Vol. I · No. 37Founded for one reader, MMXXVI10 Languages · Translated

Dragoman

the world, interpreted
10 July 2026Focus · MENA · Latin America11 Items · 4 Translated · Shelf › · Archive ›
— The Dragoman's Note —

The week’s through-line is the institution that pretends to be temporary after it has already become permanent. Miami sells climate danger back into the property machine; Aden’s crows live off war-damaged waste systems; refugee camps acquire schools, markets, policing and memory; coca in Colombia and criminal rule in Ecuador work because they supply order where the state arrives as raid or spreadsheet. The education theme sharpens the point: PNG’s procurement quotas do not train anyone unless contracts bind firms to pipelines, Taliban girls’ schooling becomes an aid gate, and professional bodies in Turkey and Papua New Guinea are battlegrounds over who gets skills, wages and public authority. Across MENA and Latin America, the fight is less over policy slogans than over the machinery that turns risk, hunger, names, compute, ports or classrooms into power.

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Lines of dispatch · Edition XXXVII

Six voices, gathered to the desk this week — each filed in its own tongue, from far afield.

MiamiAdenFranceColombiaAustraliaAnkaraTHE DESK · HAMAR
En Phenomenal World · Miami · English

Miami Syndrome

If Miami is the template, climate adaptation can become a way to extend the property cycle rather than protect the people left inside it.

A black-and-white wood engraving of a speculative city machine where dredging, insurance, tides, and escape routes are linked together.
The Boom Needs Water

Miami’s growth model was built on anticipation: dredged land, state-backed speculation, insurance markets, and the promise that the next boom will arrive before the last risk is priced in. Climate danger is not an external shock to the city’s economy; it is now one more input into the same machinery of real estate, public subsidy, and private exit.

In the meantime, Miami continues to build—literally and figuratively—on anticipation itself. Miami sits at the forefront and increasingly at the center of global financial and political power, presenting itself as a hemispheric capital and a gateway to and from a Latin America that the Trump administration is attempting to place under inc…

Why it leads: Miami’s Cuba fixation has become policy weather again: Trump’s pressure on Havana and Caracas is feeding a city built on the promise that the next rupture across the straits will make fortunes and settle old scores.

English · 4d ago · 21 min · Deep

The Brief

The Brief tracks systems that survive by absorbing the crisis meant to expose them: real estate, ports, camps, coca economies, labor schemes, medical associations and procurement rules.
ع Assafir Al-Arabi · Bilingual

Aden's Crows

غربان مدينة عدن: البُعد الثقافي والكارثة البيئية
Aden’s crow estimates195519842007

Aden’s Indian house crows arrived through the circuits of British colonial port life and then became part of the city’s ecological and cultural landscape. Their spread now marks a failed urban metabolism: waste, war-damaged services, public-health risk, and a bird that residents read through memory, omen, nuisance, and survival.

Since their first entry into Aden, the crows' reproduction accelerated, and they spread everywhere through the city's neighborhoods and coasts, until their number in 1955 reached around 100,000 crows, and in 1984 nearly 250,000.
Bilingual · 8d ago · 7 min · Deep
Es Le Grand Continent (ES) · Spanish

Operación Prometeo: Francia puede ganar la carrera por la IA. ¿Cuál sería el precio?

Prometheus compute path (GW)202720282029

France can still build an AI strategy around energy, state capacity, scientific institutions, and sovereign infrastructure, but only by treating AI as industrial policy rather than startup theater. The price is political: choices about procurement, compute, labor, military use, and dependence on American platforms cannot be hidden behind innovation rhetoric.

- Esto representaría entre el 4,5 % y el 8 % del PIB francés, de los cuales el 1,5 % correspondería a inversión pública anual, lo que constituiría, por tanto, un esfuerzo de una magnitud histórica: sería una decisión presupuestaria fundamental durante el mandato del futuro presidente de la República.
Spanish · yesterday · 50 min · Deep
En Noema · English

What Comes After The Refugee Camp

Worldwide displacement (mn people)200020242025

The refugee camp is no longer a temporary exception; in many places it has become a long-term urban form with schools, markets, policing, property claims, and generational memory. The real question is not return versus aid, but which institutions can give displaced people durable political and economic life without pretending the emergency is short.

