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The Arctic Is No Longer Empty
The Arctic is no longer a remote frozen frontier. From Svalbard to the GIUK Gap, infrastructure, surveillance routes and strategic presence are reshaping the balance between NATO and Russia. What once appeared peripheral is becoming one of the central grey zones of modern geopolitics — where power increasingly operates through permanence, logistics and silent positioning rather than open confrontation.
Adelio Debenedetti
6 days ago4 min read


Barentsburg and Pyramiden: Two Different Ways Russia Never Really Left the Arctic
Barentsburg and Pyramiden are more than abandoned Soviet Arctic settlements. They reveal how modern powers maintain influence through infrastructure, permanence and strategic ambiguity. In the high Arctic, Russia’s presence in Svalbard reflects a broader geopolitical reality: the future of power may depend less on open confrontation and more on who quietly remains positioned inside the world’s emerging grey zones.
Adelio Debenedetti
Jun 254 min read


Why the GIUK Gap Still Controls NATO Strategy in the North Atlantic
GIUK Gap explained: a North Atlantic chokepoint between Greenland, Iceland and the UK. A key corridor for naval movement, submarine tracking and NATO strategy.
Adelio Debenedetti
Apr 102 min read


What Is a Chokepoint in Geopolitics? Why It Matters Today (Hormuz, Suez, GIUK Gap)
What is a chokepoint in geopolitics and why it matters today. From Hormuz to the GIUK Gap, these strategic routes shape global power and trade.
Adelio Debenedetti
Apr 102 min read
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