defense, Security, and Resilience Bank” (DSRB) by 2027. Their article relies on in-depth research by the Atlantic Council, which came up with the idea of what was at first called the “NATO Bank”. The purpose is to provide “low-interest loans for defense modernization”, thus facilitating the goal of NATO members spending 5% of GDP on defense without significantly curtailing social and infrastructure spending.
Instead of slashing such programs to redirect funds to defense at the risk of helping populist-nationalists during the next elections and/or provoking unrest, they’d only spend a fraction of the principal each year servicing their DSRB loan instead of paying the cost upfront as if it was part of their annual expenditures. The Executive Summary of the Atlantic Council’s in-depth research hyperlinked to above also notes that “An additional critical function of the DSR bank would be to underwrite the risk for commercial banks”."
🗄 Archive
🔗 Source:
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ZeroHedge
The Planned "NATO Bank" Is Expected To Finance Europe's Impending Arms Race With Russia
Russia still has the edge in this impending arms race with Europe, but the EU’s potential federalization could narrow the gap if it ever happens...
Forwarded from QVINTA ÆTAS
"What did Ancient Rome look like at its peak in 117 AD?
The map below from Visual Capitalist shows the maximum territorial extent ever achieved by the Roman Empire, just after their successful wars in the east, where Emperor Trajan captured Dacia (Romania), Armenia, Mesopotamia, Assyria, and the Parthian capital of Ctesiphon (in modern-day Iraq).
(...)
As Visual Capitalist explains further, although Trajan is rated as one of the best Roman Emperors by historians and was considered one of the strongest military leaders in Roman history, the reality is that the peak he achieved was very short-lived."
🗄 Archive
🔗 Source
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Forwarded from QVINTA ÆTAS
Insider Paper
Finland to allow nuclear weapons on its soil: government
"MOSCOW, March 6 (Reuters) - Russia said on Friday it would respond if Finland placed nuclear weapons on its territory, saying such a move would make the Nordic country more vulnerable.
The Kremlin reacted sharply after NATO member Finland said on Thursday it was planning to lift a longstanding ban on hosting such weapons, in a move that could open the door to placing them there during times of war.
"This is a statement that leads to an escalation of tensions on the European continent," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
"This statement adds to Finland's vulnerability, a vulnerability provoked by the actions of the Finnish authorities. The fact is that by deploying nuclear weapons on its territory, Finland is beginning to threaten us. And if Finland threatens us, we take appropriate measures."
The Finnish shift is part of a wider rethink of European deterrence that has prompted France to offer to extend the protection of its nuclear arsenal to other allies on the continent."
🔗 Source
📃 Archive on Telegraph:
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Telegraph
Russia warns Finland it will be more vulnerable if it hosts nuclear weapons
Item 1 of 2 French President Emmanuel Macron and Finland's President Alexander Stubb attend a Nordic-Baltic Eight (NB8) work video conference at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France February 23, 2026. Thomas Padilla/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo [1/2]French President…
Forwarded from Song of Oil and LNG
🇷🇺 Russia Is the Quiet Winner of the Persian Gulf Energy Crisis
Just over a week before the conflict began, Russia's energy sector was under severe stress — oil prices were depressed, Western sanctions were biting, and millions of barrels of Russian crude floated without buyers on open water. The US-Israeli war on Iran has inverted that picture entirely. With Hormuz effectively closed and Gulf Arab producers unable to export at full capacity, Russian crude has become one of the few reliably deliverable alternatives on global markets.
Buyers that previously avoided Russian oil for political or logistical reasons are now returning with urgency. Indian refiners alone have already snapped up over 10 million barrels of Russian crude following a temporary one-month US sanctions waiver granted to India in response to the Middle East supply shock. Reliance Industries, India's largest private refiner, is among the buyers actively seeking Russian barrels under that waiver framework.
Moscow has effectively been handed a demand windfall and a pricing premium it could not have engineered through any diplomatic or market mechanism of its own.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Just over a week before the conflict began, Russia's energy sector was under severe stress — oil prices were depressed, Western sanctions were biting, and millions of barrels of Russian crude floated without buyers on open water. The US-Israeli war on Iran has inverted that picture entirely. With Hormuz effectively closed and Gulf Arab producers unable to export at full capacity, Russian crude has become one of the few reliably deliverable alternatives on global markets.