An old woman had spent the day hiking through the floods in the opposite direction and let me know she didn’t think much of my complaints. For the last year, she told me, she had been living on a raft, eating only the fish she caught in the floodwaters.
English · 17d ago · 25 min · Deep
En Devpolicy Blog · English

Can a Name Drive Peace?

In parts of Papua New Guinea, names carry social debts: they can preserve memories of injury, revenge, alliance, or reconciliation across generations. Peacebuilding that ignores naming misses one of the ordinary technologies through which families store conflict and make repair legible.

So, whether a child grows up carrying a debt of revenge or a tie of obligation is being settled in one of the most ordinary places there is, in what we decide to call them.
English · 18d ago · 5 min · Deep
En InSight Crime · Translated from EN/ES

What the Chone Killers Designation Means for Ecuador’s Criminal Underworld

The InSight Take: Inside Ecuador’s Chone Killers, the Latest Addition to US Terrorism List

The Chone Killers are not a foreign army in disguise but a local criminal formation shaped by prisons, ports, cocaine routes, and Ecuador’s fractured security state. A US terrorism label changes sanctions and policing incentives, but it does not explain how the group governs territory or why recruitment works.

Deborah: [00:00:34] But here at InSight Crime, we feel obliged to set the record straight, and to ask whether the Chone Killers truly fit the foreign terrorist designation. On the ground in Ecuador, they are a gang that has splintered into rival factions shooting at one another over territory.
Translated from EN/ES · 4d ago · 14 min · Deep
En InSight Crime · Translated from EN/ES

Can a New President’s Hard-Line Approach Stop the Spread of Coca in Colombia?

Can A New President’s Hard-Line Approach Stop the Spread of Coca in Colombia?
Colombia’s coca crop is concentrated in four departments, with nearly half in just 10 municipalities.
AreaCoca hectaresNote
Nariño74,547Main enclave; Tumaco 31,300
Norte de Santander48,739Now second; mainly Tibú
Putumayo44,473Major enclave
Cauca36,876Major enclave

Colombia’s coca acreage keeps expanding, but the crop is not spread evenly: cultivation is concentrated in territories where armed governance, weak market access, and rural poverty make coca the most reliable institution. A hard-line eradication policy collides with the fact that coca is a livelihood system before it is a crop statistic.

The fact that most coca cultivation is concentrated in just 10 municipalities gives President-elect Abelardo De la Espriella, who takes office in August, clear targets for the aerial eradication campaign that was one of his main campaign pledges.
Translated from EN/ES · 2d ago · 6 min · Deep
En Devpolicy Blog · English

Reading PALM Numbers with Care — Pay, Deductions and Hours Edition

The scandalous headline version of Australia’s PALM labor scheme misses the distribution: some workers do end up with little after deductions, but the data also show where hours, employer practices, accommodation costs, and reporting categories distort the picture. Reform depends on separating genuine exploitation from misleading averages.

Thus, “pay left after deductions” is a bit of an awkward metric. Much of what is deducted buys important real things and most workers would rather not arrange these things themselves.
English · 15d ago · 6 min · Deep
Tr Birikim · Translated from Turkish

The Divide in the Turkish Medical Association Is Political, Not Technical

TTB'deki Tartışma Liste Değil Siyaset Tartışmasıdır

The fight inside the Turkish Medical Association is not just an electoral-list dispute but a struggle over what professional politics is for under authoritarian pressure. The institution sits between workplace defense, public health, opposition politics, and the risk of becoming a symbolic arena detached from doctors’ material conditions.

