Tuesday, July 29, 2025
The West’s Lack of Seriousness About the Two-State Solution
For over three decades, the international community has paid lip service to the idea of a two-state solution as the path to peace between Israelis and Palestinians. Yet, since the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993—which were supposed to pave the way for Palestinian statehood—the West, particularly the United States and its allies, has failed to take meaningful steps toward realizing this goal. Instead, Israel has continued expanding settlements in the occupied territories, undermining any possibility of a viable Palestinian state. The recent announcements by France and the UK to recognize Palestine—met with immediate condemnation by Israel and the U.S.—only highlight how political, rather than principled, the West’s stance has been. If the international community had enforced the Oslo framework and recognized Palestine years ago, the cycle of violence, including the October 7 attack and the current war in Gaza, might have been avoided.
Three Decades of Empty Promises
The Oslo Accords were meant to be the foundation for Palestinian self-governance, with a five-year interim period leading to final-status negotiations on borders, Jerusalem, refugees, and security. Yet, thirty years later, Israel has not withdrawn from the occupied territories, and illegal settlements have only expanded. The West, while rhetorically supporting a two-state solution, has done little to pressure Israel into compliance. Instead, the U.S. and European powers have shielded Israel from accountability, vetoing or blocking UN resolutions condemning settlement expansions and military actions in Palestinian territories.
This lack of enforcement has emboldened Israel’s far-right government, which has openly rejected Palestinian statehood. Just yesterday, Israel announced plans to fully reoccupy Gaza and accelerate annexation in the West Bank—actions that directly contradict the two-state solution. If the West were serious about peace, it would have taken concrete measures long ago, such as recognizing Palestine, halting military aid to Israel until it complies with international law, or imposing sanctions for settlement expansions. Instead, the U.S. and its allies have allowed Israel to dictate terms, ensuring that Palestinian statehood remains out of reach.
Missed Opportunities, Manufactured Conflicts
Israel has had countless opportunities to accept a Palestinian state, which would have provided it with a clearer moral and legal high ground. Once Palestine was recognized, any future attacks from Palestinian territories would be seen as aggression from one state against another, legitimizing Israel’s right to self-defense under international law. Yet Israel has consistently chosen expansionism over coexistence. Just this week, the Israeli government has signaled plans not only to reoccupy Gaza fully but also to assert control over the West Bank—making clear that the goal is not peace, but dominance.The Abraham Accords, which normalized ties between Israel and certain Arab states, were framed as a diplomatic success. But in reality, they were a workaround—a means to ignore the core issue of Palestinian statehood. Without addressing the root cause, no agreement can bring lasting peace. Recognition of Palestine, not its erasure, is the only path to stability.
If the West genuinely seeks peace in the Middle East, it must move beyond rhetoric. Recognition of the Palestinian state must happen now, and it must be followed by concrete measures to ensure that state’s sovereignty. That includes sanctions against Israel should it unilaterally attack or reoccupy Palestinian territory without provocation. Anything less enables the status quo of violence, displacement, and injustice.
The continued delay in recognition only emboldens the Israeli government to seize more land and entrench a system of apartheid. Western inaction is not neutrality—it is complicity. A principled stance would align with the international consensus and uphold the same values of self-determination and human rights that the West claims to champion.
Global Recognition vs. Western Obstruction
More than 140 out of 193 UN member states already recognize Palestine as a sovereign state. The fact that most of the holdouts are Western nations—primarily the U.S., Canada, Australia, and parts of Europe—demonstrates that their position is driven by geopolitical allegiance to Israel rather than a genuine commitment to peace. When France recently announced its intention to recognize Palestine, only the U.S. and Israel objected. Similarly, when the UK indicated it would recognize Palestine in September, Israel immediately lashed out. These reactions prove that Israel’s government has no intention of allowing Palestinian statehood, and the West’s reluctance to act independently only enables this obstruction.
Had Palestine been recognized as a state under the Oslo framework at any point in the past 30 years, the current crisis could have been averted. A sovereign Palestine would have had diplomatic and legal means to address grievances, reducing the need for armed resistance. There would have been no need for the Abraham Accords—which bypassed Palestinian rights in favor of Arab-Israeli normalization—and no Houthi attacks in the Red Sea in solidarity with Gaza. The West’s failure to act has perpetuated the conflict, not resolved it.
The Path to Peace: Recognition and Accountability
If the West truly wants peace, it must take immediate action:
- Recognize Palestine – The UK and France’s steps are positive, but all Western nations must follow. Recognition would force Israel to negotiate in good faith rather than indefinitely delaying statehood.
- Impose Consequences on Israel – If Israel continues annexation or attacks Palestinian territories without provocation, the West must impose sanctions, halt arms sales, and support ICC investigations.
