11 July 2026Focus · MENA · Latin America11 Items · 4 Translated · Shelf › · Archive ›
— The Dragoman's Note —
Across the week, institutions keep losing their monopoly on order while private substitutes move in: wellness fills the space left by churches, parties and unions; French fire-tamers survive beside oncology clinics; gangs in Port-au-Prince and Tepito govern where the state cannot or will not. The same drift appears in harder form in Guayaquil’s cocaine ports, Kandahar’s revenue machine, Tigray’s uneasy peace and the Gulf’s newly priced security guarantees: authority is no longer a flag or a ministry, but control over chokepoints, rituals, paperwork, scanners, fuel and fear. Education, the rotating theme, enters less as campus life than as custody over discipline and knowledge, from Taliban rules for girls’ learning to Qur’anic interpretation in Europe and Egypt. Even heat, boxing and Chinese military studies turn on systems built for the wrong reality: cooler grids, amateur risk, Washington-centered scenarios. The question running underneath is not who has legitimacy, but who still has working capacity when formal trust has thinned out.
Urban collapse stops looking like accident once the city is read as an economic machine that produces abandonment alongside growth.
The City Is Rendered
Mike Davis’s dead cities are not ruins of failed modernity but working maps of capitalism’s waste line: military planning, real-estate speculation, ecology and disaster all meet in the urban landscape. The likely payload is Davis at his best, where apocalypse is not atmosphere but a method for seeing who gets made disposable.
Davis scrive in un momento storico in cui, per usare un’immagine zizekiana, in Occidente è ancora possibile tirare lo sciacquone ed eliminare i rifiuti dalla vista. Ma ciò che descrive come il suo futuro è il nostro presente: il momento in cui non esiste più un altrove dove scaricare gli scarti del sistema.
Why it leads: Mike Davis saw the metropolis as the place where capitalism’s waste, fear and abandonment would stop being exported out of sight; that future has arrived, and the dump is now the city itself.
Italian · yesterday · 10 min · Deep
The Brief
The Brief follows public institutions at the moment private habits, informal economies and tolerated parallel systems begin doing their work for them.
Heat waves are treated as a political-economic condition, not a weather story: grids, labor regimes, insurance, migration and state capacity all buckle differently under rising temperatures. The climate crisis lands through institutions built for a cooler world and budgets that still price heat as exception.
The implications of a warming climate can be difficult to fully comprehend. How can an apparently tiny change in the annual average global temperature be so determining?
Raymond Geuss answers Hillary Clinton by attacking the liberal habit of translating politics into moral causes and personal responsibility. The deeper target is a politics that prefers clean agency and blame to the muddy causal field of institutions, interests and historical inheritance.
The irony is that she is partly right – Israeli oppression of the Palestinians is a root cause of the current conflicts – but she invokes it for completely obfuscatory reasons. The attempt to cast Gaza as a causeless, isolated humanitarian ‘crisis’ is more obsolete than ever.
Wellness rituals in Latin America are filling spaces once occupied by churches, parties, unions and extended kin. Yoga, coaching, plant medicine and therapeutic language become private answers to public mistrust, precarious work and institutional exhaustion.
Con todo, esta expansión también invita a preguntas. El wellness es, además, de una búsqueda genuina, una industria global de varios billones de dólares. Cabe preguntarse si parte de la ansiedad que impulsa estas prácticas es producida por los mismos sistemas que luego ofrecen el retiro de meditación como respuesta.
A tennis-court chronicle of Brazil’s new right shows polarization as everyday social sorting, not just electoral behavior. In Santa Catarina, anti-PT identity becomes a local etiquette: suspicion, avoidance and moral labeling organize ordinary middle-class life.
I had suspected as much. My isolation was explained, as was my difficulty in making friends and finding tennis partners. The problem was purely political. No one wanted to fraternize or hit balls with “a dyed-in-the-wool PT supporter.”
A tolerated parallel healing system sits beside conventional medicine in France.
Setting
Practitioner
Role
Farmhouses
Farmers, healers
Burns, pain, fear
Clinics
Oncology services
Patient support
Institutions
Medical staff
Social permission
French fire-tamers sit beside modern medicine rather than outside it: farmers, healers and even oncology clinics maintain a quiet parallel system for burns, pain and fear. The interesting mechanism is social permission, where ritual survives because institutions tolerate what patients already use.
The article frames Chinese military analysis as a source problem, not just an intelligence problem.
