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Friday, July 17, 2026

Trump’s Push for Syria to Confront Hezbollah: A Recipe for Regional Chaos

    Friday, July 17, 2026   No comments

In a move that has sent shockwaves through an already fragile Middle East, U.S. President Donald Trump has reportedly been pressing the new Syrian leadership to take military action against Hezbollah in Lebanon. According to recent reports, Trump has suggested that the Islamist-led insurgents, led by a former al-qaeda leader, who overthrew Bashar al-Assad a year and a half ago are better positioned to root out the Iran-backed militant group than the Israeli army. While the White House may view this as a convenient offloading of regional burdens, the reality is starkly different: greenlighting Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa (formerly known as Julani) to “take care of” Hezbollah will create a vastly larger and more intractable problem for the region than it could ever solve.

The Iraqi Warning: A Line in the Sand

The profound dangers of this proposal have not gone unnoticed in Baghdad. The Iraqi government has recently issued a stark “advice” to Sharaa, explicitly warning Damascus against any involvement in the Lebanese file. According to regional sources, the Iraqi message carried a clear caveat: any Syrian encroachment into Lebanon will have direct, severe repercussions on Syria itself. Baghdad made it unequivocally clear that if Lebanese Shias or Hezbollah face any danger originating from Syrian territory, Iraqi resistance factions will not stand idly by. “Every Syrian step toward Lebanon may be followed by an Iraqi step toward Syria,” the warning read.

This is not an empty threat. It is rooted in recent, painful history. Syria is currently ruled by unelected rebel factions that have a documented track record of threatening and killing Iraqis. It was not so long ago that it took the massive, desperate mobilization of Iraqi volunteer forces—the Hashd al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilization Forces)—to counter the very same Islamist ideologies that now hold power in Damascus. Crucially, this mobilization was authorized by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and other prominent religious leaders to defend Iraq and protect Shia communities from existential threats. The memory of that defense remains vivid and potent.

The Disarmament Paradox

If the United States and Israel genuinely desire the disarmament of Hezbollah and the Iraqi Hashd forces, suggesting that a Syrian regime composed of former rebels will intervene in Lebanon to crush Shias is profoundly counterproductive. Rather than coercing these groups into laying down their arms, such a scenario validates their core narrative: that they are under imminent threat of annihilation.

For Hezbollah, a Syrian-led offensive would be framed as an existential war, guaranteeing fierce resistance. For the Hashd al-Shaabi in Iraq, the logic is equally clear. Faced with the prospect of Syrian rebels attacking Shias in Lebanon, Iraqi paramilitary forces will now insist, with heightened public and religious backing, that they must remain fully armed, mobilized, and ready to defend their brethren across the border. Any Western or Israeli hope of demobilizing these forces will instantly evaporate, replaced by a hardened resolve for self-defense.

Unleashing Internal Fragility in Iraq

The ripple effects of this destabilizing rhetoric extend far beyond the Hashd. Trump’s proposal inadvertently sheds harsh light on the fragile monopoly on force held by the central Iraqi government. If the state cannot guarantee the security of Shia communities regionally, it emboldens other armed groups operating outside Baghdad’s command.

This includes the Peshmerga and various other Kurdish armed factions. Whether these groups are anti-Turkey or anti-Iran, their entrenched bases in Iraq represent a complex web of localized power. A regional escalation triggered by Syrian intervention in Lebanon would provide these groups with both the pretext and the opportunity to expand their own military postures, further fracturing Iraq’s internal security and complicating any efforts at national cohesion.

A Pattern of Impulsive Diplomacy

Trump’s claim that he will greenlight Sharaa to handle Hezbollah fits a troubling trend in his on-the-spot, ill-conceived decision-making. Historically, such impulsive geopolitical gambits have generated cascading problems that their architects are utterly unequipped to solve. Treating the Middle East as a chessboard where rebel factions can be casually redirected to fight proxy wars ignores the deep-seated sectarian, historical, and political realities of the region.

Even Syrian interim president Sharaa has reportedly pushed back against this idea, telling Iraqi officials that he refused the U.S. request and that Damascus is not interested in reopening old fronts or returning to past policies of regional intervention. His priority, he stressed, is internal stability. Still, the mere amplification of this idea by the U.S. president is enough to destabilize the delicate balance of power.

A Region Governed by Weakness and Trauma

The Iraqi government’s stern warning to Syrian rulers serves as a microcosm of how extraordinarily complex the Middle East has become. It is a region now characterized by weak central regimes and territories ruled by former rebels, all navigating a post-Gaza war landscape that has displayed a total disregard for human dignity and international law. The trauma of recent conflicts has left communities hyper-vigilant and deeply distrustful of external meddling.

True regional stability cannot be achieved by pitting one fragile, rebel-led state against another, nor by encouraging sectarian proxy wars. If the international community wishes to see the disarmament of militias and the stabilization of the Levant, it must pursue inclusive diplomacy, strengthen legitimate state institutions, and cease floating dangerous, half-baked military alternatives. Otherwise, Trump’s latest suggestion will not be a solution, but the spark that ignites the next, even more devastating, regional conflagration.

US Strikes on Iran’s Water Plants and Bridges and International Law

    Friday, July 17, 2026   No comments

As thesecond part of the United States war on Iran enters its seventh consecutive day of strikes, the nature of the targets has shifted dramatically. Recent U.S. military actions have reportedly hit bridges, rail lines, power grids, and drinking water facilities in southern Iran near the Strait of Hormuz. With a previously declared cease-fire agreement now collapsed, this escalation raises profound and urgent questions about compliance with international humanitarian law.

The reported destruction of a drinking-water facility serving thousands of civilians is not merely a tactical escalation; it is a potential violation of the foundational rules of armed conflict. Under international law, the conduct of hostilities is governed by three core principles: distinction, proportionality, and precaution.

First, the principle of distinction requires parties to a conflict to distinguish at all times between civilian objects and military objectives. While bridges and power facilities can sometimes be considered "dual-use" infrastructure, water treatment and distribution plants are presumptively civilian objects. For a dual-use object to become a legitimate military target, it must make an effective contribution to military action, and its destruction must offer a definite military advantage. The burden of proof rests on the attacking force to demonstrate this, not on the defending state to prove the object’s civilian nature.