- Enforce International Law – The U.S. must stop vetoing UN Security Council resolutions that hold Israel accountable for violations.
The longer the West delays, the more land Israel takes, and the more violence escalates. The two-state solution is not dead because Palestinians or the international community abandoned it—it is dying because Israel and its Western backers have systematically undermined it. If the West does not act now, the alternative is endless war. The choice is clear: recognize Palestine or bear responsibility for the bloodshed that follows.
If the West fails to act now, the two-state solution will soon become obsolete, leaving only two grim alternatives: perpetual apartheid or a catastrophic, single-state conflict. Israel’s relentless settlement expansion, its stated intent to annex the West Bank, and its ongoing destruction of Gaza demonstrate that it has no interest in allowing Palestinian sovereignty. Meanwhile, the West’s inaction—masked by empty diplomatic statements—has only emboldened Israel’s extremist government to accelerate its colonization of Palestinian land. The consequences of this failure are already unfolding: the October 7 attack, the brutal war on Gaza, and the rising tensions across the region prove that oppression breeds resistance, and resistance begets further violence. Without urgent Western intervention to enforce a political solution, the cycle will only grow bloodier. The next uprising will be more violent, the next Israeli retaliation more devastating, and the next generation more radicalized. The window for a two-state solution is closing rapidly; if the West continues to prioritize Israeli impunity over justice and peace, it will bear responsibility for the explosion of violence that follows.
Tuesday, July 01, 2025
Media review: How Democracies Fail to Confront Corruption
At the Edge of Accountability
Recently, U.S. President Donald Trump, who himself has faced 88 criminal and civil indictments and was nonetheless elected to a second term, issued a public demand that Israel’s judicial system drop all charges against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Trump called the trial a “travesty of justice,” labeling the Israeli legal proceedings a “witch hunt,” and implied that U.S. aid to Israel might be contingent on ending Netanyahu’s prosecution. This unprecedented intervention—an indicted American leader defending an indicted Israeli leader, who is also facing war crimes charges at the International Criminal Court—raises a profound question: How does democracy, if it is to be taken seriously as a system of values and not merely of process, guard against corruption and the rise of authoritarian figures cloaked in democratic legitimacy? This moment is not just politically volatile; it exposes uncomfortable contradictions within how democracies perceive themselves and others.The indictment of elected leaders in democracies such as Israel and the United States raises difficult and urgent questions about the integrity of democratic systems. When prime ministers or presidents face criminal charges—whether for corruption, abuse of power, or other serious offenses—it is natural to wonder whether democracy has failed to produce ethical and responsible leadership. But while such developments highlight vulnerabilities in democratic practice, they also reveal certain institutional strengths. Democracy does not guarantee virtuous leadership; it guarantees the opportunity for accountability. Whether that opportunity is seized—or manipulated—depends on the strength of institutions and the moral commitment of both leaders and citizens.
One of the core principles of a functioning democracy is that no one, however powerful, is above the law. The fact that legal institutions in places like the United States or Israel can bring charges against sitting or former leaders speaks to the resilience of the rule of law. In authoritarian systems, leaders often operate with impunity; in democracies, they may still face scrutiny and legal consequences. In this respect, the indictment of a head of state can be viewed not as a failure of democracy, but as evidence that democratic institutions are, at least in part, doing their job.
However, this view becomes more complicated when we consider how democracies respond to similar situations in different parts of the world. When elections in the Global South produce leaders with questionable records or populist agendas, Western democracies are quick to dismiss those outcomes as the result of “sham elections” or “corrupt processes.” Yet when similarly compromised figures rise to power within the West—figures under indictment, or credibly accused of serious misconduct—those same governments often insist that the outcome must be respected as the will of the people. They demand deference to the democratic process at home, while undermining or delegitimizing it abroad. This double standard reveals a deeper truth: in many cases, democracy is treated less as a value system than as a political instrument—embraced when convenient, disregarded when not.
Such inconsistencies are damaging not only to international credibility, but to democracy itself. If democratic legitimacy is defined not by values—such as accountability, justice, and equal representation—but by outcomes that serve particular interests, then democracy becomes hollow. The insistence that democracy must be respected when it produces indicted or corrupt leaders in Western nations, while being denied that legitimacy elsewhere, exposes the erosion of democratic ethics. It becomes clear that the principle of democracy is sometimes wielded more as a shield for power than as a reflection of shared values.
