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Friday, March 20, 2026

Former Irish president, Mary Robinson: On The West's Selective Silence

    Friday, March 20, 2026   No comments

How International Law Falters in the Face of Power

In a world where the rules-based international order is repeatedly invoked as a cornerstone of global stability, a troubling pattern has emerged: the selective application of international law. Nowhere is this more evident than in the muted Western response to the United States and Israel's military campaign against Iran—a campaign that leading legal experts and respected voices like former Irish President Mary Robinson have unequivocally labeled illegal.

Mary Robinson—a former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and a moral authority on global justice—has issued a stark warning against "double standards" in upholding international law. "It's really very important that other countries do speak up, because we need to support the international rule of law. It's one of the great gains of humanity," Robinson stated, contrasting the robust condemnation of Russia's invasion of Ukraine with the tepid reaction to US-Israeli strikes on Iran.

Her message is clear: international law cannot be "à la carte." When powerful nations act with impunity, the entire framework designed to protect the vulnerable crumbles.

The joint US-Israeli attacks launched on February 28, 2026, targeting Iranian military and governmental sites and assassinating political leaders, raise profound legal questions under the United Nations Charter—the foundational treaty of the modern international system.

Article 2(4) of the UN Charter explicitly prohibits "the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state." Exceptions are narrowly defined: either authorization by the UN Security Council or self-defense against an actual armed attack.

Yet the US and Israel have not secured Security Council authorization for these strikes. Nor can they credibly claim self-defense under the strict legal standard required by international law. As UN Special Rapporteur Ben Saul has noted, lawful self-defense requires responding to an armed attack that is actual, not speculative. Preventive strikes aimed at disarmament, counterterrorism, or regime change do not meet this threshold—and may, in fact, constitute the international crime of aggression.

Legal scholars reinforce this assessment. The concept of "imminence" in international law requires a threat that is "instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of means, and no moment for deliberation." The US justification—citing Iran's missile and nuclear programs—fails this test, especially given that diplomatic talks were ongoing when strikes commenced.

Rebecca Ingber, a professor and former US State Department adviser, has described the prohibition on the use of force as a "bedrock" principle. "States may not use force against the territorial integrity of other states except in two narrow circumstances," she explained—neither of which apply here.

The contrast with Western responses to other conflicts is glaring. When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Western governments swiftly invoked international law, imposed sweeping sanctions, and rallied global condemnation. Yet when the US and Israel—close allies of many Western capitals—launch strikes that kill hundreds, including civilians, and target critical infrastructure, the response has been markedly restrained.

Robinson highlighted this discrepancy pointedly: "We see aggression now by the United States and Israel on Iran, which is not justified on the Charter, which is illegal, and very few countries have spoken explicitly about it. They're trying to avoid."

This silence is not merely diplomatic caution; it is a betrayal of the principles Western nations claim to champion. When international law is enforced only against adversaries while allies operate with impunity, the system loses its legitimacy.

Beyond the Charter violations, the conduct of the conflict raises serious concerns under international humanitarian law. Reports of strikes on civilian sites—including an attack on a girls' school in Minab that killed at least 165 people—underscore the human toll of military escalation. Civilians are already paying the price for this escalation, and these strikes risk igniting a wider regional catastrophe.

Meanwhile, Iran's retaliatory strikes against regional targets also risk violating international law if they deliberately target civilians—a reminder that violations by one party do not justify violations by another. The war on Iran is another episode in the worrying trend of international law's unraveling.

Mary Robinson's intervention is more than criticism; it is a call to action. "Governments must be prepared to speak out" against violations of international law, regardless of the perpetrator. This means European leaders, in particular, must find the courage to state clearly that the attacks on Iran violate the UN Charter.

The stakes extend far beyond the Middle East. If the international community permits powerful states to rewrite the rules of engagement through force, we return to a world where might makes right—a world the UN Charter was designed to prevent.

The war on Iran is not merely a regional crisis; it is a test of whether the international community values law over expediency. By failing to condemn illegal uses of force by their allies, Western governments undermine the very system they claim to defend. As Robinson reminds us, double standards corrode the foundation of global justice.

If we believe in a rules-based order, we must apply those rules consistently. Anything less is not pragmatism—it is complicity. The time for selective silence is over. The time for principled leadership is now.


Thursday, March 19, 2026

Media Review: Gulf States, International Law, and the Unspoken Link Between Iran Strikes and Regional Complicity

    Thursday, March 19, 2026   No comments

 The Sovereignty Paradox

In the corridors of the United Nations Human Rights Council this week, a diplomatic note from Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states described ballistic missile and drone attacks on Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates as a "situation of serious concern for international peace and security." The note characterized these strikes as "unprovoked attacks" requiring urgent international attention, calling for reparations for civilian, infrastructure, and environmental damage.

Beneath this unified diplomatic appeal lies a complex legal and strategic reality that most international actors have been reluctant to articulate plainly: the attacks on Gulf territories are occurring within the context of a broader military campaign against Iran that numerous legal scholars and a small number of Western governments—including Spain—have characterized as inconsistent with international law.

The Legal Framework: Sovereignty, Retaliation, and Contradiction

Under the United Nations Charter, Article 2(4) prohibits the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state. Article 51 recognizes the inherent right of self-defense if an armed attack occurs. These principles form the bedrock of the post-1945 international legal order.

When Iran launched strikes targeting military and energy infrastructure in Gulf states hosting U.S. forces, Tehran framed these actions not as aggression against sovereign neighbors, but as targeted responses to facilities being used to conduct what it characterizes as an illegal armed campaign against Iranian territory. In a letter to the UN Secretary-General cited by Iranian state media, Iran's UN ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani stated that the UAE's decision to allow its territory to be used in attacks on Iran amounted to "an internationally wrongful act that entailed state responsibility."

This legal argument presents a challenge for states seeking to condemn Iranian actions while remaining silent on the initial use of force against Iran. As one principle of international law holds: a state cannot claim for itself rights it denies to others. If the use of another state's territory to launch attacks violates sovereignty, then the same standard must apply consistently.

Oman's Distinctive Diplomatic Position

Amid regional consensus, Oman has maintained a notably different diplomatic posture. Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi, writing in The Economist, argued that the United States has "effectively lost control of its own foreign policy" by allowing itself to be drawn into what he termed an "unwanted entanglement" with Iran.

