The World Governments Summit begins, Norway’s defence deal and Melbourne’s Mortadeli.
Tuesday 3/2/26
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Are you in Dubai for the World Governments Summit? Or perhaps you’re heading there for some winter sun? The emirate is in constant flux, so the latest Monocle City Guide (out today) distills just how to navigate the ever-evolving metropolis, including which restaurants to reserve and where to experience its retail scene beyond the malls. For more news and views, tune in to Monocle Radio. Here’s what’s coming up in today’s Minute:

THE OPINION: Heading to the Caribbean? Take a history lesson first
IN THE BASKET: Norway’s defence deal with South Korea
DAILY TREAT: A sandwich at Mortadeli
FROM MONOCLE.COM: What to expect at this year’s World Governments Summit


The Opinion: travel

The Caribbean is more than sun, sea and sand – it’s a geopolitical hotspot too

By Gregory Scruggs
<em>By Gregory Scruggs</em>

Frequent travellers to the Caribbean are used to delays but these are typically caused by hurricanes rather than military action. Those seeking a dose of winter sun last month had their plans scrambled as the Federal Aviation Administration closed Eastern Caribbean airspace during the US special forces operation to extract Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro. Whether flying Paris to Martinique, London to Saint Lucia or Toronto to Turks and Caicos, the result was cancelled flights across the board – more than 1,100 in all. Those disruptions will almost certainly not be the last.
Civil-aviation authorities recently warned pilots in the eastern Pacific of the ongoing risks from US military aircraft. Pentagon officials confirmed in late January that they had conducted their first airstrike on an alleged drug smuggling vessel since Maduro’s capture.

With high season under way, it’s high time that holidaymakers and tourism marketers dispense with the myth that the Caribbean is nothing but an interchangeable mix of sun, sea and sand. As Monocle contributor Tom Vanderbilt said in November after finding himself in a sticky situation in Tanzania, you should “do your geopolitical research before packing your passport.”

Turbulence ahead? US fighter jets in Puerto Rico last month

That kind of homework has long been anathema to tourists heading for the beach. Conventional tourism marketing for the Caribbean typically portrays sun loungers and parasols at the water’s edge, next to a tropical cocktail garnished with a slice of pineapple. In party-hard destinations such as Cancún, Jost Van Dyke and the all-inclusive resorts that litter Jamaica and the Dominican Republic, the aspiration is escapism – throw back another margarita to forget the news of the day.

Such mindlessness has always been poor form. As Antiguan-American writer Jamaica Kincaid put it in her 1988 book A Small Place, a non-fiction work examining her birthplace, “every native of every place is a potential tourist and every tourist is a native of somewhere”. But when the native becomes a tourist, she warns, they almost inevitably transform into “an ugly empty thing, a stupid thing, a piece of rubbish pausing here and there to gaze at this and taste that”.

That kind of shutting off of the brain when going on holiday is what allows one, for example, to meander past the pastel-coloured buildings in Willemstad, the Unesco-recognised capital of Curaçao, but fail to notice the enormous oil refinery, dormant since 2019, that could prove a geostrategic lynchpin if it can once again accept crude oil from Venezuela. At its worst, such inanity sees tens of thousands of cruise ship passengers disembark to ride zip lines and water slides at a gated resort in Labadee, Haiti, who have little awareness that they are in a troubled Caribbean nation. On a recent trip, the port of call was announced as “Labadee, Hispaniola”. Travellers, however geopolitically stunted, should at least know where they are. The region is not adrift from geopolitics: it is a hotspot and one in which the White House will continue to take a keen interest. Whether it’s Cuba or Haiti, more disruption is to be expected.

This finger-wagging is not to discourage travel to the Caribbean but rather to encourage visitors to brush up on this complex part of the globe. Colonialism left a painful legacy on the region but it also left an enriching cultural heritage. You might learn why you should pick up a few words of Papiamentu and seek out a baseball game in Aruba or pack a novel by Maryse Condé and order a ti’ punch at the bar in Guadeloupe. A quick history lesson might also point you in the direction of the most tranquil Caribbean destination: the US Virgin Islands, which Washington purchased from Copenhagen in 1916. With that territorial deal long in the rear-view mirror, you can relax on the beach in Saint Croix worry-free.

Gregory Scruggs is Monocle’s Seattle correspondent. For more analysis and insight, subscribe to Monocle here.

Further reading?
After Venezuela, who’s next? Maduro’s capture revives Latin American fears of US intervention


 

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The Briefings

in the basket: norway & south korea

Norway’s artillery deal with South Korea marks a notable shift in Nordic defence acquisitions

In the basket: 16 Chunmoo long-range rocket artillery systems
Who’s buying: Norway
Who’s selling: South Korea
Price: €1.69bn
Delivery date: 2028-2031

When Nato was founded in 1949, Norway was the only member state that shared a land border with the USSR. The purchase of Hanwha Aerospace’s long-range Chunmoo rocket system is obviously intended to deter Russia from getting any funny ideas about that 197-kilometre-long stretch.

Rank and file: The Chunmoo system in Seoul

Though the Chunmoo is cheaper and can be delivered sooner than the Nato-standard American equivalent, Lockheed Martin’s Himars, it might also signify growing distrust of the US among its European allies. It is further good news for Hanwha, however, which has already sold so much kit to Poland that it plans to start manufacturing rockets in Gorzów Wielkopolski by 2028. 


• • • • • DAILY TREAT • • • • •

savour a sandwich at mortadeli

“I wanted to create an old-school Italian spot,” says Australian-Maltese chef Jake Cassar. Mortadeli, his café and delicatessen in Melbourne, has the feel of a 1960s Milanese trattoria. “The sounds, the smells, the music – I wanted people to be transported to Europe,” he adds. When the wait for a sandwich at Mortadeli’s first location rose to an hour and the queue to be served started snaking around the building, Cassar decided that it was time to expand.

The new space serves speciality coffee, handmade pasta and big hitters such as porchetta rolls and hobz-biz-zejt, a Maltese open sandwich with olives and capers. Designed by Melbourne architecture firm Fowler and Ward, the fresh outlet centres around a long bar that invites patrons to linger – starting the day with an espresso and panini, before moving on to an antipasto with a spritz.
mortadeli.com.au


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Beyond the headlines

FROM MONOCLE.COM: uae

Amid heightened geopolitical tensions, WGS is a masterclass in soft power

The World Governments Summit (WGS) kicks off today at the Madinat Jumeirah in Dubai (writes Inzamam Rashid). The annual gathering has become one of the most packed fixtures on the diplomatic calendar, with attendees including presidents, prime ministers and policymakers from across the globe.

Turn of events: This year’s WGS promises to be the biggest yet

This year’s summit opens amid heightened regional tensions: the arrival of Donald Trump’s “beautiful armada” in Middle Eastern waters highlights the president’s renewed threats to strike Iran. Meanwhile, trilateral talks involving US, Ukrainian and Russian officials are taking place in Abu Dhabi. 

Monocle will be on the ground in Dubai throughout the week. Click here to read about why this year’s summit matters more than ever. 


Monocle Radio: THE BIG INTERVIEW

Billy Bragg

Why musician Billy Bragg has outsourced his memoir. More than 600 friends, associates, collaborators and fans collaborate in Billy Bragg: A People’s History, a book about the life of a songwriter whose work has become a soundtrack to people’s lives.


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