The real divide is this: to stand side by side with Kurdish politics, or to put distance between oneself and it?
Translated from Turkish · 14d ago · 3 min · Deep
En Devpolicy Blog · English

Changes Needed to Procurement to Promote Skills Formation in PNG

Multilateral lenders are trying to make infrastructure contracts create more local work and training.
LenderNew requirementConcern
World Bank30% of labour cost localMay be too low for skilled roles
ADBAt least half of person-days localBlunter headcount-style test
ADB Build4Skills0.5% of selected civil works budgetsDirect traineeships via projects

Local labor quotas in infrastructure contracts sound like development policy, but a 30% labor-cost threshold may not create durable skills if firms can satisfy it with low-training work. PNG needs procurement rules that bind contractors to training pipelines, not just headcounts on project spreadsheets.

The new contract arrangements need to deliver an outcome that addresses directly the local skills shortage. Procurement requirements should include setting up and supporting skills training linked to established training providers. The ADB has also recently developed an alternative, more direct way of providing the skills needed.
English · 8d ago · 5 min · Deep
En Devpolicy Blog · English

Half a Day’s Pay for a Healthy Household Diet in PNG

Healthy diet cost as share of daily wagePort MoresbyKokopoLaeHighlands

In Port Moresby, one day of nutritious food for a household costs almost half a low-skilled worker’s daily wage. The chronic-disease story is therefore also a wage, market, transport, and urban-pricing story: people are not choosing bad diets in a vacuum.

Low-skill urban wage workers in PNG have an alarmingly high average NCD-risk score (2.9), similar to high-income countries (3.0) that consume a greater share of ultra-processed foods (Figure 3).
English · 14d ago · 5 min · Deep

Many Views

Many Views makes the U.S.-Iran war look less like a strike sequence than a regional trap in which Washington, Tehran and Hizballah each force the others to spend attention they cannot spare.
Many tongues on one question

America’s Iran war and the regional trap

A French strategic reading sees Washington burning scarce military bandwidth in the Middle East; an Arab one sees a war meant to cut Iran down instead cementing its regional dominance. The American security vantage shifts the lens to Lebanon, where Hizballah’s risk strategy forced itself into the U.S.-Iran settlement.

Fr · French strategic

By Continuing Its Strikes on Iran, Is the United States Marking a New Pivot Toward the Middle East?

More war with Iran would put a material ceiling on U.S. action elsewhere, including the Indo-Pacific. Le Grand Continent · French

En · U.S. security

Going Over the Brink: How Hizballah’s Risk Strategy Made Lebanon Impossible to Ignore

The U.S.-Iran framework could not stay bilateral: Hizballah’s brinkmanship made Lebanon part of the deal’s military terms. War on the Rocks · English

Deep Research

Deep Research follows power after the headline breaks: drones become logistics, gold becomes war finance, Taliban rule becomes bureaucracy, and ideas become durable only once they acquire files, schools and gatekeepers.
One fault line, many vantages

The War as Four Machines: Drones, Wages, Fatigue, and Security Architecture

A loose graphite sketch showing drones, recruitment money, public exhaustion, and security planning as connected machines on one workbench.
Four Engines Keep Turning

Read together, the war stops looking like a single front. Ukrainian interdiction is turning occupied territory into a logistics problem; Russian recruitment is converting cash and death benefits into manpower; Ukrainian society is tired without yet accepting surrender; Chinese policy analysts are already designing a settlement around “relative security,” not victory.

Ру · Russian exile/data-analytic view of the front, built from Ukrainian and OSINT military data.

Ground–Air–Ground: Ukraine’s Offensive Against Occupied-Territory Logistics Enters a New Stage

Земля — воздух — земля: украинское наступление на логистику оккупированных территорий вступает в новый этап

Russian assaults are burning men and vehicles without buying much ground. The operational center has shifted into the low sky: Ukrainian drones and mid-range strikes are attacking bridges, trucks, fuel and repair nodes so Crimea and the occupied south become brittle before they become liberatable. Re: Russia · Russian

Fr · French-European presentation of Ukrainian public opinion data from KIIS.

What Ukrainians Really Think: An Exclusive Survey

Ukrainian fatigue has not yet become strategic capitulation: the KIIS polling behind this piece catches exhaustion, continued NATO preference, and a sharp distinction between Americans and Trump. The method caveats are part of the substance: occupied territories, refugees, phone access and wartime fear all shape what can be heard. Le Grand Continent · French

中 · Shanghai/Chinese policy-institute view of the endgame and Europe-Russia security architecture.

