๐ Did Yemen just change everything?
Plus: A puzzle for the flag-lovers

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Todayโs briefing: |
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Good morning Intriguer. Every now and then, you encounter content on your socials that really takes your breath away (and no, Iโm not talking about the endless Millennial nostalgia stuff that I get fed).
Recently, friends of mine travelled to Socotra, an island off the coast of Yemen. Their photos depicted otherworldly scenes with bottle tree forests set against dramatic backdrops of white sand dunes and crystal-clear lagoons.
I didnโt realise how stunning Yemen was, as I often only saw the country through a geopolitical lens. Anyway, our top story today happens to be on Yemen and its latest geopolitical developments.

Intrigue Insight: Trumpโs China reversal?
In a shock tweet, President Trump has announced heโll now allow Nvidia to sell its cutting-edge H200 AI chips to China after all, in return for a 25% cut payable to Uncle Sam. These chips are ~ten times faster than the throttled H20 chips Trump re-authorised in July.
Intrigueโs initial take: This administration has wavered between two rival philosophies:
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One view (pushed by Nvidia and the White Houseโs David Sacks) argues itโs better to sell top AI chips to China, get it hooked on the US tech stack, undermine Chinaโs self-sufficiency push, and thereby help the US win the tech race.
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But the other view (pushed by everyone else) warns that selling China top US chips is like a) selling Nikes and Gatorade to your running rival, or b) letting China into the WTO (the 2001 move that turbo-charged Chinaโs rise), or even c) Leninโs quip about capitalists selling the rope that ultimately hangs them.
And funnily enough, Trumpโs own justice department just boosted that second view, arresting two of Chinaโs H200 smugglers for โfunneling cutting-edge AI technology to those who would use it against American interests.โ Turns out the US will now sell it instead.
Anyway, poorly-timed DOJ announcements aside, Trump is clearly now siding with that first view above, hence the 3% bump in Nvidia shares. And while he still nods to the national security risks (Nvidiaโs newer Blackwell and Rubin chips wonโt be included), we mightโve just witnessed a massive, US-backed expansion in Chinaโs own AI compute.
The bit weโre left figuring out is what (if anything) the US might get in return.
Two-state solutionโฆ

Hang around your family long enough this holidays and youโll start to hear about theย good old days when unverified folks trudged 12 miles to school. So this is your chance to one-up them with a nuanced 1980s reflection on when Yemen used to be two countries:
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The kingdom of North Yemen emerged out of the Ottoman Empire in 1918, then
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South Yemen emerged out of the British Empire as a Marxist state in 1967.
The two later unified as todayโs Republic of Yemen in 1990 before civil wars broke out in 1994 and 2014 โ even the UNโs 2022 ceasefire couldnโt stop Yemen effectively splitting back into a Houthi north (including the capital), and a grab-bag of factions in the south.
But thereโs been a massive development over the last week: one of those southern factions, sexily named the Southern Transitional Council (STC), just swept across all eight governorates of what used to be South Yemen!
And hereโs why that matters:
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The view from Aden (the southโs de facto capital)
The STC leader (Zubaidi) now stands unchallenged from the Arabian Sea to the Omani border, controlling 80% of Yemenโs oil reserves โ the engine for any functioning state.
Now, lest you think itโs all honey and bint al-sahn, he also inherits an economy in freefall, plus locals still angry after (say) his violent crackdown on women protesting unpaid salaries.
But what does Zubaidi want? Heโs already hoisting South Yemenโs old blue-and-red flag, so a declaration of independence seems inevitable though a referendum might come first.
Interestingly, he also just told Emirati outlets heโd sign any independent South Yemen onto Trumpโs Abraham Accords to recognise Israel โ a nudge for Trumpโs early backing.
But why speak first to Emirati mediaโฆ?
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The view from Abu Dhabi
This is a yuuuuuge win for the Emiratis:
First, while the STC has genuine roots (Zubaidi used to be Adenโs governor), the STC is basically an Emirati creation. Weโre talking UAE funding, training, arms, and even salaries.
Second, this means the UAE now not only has de-facto influence over a vast, resource-rich region (conveniently days after pledging $1B to help Yemenโs oil sector), but alsoโฆ
Third, the UAE now gets influence over Yemenโs half of one of the worldโs most strategic chokepoints: the Bab El-Mandeb Strait. Before the Houthis started attacking random ships, this narrow stretch carried 10-15% of global seaborne trade!
But for every โwinnerโ, thereโsโฆ
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The view from Riyadh
Guess who effectively created south Yemenโs losing faction? Thatโs right, the Saudis were long hosting the leader-in-exile, paying his salary, and even guarding his Aden palace!
Why? Both the Saudis and Emiratis wanted to counter the Iran-backed Houthis up north, but these two regional rivals backed different factions, and eventually pursued different strategies: the young Saudi crown prince ultimately opted for a political settlement with the Houthis to stabilise the borders, while he pursued his big domestic transformation.
But with Saudi forces retreating, the crown princeโs grand strategy now looks in disarray.
So Intriguers, we might be witnessing a Yemen rushing back to the 80s.
Intrigueโs Take
To call Yemen a failed state almost misses the point: Yemen was, if anything, always more of a state in construction, and now itโs devolving back to two states in construction.
But for the rest of us itโs still worth askingโฆ does any of this really matter? Sure.
First, Yemenโs state-owned oil producer has now halted production, fuelling energy market jitters (even if Yemenโs output is pretty modest).
Second, Iran has always seen Yemenโs Houthis as its cheapest proxy: a few hundred million a year to pin down your Saudi and Emirati rivals, pressure your Israeli foes, and draw The Great Satan into costly Red Sea patrols. So while this UAE consolidation might pose more of a threat to the Houthis longer term, these anti-Houthi forces are still busy.
Then third, it all hints at our multipolar worldโs reversion to proxy wars: the Emiratis are learning in Yemen what itโs like when a proxy strategy works, while learning the opposite over in Sudan where UAE-backed RSF paramilitaries keep committing atrocities.
Then finally, itโs another reminder how brittle our world order is, with Yemen now joining (say) Syria, Myanmar, the Sahel, and beyond as a stark reminder of just how quickly a seemingly stable stalemate can collapse.
Sound even smarter:
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The Emiratis already helped yoink the key Yemeni island of Socotra back in 2020 from Saudi-backed factions.
Meanwhile, elsewhereโฆ

