13 July 2026Focus · Africa · Central Asia & Pacific12 Items · 4 Translated · Shelf › · Archive ›
— The Dragoman's Note —
This week keeps returning to the same awkward fact: power rarely announces itself as power once it has been built into machinery. Jean Monnet’s lesson is the benign version, institutions that alter incentives until cooperation becomes the practical route; Chechnya’s “family-conflict commission,” Taiwan’s sports loopholes and military AI ask the darker question of who remains accountable when systems decide for people. Australia appears twice as a country trying to name its interests honestly: a coal-and-gas exporter auditioning for COP31, and a Pacific power whose aid has to be defended as influence and trust, not charity. Money does much of the governing: New Zealand’s property playbook and floating-rate margins, Japan’s failed ¥140 billion soft-power fund, and the prostitution debate all turn moral language back toward contracts, rents and who pays. Across the edition, culture is not decoration but infrastructure: Islam, Americanisation, “Cool Japan,” Gaza’s built environment, Arab identity and reproductive technology all become fights over the categories through which people are made legible.
Avustralya Karbon İmparatorluğunun İklimi Değiştirme Mücadelesi: Yirmi Yıllık Söylem Çatışmasının Yapısal Cephesi ve COP31'in Tarihsel Yükü
Australia’s two decades of climate politics show how successive governments renamed the climate problem while the deeper machinery of fossil-fuel expansion continued largely uninterrupted.
The Name Above Coal
Australia is treated as a carbon empire whose climate politics cannot be explained by party preference alone. Two decades of rhetorical conflict sit on top of an export economy, fossil-fuel rents, Pacific diplomacy and the burden of hosting COP31 while still profiting from coal and gas.
To grasp Australia’s climate politics, one must first see a paradox. Australia is physically one of the countries most exposed to the effects of climate change; its coral reef has undergone large-scale bleaching, and the “great bushfire” season has effectively become a permanent threat across the south of the continent.
Why it leads: Australia arrives at the COP31 era as both climate casualty and carbon superpower: a country watching reefs bleach and fire seasons lengthen while its coal and gas exports keep expanding beyond the frame of domestic targets.
Translated from Turkish · yesterday · 15 min · Deep
The Brief
The Brief follows the institutions, markets and cultural machines that keep governing after the slogans have gone stale.
Islamic civilisation appears here as a set of worlds, not a single doctrine marching through history. Law, empire, trade, conversion, scholarship and court culture produced different Muslim social orders from the Mughals to the Mediterranean, which is exactly what the flat civilisational label erases.
‘The world that Muslims had made was tied together by worldly interests and material goods, by merchants, money, and trade winds, at least as much as by religious teaching and spiritual values, itinerant scholars and wandering Sufis’, McDougall writes.
Jean Monnet was not the dull technocrat later European memory made him into. His method was political invention through institutions: build machinery that changes incentives, then let national leaders discover that cooperation has become the practical path.
La tragedia de Europa es haber convertido a Jean Monnet en alguien aburrido. Este personaje fabuloso, que recorrió el mundo durante décadas, viviendo aventuras increíbles y persiguiendo sin descanso el loco ideal de una Europa unida, se ha convertido en una referencia anticuada, un padre fundador disecado, que solo sirve para citarlo en t…
Convicted or credibly accused coaches can leave schools and reappear in private clubs, community teams and youth programs because Taiwan’s disclosure regime is built around institutions, not the children’s actual activity networks. The proposed fixes, from amending the National Sports Act to a child-work permit system, run into questions of data, due process and who carries enforcement costs.
“But Betty and I both felt: this isn’t right. These are people with prior convictions for sexually assaulting children. How can they be allowed to come into contact with minors again? That was what we found most inconceivable.”
New Zealand household wealth was built around one repeated trade: borrow hard against residential land and let tax, planning scarcity and credit cycles do the rest. The five assumptions left by that era no longer hold cleanly, so middle-class financial behaviour is being forced off its old script.
For most households, New Zealand never really had a wealth-building playbook. It had one play, run on repeat for two generations: borrow the maximum against residential property, service the loan, and wait.
Americanisation is not ending simply because the United States looks politically degraded. The cultural machine that made the world speak in American forms is distributed through language, entertainment, platforms, habits and aspiration, which makes hegemony harder to switch off than presidential theatre suggests.
