
Ceasefire Collapses: US Strikes Iran After Attacks in the Strait of Hormuz
A truce months in the making unravelled in 48 hours after attacks on shipping in the world's key oil chokepoint.
Great-power diplomacy · Energy geopolitics · The global order
Augustus York is International Affairs Editor at Times of Pol, where he leads the publication's coverage of relations between the world's major powers. He writes on diplomacy, energy security and the slow reordering of the international system — the stories that unfold over years rather than news cycles, and that shape the world long after the headlines fade.
Over more than two decades in journalism, he has reported from summits, capitals and conflict zones across four continents, developing a particular interest in the machinery of negotiation: how deals are struck, why they collapse, and what happens when the routine habits of diplomacy break down. His analysis is grounded in a conviction that the most important developments in world affairs are often the quietest, and that clear explanation is a form of public service.
His reporting concentrates on great-power competition, the geopolitics of energy and critical resources, the health of international institutions, and the structural forces reshaping alliances and rivalries. He is especially drawn to the intersection of economics and security — the point where trade, sanctions and infrastructure become instruments of statecraft.
Augustus writes for readers who want more than a summary of events. His pieces aim to explain not only what has happened but why it matters, drawing on history and structural analysis to place fast-moving news in a longer frame. He believes independent journalism means following the evidence wherever it leads, and printing what powerful actors would prefer left unsaid.

A truce months in the making unravelled in 48 hours after attacks on shipping in the world's key oil chokepoint.

Why the routine machinery of negotiation is breaking down between the world's largest powers — and what replaces it.

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Record displacement is testing asylum systems and reshaping domestic politics far from the front lines.
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