IUVM Press

IUVM Press

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While NATO Talks, Russia Takes Territory: The Battlefield Decides What Diplomacy Cannot

After more than 46 months of war, it has become evident that NATO members remain trapped in the illusion of delivering a decisive defeat to Russia, while simultaneously scrambling to preserve Ukraine’s viability. In contrast, Moscow is imposing new realities on the battlefield—realities that grow stronger as NATO sinks deeper into political paralysis.

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Europe Is No Longer Pretending: The Continent Is Preparing for War

Europe is actively preparing itself for a major confrontation with Russia —as early as 2026, or at the latest by 2027.

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Mach 10 in the Grey Zone: Moscow’s Hypersonic Message to a Divided West

At its core, Russia’s objective is to demonstrate the seriousness of its declared red lines. Moscow is escalating tensions not to trigger full-scale war, but to control escalation and enter future peace negotiations from a position of maximum leverage.

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The Bomb That Shook the West: China’s Nuclear Rise and America’s Strategic Anxiety

Beijing is moving beyond its long-standing doctrine of minimal nuclear deterrence and toward establishing a reliable and operational nuclear strike capability. Historically, China’s nuclear doctrine emphasized second-strike capability. However, changes in Beijing’s security thinking over recent years have reshaped this approach. China is now expanding its first-strike potential, effectively placing itself alongside the United States and Russia as a full-spectrum nuclear power.

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Arms, Orbits, and the New Limits of Western Power

Russia’s state armament program emphasizes increasing the share of modern, intelligent, and network-centric weapons throughout the 2030s. Its primary objective is the modernization of Russia’s military arsenal and the preservation of a relative strategic edge over NATO

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Breaking the Caspian Taboo: Targeting Russian Civilian Ships in a New Shadow War

To date, the security of the Caspian Sea has been the most important shared interest among these five states. Any incident of this nature therefore represents a serious erosion of regional security and signals the spillover of tensions from the Ukraine conflict and the Black Sea into the Caspian basin. Such developments threaten commercial cooperation, logistical corridors, and the broader strategic interests of Caspian littoral states.

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The Quiet Coup: How Extremists Are Rewriting Europe’s Future

The rise of far-right movements in Europe has accelerated dramatically over the past decade...

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Inside the Miami–Moscow Backchannel: Is Ukraine Being Pressured Into a Painful Peace?

subsequent Over the past month, following the release of Trump’s 28-point peace outline for Ukraine and the talks over how to implement it...

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Europe’s Military Mirage: Why a Strong Continent Still Fears Russia

For more than half a century, Europe enjoyed uninterrupted peace, pouring its energy into development and prosperity. After two devastating world wars...

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When ‘Peace’ Becomes Leverage: The Real Agenda behind Trump’s Ukraine Plan

Recent developments in Ukraine have prompted Donald Trump, once again, to push a multi-layered “peace plan” designed first and foremost around America...

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America Reopens the Nuclear Age It Once Tried to Bury

Just hours before Donald Trump’s scheduled meeting with Xi Jinping in South Korea on October 29, 2025, the former U.S. president took to Truth Social...

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NATO’s Quiet Coup in the Caucasus: Azerbaijan Becomes the Frontline

In 1994, after Baku and NATO signed their initial agreements, military, educational, and diplomatic cooperation between the two sides began—setting th...

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