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Russia seeks 'third power' status in Southeast Asia via energy

Russia seeks 'third power' status in Southeast Asia via energy

South China Morning Post

Russia is attempting to secure 'third power' status in Southeast Asia through energy initiatives amid regional uncertainty and geopolitical rivalries.

2 sources across English

Too few sources yet for a reliable bias read.

How outlets framed it

Left: The South China Morning Post questions Russia's potential to achieve 'third power' status in Southeast Asia through its energy initiatives amidst regional uncertainties.

Center: Brookings Institution's coverage focuses on the broader 'fallout' occurring within Southeast Asia.

Key divergence: The primary divergence lies in the focus, with one source examining Russia's specific geopolitical ambitions and the other addressing a more general regional 'fallout'.

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Source-by-source bias tags and translations live in the interactive view.

Reported by

Brookings · Scmp

Zaviye reads the Middle East press across six languages and maps who covers what, and how. The feed · The Brief

Russia seeks 'third power' status in Southeast Asia via energy — coverage across 2 sources | Zaviye