Second, and more critically, international law explicitly protects objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population. Article 54 of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions prohibits attacking, destroying, or rendering useless objects such as drinking water installations and supplies. Although the United States is not a party to Additional Protocol I, this specific prohibition is widely recognized as a norm of customary international law, binding on all states regardless of treaty ratification. The destruction of a water facility on Iran’s southern coast, which reports indicate could impact tens of thousands of civilians, directly tests this absolute red line.

Third, the principle of proportionality prohibits attacks where the expected incidental harm to civilians would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated. Even if the U.S. military argues that a bridge or a water plant supports Iranian logistical movements, the long-term humanitarian consequences of depriving a civilian population of clean water must be factored into the proportionality calculation. The collapse of water infrastructure often leads to secondary public health crises, which compounds the civilian harm far beyond the initial blast radius.

The U.S. military’s recent statements have made no specific mention of civilian infrastructure, focusing instead on the broader operational campaign. However, silence on the matter does not equate to legal compliance. In modern warfare, the normalization of striking dual-use or civilian infrastructure sets a dangerous precedent. If major military powers freely interpret "military advantage" to encompass the degradation of a nation’s basic life-sustaining systems, the entire framework of the laws of war risks unraveling.


Furthermore, Iran’s reported attempts to strike similar targets in U.S.-allied Gulf countries hosting American bases compound the regional danger. This tit-for-tat escalation against infrastructure threatens to drag neighboring civilian populations into the crossfire, further multiplying the violations of international humanitarian law across the Middle East.

As the strikes stretch into a second week, the international community, including legal advisors within the Pentagon and allied nations, must urgently scrutinize the target selection process. Transparency regarding the military justification for hitting water plants and bridges is not just a matter of public relations; it is a legal obligation.

War, even when deemed necessary by a state, is not a legal vacuum. The destruction of a drinking-water facility is a stark reminder that the laws of armed conflict were designed precisely for the fog of war, to preserve a baseline of humanity. If the U.S. and Iran continue to treat civilian infrastructure as legitimate battlegrounds, the ultimate casualty will be the international legal order itself.












Thursday, July 16, 2026

Media Review: Iran Warned White House That Trump Envoys Exploited Diplomatic Talks for Financial Gain, Sources Say

    Thursday, July 16, 2026   No comments

During critical US-Iran negotiations in Switzerland’s Lake Lucerne area in late June, Iranian officials delivered a stark and highly unusual warning to the Trump administration: the continued involvement of Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner threatened to derail a fragile diplomatic framework, allegedly due to their exploitation of confidential negotiation intelligence for financial market advantage.

According to a senior Iranian official who spoke to Drop Site News, Tehran bypassed traditional diplomatic channels to send a private message directly to Vice President JD Vance through an intermediary. The message warned that the presence of Witkoff and Kushner could jeopardize efforts to transform the June 17 framework into a lasting, binding agreement.

The allegations strike at the heart of growing concerns over conflicts of interest within the administration’s inner circle. Iranian negotiators reportedly told Vance that Witkoff and Kushner appeared “more focused on using confidential negotiation information to benefit from financial markets than on securing a diplomatic breakthrough.”

Furthermore, Iranian officials raised serious objections over repeated, unauthorized leaks by Kushner to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, complicating Tehran’s already delicate calculus in the talks.

A Pattern of Warnings

The Lake Lucerne outreach was not Tehran’s first attempt to raise the alarm. According to the Iranian official, in the weeks leading up to the signing of the memorandum of understanding, Tehran provided neutral mediators with written material it described as concrete evidence that “individuals close to President Trump” were actively exploiting the Iran war and related diplomatic developments to influence financial markets.

“Even before the Islamabad talks kicked off in April, we had already sent multiple messages to Trump through the Pakistanis, warning them about [Witkoff’s] overall destructive role in the previous negotiation,” the official stated.

Tehran’s decision to go directly to Vice President Vance came after earlier attempts to communicate these concerns through mediators backfired. The Iranian official noted that messages shared through those channels were improperly distributed to the broader US negotiating team—including Kushner, who holds no official government position.

“We transmitted data and assessments through an exclusive channel to Mr. Vance,” the official said, adding that Tehran made it clear it believed Witkoff and Kushner were “abusing” the diplomatic process and “effectively disrupting the overall negotiating atmosphere.”

White House Furiously Denies Allegations

The Trump administration has vehemently rejected the claims, framing the report as a malicious fabrication designed to undermine the President’s diplomatic mission.

“No such message was ever transmitted to the United States,” White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said in a sharply worded statement. “It’s sad that Drop Site News ‘reporters’ are so filled with hate for America and devoid of respect for themselves that they have become full-throated propagandists for the Iranian regime.”

A US official also pushed back against the narrative, telling Drop Site News: “A message of this nature was never conveyed to the Vice President or his team. Additionally, any insinuation that the other members of the president’s trusted negotiating team are operating under motives other than serving the president and delivering on his mission is false.”

Internal Friction Exposed

Despite the White House’s blanket denial, the administration’s messaging appears fractured. A source close to Vice President Vance separately confirmed to Drop Site News that Iranian negotiators had, in fact, openly expressed their objections to Witkoff and Kushner’s participation in the talks during the Swiss meetings.

This contradiction highlights the precarious tightrope the administration is walking. The involvement of private citizens with vast financial portfolios and deep personal ties to the President in sensitive, high-stakes geopolitical negotiations has long drawn scrutiny from ethics watchdogs. The allegation that market-moving intelligence was gleaned from closed-door diplomatic sessions elevates those concerns from theoretical ethical breaches to potential national security liabilities.

Fragile Framework at Risk

The June 17 framework was hailed by the White House as a major diplomatic achievement, offering a pathway to de-escalate tensions in the Middle East. However, if Tehran’s distrust of the US negotiating team’s motives is genuine, the foundation of the agreement may be far more brittle than publicly acknowledged.

Ethics experts note that the blending of private financial interests, familial proximity to the President, and unofficial diplomatic roles creates a fertile ground for both actual and perceived conflicts of interest.

