Dear Decision Maker , While headlines distract and overwhelm, our job is to decode the signal in the noise. Each week, we drop a curated brief of the most critical developments from unstable regions, covert operations, and emerging intelligence trends—distilled by analysts, not algorithms. If you operate in security, policy, defence, or just want to understand how power actually moves, this report was made for you. Dig in, Ahmed
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Our mission is to provide comprehensive and actionable intelligence to businesses, government agencies, and private clients. With a team of experienced intelligence collectors and analysts, many with backgrounds in intelligence services, military, law enforcement, and academia, we are committed to delivering insights that drive informed decision-making.
The Intelligence You Can't Google Just Got Better Decision Maker, While everyone else is arguing about headlines, you've been getting the ground truth. But here's what's changing, and why you should care. The Problem With "Intelligence" Today Every day, 2.5 quintillion bytes of data get created. Executives drown in noise. Analysts chase shadows. Decision-makers guess. Meanwhile, the real threats, the ones that destroy careers, sink companies, and topple governments – move in silence. The...
Dear Decision Maker, While your risk assessment teams debate quarterly projections, the real threats to your operations are evolving in real-time across three critical domains that most corporate intelligence briefings completely miss. The first is leadership transition risk. This week's appointment of Major General Mohammad Pakpour as Iran's new IRGC chief isn't just a personnel change. it's a strategic shift that will reshape Middle Eastern energy security and defence procurement patterns...
Dear Decision Maker, Three source reactions that perfectly illustrate why headlines fail decision-makers. One: A source in Lagos describing how Nigeria's banditry has evolved beyond kidnapping into something resembling organised warfare. The sophistication would surprise most Western analysts still calling it "rural crime." Two: A source in Phnom Penh explaining how Cambodia's scam centres aren't just stealing from individuals. They're building industrial-scale fraud operations that dwarf...