Buyers that previously avoided Russian oil for political or logistical reasons are now returning with urgency. Indian refiners alone have already snapped up over 10 million barrels of Russian crude following a temporary one-month US sanctions waiver granted to India in response to the Middle East supply shock. Reliance Industries, India's largest private refiner, is among the buyers actively seeking Russian barrels under that waiver framework.
Moscow has effectively been handed a demand windfall and a pricing premium it could not have engineered through any diplomatic or market mechanism of its own.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
The Wall Street Journal
The Big Winner From the Persian Gulf Energy Crisis? Russia
Just over a week ago, Russia’s energy industry was in its worst shape in years, with low oil prices and sanctions starving the economy of cash. Millions of barrels of Russian oil floated on the sea, much of it without a destination.
The war in the Persian…
The war in the Persian…
Forwarded from Song of Oil and LNG
🇶🇦 Qatar Loads First LNG Cargo Since Force Majeure — A Signal, Not a Resumption
Qatar appears to have loaded its first LNG cargo from the Ras Laffan export complex since the facility was shut down and force majeure declared following drone attacks linked to the broader Iran conflict. The loading represents a symbolic operational restart, but market participants should not interpret it as a return to normal export volumes from the world's second-largest LNG exporter.
Ras Laffan handles the full output of Qatar's LNG export infrastructure, which delivers approximately 77 million tonnes per year to long-term contract buyers across Europe, Japan, South Korea, China, and India. Even a partial or intermittent resumption matters at the margin — European and Asian buyers have been competing frantically for alternative cargoes, driving European benchmark gas prices toward a 50 percent weekly gain, the largest since 2023. A single cargo does not resolve the structural supply gap that has opened over the past week.
Until the Strait of Hormuz reopens and tanker insurance markets normalise, Qatar's ability to sustain exports at any meaningful rate remains constrained by security conditions rather than by production capacity.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Qatar appears to have loaded its first LNG cargo from the Ras Laffan export complex since the facility was shut down and force majeure declared following drone attacks linked to the broader Iran conflict. The loading represents a symbolic operational restart, but market participants should not interpret it as a return to normal export volumes from the world's second-largest LNG exporter.
Ras Laffan handles the full output of Qatar's LNG export infrastructure, which delivers approximately 77 million tonnes per year to long-term contract buyers across Europe, Japan, South Korea, China, and India. Even a partial or intermittent resumption matters at the margin — European and Asian buyers have been competing frantically for alternative cargoes, driving European benchmark gas prices toward a 50 percent weekly gain, the largest since 2023. A single cargo does not resolve the structural supply gap that has opened over the past week.
Until the Strait of Hormuz reopens and tanker insurance markets normalise, Qatar's ability to sustain exports at any meaningful rate remains constrained by security conditions rather than by production capacity.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Worldoil
Qatar loads first LNG cargo since force majeure
Qatar appears to have loaded its first LNG cargo since shutting the Ras Laffan export complex and declaring force majeure after drone attacks and escalating conflict in the Middle East disrupted regional energy flows.
Forwarded from Song of Oil and LNG
🇮🇳 India's LPG Prices Rise for First Time in a Year as Middle East Supply Collapses
Indian oil marketing companies have raised liquefied petroleum gas prices for the first time in approximately twelve months, as the US-Israeli war on Iran disrupts Middle Eastern supply chains and drives global LPG benchmark prices sharply higher. LPG is used primarily as a cooking fuel by hundreds of millions of Indian households, making the price increase both an energy market event and a domestic political and social issue of the first order.
India is one of the world's largest LPG importers, with a significant share of supply historically sourced from Gulf producers now operating under force majeure or facing export blockages due to the Strait of Hormuz closure. Simultaneously, Adani Total Gas has tripled gas prices for large industrial consumers exceeding 40 percent of their daily allocation, compressing margins across India's manufacturing base. Indian Oil Corp has separately moved to book crude cargoes loading from Saudi Arabia's Red Sea port of Yanbu — a routing that bypasses the Hormuz chokepoint entirely — to maintain refinery throughput.
The speed with which the supply shock has translated into retail price increases in India illustrates the degree to which Asia's energy import dependency leaves consumer populations directly exposed to Gulf conflict dynamics.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Indian oil marketing companies have raised liquefied petroleum gas prices for the first time in approximately twelve months, as the US-Israeli war on Iran disrupts Middle Eastern supply chains and drives global LPG benchmark prices sharply higher. LPG is used primarily as a cooking fuel by hundreds of millions of Indian households, making the price increase both an energy market event and a domestic political and social issue of the first order.
