History will remember many crimes of this age. It will remember the bombs . It will remember the starvation . It will remember children pulled from rubble in pieces small enough to fit in their fathers’ hands. But history will also remember something colder, uglier, and perhaps more damning: It will remember how compassion itself was hunted down. Not long ago, the language of the West was filled with grand declarations: rule of law, human rights, international order, civilized values. Today those words hang like burnt banners over a moral wasteland. In international waters near Crete, a humanitarian flotilla carrying activists attempting to challenge the siege of Gaza was intercepted. More than 170 activists were detained. Most were released. But two men — Thiago Avila and Saif Abu Keshek — were taken away into Israeli custody, accused of aiding “the enemy,” while governments in Spain and Brazil demanded their release. Read that again. Not arms traffickers. N...
There are moments in history when empires do not collapse from a single blow. Not invasion. Not military defeat. Not the sudden fall of a capital city. They collapse from something slower — and more tragic: The slow exposure of their contradictions. Economic contradictions. Political contradictions. Moral contradictions. A great power, long accustomed to commanding history, suddenly finds itself unable to command reality. That is where America now stands. The war on Iran is being sold, as so many wars before it, as a demonstration of strength — another spectacle of missiles, threats, patriotic slogans, and televised triumphalism. Yet beneath the fireworks lies a harsher truth: This war is not proving American power. It is exposing American decline. As warned in conversation with : “We are living through the end of empire — and that end has been accelerated by everything going on in the Middle East.” That sentence should shake every capital on earth. Because t...