Albusaidi described Iranian strikes on Gulf states hosting U.S. bases as "inevitable, if deeply regrettable," calling them "probably the only rational option available" in response to a war "designed to terminate" Iran. His analysis underscores a reality that complicates simple narratives of aggression: military infrastructure hosted on sovereign territory does not exist in a legal vacuum. When that infrastructure is used to project force against a neighboring state, the hosting state becomes, in the eyes of international law and strategic calculation, a participant in the conflict.

Targeting the Architecture of War: Radar Sites and Military Infrastructure

An analysis by ABC News of satellite imagery and verified footage indicates that Iranian drones and missiles have struck at least 10 radar sites used by the U.S. and its allies across West Asia since the conflict escalated. These include facilities at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, sites in the UAE, Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan, Camp Arifjan in Kuwait, Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, and the U.S. Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain.

Experts note that radar systems are both vital and vulnerable: their emissions make them detectable, and even partial damage can degrade detection capabilities, effectively "blinding" segments of missile defense networks. The targeting of these assets reflects a strategic calculation: disrupting the early-warning architecture that enables offensive operations.

From a legal perspective, the distinction between "military" and "civilian" infrastructure becomes critical. International humanitarian law requires parties to distinguish between military objectives and civilian objects. However, when military assets are embedded within or adjacent to civilian infrastructure—as is often the case with radar installations near population centers—the legal and humanitarian consequences multiply.

International Responses: A Spectrum of Legal Interpretation

While Gulf states have sought emergency UN debate over Iranian strikes, the international response has revealed significant divergence in legal interpretation.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has been among the clearest Western voices, stating ahead of a recent EU summit that the war on Iran is "illegal," has "no reason behind it," and is causing significant harm to civilians, refugees, and economies. Sánchez linked the conflict to wider Middle East tensions, emphasizing that the EU must send a clear message supporting multilateralism and international law.

China's Foreign Ministry stated it is "always opposed to the use of force in international relations" and expressed shock at remarks by Israeli officials regarding targeting Iranian leadership. The UN Secretary-General has called on all parties to end a conflict "that is risking to get completely out of control, causing immense suffering on civilians."

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas emphasized that "member states do not have an appetite to go to this war" and that "we need an exit from this war, not escalation." These statements reflect a growing recognition that military escalation carries profound humanitarian and economic risks without clear strategic resolution.

Economic Dimensions: Hormuz, Sanctions, and Energy Security

The conflict's economic stakes are substantial. Iran is reportedly weighing legislation to impose transit fees on ships moving through the Strait of Hormuz, through which approximately 20% of global oil trade passes. An advisor to Iran's supreme leader suggested that "a new regime for the Strait of Hormuz" could enable Tehran to enforce maritime limits on countries that have imposed sanctions.

Meanwhile, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent indicated that the United States "may unsanction the Iranian oil that's on the water"—approximately 140 million barrels—to manage global energy prices. This potential policy shift underscores how economic instruments are being recalibrated in response to military realities.

Strikes on key gas fields have sparked fears of broader energy market disruption. With three of the world's top gas producers facing sustained attacks, analysts warn of risks that could reshape global energy supply chains.

The Narrative Imperative: Consistency and Credibility in International Discourse

The central diplomatic challenge emerging from this crisis is not merely military but narrative. States that condemn attacks on their sovereignty while facilitating military operations against others from their territory face a credibility gap that undermines their diplomatic standing.

International law does not permit selective application. If sovereignty is inviolable, it must be inviolable for all. If the use of force requires justification under Article 51, that justification must meet the same threshold regardless of the actor. When states house radar stations, military bases, and allow airspace to be used for operations against a neighbor, they cannot credibly claim non-participation in the resulting conflict.

This is not a matter of assigning blame but of upholding the consistency that gives international law its authority. As legal scholars have noted, the prohibition on the use of force is a jus cogens norm—a peremptory principle from which no derogation is permitted. Its application cannot be contingent on political alignment.

Pathways Forward

Oman's Foreign Minister suggested that while diplomacy may be "certainly difficult" after repeated shifts from negotiations to military action, "the path away from war … may have to lie through precisely this resumption." This perspective acknowledges that sustainable resolution requires addressing root causes, not merely managing symptoms.

For Gulf states, the immediate challenge is balancing legitimate security concerns with the long-term strategic imperative of regional stability. For the international community, the test is whether principles of international law can be applied consistently, even when politically inconvenient.

The current crisis underscores a fundamental truth of international relations: narratives matter. Credibility is earned not through selective condemnation but through principled consistency. In a region where historical grievances and strategic competition intersect, the only durable foundation for peace is a shared commitment to the rules that were designed to prevent exactly this kind of escalation.

As the UN chief warned, this conflict risks getting "completely out of control." Preventing that outcome requires more than emergency debates or targeted sanctions. It requires the courage to state obvious truths: that sovereignty is indivisible, that international law applies to all, and that lasting security cannot be built on the selective application of principles that were meant to protect everyone.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

The High Cost of Reactive Strategy

    Sunday, March 15, 2026   No comments

Oil, Sanctions, and the Global Economy


In the complex arena of geopolitical economics, few tools are as potent as oil sanctions, and few markets are as sensitive as global energy. A recent policy shift involving the temporary suspension of sanctions on Russian oil has sparked intense debate among economists and strategists. The decision, framed as a necessary move to stabilize soaring energy prices following heightened tensions in the Middle East, reveals a deeper tension between short-term economic relief and long-term strategic coherence. While the immediate goal is to lower costs for consumers, the underlying logic risks creating perverse incentives that could prolong instability and undermine the very mechanisms designed to enforce global norms.

The Mechanics of the Crisis

To understand the gravity of this decision, one must first understand the leverage points involved. Oil is the lifeblood of the modern industrial economy. When supply is disrupted—whether by conflict in the Strait of Hormuz or production cuts—prices spike. These spikes ripple outward, increasing the cost of transportation, manufacturing, and food production, ultimately fueling inflation that hurts households worldwide.

Sanctions are traditionally used as a non-military tool to pressure nations into changing behavior. There are most effective when they are done by consensus and in accordance to international norms. By cutting a country like Russia off from the global oil market, the anti-Russia block aims to deprive it of the revenue needed to fund conflict. However, this tool is a double-edged sword. Restricting supply from a major producer inevitably tightens the global market, driving prices up.

