Skip to main content

Posts

Follow Me !

The War That Wins on Paper—and Bleeds in Reality

  The War That Always Works—Until It Doesn’t There is a certain elegance to modern war. Not the destruction. Not the bodies. But the presentation . The language is always impeccable: “ Strategic degradation” “Precision targeting” “Limited objectives” It almost sounds like a policy workshop — not the opening act of something that may consume an entire region. And once again, the script is being rehearsed. Iran is “weakened.” Its systems are “degraded.” Its options are “limited.” And somewhere between these carefully chosen words, a very old idea quietly returns: Maybe this time, we finish it. Chapter One: The Seduction of Air Power Airstrikes are irresistible. They promise control without commitment. Dominance without vulnerability. Victory without presence. You can bomb a country… without ever having to meet it . No dialects to understand. No terrain to navigate. No জনগোষ্ঠী to confront. Just coordinates. And for a brief moment— it feels like war ...
Recent posts

When the Warning Comes From Within — And Still the World Looks Away

There is something deeply inconvenient about criticism that comes from your own house. It cannot be dismissed as antisemitism. It cannot be brushed aside as ignorance. It cannot be labeled “external hostility.” And that is precisely what makes the recent remarks by Tzipi Livni so… uncomfortable. Because when someone like Livni says that Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is “dismantling the State of Israel” —you don’t get the luxury of pretending it’s just another activist slogan. You get a mirror. A State “Dismantling Itself” Let’s pause on that word: dismantling. Not under attack. Not misunderstood. Not unfairly criticized. But dismantled— from within. According to Livni, this dismantling is not accidental. It is structural. Deliberate. Policy-driven. She warns of a system where: Armed settler militias are increasingly normalized Parallel legal systems operate side by side —one for settlers, another for Palestinians Occupation is no longer temporary, but indefinite ...

The War That Exists—Because It Was Written Well Enough

There is something almost admirable about the craftsmanship. Not the war. Not the السياسة. Not even the الإنسان cost. The writing . Because what we are reading is not just a report—it is a performance. A carefully staged production in the familiar voice of school of authority, where tone substitutes for truth and narrative quietly outruns verification. And like all good performances, it asks for one thing: belief. A War Built on Assertions, Not Evidence We are told a war began. A full-scale confrontation involving and . Leadership decapitated. Oil chokepoints sealed. الكهرباء infrastructure threatened. حتی schoolchildren pulled into the margins of “collateral damage.” It is all very cinematic. And yet—strangely—absent from the global echo chamber of verification. No consensus from Reuters. No confirmation from the BBC. No grounding in the slow, boring discipline of fact. Just… momentum. Because in modern conflict, if a story moves fast enough, it no longer needs to be...

When the System Is Questioned by Its Own Guardians. A Warning Israel Can’t Dismiss.

  When the Warning Comes From Within There are moments in history when criticism from the outside can be dismissed—but when it comes from within, it becomes something far more dangerous: a mirror. That is what makes the recent letter by the The London Initiative so unsettling. Jewish philanthropists. Rabbis. Community leaders. Not critics of Israel—but voices shaped by it—now warning Isaac Herzog that something has gone terribly wrong. Their charge is stark: extremist settler violence is no longer fringe— it is becoming normalized. The Numbers That Refuse to Stay Quiet This is not rhetoric. It is data. Israeli military data (reported by Haaretz ) shows settler attacks rose by 25% in 2025 845 attacks in 2025 alone , injuring around 200 Palestinians Since October 2023: over 1,700 recorded settler attacks Early 2026: an average of 4 incidents per day And according to the United Nations and field reporting: Hundreds of Palestinians injured already in 2026 Entire ...