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๐ฐ๐ญย CAMBODIA – Fighting resumes. |
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๐ฆ๐บย AUSTRALIA – Not so fast. Comment:ย We explored the geopolitics of this big story yesterday. |
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๐ฌ๐งย UNITED KINGDOM – Another draft. ย |
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๐จ๐ณย CHINA – New record. ย Comment: Weโve often explored the ways Chinaโs export wave is gobbling foreign industry, and the pro-trade folks at the Financial Times recently put it rather starkly like this: โIt is now increasingly hard to see how Europe, in particular, can avoid large-scale protection if it is to retain any industry at all.โ |
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๐ฎ๐ฉย INDONESIA – Rebuild.ย Comment: We explored the geopolitics of natural disasters here. |
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๐ฒ๐ฝย MEXICO – You can stay. ย Comment: Russiaโs embassy in Mexico City is massive, and itโs not to negotiate tequila tariffs: the various SVR and GRU handlers based there fly US-based sources down for debriefing under the cover of a sweet, sweet Cancun holiday. Ditto the suspiciously big Russian embassies in places like Nicaragua. |
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๐ฎ๐ถย IRAQ – Thatโs awkward.ย ย Comment: The US has long worked to curb Iranโs influence in Iraq, but this news suggests thereโs still a ways to go. |
Extra Intrigue
Intrigueโs commodities corner is back
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Copper:ย The price of copper broke a fresh record on Monday, amid a possible supply squeeze and partial optimism around Chinaโs 2026 growth.ย
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Crypto: Almost half of Americaโs Gen Z-ers say theyโd be happy to get cryptocurrency this Christmas, nearly double the broader US average.ย
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Coffee: Prices for the bean that makes your morning cuppa possible are expected to ease in 2026 thanks to a supply recovery in Brazil.
Puzzle of the day
Credits: Michael Vahrenwald for Bloomberg Markets.
They say a picture is worth a thousand words, but the photo above contains just one.
By photographer Frederick Charles, โA Banner Dayโ is one of 80 artworks containing a hidden puzzle hanging in the offices of NYC hedge fund PDT Partners. Bloomberg recently did a feature on them, but the above piece really caught our eye given its Intrigue vibes.
Can you figure out the five-letter word from the picture?
Hint: You might want to brush up on your flag knowledge!
(Solution at the bottom)
Todayโs poll
What do you think will happen with Yemen? |
Yesterdayโs poll: What do you think about Australia's age limits for social media?
๐ Good stuff – we've got to protect the kids (69%)
๐ It's a mess – unworkable and counter-productive (28%)
โ๏ธ Other (write in!) (3%)
Your two cents:
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๐ย P.G: โI like that it's a vanguard to more regional sovereign control over social media. I like the specificity of it and I think this is a smart first step toward reining in Big Tech's pernicious global impunity.โ
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๐ ย E.K.M: โChildren deserve a safer internet with spaces dedicated to them, not a complete community shut-out that they are incentivized to circumvent.โ
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โ๏ธ B.T: โIโd rather see mandatory education on critical thinking and enormous financial penalties for platforms that allow scammers and disinformation to prey on people.โ
Puzzle solution: The colours worn by the photoโs subjects each represent a different national flag. From left to right: Germany, Rwanda, Algeria, Thailand, Estonia. Together, they spell the word โgrateโ.








