Shri , Bharathi
Shri , Bharathi @jayaa0303 ·
BRICS leader #Modi is leading War of #GlobalSouth vs USD,for establishing WEF led #Multipolar World. CHEAP OIL when it fuelled war on Ukraine,was a big Profitable Business for Modi's Ambanis. May be #IRGCTerrorists too will start CHEAP OIL sales to IndiA,under Modi's advice🤪
Mario Nawfal Mario Nawfal @MarioNawfal ·
🇷🇺🇮🇳 India and Russia have agreed to resume Russian LNG sales despite western sanctions for the first time since the start of the Ukraine war. Putin is loving the Iran war. Source: ReutjoZ1
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Shivrajsinh Rana
Shivrajsinh Rana @shivrajsinhrana ·
Replying to @shivrajsinhrana
🌐 HE SAW MULTIPOLARITY FIRST Huntington rejected US unipolarity as temporary. 💡 2026: G7 vs BRICS — near equal GDP. Dollar hegemony challenged. No single superpower. Multiple power centres. 💥 He saw this before anyone named it. 😱 #Multipolar #Huntington (21/24)
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DaaruPeCharcha
DaaruPeCharcha @DaaruPeCharchaa ·
Yes.. Gold is a big reason for this USD vs INR value Plus, I believe #India is printing a lot more too (possibly with the vision of making #INR easily available to UPI users in Global South) #Multipolar World!!
Ritesh Jain Ritesh Jain @riteshmjn ·
I agree with this view. Infact, I am of the view that if Indians continue to buy Gold, then INR could depreciate much more vs USD. I don’t think that’s bad news. Come to think of it this way, Indians are shorting INR vs USD and going long on GOLD. China is effectively doing the ng its citizens to buy Gold but they have massive current account surplus, hence CNY is not pressured like INR.
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Arielius Fornarius Maximus Signiferium Limes
Arielius Fornarius Maximus Signiferium Limes @ArielFornari ·
#empireindecline #Multipolar #IranWar‌ #Trump #trumpswaronoureconomy
@WouterW_Vreug @ProfessorPape Uncle Sam is in one big jam. It sleepwalked into this conflict far away in the M. E. while grossly ignoring its back patio in the #Caribbean. #DominicanRepublic an important ally & regional economic hub is now showing signs of severe economic strain, plus affecting U. S....
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deathwatch
deathwatch @14dayadventist ·
Replying to @14dayadventist
@araghchi Out of the supposed Russia-China-India #BRICS #Multipolar #Duginite alliance: Russia's getting Ukraine war China's getting Trade war India? Getting FREE TRADE with EU and more #H1B in America! Now tell me, why's #India not getting contained as RU/CN/IR? x.com/ElonMuskIsBrow…
@davidicke If "Power's moving to China/Russia" then why do Trump not resolve the Ukraine war in favor of Russia but is choosing to keeping it on to kill Russian and Ukrainians? But every time u attack #India they scream real hard! So who are they moving to? #India x.com/PrezLives2022/…
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Korsoraattori
Korsoraattori @korsoraattori ·
#multipolar
Natalka Natalka @NatalkaKyiv ·
I think all of us could use some comic relief today. This gem comes from Russia out of all places. 🫣😂 “What is a ‘multipolar war’? It’s when, for example, some important Moscow official, who got stuck in Dubai — where he went to f*ck women and lied to his wife that he was oasnoyarsk — is defended from the Iranian ‘Shaheds’ by Madyar’s guys with their interceptors.”