The recent announcement to pause these sanctions was justified by the need to flood the market with additional supply to counteract price hikes caused by regional conflict involving Iran. The stated intention is temporary: once the crisis abates and prices stabilize, the sanctions will return. On the surface, this appears to be a pragmatic humanitarian adjustment. Yet, when examined through the lens of game theory and strategic incentives, the move exposes a significant vulnerability in reactive policymaking.

The Strategic Flaw: A Lesson in Incentives


The core criticism of this policy is not about the desire for affordable oil, but about the signal it sends to adversarial actors. By linking the relief of sanctions on one front (Russia) to the resolution of a conflict on another (Iran), the policy inadvertently creates a profitable alliance between disparate actors who benefit from continued instability.

This dynamic can be understood through a simple analogy. Imagine a neighborhood where a child, let's call him R, is banned from selling lemonade because his friend, I, is sharing profits with him. The ban is meant to punish I. However, I responds by blocking other kids from selling lemonade too, creating a shortage that drives prices sky-high. Seeing the high prices, R's father lifts the ban on R, saying he can sell again until I stops blocking the others.

In this scenario, what is R's best move? Rational self-interest dictates that R should encourage I to keep blocking the competition. As long as the shortage persists, the price of lemonade remains high. R can sell less volume but make more profit, sharing the excess with I. The punishment intended for I has been neutralized, and both parties are now financially incentivized to maintain the crisis rather than resolve it.

Translating this to the global stage, the temporary easing of sanctions on Russian oil removes the pressure on Moscow to seek peace or de-escalate. Instead, it allows Russia to continue generating revenue while global prices remain elevated due to the unrelated conflict with Iran. If the promise to "reinstate sanctions later" lacks credibility or enforceability, the leverage is lost entirely. The market perceives the pause not as a temporary fix, but as a weakening of resolve, encouraging other nations to test the limits of economic coercion.

Implications for the World Economy

The economic implications of this strategic misalignment are profound. First, it introduces volatility into energy markets. Investors and industries thrive on predictability. When sanctions policy becomes reactive—shifting based on the latest headline rather than a cohesive long-term plan—it creates uncertainty. This uncertainty can lead to hoarding, speculative trading, and further price swings, negating the intended stabilizing effect of the policy.

Second, it risks entrenching inflation. If the structural incentives keep oil supplies artificially constrained by geopolitical maneuvering rather than genuine scarcity, the baseline cost of energy remains high. This "conflict premium" becomes embedded in the global economy, slowing growth and reducing the standard of living for consumers worldwide.

Third, and perhaps most dangerously, it erodes the efficacy of sanctions as a diplomatic tool. Sanctions rely on the threat of economic pain to change behavior. If that pain can be easily alleviated by shifting geopolitical winds, the threat loses its teeth. Future attempts to use economic pressure to halt aggression may be ignored by adversaries who anticipate similar waivers will be granted when prices rise.

The Need for Strategic Coherence

The situation underscores a fundamental principle of statecraft: tactics must serve strategy, not replace it. Lowering oil prices is a worthy goal, but not if it comes at the cost of empowering aggressors or dismantling the frameworks designed to maintain international security. A more robust approach would involve stopping aggression: any and all acts attacking sovereign nations outside the framework of International Law.

Using the most powerful hammer, armed forces, to hit every nail that appears, without a plan for the structural damage left behind, risks leaving a trail of destruction that will be costly to repair. The global economy requires leadership that anticipates second-order effects—understanding that a decision made to solve today's price spike could tomorrow's conflict longer and more expensive.

In the end, the lesson is clear. In an interconnected world, economic decisions are never isolated. They send signals, create incentives, and shape the behavior of nations. When those signals are mixed, and the incentives reward instability, the entire global system pays the price. True stability comes not from reactive pauses, but from a consistent, strategic vision that aligns economic tools with long-term peace and security.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Social Media review: US Senator Chris Murphy: "Trump has lost control of this war"

    Saturday, March 14, 2026   No comments

In a stark and urgently worded social media post, U.S. Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT) declared that former President Donald Trump "has lost control of this war," offering a sobering critique of the administration's handling of escalating tensions with Iran. Drawing on insights from closed-door briefings, Murphy outlines four interconnected crises that, in his view, reveal a dangerous miscalculation of Iran's capabilities and a lack of strategic foresight from the White House.

Murphy's central argument is that Trump fundamentally misjudged Iran's capacity and willingness to retaliate, igniting regional instability with potentially global consequences. The Connecticut senator, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, structures his warning around four critical flashpoints that collectively illustrate a conflict spiraling beyond Trump's control.

The first crisis concerns the Strait of Hormuz. Murphy contends that Trump incorrectly assumed Iran would not close this vital maritime chokepoint, through which a significant portion of the world's oil supply flows. With the Strait now closed, oil prices are spiking, and Murphy warns that a prolonged closure could trigger a global recession. He emphasizes the logistical nightmare of reopening the waterway: Iran's asymmetric tactics—using thousands of small drones, speedboats, and mines—are too dispersed and concealed to be easily neutralized. Even naval escorts for tankers, he notes, would strain U.S. naval resources and leave American ships vulnerable.

Second, Murphy highlights a shift in modern warfare that he believes the administration overlooked: the age of the drone. While U.S. forces can target Iran's missile infrastructure, they cannot eliminate the country's vast arsenal of cheap, weaponized drones. These drones, he argues, enable Iran to indefinitely threaten regional oil infrastructure, as demonstrated by a recent attack on an Omani oil depot. Compounding this vulnerability, Gulf state allies are depleting their interceptors, leaving critical energy assets increasingly exposed.

The third crisis involves the dangerous expansion of conflict beyond Iran's borders. Murphy warns that Iranian proxies in Lebanon and Iraq are actively engaging Israeli and U.S. targets, raising the specter of a broader regional war. He points to Israel's threatened ground invasion of Lebanon as a potential new flashpoint, while noting that Houthi forces in Yemen could soon re-escalate pressure in the Red Sea. In Syria, he adds, U.S. strikes on Iran risk reigniting conflict in an already fragile theater.

Finally, Murphy identifies the most profound failure: the absence of a viable endgame. Iran and its network of proxies, he argues, can sustain chaos indefinitely. The administration faces a grim choice between a catastrophic ground invasion—potentially costing thousands of American lives—or declaring a hollow victory that merely allows hardened Iranian leadership to rebuild. Murphy stresses that these outcomes were foreseeable, which is why previous presidents exercised greater caution.