Moreover, in deeply polarized societies, even the mechanisms of accountability begin to fracture. Voters may see legal indictments not as a signal of wrongdoing, but as a partisan attack. In such an environment, democratic institutions remain formally intact, but their moral authority is weakened. Leaders who are under investigation—or even convicted—may be rewarded with public support rather than rejection. Far from being disqualified, their defiance becomes a badge of honor. This speaks not only to the failings of political elites, but to a broader cultural crisis in democratic societies: the erosion of civic norms, the rise of partisan loyalty over public ethics, and the loss of a shared commitment to the common good.While the indictment of elected leaders does not necessarily prove that democracy is broken, it does serve as a warning. It reveals the tension between democratic form and democratic substance—between holding elections and cultivating a culture of accountability and ethical governance. The fact that such tensions are more readily condemned in the Global South than confronted at home suggests that democracy, in the hands of powerful nations, is often invoked more as a geopolitical tool than as a universal standard.
Ultimately, the health of democracy cannot be judged solely by whether elections occur, or whether leaders are indicted. It must be measured by the integrity of institutions, the honesty of public discourse, and the degree to which citizens demand responsibility and justice from those who govern them. Democracy may still provide the tools to hold leaders accountable, but those tools are only effective if people are willing to use them—not selectively, not cynically, but consistently, and in defense of the values democracy is supposed to serve.
Monday, June 30, 2025
The Just War Legacy: Why How a Nation Fights Matters More Than Winning
Vctory in war cannot be defined solely by military triumph or territorial gain. It is judged by the means through which that victory was achieved. A war can be won on the battlefield, yet leave behind a legacy of shame, trauma, and ethical collapse that haunts a nation for generations. In contrast, a nation that loses a war but conducts itself with honor, restraint, and respect for the law secures something far more enduring than military success: it secures its future moral standing, both in the eyes of its own people and in the judgment of history.
Conflict is not just an event; it is a story that nations tell themselves and that future generations will remember. The narrative of a war—the record of what was done, how it was done, and why—is essential not just for historical accuracy, but for national identity. Documenting wars honestly, particularly through the lens of customary international law and ethics, is crucial to understanding whether a nation acted with integrity or surrendered to its worst instincts.This is why narrative matters. It gives voice to victims, records the crimes of aggressors, and shines a light on the choices made during the darkest hours. It becomes the memory a nation must live with, and the standard against which its future behavior is measured.
Throughout human history, warfare has been a constant, but so too has been the effort to place limits on its conduct. From ancient codes of honor to the Geneva Conventions, societies have always understood that even in war, there must be rules. Customary international law—principles such as the protection of civilians, the prohibition of unnecessary suffering, and the humane treatment of prisoners—exists to maintain a minimum standard of decency in an otherwise brutal domain.
These rules are not optional ideals. They are legal and moral guardrails that prevent conflict from degenerating into pure savagery. They uphold human dignity, restrain the impulse toward cruelty, and serve as the foundation for any claim to justice or legitimacy in wartime.
A nation that wins a war through the use of illegal, unethical, or treacherous practices may achieve temporary dominance, but it builds its success on a foundation of rot. War crimes, targeted civilian killings, use of banned weapons, or deliberate acts of disproportionate violence may produce a battlefield advantage—but they do so at the cost of a nation’s soul.
History has consistently shown that military victory does not equate to moral victory. Nations that commit atrocities may silence critics in the short term, but they cannot silence history. They are forever stained by their methods. And eventually, their own people—especially future generations—will inherit not pride, but shame.
Conversely, those who fight honorably—even when outmatched—leave behind a legacy of courage and principle. The world remembers the resistance of the few against tyranny and injustice far more reverently than the conquests of the powerful through cruelty. A nation that respects the laws of war, even in defeat, preserves its humanity. It teaches its children not just to survive, but to live with values worth defending. War fought in accordance with ethical and legal norms affirms a nation’s commitment to civilization itself. And even when such wars are lost, the values upheld in their conduct endure. They are the seeds from which future peace and justice can grow.