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Arielius Fornarius Maximus Signiferium Limes
Arielius Fornarius Maximus Signiferium Limes @ArielFornari ·
#empireindecline #Multipolar #IranWar‌ #Trump #trumploser #trumpaffordabilitymeltdown
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ @shanaka86 ·
BREAKING: The Strait of Hormuz is no longer closed. It is no longer open. It is something the world has never seen before: a permissioned corridor run by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, priced at $2 million per vessel, payable in yuan. Three ships transited in the last 24 pre-war average of 60 per day. Total throughput: 310,000 deadweight tonnes. Three percent of normal. Four hundred vessels are waiting outside the strait right now. One hundred and fifty tankers. One hundred and twenty bulk carriers. One hundred and thirty others. Waiting for permission from the IRGC Navy to enter a 5-nautical-mile channel between Larak and Qeshm islands inside Iranian territorial waters. This is how the gate works. A vessel operator contacts approved intermediaries with IRGC connections, submitting full documentation: IMO number, ownership chain, cargo manifest, destination, crew list. The intermediaries forward the package to the IRGC Navy’s Hormozgan Provincial Command for sanctions screening, cargo alignment checks that prioritise oil over all other commodities, and geopolitical vetting. The toll is approximately $2 million per tanker. For a VLCC carrying 2 million barrels, that is $1 per barrel. Preferred currency: yuan. If the vessel passes, the IRGC issues a clearance code and route instructions. Upon approach, VHF radio hail, AIS verification, patrol boat escort. One ship at a time. Through the narrowest channel of the most important waterway on Earth. Iranian crude is still flowing. Approximately 1.1 to 1.5 million barrels per day, mostly to China, at near pre-war levels. Iran’s own oil transits the strait it controls. The blockade applies to everyone else. Iran is simultaneously the gatekeeper and the primary beneficiary. The toll funds the IRGC. The IRGC maintains the gate. The gate generates the toll. The circle is self-sustaining. Now look at what is NOT transiting. Fertiliser. Gulf nations supply 49 percent of the world’s exported urea. Ammonia requires the natural gas that Qatar declared Force Majeure on and that Iranian strikes disrupted at South Pars. Effectively zero fertiliser vessels have received approval through the permissioned corridor. The IRGC is prioritising oil because oil generates revenue. Fertiliser does not. The molecules that feed four billion people are trapped behind a gate that only opens for molecules that fund the gatekeeper. The yuan preference is the structural shift that outlasts the war. Every tanker that pays in yuan instead of dollars establishes a precedent. Every precedent weakens the petrodollar architecture that has governed energy trade since 1974. The IRGC is not just blocking a strait. It is building an alternative payment rail under live fire. The $2 million toll in yuan is not a fee. It is a proof of concept for a post-dollar energy settlement system, stress-tested in the most extreme conditions imaginable: a three-front war with the world’s largest military. The world’s central banks are trapped by the same strait: the Fed cannot cut, the ECB is hiking, the BOJ is tightening. Six countries are rationing fuel. Japan’s 10-year yield hit a 27-year high. Slovenia has QR codes at the pump. South Korea is barring government vehicles one day per week. And behind all of it, 400 ships wait outside a 5-nautical-mile channel for a clearance code from the IRGC Navy, payable in a currency that is not the dollar. Twenty percent of the world’s oil supply. Controlled by a VHF radio call and a yuan transfer. The strait did not close. It changed ownership. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
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Ambu Asokan Vamadevan
Ambu Asokan Vamadevan @AmbuAsokanV ·
The #Chinese government should remain composed amid the rising tensions and distractions in neighboring regions. In the emerging #multipolar world, no nation should be demeaned or harmed by external forces without legitimate justification. This is not an era for a country like #China, which has already made remarkable strides in development. Any misstep driven by overreaction or miscalculation could set the nation back by a decade, as would be the case for any country. #EpicFury #IranWar‌ #Iran #middleeastunrest #XiJinping
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BharatAgeMindset 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
BharatAgeMindset 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳 @BharatMindset ·
One more reminder about the whole "#Multipolar" #GlobalSouth #BRICS shit: Anyone bright enough to realize..... NO ONE FROM #GLOBALSOUTH (especially #India!) offered to help Iran? As in not a single condemnation or medical aid? Only Muslims/Russia/China did ANYTHING 2 help!
