Tuesday, 24 February 2026

4 years of full-scale war: Can Ukraine Legally Reclaim Its Nuclear Status?


In debates about Ukraine’s future, one question keeps resurfacing, quietly at first and then ever louder: could Ukraine ever re-enter the nuclear club? After the collapse of the security assurances that once underpinned its denuclearisation, the issue is no longer confined to fringe commentary. 
 
It now sits at the intersection of law and survival, of the NPT’s rules and a state’s right to exist. This article asks the hardest version of the question: can Ukraine legally reclaim a nuclear status, and what would such a decision mean for the world that once persuaded it to disarm?

Ukraine’s nuclear knot: how the 1990–1994 package built an architecture that broke in 2014 and 2022

1) The inheritance moment: a vast arsenal without a sovereign nuclear status

After the collapse of the USSR, Ukraine found itself hosting one of the largest nuclear arsenals in Europe. In practice, this was an unprecedented status: warheads were on Ukrainian territory, but command-and-control, permissive action links, and much of the operational chain remained embedded in Soviet, then Russian, systems.

That starting point matters. Ukraine’s decisions in 1990–1994 were not made in a moral vacuum. They were made under hard power realities and intense external pressure to preserve the global non-proliferation regime.

Taiwan has become the world’s example of how an economy can boom while many people feel left behind

Silicon Island’s Boom: When the Economy Grows Faster Than Salaries
Taiwan has become the world’s clearest example of how an economy can boom while many people feel left behind. Under constant military pressure from China and amid trade tensions with the United States, the island has still been posting spectacular numbers. GDP has grown around 8% for two quarters in a row, and overall growth is expected to reach about 7.4% in 2025 – even faster than China.

The engine is obvious: high tech.
Taiwan’s factories build the chips and servers that power today’s artificial intelligence revolution. Its champion, TSMC, supplies giants like Nvidia and AMD and has lifted its own revenue forecast into the mid-30% range. Exports have exploded – up more than a third this year, with shipments to the US jumping over 60% as American tech companies race to build AI data centres. Taiwan’s stock market has surged into the world’s top ten on this wave of AI enthusiasm.
But this success story has a shadow. A rich economy, ordinary pay.

The Demilitarisation of Transnistria: International Law, Ukrainian Strategic Necessity, and Moldovan Sovereignty


A Frozen Conflict in a Hot War

The Transnistrian region, a narrow strip of land between the Dniester River and the Ukrainian border, has functioned as a "frozen conflict" zone since 1992. However, the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 has fundamentally altered the geopolitical calculus. What was once a local diplomatic dispute is now a critical security threat to Southern Ukraine and the stability of South-Eastern Europe.

From the perspective of international law and the sovereignty of the Republic of Moldova, the potential for Ukrainian involvement in the demilitarisation of this region is not merely a military hypothetical, but a legally grounded pathway to regional stability.

1. The Legal Foundation: Sovereignty as an Absolute


The primary pillar of any analysis regarding Transnistria is the status of the territory under international law. The so-called "Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic" (PMR) is a legal nullity.

How the World Economy Could Look in 2050: Asia Takes the Lead



By 2050, the economic map of the world may look very different from what we know today.

According to long-term projections by Goldman Sachs, the centre of gravity of global GDP is expected to shift decisively away from today’s developed markets and towards emerging Asia.

The Big Picture: Who Owns Global GDP in 2050?

In 2050 (in constant 2021 USD), global GDP is projected to total about $227.9 trillion. Here’s how that pie is expected to be divided:

  • Asia (excluding developed markets): $90.6 trillion – 40%
  • Developed Markets (DM): $82.9 trillion – 36%
  • Central & Eastern Europe, Middle East & Africa (CEEMEA): $38.3 trillion – 17%
  • Latin America: $16.0 trillion – 7%

The headline shift is clear:

Emerging Asia is projected to become the largest regional contributor to world GDP, with 40% of the total, edging ahead of traditional Developed Markets at 36%.

To see how dramatic this is, compare it with the year 2000. At that time, developed economies (North America, Western Europe, Japan, etc.) accounted for more than 77% of global GDP. By 2050, their share is expected to fall to just over a third.

Asia’s Rise: Beyond the “China Story”


When people think about Asia’s economic success, they often focus on China – and for good reason. But the 2050 picture is not just about China.

Saturday, 14 February 2026

Munich 2026: Zelensky’s “Munich 1938” Warning to Europe

Standing at the podium of the Munich Security Conference, Volodymyr Zelenskyy wasn’t in “please help us” mode this time. His message was closer to an alarm bell: Europe is drifting toward a familiar historical trap—one that once carried the name “Munich.”

Not as a metaphor for a textbook. As a warning for the present.

“Don’t repeat 1938—don’t trade security for an illusion”

Zelensky drew a straight line to the logic of the Munich Agreement: the idea that sacrificing someone else’s sovereignty can buy peace. In 1938, it was Czechoslovakia. Today, he argued, it would be Ukraine.

His blunt formulation (reported widely) was that it would be an illusion to think the war can be reliably ended by dividing Ukraine—just as it was an illusion to believe sacrificing Czechoslovakia would save Europe from a greater war.

He wasn’t just invoking history for effect. He was saying: this is the decision-point again.

And then came the hardest part of his framing: time does not pause for hesitation. In war, war itself “owns time.” While allies debate, Russia adapts.