India is one of the world's largest LPG importers, with a significant share of supply historically sourced from Gulf producers now operating under force majeure or facing export blockages due to the Strait of Hormuz closure. Simultaneously, Adani Total Gas has tripled gas prices for large industrial consumers exceeding 40 percent of their daily allocation, compressing margins across India's manufacturing base. Indian Oil Corp has separately moved to book crude cargoes loading from Saudi Arabia's Red Sea port of Yanbu — a routing that bypasses the Hormuz chokepoint entirely — to maintain refinery throughput.
The speed with which the supply shock has translated into retail price increases in India illustrates the degree to which Asia's energy import dependency leaves consumer populations directly exposed to Gulf conflict dynamics.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Reuters
India raises cooking gas prices as Iran war hits supply
Indian companies have raised the prices of liquefied petroleum gas, mostly used as a cooking fuel, for the first time in about a year, as global prices surge with the U.S.-Israel war on Iran disrupting supplies from the Middle East.
Forwarded from Song of Oil and LNG
Europe's Gas Prices Post Largest Weekly Gain in Three Years — and the Continent Has No Easy Answer
Europe's benchmark natural gas price is heading for a weekly gain of approximately 50 percent, the largest single-week move since 2023, as the Strait of Hormuz closure has effectively halted Qatari LNG exports and forced European buyers into a direct bidding war with Asian importers for every available cargo on the spot market. The price shock is arriving at a moment when European storage, while not critically low, offers limited cushion against a prolonged supply disruption.
Europe had spent much of 2025 managing a structural LNG dependency that replaced Russian pipeline gas following the 2022 cutoffs. Qatar was a cornerstone of that diversification strategy, supplying a meaningful share of European LNG imports under long-term contracts now suspended under force majeure. Alternative suppliers — the United States, Australia, West Africa — are operating at or near capacity with no short-term surge ability. The energy price shock is compounding broader economic stress in the eurozone at a time when several major economies are already flirting with stagnation.
Europe has once again discovered that energy security built on long-distance LNG dependency carries a geopolitical fragility that diversification by source cannot fully eliminate when a single transit chokepoint is removed from the system.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Europe's benchmark natural gas price is heading for a weekly gain of approximately 50 percent, the largest single-week move since 2023, as the Strait of Hormuz closure has effectively halted Qatari LNG exports and forced European buyers into a direct bidding war with Asian importers for every available cargo on the spot market. The price shock is arriving at a moment when European storage, while not critically low, offers limited cushion against a prolonged supply disruption.
Europe had spent much of 2025 managing a structural LNG dependency that replaced Russian pipeline gas following the 2022 cutoffs. Qatar was a cornerstone of that diversification strategy, supplying a meaningful share of European LNG imports under long-term contracts now suspended under force majeure. Alternative suppliers — the United States, Australia, West Africa — are operating at or near capacity with no short-term surge ability. The energy price shock is compounding broader economic stress in the eurozone at a time when several major economies are already flirting with stagnation.
Europe has once again discovered that energy security built on long-distance LNG dependency carries a geopolitical fragility that diversification by source cannot fully eliminate when a single transit chokepoint is removed from the system.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Forwarded from Song of Oil and LNG
IEA Holds Back on Emergency Reserves Despite Hormuz Crisis — A Bet on Short Duration
The International Energy Agency has signalled it sees no immediate need to release emergency oil reserves from member country stockpiles, despite the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the cascading production shut-ins across the Gulf. The agency cited ample global supply availability and characterised the logistical disruptions as temporary, a framing that implies confidence the conflict will be resolved before a structural supply deficit materialises in inventories.
The IEA coordinates emergency reserve releases under the collective action mechanism established after the 1973 oil embargo, with combined member holdings exceeding 1.5 billion barrels. A coordinated release was last deployed in 2022 following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The decision not to act now is effectively a forecast: that the Hormuz closure will be short-lived and that the price spike — with Brent pushing toward $90 and analysts warning of $150 — does not yet constitute the kind of sustained supply emergency the reserve mechanism was designed to address.
