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Asia Market Open: Bitcoin Dips Below $90K, Wall Street Rebound Lifts Asia Risk Mood

22 January 2026 at 22:34

Bitcoin dipped below $90,000 on Friday as Asian stocks posted modest gains after the Bank of Japan held rates steady, with investors weighing softer US tariff talk alongside signs of US economic resilience.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan rose 0.4%, while Japan’s Nikkei added 0.3%.

Japan’s central bank left its interest rate steady at about 0.75% after wrapping up its two-day policy meeting on Friday.

The hold followed a rate increase in December that lifted borrowing costs to their highest level in three decades, after policymakers judged the chances of meeting the 2% inflation target had improved.

BREAKING: BOJ revises inflation forecast up, keeps policy rate unchangedhttps://t.co/hn72uFUABs pic.twitter.com/KgWAHpmrqs

— Nikkei Asia (@NikkeiAsia) January 23, 2026

Market snapshot

  • Bitcoin: $89,795, down 0.1%
  • Ether: $2,960, down 1.7%
  • XRP: $1.91, down 1.6%
  • Total crypto market cap: $3.11 trillion, down 0.3%

Wall Street Extends Rebound After Trump Eases Tariff Rhetoric

Greg Magadini, director of derivatives at Amberdata, said: ”The biggest threat today for global risk-assets, including BTC and altcoins, is around debt sustainability. If yields rise too much, the cost of financing (and investment attractiveness) of risk-assets requires lower prices.”

On Wall Street, stocks extended a rebound for a second session on Thursday after President Donald Trump walked back earlier tariff threats on European goods and ruled out taking control of Greenland by force.

The S&P 500 gained 0.5% and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.9%, with investors rotating back into equities after the midweek jitters.

The rally also broadened, with the small-cap Russell 2000 closing at a record high, even as the week stayed choppy, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq were down 0.4% for the week and the Dow was little changed.

Earnings Season Looms As A Fresh Market Test

In rates and FX, the dollar index held near 98.329 and hovered around its lowest levels of the year after its biggest one-day fall in six weeks.

Fed funds futures implied a 96% chance the Federal Reserve will keep rates on hold at its Jan. 28 meeting, and the 10-year Treasury yield ticked up to about 4.247%.

Commodities stayed in focus as precious metals pushed deeper into record territory, with gold up 0.3% to $4,951.47 per ounce and silver up 1.7% at $97.85.

South Korea led the regional move, the Kospi rose 1.1% for a third day after crossing 5,000 for the first time, a level President Lee Jae Myung had pledged to target through market reforms and tax measures aimed at narrowing the so-called Korea discount.

Tech also kept traders busy after Intel forecast quarterly revenue and profit below estimates, sending its shares down 11% in after-hours trading, a reminder that earnings season can still reshape sentiment quickly.

The post Asia Market Open: Bitcoin Dips Below $90K, Wall Street Rebound Lifts Asia Risk Mood appeared first on Cryptonews.

Bitcoin & Ethereum ETFs Shed Over $1B – But Solana and XRP See Inflows

22 January 2026 at 13:22

U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin and Ethereum exchange-traded funds saw over $1 billion in outflow in a single trading day on January 21, as investors moved out of the two largest cryptocurrencies during a broader market downturn.

Meanwhile, smaller altcoin-linked products linked to Solana and XRP experienced net inflows, which points to an apparent institutional positioning difference during the most recent volatility.

According to SoSoValue, on January 21(ET), Bitcoin spot ETFs saw a total net outflow of $709 million yesterday, marking three consecutive days of net outflows, while Ethereum spot ETFs recorded a total net outflow of $298 million. Meanwhile, Solana spot ETFs saw a total net… pic.twitter.com/rQZrHfM8LK

— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) January 22, 2026

Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs recorded more than $1 billion in withdrawals, despite both asset classes recording positive cumulative inflows since inception.

Bitcoin ETFs Post November-High Redemptions During Global Market Rally

Bloomberg reported that outflows from Bitcoin ETFs were the biggest one-day redemption since November, and came at a time when the conventional risk assets reversed against calmer geopolitical tensions.

The remarks by U.S. President Donald Trump at Davos, where he dismissed military action over Greenland and indicated a halt to tariffs imposed on Europe, contributed to the boost in equities in the U.S., Europe, and Asia.

The iShares Bitcoin Trust at BlackRock recorded the highest outflow of $356.64 million, with Fidelity’s FBTC in second place at $287.67 million. Grayscale’s GBTC still experienced smaller yet steady redemptions and has had a total cumulative net outflow of over $25 billion since conversion.

Bitcoin ETF data source: SoSoValue

The HODL was the only big Bitcoin ETF that recorded a net inflow, which was $6.35 million.

Bitcoin ETFs have already registered weekly net outflows of $1.19 billion, while January remains slightly positive overall, with net inflows of $17.56 million.

Source: Cryptonews

At the time of writing, Bitcoin was trading at approximately $89,100, a loss of almost 7% over the past week, and the trading volume was decreasing, indicating a low level of activity in the short term.

Selling Pressure Hits Ethereum ETFs, Led by BlackRock’s ETHA

Ethereum ETFs mirrored the pressure seen in Bitcoin. On January 21, spot Ether ETFs posted net outflows of $297.51 million, following another heavy outflow the previous day.

BlackRock’s ETHA accounted for the bulk of the redemptions, shedding more than $250 million, while Fidelity’s FETH and Grayscale’s ETHE also saw net withdrawals. Grayscale’s lower-fee ETH mini trust was a notable exception, recording a modest inflow.

Despite the outflows, Ethereum ETFs still managed close to $18.3 billion in assets, roughly 5% of Ethereum’s market capitalization.

Ethereum itself briefly reclaimed the $3,000 level before slipping back, trading near $2,900, and was down nearly 13% over the past week.

Capital Shifts to Solana and XRP ETFs Amid Broader ETF Selloff

In contrast to the sell-off in Bitcoin and Ethereum products, Solana and XRP spot ETFs attracted fresh capital. Solana ETFs recorded net inflows of $2.92 million on January 21, lifting cumulative inflows to nearly $870 million.

Assets under management rose to about $1.10 billion, supported by steady interest in products from Fidelity, VanEck, and Grayscale, even as SOL’s price fell more than 11% on the week.

XRP ETFs also rebounded, posting $7.16 million in net inflows after starting the week with outflows. Cumulative inflows since launch now stand at $1.23 billion, with total assets around $1.39 billion.

Funds from Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, and Canary Capital led the day’s inflows, despite XRP trading lower alongside the broader market.

Market watchers said the divergence reflected positioning, not fundamentals, with Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs reacting to macro-driven rebalancing, while smaller Solana and XRP funds drew selective inflows after earlier declines.