Common Security in View: A New Paradigm for the Political Settlement of the Ukraine Crisis

着眼共同安全:政治解决乌克兰危机的新范式

Beijing’s settlement grammar starts from a clash between freezing the war and building durable peace. Ceasefire monitoring, security guarantees, Ukraine’s sovereignty, Russia’s security anxieties and NATO’s edge all become design variables inside a “common security” framework rather than points for moral adjudication. Shanghai Institutes for International Studies · Chinese

One fault line, many vantages

After the Axis: Who Writes the Middle East’s Next Security Order?

Read together, these four make the same move from different places: Iran’s network no longer looks like an unstoppable “axis,” but its weakening does not produce order. The vacuum is being contested by Turkey’s border-state realism, Gulf-led middle-power coordination, Chinese revision of the “proxy” label, and a Russian reading of Abraham Accords security as U.S.-Israeli hierarchy. ([siis.org.cn](https://www.siis.org.cn/lw/17644.jhtml))

中 · Chinese Middle East scholarship, reading Iran through state-security logic rather than the Western proxy template

The Setback of Iran’s Resistance Strategy and Its Impact on the Middle Eastern Regional Order

伊朗抵抗战略受挫及其对中东地区秩序的影响

Iran’s “resistance” system is treated as forward defense, not simple revolutionary export: regime security, anti-U.S./anti-Israel ideology, non-state partners and missile deterrence formed one structure. The damage to Hamas, Hezbollah, Syria logistics and Iranian deterrence weakens a balancing force, but also loosens regional norms and pushes Palestine and Israeli military dominance back to the top of the agenda. ([siis.org.cn](https://www.siis.org.cn/lw/17644.jhtml)) 上海国际问题研究院 · Chinese

En · Gulf/Saudi regional-order design, with Pakistan brought in as the South Asian security weight

STEP (Saudi Arabia–Turkey–Egypt–Pakistan): A New Framework for Regional Stability in the Middle East

The proposed Saudi-Turkey-Egypt-Pakistan format is not a “Sunni NATO” but a consultation machine for states with money, military capacity, geography, religious legitimacy and nuclear deterrence. Its central problem is Iran: if Tehran sees STEP as containment, it will fight it; if the four keep channels open, it can become a crisis-management platform. ([grc.net](https://www.grc.net/single-commentary/404)) Gulf Research Center · English

Ру · Russian strategic-system view; useful for how Moscow-adjacent analysis names the emerging order

Pax Hebraica: The Formation of Israeli-American Dominance in the Middle East

Pax Hebraica: становление израильско-американского господства на Ближнем Востоке

Abraham Accords security becomes the organizing mechanism, not a peace afterthought: Arab states are pressured to bind their stability to a U.S.-Israeli center while Iran’s weakened axis loses blocking power. The real structural obstacle, in this Russian reading, is no longer Tehran but Turkey, whose own regional project can collide with Washington despite NATO membership. ([russiancouncil.ru](https://russiancouncil.ru/analytics-and-comments/analytics/pax-hebraica-stanovlenie-izrailsko-amerikanskogo-gospodstva-na-blizhnem-vostoke/)) Российский совет по международным делам · Russian

Many tongues on one storm

Sudan’s War Is a Supply Chain, Not a Front Line

Sudan is no longer readable as a duel between Burhan and Hemedti. The sharper map is a franchised war economy: Gulf money, Libyan rear bases, Colombian tactical labor, gold, land, ports and border corridors turn every ceasefire into a negotiation with the supply chain, not just the generals.

En · Sudan-focused OSINT/reporting collective, reading the war through routes, bases and verified movement rather than communiqués.