Blind spot
Why it matters
Proposed fix
Doctrine
Texts are dwindling or outdated
Restore public OSINT translation
New technology
AI, autonomy and hypersonics outpace sources
Use partial sources carefully
Online controls
2025 rules chilled PLA information flows
Rebuild FBIS-like access
Chinese military studies often begins from Washington’s preferred scenario and then asks how Beijing would react. That method misses Chinese doctrine, bureaucratic incentives and strategic imagination on their own terms, producing analysis that is precise but badly centered.
The result is a community that is increasingly speculating or inferring Chinese military strategy from woefully outdated doctrinal texts, despite valiant efforts to stitch together incomplete pictures from a paucity of sources.
La Unión Tepito is rooted in a Mexico City neighborhood economy where extortion, retail drug markets, protection and local identity overlap. The group’s power is not just violence; it is the ability to plug criminal governance into Tepito’s informal commerce and urban density.
Alongside its takeover of drug-selling points in Mexico City, including in Tepito itself, La Unión Tepito began extorting local businesses. This was often done through the “gota a gota,” or “drop by drop,”
Haiti’s criminal landscape is shaped by the collapse of political mediation, chronic economic exclusion and armed groups that increasingly govern territory. Gangs are not an interruption of the state so much as one successor form where state authority, business protection and neighborhood survival have fused.
Gang territorial dominance enables near-total regulation of movement into and out of the capital and generates revenue through the extortion of commercial traffic. Such control requires sustained access to military-grade firepower through arms trafficking, a supply that rivals that of Haiti’s security forces.
Taiwan’s amateur boxing boom has outrun the safety regime around it: four serious injuries or deaths in eight years, no unified legal standards, uneven medical checks, inconsistent insurance and heavy dependence on organizer self-discipline. The ring is being sold as self-realization while risk is pushed onto novices.
Unlike competitions organized by single-sport associations, which are overseen by the Ministry of Sports, the private events now springing up everywhere have no unified, legally mandated safety standards. Organizers vary in their practices on pre- and post-fight medical checks, medical staffing, and athlete insurance.
Judge Hussein Madkour left Egypt’s State Lawsuits Authority without the usual presidential send-off after allegations of financial misconduct. The quiet exit matters because the body represents the state in court, making its internal discipline a window into how Egyptian official accountability is managed behind ceremony.
English · 5d ago · Skim
Deep Research
Deep Research tracks power through bottlenecks: ports, pipelines, Gulf guarantees, Taliban revenue, Tigrayan command and the custody of sacred or historical texts.
One fault line, many vantages
Attrition Is a Political Economy, Not a Front Line
Pain Becomes Capacity
Read together, the war becomes a contest over bottlenecks: workers, refineries, pipelines, payment rails, oil discounts, and the social groups paid to keep fighting. The strongest non-anglophone material does not ask who sounds more righteous; it tracks which institutions can keep converting pain into usable capacity.
Ру · Russian independent political economy, from the Russian-language opposition-analytic sphere
Russia’s “military Keynesianism” is not broad wartime prosperity: war money lifts soldiers, defense towns and some poorer regions, while VAT, inflation, pension poverty and asset concentration keep the social contract regressive. The useful correction is that inequality, not headline military spending, may shape Russia’s postwar instability. Riddle Russia · Russian
Укр · Ukrainian data-journalism view of deep-strike warfare and Russian domestic strain
Росія без бензину: карта дефіциту пального на заправках РФ оновлюється щодня
Ukrainian long-range drones turn refinery hits into a civilian logistics problem: diesel may exist, but the production and distribution system was not built to import and move petrol from abroad at scale. The map is a small piece of war economics in real time: refinery damage becomes queues, rationing, lower economic activity and visible irritation inside Russia. Texty.org.ua · Ukrainian
中 · Chinese Eurasia-policy reading of Ukraine’s gas-transit move
Kyiv’s 2025 gas-transit cutoff is treated as leverage over three systems at once: Russian export revenue, European states still dependent on transit routes, and the US LNG/reconstruction bargain under Trump. The slant is Beijing-Eurasian realist rather than Ukrainian, which is precisely its value: pipelines appear as bargaining instruments, not just energy infrastructure. 欧亚系统科学研究会 · Chinese
En · Indian strategic-policy view of sanctions, oil and strategic autonomy
Sanctions have not broken Moscow-New Delhi ties; they have changed their material form. The relationship is now oil-heavy and payments-constrained, with rupee-vostro workarounds, freight-corridor limits, US secondary-sanctions pressure, and India’s arms diversification all capping how far the partnership can move beyond hydrocarbons. Riddle Russia · English
One fault line, many vantages
When the Gulf Stops Being a Safe Back Office
The war is not only a contest of missiles and fronts; it is a contest over guarantees. American protection, Iranian proxy depth, Gulf logistics, tanker insurance and energy-market control all turn out to be priced systems, not fixed facts.