“As long as individuals with significant private financial stakes are in the room where diplomatic secrets are discussed, the integrity of the process will be questioned by adversaries and allies alike,” said a former State Department ethics official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

With the November midterms approaching and global markets highly sensitive to Middle Eastern stability, the administration will likely face mounting pressure from Congress to launch a formal inquiry into the conduct of its unofficial envoys. For now, the White House is digging in, but the shadows cast over the Lake Lucerne talks may prove difficult to dispel.

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Media review: NYT's analysis of Gibbon and Ibn Khaldun's counterpoint

    Tuesday, July 14, 2026   No comments

Beyond the Illusion of Imperial Crisis

As the United States marks its 250th anniversary in 2026, the specter of imperial decline has once again dominated Western intellectual discourse. In a recent reflection, historian Charles King turns to Edward Gibbon’s magnum opus, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, to interrogate the contemporary American condition. King’s analysis rightly warns against the hubris of exceptionalism and the paralysis of apocalypticism, highlighting Gibbon’s timeless insight: civilizations do not fall suddenly; they falter when they lose the capacity to perceive their own internal transformations.


However, while the Gibbonian lens offers a profound moral and historical warning about "self-deception," it remains partially constrained by a state-centric ontology. To fully comprehend the structural realities of the present moment, we must integrate Gibbon’s historical humility with the historical sociology of Ibn Khaldun, viewed through a modern systems-thinking framework. When we do, what is commonly diagnosed as an "imperial crisis" or "strategic miscalculation" is revealed to be something far more profound and structurally inevitable: systemic completion, characterized by a deep conceptual-praxeological misalignment and the exhaustion of adaptive capacity.

The Gibbonian Warning: Self-Deception and the Loss of Adaptive Vision

King’s reading of Gibbon emphasizes that the fall of Rome was not a sudden cataclysm but a gradual erosion born of "self-deception" (khida' al-dhat). This occurs when societies rigidly cling to the habits, laws, and institutions of a bygone era, long after the material and social conditions that birthed them have vanished. Consequently, they become incapable of adapting when crises inevitably materialize.

Gibbon did not view history as a repository of ready-made rules or a tool to validate preconceived political narratives—whether as a defense of tolerance or a warning against the erosion of traditional values. Rather, he saw it as a discipline for cultivating critical thinking and intellectual humility. This humility was recognized by the American founding generation. Thomas Jefferson kept Gibbon in his personal library; James Madison consulted his insights while drafting the Federalist Papers; and John Quincy Adams studied his work to understand the perennial risks of political division and concentrated power. As historian Henry Adams noted, simply replacing the word "Rome" with "America" makes Gibbon’s questions directly relevant to the present.

King rightly notes that Gibbon himself was no triumphant man of power, but a figure marked by physical frailty and personal insecurity. It was precisely this detachment that allowed him to produce a work of unparalleled analytical rigor. The core Gibbonian lesson for 2026 is not that America is destined to perfectly replicate Rome’s fate, but that all political systems undergo phases of transformation. Surviving these phases requires the humility to test our assumptions against the complex, often contradictory, realities of historical change.

The Khaldunian Correction: Beyond the State-Centric Ontological Error

While Gibbon’s framework is invaluable for diagnosing the symptoms of decline, Ibn Khaldun’s historical sociology provides the systems-level architecture to explain its mechanics. Contemporary Western decline narratives routinely commit what systems theorists call an ontological error: they treat the United States as a discrete, bounded civilizational entity whose fate rises and falls linearly with its geopolitical and economic indicators.

Ibn Khaldun fundamentally decouples the state (dawla) from the civilization (hadara). He posits that political authority is merely a temporary vessel for a broader civilizational formation, sustained by ‘asabiyya—a cohesive social energy rooted in shared purpose, mutual obligation, and collective discipline. States decay when institutional complexity and elite self-interest dilute this cohesion, but the civilizational formation itself can persist, adapting its conceptual core while shedding exhausted administrative structures.

Through this lens, "American civilization" is more accurately understood as the contemporary apex of a broader matrix that crystallized during the European Enlightenment and consolidated through global liberal-capitalist institutionalization. The United States did not invent this system; it inherited, intensified, and operationalized it, much like the British Empire did in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Therefore, analyzing "American decline" solely through the lens of US domestic policy or specific geopolitical blunders mistakes a shift in the civilizational center of gravity for the collapse of the civilization itself.

Conceptual-Praxeological Misalignment: The Mechanics of "Self-Deception"

Gibbon’s concept of "self-deception" finds its precise systemic equivalent in what Ibn Khaldun’s framework identifies as conceptual-praxeological misalignment.

The conceptual domain encompasses the values, norms, and teleological orientations that legitimize a social order (e.g., rule of law, human rights, procedural legitimacy). The praxeological domain consists of the organized fields of human action—bureaucracies, financial architectures, military doctrines, and logistical networks—that enact those values. In a healthy, cohesive system, these domains are mutually reinforcing.

However, as a system matures, its praxeological mechanisms become increasingly complex and technically efficient. They develop tight feedback loops that reward immediate, measurable outputs over long-term purpose. Bureaucracies optimize for procedure rather than justice; financial systems prioritize liquidity over productive investment; military doctrines emphasize relentless readiness over credible deterrence. Eventually, these praxeological systems achieve operational autonomy from the conceptual framework that originally legitimized them.

This decoupling is the structural definition of "empire." It is not defined by territorial expansion, but by the erosion of normative credibility and the compensatory reliance on coercive and extractive power. What Gibbon observed as societies clinging to outdated institutions is, in systems terms, a praxeological apparatus continuing to reproduce established patterns of action long after the ‘asabiyya that guided them has evaporated. The conceptual system becomes merely decorative, a rhetorical shell masking an extractive reality.

Systemic Completion and the Trap of Maximalism

This misalignment leads to the phenomenon of systemic completion, articulated by the modern interpreter of Ibn Khaldun in this work: Systemic Completion, Civilizational Misalignment, and the Illusion of Imperial Crisis. Prevailing commentary often points to episodic events—fiscal thresholds, diplomatic ruptures, or specific military engagements—as the triggers of decline. A systems-based Khaldunian view, as reconstructed by Souaiaia, inverts this causality. These events are not the cause of decline; they are the legible outputs of a configuration that has already reached its functional limits.