How the UAE Arms Sudan's RSF Through the Libyan Desert

Kufra, Benghazi, Sabha and the Libyan border triangle function as the RSF’s protected rear area: aircraft, fuel, vehicles, trainers and fighters move through Haftar-controlled territory before entering Darfur. The useful correction is geographic: RSF endurance depends less on desert mystique than on a cross-border logistics system that Sudan’s army cannot easily bomb. Sudan War Monitor · English

En · Nordic Africa Institute policy analysis, useful for converting battlefield facts into political endgames.

Split, Talks or Takeover – Three Scenarios for the Sudan War

The likely future is not quick victory but institutional partition: rival administrations, militia economies and external sponsors harden into a de facto split. Negotiations become plausible only if outside patrons converge; a military takeover remains possible but would probably bring reprisals rather than restored state capacity. The Nordic Africa Institute · English

What they said would happen

The Taliban Did Not Moderate. They Institutionalized.

Afghanistan now is not the 1990s reenacted frame-for-frame and not the liberalizing Taliban some officials hoped to bargain with: it is a centralized Emirate that has fused courts, clerical authority, education, aid access and border trade into a coercive state, while mass poverty and returnee pressure keep ordinary families dependent on whatever channel still works. Scorecard: Joe Biden's July 8, 2021 claim that a Taliban overrun was "highly unlikely" and that there would be no Saigon-style embassy evacuation was plainly wrong; Kabul fell on August 15. Zabihullah Mujahid's August 17 promises of amnesty and women's work and education under Islamic law failed in practice: the UN later counted more than 200 former officials and security-force members killed, and girls and women have been pushed out of secondary school, university and most public employment. Lindsey Graham's "another 9/11" warning has not happened, though Zawahiri's 2022 presence in Kabul and ISKP/TTP violence keep the safe-haven question open; George W. Bush's warning of "unspeakable harm" to Afghan women was right. UNDP's September 2021 warning that up to 97% of Afghans could fall below the poverty line by mid-2022 was too exact as a number, but right as a direction: aid collapse, drought, deportations and disrupted trade have left hunger and dependency as governing facts. The pro-withdrawal claim that another small U.S. garrison could not build a self-sustaining Afghan republic looks grimly vindicated; the claim that withdrawal could be orderly was not. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Taliban_offensive?utm_source=openai))

En · Afghan religious-public-sphere analysis, from AAN contributors following clerical authority under the Emirate.

Preaching Without a Party: Independent Religious Figures Find Space Under the Islamic Emirate

The Emirate has suppressed Islamist parties and pulled mullahs into state structures, but urban online preachers have expanded into the gap with charity, self-help, family counselling and soft religious authority. The mechanism is subtle: when mosque sermons become state communication, people look for religious counsel that does not sound like a decree. Afghanistan Analysts Network · English

En · Interviews with Afghan defence lawyers in Kabul and Mazar-e Sharif, read as institutional anatomy of the new state.

Practising Law Under the Emirate: Afghan Defence Lawyers Fight for Space in a Transformed Justice System

The republic's corrupt but codified legal order has been replaced by courts run through Hanafi jurisprudence, mullah-judges and collapsed separation between courts, intelligence and decree enforcement. Defence lawyers still exist, but as tolerated petitioners rather than institutional safeguards; women lawyers are almost entirely pushed out. Afghanistan Analysts Network · English

En · Afghan water-and-agriculture expertise using crop, trade, IPC and route data.

Can Afghanistan Feed Itself? Agriculture, Trade and Food Security Under Pressure

The food crisis is not just a donor shortfall: Afghanistan has a structural wheat gap, fragile rainfed belts, too little irrigated land for a population above 40 million, and trade routes now rerouted from Pakistan toward Central Asia. The poppy ban may push land into wheat, but that swaps cash income for a thirsty low-margin crop. Afghanistan Analysts Network · English

En · Guardian/Zan Times investigation across eight Afghan provinces, with Afghan women reporters close to households and schools.

