The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—now in its eighth week and described as the largest…
Category: Geopolitics
This section focuses on geopolitics: how geography shapes power. That includes location, borders, climate, natural resources, population patterns, and physical terrain. The goal is to examine how these factors influence politics, foreign policy, and international relations, and how states use geographic position and assets to gain or project influence.
From a Nordic perspective, the picture is distinct. Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden are small, open economies operating in a strategically exposed region. They rely on Arctic proximity, maritime access, energy resources, and strong institutions to navigate security risks, particularly those linked to Russia. At the same time, they use EU and NATO cooperation, green energy leadership, and rules-based diplomacy to convert geographic constraints into political and economic leverage.
Geopolitics here is not just about great-power rivalry. It is a constant operating condition. Nordic countries treat it as an input into decision-making much like weather: something to monitor, interpret, and respond to continuously. Their scale, openness, and northern location shape both their vulnerabilities and their advantages, just as size and geography define the strategic outlook of larger powers.
Norway’s Oil Windfall: Europe Asks Oslo to Share Crisis Gains
As war and instability grip the Middle East and the Strait of Hormuz, Norway’s role as…
Swedish Royal Visit to Ukraine Exposes Russian Disinformation Tactics as Nordic Support Reaches Unprecedented Scale
Analysis: How a manufactured diplomatic snub reveals Moscow’s anxiety over Sweden’s €8.2 billion commitment to Ukraine…
Transatlantic Energy Realities: What US “Energy Dominance” Means for Nordic Business Strategy
When the Trump administration recently reaffirmed its “energy dominance” doctrine, the message to European capitals was…
Caught in the Crossfire: How China’s Export Controls Are Rewiring European Business
European boardrooms have a new line item on their risk registers: Beijing’s export license. What began…