Senator Murphy's post serves as a forceful intervention in the national security debate, urging a strategic pivot. He asserts that Trump's best course is to "cut his losses and end it," framing de-escalation not as retreat but as the only viable path to prevent a wider disaster. Whether one agrees with his assessment or not, Murphy's detailed breakdown underscores the high stakes of miscalculation in an era of asymmetric warfare and interconnected global systems. His warning invites policymakers and the public alike to confront a difficult question: when a conflict outpaces its architects' control, what does responsible leadership demand?

   

Media review: Asymmetric Resistance and the Limits of American Power in the War on Iran

    Saturday, March 14, 2026   No comments

The Driver and the Machine


You can have the fastest car in the world, but if you are an average or poor driver, you won't be able to win the race. This analogy captures the strategic dilemma facing the Trump administration in its war on Iran, but it also reveals a deeper truth about the nature of modern conflict. There is no dispute that the U.S. military is the most powerful in the world—indeed, as the agency with the largest budget outside entitlement programs, it is the most armed, lethal, and destructive machine in human history. Yet, military capability alone does not guarantee strategic success. A military is only as effective as the political leadership that sets its goals, strategy, and timeline. Outcomes are determined not by raw power, but by the wisdom, foresight, and skill of those who wield it.


However, to view this conflict solely through the lens of American "victory" or "defeat" is to adopt a biased framework that ignores the agency, resilience, and strategic logic of the defender. In asymmetric warfare, the definition of victory is not symmetrical. For the aggressor, victory often means total domination, regime change, or the complete neutralization of a threat. For the defender, particularly a nation facing an existential threat from a superpower, victory is defined simply by survival. If the Iranian state remains standing, its institutions functioning, and its core sovereignty intact despite the onslaught of the world's most powerful military, then from Tehran's perspective, the aggression has already failed. This essay reviews media stories to examine the gap between tactical success and strategic failure, arguing that the inability of the United States to achieve its maximalist objectives speaks less to American weakness and more to the enduring power of resistance against overwhelming force.

The Aggressor's Dilemma: Seven Pillars of Strategic Stalemate


Analysts from CNN, Al Jazeera, and The Independent have identified at least seven interlocking reasons why the United States has not achieved a decisive victory, despite inflicting significant physical damage. These factors highlight the limits of kinetic power when divorced from political reality.

1. The Strait of Hormuz: The Weaponization of Geography

Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz transformed a military confrontation into a global economic crisis. While the U.S. Navy possesses unmatched firepower, reopening the Strait by force presents extraordinary risks. More importantly, Iran’s ability to hold the world’s energy supply hostage demonstrates that a regional power can leverage geography to offset conventional military inferiority. Even if the U.S. forcibly reopens the channel, the requirement for a permanent, resource-intensive naval presence signifies a strategic drain, not a victory.

2. The Resilience of the Iranian State

The assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was intended to catalyze regime collapse. Instead, the swift appointment of Mojtaba Khamenei as successor signaled institutional continuity. Far from sparking the popular uprising Trump anticipated, the attacks appear to have reinforced the regime's narrative of external aggression. From Tehran’s viewpoint, the survival of the leadership structure amidst decapitation strikes is a testament to the depth of the state’s roots and a defeat for the U.S. objective of regime change.

3. Divergent Timelines and Alliance Friction

While Trump seeks a swift, politically marketable conclusion, Israel views security as a perpetual struggle. This misalignment complicates the U.S. exit strategy. Iran, conversely, operates on a timeline of generations. By absorbing the initial shock and prolonging the conflict, Tehran exploits the short-term political cycles of Western democracies, betting that American public patience will erode before Iranian resolve does.

4. The Unresolved Nuclear Question

Despite claims that U.S. strikes have "obliterated" Iran's nuclear program, international reports suggest Tehran retains stocks of highly enriched uranium. The inability to physically locate and destroy every gram of fissile material—a task requiring high-risk ground operations—means the core nonproliferation objective remains unfulfilled. The latent capacity to reconstitute the program remains a powerful deterrent and a symbol of technological resilience.

5. The Absence of Internal Collapse

Trump’s rhetoric framed the war as a liberation effort, expecting Iranians to rise up. No such uprising materialized. Instead, the security apparatus maintained control. This disconnect undermines the moral narrative of the intervention. For Iran, the lack of internal fracture despite massive external pressure validates the state’s claim to represent a significant portion of national sentiment, or at least its ability to enforce unity in the face of foreign invasion.


6. Regional Escalation as a Force Multiplier

The conflict has spilled beyond Iran’s borders, with Hezbollah, Iraqi militias, and Houthi forces intensifying operations. This "Axis of Resistance" strategy effectively expands the battlefield, stretching U.S. resources thin across multiple fronts. For Iran, activating these proxies transforms a bilateral conflict into a regional war of attrition, a domain where the superpower’s technological edge is diluted by the sheer complexity of the theater.

7. Domestic and Economic Blowback

Rising fuel prices and economic uncertainty have begun to erode U.S. public support. Unlike the post-9/11 rally effect, the war on Iran has generated immediate domestic pain. Iran’s strategy of targeting global energy markets directly impacts the American voter, turning the war’s cost into a political liability for the aggressor.

The Defender’s Perspective: Victory Through Survival and Resistance

To understand the full scope of this conflict, one must shift the perspective from Washington to Tehran. In the annals of military history, from Vietnam to Afghanistan, a consistent pattern emerges: when a superpower fails to achieve its rapid, decisive objectives against a determined regional actor, the defender claims a strategic victory.

For Iran, the metrics of success are fundamentally different. They do not need to invade the United States, sink its carrier groups, or bomb Washington D.C. to "win." Their objective is negative: to prevent the positive objectives of the aggressor.

  • Did the U.S. topple the government? No.
  • Did the U.S. permanently disarm Iran? No.
  • Did the U.S. force unconditional surrender? No.

By these measures, Iran has succeeded. The mere fact that the Islamic Republic continues to function, issue commands, and project power through its proxies after weeks of intense bombardment by the world's sole superpower is, in itself, a profound statement of resilience. As noted by The Independent, the war has exposed the limits of air power; bombs can destroy buildings, but they cannot easily destroy a political will forged in decades of isolation and perceived existential threat.