En · Gulf Arab security view from a Qatar-based research center
The old Gulf formula no longer works: US bases, normalization tracks and mediation roles did not prevent Israel from striking Doha or Washington from looking permissive. Saudi-Pakistani deterrence, Qatar's Turkish base and Emirati ties with China are not replacements for the US umbrella; they are hedges against an ally that no longer reliably restrains Israel. Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies · English
De · German Middle East magazine, energy-security and Gulf infrastructure lens
Hormuz risk has moved from the crisis desk into investment models: insurance premia, refinery flexibility, bypass pipelines and foreign technical labor now decide how much Gulf energy is really worth. The region optimized for throughput, not redundancy; cheap drones and missiles made that efficiency look like a liability. zenith · German
Ру · Russian foreign-policy establishment view of US energy power and China containment
Иранский конфликт: доминирование на глобальном рынке энергоресурсов и стратегическая доктрина Трампа
The Russian read is brutally materialist: Hormuz disruption weakens OPEC's market power, makes US shale exports more competitive, and turns maritime access and insurance into instruments of American energy dominance against China. Too monocausal, but useful as a counter-panel to the Gulf and German pieces: where they see systemic vulnerability, Moscow sees an energy strategy. Russian International Affairs Council · Russian
Many tongues on one storm
Ecuador Is Being Rewired as a Cocaine Port
Ecuador is not simply suffering a crime wave. Cocaine has found a working infrastructure: rural feeder towns with road and river access, scanner queues no state can actually read, banana containers with cloned seals, port insiders, front companies and European demand pulling volume through Guayaquil, Posorja and Machala.
Es · Ecuadorian security reporting from the rural feeder routes behind Guayaquil’s ports
Small Guayas cantons have become corridor assets: low-population towns with road or river access where local bosses from Los Lobos and Los Aguilas can stage drugs, contaminate trucks and containers, and move weapons. The quietness is part of the control; impunity, judicial favors and local fear lower the visible homicide signal. Primicias · Spanish
Es · Ecuadorian infrastructure-and-state-capacity view from the ports
Ecuador bought the hardware and still lacks state capacity: export containers pass through scanners, but the image-review system cannot absorb the volume. More than 2.5 million TEU in 2024 meant roughly 7,001 containers a day, turning the scanner queue, truck wait and hidden police-customs review centre into new surfaces for criminal pressure. Primicias · Spanish
What they said would happen
Afghanistan After the Prophecies Failed
The scorecard is harsher and stranger than either camp expected: on July 8, 2021, Joe Biden said a Taliban overrun of the whole country was “highly unlikely” and rejected the Saigon-evacuation analogy; Kabul fell on August 15. Zabihullah Mujahid promised amnesty and women’s work and education “within Islamic law”; the women’s-rights claim failed plainly, and the amnesty claim is badly damaged by documented killings and abuse of former officials. Malala Yousafzai’s fear that Afghan women would lose two decades of public and educational gains aged better than the official reassurances; the Doha pledge that Afghan soil would not host threats to others is still mixed, with no 9/11-scale export but al-Qaeda, ISKP, and TTP questions unresolved. The other surprise is the state itself: not immediate warlord chaos, not a simple narco-emirate, but a Kandahar-centered authoritarian revenue machine that can ban poppy, centralize rents, and remake girls’ education into a madrasa-and-household discipline system. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Taliban_offensive?utm_source=openai))
فا · Dari Afghan reporting on Taliban factional political economy in Badakhshan.
Badakhshan’s gold mines show what Taliban rule now looks like: not just ideology, but the central office in Kandahar moving loyalists into revenue posts, displacing local Tajik Taliban commanders, and converting mines into a liquid source of power under sanctions. The useful detail is the personnel map: who was moved, who lost access to gold, and how ethnic hierarchy and fiscal centralization now reinforce each other. Etilaatroz · Persian
En · Specialist geospatial and fieldwork analysis of Afghan rural economies and narcotics markets.
