Iran’s $50K drone changed how every army fights. Watch why: Why Iran’s $50,000 Drone Is Beating Million Dollar Missiles. watch video on watch page
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Iran’s $50K drone changed how every army fights. Watch why: Why Iran’s $50,000 Drone Is Beating Million Dollar Missiles
https://youtu.be/LQyOly9LdJU
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In this GVS Deep Dive, Najma Minhas unpacks the blacklist expansion, collapsing soybean trade, Huang’s explosive remarks, and how this escalation will reshape global trade negotiations. watch video on watch page
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China is “NANOSECONDS” behind the US. Allowing US companies like Nvidia to compete in China fits the interests of both Beijing and Washington, according to Jensen Huang, the US chipmaker’s founder and CEO.
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renewable energy and trillions of parameters in Alibaba’s Qwen3-Max. This is why many believe the AI Century belongs to Beijing, not Washington.
Big news: Alibaba just announced a $53 billion investment in artificial intelligence and unveiled Qwen3-Max, a trillion-parameter model to rival OpenAI and Anthropic. But this isn’t just corporate news. It signals China’s broader strategy: making AI an industrial backbone, not just an app.
In this Deep Dive we explore:
How China’s factories + 300,000 robots give AI real-world scale.
Why inference demand and cheap energy matter more than hype.
How 1.4 billion people create oceans of data for training.
China’s “brain gain” as scientists return from the U.S. and Europe.
The role of renewables + ultra-high-voltage grids powering AI clusters.
Why U.S. sanctions may have accidentally accelerated China’s chip industry.
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The Trump administration just announced a shocking new H-1B visa policy: a $100,000 fee for new applications starting March 2026. The move triggered panic among tech companies, chaos for workers, and even stock crashes in India’s IT sector.
In this video, we break down:
What exactly happened when the H-1B fee was announced.
Why the policy is seen as “another own goal” by the Trump administration.
How Indian IT firms like Infosys, TCS, and Wipro are directly affected.
The impact on U.S.-India relations, as ministers in New Delhi push back.
Why the H-1B visa was introduced in 1990, and how it fueled U.S. innovation.
The risks of brain drain, global talent moving to Canada/UK, and America losing its edge.
With 71% of H-1B visas going to Indians and thousands of Asian students already reconsidering U.S. education, this policy could reshape the global tech talent market. Is this protectionism… or a self-inflicted wound?
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China’s rise is no longer measured only in factories, ports, or military strength. It is now measured in money — and specifically, in the reach of its own currency.
In this episode of GVS Deep Dive, Najma Minhas examines how China’s yuan is reshaping the global financial order. Less than fifteen years ago, almost none of China’s cross-border trade was settled in its own currency. Today, more than half is. Saudi Arabia now accepts yuan for oil, Russia clears more than 90% of its trade with China in yuan and rubles, Brazil settles soybeans directly in yuan, and Hungary has issued the largest-ever sovereign yuan bond.
Beijing has built the financial plumbing: swap lines, clearing banks, digital yuan pilots, and the CIPS payment system. Together, these moves create a parallel system less dependent on Washington and the dollar.
History tells us this shift should take decades. The U.S. dollar needed two world wars, the Marshall Plan, and Bretton Woods before it became the world’s reserve currency. But China’s yuan is rising in less than twenty years.
Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar faces headwinds: sanctions fatigue, political dysfunction in Washington, record deficits, and shaken trust in Federal Reserve independence. As dollar dominance erodes, the yuan offers an alternative — especially for countries seeking to diversify or escape sanctions.
Will the yuan replace the dollar? Not yet. But even if it rises to just 10–15% of global reserves, the balance of financial power will change. The question is no longer if the yuan will matter — but how fast.
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Moeed Pirzada invites Gen.Tariq Khan, Former Head Pakistan’s Western Command to unpack Saudi ~Pakistan Defense Pact. Against Whom? Why Now? youtu.be/01-cjAV5vwc?si… via @YouTube watch video on watch page
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Washington claims to protect its allies. But as tensions with China escalate, that protection is looking more like a trap.
Japan’s Prime Minister just resigned after a disastrous $550B deal demanded by the U.S. South Korea is facing public outrage after American trade concessions. And now, China is striking back — targeting Nvidia’s dominance in AI chips and turning U.S. soybeans into a weapon.
From Tokyo to Silicon Valley to America’s heartland, Beijing is playing hardball — rewriting the rules of global trade and power.
In this GVS Deep Dive, Najma Minhas examines:
Why Japan’s alliance with the U.S. collapsed into crisis
How China is squeezing Nvidia with antitrust reviews and shadow bans
The soybean shock devastating U.S. farmers
Beijing’s long game in rare earths, AI, and diplomacy
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Overnight, Larry Ellison became the richest man in the world — Oracle’s stock soared by $240 billion in a single day, the biggest gain since 1992. The reason? Artificial Intelligence. But behind the headlines is a story Wall Street doesn’t want to tell you: AI isn’t just eating data, it’s eating electricity.
From Singapore to Virginia, from Shenzhen to Bengaluru, data centers are consuming city-sized amounts of power. Oracle’s latest contract alone will require 4.5 gigawatts — the equivalent of more than two Hoover Dams or the entire grid of Singapore. And this is only the beginning.
As the U.S. grid struggles with aging infrastructure and endless project delays, China is building electricity capacity at wartime speed — from 217 GW of solar in a single year to dozens of new coal and nuclear plants. The result? While the U.S. may win the chip battle, China looks set to win the energy war.
This is the world’s first AI energy arms race — and whoever controls electricity will control the future.
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Deep diving into major regional and international issues to drill down an understand the how, why, what and where!
13 May 2023