Karim Bellarte is a nonfiction writer and analyst interested in how power operates through ordinary economic systems: contracts, payment rails, shipping documents, risk models, and the quiet judgements made inside institutions. His work approaches sanctions not as slogans or moral theatre, but as engineered interventions that must pass through markets and organisations before they can touch a political target. That perspective keeps the focus on mechanisms: who must comply, what gets priced in, where incentives bend, and why evasion is often the most rational response available to those under pressure.Bellarte writes in a tradition that treats geopolitics and political economy as inseparable. He is drawn to moments when grand strategy collides with the mundane, such as the expansion of compliance departments into quasi-public authorities, or the way coalition politics quietly determines what enforcement can sustain. A recurring thread in his thinking is the long European and Mediterranean history of blockade, embargo, and commercial privilege, where control of trade promised decisive outcomes but reliably produced new intermediaries, new routes, and new forms of bargaining.Across Sanctioncraft, his aim is clarity without simplification: to help readers see sanctions as living systems with feedback loops, second-order effects, and institutional constraints. He writes for people who want to argue less about whether sanctions are ""tough"" and more about whether they are coherent, credible, and aligned with achievable political ends.