Category "Major Military Operations"

The Silent AI War: Why Governments Are Racing for Artificial Intelligence — and Why Scientists Are Worried

For most people, artificial intelligence still feels like a convenient tool. It writes emails, answers questions, helps students study, and assists businesses with everyday work. But behind the scenes, something much bigger is unfolding. A quiet global race is underway. Governments are no longer looking at AI simply as technology....

AI’s Red Lines: Anthropic’s Stand Against the Pentagon and OpenAI’s Shadowy Victory

In the high-stakes arena of artificial intelligence, where code meets conscience, a seismic rift has opened between innovation and national security. Last July, Anthropic signed a landmark $200 million deal with the Pentagon, embedding its Claude AI into classified networks—complete with ironclad “red lines” barring mass surveillance and autonomous weapons....

When Silence Becomes Complicity: A Lesson from the Classroom to Global Politics

A professor once walked into a classroom and suddenly announced a surprise test. The students had no prior information. The professor, however, knew it was only a small exercise meant to observe their reactions. This simple situation reveals a powerful economic concept: Adverse Selection caused by Information Asymmetry. The professor...

The Quiet War Behind the Missiles: Iran, Russia, China and the Battle Against the Dollar

When wars erupt, the world watches missiles, drones, and airstrikes. But history often hides the real battlefield behind the smoke. In the case of Iran, Russia, and China, the most important war may not be fought in the skies—it may be fought in the global financial system. For nearly eight...

Friendship, Power, and Silence: Is India Losing Its Strategic Voice?

In international politics, friendship between nations is often celebrated. Leaders shake hands, hug on global stages, and call each other “great friends.” But history repeatedly shows that geopolitics is not about friendship. It is about interests, power, and timing. Since Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power in 2014, India’s...

Success, Failure, and the War Within: What the Bhagavad-Gita Can Teach Us in a World on Fire

Human beings suffer not only because of what happens to them, but because of how they define what happens to them. If people have the wrong definition of success, they will automatically have the wrong definition of failure. And that simple misunderstanding quietly shapes most of the stress, jealousy, and...

The Gates of Hell Are Open: What Iran’s Last Stand Means for the World

Five days ago, the world changed. On 28 February 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran — codenamed Operation Epic Fury by Washington and Operation Roaring Lion by Tel Aviv. The opening salvo didn’t just hit military installations. It killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei himself,...

AI, War, and Power: A Weekend That Shook Washington

The bombshell that rocked the world this weekend isn’t just another tech spat—it’s a full-blown crisis exposing the raw nerves where artificial intelligence meets modern warfare, presidential power, and corporate conscience. Confirmed details show the U.S. military deployed Anthropic’s Claude AI model during the devastating strikes on Iran, mere hours...

Strait of Hormuz: The World’s Most Dangerous Energy Chokepoint

The world economy runs on a fragile thread called confidence, and oil is one of the pillars holding that thread together. When oil routes are threatened, markets panic, governments react, and ordinary people feel it in their daily lives. That is exactly what is unfolding around the Strait of Hormuz...