The post Bitcoin & Ethereum ETFs Shed Over $1B – But Solana and XRP See Inflows appeared first on Cryptonews.

Asia Market Open: Bitcoin And Stocks Edge Higher As Greenland Tensions Cool

21 January 2026 at 22:04

Bitcoin inched up toward $90,000 early Thursday as investors eased back into risk, after President Donald Trump struck a calmer tone on Greenland and signalled a path toward a deal that pulled some heat out of markets.

Asian equities followed Wall Street higher, while gold and silver slipped as the scramble for safety faded.

Market snapshot

  • Bitcoin: $89,906, up 0.9%
  • Ether: $3,018, up 1.8%
  • XRP: $1.95, up 2.6%
  • Total crypto market cap: $3.13 trillion, up 0.9%

The shift came after Trump said he had reached the “framework of a future deal” involving NATO over Greenland, and indicated he would hold off on the tariff threat that had rattled traders earlier in the week.

⚠Bitcoin held near $92,000 as trade-war fears resurfaced, Asian stocks slipped in risk-off trading, and futures and FX markets led the reaction.#CryptoMarketUpdate #AsiaMarketOpen https://t.co/6MSIpB6dlS

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) January 20, 2026

Trump Backs Off Greenland Tariffs, Leaves Details Of Deal Vague

That message marked a clear step down from the weekend’s rhetoric, when Trump talked up US control of Greenland, threatened a new round of duties on several European countries, and kept markets guessing about how far he might push.

European leaders had been preparing retaliation options and warning the dispute risked spilling into a broader trade fight.

Even so, the contours of any “framework” remain hazy. Denmark has repeatedly rejected the idea of ceding the semi-autonomous island, and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte later suggested sovereignty was not on the table in his conversation with Trump, leaving investors to treat the détente as tactical, not permanent.

Markets traded the change in tone quickly. Japan’s Nikkei rose 1.4%, South Korea’s Kospi gained 1.6%, and Australia’s S&P ASX 200 added 0.6%, putting a regional gauge on track to snap a three-day losing streak.

Overnight in the US, equities rose as traders unwound part of the week’s risk-off positioning. The S&P 500 climbed 1.2% and the Nasdaq 100 advanced 1.4%, after Trump’s comments reduced the odds of near-term tariff escalation tied to Greenland.

Relief Rally Meets Reality As Greenland Stays A Live Risk

In crypto, the bounce came with a more measured tone. Bitfinex analysts said the focus now is on signs that the market is stabilizing, including ETF flows flattening or turning positive, spot taker cumulative volume delta staying net positive, and price reclaiming the $90,000 to $92,000 zone with falling volatility.

“If those don’t align, this move looks like redistribution instead of the previously assumed consolidation before an uptrend,” they said.

Rates and the dollar looked steadier as well. Treasury yields held near recent levels after easing in the prior US session, helped by calmer bond-market trading and solid demand at a $13B 20-year auction, while the greenback edged higher.

Currently, traders are treating Greenland as a live headline risk rather than a closed chapter.

Trump is still keeping the issue on the global agenda at Davos, and investors have learned this week that a single line from the podium can reset the mood across stocks, crypto and havens just as fast.

The post Asia Market Open: Bitcoin And Stocks Edge Higher As Greenland Tensions Cool appeared first on Cryptonews.

Asia Market Open: Bitcoin Tumbles To $88K, Gold Sets Record As Markets Price Fresh Trade Shock

20 January 2026 at 21:04

Bitcoin slid 4% to about $88,000 on Wednesday as a sharp leverage unwind ripped through crypto markets, adding fresh stress to a week already defined by risk aversion across stocks, bonds and currencies.

Spot gold surged past $4,800 an ounce for the first time, while silver also notched record highs, as investors kept leaning into havens during a broad “Sell America” style move that pressured the dollar.

Liquidation data from CoinGlass showed 181,570 traders got wiped out over the past 24 hours, taking total liquidations to $1.07B. Long positions took most of the damage, with $998.33M liquidated versus $71.39M in shorts.

Market snapshot

  • Bitcoin: $88,942, down 4%
  • Ether: $2,963, down 7.1%
  • XRP: $1.90, down 3.8%
  • Total crypto market cap: $3.09 trillion, down 3.9%

Bitcoin, Ether Dominate Liquidations As Equities Stay Under Pressure

Bitcoin and Ether accounted for the bulk of the forced selling. The heatmap showed $440.19M in Bitcoin liquidations and $392.38M in Ether, while the remaining tokens together tallied about $52.60M.

Dow tumbles by more than 850 points and stocks suffer worst day since October as Trump clashes with European leaders over Greenland https://t.co/WQDVJiQ8H4

— CNN (@CNN) January 20, 2026

The risk mood also weighed on equities in Asia, where losses extended into a third session. MSCI’s Asia-Pacific index outside Japan fell 0.3% in early trade, and Japan’s Nikkei dropped 1.2%, marking a fifth straight decline.

Europe looked soft as well. Euro Stoxx 50 futures and DAX futures both slipped 0.4%, keeping traders on edge as they assessed the latest tariff timeline and its knock-on effects for global growth.

Wall Street Losses Deepen As Trump Doubles Down On Greenland

In the US, the previous session delivered the heaviest hit, with Wall Street sliding more than 2% overnight. The S&P 500 fell 2.06% and the Nasdaq Composite sank 2.4%, while Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures later steadied, up about 0.2% in early dealing.

That same flight to safety kept pushing bullion higher. Trade tensions stayed at the centre of the story. President Donald Trump doubled down on his Greenland rhetoric, saying there was “no going back” on his goal to control the island, and his tariff threats toward Europe revived fears of a wider trade war.

Policymakers in Europe prepared their response, with the European Union set to hold an emergency summit in Brussels on Thursday and leaders weighing options that include tariffs worth 93B euros, $109B, on US imports.

Koinly CEO Robin Singh said February has historically been Bitcoin’s month, averaging double-digit gains over the past decade. “But underperformance wouldn’t be surprising, and it’s not necessarily a bad thing,” he said.

The post Asia Market Open: Bitcoin Tumbles To $88K, Gold Sets Record As Markets Price Fresh Trade Shock appeared first on Cryptonews.

Asia Market Open: Bitcoin Steadies Near $92K, Stocks Slip On Trump Tariff Threat Over Greenland

19 January 2026 at 22:16

Bitcoin held near $92,000 on Tuesday after Monday’s sell-off, as traders stayed cautious amid renewed trade-war anxiety sparked by President Donald Trump’s threat to slap tariffs on eight European nations unless the US is allowed to buy Greenland.