In today’s world—where weapons of mass destruction can annihilate entire cities and technological warfare can kill with the push of a button—the temptation to ignore ethical constraints is greater than ever. But the ability to destroy does not justify destruction. With such power comes even greater responsibility to act within the bounds of law and morality. The increased lethality and destrcivenes of of weapons is matched by the increased tension around the world:As of mid-2025, the global landscape is marked by a surge in armed conflicts and the rising specter of new wars. In Eastern Europe, the war in Ukraine continues into its fourth year, devastating cities, crippling infrastructure, and causing hundreds of thousands of casualties. In Southwest Asia, the Gaza war has escalated into a humanitarian disaster, with tens of thousands of civilians—many of them children—killed amid siege tactics and indiscriminate bombings. Adding to the regional instability, a 12-day war between the United States, Israel, and Iran recently erupted, involving aerial bombardments, cyberattacks, and targeted assassinations, including the killing of unarmed Iranian scientists. In Africa, civil wars in Sudan, conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the insurgency across the Sahel region continue to displace millions. Myanmar's civil war grinds on with no resolution, while tensions in the South China Sea and the standoff between China and Taiwan raise alarm over a potential future war—possibly within the next two years. One of the most alarming developments occurred in South Asia in early May, when India and Pakistan (two nuclear armed nations) engaged in a four-day military exchange, marking the fiercest cross-border violence since 1971. Prompted by a deadly terrorist attack in Kashmir on April 22 that killed 26 civilians, India launched “Operation Sindoor” on May 7—conducting strikes on militant sites inside Pakistan and Pakistan‑administered Kashmir. Pakistan retaliated with drone, missile, artillery strikes, and shelling that hit civilian areas, including a Sikh temple and schools, and downed several Indian jets. Both nations suffered civilian and military casualties—dozens killed on each side. Despite the stop of cross border strikes, the conflict between the two countries is unresolved conflicts. The decades long tension between North Korea and South Korea sustain a volatile global climate where peace remains fragile and temporary while nation-states are investing more in weapons of mass killing. All this make war a lived reality for millions of people around the world, and the only restraining factor that might minimize the harm is a collective commitment to norms and ethics of war; not more rhetoric for starting and fighting wars.
We live in a time when nations that commit atrocities still attempt to justify their actions as righteous. This very behavior is itself a tacit admission: that the only wars truly justifiable are those fought justly. If a cause is moral, its conduct must be moral. If the methods are indefensible, no amount of rhetoric can redeem them. War is not just a contest of arms; it is a test of character. A nation is not judged solely by whether it wins or loses a war, but by how it fights it. In the long arc of history, justice, law, and honor matter more than military success. Nations that uphold these principles secure more than territory—they secure legitimacy, dignity, and the loyalty of future generations. Victory achieved at the expense of humanity is no victory at all. Only those who fight with integrity, who respect the laws of war, and who honor the rights of even their enemies, can claim to have won anything worth keeping.
Sunday, June 29, 2025
Iran–Pakistan Relations before and after the 12-Day Israel-Iran War
The recent 12-day war between Israel, US, and Iran has not only reshaped Middle Eastern dynamics but also sent ripples across South Asia—particularly impacting Iran's complex but evolving relationship with Pakistan. Although the two neighbors have shared a history of cautious cooperation punctuated by periods of distrust, the latest conflict appears to be accelerating a strategic convergence between Tehran and Islamabad. Just over a year ago, in January 2024, relations between Iran and Pakistan nearly derailed after a rare exchange of cross-border missile strikes. Iran targeted what it claimed were hideouts of the Sunni militant group "Jaish al-Adl" in Pakistan’s Balochistan province. Islamabad responded with airstrikes on Iranian territory, claiming to hit Baloch separatists threatening Pakistani sovereignty.
The 12-day war launched by Israel on Iran has reignited fears of regional destabilization. For Pakistan, the risk is not just ideological alignment with a fellow Muslim-majority state under siege; it's deeply strategic. Iran’s internal security vulnerabilities—exposed by Israeli strikes—create a vacuum that could empower militant groups like Jaish al-Adl, which have already carried out dozens of deadly attacks in Iran’s Sistan-Balochistan province. Pakistan fears that a weakened Iranian state would allow these groups to spill over into Pakistani territory, intensifying separatist violence in its own Balochistan province.
Moreover, the war has created space for greater alignment against perceived Israeli and Western aggression. Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif publicly condemned Israel, warning that Islamic nations could face similar fates if they remain divided. At the United Nations, Pakistan’s envoy described Israel's actions as a threat to the entire region and expressed full solidarity with the Iranian people.
General Asim Munir, Pakistan’s powerful Army Chief, visited Washington mid-June—his first official trip since 2001. There, he cautioned U.S. officials, including former President Donald Trump, against supporting the Israeli offensive. Munir argued that toppling Iran’s regime would lead to chaos across Balochistan and empower groups like Jaish al-Adl, which Washington itself classifies as a terrorist organization.
In private discussions, Munir also warned of the precedent that bombing Iran’s nuclear infrastructure might set. Although Israel has historically remained silent on Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, Islamabad remains sensitive to parallels drawn with its own facilities.
Despite its public support for Iran, Pakistan remains interested in preserving its long-standing but strained relationship with the U.S.—particularly in light of renewed American interest sparked by the Iran conflict. Pakistan’s hope is to use this geopolitical moment to negotiate economic and strategic concessions from both Washington and Beijing.
Over the past decade, Pakistan has leaned heavily into its strategic partnership with China, especially through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Yet Islamabad understands that overdependence on China is risky, particularly amid growing U.S.-China rivalry. Diversifying economic partners while aligning diplomatically with both superpowers offers Islamabad a path to stability and leverage.
