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The Unspoken Drive

       
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The Scale of Faith: From Economic Market to Political Power

Outside, the pilgrims continued walking in endless white spirals beneath the desert night.… By the time the first call to prayer echoed across the valley of Mina, more than 1.6 million pilgrims had already converged upon western Saudi Arabia. From the air, the pilgrimage resembled a living circulatory system. White streams of human bodies moved through geometric corridors beneath floodlights and drone surveillance. Trains arrived every few minutes. Cooling stations exhaled artificial mist into the desert heat. Security helicopters circled silently above the Grand Mosque while AI-assisted monitoring systems tracked crowd density in real time. In 2025 alone, over 420,000 workers and security personnel had been mobilized to manage the Hajj season. Colonel Faisal al-Harbi stood inside the command center near Mina and watched the screens without blinking. He had spent twenty-seven years in the Saudi security services. He knew that...

A Fragile Truce: Did the US Blink in the Tariff War?

“And China discovered that surviving pressure is itself a form of power.”… The rain had stopped over Beijing by the time Air Force One lifted into the gray morning sky. Inside Zhongnanhai, the Chinese leadership compound west of the Forbidden City, the mood was neither celebratory nor anxious. It was something older and more familiar: patient. American television networks framed President Donald Trump’s visit to China as a victory tour. The White House emphasized the sale of aircraft, renewed agricultural purchases, and promises that Chinese buyers would once again absorb millions of tons of American soybeans. Chinese state media, meanwhile, spoke of “strategic stability” and “mutual respect.” Yet the most important outcome was almost invisible. The tariffs did not rise. Again. For the third time in less than two years, Washington and Beijing had stepped back from a trade escalation that economists feared could fracture the glob...

Taiwanese Regulators Caught in the US-China Geopolitical Tug-of-War

and too valuable to leave fully independent.… The elevator to the eighth floor of the headquarters of the Taiwan Fair Trade Commission required two separate biometric scans after midnight. Lin Yu-chen pressed her thumb against the glass sensor and waited for the green light. Outside the building, rain drifted through central Taipei in thin silver lines. Electric scooters hissed through the wet streets below, weaving between convenience stores glowing with advertisements for AI chips, cloud infrastructure, and overseas engineering programs. The city had changed faster in the last five years than in the previous twenty. Everyone in Taiwan could feel it. Semiconductors were no longer merely an industry. They had become geopolitics itself. Inside the TFTC’s Strategic Market Analysis Division, entire teams now existed solely to monitor the relationships between Taiwanese firms and American hyperscalers, Japanese lithography supplier...