David Mansfield’s satellite-and-fieldwork reading breaks the easy “Taliban equals narco-state” line: the poppy ban has held cultivation at historic lows, but it is moving pressure into Badakhshan, Balochistan, migrant remittances, and farmer debt. The next decision is political, not agronomic: tolerate poppy’s return or coerce the rural base that helped bring the Taliban back. Alcis · English
فا · Afghan women-focused reporting from inside the social circuits where protest is suppressed.
طالبان در خیابان، مردان در خانه؛ چگونه صدای اعتراض زنان افغانستان خاموش میشود؟
The coercion is no longer only at the checkpoint: families, brothers, fathers, phone access, WhatsApp stories, and fear of Taliban retaliation now police the last scraps of women’s public speech. Rukhshana’s value is proximity to the small mechanisms by which a national gender order enters the home. Rukhshana Media · Persian
After the cameras left
Tigray After Pretoria: Peace Without a Sovereign Referee
Pretoria stopped the federal-Tigrayan war, but it left four live detonators: who commands Tigray’s armed men, who governs the interim administration, who returns to Western/Southern Tigray, and whether Ethiopia’s Red Sea campaign turns Tigray into a regional proxy front. The most important shift is social: many Tigrayans are no longer rallying to war as collective defense; they are dodging conscription, queuing for cash, leaving if they can, and waiting in camps that peace never emptied.
Am · Amharic-language reporting with a Mekelle resident, TPLF denial, and EU/US diplomatic warnings.
A former TDF fighter in Mekelle says his workplace and kebele ordered him back into service, despite injury from the last war; he is trying to flee the region. The social base of the war has changed: checkpoints, workplace pressure, and a new TPLF power regulation are turning Pretoria from a ceasefire into a fight over who can legally command young bodies. Deutsche Welle · AM
En · Ground reporting from Mekelle and nearby farming areas, with ordinary residents rather than diplomats at the center.
In Mekelle, a tour guide has no tourists, ATMs are empty, and a farmer near the Eritrean crossing routes cannot get fuel, fertilizer, or buyers to market. Fear of war is already functioning like war: cash, transport, tourism and farm inputs choke before the guns fully return. Associated Press · English
A standing interest, freshly read
What Happens When Ideas Change Custody?
The common thread is custody: who gets to hold a text, concept, or memory, what tools they bring to it, and what political uses follow. Revelation becomes archive, eschatology becomes strategy, testimony becomes political grammar.
No · Norwegian philosophy and intellectual-history venue; a researcher trained in Islamic studies asking what Norway’s idea-history canon has left out.
European work on the Qur'an was polemical and power-laden, but also filological labor over manuscripts, Arabic terms, translation choices, and Islamic textual reality. Qureshi widens global intellectual history: ideas move through libraries, translators, glosses, and bad-faith frames, not only through clean lines of influence. Salongen · Norwegian
ع · Arabic intellectual journal, working from inside modern Islamic hermeneutics rather than European Qur'an reception.
القرآنولوجيا المعاصرة: نصر حامد أبو زيد ومفهوم القرآن وطبيعته
Abu Zayd’s Qur'an is not a sealed cipher outside history: it enters Arabic, seventh-century discourse, a hierarchy of primary and secondary texts, and a culture it both formed and was formed by. The crucial distinction is between religion and human religious thought; once made, interpretation becomes a worldly practice rather than a demotion of the sacred. Mominoun Without Borders · Arabic
De · German sociology/intellectual-history review, reading a current right-wing concept through Schmitt, Taubes, Dugin, Thiel, and anti-messianic traditions.
Katechon begins as Paul’s force that delays apocalypse; through Carl Schmitt and today’s illiberal right it becomes a myth for naming the enemy, sanctifying emergency, and opposing universalist politics. Potsch is sharpest where he treats the term as a political image, not a theology exam: contradiction is part of its usefulness. Soziopolis · German
It · Italian literary-intellectual blog; a chemist-reader defending a political Levi against monumentalization and flattening.
Levi is pulled out of the harmless witness-saint role and put back among work, revolt, Soviet victory, reasonable hope, and the discipline of distinction. The hinge is controtempo: his writing beats against victim mythology and authoritarian-military common sense without collapsing Nazism, Stalinism, and resistance into lazy equivalence. Le parole e le cose² · Italian