Stratheia
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Stratheia is a portmanteau of the words ‘Strategy’ and the name of the Greek goddess of sight and vision, ‘Theia’. The platform aims to be a unique global source of investigation, analysis, opinions, and commentary on policy, intelligence, and technology. The platform caters to a wide range of global issues and events of major significance. We aim to bring the voices of distinguished scholars, policymakers, as well as researchers of strategy, policy, and technology from all over the world to this platform. Our team of analysts, data scientists, and strategic insight specialists present a fresh outlook to open source intelligence and policy. Through this platform, our global audience will benefit from the expert opinions of a versatile team of authors and researchers. Current topics of interest include politics, intelligence, technology, economy, military, geopolitics, and lawfare. Source
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Media Outlet details
| Scope | International |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Country | Pakistan |
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Recent Articles
Search ArticlesCan the Strait of Hormuz Return to Normal?
On Tuesday, missile attacks hit two oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, one registered to the UAE, killing a crew member and reviving hostilities that the U.S. and Iran were believed to have paused weeks earlier. Within hours, U.S. Central Command reinstated its naval blockade on Iranian ports, and global oil markets reacted sharply, with Brent crude surging more than 9% in one day, the largest single-day increase in over six years.
When Water Becomes A Weapon!
Water is an essential source of life, but in today’s world it is increasingly becoming a source of power and conflict. In an era where water scarcity is increasing and political rivalries are deepening, control over shared water resources has become a powerful tool of influence. As climate change, population growth, and geopolitical tensions are emerging, they are placing greater pressure on shared water resources.
Why India Can't Stop Indus Water?
New Delhi, in April 2025, announced that it would place the Indus Water Treaty in abeyance after a terrorist attack on tourists in Indian-occupied Kashmir, Pahalgam. As usual, this time too, Pakistan was blamed for this incident. The Indian public was informed that Pakistan would not receive a single drop of water, as announced by New Delhi’s Minister of Water, C.R. Patil.
India's Hybrid Warfare Campaign in AJK
The nature of warfare has transformed between Pakistan and India for a long time. Particularly after 2019, India has started a hybrid warfare using unconventional methods like disinformation campaigns, cyber, and economic tools to build a narrative against Pakistan. Indian networks of fabricated media outlets have been uncovered by European watchdogs such as the EU disinfo lab, spreading an anti-Pakistan narrative to get more support from global institutions like the EU and the UN.
Russia's Strategic Diplomacy and Africa's Expectations
By declaring October 28-29, the dates for the third Russia-Africa Summit, which carries a strategic weight, Russia has demonstrated another practical approach towards raising multifaceted relations with Africa, reconvening African leaders, corporate executive entrepreneurs, stake holders and academic researchers to highlight its noticeable achievements and bilateral agreements that have been implemented since 2019.
The Alliance that Spends More but No Longer Trusts
On 7 and 8 July 2026, a NATO summit was held in Ankara; heads of 32 NATO members along with representatives from Ukraine and South Korea attended the summit. There was an announcement of billions of dollars for new defense spending, but this budget raises concern about the future of this alliance. The US-Iran war signaled the uncertainty and lack of trust among the member states; that uncertainty is the real story of Ankara.
The Risk of Automated War in South Asia
One luxury has played a key role in South Asia’s nuclear deterrence: Time. Time has always been a major component in South Asian nuclear deterrence. In previous border incidents, it took the political leaders a number of hours or days to put together the conventional military forces, confirm the intelligence, and consult with military commanders that gave them an “operational breathing space”.
The Disarming Temptation: India's Counterforce Ambitions and South Asian Stability
South Asia’s nuclear deterrence has long rested on the assumption that neither side can strike first without inviting devastating retaliation, but that assumption is now under strain. India’s expanding intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities, precision-strike systems, and ballistic missile defenses are creating concerns that New Delhi may eventually view counterforce targeting as a viable option: disarming Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal before it can be used.
Why Is India Spending More on Weapons Than Welfare?
India, which is in the midst of emerging as a regional power, seems to be doing everything it can to go against the tide.
Who Is Undermining the Non-Proliferation Order?
What poses the greatest threat to the global non-proliferation order: the pursuit of nuclear weapons, or the selective application of the rules designed to prevent their spread? For decades, the international community has viewed nuclear proliferation as the foremost threat to global security. While the world’s attention has remained fixed on preventing the spread of nuclear weapons, the very system established to achieve that goal has gradually lost its credibility.