No se trata con ello de hacer presentismo, exigiendo al mundo de anteayer que comulgue con los valores morales de ahora mismo, sino más bien de señalar que los ideales de la Ilustración que inspiraron a los padres de la patria estadounidense no impidieron –cómo podrían– una praxis política que a menudo los traicionaba…
The prostitution debate keeps resurfacing because each camp turns a social arrangement into a moral emblem. The useful question is where money changes the meaning of consent, work, exploitation and state power, and why parliamentary rituals repeatedly flatten those distinctions.
Pauline Hanson’s softer language on aid still rests on a familiar Pacific story: China threat, corruption, wasted money. The useful concession is that aid advocates cannot answer populist suspicion with moral scolding; they need to explain what Australian aid actually buys in influence, stability and regional trust.
Whether it is accessing funding for state-of-the-art policing equipment, high-profile infrastructure projects or elite sporting franchises, Pacific governments have a direct interest in keeping the contest going as its ending — either in the form of one rival withdrawing or both rivals reaching an agreement to cease competition — would cr…
Japan’s state-backed soft-power fund has accumulated more than ¥50 billion in losses after years of trying to turn content, food and lifestyle exports into national influence. The likely abolition or merger points to a deeper mismatch between bureaucratic investment logic and cultural circulation.
To date, ¥204 billion has been committed to 83 projects, including overseas initiatives and medium- to long-term programs whose risk would otherwise make it difficult for private companies to invest on their own.
New Zealand banks passed the latest OCR increase through in full while holding back some of the earlier OCR reductions over the past two and a half years. The asymmetry turns monetary policy into a margin-management opportunity for banks before households feel the official easing.
The net result is that banks have withheld 40 to 50 bps from their floating rate clients of the cumulative RBNZ policy rate cuts.
В Чечне за девять лет «воссоединили» больше половины разведенных супругов
Chechnya’s family-conflict commission claims to have “reunited” 3,038 of 6,020 divorced couples over nine years. The number is not a welfare success metric; in many cases it signals state and patriarchal pressure forcing private life back into officially approved family form.
As Radio Liberty notes, commission members carry out their duties perfunctorily and with the use of pressure. Women may agree to “reconciliation” in order to be able to see their children: as a rule, in a divorce the court leaves them with the father.
A Catholic security scholar tries to reconcile just-war reasoning with military AI instead of treating automation as either salvation or taboo. The likely core is not whether AI is “ethical,” but what kinds of command responsibility, discrimination and accountability can survive machine-speed targeting.
As a Catholic, I cannot treat a papal encyclical as just another op-ed. I am called to receive it with deep reverence, and I do.
English · 7d ago · 13 min · Skim
Many Views
Many Views turns naming into terrain: Gaza, birth, family and law look different depending on which language gets to set the first category.
Many tongues on one question
Gaza’s genocide in historical, urban and everyday life
A French literary review, an Arabic urban critique, a Brazilian historical left journal and a Hebrew-Palestinian local vantage converge on Gaza, but they locate the catastrophe in different places: Zionism’s descent, the planned destruction of the built environment, the First World War roots of the conflict, and ordinary joy under siege.
Omer Bartov’s Gaza verdict leaves Zionism itself intact while asking how Israel’s post-October 2023 war crossed into genocide. En attendant Nadeau · French
Gaza’s present is traced back to British-Ottoman fighting in the First World War, when the city’s capture opened the way for a Zionist project still remaking regional politics. La Storia e le Idee · Portuguese
Another question, several views
Reproductive technology, law and inequality
A Dutch bioethics warning and a Taiwanese legal-social lens both ask who gets to shape birth when reproduction becomes programmable, purchasable and rule-bound. One worries that AI-assisted embryo editing could harden class privilege; the other starts from egg donors, surrogates and would-be parents caught between Taiwan’s market and its outdated law.
Hoe voorkomen we een toekomst waarin de rijken genetisch bevoorrechte designerbaby’s creëren?
AI makes embryo DNA editing less hypothetical, so the Dutch worry is class power: designer babies could become another advantage reserved for the already privileged unless ethical rules arrive first. Project Syndicate · Dutch
Taiwan’s assisted-reproduction debate cannot stop at yes-or-no slogans when markets and law are already rearranging family, blood ties and parenthood without enough local research. The Reporter · Chinese
Deep Research
Deep Research tracks wars and states through their working parts: minerals, sanctions, pipelines, courts, housing, militias and memory.
