In May 2026, Vietnam's Foreign Minister met with North Korean officials, a significant yet underreported event that challenges the Western narrative of the DPRK as isolated and irrational. This meeting signifies the resurgence of socialist internationalism and the resilience of anti-imperialist relations against a U.S.-dominated order. Vietnam asserts its independence by maintaining ties with a historically aligned state despite pressures to conform to U.S. interests, illustrating a defiance of binary political expectations dictated by Western powers. As these two nations deepen cooperation, they expose cracks in imperial control, revealing that sovereignty endures in the face of sanctions and coercion.
Compliance by Tariff: Vietnam, Trump’s Trade Ultimatum, and the Algorithm of Empire
What looks like a trade deal is a digital enforcement regime—binding Vietnam’s economy, infrastructure, and labor to U.S. command through spreadsheet warfare and tariff threats. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | July 2, 2025 The Empire Speaks: Journalism as Class Discipline There’s a particular genre of journalism that doesn’t bother with reporting. It doesn't... Continue Reading →
Firewall for Empire: Vietnam’s Cutter Diplomacy and the Class Struggle at Sea
The Pentagon hands off warships, Newsweek hands off narratives, and a comprador class signs away sovereignty—all in time for the 30th anniversary of “normalized” relations By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 21, 2025 Ink Over Napalm: Newsweek’s Cutter Diplomacy and the Manufacture of Consent Newsweek’s breezy dispatch about Washington “growing a defense partnership... Continue Reading →