Markets felt the shock first through futures and currencies as Wall Street cash markets were closed on Monday for a holiday, leaving no regular overnight session to set the tone.

Market snapshot

  • Bitcoin: $92,360, down 0.4%
  • Ether: $3,183, down 0.8%
  • XRP: $1.96, up 0.2%
  • Total crypto market cap: $3.21 trillion, down 0.3%

By early Asia hours, Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures were down about 1% as investors pared exposure to US risk assets.

Asian equities dipped as the risk-off move spread, with MSCI’s broad Asia-Pacific gauge down about 0.44% and Japan’s Nikkei off about 0.8%. Europe looked softer too, with futures pointing to a muted, lower open as traders digested the latest tariff timeline.

The dollar stayed under pressure and US Treasury yields climbed, with the 10-year yield rising to around 4.265%, its highest level in more than four months, as the so-called Sell America trade regained momentum in early dealing. Gold held near record levels and the Swiss franc drew fresh haven demand.

Bitcoin Trades Calmly Despite Macro Turbulence

In crypto, the price action looked calmer than the macro headlines. Bitcoin hovered near $92,000 after last week’s squeeze higher, and some desks framed the recent volatility as a leverage reset rather than a full change in trend.

Bitfinex analysts said Bitcoin showed early signs of structural improvement in 2026 after briefly pushing through the $94,000 to $95,000 resistance zone, a move they said flushed out shorts in the biggest clear-out in nearly 100 days.

They added that aggressive spot buying helped the rebound and that long-term holder distribution slowed, with realized profits dropping to about 12,800 BTC per week, well below earlier cycle peaks.

“For a more durable rally to take hold, market structure will need to transition into a regime where maturation supply begins to outweigh long-term holder spending,” the analysts said.

“Such a shift would drive long-term holder supply higher, signalling renewed conviction and reduced sell-side pressure. Historically, this configuration was last observed during Aug. 2022–Sept. 2023 and again from March 2024–July 2025, both periods that preceded stronger and more sustained trend recoveries for Bitcoin.”

Europe Prepares Countermeasures To US Tariff Push

Trump’s tariff threat drove the broader mood. He said the US would impose additional 10% import tariffs from February 1 on goods from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Finland and Britain, and raise them to 25% on June 1 if no deal is reached.

European officials pushed back, and the EU began weighing retaliation if the duties advance, including reactivating a suspended tariff package worth about €93B and considering the bloc’s Anti-Coercion Instrument, a tool designed for high-pressure trade disputes.

Attention now shifts to Davos, where Trump is set to meet global business leaders on Wednesday during the World Economic Forum, keeping trade and policy risk front and centre for markets that have started the week in defensive mode.

The post Asia Market Open: Bitcoin Steadies Near $92K, Stocks Slip On Trump Tariff Threat Over Greenland appeared first on Cryptonews.

HoneyMyte (aka Mustang Panda) Deploys ToneShell Backdoor in New Attacks

30 December 2025 at 10:22
HoneyMyte (Mustang Panda) is back with a new ToneShell backdoor. Read how this stealthy attack blinds Microsoft Defender to target government entities in Asia.

The Delhi Blast and Pakistan’s Proxy War: Why Another Clash Looks Likely

25 November 2025 at 10:38

OPINION — South Asia has once again returned to the global spotlight after a suicide bombing struck the heart of India’s capital on November 10. The bomber detonated explosives in a car near Delhi’s historic Red Fort, killing 13 and injuring 25 others. This attack—the first major attack in the Indian capital in over a decade—points to the threat of Pakistan-based terrorism beyond the border regions.

According to Indian authorities, the Delhi bombing was part of a broader plot that security agencies disrupted in the days leading up to the attack. The suicide bomber, allegedly recruited by the Pakistan-based group Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), reveals how Pakistan-backed outfits are upgrading their recruitment methods and fundraising tactics following Indian airstrikes in May that destroyed several of their operational centers. These developments highlight the fragility of regional security as both India and Pakistan edge closer to another military confrontation. With this backdrop, the United States must reassess its growing ties with Pakistan’s military establishment, which remains the epicenter of South Asia’s instability.

The Rise of a “White-Collar” Terror Network

Prior to the Delhi attack, Indian authorities uncovered a terror network across three provinces in India, including Jammu and Kashmir. Authorities seized nearly 2,900 kilograms of explosive materials near Delhi, including 360 kilograms of ammonium nitrate, confiscated assault rifles, and arrested at least ten doctors linked to the operation.

The scope of the seizure suggests that the “white collar” terrorist cell planned multiple coordinated attacks capable of mass casualties far exceeding the Delhi bombing. A hypothesis remains that the Delhi suicide bomber, Dr. Umar Nabi, acted independently after authorities preempted the larger plot and detained his associates. Nabi and another doctor from Kashmir were allegedly connected with JeM recruiters via Telegram and met their handlers in Turkey. It can be assessed with high confidence that the duo’s alleged meeting with their handlers overseas likely facilitated access to explosives, funding, and logistical support.

The revelation of the white-collar terrorist network in India marks a shift in Pakistan-based terrorist groups’ recruitment strategies—from radicalizing uneducated youth to mobilizing educated professionals with specialized skills. At the same time, JeM and other groups have shifted their financing from traditional banking channels to fintech platforms, mobile wallets, and decentralized digital payment systems. Together, these trends illustrate a strategic recalibration: a move toward more sophisticated, less detectable forms of proxy warfare aimed at destabilizing India’s internal security and social cohesion.

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The Pakistan Angle

A day after the Delhi bombing, another suicide attack outside Islamabad’s District Court killed 12 people. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Defense Minister Khawaja Asif immediately blamed India, claiming the attacks were “orchestrated from Afghanistan at India’s behest.” However, the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) offshoot Jamaat ul Ahrar (JuA) claimed responsibility, contradicting the government’s narrative. Although no direct link has been established between the Delhi and Islamabad attacks, the latter exposes Pakistan’s deteriorating counterterrorism capacity and its flawed internal security policies. Official data from October indicates more than 4,700 terrorist incidents occurred in Pakistan this year alone, killing over 1,000 people despite 62,000 reported counterterrorism operations carried out by security forces. This paradox points to a chronic failure of strategy rather than a lack of effort.

Instead of reinforcing counterinsurgency grids in its northwest, Pakistan has relied on punitive airstrikes and heavy-handed tactics—often targeting civilian areas in Afghanistan. In early October, Pakistani jets carried out an airstrike in Kabul intended to kill TTP leader Noor Wali Mehsud. The botched operation, however, damaged civilian infrastructure and provoked international condemnation. Mehsud later released a video clip confirming he remains active within Pakistan, further embarrassing Islamabad. Additional airstrikes in Afghanistan’s Paktia Province killed three athletes, inflaming tensions along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border and triggering sporadic cross-border shelling. These misdirected operations have played directly into the TTP’s hands, enabling its expansion and emboldening more radical offshoots like JuA, which has increasingly targeted civilians in major Pakistani cities.