The 12-day war has likely accelerated the slow-burning strategic realignment between Iran and Pakistan. Historically divided by sectarian suspicions and divergent foreign policy priorities, the two nations now find themselves driven together by shared security concerns, declining Western engagement, and expanding Chinese influence.
This doesn’t mean a full-fledged alliance is inevitable. Deep mistrust lingers—especially over past proxy support and sectarian competition. However, as both nations face a common threat from Israeli aggression, cross-border militancy, and marginalization by Western powers, their overlapping interests may now outweigh historical grievances.
The war has made one thing clear: Iran and Pakistan can no longer afford ambiguity in their relationship. Whether driven by fear, necessity, or opportunity, they appear to be moving—cautiously but decisively—toward a more robust partnership.
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Global Solidarity March to Gaza: A Historic Civilian Mobilization to Break the Siege
June 2025 – In an unprecedented act of international solidarity, over 4,000 individuals from more than 80 countries have launched a global march to Gaza, aiming to reach the besieged Palestinian territory on foot via Egypt’s Rafah border crossing. The initiative, titled “The Global March to Gaza,” is being organized by a coalition of international trade unions, human rights groups, and solidarity movements in response to what they describe as a “man-made humanitarian catastrophe” in Gaza, under Israeli siege since October 2023.
About a year ago, Republican politicians suggested that American citizens who are protesting the genocide in Gaza be sent to Gaza; it would seem some are doing just that now.
A Humanitarian Crisis in Focus
Led by the International Coalition Against Israeli Occupation, the march is a civilian response to the rapidly deteriorating situation in Gaza, where over two million residents face famine, medical shortages, and a near-total blockade. The organizers cite starvation being used as a weapon and the systematic targeting of civilians, especially children, as central motivations for this extraordinary mobilization.
Thousands of aid trucks, loaded with food, medicine, and fuel, have been stalled at the Rafah border for months. The marchers aim to physically escort and pressure for their immediate entry.
International Participation and Civil Mobilization
The march is uniquely global and grassroots. Delegations include European parliamentarians and civil society representatives from across Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Europe. The “March to Gaza” has drawn support not only from Arab and Muslim communities but also from diverse backgrounds—doctors, lawyers, students, and humanitarian activists, many of whom are personally financing their participation.
Groups such as the Catalan alternative union (IAC), Irish human rights activists, and legal advocates like German lawyer Melanie Schweizer emphasize the peaceful and volunteer-based nature of the march. According to spokesperson Karen Moynihan of the Irish group, this is “a civilian cry against genocide,” calling for an end to complicity by silence.
Objectives of the March
The organizers have laid out five primary goals:
- Stop the Genocide: Pressure the international community to halt ongoing Israeli violations against Palestinians, particularly the deliberate starvation of civilians.
- Immediate Humanitarian Access: Demand the entry of urgent aid through Rafah without restrictions, emphasizing the thousands of trucks already waiting at the border.
- End the Siege: Advocate for the unconditional lifting of the Israeli blockade, enabling sustainable access to essentials like water, food, fuel, and medicine.
- International Accountability: Urge global institutions to hold Israel accountable for violations of international law, and condemn governments that remain passive or complicit.
- Empower Civil Society: Amplify the voices of global civil society as a force of peaceful resistance, drawing inspiration from historical solidarity movements and emphasizing non-violent civilian action.
Path to Gaza: A Difficult but Symbolic Route
Participants began arriving in Cairo in early June, ahead of a final push towards Gaza. The “Caravan of Steadfastness,” a land convoy from Algeria and Tunisia, is scheduled to merge with the larger group in Egypt’s northern Sinai region. From the city of Al-Arish, the coalition will begin its march on foot to the Rafah crossing, where they plan to stage a peaceful sit-in until aid is allowed in.
Organizers acknowledge the challenges of marching through desert terrain but insist it pales in comparison to the suffering endured by Gazans over the past 20 months.
A Message of Peace and Global Conscience
The march is deliberately unaffiliated with any government, military force, or political party. It is presented as a civilian-led, peaceful protest meant to convey the global demand for justice, humanity, and dignity for Palestinians.
“This is not just a march to Gaza,” said organizer Saif Abu Khashk. “It is a march for humanity itself.”
As international attention turns toward Rafah, the Global March to Gaza represents a striking moment in modern civil action—where borders, languages, and politics are set aside in the name of urgent humanitarian relief and moral accountability. Whether or not it succeeds in breaking the blockade, the march has already sent a clear message: the world is watching, and civil society is rising.