As institutions refine their coordination of work and energy, they achieve maximal efficiency. However, efficiency carries a severe structural consequence: it compresses adaptive bandwidth. The system becomes exceptionally proficient at doing what it was designed to do, but increasingly incapable of doing anything else. Slack—the structural prerequisite for adaptation and innovation—is systematically eliminated because it appears wasteful under conditions of growth.

Consequently, the pursuit of maximal deterrence, maximal financialization, and maximal proceduralism creates a structural trap. The system continues to generate impressive, large-scale outputs, creating the illusion of enduring power. Coherence has eroded. Policymakers mistake capacity for resilience, and commentators mistake volatility for sudden collapse. In reality, the system has not failed; it has completed its developmental arc. It has optimized itself to the point of adaptive exhaustion.

Reframing Transformation Beyond the Decline Paradigm

Charles King’s invocation of Gibbon serves as a vital corrective to the twin delusions of our time: the belief that the present is an unparalleled golden age, or the fear that it is an unprecedented, irreversible collapse. Both are forms of historical arrogance that prevent genuine adaptation. Gibbon teaches us that history offers no guarantees, but it does grant us the humility to recognize our errors and the complexity of reality.

When we layer Ibn Khaldun’s systems framework over this Gibbonian humility, a clearer picture emerges. The contemporary geopolitical strain is not a simple story of an American empire making strategic errors. It is the saturation of a broader civilizational configuration whose mechanisms have reached maximal functional output. The increasing reliance on praxeological systems of power (coercion, financialization, technocratic insulation) is not a temporary deviation, but a structural rebalancing compensating for diminished normative integration.

The analytical question, therefore, is not how to "save" the American empire or prevent a Rome-like collapse. The question is whether the alignment between conceptual and praxeological systems can be restored, or if we must prepare for a post-completion reconfiguration. New civilizational orders will not simply inherit the old system; they will emerge from the peripheries, reconfiguring residual elements under new conditions of cohesion, resource distribution, and normative credibility. They may be less centralized and less exportable, but they will endure because they will possess what the current system has lost: systemic coherence.

In the end, Gibbon and Ibn Khaldun converge on a profound truth: civilizations do not die from external blows alone. They transition when they lose the ability to see themselves clearly, when their institutions outpace their cohesion, and when they mistake the relentless machinery of their own maximalism for the enduring vitality of their soul.

  

Monday, June 29, 2026

Iran and Oman Launch Joint Committee on Strait of Hormuz Management

    Monday, June 29, 2026   No comments

Iran and Oman have initiated formal discussions on the future administration of the Strait of Hormuz, marking a significant step in bilateral cooperation over one of the world's most strategic maritime chokepoints.


The inaugural meeting of the joint committee on the Strait of Hormuz took place in Muscat, bringing together Kazem Gharibabadi, Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs, and Abdulaziz Al-Hinai, ambassador-at-large at the Omani Foreign Ministry. The talks focused on current challenges and the long-term governance framework for the vital waterway that connects the Persian Gulf to international waters.

The negotiations are being conducted under the framework of Article 5 of the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding, which emphasizes the sovereign rights of coastal states bordering the strait. This agreement provides the legal foundation for addressing technical and operational matters related to maritime traffic and security in the region.

A key component of the memorandum involves the removal of technical and military obstacles in the strait. The agreement stipulates that Iran will conduct demining operations within a 30-day window, a measure aimed at enhancing navigational safety and reducing potential risks to commercial shipping. The talks also mandated discussions between Tehran and Muscat on defining maritime services and administrative protocols for the waterway.

The joint committee represents the first formal mechanism established specifically for managing the Strait of Hormuz through bilateral cooperation. Both delegations emphasized that all future maritime arrangements must align strictly with applicable international law while respecting the sovereign rights of the coastal nations.


Officials indicated that these bilateral discussions are intended to serve as a foundation for broader regional cooperation. The framework envisions eventual expansion of the talks to include other Persian Gulf littoral states, creating a more comprehensive approach to managing the strategic corridor through which a significant portion of global oil shipments passes daily.

The establishment of this joint committee reflects growing recognition among regional powers of the need for coordinated governance of shared maritime spaces. The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world's most critical energy transit routes, with approximately one-fifth of global oil supplies passing through its narrow waters each year.

The next steps in the process will involve implementing the demining operations and continuing technical discussions on maritime services administration. Both sides expressed commitment to maintaining regular dialogue through the joint committee mechanism to address emerging challenges and ensure the safe, efficient passage of commercial vessels through the strait.

The talks underscore the importance of diplomatic engagement in managing shared maritime resources and demonstrate a regional approach to addressing security and administrative challenges in one of the world's most economically significant waterways.




The Israel-Turkey Rift and the War on Iran Are Exposing the Limits of Power Politics

    Monday, June 29, 2026   No comments

 Azerbaijan's Strongman Gamble

By analyzing the geopolitical tightrope Baku walks between Ankara and Tel Aviv, we see a cautionary tale about the fragility of authoritarian alliances built on proximity to power

The Architecture of Autocratic Power

President Ilham Aliyev has ruled Azerbaijan with an iron fist since 2003, when he succeeded his father Heydar Aliyev in a transfer of power that transformed the country into a hereditary autocracy. His governing philosophy rests on a simple premise: project strength through proximity to powerful patrons. Oil wealth has been the foundation—funding military modernization, suppressing dissent, and financing what critics call "caviar diplomacy," the systematic use of financial inducements to influence foreign politicians, journalists, and lobbying groups.

The domestic architecture of this power is totalizing. Constitutional amendments have abolished presidential term limits, allowing Aliyev to extend his rule indefinitely. In 2017, he appointed his wife Mehriban as vice president, cementing the dynastic character of the regime. Media restrictions, crackdowns on political opposition, and control over civil society have eliminated meaningful domestic challenges to his authority.