One fault line, many vantages
When War Becomes a Supply Chain, a Tax System and a Media Failure
The Furnace Keeps Accounts
Read together, these four pieces move the war away from battlefield chronology: Ukraine is attacking logistics and refinery confidence; Russia is converting budget, labour and television trust into consumables; sanctions are becoming a corporate-risk regime, not just a diplomatic signal.
Укр · Ukrainian battlefield-logistics view, from Texty’s data/reporting desk
Удари на середню відстань. Україна знову почала вибивати російську логістику
The war’s decisive unit is no longer the warehouse but the route: HIMARS forced Russia from big depots into micro-logistics, and mid-range drones now make even those small delivery chains expensive, visible and fragile. The useful comparison is two supply models under pressure: Russia’s rail-heavy Soviet depth versus Ukraine’s digitised, aid-dependent, mixed-equipment system. Texty.org.ua · Ukrainian
Ру · Russian exile-sociological view of domestic politics and information control
Деградация равновесия: резкое ухудшение социальных настроений сопровождается коммуникативным вакуумом в отношениях населения и власти
Ukraine’s refinery strikes and the June fuel crisis have punctured the wartime loyalty premium: Re:Russia tracks how anxiety, consumer pessimism and declining trust in television now reach even older pro-Kremlin cohorts. The mechanism is political, not only economic: the Kremlin’s censorship can hide less just as it has fewer credible channels left to explain the costs. Re: Russia · Russian
En · Polish/Eastern European security-economy view
Russia can still fund the war, but the civilian economy is being hollowed out: falling investment, weak retail, losses in trucks, steel and energy, labour shortages, regional deficits and expensive domestic borrowing are doing the damage. OSW’s key correction is that resilience and deterioration coexist: the system can keep fighting while its non-war sectors are cannibalised. OSW Centre for Eastern Studies · English
One fault line, many vantages
After the Axis, Who Owns the Regional Map?
The old shorthand no longer holds: Iran’s network can still raise costs, but it cannot reliably rescue Tehran; Gulf capitals fear both Iran and an unrestrained Israel; Turkey and Israel now collide in Syria, the eastern Mediterranean and the Red Sea. Read together, these pieces replace the neat “normalization versus resistance” map with a region of overlapping vetoes, exposed security guarantees and domestic systems trying to survive the war they helped make.
De · German policy analysis centered on Ankara’s regional calculus and Israel’s post-October 7 security doctrine
The Turkey-Israel break is no longer just Erdoğan’s Gaza rhetoric. Syria, Kurdish armed structures, eastern Mediterranean gas, Somaliland and Bab al-Mandab have become linked arenas where two states with incompatible order projects keep stepping into each other’s operating space. Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik · German
En · Gulf security calculus through Sanam Vakil’s Chatham House lens, interviewed from the US press ecosystem
The Gulf monarchies did not want an anti-Iran war that turns them into targets. Sanam Vakil strips away the Sunni-Shia cliché: the real problem is power, economic exposure, US unreliability and a normalization project that Gulf rulers wanted to use for integration, not as an open-ended Israeli anti-Iran alliance. The New Yorker · English
Many tongues on one storm
Congo’s Peace Deal Meets the War’s Real Institutions
The Washington and Doha tracks treat eastern Congo as a state-to-state bargain: Rwanda withdraws, Kinshasa neutralizes the FDLR, investors regularize minerals. The war on the ground is organized differently: Rubaya’s coltan has a working export chain, the AFC has a parallel administration, the Wazalendo are a fragmented subcontracted army, and older certification rules have already reshaped who can sell Congolese minerals.
Fr · Investigative supply-chain view from Global Witness, strongest on the buyer side of the war economy.
Rubaya is not just a mine under rebel control; it is a route into capacitors, smelters and global brands. Global Witness follows more than 2,000 tonnes of conflict coltan from M23-controlled eastern Congo through Rwanda and into electronics supply chains, exposing why due-diligence systems can legalize opacity rather than stop it. Global Witness · French
Fr · ACLED conflict-network mapping, with a French edition; good on South Kivu’s armed sociology rather than diplomatic theater.