Friday, June 06, 2025

Current Events: The Power Equation--How Will the Trump-Musk Feud End?
The dispute escalated sharply this week when Musk, using his platform X (formerly Twitter), alleged that President Trump was implicated in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal. “It’s time for the big reveal—Trump’s name is in the Epstein files. That’s why they were never released,” Musk declared, igniting a firestorm. President Trump responded through Truth Social, calling Musk “crazy” and revealing that he had already removed him from a key advisory role. Trump further threatened to strip Musk of billions of dollars in government contracts, stating that ending federal support for Musk's ventures was “the easiest way to save billions in our budget.”
This rhetoric has not remained confined to social media. Steve Bannon, former White House strategist and a key voice in Trump’s inner circle, has urged the president to invoke the Defense Production Act—a national security statute dating to the Korean War—to seize control of SpaceX. On his War Room Live broadcast, Bannon pushed even further, calling for Musk to be deported and for his security clearance to be revoked. Such measures, if enacted, would be extraordinary, signaling a dramatic break between the U.S. government and one of its most prominent innovators.
As the domestic battle rages, the international dimension has quietly taken shape. In Moscow, Dmitry Novikov, deputy chairman of the Russian Duma's Foreign Affairs Committee, floated the possibility of Russia offering political asylum to Musk, much like it did for Edward Snowden in 2013. Though Novikov conceded that Musk likely does not need such protection—“he’s playing a different game”—the mere suggestion functions as a geopolitical provocation. It signals that Russia is willing to exploit internal American fractures for symbolic gain, and perhaps more.
Musk’s global footprint makes this more than idle speculation. Born in South Africa, with business interests spanning Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, Musk is no ordinary corporate figure. He operates in a rare sphere where technological influence intersects with statecraft. His companies—Tesla, SpaceX, Starlink, Neuralink—are deeply embedded in America’s energy, communications, defense, and aerospace sectors. Many of these ventures rely on government contracts and federal subsidies. Disrupting these relationships would reverberate far beyond Washington.
The economic fallout of such a rupture could be immense. SpaceX alone holds essential contracts with NASA and the Department of Defense, from satellite launches to lunar exploration. Tesla, meanwhile, is central to the Biden-era green energy transition—an agenda now in jeopardy under Trump’s second administration. If those contracts were terminated, the effects would ripple through markets, private-sector innovation, and U.S. strategic infrastructure.
But perhaps the most dangerous consequence of this feud is the vacuum it may create on the international stage. Should Musk begin to align himself with governments antagonistic to the U.S., whether out of necessity or opportunism, it could lead to a new axis of technological power. Russia has already expressed interest, and China—long at odds with American tech dominance—could seize the opportunity to court Musk with offers of collaboration, capital, or simply sanctuary. South Africa, maintaining a neutral stance in global alignments, could also become a fallback base for Musk’s operations. Such realignments would raise urgent questions about the control of technologies that are now foundational to global security, including satellite communications, AI, and space exploration.
At a time when private technology firms rival states in influence, the deterioration of the U.S.-Musk relationship is more than a political feud—it is a tectonic shift. This is not merely about bruised pride or policy disputes. It is about the architecture of global power in the 21st century. If President Trump moves to isolate Musk, and if Musk finds favor in foreign capitals eager to undermine U.S. dominance, the outcome may not just redefine American tech policy. It may redraw the very lines of geopolitical influence for years to come.
In the end, despite the drama, threats, and theatrical confrontations, the feud between Donald Trump and Elon Musk is unlikely to result in a true rupture. Beneath the public insults and political posturing lies a shared worldview: both men believe in power—its acquisition, its preservation, and its proximity. They do not operate according to principles of right and wrong, but rather by calculations of strength, leverage, and access. Each understands that respect is accorded not by virtue, but by dominance.
This shared logic of power will ultimately draw them back into alignment. Trump, now sitting in the Oval Office for a second time, controls the machinery of the state, including its vast financial and legal apparatus. And Musk, for all his defiance, knows that the U.S. government still has the absolute ability to disrupt, seize, or dismantle the very infrastructure that supports his empire. All it would take is one plausible accusation tied to national security or financial misconduct to put his operations at risk.
Both men are too ambitious—and too dependent on each other’s resources—to let their rivalry spin out of control. They will do the math, weigh the cost, and reach a truce. Because in the end, neither of them believes in serving anything higher than power itself. And as long as they both worship at that altar, they are bound to meet again—if not as allies, then as co-conspirators in the preservation of their own influence. Assuming Musk and Trump eventually come to their senses, the feud might fade as nothing more than a brief power play between two ego-driven figures.