Yet this strongman model, so effective at maintaining domestic control, has created a foreign policy dependency that is now unraveling. Azerbaijan's strategy of balancing between competing regional powers—maintaining close ties with Israel, Turkey, Russia, and the West simultaneously—assumed that these powers would remain stable partners. The 2026 US War On Iran and the escalating Israel-Turkey rivalry have shattered that assumption.

The Israel-Turkey Rupture: Azerbaijan's Impossible Choice

For years, Azerbaijan positioned itself as the rare Muslim-majority country with deep strategic ties to Israel while maintaining its fraternal bond with Turkey. The 2021 Shusha Declaration formalized a mutual defense pact between Baku and Ankara, committing both countries to support each other "using all possibilities" in case of military attack. This alliance was instrumental in Azerbaijan's 2020 victory in Nagorno-Karabakh, with Turkish drones and Israeli weapons combining to devastating effect.

But the geopolitical landscape has shifted dramatically. By early 2026, what began as diplomatic friction between Israel and Turkey has hardened into what analysts now describe as a "strategic rivalry" with direct consequences for regional stability. The Gaza conflict, competition in Syria, disputes over Eastern Mediterranean energy resources, and Israel's recognition of Somaliland (challenging Turkey's influence in the Horn of Africa) have created multiple flashpoints.

Azerbaijan has attempted to play mediator. Hikmet Haciyev, assistant to President Aliyev, revealed that Baku has been conducting "silent diplomacy" to de-escalate tensions, even facilitating a military hotline between Turkish and Israeli forces to prevent accidental clashes over Syria. But mediation requires credibility with both sides, and Azerbaijan's credibility with Turkey is now in question.

The breaking point came on June 28, 2026, when the Israeli cabinet unanimously approved Foreign Minister Gideon Saar's proposal to formally recognize the Armenian genocide. For Azerbaijan, this was an existential provocation. The country has built its national identity in part on denying the events of 1915, maintaining that the deaths were part of a broader wartime tragedy affecting both Armenians and Azerbaijanis. The Azerbaijani foreign ministry issued a rare public rebuke, calling the move an "unacceptable distortion of historical facts without sound legal or scholarly basis" and warning that it "deepens regional divisions and undermines efforts to achieve lasting peace."

This diplomatic rupture exposes the fundamental contradiction in Azerbaijan's foreign policy. Baku cannot maintain its strategic partnership with Israel while Israel takes positions that directly threaten Azerbaijan's relationship with Turkey—its guarantor of security against Armenia and its ethnic kin. Turkey dismissed the Israeli decision as a "political distraction" aimed at diverting attention from the International Criminal Court's arrest warrants against Israeli officials, but the damage to Azerbaijan-Israel relations may be lasting.

The Iran War: Geography as Vulnerability

The February 2026 US-Israeli military strikes on Iran laid bare another vulnerability in Azerbaijan's power projection strategy: geography. Azerbaijan shares a long border with Iran, and the two countries have complex ties. Ethnic Azerbaijanis constitute a significant minority in Iran—some estimate they form the largest ethnic group in the country—and hold positions of influence in the clerical establishment, military, and bureaucracy.

Initially, Azerbaijan attempted to maintain neutrality. President Aliyev visited Iran's embassy in Baku on March 4 to offer condolences following the US-Israeli assassination of Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. But neutrality proved impossible. On March 5, Iranian drones struck Azerbaijan's Nakhchivan exclave, with Tehran implying that the territory had been used by Israeli and American forces. Azerbaijan closed its southern airspace for 12 hours, shut border crossings with Iran, and Aliyev threatened military retaliation.

Reports subsequently emerged that Israel had used Azerbaijani territory as a base for operations during the Iran war. Azerbaijan's energy minister confirmed what many suspected: "We do not refute those allegations that we have a very, very deep security partnership with Israel," including intelligence sharing, military cooperation, and weapons supply.

This proximity to conflict has transformed Azerbaijan's greatest asset—its strategic location connecting the Caspian to the Middle East—into a liability. The country now faces what analysts call "contagion risk" from the Iran war, with fears that Iranian proxies or sympathetic elements could launch attacks against Israeli interests on Azerbaijani soil. Azerbaijan's security forces have already arrested Iranian agents planning such attacks.

The Identity Paradox: Ethnicity, Religion, and the Autocrat's Dilemma

Beneath the geopolitical maneuvering lies a profound demographic reality that complicates Azerbaijan’s foreign policy: the country’s population is overwhelmingly Shia Muslim, even as it is ethnically and linguistically Turkic. This dual identity creates competing visions for national solidarity. The Turkic connection naturally pulls Baku toward Ankara, fostering a secular, pan-Turkic nationalism that the Aliyev regime has championed. Conversely, the Shia religious affinity creates a deep, underlying cultural and spiritual gravity toward Tehran.

This internal fault line is being exacerbated by the very conflicts Aliyev seeks to navigate. The shared outrage over Israel's military campaigns—first in Gaza and now in the broader regional war—is acting as a powerful unifying catalyst across the Muslim world. Paradoxically, the "Israel threat" is bridging traditional sectarian divides, drawing the Israeli-designated "Sunni axis" (anchored by Turkey) closer to the "Shia axis" (led by Iran).

This convergence poses a direct internal threat to the autocrat in Baku. Aliyev has carefully managed these identity dynamics, strictly enforcing state secularism to suppress political Islam and maintain absolute control. However, if the escalating tensions with Israel push Turkey into a strategic alignment with Iran, the religious dimension of Azerbaijani identity will inevitably be empowered. As Ankara moves closer to Tehran, the Azerbaijani public—already connected to Iran through the shared faith of Shiism—will naturally drift closer to Tehran in their geopolitical sympathies. This shift threatens to undermine the state's carefully curated secular, Turkic-nationalist narrative, empowering domestic religious factions that the regime has long kept marginalized. For Aliyev, the ultimate nightmare is a regional realignment where his primary patron, Turkey, aligns with his primary security concern, Iran, leaving his secular autocracy caught in the crossfire of a resurgent religious solidarity.

The Limits of American and Israeli Power

Azerbaijan's bet on proximity to power assumed that American and Israeli influence in the region would remain ascendant. The 2026 Iran war has demonstrated the limits of that power.