Pakistan’s motivations appear less about counterterrorism and more about geopolitical signaling. Its October 9 airstrike in Kabul coincided with Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi’s visit to India—the first such diplomatic outreach since the Taliban takeover of Kabul. The timing suggests Pakistan’s strikes were designed to warn Kabul against strengthening ties with New Delhi. Yet, Afghanistan has refused to yield and continues to deepen cooperation with India in healthcare and infrastructure development.

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Another Conflict Remains Imminent

As domestic terrorism surges, Pakistan’s civil-military leadership has diverted its focus to countering India’s strategic positioning in the region by inflicting punitive strikes on Afghanistan and increasing military cooperation with the interim government of Bangladesh, which is hostile to New Delhi. Simultaneously, Field Marshal Asim Munir, Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff, recently consolidated power after parliament passed the 27th constitutional amendment, granting him sweeping authority and lifetime immunity from prosecution. This move has sparked widespread criticism within Pakistan. Three senior judges have resigned in protest, and prominent civil society figures warn that the country has entered a new phase of authoritarian rule. Munir’s expanding authority mirrors the military’s long-standing playbook: when legitimacy wanes, external crises—particularly with India—serve as instruments of political survival.

The conditions for another India-Pakistan confrontation are steadily aligning. Pakistan’s military, under domestic pressure, could once again resort to conflict with India to restore its standing. Meanwhile, Indian Army Chief General Upendra Dwivedi has warned that any future operation would be far more severe than Operation Sindoor—the codename for India’s May 2025 strikes on Pakistani terrorist and military infrastructure. General Dwivedi’s statement that territory remains the “currency of victory” signals India’s willingness to pursue limited territorial gains in Pakistan-occupied areas of Jammu and Kashmir in the event of renewed hostilities.

The May India-Pakistan conflict has set a precedent that Pakistan will use nuclear saber-rattling to secure a ceasefire with India. Yet, Indian strategists increasingly regard Pakistan’s nuclear threats as coercive posturing designed to provoke U.S. intervention rather than as credible deterrence. If another conflict erupts, India may not be deterred by Pakistan’s nuclear signaling. The Indian calculus appears to favor limited conventional offensives aimed at degrading Pakistan’s militant infrastructure and securing limited territorial gains while testing Islamabad’s actual nuclear resolve. Such a confrontation would dramatically alter South Asia’s deterrence dynamics and expose the fragility of Pakistan’s “bleeding India with a thousand cuts” doctrine.

Conclusion

For the United States, these developments present a dilemma. As I warned in The Cipher Brief in September, America’s national security priorities cannot align with Pakistan’s objectives in the region. Washington’s growing diplomatic and economic engagement with Pakistan risks undermining long-term regional stability if it fails to address Islamabad’s dual game—presenting itself as a counterterror ally while nurturing militant proxies.

Washington must reexamine the foundations of its Pakistan strategy. The United States should leverage its political influence and aid frameworks to condition engagement on measurable counterterror reforms: dismantling militant networks, enforcing digital financial oversight, and halting cross-border militant activity. Without such conditionality, the United States risks legitimizing a regime that fuels the very instability it claims to combat.

The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals.

Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.

Have a perspective to share based on your experience in the national security field? Send it to Editor@thecipherbrief.com for publication consideration.

Read more expert-driven national security insights, perspective and analysis in The Cipher Brief

Trump’s Trip Was a True “Pivot” to East Asia

6 November 2025 at 11:35
OPINION — President Trump’s meetings in East Asia last week did more to enhance our relationship with a few allies and partners in the region than the past fifteen years of talking about a “pivot to Asia”.

Yes, showing the flag and having the President interact with counterparts is an important part of diplomacy, at the highest level. It has impact because it shows that the U.S. cares about allies and partners, that the U.S. values this relationship and will be there for allies and partners, regardless of the cost.

So, Mr. Trump’s visit to the region was more than tariffs and trade. It was about relationships that principally deal with national security,

Mr. Trump’s meetings with Japan’s new Prime Minister, Sanae Takaichi, and South Korea’s President Lee Jae Myung were particularly noteworthy. The U.S. and Japan signed security and economic measures – and a Memorandum of Cooperation – to expand cooperation on shipbuilding and critical-minerals supply chains, an apparent initiative to reduce reliance on China for rare earth and other critical minerals. More importantly, it established a relationship with Japan’s new prime minister that will ensure we remain close allies.

With South Korea, U.S. approval to develop nuclear-powered submarines using U.S. technology and facilities was a major U.S. decision, with South Korea joining a select few states that operate nuclear-propulsion submarines. There are a few particulars related to the fuel and safeguard agreements that will have to be addressed, but the bottom line is that South Korea, within a few years, will have nuclear-powered submarines (with conventional weapons), a major enhancement of their deterrent capabilities. South Korea also committed to purchasing large quantities of U.S. energy – oil and gas – and a $350 billion trade and investment agreement.

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The highly touted meeting of Mr. Trump with Chinese President Xi Jinping was important because it happened, while underwhelming for the substantive progress. Yes, China did agree to resume purchasing U.S. soybeans and agreed to suspend planned export restrictions on rare earth minerals for one year, while also committing to greater cooperation on the trafficking of fentanyl precursor chemicals into the U.S. In return, the U.S. reduced tariffs on Chinese products from 57% to 47%.

The U.S. also said it discussed the possible sale of U.S. computer chips to China, although not the newest AI chips. For many, Mr. Trump’s announcement that he will visit China in April 2026, with a subsequent trip to the U.S. by Mr. Xi was welcomed by many, hoping that a more robust dialogue with China would be in our respective countries’ interest.

Interestingly, there was no mention of Taiwan or potential conflict in the South China Sea. Apparently, the Trump-Xi meeting dealt exclusively with trade and fentanyl-related issues. Or, if these issues were discussed, both agreed that there would be no public statement documenting these discussions.

Mr. Trump’s visit to Malaysia, Japan and South Korea was an important visit of a U.S. president who prides himself on being a peacemaker. In Malaysia Mr. Trump witnessed the signing of a peace accord between Cambodia and Thailand that he personally brokered. Indeed, that’s how Mr. Trump started his five-day trip to East Asia. He ended it with a request that the U.S. and China help end the war in Ukraine. This has been a heavy lift for the U.S. and Mr. Trump personally, who tried to end this war. It’s also a challenge for China, given that China continues to buy Russian oil, and reportedly provides machine tools, semiconductors and other dual-use items that help Russia rebuild its defense industry.