The AFC’s advance works because it is more coherent than the pro-Kinshasa armed ecosystem facing it. Peace talks that name only Kinshasa, Kigali and M23 miss the actors that actually move front lines: Banyamulenge groups, Burundian rebels, Wazalendo factions and FARDC units that cooperate, defect and fight each other. ACLED · French
En · Jon Lee Anderson’s ground-and-history reporting from eastern Congo for a US magazine audience.
Grand diplomacy looks thinner from the Kivus: chiefs, displaced civilians, militias and local authorities still live inside a war built from land claims, refugee histories, mineral routes and state weakness. The reporting is worth the mainstream slot because it keeps the peace initiative in contact with social reality rather than treating it as a White House instrument. The New Yorker · English
En · Academic supply-chain economics; not Congo field reportage, but a sharp mechanism for why traceability regimes can misfire.
Conflict-mineral regulation did not simply clean the market; it helped create a certification-driven captive market in DRC tin exports, with price signals collapsing and rigidity persisting after deregulation. Read beside the Rubaya investigation, it explains why “responsible sourcing” can harden chokepoints that smugglers and certified intermediaries learn to use. arXiv / Resources Policy · English
What they said would happen
Egypt After Tahrir: The State Won the Square, Not the Social Question
Predictions ledger: Barack Obama said on February 11, 2011 that Egyptians had made clear “nothing less than genuine democracy” would carry the day; the Muslim Brotherhood spent 2011 signaling it would not seek the presidency; TIMEP warned in January 2014 that a President Sisi would inherit unemployment, a subsidy economy and state finances he could not fix by charisma; Sisi’s 2014 pitch promised security, jobs, healthcare and food security. Score: Obama was right that Egypt would never be the same, wrong on democratic direction; the Brotherhood’s restraint pledge collapsed with Morsi’s candidacy; Sisi delivered demobilization and fear, not social stability; the economic warning aged best, while the open question is whether the Brotherhood is dead or merely preserved as the regime’s most useful scarecrow. Read together, these pieces show the revolution’s unresolved material core: housing, land, opposition organization, political Islam and popular culture were not transformed into democracy, but absorbed into a security-development state that still cannot manufacture consent.
ع · Egyptian urban researcher, from inside Cairo’s housing politics and fieldwork among residents
حين اقتحم الفقراء بيوت الدولة.. عن "المُحتلة" والسكن وثورة يناير
January becomes legible not as a Facebook-and-Tahrir morality tale, but as a break in the state’s control over urban space: families occupied empty social-housing blocks the state had built and left unused. Fifteen years later, the same housing question has hardened under Sisi into land speculation, administrative suspension and a state that treats the city as value storage before shelter. Al-Manassa · Arabic
ع · Egyptian political follow-up on the Brotherhood thirteen years after the coup
تنظيم بلا قيادة وجسد مطارَد.. أين الإخوان المسلمون الآن
The Brotherhood has not been simply “destroyed”: it has split into London, Istanbul and more militant/exiled currents, with money, media assets and the title of guide now objects of struggle. Repression that once fused the movement now fragments it, while the regime still needs the Brotherhood as proof that emergency politics must continue. Al-Manassa · Arabic
ع · A leftist lawyer and 2012 presidential candidate looking back from Cairo, 2026
حوار| خالد علي: سُلطة 30 يونيو فشلت حتى في القضاء على الإخوان
Khaled Ali reconstructs the third position that rejected both Brotherhood rule and military restoration, then asks why it lost: weak organization, elite coordination with the army, and a political class that treated the street as leverage rather than a democratic base. His sharpest present-tense claim is that Egypt now sits on social anger without an opposition force capable of directing it. Al Manassa · Arabic
En · Egyptian cultural-political analysis through street music and regime mobilization
The Sisi state borrowed shaabi and mahraganat aesthetics to turn the 2013 coup and 2014 election into a street carnival of allegiance; by 2023, the same concert machinery was producing boos, indifference and stray anti-Sisi chants. Propaganda can rent popular culture, but inflation, food prices and vanity projects have made the old soundtrack unusable. The Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy · English
After the cameras left
After Qantar, Sovereignty Became a Bargain Over Pipelines, Courts and Assets
Qandy Qantar did not produce a liberal break; it gave Tokayev room to strip Nazarbayev-era networks of assets while leaving the coercive state intact. Russia’s war then made Kazakhstan more necessary to Moscow and more exposed to it: a corridor, pressure valve, sanctions hinge and refuge that is not quite safe.