Military analysts have noted that air power—the primary tool of both the US and Israeli campaigns—has "significant limitations in influencing the outcome of a war." Historical precedent shows that aerial bombardment often fails to achieve political objectives. The US bombing of North Vietnam did not break Hanoi's will; NATO's 1999 campaign against Serbia rallied support for Slobodan Milošević rather than undermining him. In Iran, the initial strikes may have disrupted nuclear facilities, but they also "rally segments of the population to the government that would otherwise oppose it."

The broader lesson is that military power cannot easily translate into political outcomes. The US has sought to limit its involvement to avoid "another Iraq-like quagmire," but the stated objectives—regime change and permanent elimination of Iran's nuclear capability—may require precisely the kind of ground commitment Washington wishes to avoid. Israel's Arrow missile interceptors neared depletion during Iran's response, revealing vulnerabilities in even advanced military systems.

For Azerbaijan, this means its powerful patrons are showing strain. The US is increasingly focused on domestic politics and great power competition with China; Israel is fighting multiple conflicts and facing growing international isolation. The "uncontested military hegemon" status Israel seeks to maintain in the Middle East is being challenged not just by Iran but by Turkey's reassertion of its own regional role.

The Risk of Isolation

Azerbaijan now faces a convergence of pressures that threaten to isolate it. The "3+3" regional format—bringing together the three Caucasus states (Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia) with Turkey, Iran, and Russia—represents a pushback against permanent Western military presence in the region. Iran and Turkey, despite their rivalries, remain wary of US commercial or military entrenchment on their borders.

Economically, Azerbaijan faces structural challenges. Oil production fell by approximately 5% in 2025, and the IMF projects a further narrowing of the current account surplus in 2026. The country is pursuing "green energy" and transit partnerships to compensate, but rapid diversification has not materialized. As the economic advantages from the Karabakh wars diminish, domestic social unrest becomes more likely.

Diplomatically, Azerbaijan's multivector approach—maintaining ties with competing powers simultaneously—is being tested to the breaking point. The country cannot simultaneously:

  1. Maintain its strategic partnership with Israel while Israel recognizes the Armenian genocide
  2. Honor its mutual defense pact with Turkey while Turkey and Israel become strategic rivals
  3. Manage its border with Iran while hosting Israeli military operations
  4. Balance relations with Russia while pursuing Western energy partnerships

Each of these contradictions creates friction. The recent rebuke of Israel over genocide recognition signals that Baku may be prioritizing its Turkish relationship—but this comes at the cost of the intelligence and military cooperation that made Azerbaijan's 2020 victory possible.

The Philosophy of Strength Through Proximity

Azerbaijan's governing philosophy under Aliyev has always been transactional: align with the strongest patrons, extract maximum benefit, and use those resources to consolidate domestic power. This approach worked when the international order was more stable, when US hegemony seemed permanent, and when regional rivalries could be managed through careful balancing.

But the fast-changing world of 2026—catalyzed by the Iran war, the Israel-Turkey rupture, and the broader erosion of American influence—has exposed the limits of this philosophy. Strength through proximity to power requires that power remain stable and effective. When patrons are overextended, when alliances fracture, and when geography becomes a liability rather than an asset, the strongman's gamble begins to look like a trap.

Azerbaijan now risks the very isolation it has spent decades avoiding. The question is whether Aliyev's regime can adapt to a world where the old calculations no longer apply—or whether the architecture of autocratic power, so carefully constructed over two decades, will prove as fragile as the alliances it was built upon.

The coming months will reveal whether Baku can navigate this transition, or whether the strongman's bet on proximity to power will leave Azerbaijan stranded between patrons who can no longer protect it and neighbors who no longer trust it.



Thursday, June 25, 2026

The Aftermath of the Iran Conflict is Redrawing Southwest Asia and North Africa

    Thursday, June 25, 2026   No comments

 Forging a New Equilibrium

In the wake of the recent US-Israeli war on Iran, the geopolitical tectonic plates of the Middle East are shifting once again. According to diplomatic sources, Saudi Arabia is preparing to host a landmark summit aimed at reconciling Gulf states with Tehran. Crucially, these talks are being organized independently of the ongoing negotiations between Washington and the Iranian government.


This diplomatic maneuver signals a profound transformation. The recent war, while devastating, appears to have catalyzed a new era of regional pragmatism. As the dust settles, the conflict is fundamentally altering how SWANA approaches its own security, and in doing so, it is sending ripple effects across the global order.

The End of External Dependence?

For decades, the security architecture of the Persian Gulf was heavily reliant on the United States. However, the recent conflict demonstrated the limits and vulnerabilities of external security guarantees. By organizing a reconciliation summit separate from US-Iran negotiations, Riyadh is sending a clear message: the Gulf states are taking ownership of their immediate neighborhood.


The war underscored a harsh reality for the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states. Regardless of political or ideological differences, a prolonged conflict on their doorstep threatens their coastlines, disrupts vital shipping lanes like the Strait of Hormuz, and endangers critical infrastructure. For Saudi Arabia, whose ambitious Vision 2030 relies heavily on foreign investment, tourism, and regional stability, a hostile or heavily sanctioned Iran next door is an economic liability.

Similarly, for Iran, the economic and infrastructural toll of the recent conflict has made regional de-escalation an absolute necessity. The upcoming talks in Riyadh represent a mutual recognition among regional powers that they cannot afford perpetual hostility. The imperative for survival and economic recovery has overridden ideological rigidity.

A Shift Toward Regional Realpolitik

The decision to host these talks in Saudi Arabia cements Riyadh’s transition from a traditional US ally into an independent regional broker. Following the Chinese-brokered détente between Riyadh and Tehran in 2023, the recent war tested that fragile relationship. The fact that Saudi Arabia is now stepping up to host a broader Gulf-Iran summit suggests that the 2023 agreement has matured into a more resilient, institutionalized framework for conflict resolution.

This shift toward "regional realpolitik" means that Middle Eastern powers are increasingly willing to compartmentalize their disputes. They are moving away from zero-sum proxy conflicts and toward transactional diplomacy focused on mutual security, trade routes, and energy cooperation. If successful, this could lead to a localized security framework that manages tensions without requiring external military intervention.