The Moral and Political Dimension

From the Iranian perspective, this war validates the doctrine of "resistance" (muqawama). The narrative that a smaller nation can stand toe-to-toe with the "Great Satan" and survive serves as a powerful ideological tool, not just domestically, but across the Global South. It challenges the notion of American invincibility. When the Wall Street Journal reports that U.S. bases in Saudi Arabia have been struck and tankers seized, it highlights that Iran retains the capacity to inflict pain, raising the cost of aggression to unacceptable levels.

Furthermore, the failure of the U.
S. to spark an internal revolution suggests that the American understanding of Iranian society was flawed. By underestimating the cohesion of the Iranian state—even among those who may disagree with the government—the U.S. played into the hands of hardliners who could point to the bombing raids as proof that the West seeks destruction, not democracy. In this light, every day the regime survives is a propaganda victory that offsets the physical damage inflicted by U.S. ordnance.

The Economic Counter-Strike

Iran’s decision to close the Strait of Hormuz and potentially trade oil in Yuan rather than dollars is not just a tactical move; it is a strategic challenge to the global order dominated by the U.S.. By threatening the global economy, Iran demonstrates that in an interconnected world, a regional power holds leverage that can paralyze a superpower. The resulting spike in gas prices in the U.S. serves as a tangible reminder to the American public that the war is not a distant video game, but a reality with immediate consequences. This economic resistance acts as a check on unlimited military escalation.

The Strategic Paradox: Truth vs. Narrative

The central paradox of this conflict is the divergence between the narrative of victory and the reality of stalemate. President Trump’s declaration—"We won, in the first hour"—stands in stark contrast to the unfolding reality of a widening war, rising costs, and an unyielding adversary (CNN).

This dissonance highlights a critical lesson: Truth has a way of offsetting oppressive and lies-driven actions. No amount of rhetorical flourish can permanently mask the facts on the ground:

  • The truth is that the Strait remains closed.
  • The truth is that Iranian missiles are still flying.
  • The truth is that the regime has not fallen.
  • The truth is that the American public is feeling the pinch at the pump.

When an aggressor relies on a narrative of easy victory that contradicts the lived experience of soldiers, civilians, and markets, the credibility of the leadership erodes. The "fog of war" eventually lifts, revealing that the "fastest car" has been driven into a ditch by a driver who refused to read the map.

For Iran, the "truth" of their survival is their strongest weapon. It proves that military superiority is not absolute. It demonstrates that a nation with fewer resources, if unified by a cause of national defense and equipped with asymmetric strategies, can blunt the spear of empire. This does not mean Iran is without suffering; the humanitarian cost, warned of by the WHO, is tragic and severe (Al Jazeera). But in the cold calculus of strategic objectives, the survival of the state against such odds redefines the balance of power in the Middle East.

The Endurance of the Defended

The war on Iran underscores a fundamental principle of statecraft that the Trump administration appears to have overlooked: the most powerful military in history cannot compensate for unclear objectives, unrealistic expectations, or the underestimation of an opponent’s will to resist.

Viewing the conflict fairly requires acknowledging that while the U.S. may claim tactical successes in destroying specific targets, it faces a strategic failure in achieving its overarching goals. Conversely, Iran, despite suffering immense physical damage and humanitarian hardship, has achieved a form of victory through endurance. By refusing to collapse, by keeping its command structure intact, and by leveraging its geographic and asymmetric advantages to impose heavy costs on the aggressor, Iran has demonstrated that resistance is a viable strategy against superior firepower.

Ultimately, the outcome of this war will not be decided by the tonnage of bombs dropped, but by the political staying power of the participants. If the United States withdraws without having achieved regime change or permanent disarmament, history will likely record this not as an American victory, but as another chapter in the long saga of imperial overreach meeting the unyielding wall of national resistance. In the race between the fast car and the skilled, determined driver who knows the terrain, the latter often finds a way to block the road. The truth of that resilience is the ultimate counterweight to the illusion of dominance.



Thursday, March 12, 2026

How the UNSC Rendered Itself Useless in the Middle East Crisis

    Thursday, March 12, 2026   No comments

In the high-stakes theater of the United Nations Security Council, the principle of sovereignty is supposed to be absolute. It is the bedrock of the UN Charter, the line that no nation should cross without consequence. Yet, a recent session regarding the spillover of the war on Iran revealed an institution where that principle is not applied as law, but wielded as a political weapon. Through the contrasting fate of two resolutions, the Security Council demonstrated an inconsistency that threatens to render it useless as an arbiter of international peace.

The divergence began with Resolution 2817. Prepared by Bahrain and backed by the Arab Gulf States, the document was swift and specific. It condemned strikes on the territories of neighboring Arab states and called on Iran to immediately stop such actions. The Council adopted it with ease. On the surface, it was a defense of territorial integrity—a standard procedure for a body tasked with maintaining security.

Maria Zakharova

But beneath the procedural success lay a glaring omission. As Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova noted, the resolution was presented in isolation from the underlying cause of the escalation. To Moscow and Beijing, the text created a false narrative where Iran allegedly attacked sites entirely of its own accord and out of malicious intent. This framing ignored the context provided by Russian officials: that the current crisis is rooted in unprovoked aggression by the United States and Israel against the Islamic Republic of Iran.

This selective blindness set the stage for the Council's second test of the day. Recognizing the imbalance, Russia, with the support of China, proposed an alternative draft resolution. This text aimed for urgent de-escalation. It sought to condemn strikes against any civilian targets without assigning blame to a single party. By all diplomatic accounts, this was an impartial initiative designed to stop the bleeding rather than assign political points. It was the kind of document responsible members of the Council should have rallied behind.

Instead, the alternative draft collapsed. Only China, Pakistan, and Somalia voted in favor. The United States and Latvia voted against it. The remaining members abstained, despite having raised no substantive objections to the Russian text during prior consultations.

The voting pattern exposed the fissure running through the chamber. On one hand, the Council mobilized quickly to condemn Iran's violation of sovereignty against Gulf states. On the other, it refused to pass a neutral measure that would have acknowledged the broader violence, including the strikes against Iran itself. The inconsistency is stark: sovereignty is violated when Iran strikes its neighbors, warranting a formal condemnation; yet when the United States and Israel strike Iran, the Council produces no corresponding censure, nor will it support a text that treats all civilian targets as equally protected.

Maria Zakharova voiced the frustration shared by many observers of the body's decline. She expressed extreme dissatisfaction with the process, noting that Bahraini sponsors turned down every Russian or Chinese proposal seeking to redress the unbalanced text of Resolution 2817. When the impartial alternative was put to the vote, the silence of the abstaining nations was deafening. As Zakharova asked, "Does this mean they are not interested in ending the current confrontation in the Middle East?"