Arnaud Bertrand Arnaud Bertrand @RnaudBertrand ·
I don't think people realize just how extraordinary what we're witnessing with Iran is. I was arguing with a dear journalist friend of mine yesterday who was telling me that Iran was winning, yes, but only on the strategic level, not tactically. The type of thing a skinny kid ers in highschool tells himself to make himself feel better: "These people will BEG to work for me in ten years. Everyone knows jocks peak in highschool. They'll literally beg." 😏 I think that's precisely wrong, and that's what makes the Iran war different. As of now, Iran is in fact holding its own tactically too. Think about other U.S. wars of aggression these past few decades. Take Vietnam, Afghanistan, Libya, Iraq, Serbia, etc. (the list is unfortunately very long). The pattern was roughly always the same with an immense power differential between aggressor and victim. These wars were, by and large, imperial: the empire attempting to crush a much weaker people whose only realistic recourse was guerrilla resistance. And that is when they actually had the will to resist: some - like Libya - barely even bothered, just resigning themselves to their fate (despite being, at the time, the richest country in Africa). As spectators of these wars, if you had any moral sense, the dominant emotion was a kind of helpless disgust: you were watching a giant stomp through someone else's house. Sure, the U.S. actually lost many - if not most - of these wars, famously replacing the Taliban with the Taliban or being expelled with their tail between their legs from Vietnam, but the power differential was no less real for it. It's just that power doesn't always guarantee victory: sometimes the giant can't kill everyone, and eventually tires of trying. But the “victories” won this way were always pyrrhic at best: the people endured, yes, but what they were left with was a country in ashes that takes decades to rebuild. Meanwhile, in the grand scheme of things, the giant walked away with little more than a bruised ego. Iran is - remarkably - proving to be an entirely different beast: when others were merely surviving a giant, Iran appears to be able to compete with one. What just happened over the past 48 hours is the best illustration of this. You had the President of the United States issue a formal ultimatum: reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours or we "obliterate" your power grid. Iran's response was essentially: we dare you, if you do this we'll make all your Gulf allies uninhabitable within a week. And, as we saw, Trump backed down: pretexting non-existent "VERY GOOD AND PRODUCTIVE CONVERSATIONS" with Iran, he said his ultimatum no-longer applied (or, rather, became 5 days). Adding he now envisaged the Strait of Hormuz being “jointly controlled by me and the Ayatollah.” To the amusement of Iran’s diplomacy x.com/IraninSA/statu…S). That, folks, is a textbook tactical victory. It is, remarkably, Iran demonstrating in this instance that it had escalation dominance over the United States of America. That is, the ability to credibly threaten consequences so severe that the US - for perhaps the first time since the Cold War - found it preferable to stand down. That's no skinny kid being locked in a locker dreaming of revenge fantasies. That's the kid grabbing the bully's wrist mid-shove and watching his face change. And it's not the only tactical victory in this war so far. Take the episode over the Israeli attack on Iran's South Pars gas facility. Iran had warned that if that happened U.S. allies in the region - including Israel - would face a symmetrical response. And they delivered: famously devastating Qatar's Ras Laffan facility - which produced roughly 20% of global LNG supply - and leading, according to Qatar themselves, to a $20 billion loss of annual revenue for the next 5 years oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-…f). Not only that but they also managed to hit Israel's Haifa refinery aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/19…Z), one of the country's most strategic and protected sites. The result was Trump distancing himself from the South Pars attack, saying that Israel had "violently lashed out" unilaterally and that "NO MORE ATTACKS WILL BE MADE BY ISRAEL pertaining to this extremely important and valuable South Pars Field." Israel then said it wouldn't strike Iran energy sites anymore bloomberg.com/news/articles/…S). From where I stand, that's another tactical victory. It is, at least, Iran demonstrating that is can fight back **symmetrically** against the U.S. and its allies. Not through asymmetric resistance with IEDs hidden in the roadside or traps hidden in the jungle, but eye for eye, and against some of the most heavily protected sites on the U.S.'s side. That's qualitatively different from any other adversaries the U.S. has directly fought in recent wars. There's plenty more, such as the pretty relevant fact that Iran has gained control of the single most strategic energy chokepoint on earth and the U.S. is finding it impossible to break that control. To the point where Trump has been reduced to publicly begging China - of all countries - for help, which given Trump's ego mustn't have been easy to do. Only to be told no. By China. And by everyone else he asked. This is the topic of my latest article: how this is, in fact, the first genuine "multipolar war." First, in the narrow sense: because Iran is revealing itself to be a genuine pole of power - not a superpower, but an actor that cannot be submitted, which is all multipolarity is. And second, because the war itself is accelerating multipolarity everywhere else: the U.S. has never been more isolated, never looked weaker and its security guarantees have never been more hollow. In my article I lay out the full scoreboard - military, economic, political - and explain why this war has already changed the world, regardless of how it ends. Enjoy the read here:open.substack.com/pub/arnaudbert…b
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Yeghia Tashjian /يغيا/ Եղիա Թաշճեան 🇱🇧🇦🇲
Yeghia Tashjian /يغيا/ Եղիա Թաշճեան 🇱🇧🇦🇲 @yeghig ·
The #UnitedStates now faces an impending world system from which it once sought to isolate itself: a #multipolar order it cannot dominate. Thomas Graham assesses US engagement in a multipolar world: go.iiss.org/402G4kt @IISS_org
Survival: Global Politics and Strategy Feb–Mar 2026

Rafal Rohozinski and Chris Spirito question whether artificial intelligence can learn to defend against its own weaponisation, Steven Simon casts doubt on the realisation of phase two of Donald...

From iiss.org
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