Global Ripple Effects: Energy and Multipolarity

The changing dynamics in the Gulf have immediate and far-reaching implications for the rest of the world.

First and foremost is the issue of global energy security. The recent conflict inevitably sent shockwaves through global oil and gas markets, highlighting the world's continued vulnerability to disruptions in the Persian Gulf. A successful Gulf-Iran reconciliation, brokered by the states that sit on the world's largest energy reserves, could lead to a more stable, cooperative approach to energy transit. If regional powers can guarantee the security of the Strait of Hormuz collectively, it reduces the global risk premium on energy and lessens the strategic burden on Western navies.

Secondly, this diplomatic shift accelerates the transition toward a multipolar world order. As Gulf states demonstrate their ability to manage their own post-war reconciliation, the global perception of the Middle East changes. It is no longer viewed solely as a chessboard for superpower rivalry, but as a region with its own agency. This autonomy is likely to attract other global powers—such as China, the European Union, and India—who are primarily interested in trade, reconstruction, and energy stability rather than military entanglements. These nations will likely look to Riyadh and Tehran as the primary gatekeepers for regional access.

A Fragile but Necessary New Normal

The road ahead is undoubtedly fraught with challenges. Decades of mistrust, unresolved territorial disputes, and the lingering trauma of the recent war will not be erased by a single summit in Riyadh. Furthermore, the outcomes of the separate US-Iran negotiations will inevitably cast a long shadow over the Gulf's internal discussions.

Nevertheless, the upcoming talks represent a critical inflection point. The US-Israeli war on Iran, rather than permanently fracturing the region, has paradoxically forced its inhabitants to confront the unsustainability of endless conflict. By choosing diplomacy over continued militarization, and regional autonomy over external dependence, the Gulf states are attempting to forge a new economic and security block. If they succeed, the world will have to adapt to a region that is no longer just a theater for global power struggles, but an independent architect of its own future.

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Deatails of the Iran-U.S. Memorandum of Understanding (Yet to be signed June 19)

    Sunday, June 14, 2026   No comments

Phase 1 | Upon announcement of the MoU (effective immediately):

– Upon announcement of the MoU, both sides declare an immediate, complete and permanent end to all hostilities in the region, including Lebanon.

– Upon announcement of the MoU, the United States declares the immediate and complete lifting of the U.S. naval blockade against Iran.


Phase 2 | After Signing of the MoU (30-day period):


– Upon signing the MoU, the United States confirms its commitment to non-interference in Iran’s domestic affairs and respect for the sovereignty of the Islamic Republic of Iran.


– Upon signing the MoU, the United States affirms that it will not increase the amount of troops or military assets present in the region, nor impose any new sanctions during the negotiations.


– Upon signing the MoU, Iran reaffirms its commitment to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and confirms that it will never produce, develop, or acquire a nuclear weapon.


– Upon signing the MoU, the United States declares that it will provide Iran with half of its frozen funds, amounting to a value of $12 Billion, to be made available in a non-reversible manner within 30 days, with a commitment to make the remaining half available during the subsequent 60 days.


– Upon signing the MoU, the United States will issue sanctions waivers for Iranian oil, gas, and petrochemical exports, effective immediately, with a commitment to extend these waivers permanently once a final agreement is reached.


– Upon signing the MoU, the U.S. will begin immediate consultations with Israel to present a short term timeframe for a full Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon, including points occupied following the 2024 Israel-Hezbollah agreement.


– Upon signing the MoU, Iran confirms it will reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial maritime traffic, according to certain specified arrangements determined by Iran, within 30 days.


Phase 3 | Negotiations on a Final Deal (60-day period + possible extension):


– The 60-day negotiating period will begin once all the terms of the MoU have been met in the previous 30 days.


– The 60-day negotiating period can be extended by mutual agreement of both parties.


– During these 60 days, the U.S. will make the remaining $12 Billion of Iran’s frozen assets available.


– During these 60 days, the U.S. will present plans for a reconstruction fund for Iran, amounting to a value of at least $300 Billion, funded partially by Gulf states.


– The U.S. and Iran will begin detailed discussions on a permanent solution to nuclear-related matters, including enrichment, the existing uranium stockpile, and the fate of the nuclear sites.


– The U.S. and Iran will begin detailed discussions regarding the lifting of all economic sanctions on Iran, including primary, secondary, U.S. and UN sanctions, as well as the withdrawal of all UN Security Council and IAEA Board of Governors resolutions against Iran.


– A monitoring mechanism will be established to supervise the implementation of a final agreement.


– The final agreement will be approved by a UN Security Council Resolution.


Friday, June 12, 2026

Media (IRNA) Review: Draft Memorandum Unveiled to End Regional War, Sets 60-Day Framework for Final Agreement

    Friday, June 12, 2026   No comments

An exclusive report by the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) has shed light on the general framework of a draft memorandum aimed at bringing a definitive end to the ongoing regional war. The proposed agreement outlines a strict 60-day negotiation period focused on three core issues, while firmly establishing Tehran's red lines regarding its nuclear program, strategic waterways, and defense capabilities. The outline explains why Trump has hesitated to sign the deal and what Iran is willing to accept. It should be noted that there is no official draft that is available to know what are exactly the terms of this emerging deal, but this news reporting explains Iran's strict framework.

According to the details of the current draft, the memorandum prioritizes a comprehensive cessation of hostilities, economic relief, and accountability, all while explicitly rejecting external interference in Iran's sovereign affairs.

Here is a breakdown of the key issues covered in the draft memorandum as reported by IRNA:

A Definitive End to the War on All Fronts

The primary and most urgent objective of the memorandum is to bring a definitive end to the war across all regional fronts, with a specific focus on Lebanon. The draft explicitly rejects the phrase "extension of the ceasefire," signaling a push for a permanent halt to military operations. Under the terms of the agreement, the United States would commit to compelling Israel to end the war in Lebanon, ensuring a comprehensive regional de-escalation rather than temporary pauses in fighting.

