
Three years of war in Ukraine
By CAIO BUGIATO: As Russia gains ground faster than at any point in the war, the new assessment of U.S. foreign policy is that the current world order is obsolete
By CAIO BUGIATO: As Russia gains ground faster than at any point in the war, the new assessment of U.S. foreign policy is that the current world order is obsolete
By CAIO BUGIATO: Donald Trump's government, like Hitler's government, could be the catalyst for the transition (or implosion) of the world order.
By CAIO BUGIATO: The “doctrine” of war until the end of the Washington summit materialized in the Ukrainian incursion into Russian territory, in the province of Kursk
By CAIO BUGIATO: If the dynamics of the battlefield will set the tone for negotiations involving the end of the war, Vladimir Putin's government has a wide advantage
By CAIO BUGIATO: The Russian victory shakes the military power of the West and demolishes its image of invincible powers that the States and the ruling classes of the central countries made the whole world believe
By CAIO BUGIATO: The West failed to shake Putin, and the fifth phase of the War in Ukraine brings another element of concern for Zelensky's government, the Israeli massacre in Gaza
By CAIO BUGIATO: Ukraine and Israel have presented characteristic elements of a process of fascistization
By CAIO BUGIATO: The Ukrainian offensive failed. Which is terrible for Zelensky, who is racing against time and rain to please his sponsors
By CAIO BUGIATO: NATO has always been one of the most powerful protectors of colonialism and still today seeks to impose dependency and subordination
By CAIO BUGIATO: The general offensive of NATO against Russia has been going on for a long time, with the advance of the military organization in Europe towards the borders of the Russian state
By CAIO BUGIATO: The Russian government does not intend to open peace talks on Ukraine that do not focus on creating a new world order
By CAIO BUGIATO:
Reflections on the recent meeting between Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin.
By CAIO BUGIATO: Five points from Putin's speech on Ukraine's war and foreign affairs
By CAIO BUGIATO:
The dynamics of war after a year of armed conflict
By CAIO BUGIATO:
NATO historically presents fallacious speeches and words in the wind, especially when it comes to democracy and freedom
By CAIO BUGIATO:
US foreign policy and Sérgio Moro's Lava Jato threw Brazil into Bolsonarist hell
By CAIO BUGIATO:
The war in Ukraine signals a shift in the axis of the world's political economy towards Asia
By CAIO BUGIATO:
The increasingly clear signs of Ukraine's accession to NATO and the instability in eastern Ukraine meant the crossing of a demarcation line
By CAIO BUGIATO: As Russia gains ground faster than at any point in the war, the new assessment of U.S. foreign policy is that the current world order is obsolete
By CAIO BUGIATO: Donald Trump's government, like Hitler's government, could be the catalyst for the transition (or implosion) of the world order.
By CAIO BUGIATO: The “doctrine” of war until the end of the Washington summit materialized in the Ukrainian incursion into Russian territory, in the province of Kursk
By CAIO BUGIATO: If the dynamics of the battlefield will set the tone for negotiations involving the end of the war, Vladimir Putin's government has a wide advantage
By CAIO BUGIATO: The Russian victory shakes the military power of the West and demolishes its image of invincible powers that the States and the ruling classes of the central countries made the whole world believe
By CAIO BUGIATO: The West failed to shake Putin, and the fifth phase of the War in Ukraine brings another element of concern for Zelensky's government, the Israeli massacre in Gaza
By CAIO BUGIATO: Ukraine and Israel have presented characteristic elements of a process of fascistization
By CAIO BUGIATO: The Ukrainian offensive failed. Which is terrible for Zelensky, who is racing against time and rain to please his sponsors
By CAIO BUGIATO: NATO has always been one of the most powerful protectors of colonialism and still today seeks to impose dependency and subordination
By CAIO BUGIATO: The general offensive of NATO against Russia has been going on for a long time, with the advance of the military organization in Europe towards the borders of the Russian state
By CAIO BUGIATO: The Russian government does not intend to open peace talks on Ukraine that do not focus on creating a new world order
By CAIO BUGIATO:
Reflections on the recent meeting between Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin.
By CAIO BUGIATO: Five points from Putin's speech on Ukraine's war and foreign affairs
By CAIO BUGIATO:
The dynamics of war after a year of armed conflict
By CAIO BUGIATO:
NATO historically presents fallacious speeches and words in the wind, especially when it comes to democracy and freedom
By CAIO BUGIATO:
US foreign policy and Sérgio Moro's Lava Jato threw Brazil into Bolsonarist hell
By CAIO BUGIATO:
The war in Ukraine signals a shift in the axis of the world's political economy towards Asia
By CAIO BUGIATO:
The increasingly clear signs of Ukraine's accession to NATO and the instability in eastern Ukraine meant the crossing of a demarcation line