The implications extend far beyond a single meeting. When the Security Council condemns retaliation while ignoring the aggression that sparked it, it ceases to be a neutral ground. It becomes a venue where sovereignty is protected for allies and disregarded for adversaries. The nine countries that abstained on the Russian draft did not object to the text, yet they refused to support it. In doing so, they endorsed a framework where accountability is selective.

A security council that cannot condemn aggression regardless of its source loses its moral authority. It may still pass resolutions, it may still hold votes, but as the discrepancy between Resolution 2817 and the failed Russian draft shows, it has lost its consistency. In the face of such double standards, the UNSC risks becoming not a guardian of international law, but a mirror reflecting the geopolitical biases of its most powerful members. Until it can address violations of sovereignty with equal vigor regardless of the perpetrator, its utility remains severely compromised.

 

Monday, March 09, 2026

Regional Realignment in the Wake of Iran's Leadership Transition

    Monday, March 09, 2026   No comments

 The Calculus of Conflict

The architecture of Middle Eastern power is seldom static, but the events of early 2026 have accelerated its transformation with unprecedented velocity. Following a coordinated military campaign by the United States and Israel against Iranian territory, the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and the subsequent elevation of his son Mojtaba Khamenei to the nation's highest office, a subtle yet significant diplomatic recalibration has emerged from Ankara and Baku as well as from other powers including Russia and China. These developments, unfolding against a backdrop of profound human cost and strategic uncertainty, invite careful examination not merely as discrete news items, but as interconnected signals within a complex geopolitical ecosystem.

The military actions undertaken by the United States and Israel against Iranian infrastructure represent a decisive intensification of a long-simmering confrontation. Such operations, regardless of their stated objectives, inevitably reshape the strategic landscape. They impose immediate humanitarian consequences, challenge established norms of state sovereignty, and compel neighboring states to reassess their own positions. The reported loss of life, including civilians, underscores the tragic human dimension that transcends geopolitical maneuvering. In this context, every diplomatic utterance carries amplified significance, as regional actors navigate the precarious space between principle, pragmatism, and self-preservation.

The transition of leadership within Iran's structure is never merely an administrative matter. The selection of Mojtaba Khamenei as Supreme Leader following his father's death signals both continuity and a moment of profound vulnerability. For external observers, the succession invites speculation about potential shifts in tone, tactic, or diplomatic openness. For Iran's neighbors, it presents a critical juncture: a moment to either exacerbate tensions through confrontation or to explore avenues for stabilization through engagement. The manner in which regional powers choose to acknowledge this transition reveals much about their strategic calculus and their vision for the region's future.


It is against this charged backdrop that the recent statements from Turkey and Azerbaijan acquire particular resonance. Both nations, having initially taken measures that could be interpreted as aligning with the momentum of escalation—Azerbaijan with troop deployments to its Iranian border, Turkey with its complex balancing act between NATO commitments and regional partnerships—have now articulated positions emphasizing solidarity, neighborly respect, and the imperative of de-escalation.

President Ilham Aliyev's congratulatory message to Mojtaba Khamenei, coupled with condolences for his predecessor, frames the Iran-Azerbaijan relationship as one rooted in the enduring will of neighboring peoples. This language, emphasizing shared history and mutual respect, stands in deliberate contrast to the rhetoric of confrontation. It suggests a preference for stability over volatility, for dialogue over discord.

Similarly, President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan's unequivocal defense of Iran's sovereignty and his warning against actions that would "cast shadow over our thousand-year neighborly, brotherly ties" articulate a clear diplomatic stance. His characterization of efforts to "turn brother against brother" as a trap to be avoided reflects a sophisticated understanding of the region's sectarian and political fault lines. ErdoÄŸan's emphasis on Turkey's "extraordinary efforts to prevent spread of fire, further bloodshed" positions Ankara not merely as a commentator, but as an active stakeholder invested in containing the crisis.


These converging diplomatic signals from two influential regional powers suggest the possible emergence of a framework for de-escalation. Turkey's historical role as a mediator, its diplomatic channels with multiple parties, and its stated commitment to a "terror-free" region achieved through dialogue rather than division provide potential infrastructure for negotiation. Azerbaijan's shift, meanwhile, removes a potential vector of tension along Iran's northern border, allowing diplomatic energy to be redirected toward conflict resolution rather than border management.

The significance of this moment lies not in any single statement, but in the pattern they collectively form. When states that have benefited from strategic ambiguity begin to articulate clear preferences for restraint, it can create space for diplomatic maneuvering that was previously foreclosed. The acknowledgment of Iran's leadership transition by neighboring capitals, framed in terms of respect and continuity, subtly reinforces the legitimacy of diplomatic engagement over military imposition.


For an educated audience attuned to the nuances of international relations, the critical question is not whether these diplomatic shifts guarantee peace—they do not—but whether they represent a credible foundation upon which peace might be constructed. The answer depends on several interrelated factors: the capacity of Iran's new leadership to engage constructively amid domestic pressure; the willingness of external powers to recalibrate their strategies in response to regional diplomatic initiatives; and the ability of all parties to separate immediate tactical objectives from long-term strategic stability.

The tragedy of armed conflict lies in its capacity to foreclose possibilities, to harden positions, and to elevate the logic of retaliation over the logic of resolution. The recent diplomatic overtures from Turkey and Azerbaijan suggest that this foreclosure is not inevitable. They remind us that even in moments of profound crisis, the tools of statecraft—dialogue, acknowledgment, respect for sovereignty—retain their relevance.

The events of early 2026 will undoubtedly be analyzed for years to come as a case study in crisis diplomacy, alliance management, and the enduring tension between force and negotiation. What emerges clearly from the current moment is that regional stability cannot be imposed from without; it must be cultivated through sustained engagement, mutual recognition, and a shared commitment to minimizing human suffering.

The statements from Ankara and Baku, though carefully calibrated, point toward a recognition of this fundamental truth. They suggest that the path to ending violence in the region may not lie in further escalation, but in the patient, principled work of diplomacy—work that honors the sovereignty of nations, acknowledges the complexity of local histories, and places the preservation of human life at the center of strategic calculation. In an era too often defined by the rhetoric of division, such reminders carry not just diplomatic weight, but moral urgency.