If the IEA's duration assumption proves wrong and the conflict extends beyond several weeks, the political pressure to release reserves will intensify sharply, and the agency's credibility as a crisis manager will be on the line.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
The International Energy Agency has signalled it sees no immediate need to release emergency oil reserves from member country stockpiles, despite the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the cascading production shut-ins across the Gulf. The agency cited ample global supply availability and characterised the logistical disruptions as temporary, a framing that implies confidence the conflict will be resolved before a structural supply deficit materialises in inventories.
The IEA coordinates emergency reserve releases under the collective action mechanism established after the 1973 oil embargo, with combined member holdings exceeding 1.5 billion barrels. A coordinated release was last deployed in 2022 following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The decision not to act now is effectively a forecast: that the Hormuz closure will be short-lived and that the price spike — with Brent pushing toward $90 and analysts warning of $150 — does not yet constitute the kind of sustained supply emergency the reserve mechanism was designed to address.
If the IEA's duration assumption proves wrong and the conflict extends beyond several weeks, the political pressure to release reserves will intensify sharply, and the agency's credibility as a crisis manager will be on the line.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Worldoil
IEA sees no need yet to release emergency oil reserves amid Iran crisis
The International Energy Agency said it sees no immediate need to release emergency oil reserves despite disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, citing ample global supply and only temporary logistical impacts from the Iran conflict.
Forwarded from Song of Oil and LNG
Iran War Threatens Months of Higher Fuel Prices Even After Guns Fall Silent
Analysts and logistics operators are warning that even a rapid end to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran would not quickly reverse the energy price shock now working through global markets. Damaged port infrastructure, disrupted shipping insurance frameworks, logistical rerouting of tanker fleets, and risk premiums embedded in long-term contract pricing could sustain elevated fuel costs for weeks or months after any ceasefire.
The structural damage runs deeper than headline production outages. Shipping insurers have dramatically repriced war-risk premiums for Gulf voyages, making many routes commercially unviable even if they are technically passable. Refineries across Asia have been forced to alter crude slates, accept lower utilisation, or pay sharp premiums for alternative supply — costs that move through to fuel pump prices with a lag. Supply chains for fertilizer, petrochemicals, and industrial gases that depend on Gulf feedstocks are facing simultaneous disruption. BMI, a Fitch Solutions company, has characterised expected oil and gas price rallies as significant yet short-lived, but acknowledges that the recovery timeline is highly sensitive to conflict duration and the pace of infrastructure repair.
The energy market is learning once again that the cost of a Gulf war is not priced only in the weeks of active combat but in the months of operational and financial reconstruction that follow.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Analysts and logistics operators are warning that even a rapid end to the US-Israeli campaign against Iran would not quickly reverse the energy price shock now working through global markets. Damaged port infrastructure, disrupted shipping insurance frameworks, logistical rerouting of tanker fleets, and risk premiums embedded in long-term contract pricing could sustain elevated fuel costs for weeks or months after any ceasefire.
The structural damage runs deeper than headline production outages. Shipping insurers have dramatically repriced war-risk premiums for Gulf voyages, making many routes commercially unviable even if they are technically passable. Refineries across Asia have been forced to alter crude slates, accept lower utilisation, or pay sharp premiums for alternative supply — costs that move through to fuel pump prices with a lag. Supply chains for fertilizer, petrochemicals, and industrial gases that depend on Gulf feedstocks are facing simultaneous disruption. BMI, a Fitch Solutions company, has characterised expected oil and gas price rallies as significant yet short-lived, but acknowledges that the recovery timeline is highly sensitive to conflict duration and the pace of infrastructure repair.
The energy market is learning once again that the cost of a Gulf war is not priced only in the weeks of active combat but in the months of operational and financial reconstruction that follow.
🔎 Source
@songofoil
Reuters
Iran war threatens prolonged hit to global energy markets
Consumers and businesses face weeks or months of higher fuel prices.
Forwarded from Tabz - Alternative Media (Tabz)
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You see this hat? Free Cuba. Stay tuned. The liberation of Cuba is upon us.
We're marching through the world. We're cleaning out the bad guys.
We're going to have relationships with new people that will make us prosperous and safe.
Iran is going down and Cuba is next.
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Forwarded from Tabz - Alternative Media (Tabz)
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Venezuela and Iran have 31% of the world's to oil reserves. We're going to have a partnership with 31% of the known reserves.
This is China's nicemare... nightmare.
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