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The Art of the Deal, the Strait of Fire, and the Empire of Manufactured Crisis

  There is something almost breathtakingly absurd — and tragically familiar — in watching modern empire set the house ablaze, then stand in front of the flames demanding applause for holding a bucket. That is where America now stands in the Strait of Hormuz. Not as a stabilizer. Not as a peacemaker. Not as the adult in the room. But as an arsonist, pacing nervously outside the inferno, complaining that the smoke is ruining the neighborhood. According to reporting, Iran offered a pathway to reopen one of the world’s most vital energy arteries — a proposal that could ease global economic panic, calm oil markets, and halt further escalation. But there was a problem: It did not produce the one thing modern American politics worships above peace, above diplomacy, above global stability: a theatrical victory photo-op. A U.S. official reportedly worried accepting the deal might “deny Mr. Trump a victory.” Pause there and absorb the moral architecture of our age. Not: Will fe...
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When a Constitution Becomes a Decorative Document America’s Latest War, and the Curious Death of Accountability

  There is an imperial comedy unfolding before the world — dark enough to be tragedy, absurd enough to be satire. This is, after all, the very “model democracy” United States  has spent decades promising to export to humanity — by missile, by occupation, by sanctions, by “shock and awe,” by solemn lectures on liberty delivered from polished podiums standing atop broken nations. This was the sermon preached to Iraq. Imposed on Afghanistan. Invoked amid the destruction of Libya . Entangled in the agony of Syria. Echoed through the devastation of Yemen.  The doctrine was always wrapped in noble language: Rule of law. Democratic institutions. Constitutional order. Checks and balances. How magnificent those words sound — right up until power decides they are optional at home. What a remarkable export product: A democracy where Congress yields, courts hesitate, executive power expands, wars begin first and legal arguments arrive later — wrapped in flags, marketed...

The Confession Without Consequence When Empire Admits the Crime… and Funds It Anyway

  There are moments in history when power accidentally tells the truth. Not because conscience triumphs. Not because morality suddenly awakens. But because the wreckage becomes too vast to keep describing as “complicated.” That moment arrived when — a pillar of Washington’s foreign policy establishment, veteran diplomat, architect of negotiations, insider to empire’s machinery — uttered words that would once have been politically unthinkable: “ Prime Minister Netanyahu has led us down a road — and we have been part of it — that has, in essence, created a genocide in Gaza that has destabilize d the Middle East.” Read that again. Not they . We. Not Israel alone . We have been part of it. That single phrase — “we have been part of it” — may be one of the most consequential admissions made by a former senior American official in modern Middle Eastern history. For decades, Washington supplied the bombs, shielded the diplomacy, vetoed accountability, framed slaughter as...

At 78, a Nation at War With Itself

There is a haunting irony in watching a state built on the promise of refuge become trapped in fear of its own reflection. For decades, **** was one of the men entrusted with Israel’s sword — soldier, commander, prime minister, architect of its security doctrine. Not a radical voice. Not an outsider. Not a dissident shouting from the margins. An insider. And when insiders begin speaking the language of alarm, history listens differently . His warning is not that Israel may be destroyed by rockets, tunnels, militias, or regional enemies. His warning is more unsettling: that Israel may survive every external war — and lose itself from within. That is a far more tragic form of defeat. A nation can repel missiles and still watch its institutions hollow out . A nation can dominate battlefields and still become morally exhausted. A nation can claim victory abroad while quietly burying democracy at home . This is the paradox now confronting Israel at 78: militarily formidable, technologic...

The War That Didn’t End—It Just Exhausted Its Author

  There is something almost poetic—no, procedural—about how modern wars now “end.” Not with peace. Not with victory. Certainly not with accountability. Just… irritation. The Age of Strategic Annoyance According to Amos Harel, Donald Trump is now “fed up” with the war against Iran. Fed up. As if the war overstayed its welcome. As if geopolitics were a dinner guest who forgot to leave. One almost expects a formal statement: “We regret to inform the Middle East that we are no longer enjoying this conflict.” From Shock and Awe to Shrug and Exit Once upon a time, wars were launched with doctrines. Now they end with moods. Not “mission accomplished” Not “objectives achieved” Just: this is getting tedious And yet, despite the fatigue: No agreement No settlement No structural change Just a pause—thin, brittle, and marketed as progress. Because in modern strategy, if you stop talking about the war loudly enough, it begins to resemble peace. Netanyahu: Still ...

Germany’s “Frustration”: A Masterclass in Moral Acrobatics

  There is something almost poetic—no, administrative—about the way modern Germany expresses outrage. Not outrage that disrupts. Not outrage that acts. Just the kind that clears its throat politely… while continuing business as usual. According to a recent Germany, a Steadfast Ally of Israel, Now Voices Some Frustration by Christopher F. Schuetze, Berlin is now “frustrated.” Frustrated. Not horrified. Not alarmed. Not compelled. Just… frustrated. The Art of Saying “Concerned” While Doing Nothing Yes, Friedrich Merz has “expressed concern” over: Bombing in Lebanon Expansion in the West Bank A capital punishment law targeting Palestinians Concern, in diplomatic language, is a fascinating word. It means: “We see what’s happening. We disagree. We will continue exactly as before.” Germany, after all, still: Opposes EU sanctions Maintains defense agreements Continues political backing So what exactly has changed? Tone. Just tone. And in international po...

“Cutting the Grass” While Uprooting the Roots: The West Bank’s Slow-Motion Annexation

There is a peculiar comfort in familiar phrases. “Security.” “Deterrence.” And, of course, that chillingly casual doctrine: cutting the grass. Popularized within Israeli military discourse to describe periodic operations against groups like Hezbollah or Hamas it suggests something routine. Manageable. Almost… agricultural. But what happens when the “grass” is no longer rockets— but people, homes, olive trees, and entire communities? The Violence No One Can Call “Routine” Anymore According to B'TSlem , the West Bank has witnessed a sharp escalation in both settler violence and state-backed coercive measures since 2023. Their reports document: Systematic forced displacement of Palestinian communities, particularly in Area C Increasing settler attacks , often under military protection or passive observation Destruction of homes, water infrastructure, and agricultural land Meanwhile, reporting from Haaretz —hardly a fringe outlet—has described: Armed settler groups c...

When the Readers Move Ahead of the Columnist

  There is something quietly seismic happening—not in the corridors of power, not in carefully worded opinion columns, but in the comment sections beneath them. While attempts to diagnose where Israel “lost its way,” the readers seem to be asking a far more unsettling question: What if it didn’t lose its way at all? What if this is the way? For decades, the comforting narrative was simple: the problem was leadership. Replace , and the moral arc would gently correct itself. Peace would again become plausible. Restraint would return. The “real Israel” would re-emerge. But the readers are no longer convinced. They are pointing to something deeper—something less convenient. Not a deviation. A pattern. Not an exception. A structure. Because when policies persist across decades, across governments, across crises—at what point do we stop calling them mistakes and start calling them design? The Quiet Collapse of a Narrative One reader puts it bluntly: Palestinians have alr...