Monday, March 02, 2026

Russia's Assessment of the Attack on Iran Through Medvedev's Lens

    Monday, March 02, 2026   No comments

In his recent remarks to TASS, Dmitry Medvedev articulates a distinctly Russian strategic perspective on the attack against Iran and the killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. His assessment operates on multiple levels: geopolitical, civilizational, and nuclear-strategic.


First, Medvedev frames the strike not as an isolated incident but as part of a broader U.S.-led campaign to preserve global hegemony—a "war of the United States and their allies to preserve global dominance." This aligns with Moscow's longstanding narrative that Western actions are driven by imperial maintenance rather than legitimate security concerns.

Second, he emphasizes Iran's resilience as an "ancient civilization," suggesting that while Tehran's immediate retaliatory capacity may be limited, its strategic patience and cultural cohesion will enable long-term adaptation. Notably, Medvedev argues that U.S. actions have inadvertently strengthened Iranian societal consolidation—a classic unintended-consequence warning familiar in Russian strategic discourse.

Third, and most significantly, Medvedev warns that the attack will accelerate Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons "with tripled energy." This reflects Moscow's concern that regime-change operations destabilize non-proliferation frameworks and empower hardliners. From Russia's viewpoint, the strike undermines diplomatic channels and validates Tehran's most hawkish factions.

Finally, Medvedev underscores the heightened vulnerability of U.S. and Israeli territory, noting that Khamenei's status as a "spiritual father to nearly 300 million Shiites" transforms his death into a potent mobilizing symbol. This assessment serves both as analytical observation and implicit deterrence messaging: actions against one sovereign state may trigger cascading regional consequences.

Russia's assessment, as conveyed by Medvedev, portrays the attack as a strategic miscalculation that risks escalating regional conflict, accelerating nuclear proliferation, and strengthening anti-Western solidarity—outcomes Moscow views as detrimental to global stability and its own strategic interests.

  

Media Review: How a Unilateral Strike on Iran Threatens the Foundations of Global Order

    Monday, March 02, 2026   No comments

In the predawn darkness of late February 2026, the world watched as two allied powers crossed a threshold from which there may be no return. The United States and Israel launched a coordinated military assault on Iran, targeting not merely military installations but the very heart of its political leadership. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed. Dozens of senior officials perished. A school in southern Iran was struck, claiming the lives of children. And with that single act of force, the fragile architecture of international law—built painstakingly in the ashes of two world wars—began to crack.

This was not a defensive action. It was not a response to an imminent attack. By the admission of Pentagon officials themselves, there was no intelligence suggesting Iran was preparing to strike first. There were no smoking guns, no intercepted orders, no imminent threat that satisfied even the most permissive interpretations of self-defense under international law. What there was, instead, was a decision: a choice to act unilaterally, to bypass the United Nations, to abandon ongoing diplomacy, and to assert through force what could not be achieved through law.

The consequences of that choice ripple far beyond the Middle East. They strike at the heart of global economic stability and the security structures that have, however imperfectly, prevented great-power war for eight decades.

The Economic Precipice

The Strait of Hormuz is not merely a geographic feature; it is an artery of the global economy. Roughly twenty percent of the world's oil supply passes through its narrow waters. When Iran signals that US bases in the region will remain targets unless removed, and when retaliatory strikes already echo across Gulf states, the market does not hesitate. Oil prices surge. Shipping insurers recalculate risk. Supply chains tremble.

But the economic vulnerability runs deeper. The attack has shattered confidence in the predictability of international relations. Investors do not fear conflict alone; they fear the arbitrariness of conflict. When the world's most powerful military alliance demonstrates that it will act without legal authorization, without transparent evidence, and without regard for diplomatic process, the foundation of long-term planning erodes. Contracts become riskier. Capital becomes cautious. The delicate machinery of global trade, which depends on stable rules and predictable behavior, begins to seize.

Consider the ripple effects: European economies still recovering from energy shocks now face renewed uncertainty. Asian manufacturing hubs dependent on Middle Eastern energy confront potential disruption. Emerging markets, already strained by debt and inflation, brace for capital flight. This is not speculation; it is the logical consequence of replacing law with might. When force becomes the first resort rather than the last, every nation must prepare for a world where power, not principle, dictates outcomes.

The Collapse of Security Architecture

The United Nations Charter was designed precisely to prevent what has now occurred: unilateral wars of choice justified by self-defined threats. Its prohibition on the use of force, except in self-defense against an actual armed attack or with Security Council authorization, was not an idealistic aspiration. It was a hard-learned lesson from centuries of catastrophic war.

By acting outside this framework, the US and Israel have not merely violated a treaty; they have undermined the very logic of collective security. If powerful states can decide for themselves what constitutes a threat, when diplomacy has failed, and when force is justified, then the Charter becomes optional—a suggestion for the weak, a constraint to be ignored by the strong.

The precedent is perilous. What prevents other nuclear-armed powers from adopting the same logic? What stops regional rivals from citing this attack as justification for their own preventive strikes? The non-proliferation regime, already strained, faces existential doubt: if diplomatic engagement can be aborted by military action at any moment, why would any state relinquish its deterrent capabilities?

Even alliances are fracturing. Spain has refused to allow its bases to be used for further attacks. France has called for Security Council debate. Oman, which mediated talks, has condemned the abandonment of diplomacy. This is not mere disagreement; it is a recognition that the attack threatens the cohesion of the very partnerships that underpin global security. When allies begin to distance themselves from unilateral aggression, the foundation of collective defense weakens.

The Sovereignty Double Standard: A Self-Condemnation in Plain Sight

Nowhere is the incoherence of the attackers' position more starkly revealed than in their response to Iran's retaliation. Hours after Iranian forces struck back against military assets and logistics centers used in the initial assault, the United States issued a joint statement with Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. The declaration denounced Iran's actions in unequivocal terms: "These unjustified strikes targeted sovereign territory, endangered civilian populations, and damaged civilian infrastructure."

The statement is remarkable not for what it says, but for what it omits. There is no mention of Iran's sovereignty. No acknowledgment that the strikes Iran retaliated against were launched against its territory, its leadership, and its civilian infrastructure. No reference to the school hit in southern Iran, or to the assassination of a leader of state during ongoing diplomatic talks. The principle of sovereignty—so fiercely invoked when convenient—is silently abandoned when it protects the vulnerable rather than the powerful.