‘Send Your Daughters or You Get No Aid’: The Taliban Are Making Religious Schools Girls’ Only Option

The girls' education ban has not left a vacuum; it has created a recruitment channel for madrasas. Food aid, mullah salaries and public jobs turn religious schooling into both a survival strategy and a credential system, while math, science and university degrees lose social value. The Guardian / Zan Times · English

After the cameras left

Tigray After Pretoria: A Peace Without a Governing Order

Pretoria stopped the front line, not the political economy of war. Tigray now has disputed authority, remobilizing armed structures, blocked returns to western and southern territories, a cash-starved civilian economy, and regional actors turning the same borderlands into leverage against Addis Ababa.

Am · Addis-based Amharic independent reporting, drawing on current and former TDF-linked sources.

The TDF’s Military Structure and the New Reshuffle of Commanders

የትግራይ ተዋጊ ሀይሎች (TDF) ወታደራዊ አወቃቀር እና አዲሱ የጦር መኮንኖች ሽግሽግ

The post-war TDF is not simply demobilized ex-fighters waiting for politics to resume. Wazema maps a reorganized command system, front by front, including western and southern deployments and the Sudan-linked “Army 70”; the political point is that the TPLF has rebuilt coercive capacity precisely while the interim civilian order is contested. Wazema · AM

En · Tigrayan constitutional and peace-process critique, from Ethiopia Insight’s contributor network.

Pretoria’s Unfinished Peace Is Fueling Tigray’s New Crisis

The Tigrayan counter-reading: the crisis did not begin with TPLF overreach, but with three years of deferred clauses: non-federal forces still in disputed areas, displaced people still unable to return, fuel and budget pressure, and no settled route back into Ethiopia’s federal order. Western Tigray is the test: without a dated return-and-administration mechanism, “de-escalation” freezes the next war in place. Ethiopia Insight · English

A standing interest, freshly read

How Ideas Acquire Machinery

These selections make ideas less like texts than conversion devices: anthologies, curricula, certificates, ministries, and professional networks turn concepts into power. The common thread is institutional biography: an idea survives when it learns to pass through files, classrooms, appointments, and gatekeepers.

中 · Chinese-language Qing intellectual history, via The Paper’s 私家历史 channel; a Taiwan historian on the pre-Opium War statecraft turn.

Huang Kewu: Wei Yuan and the Imperial Anthology of Statecraft Writings

黄克武:魏源与《皇朝经世文编》

Wei Yuan’s 1826 anthology was not a neutral compilation. By cutting, reclassifying, and subordinating Qing prose to 学术, 治体, and 六政, it turned scattered literati writing into a program for practical statecraft before the Opium War: textual learning redirected toward administrative problem-solving before “Westernization” became the obvious frame. / The Paper · Chinese

Fr · French Latin America political science, reading a Chilean apologetic biography against dictatorship and post-Pinochet continuity.

The Leader of the Chicago Boys

Sergio de Castro’s neoliberalism looks less like imported American theory than a cadre pipeline: Catholic University training, Chicago mentorship, Mont Pèlerin-linked isolation, El Ladrillo, then dictatorship ministries. “The Chile model” becomes an institutional sequence in which a marginal academic faction acquires coercive state power and converts markets into law. La Vie des idées · French

De · German sociology-history review; West/East German disciplinary memory seen through Gehlen, Adorno, and Harich.

The Anthropologist and the Dialecticians

Arnold Gehlen does not fit West German sociology’s self-image as an exile-liberal democratic science, yet his concepts traveled through the very networks that story excludes: Adorno’s Frankfurt, Harich’s Marxist East Berlin, student textbooks, and role theory. Postwar German sociology appears as a compromised contact zone, not a clean anti-fascist reboot. Soziopolis · German

En · US legal-historical scholarship made public-facing; Chinese exclusion seen from administrative evidence rather than doctrine alone.

Documenting Birthright Citizenship under Chinese Exclusion

Birthright citizenship became real only when a racialized bureaucracy agreed to recognize it. After Wong Kim Ark, Chinese Americans had a constitutional right on paper, but certificates, photographs, white witnesses, inspectors’ hunches, and file-room suspicion could still turn a citizen into an alien; the history of an idea runs through forms and ports. Public Books · English

Dragoman · Edition 37 · 10 July 2026the world, interpretedembeddings · limbic — interpretation · codex