Geopolitical Intelligence Dashboard
Strategic Risk & Economic Stability Monitoring
US-Iran Water Infrastructure Conflict
78
rising
Israel-Lebanon-Hezbollah Tensions
72
rising
Ukraine-Russia Energy Targeting
70
rising
US-China Trade & Technology Friction
68
rising
Commodity Market Volatility From China Demand
64
rising
Cybersecurity & AI Exploit Surge
66
rising
Pakistan-Afghanistan Border Escalation
55
stable
Myanmar Internal Conflict
58
stable
Major Geopolitical Themes
Middle‑East Multi‑Front Escalation
U.S. strikes on Iranian water infrastructure, Israeli air raids in Lebanon, and Iranian threats to Hezbollah create a tightly coupled risk set that could spiral into a broader regional war, threatening energy transit routes, maritime security, and global oil markets. The convergence of water‑resource targeting and cultural‑heritage attacks amplifies domestic backlash and international diplomatic pressure.
high
Key Actors
- United States
- Iran
- Israel
- Hezbollah
- Lebanon
US‑China Strategic‑Economic Competition
Export controls, rare‑earth duties, and a burgeoning Chinese satellite constellation intensify a technology‑centric rivalry that permeates supply chains, defense procurement, and financial markets. The trade friction adds cost pressures to U.S. firms operating in China and elevates risk of a coordinated economic decoupling, especially as AI regulation and cyber‑security disputes unfold.
moderate
Key Actors
- United States
- China
- USTR
- US‑China Business Council
Energy Infrastructure Targeting as War Lever
Ukraine’s strike on a Russian oil refinery and the shadow‑fleet tanker demonstrates a trend of using energy assets to erode opponent revenue. Coupled with Middle‑East water‑resource attacks, the pattern indicates a shift toward targeting critical utilities to impose economic pain and force political concessions, raising systemic energy‑market volatility.
high
Key Actors
- Ukraine
- Russia
- United States
- Iran
Cyber‑Enabled Vulnerability Surge
Microsoft’s unprecedented Patch Tuesday, the emergence of AI‑driven phishing exploits, and ransomware‑as‑a‑service activity indicate an acceleration of cyber‑threats against both civilian and defense sectors. The convergence of AI, supply‑chain attacks, and zero‑day disclosures raises the likelihood of disruptive cyber incidents that could intersect with physical infrastructure, especially in energy and finance.
moderate
Key Actors
- Microsoft
- Anthropic
- The Gentlemen ransomware group
- OpenAI
Regional Analysis
Middle East
Middle‑East tensions have intensified on multiple fronts, with water‑infrastructure attacks and historic‑site bombings creating a volatile mix that threatens energy flows and could draw regional actors into direct conflict, raising systemic market and humanitarian risks.
Escalation Risks
- U.S.-Iran direct confrontation
- Israel-Hezbollah war
- Disruption of oil transit through Hormuz
Europe Russia
Ukraine’s deep‑strike on Russian energy assets raises the stakes of the conflict, threatening Russian revenue streams and prompting possible retaliatory actions that could destabilize European energy markets and intensify NATO‑Russia strategic competition.
Escalation Risks
- Retaliatory missile strikes on Ukrainian infrastructure
- Escalation of NATO‑Russia posturing
- Energy supply shocks for Europe
Asia Pacific
The Asia‑Pacific region faces heightened US‑China strategic competition across trade, AI, and space, creating supply‑chain fragmentation and prompting allied coordination to mitigate technology decoupling risks.
Escalation Risks
- Escalation of tech export restrictions
- Potential retaliatory sanctions on semiconductor equipment
- Space‑based intelligence competition
Africa
Indonesia’s export controls on strategic metals create supply‑chain stress that indirectly affects African mining exporters, raising commodity price volatility and prompting diplomatic engagement on alternative sourcing.
Escalation Risks
- Supply bottlenecks driving price volatility
- Potential illicit trade routes emerging
Americas
American markets grapple with high inflation and heightened volatility, while defense equities benefit from overseas conflict developments; the macro environment remains sensitive to Fed actions and external geopolitical shocks.
Escalation Risks
- Domestic political pressure on Fed
- Potential contagion from overseas energy shocks
