Relaciones Internacionales – Comunicación Internacional

20 mayo, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
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The European Digital Capacity Index

EU Digital Capacity Map

Fully developed by POLITICO, the European Digital Capacity Index (EDCI) provides a comparative assessment of how effectively EU member states translate digital policy into real-world outcomes. The EDCI provides a systematic measurement of each EU member state’s ability to design, implement, and sustain digital policy and infrastructure.

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19 mayo, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
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A World on the Edge: Priorities for a Pandemic‑Resilient Future (GPMB)

The 2026 GPMB report, A World on the Edge: Priorities for a Pandemic‑Resilient Future, finds that as infectious disease outbreaks become more frequent they are also becoming more damaging, with widening health, economic, political and social impacts, and less capacity to recover from them.

This report uses the GPMB Monitoring Framework to assess how the impacts of the six new Public Health Emergencies of International Concern (PHEICs) of the past decade have evolved and identifies the areas where they are now most acute.

To rebuild trust and advance equity, the world requires independent pandemic risk monitoring, equitable access to countermeasures, and sustainable financing, enabled by sustained political attention.

 

17 mayo, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
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Checkmate in Iran (Robert Kagan)

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The Atlantic@TheAtlantic
Amit Segal@AmitSegal
In Iran, they are publishing the five conditions set by Trump for a deal: 1- The U.S. will not pay any compensation for the damages to Iran 2- Transfer of the enriched uranium to the U.S. 3- Only one nuclear facility will remain operational inside Iran 4- Less than a quarter of Iran’s frozen assets will be released 5- The cessation of war on all fronts is conditional on holding negotiations
 
In contrast to the five «confidence conditions» set by the Iranians for holding negotiations: 1- Ending the war on all fronts 2- Lifting of sanctions 3- Release of the frozen funds 4- Compensation for war damages 5- Recognition of Iran’s sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz

15 mayo, 2026
por Felipe Sahagún
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Cypher brief, May 15, 2026

It’s Thursday…and with all eyes on China and the business-driven agenda for meetings between presidents, many of the critical thinkers in the national security community are looking at what’s not on the agenda. 
 
For example, Russia has been bombarding Ukraine with attack after attack this week as fewer eyes seem to be paying attention and former senior CIA operations officer Sean Wiswesser writes exclusively in today’s Cipher Brief that Russia and China pose more of a threat when they coordinate their actions. This is something worth watching (and reading).
 
In another piece you’ll only read in tonight’s Cipher Brief, Brian Lessenberry, a senior fellow at the University of Virginia’s National Security and Data Policy Institute unpacks the consequences to the national security mission of post-9/11 analytic tradecraft standards that may be increasingly outdated (especially with the rise of AI-enabled analytic capabilities). Read more in this Cipher Brief exclusive. 
 
And retired Chief Warrant Officer 5 Joey Gagnard (who is also CEO of Atlas Special Projects and The Cipher Brief’s partner for this year’s Meridian Forge Summit) argues that even if the Pentagon secures its $1.5 trillion FY2027 budget request, it’s not necessarily an automatic game-changer. He argues that how that money is spent is the secret to success. (Here’s a hint, Gagnard writes that more funds going to advanced systems developed by neoprimes are bringing unprecedented levels of innovation to the defense sector.)  This is a must-read you don’t want to miss in The Cipher Brief
 
Here’s a look at the other key developments we’re tracking this Thursday…
 
A BIG DAY IN BEIJING – Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping met for two hours today in the Great Hall of the People alongside a host of senior Chinese officials and American business leaders. The biggest headline to come out of that meeting was Xi’s warning of “clashes and even conflicts” with the U.S. over Taiwan if that issue is handled poorly. (Feels like a shot across the bow, eh?) The U.S. part of the delegation reportedly focused more on expanding U.S. market access in China and increasing Chinese investment in the U.S. Presidents Trump and Xi later took a tour of the famous Temple of Heaven in Beijing and met again for a state banquet. President Trump described the visit as “extremely positive and productive” and Xi toasted that the U.S. and China “should be partners rather than rivals.” Continue leyendo →