🇬🇧 BLOG

New on the Blog This Week

 

They came for jobs. But brought a storm.
Moscow witnessed another violent brawl over the weekend — a group of young men clashed in broad daylight using shovels and road signs like weapons. Police detained several, two may lose their citizenship. Videos went viral. Outrage exploded. But beyond the headlines, a deeper question emerged: Why are we...

While thousands of trucks rot at the Kazakhstan–Russia border, Moscow silently signs something far more interesting. A new railway. Through Mongolia. Into China. And Vietnam. Officially — it's about tourism and trade. Unofficially — it's a bypass. A message. A geopolitical side-eye.

While Donald Trump embarked on his latest "peace tour" across Asia, the world gave him not one, but two diplomatic slaps.
First — North Korea. Then — India. And both made it crystal clear: Russia, not the US, is their chosen partner.

When Washington suddenly rediscovers Central Asia, Moscow doesn't panic — it smirks. Because this isn't new. It's the same playbook, just on a new stage. What failed under the Ukrainian flag may succeed under the cover of "sustainable development" and "strategic partnership."