Ру · Kazakh independent outlet interviewing Central Asia/Russia analysts on the mechanics of dependence.
Kazakhstan’s 2025 “comprehensive strategic partnership” with Russia reads less like a new alliance than a ritual around an unequal bargain. Oil still mostly exits through Russian territory, Rosatom brings nuclear lock-in, and parallel imports plus reverse gas flows deepen the economic tie even as Astana performs sovereignty. Vlast · Russian
Ру · Azattyq Asia tracking post-Qantar ownership changes in mining, telecom, gas and urban land.
«Отодвинуть старые группы влияния». Как стратегические активы в добывающей отрасли Казахстана меняют владельцев
After January, de-Nazarbayevization moved from symbolism into ownership: Kazakhmys changed hands, Kazzinc and ERG may follow, and new figures with thinner public business histories appear beside presidential access and Swiss commodity credit. The old clans are weakened, but strategic rent is being reallocated, not democratized. Azattyk Asia · Russian
Ру · Local reporting from Kazakhstan on Russian deserters and activists caught between asylum law and security cooperation with Moscow.
Kazakhstan became a refuge and transit point for Russians fleeing war and repression, then its borders, extradition process and asylum bureaucracy began working as Moscow’s outer legal perimeter. The cases of Zelimkhan Murtazov, Yulia Emelyanova and others turn “multi-vector” into an administrative fact: safety lasts only while a person stays quiet and legally convenient. Vlast · Russian
Ру · Ground-level follow-up with one January survivor in Almaty, close to the social cost of state non-accountability.
«Хочу эмигрировать». Что изменилось в жизни Саята Адильбекулы, пережившего пытки в дни Кантара
Four years after Qantar, Sayat Adilbekuly’s life is the state’s follow-up in miniature: shot while looking for medicine, dragged from hospital into detention, tortured, later cleared, barely compensated, and still pressured for posting about January. Reform talk meets the routine machinery of impunity: missing camera footage, masked units, withheld identification photos and a complaint now before the UN. Azattyq Asia · Russian
A standing interest, freshly read
Who Gets to Name the Arab World?
The live debate is not “tradition versus modernity.” It is control over categories: gender, indigeneity, mother tongue, minority language, and the machine-readable idea of Arab culture.
ع · Tunisian scholar of Islamic thought and gender studies, speaking in Arabic from inside the Arab academic debate over gender terminology.
"المجتمعات الإسلامية لم تكن معادية للهويات غير النمطية"
Amel Grami turns the anti-gender panic inside out: the supposedly Western category becomes legible through Islamic legal and literary archives, where mukhannath, khuntha, eunuchs and beardless youths had named social and legal places. The harder break comes with colonial legal systems and modern conservative campaigns, not with an eternal Islamic binary. Qantara · Arabic
En · Moroccan Amazigh studies scholar, writing against Arab-national and colonial naming regimes.
“Arab Maghreb” stops looking like neutral geography. Brahim El Guabli traces how Arabisation after independence turned anti-colonial slogans into state policy, making a “good” Amazigh one who assimilated while French and Arabic continued to dominate education, administration and prestige. Qantara.de · English
En · Arabic NLP position paper, useful as a map of how cultural simplification is being rebuilt inside AI infrastructure.
The technical claim has political teeth: Arabic-specific AI systems often replace Western default culture with a single “Arab” default, flattening Morocco, the Gulf, the Levant, Egypt and Sudan into one imagined user. The next cultural gatekeeper may not be a ministry or textbook but an alignment dataset. arXiv / C3NLP workshop · English
En · Kurdish-Iraqi diasporic interview with a Kurdish sociolinguist; a minority-language view from inside the region’s Arab, Turkish and Persian state orders.
Kurdish survives daily speech but loses ground when schooling, literacy, embassies, prestige and now AI all reward Arabic, Turkish, Persian, French or English. Sheyholislami’s blunt mechanism is intergenerational: deny mother-tongue education, and by the third generation diaspora children inherit memory without a working language. The Markaz Review · English