Mr. Trump’s trip to East Asia was a success, especially for what he accomplished in South Korea and Japan.

This column by Cipher Brief Expert Ambassador Joseph DeTrani was first published in The Washington Times

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A Fragile Truce at the Durand Line: Will the Afghanistan–Pakistan Ceasefire Last?

30 October 2025 at 13:23

OPINION — One of the most enduring security issues in South Asia has been rekindled by the recent border conflicts between the Taliban-led Afghanistan and Pakistan military regimes. Diplomatic efforts by Qatar and Turkey have resulted in a tenuous ceasefire after days of fierce fighting that claimed scores of lives on both sides, offering a little respite from the rising violence. However, talks for a lasting peace have since collapsed. The crisis reveals long-standing structural tensions along one of the most volatile frontiers in the world that have their roots in militant activity, historical enmity, and disputed sovereignty.

Escalation and Triggers of Conflict

Intense fighting broke out along several stretches of the 2,600-kilometer Afghanistan-Pakistan Durand line in early October 2025, especially close to Spin Boldak–Chaman and the Kurram tribal areas. Each side accused the other of starting the conflict. The Taliban-led government denounced Pakistan's retaliatory bombings as a violation of national sovereignty, while Pakistan asserted that militants connected to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) were conducting cross-Durand line attacks from Afghan territory. According to reports, Pakistani air raids in the provinces of Kandahar and Paktika killed dozens of civilians. Taliban members retaliated by attacking a number of Pakistani military installations, with the opposing side suffering heavy losses. Afghan traders are losing millions of dollars every day as a result of the conflict's rapid disruption of humanitarian and commercial routes, which led to the closure of important Durand line crossings.

This breakdown was not the first. Pakistan has long accused the Afghan Taliban of harbouring the TTP, a group committed to destroying Pakistan's government but philosophically linked with Kabul's leadership. The Taliban have refuted these claims, stating that Afghanistan forbids the use of its territory against other countries. However, the Durand Line, from the colonial era, continues to function as a political and geographic fault line, trapping both sides in a never-ending blame game.

The Doha-Istanbul Ceasefire Agreement

An emergency ceasefire agreement was reached on October 19, 2025, following nearly a week of fighting, thanks to intensive mediation by Qatar and Turkey. Both parties committed to immediately stopping offensive operations, prohibiting cross-Durand line attacks, and setting up systems for ensuring compliance under the agreement. To address implementation and verification procedures, a follow-up meeting was planned for October 25 in Istanbul. The deal was heralded as a diplomatic victory, particularly since Turkey and Qatar, who both have comparatively open lines of communication with the Taliban leadership, were instrumental in facilitating communication between two regimes which do not trust one another.

Khawaja Muhammad Asif, the defence minister for the Pakistani military dictatorship, underlined that Islamabad would evaluate the truce based on the Taliban's capacity to control the TTP. "This agreement will be broken by anything coming from Afghanistan," he cautioned. The Taliban's stated position that Afghanistan "will not allow its soil to be used against any country" was reaffirmed by Zabihullah Mujahid, the regime's spokesperson. Although these declarations show official dedication, they conceal more profound disparities in ability and perspective. The Taliban government sees the threat as a matter of border integrity and sovereignty, whereas Pakistan primarily sees it through the prism of counterterrorism. It will take more than diplomatic words to bridge different viewpoints.

Istanbul Talks

The follow-up talks in Istanbul — intended to turn the Doha truce into an enforceable framework—ended without a resolution after four days of negotiations. Reporting from multiple outlets indicates that mediators could not bridge the gap over concrete action against TTP networks allegedly operating from Taliban controlled soil and over how to verify any commitments. Pakistani regime’s officials briefed that Kabul was unwilling to accept binding steps to rein in or relocate the TTP; Afghan sources countered that the Taliban does not command or control the TTP and rejects responsibility for cross-Durand line attacks.

On the eve of, and during, the Istanbul round, Pakistan’s defence minister publicly warned that failure would risk “open war,” underscoring how narrow the window is for diplomacy if violence resumes along the frontier. While he acknowledged the ceasefire had broadly held for several days, he framed the talks’ success as contingent on Kabul’s verifiable curbs on the TTP. Reports say talks in Istanbul have restarted in another attempt for a deal.

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Key unresolved issues

First, TTP-focused measures: Islamabad sought explicit commitments (dismantling safe havens, detentions/relocations, or handovers of wanted militants), while Kabul insists it won’t allow Afghan territory to be used against neighbours but resists operations that might trigger internal backlash or fracture ties with sympathetic factions. No binding text on TTP was agreed.

Second, a verification and incident-prevention mechanism: negotiators discussed joint hotlines, third-party monitoring, or liaison teams stationed in cross-Durand line hubs to investigate incidents in real time. Talks stalled over scope, authority, and who would adjudicate disputes.

Third, the Durand Line: Pakistan has fenced large stretches and wants coordinated patrols and recognized crossing protocols; the Taliban does not formally recognize the Durand Line as an international boundary, making technical fixes politically sensitive. This gap persisted in Istanbul.

Fourth, trade and crossings: business lobbies on both sides pushed for a timetable to reopen Spin Boldak–Chaman and other checkpoints for normal commerce and humanitarian flows, but negotiators did not finalize sequencing (security steps first vs. parallel reopening).

Fifth, refugees and returns: Islamabad raised concerns around undocumented Afghans and cross-Durand line facilitation; Kabul pressed for humanitarian safeguards. No durable arrangement was announced.

Obstacles to Durable Peace

The structural issues threatening Afghanistan-Pakistan ties are still mostly unaddressed in spite of the truce. First, the ceasefire does not include militant organisations like the TTP. Their independence severely restricts the enforceability of the agreement. According to analysts, the Taliban are reluctant to use force to fight the TTP because of ethnic and ideological ties that make internal Afghan politics more difficult.

Second, monitoring is quite challenging because of the porous nature of the Durand-line. Pakistan has unilaterally fenced off significant portions of the Durand Line, whereas Afghanistan does not formally recognise it as an international border. Recurrent conflicts are exacerbated by this lack of mutual recognition, especially when it comes to security patrols and cross-Durand line trading.

Third, there is still an imbalance of interests. Attacks by militants coming from Afghanistan are the problem for Pakistan. Pakistan's repeated airstrikes and backing of anti-Taliban groups are the source of Kabul's resentment. Joint security coordination is hampered by these conflicting narratives.

Fourth, pressure from within both governments is increasing. While the Taliban in Afghanistan must strike a compromise between meeting external demands and preserving their credibility among nationalist and tribal factions, public annoyance in Pakistan has increased due to an increase in attacks on security forces. Internal resentment could result from any impression of giving in.