However, if they don’t come to their senses—and that remains a real possibility, given the corrosive nature of hubris, a social affliction that often consumes those who overestimate their own importance—the clash is likely to escalate. What began as a public sparring match could spiral into one of the messiest, most theatrical battles in recent memory. Equal parts spectacle and ego war, it would be a uniquely modern showdown: fueled by platforms, followers, and the conviction that neither man can afford to lose. If forced to place a bet, one should bet on hubris. It has always been the silent architect of downfall for those who see power as the only measure of success—or failure.
Wednesday, June 04, 2025

USA, again, alone, vetoes Gaza ceasefire resolution
The text, co-sponsored by Algeria, Denmark, Greece, Guyana, Pakistan, Panama, the Republic of Korea, Sierra Leone, Slovenia, and Somalia – collectively known as the E-10 – received 14 votes in favour, with the US casting the lone vote against.
As one of the council’s five permanent members, the US holds veto power – a negative vote that automatically blocks any resolution from going forward.
Had it been adopted, the draft would have demanded “an immediate, unconditional and permanent ceasefire in Gaza” to be respected by all parties.US has opposed all UNSC resulutions that could have brought an end to the carnage in Gaza.
Russia’s UN envoy, Vasily Nebenzya, made it clear during a Security Council session: the world can now see who genuinely wants peace, and who continues to exploit global crises for geopolitical games.
His statement came in response to the United States vetoing yet another resolution calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.

Media Review: Nuclear Talks Enter Critical Phase as Iran Holds Firm on Sovereignty
A central point that has emerged is that any potential deal will not deny Iran the right to enrich uranium on its own soil. This position has been echoed in the latest remarks by top officials on both sides. Iran’s Supreme Leader has reinforced this stance, emphasizing that uranium enrichment is a matter of national sovereignty and national security. He also issued a fatwa prohibiting the development or possession of nuclear weapons, underscoring Iran’s declared commitment to peaceful nuclear energy.
These red lines—especially the right to enrichment—are seen as non-negotiable, rooted in Iran’s lack of trust toward the West based on previous experiences. As a result, any viable deal will likely have to respect these boundaries to move forward.
Iran's leader provides the reasoning behind Iran's right to Uranium enrichment
“Now, in the nuclear industry, there is one key point that functions like the master key: Uranium enrichment.
Our enemies have fixated on this enrichment—they’ve put their finger exactly on this. A vast nuclear industry, without the ability to enrich uranium, is essentially useless. Why? Because for our power plants, we’d have to stretch out our hand and ask others for fuel.
It’s like having oil in your country but being forbidden from building refineries or producing gasoline—you have crude oil, but you have to buy gasoline from someone else. And that country might sell it to you at whatever price they wish—or they might just refuse altogether, making up an excuse. That’s how they behave.
Even if we had 100 nuclear reactors, without enrichment, they’d be useless—because nuclear power plants require fuel. If we can’t produce that fuel ourselves, we’d have to go begging to the US, and they might set dozens of conditions just to give us fuel.
We already experienced this in the 2000s, when we needed 20% enriched uranium. The US president at the time sent 2 heads of state—so-called friends—to act as intermediaries and told us: ‘Give us part of your 3.5% enriched uranium, and we’ll give you the 20% fuel you need.’ Our officials agreed, and an exchange was planned.
I said the exchange must be done like this: They bring the 20% enriched fuel to Bandar Abbas, we test it to ensure it’s genuine, and then we hand over the 3.5% in return. When they saw that we were serious and insistent on inspecting the 20% fuel first, they backed out of the deal and broke their promise.
Meanwhile, amid all this political back-and-forth, our scientists produced the 20% enriched uranium domestically, right here inside this country.
...
Iran is a strong nation, an independent nation. Our nuclear industry is one of the most advanced in the world, and we employ thousands of scientists, researchers, and other workers. Should we give all of this up? Should we make all of them jobless? Are we insane?
You [United States] have nuclear capabilities. You have atomic bombs. You possess devastating weapons.
What right do you have to question whether the Iranian nation should have nuclear enrichment or not, or a nuclear industry or not? We are a sovereign nation, we have the right to decide our own future. It has nothing to do with you. This is the principle of our independence.
The latest American proposal is 100% against our doctrine and against our positions.
From here on, I pledge to the Iranian nation, with the help of God, we will strengthen our national power as much as we can."
After the statement by the Iranian leader, the foreign minister, Abbas Araqchi, issued his own declaration on X:
"There is a reason why only a few nations master the ability to fuel nuclear reactors. Apart from significant financial resources and political vision, it requires a solid industrial base and a technological-academic complex that can produce necessary human resources and know-how. Iran has paid dearly for these capabilities, and there is no scenario in which we will give up on the patriots who made our dream come true. To reiterate: No enrichment, no deal. No nuclear wrapons, we have a deal."
