Sunny Peter

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Scramble for Critical Minerals: How Lithium, Cobalt, and Rare Earths Are Fueling New Conflicts

Rare earth elements, despite their name, are relatively abundant in Earth's crust but extremely difficult to extract and process without severe environmental consequences. China's dominance in this sector stems not from geological advantage but from willingness to accept environmental and health costs that Western nations have deemed unacceptable. The processing of rare earths generates toxic waste streams and radioactive byproducts that require careful management over decades.
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When Algorithms Go to War: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of International Conflict

The next major international crisis may not begin with troops massing at borders or warships crossing into disputed waters. It might start with an...

Putin Cancels Russia-Arab Summit as Middle East Influence Wanes

The Kremlin's sudden cancellation of what was meant to be a showcase of Russian influence in the Arab world has laid bare an uncomfortable...

They Predicted AI Would Rationalize Diplomacy. It Made Everything Worse

In September 2025, when the United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted a landmark resolution establishing the first truly global AI governance mechanisms—an Independent International...

Kabul Under Pressure: India’s Diplomatic Gambit and Pakistan’s Airstrikes Reveal Shifting Power Dynamics

October 10, 2025, delivered two starkly contradictory messages to Afghanistan's Taliban government within hours of each other. In New Delhi, Indian External Affairs Minister...

Civil Society’s Frontline: How Aid Flotillas Are Reshaping Conflict Diplomacy

When Israeli naval forces intercepted the Global Sumud Flotilla in early October 2025, detaining over 500 activists from more than 40 countries who were...

Between Technocracy and Sovereignty: Can International Administration Work in Gaza?

When Cambodia's warring factions signed the Paris Peace Accords in 1991, the United Nations embarked on an unprecedented experiment. The UN Transitional Authority in...