Last but not least, the economic aspect introduces another level of complication. Afghanistan relies significantly on cross-border trade through Pakistan for imports and transit to global markets. Significant financial losses and humanitarian difficulties have resulted from the bridge closures. Unless trade flows restart fully, the truce will have limited practical effects.

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The Strategic and Regional Implications

There are wider ramifications for South and Central Asia from the crisis and the resulting truce.

Stability and militancy in the region: Should the truce fail, transnational militant networks, such as IS-K and al-Qaida elements, may gain more confidence. Resuming hostilities might destabilise the entire region, as these organisations flourish in uncontrolled border areas.

Taliban governance: The truce also serves as a litmus test for the Taliban's ability to govern. Global opinions of its legitimacy as a ruling power will be influenced by its capacity to maintain territorial control, interact diplomatically, and quell militant groups.

Realignments in diplomacy: The participation of Qatar and Turkey demonstrates how regional diplomacy is changing. Both nations have established themselves as go-betweens that can interact with the Taliban government without granting official recognition. Their mediation highlights a changing power dynamic in South Asia, where non-Western actors are having a greater impact on resolving disputes.

Economic and humanitarian impact: The conflict's humanitarian effects go beyond its security implications. Food and medical supplies have been disrupted by the closing of the Cross-Durand line, and the situation for displaced people on both sides of the frontier is getting worse. Maintaining peace will depend on reopening trade channels and making sure help is delivered.

The Road Ahead

The establishment of cooperative verification systems, a quantifiable decline in militant attacks, and the resumption of trade are important markers to keep an eye on. If any party breaks the agreement, the area can quickly revert to hostilities. It will be a careful balancing act for Pakistan to keep pressure on the Taliban without inciting escalation. The ability of the Taliban to control militant organisations while maintaining internal unity and sovereignty will be put to the test in Afghanistan. Supporting monitoring, communication, and de-escalation procedures is essential for regional partners, especially Qatar and Turkey, to continue their mediation efforts beyond symbolic diplomacy. As of October 28, the Istanbul process has adjourned without a deal, leaving these markers unmet and the ceasefire’s durability uncertain until verifiable steps are negotiated.

In the end, the ceasefire between Afghanistan and Pakistan serves as an example of the potential and vulnerability of regional diplomacy in a post-Western security context. In addition to bilateral discussions, broad regional collaboration tackling the interconnected problems of militancy, Durand-line governance, and economic interdependence will be necessary for a lasting peace. The willingness of both regimes to turn promises into tangible, verifiable action will determine whether this armistice develops into long-lasting stability or just serves as another brief break in a lengthy history of antagonism.

The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals.

Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.

Have a perspective to share based on your experience in the national security field? Send it to Editor@thecipherbrief.com for publication consideration.

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Afghanistan Is Becoming India and Pakistan’s Proxy Battlefield—Again

15 October 2025 at 17:39
OPINION — On Oct. 15, 2025, Islamabad and Kabul announced a 48-hour ceasefire after days of shelling and cross-border clashes around Spin Boldak/Chaman and in Kurram. That same week New Delhi hosted Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, the highest-profile Taliban visit to India since 2021. These two parallel events are not accidental. They are the visible symptoms of a strategic pattern that has, for decades, made Afghanistan an arena for India–Pakistan competition. If left unchecked, that competition will once again turn Afghan territory, institutions, and people into collateral damage.

The recent clashes underscore a simple truth: kinetic escalation along a porous frontier is a multiplier. Airstrikes, artillery duels, and intermittent border closures do not remain local nuisances. They force displacement, interrupt trade and humanitarian access, and create openings for transnational violent actors to regroup and expand. At the same time, high-level diplomatic gestures, like India’s reception of a Taliban foreign minister—help normalize engagement without demanding verifiable commitments from Kabul on terrorism, human rights, or governance. The result is a dangerous two-track dynamic: escalation on the ground and normalization in the capitals.

A brief history of the rivalry on Afghan soil

Pakistan’s footprint in Afghanistan is old and deep. From the anti-Soviet jihad to the 1990s civil war, Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) cultivated proxies, trained fighters in madrassas and camps, and hosted Taliban decision-making bodies in Quetta, Peshawar, and Miramshah. By the time I led Signals Intelligence at NDS, the material flows, explosives, trainers, and fighters—were a familiar pattern. As U.S. forces drew down after 2014, Islamabad’s public posture shifted; in private and in some diplomatic forums, Pakistan presented the Taliban as a political reality to be accommodated. That accommodation was always transactional, however, and it produced deep leverage inside Afghanistan—from provincial commanders to elements inside Kabul.

India’s engagement followed a different logic but with equally transactional ends. Delhi invested heavily in infrastructure, education and development—roads, power projects, scholarships that sent Afghans to Indian universities. Those investments built goodwill and administrative capacity. But India also positioned itself as a counterweight to Pakistan. New Delhi’s network of consulates, including two on Pakistan’s border, provided both soft-power reach and strategic insight. My colleagues and I at NDS were aware that New Delhi’s intelligence service (RAW) cultivated contacts in border provinces and maintained links that could be used against Pakistan. At the time the Afghan republic rationalized these partnerships: the enemy of our enemy was a useful ally. That pragmatic logic blinded us to a harsher reality—India’s support for Afghan institutions was, ultimately, calibrated to New Delhi’s competitive needs, not an unconditional commitment to the Republic’s survival.

Two anecdotes illustrate the corrosive effect of external rivalry on Afghan sovereignty. First, while intercepting communications as head of Signals Intelligence I once heard General Dostum pleading on the phone with Pakistan’s ambassador—an exchange that revealed how quickly even vocal opponents could seek patronage. Second, a private meeting with the RAW station chief in Kabul—held months before the Republic collapsed—left me with a hollow certainty: Indian intelligence was preparing contingency plans for the Republic’s fall rather than mobilizing to prevent it. Those were not betrayals born of malice but of strategic realism: both Delhi and Islamabad were optimizing for their own survival and leverage.

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Why this rivalry matters now

Three features make the current moment particularly risky.

First, even when attacks originate with state-adjacent actors inside Afghanistan, their effects are interstate: whether Islamabad acknowledges strikes in Kandahar or Taliban-aligned groups carry out violence, the result is cross-border harm — civilians killed, infrastructure damaged, and humanitarian access disrupted.

Second, diplomatic gestures without conditionality distort incentives. India’s public reset—receiving a Taliban foreign minister—grants political space to a movement whose internal policies remain deeply repressive. If major regional powers normalize ties without demanding verifiable changes, they risk entrenching a governance model that enables radicalization and denies basic rights, particularly for women and minorities.