When Crusaders Go Digital: Old Wars, New Costumes, Same Bloodlust

History, it seems, has developed a dark sense of humor. After centuries of reflection, scholarship, and solemn declarations of “never again,” we now find elected officials—armed not with swords but with AI filters —cosplaying as Crusaders . Progress , apparently, means upgrading from iron armor to algorithmic propaganda. Let’s begin where this story actually starts—not in Washington, not in Tel Aviv, but nearly a thousand years ago, when Europe launched what it called “holy wars.” ⚔️ The Original Crusades: A Brief Reminder The Crusades (1095–1291) were not a single war but a series of campaigns initiated after Pope Urban II’s call at Clermont in 1095. His message was simple and devastatingly effective: reclaim Jerusalem, and God will reward you. What followed was not a clean clash of armies, but waves of violence that engulfed entire regions—from France and Germany through Hungary, into Byzantium, Antioch, and Palestine. Historians caution that medieval records are fragmented, but acro...

Iran, Oil, and the Art of Postponed Apocalypse

  Ah, diplomacy. Or, as President Trump calls it, “very strong talks,” led by Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff—because when the world teeters on the brink of nuclear escalation, why not hand the steering wheel to real estate moguls? Trump’s latest move: postpone strikes on Iran’s energy infrastructure for five days. Five days to “talk” while the Middle East burns and markets breathe a temporary sigh of relief. Never mind that Iran calls it what it is—a PR stunt to calm oil prices and buy time for more bombs. Meanwhile, contradictory statements are flying faster than missiles. On Saturday, Iran had 48 hours to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or else. Monday: talks are “very good.” Thursday? Who knows. Trump himself seems surprised by his own next move. The human cost, of course, is incidental. Over 2,000 dead in three weeks—mostly civilians in Iran and Lebanon. Hospitals, water plants, energy grids—targets all. Nuclear sites—“potentially irreversible consequences,” says the Red Cros...

The Mirage Dome: When “Impenetrable” Meets Reality in the Negev

There are moments in modern warfare when reality doesn’t just knock—it lands, twice, three hours apart, in the middle of your most guarded illusions. This weekend, near Dimona  and Arad, that illusion didn’t merely crack. It collapsed—politely, precisely, and with devastating clarity. Two Iranian missiles slipped through what has long been marketed—politically, technologically, almost mythologically—as an impenetrable shield. Not one. Two. Hours apart. Enough time, you’d think, for the “world’s most advanced missile defense system” to regroup, recalibrate, and remind everyone why billions of dollars—and decades of engineering—were poured into it. Instead, it reminded everyone of something far less comforting: Even the most expensive shield can blink. The Cult of Invincibility For years, systems like Iron Dome, Arrow 3, and David’s Sling have been presented not just as defensive tools—but as technological miracles. Political talking points. Export products. Symbols of nat...

"Once and for All” — The Forever War’s Favorite Lie

  There is something almost poetic about the phrase “once and for all.” It rolls off the tongue with the confidence of history—clean, decisive, final. It promises closure. It sells victory. It reassures voters. It fits neatly into speeches. And it has never once worked. If there were a museum of failed geopolitical slogans, “once and for all” would sit proudly beside “mission accomplished,” quietly whispering: we’ll be back. is right to be ambivalent. But ambivalence may actually be too generous. What we are witnessing is not strategy. It is ritual—repeated, predictable, and curiously immune to evidence. Kill the leaders. Destroy the infrastructure. Declare momentum. Repeat. Three generations of Hamas leadership eliminated—and yet Hamas governs Gaza still. Not metaphorically. Not ideologically. Literally. A fourth generation, rising like a political law of nature: power abhors a vacuum, especially when bombs create it. But this time, we’re told, it’s different. Because this...

Escalate First, Explain Later: The Dangerous Divide Exposed by Israel’s Strike on Iran

  There are moments in geopolitics when a single event does more than shock markets or trigger retaliation—it exposes the architecture of decision-making itself. The Israeli strike on Iran’s South Pars gas field, reported in The New York Times as a point of friction between and , is one such moment. On the surface, it looked like a familiar disagreement between allies. Trump claimed the United States “knew nothing.” Israeli officials suggested otherwise. Statements were walked back. Clarifications followed. But beneath the confusion lies something far more consequential than a messaging gap. This was not miscommunication. This was divergence. Two Strategies, One War The United States and Israel are no longer simply coordinating tactics—they are pursuing fundamentally different theories of power. For Washington, even under a president as unpredictable as Trump, war remains bounded by consequences: Global energy markets must remain stable Regional escalation must be c...