Saturday, May 31, 2025
U.S. Ambassador Blows Hole in Israel’s Official Dual Citizenship Figures
The issue of dual citizenship in Israel, particularly involving American-Israelis, is mired in significant statistical inconsistencies. On one hand, the Israeli government has maintained that only about 10% of its population holds dual citizenship. On the other, a recent statement by the U.S. Ambassador to Israel in May 2025 directly contradicts that figure, asserting that there are 700,000 U.S. citizens currently inside Israel. This number, when examined in the context of Israel’s demographics, immigration history, and citizenship laws, reveals deep flaws in the official Israeli narrative.
Israel’s Nationality Law and the Facilitation of Dual Citizenship
Established in 1952, the Israeli Nationality Law enables individuals to acquire citizenship by birth, marriage, naturalization, and most notably, under the Law of Return. The Law of Return has been the foundation for a significant influx of Jewish immigrants worldwide, particularly from North America, the former Soviet Union, and Europe. Crucially, Israeli law does not require immigrants to renounce their original citizenship. As such, dual and even multiple citizenships are legally permitted and in practice, quite common. This legislative openness was designed to encourage Jews to migrate to Israel while maintaining their national ties elsewhere.
From a population of less than a million in 1948, Israel has grown to 9.9 million by 2024. This growth has been driven significantly by immigration. Since Israel’s founding, 3.46 million people have immigrated, nearly half of them since 1990. Among these immigrants, major influxes came from the United States, Russia, and Europe.
The U.S. Ambassador’s just obliterated Israel's narrative about the number of Israel citizens with dual citizenship
A key moment revealing this data discrepancy occurred when the U.S. Ambassador to Israel stated in May 2025:
“We don't need Israel's permission to conclude an agreement with the Houthis. If one of the 700,000 American citizens inside Israel is hurt by a Houthi attack, then we'll respond.”
This figure of 700,000 American citizens currently residing in Israel starkly contradicts the Israeli government’s longstanding claim that only 120,000 Israeli citizens hold U.S. citizenship. Crucially, the ambassador's statement referred specifically to U.S. citizens physically present in Israel, whether as residents, dual citizens, or extended-stay nationals. It does not include the significantly larger population of Jewish Americans who have claimed Israeli citizenship under the Law of Return but continue to reside in the United States.
This distinction is important: under Israeli law, any Jew worldwide can obtain Israeli citizenship without relinquishing their existing nationality. Many Jewish Americans—estimated at 7.2 million people—have already taken up this option, even if they have never relocated to Israel. These individuals, while not living in Israel, remain Israeli citizens on paper, often eligible for Israeli government services, voting rights (if they return), and military service for their children.
Thus, the 700,000 figure represents only a subset of U.S.-Israeli dual nationals: those currently inside Israel, according to the ambassador. When including all U.S. citizens who have acquired Israeli citizenship under the Law of Return but reside abroad, particularly in the U.S., the total number of American-Israeli dual citizens could be substantially higher.
Many countries, including Russia, the United States, France, and the UK, allow citizenship by descent. If a parent retains foreign nationality, their Israeli-born children can often claim the same. For example, Russian law does not prohibit dual citizenship and considers children of Russian citizens to be eligible for Russian nationality. Thus, second-generation Israelis born to immigrants from countries allowing citizenship by descent further swell the ranks of dual citizens—often without being officially counted.
A 2011 report on Israeli expatriates in the UK revealed that over 44% of Israelis in Britain held dual citizenship, and many more entered the UK with EU passports—an avenue unavailable without direct family links to European citizenship.
This pattern undermines Israel's claim that dual citizenship is confined to a minor share of the population. If anything, it demonstrates a widespread and systemic underreporting or obfuscation of dual nationality status for political or strategic reasons—perhaps to downplay foreign influence or demographic vulnerability.
This further exposes the deep inconsistency in the Israeli government’s claim that only 10% of its population holds dual citizenship. If 700,000 U.S. citizens live in Israel, that alone constitutes nearly 7% of Israel’s total population. When factoring in the large number of Israeli citizens with Russian, French, British, or other citizenships—and the reality of hereditary citizenship laws—it becomes mathematically impossible to reconcile this with the official 10% figure. Moreover, these figures do not account for the vast number of Israeli citizens living abroad, many of whom hold dual or multiple nationalities, nor do they capture the legal eligibility of millions of Israelis to reclaim foreign citizenship through their parents or grandparents.
In light of the growing involvement of dual nationals in key state institutions and military operations, including in controversial conflicts like the war in Gaza, and possible violation of international law where many of these participants are accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity are, the need for transparency and accountability is more pressing than ever.
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