Third, Afghans pay the price. External competition saps Afghan agency. Political elites are incentivized to cultivate foreign patrons rather than build domestic coalitions. Former security personnel, civil servants and vulnerable communities are either abandoned or become leverage for outside actors. The human cost—displacement, loss of livelihoods, shrinking civic space—is the clearest metric of failure.

A three-part policy approach: sovereignty, de-escalation, and conditional engagement

If Washington and its partners are serious about stability in South and Central Asia, they should adopt a compact focused on three priorities.

Prevent Afghanistan from becoming the battlefield. The U.S. should lead a regional security initiative—narrow in scope but backed by monitoring and consequence mechanisms—bringing together India, Pakistan, Iran, China, and key Central Asian states. The initiative would pledge non-use of Afghan territory for hostile proxy activity, create impartial border monitoring mechanisms, and establish rapid-response channels to defuse incidents before they spiral.

Push India and Pakistan back to bilateral dialogue. The most durable way to remove Afghan soil from the rivalry is to reduce the rivalry itself. Washington should use calibrated incentives and diplomatic leverage to get Delhi and Islamabad into issue-specific talks—starting with confidence-building measures on border management, refugee handling, counter-narcotics cooperation, and a hotline for counterterrorism incidents. These are pragmatic, tradeable commitments that build reciprocity without demanding grand concessions.

Condition engagement with Kabul on verifiable benchmarks. Engagement with the de facto authorities will continue for humanitarian and security reasons—but it must not reward predation. Bilateral ties should be tied to transparent, public benchmarks: demonstrable counter-terrorism cooperation, protections for civilian populations (especially women and minorities), and steps to prevent Afghan soil from being used by transnational violent actors. Parallel support must be scaled for civil society, independent media, and the Afghan diaspora—networks that preserve the political capital needed for a future inclusive order.

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Realism with consequences

Some will argue that Delhi’s and Islamabad’s actions are driven by existential fears and that external pressure has limited purchase. That is true. But realism also recognizes that incentives, reputational costs, and monitoring can alter strategic calculations. The goal is not to force idealism but to make proxy strategies less profitable—politically, economically and reputationally—than cooperation.

Conclusion

The recent ceasefire and high-profile diplomatic activity are warnings more than signals of resolution. Afghanistan’s sovereignty must not be treated as negotiable currency in a broader regional rivalry. If the international community fails to act, Afghans will continue to suffer as their country becomes the chessboard for others’ strategies. The path forward is straightforward, if politically difficult: prevent kinetic escalation, push India and Pakistan toward practical dialogue, and condition engagement with Kabul on measurable protections for Afghan people. For the sake of Afghanistan—and for regional security—that is the responsible, pragmatic choice.

The Cipher Brief is committed to publishing a range of perspectives on national security issues submitted by deeply experienced national security professionals.

Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of The Cipher Brief.

Have a perspective to share based on your experience in the national security field? Send it to Editor@thecipherbrief.com for publication consideration.

Read more expert-driven national security insights, perspective and analysis in The Cipher Brief

Chinese Police Enlist Drug-Sniffing Squirrels

10 February 2023 at 08:00

Forget the hounds. Police in China are releasing the squirrels. 

Law enforcement in the city of Chongqing reportedly announced that it is training a team of drug-sniffing squirrels to help locate illicit substances and contraband. 

Insider reports that the police dog brigade in the city, located in southwestern China, “now has a team of six red squirrels to help them sniff out drugs in the nooks and crannies of warehouses and storage units.”

According to Insider, “Chongqing police told the state-linked media outlet The Paper that these squirrels are small and agile, and able to search through tiny spaces in warehouses and storage units that dogs cannot reach,” and that the “squirrels have been trained to use their claws to scratch boxes in order to alert their handlers if they detect drugs, the police said.”

“Squirrels have a very good sense of smell. However, it’s less mature for us to train rodents for drug search in the past in terms of the technology,” said Yin Jin, a handler with the police dog brigade of the Hechuan Public Security Bureau in Chongqing, as quoted by the Chinese state-affiliated English newspaper Global Times.

“Our self-developed training system can be applied to the training of various animals,” Yin added.

The newspaper noted that in contrast to drug dogs, “squirrels are small and agile, which makes them good at searching high places for drugs.”

According to Insider, “China’s drug-sniffing squirrels may well be the first of their kind,” although “animals and insects other than dogs have also been used to detect dangerous substances like explosives.”

“In 2002, the Pentagon backed a project to use bees to detect bombs. Meanwhile, Cambodia has deployed trained rats to help bomb-disposal squads trawl minefields for buried explosives,” Insider reported. “It is unclear if the Chongqing police intends to expand its force of drug-sniffing squirrels. It is also unclear how often the squirrel squad will be deployed.”

China is known for its strict and punitive anti-drug laws. 

According to the publication Health and Human Rights Journal, “drug use [in China] is an administrative and not criminal offense; however, individuals detained by public security authorities are subject to coercive or compulsory ‘treatment.’”

The journal explains: “This approach has been subject to widespread condemnation, including repeated calls over the past decade by United Nations (UN) agencies, UN human rights experts, and human rights organizations for the country to close compulsory drug detention centers and increase voluntary, community-based alternatives. Nonetheless, between 2012 and 2018, the number of people in compulsory drug detention centers in China remained virtually unchanged, and the number enrolled in compulsory community-based treatment rose sharply.”

“In addition to these approaches, the government enters all people detained by public security authorities for drug use in China into a system called the Drug User Internet Dynamic Control and Early Warning System, or Dynamic Control System (DCS),” the journal continues. “This is a reporting and monitoring system launched by the Ministry of Public Security in 2006. Individuals are entered into the system regardless of whether they are dependent on drugs or subject to criminal or administrative detention; some individuals who may be stopped by public security but not formally detained may also be enrolled in the DCS”

The Dynamic Control System “acts as an extension of China’s drug control efforts by monitoring the movement of people in the system and alerting police when individuals, for example, use their identity documents when registering at a hotel, conducting business at a government office or bank, registering a mobile phone, applying for tertiary education, or traveling,” according to the journal.

The post Chinese Police Enlist Drug-Sniffing Squirrels appeared first on High Times.

Explore Church Street, Bengaluru

25 January 2023 at 22:20
Church street , Bengaluru
Take a walk along the cobblestone path with bookstores, good coffee, art and all things creative at Church Street,  Bengaluru.
It is fanatic to see Bengaluru back to buzzing with activity just like before.  Though most of us are a bit morning conscious of our distances and masks,  it is certainly that namma Bengaluru. One of the spaces that we always took for granted was Church Street. With the current visit, I realise this is a space I miss.  After its facelift in 2019, the more pedestrian-friendly church street has taken a turn from being one of the side lanes to Mahatma Gandhi Road to one that is sought out by many. With MG road now adding on the metro and ongoing construction,  it doesn’t look as glamorous as before what better than art, music and literature hub Church Street to take over that role !