The Nuclear File Remains Untouched

Addressing widespread speculation regarding Iran's nuclear program, the report confirms that the nuclear issue remains untouched in the initial signing of the memorandum. Iran is not undertaking any new commitments in the current draft. Instead, the nuclear file—along with sanctions and reparations—will be addressed during a dedicated 60-day negotiation period following the signing of the agreement.

Crucially, the scope of these upcoming 60-day talks is strictly limited to three specific issues:

  • The continuation of Iran's peaceful nuclear program.
  • The lifting of all US unilateral sanctions and relevant international resolutions.
  • Mechanisms for war compensation.

Other contentious topics, most notably Iran's missile capabilities, are completely excluded from the agenda and will not be up for discussion.

Economic Relief and War Reparations

The memorandum establishes a clear pathway for the release of Iran's frozen assets. A portion of these funds is slated to be released immediately upon the signing of the agreement, with the remainder to be unfrozen gradually throughout the 60-day negotiation period. According to the report, Tehran has secured clear guarantees based on mechanisms it proposed.

Furthermore, the draft places war reparations squarely on the agenda. The agreement includes provisions for compensation for damages inflicted on Iran during US and Israeli aggression. The specific mechanisms for obtaining and distributing these reparations are to be finalized during the post-signing negotiations.

Sovereignty Over the Strait of Hormuz

The exclusive report firmly dismisses any rumors regarding the transfer of control over the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global oil chokepoint. Iran is not committing to handing over the management of the waterway, nor will the United States have any role in its administration.

Instead, the future administration of the Strait of Hormuz will be resolved strictly as a regional matter. Management of the waterway will be handled through dialogue and joint decision-making exclusively between Tehran and Oman.

A Strict 60-Day Path to a Final Agreement

The draft memorandum serves as a foundational framework rather than a final settlement. By limiting the post-signing negotiations to a 60-day window and strictly defining the agenda to peaceful nuclear activities, sanctions relief, and reparations, Tehran aims to prevent the negotiations from being derailed by unrelated demands.

If signed, the memorandum will immediately halt regional bloodshed and unlock vital economic resources, setting the stage for a rigorous two-month diplomatic sprint to finalize a comprehensive and lasting peace agreement.


Update: Trump replies to this news report:


Iran's FM reaction to the reporting on the final draft MoU:


Trump respnds by sharing screencapture of FM Araqchi's post"





And JD Vance, too, chimes in:





How the War on Iran Forged a New, Pragmatic Order in SWANA

    Friday, June 12, 2026   No comments

 The Tectonic Shift

For decades, the geopolitical architecture of Southwest Asia and North Africa (SWANA) was defined by a relatively rigid hierarchy: Washington set the strategic agenda, and regional actors, particularly the Gulf monarchies, aligned their security and economic policies accordingly. Today, that architecture lies in ruins. The catalyst for this collapse is not a gradual erosion of influence, but a sudden, violent rupture: the US-Israeli war on Iran. In the crucible of this conflict, the nations of the SWANA region have not merely reacted; they have fundamentally rewritten the rules of engagement. Nowhere is this dramatic realignment more starkly evident than in the recent revelations of a UAE pivot toward Tehran, followed closely by reports of a clandestine, audacious proposal between Qatar and Iran.

According to recent reporting by The Washington Post, at the onset of the conflict, Qatari officials approached Tehran with a staggering proposition. To safeguard the Ras Laffan Industrial City—the beating heart of Qatar’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) economy—Doha offered to voluntarily halt its gas production. The strategic logic was as ruthless as it was brilliant: a sudden cessation of Qatari gas exports would send global energy prices skyrocketing, thereby inflicting severe economic pain on Western markets and amplifying domestic pressure on the United States and Israel to abandon the war. In exchange, Qatar demanded only one condition from its nominal adversary: "you are not going to attack us."

This reported "secret deal" is a masterclass in survivalist realpolitik. It demonstrates that Gulf states are no longer willing to serve as passive collateral damage in Washington’s ideological or strategic crusades. Instead, they are actively weaponizing their own economic leverage to manipulate global markets and force a geopolitical outcome that serves their national interests. Qatar’s message to Iran was unequivocal: You will achieve your objectives without striking us. It was a declaration of functional neutrality, prioritizing regime survival and economic continuity over unconditional alliance with the West.

This Qatari gambit does not exist in a vacuum; it is the second major tremor in a region undergoing a profound seismic shift. It follows closely on the heels of the United Arab Emirates’ calculated pivot toward Iran. For years, the UAE was the cornerstone of the US-led anti-Iran coalition in the Gulf. Yet, faced with the existential risks of a protracted, high-intensity war on its doorstep, Abu Dhabi recognized that unwavering alignment with Washington offered more peril than promise. By opening channels with Tehran, the UAE signaled to the region that the era of automatic alignment is over. The new doctrine is multi-alignment: maintaining working relationships with all powers, but ultimately answering to the imperative of national preservation.

The implications of this SWANA realignment are staggering. First, it exposes the limits of American hegemony. The United States can no longer assume that its regional partners will automatically absorb the shocks of its foreign policy decisions. When pushed to the brink, Gulf states possess the agency, the resources, and the diplomatic channels to circumvent Washington entirely.

Second, the Qatari proposal highlights a terrifying new vulnerability for the West: the weaponization of energy interdependence. Europe and Asia rely heavily on Gulf energy exports. The mere threat of a coordinated Gulf production halt to force a ceasefire reveals that the region’s resource-rich states hold a trump card that can override Western military objectives. The fact that intelligence officials suggest a "tacit understanding" may have temporarily held between Doha and Tehran indicates that this is not just theoretical diplomacy, but an active, shadow negotiation shaping the battlefield.

Ultimately, the war on Iran was likely intended to reassert dominance and neutralize a regional adversary. Instead, it has accelerated the very multipolarity it sought to prevent. The nations of SWANA are no longer mere chess pieces on a board controlled by external powers. They have become sovereign, pragmatic actors making ruthless, high-stakes calculations. The secret dealings between Qatar and Iran, alongside the UAE’s strategic hedging, are not anomalies; they are the blueprint for the new Middle East. In this new era, survival belongs not to the most loyal ally, but to the most adaptable strategist.



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