The numbers that strip away wishful thinking

Zelensky deliberately spoke in facts, not diplomatic fog. According to reports from his Munich remarks, he pointed to the scale of Russian attacks in January:

  • 6,000+ drones in a month

  • 150+ missiles

  • 5,000 guided aerial bombs

He also referenced a single-night strike of 24 ballistic missiles and 219 drones—a figure consistent with reporting about a major overnight barrage on 12 February 2026.

The implication was unmistakable: if anyone in Europe is still hoping the war is “cooling,” the data says otherwise.

Air defense isn’t a “wish list.” It’s survival.

Zelensky described what may be the worst sentence a leader can hear in wartime: air-defense units running empty. And he sharpened it into a moral argument:

You cannot protect lives with gratitude. “Thank you” doesn’t intercept missiles.

So the priority, in his framing, is immediate: missiles for air-defense systems, delivered fast—without pauses, without bureaucratic loops.

The “floating wallets of the Kremlin”

One of the most pointed blocks of the speech was about oil and money. Zelensky’s argument: as long as Russian energy revenue keeps flowing, the war machine keeps breathing.

He described a fleet of Russian tankers still moving across European waters—“floating wallets” funding aggression—and urged Europe to cut off that resource pipeline if it genuinely wants peace. (The core claim here is his political message: war financing is not abstract; it’s logistics and cashflow.)

Elections under missiles? Zelensky’s cold answer

Addressing rumors and pressure around elections, Zelensky’s response was consistent and unsentimental:

  • No elections during full-scale war

  • First: ceasefire

  • First: security

  • Then: politics

He even added a line of irony—suggesting elections could be held “simultaneously with Russia”—which drew knowing smiles in the room, but carried a serious point: democracy can’t be performed while rockets are deciding the calendar.

Security guarantees must come before peace, not after

This was the core of the whole speech: peace without concrete guarantees is just an intermission.

Zelensky pushed the idea that a security deal must precede any final peace agreement—complete with real deterrence mechanisms and U.S. involvement, plus a stronger Europe that can act as a security player rather than a concerned observer.

In fact, he has publicly argued in Munich that Ukraine wants long-term, binding U.S. security backing before signing any peace deal.

And he delivered one of his hardest psychological portraits of Vladimir Putin: Putin is not living like ordinary people—he is, in Zelensky’s phrasing, a “slave to war.”

Europe has to grow up

Around Munich, officials and observers have been discussing bigger defense budgets, new commitments, and larger aid packages. Zelensky’s bottom line was less technical and more existential:

Europe can’t remain a spectator in its own history.

The subtext: if Europe wants strategic autonomy in practice, it has to pay for it, produce for it, and decide like it.

The reaction: “one of the toughest” Zelensky speeches in Munich

Applause reportedly ran long—less like protocol, more like recognition that the speech wasn’t trying to please anyone.

Western coverage also emphasized the clarity of his signal to Washington: no “peace first, guarantees later.” Guarantees must be built into the path before any signatures.

Thursday, 12 February 2026

European Business Mission 2026 in Munich

European Business Mission 2026

Date: March 25, 2026

Location: Munich, Germany 🇩🇪
Hashtags: #europeanbusinessmission #munich #germany #GlobalBusinessWeek #europeanbusinessweek


If you're an entrepreneur — this is your invitation to join the European Business Mission 2026!

This exclusive one-day event will take place on March 25, 2026, in the heart of Bavaria’s capital — Munich, one of Europe’s most innovative business hubs. The mission is organized as part of the EUROPEAN BUSINESS WEEK 2026, and is supported by:

  • Global Business Week

  • British Business Week

  • European Business Week

  • BOSS Club 100

  • European Association for Business Development

  • World Woman Club


🎓 Event Format:

European Business Meetings + Business Tour + Cruise

Organized by the International Business Academy Consortium, European Association for Business Development, BOSS Club, and World Woman Club, the European Business Mission in Munich is a high-level professional event designed for:

  • Entrepreneurs & Business Owners

  • Government Officials

  • MBA Students

  • Corporate Delegates & Investors


💎 Mission Objective

The goal of the European Business Mission is to promote global entrepreneurial education and connection through the exploration of European business innovations, direct dialogue with market leaders, and practical exposure to industry best practices.


🌍 Exploring European Business Ecosystems

Participants will:

  • Visit Munich-based companies and innovation hubs

  • Learn directly from European entrepreneurs and industry experts

  • Discover current trends, technological advances, and business models shaping the EU economy

  • Engage in cross-cultural business learning experiences


🤝 Elite Business Networking

Our events are designed for meaningful and results-driven networking.

  • Closed international groups (20+ participants)

  • Dedicated guides and interpreters

  • Access to Business Tours in collaboration with partners in 35+ countries

  • European Business Meetings including panel discussions and private networking sessions

  • Create real opportunities for partnerships, investments, and joint ventures


📅 Preliminary Programme – March 25, 2026

Day 1 – Arrival & Networking

Welcome to Munich — a city where tradition meets innovation. Known as Germany’s economic powerhouse, Munich is home to global corporations, vibrant startups, and powerful investment hubs.

📌 Arrival & Check-in – Recommended by 1:00 PM (or the day before)
📌 Business Forum & Networking – Starts at 4:00 PM

Explore the city, connect with forward-thinking business leaders, and engage in transformative discussions surrounded by Munich’s historic charm.


📞 Contact Us:

Phone: +44-74-64-466-442


Secure your place at one of Europe’s most important business gatherings of 2026.
Whether you’re scaling your company, building international bridges, or seeking inspiration — #EuropeanBusinessMission in Munich is where your next breakthrough begins.

Popular Articles of the 7 days