Location

The 750m stretch of cobblestoned path changed the experience of busy metropolitan Bengaluru to that envisioned by book and art lovers. This is Church Street parallel to the now lost-it’s-glory MG road.  Leading to the famed St Mark’s Cathedral, this is a part of knowing your city.  This is the road leading off the Brigade Road to Starla Road and can be accessed through any of these roads. 
Street art at Church street

How to reach?

Reaching Bengaluru 
Air travel: Bengaluru International Airport caters to most international routes. Check with the airlines for the recent advisory and check the government website for visa regulations.
Trains: Bengaluru  Junction is a busy area that brings trains across India. Enjoy a unique Indian rail ride based on your location. 
Buses: Both the private and public bus networks are huge.  Alight at Majestic Station and further catch the metro to reach Church Street.  
Travel in Bengaluru
Metro: Currently the fastest and fuss-free way to travel in Bangalore is the metro train service.  Get down at MG road station and exit via the Church Street exit to be directly greeted by the iconic cobblestone path. 
Cabs and autos in and around the city,  it is easy to hail a can or the ever-persistent autorickshaws. Fix the price before you board. Rather than haggling,  I prefer to use Uber or Meru services. There are multiple varieties of transport that these services provide.  

What to see at Church street? 

The bibliophile’s paradise if you are like us,  loving the smell of books and getting so excited by the unlimited number of books, this is your place.  With bookstores that tower taller than any apartments in this area,  you can sure spend a few hours at blossom,  bookworm etc  Enjoy some rare book hunting or just walk into one of these and just settle down along the long aisles of these bookstores.
Street art as soon as you start your walk the colourful wall art will capture your attention.  These beautiful works take your eyes away from the otherwise dusty exteriors and provide that instant smile.  Enjoy these as you walk by and locate the metro station from far thanks to the colourful tall wall art.  
Artists and music:  towards evenings treat yourself to that amazing creative idyll of budding and veteran artists, and guitarists on the sidewalk.  You can spend some time at 
Animation souk for that love of pop culture you need to peek into The animation souk.  The place will satisfy your gift needs with cartoons, superheroes and more. 
animation art at Church street bengaluru

Let’s eat

Start off at Church Street with the best coffee at Mateo. As you read and move through the path, there are plenty of places offering world cuisine and pretty much true to the flavours. The street hosts some of the best pubs with live music. Wait till twilight to see this place transform into one of the best night spaces.
I would highly recommend having coffee at Mateo. For the pubs try Chugs or Pegs. For food, I am a huge fan of the Indo-Chinese cuisine in Mainland China but walking up this street is as easy as looking and choosing.  

Climate and costume 

Bangalore can range between hot 30s to cooler 20s. This depends on the season. Check the weather before you plan your day.  Carry a light all-weather jacket towards evening.  Generally, Bengaluru is not too humid,  but it can rain from time to time.  Dress easy if you are heading to just explore or dress to impress for the pub nights, that’s up to you.

Stay connected.  

Connecting with the different dimensions of a place you visit gives you an overall idea of life and culture. I find Church street easily does this for me.  The classic temple-rich town transforms easily into a global scene just by taking yourself here. Hope you enjoy travelling to Bengaluru as much as we do.  If you are looking for a unique temple experience try Gavipuram temple with astronomical research history while you are in Bengaluru. If you are planning to travel to Kerala, check out our hiding spot,  Thrissur. Stay on with us as we resume travel and bring more on our India travel. Subscribe to this website or follow us on instagram or twitter
Disclaimer 
The opinions and guidance is based solely on our experience. The links provided are for reference we would advise you to check before you head to the places.  The information is based on the date of publication and can change,  so refer to the relevant websites for current information.
Book stores , Church street

OSCE Trains Uzbekistan Law Enforcement to Track and Seize Crypto, Search Dark Web

22 October 2022 at 17:30
OSCE Trains Uzbekistan Law Enforcement to Track and Seize Crypto, Search Dark Web

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) has set out to teach law enforcement officers in Uzbekistan how to conduct crypto and dark web investigations. The regional body recently organized a training course for employees of the country’s security agencies in Tashkent.

Uzbekistan Police and Security Agents Attend OSCE Course on Cryptocurrencies

Representatives of Uzbekistan’s Prosecutor General’s Office, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and the State Security Service have taken a training course on cryptocurrency and dark web investigations held by the OSCE between Oct. 17 and 21 in the capital Tashkent.

The course was organized by the OSCE Transnational Threats Department in co-operation with the OSCE Project Co-ordinator in Uzbekistan and the Academy of the Prosecutor General’s Office, the intergovernmental security body said on its website.

“Participants learned about the main concepts and key trends in the areas of internetworking, anonymity and encryption, cryptocurrencies, obfuscation techniques, dark web, and Tor networks,” the announcement detailed.

They also practiced various approaches and methods for seizure of crypto assets, blockchain analysis, and darknet searching. The course was based on materials provided by the European Cybercrime Training and Education Group (ECTEG).

A new computer classroom donated by the OSCE to the Prosecutor General’s Academy was inaugurated before the course by Deputy Prosecutor General of Uzbekistan Erkin Yuldashev and Acting OSCE Project Co-ordinator in Uzbekistan Hans-Ulrich Ihm.

Crypto Training in Region to Continue Throughout Next Year

Digital technologies have been transforming the criminal landscape, noted Evgeniy Kolenko who heads the Prosecutor General’s Academy. He insisted that educating law enforcement in this field needs a long-term and systematic approach.

“Cybercrime education requires adequate equipment – both hardware and software,” added Gayrat Musaev, Head of the Academy’s Department for Implementation of Information and Communication Technologies and Information Security. Musaev also praised the new dark web lab.

The OSCE course is the first of this kind in Uzbekistan within the second phase of the “Capacity Building on Combating Cybercrime in Central Asia” project funded by the U.S., Germany, and South Korea. Similar training activities will continue across the region throughout 2022 and 2023.

This year, the government in Tashkent has been taking steps to more comprehensively regulate Uzbekistan’s crypto sector. In the spring, President Shavkat Mirziyoyev issued a decree providing definitions for terms like crypto assets and exchange. New registration rules for crypto miners were presented in June and earlier in October, Uzbekistan introduced monthly fees for crypto companies.

Do you think law enforcement authorities in Central Asia will continue to increase focus on the crypto space? Share your thoughts on the subject in the comments section below.

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