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...
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...