This is not diplomacy. It is not law. It is a performative contradiction that reasonable observers recognize for what it is: a self-condemnation. To attack a sovereign nation without authorization, then invoke that same sovereignty to condemn the victim's response, is not a coherent legal position. It is an admission that the rules apply only in one direction. It reveals a worldview in which sovereignty is not a universal right, but a privilege granted selectively by those with the power to enforce their preferences.

The danger of this double standard extends far beyond rhetoric. It erodes the foundational doctrine of non-aggression that has, however imperfectly, served as a brake on endless war. That doctrine holds that peace is not the absence of conflict among the powerful, but the presence of equal protection under law for all nations. When that principle is fractured—when aggression is legitimized for some and criminalized for others—the entire edifice of international order begins to tilt.

The Rhetoric of Supremacy

Perhaps the most dangerous element of this crisis is not the bombs themselves, but the language used to justify them. "We did not start this war," declared a senior US official, moments before adding, "We set the terms of this war from start to finish." This is not contradiction; it is doctrine. It is the assertion that the United States reserves the right to define reality—to decide when a conflict begins, who is an aggressor, and what constitutes legitimate self-defense—regardless of evidence, international consensus, or the sovereignty of others.

This rhetoric reveals a deeper assumption: that certain lives matter less than others. When Iranian officials are targeted and killed, it is framed as necessary counterterrorism. When Iranian civilians die, including children in a school strike, it is regrettable but incidental. When Iran retaliates against military bases, it is condemned as indiscriminate escalation. The asymmetry is not accidental; it is ideological. It treats the sovereignty and security of non-Western nations as inherently subordinate to the strategic preferences of imperial powers.

Such thinking is not new. It is the character of empires throughout history: the belief that their interests are universal, their actions inherently legitimate, and their victims collateral to a greater good. But in a world of nuclear weapons, interconnected economies, and rising multipolarity, this arrogance is not merely morally bankrupt—it is existentially dangerous.

Law or Chaos?

Iran has made its position clear: US bases in the region will remain targets unless removed. Retaliation will continue. The cycle of violence is accelerating, not because diplomacy failed, but because it was deliberately abandoned. Every missile launched, every base struck, every civilian casualty deepens the crisis and narrows the space for de-escalation.

The international community now faces a stark choice. It can accept the normalization of unilateral preventive war, allowing might to supersede law and setting a precedent that will inevitably be used against weaker states—and eventually, against the powerful themselves. Or it can reaffirm the principles that have, however imperfectly, maintained a measure of order: that sovereignty matters, that evidence must precede action, that diplomacy must be exhausted, and that the use of force requires collective legitimacy.

The double standard exposed in the wake of Iran's retaliation is not a minor diplomatic inconsistency. It is a reminder that the principle of non-aggression cannot be a selective doctrine. Peace cannot be secured by granting some nations the right to attack while denying others the right to defend. If sovereignty is to mean anything, it must mean the same thing for Tehran as it does for Washington, for Riyadh as for Ramallah.

The stakes could not be higher. This is not merely a regional conflict. It is a test of whether the post-1945 international system can survive the actions of those who helped create it. If the rules apply only when convenient to the powerful, they are not rules. They are suggestions. And a world governed by suggestions, rather than law, is a world where every dispute becomes a potential catalyst for catastrophe.

The attack on Iran was more than a military operation. It was a statement: that some nations believe they stand above the law. The question now is whether the rest of the world will accept that premise—or whether it will defend the fragile, essential idea that no state, however powerful, is entitled to wage war by its own decree. 

Friday, February 27, 2026

OIC Condemns Israel's West Bank Annexation Plans in Emergency Session

    Friday, February 27, 2026   No comments

JEDDAH — The Organization of Islamic Cooperation has issued a strong condemnation of Israel's recent moves to designate large swaths of the occupied West Bank as "state property," characterizing the actions as a de facto annexation and a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law.

The declaration emerged from an emergency meeting of OIC foreign ministers held at the organization's headquarters in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Diplomats from across the Muslim world gathered to formulate a unified response to what they described as escalating Israeli violations in Palestinian territories.

In their final statement, member states declared the Israeli measures "null and void" and called upon the international community, particularly the United Nations General Assembly and Security Council, to uphold their responsibilities in preserving regional stability. The statement emphasized that unilateral actions altering the status of occupied territories undermine the foundations of peace and the rights of the Palestinian people.

The ministers also addressed recent remarks by the U.S. Ambassador to Israel, describing them as provocative and without legal or historical foundation. The OIC reaffirmed that such statements cannot alter the legal status of the Occupied Palestinian Territory nor diminish the fundamental rights of Palestinians or the sovereignty and territorial integrity of states in the region.

Alongside the condemnation of annexation efforts, the OIC called for full implementation of the current ceasefire framework in Gaza, a complete Israeli withdrawal, and unhindered delivery of humanitarian aid. The statement referenced ongoing international efforts to secure a comprehensive and permanent end to hostilities, noting the urgent need to address the humanitarian catastrophe that has unfolded over more than two years of conflict.

Saudi Arabia, host of the emergency session, reinforced its position through Deputy Foreign Minister Waleed al-Khereiji, who reiterated the Kingdom's rejection of Israeli initiatives in the West Bank. He warned that measures aimed at establishing sovereignty over Palestinian land sabotage prospects for peace and destabilize the broader region.

Israel's Security Cabinet recently adopted a series of decisions altering the administrative and legal landscape in the West Bank. These include removing barriers to land purchases by settlers, expanding state authority to seize areas previously under Palestinian administration, and restructuring local governance in Hebron to establish an Israel-affiliated parallel municipality. Additionally, the Israeli government approved a unilateral land registration process in the occupied territory—a move widely viewed as formalizing the confiscation of Palestinian property under international law.

Under longstanding international legal frameworks, the West Bank, occupied since 1967, is recognized as territory intended for a future Palestinian state. Israel's status as an occupying power prohibits the transfer of its civilian population into occupied areas and forbids alterations to property ownership structures. The OIC statement underscored that recent Israeli policies contravene these core principles.

The emergency gathering concluded with a call for coordinated diplomatic action to halt further escalation and to reinvigorate efforts toward a just and lasting resolution based on international law and mutually agreed parameters. As tensions remain high, the international community faces mounting pressure to translate condemnation into concrete measures that uphold the rule of law and protect the rights of all civilians in the region.

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