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The Supply Chain of Silence

  For months, the war in Gaza has been described in careful language— conflict , self-defense , security operations . But behind that vocabulary sits a far less poetic reality: a steady, deliberate, industrial-scale flow of American weapons into Israeli hands. Not metaphorical support. Not diplomatic cover. Actual bombs. Actual machinery. Actual approvals. And lately—actual discomfort. When “Concerns” Finally Catch Up With Reality On April 15, 2026, something unusual happened in Washington. Not a policy shift. Not a moral awakening. Just… hesitation. A group of Democratic senators—many of whom had previously supported or tolerated arms transfers to Israel—suddenly decided that perhaps sending 1,000-pound bombs and armored bulldozers into an already devastated region might deserve a second thought. Led by Bernie Sanders , the effort sought to block these transfers. It failed. Of course it failed. But failure, in this case, came with a revealing detail: the number ...
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“Trump’s ‘Finished’ War Meets an Unfinished Reality”

  There are wars that end with surrender. There are wars that end with treaties. And then there are wars that end in press conferences—where victory is declared before reality has even finished speaking. The War That Ended on Television According to Donald Trump, the Iran war is, more or less, done and dusted . A success. A reset. A “pretty reasonable” new regime. It’s a neat ending. Clean. Marketable. Almost cinematic. There’s just one problem: The war did not get the memo. Because outside the carefully constructed language of interviews and briefings, nothing behaves like a finished victory. The Strait of Hormuz is still unstable. Global markets are still flinching. Oil prices still twitch at every headline. And Iran—the country that was supposed to bend—appears to be doing something far less cooperative: It is adjusting. Regime Change, Without the Change The administration wants to sell a transformation. But what emerged looks less like change—and more like co...

The Normalization of the Unthinkable — Now in Their Own Words. Settlers violence in West Bank.

  There are moments when a system accidentally speaks for itself. The recent confrontation between Netzah Yehuda reservists and a CNN crew did not merely expose misconduct. It exposed something far more unsettling: consistency . And when placed alongside verified testimonies from Israeli veterans themselves, that consistency hardens into something difficult to deny. Not an incident. Not a deviation. A pattern—with witnesses from inside the system. 1. Netzah Yehuda and CNN: When the Camera Caught the Routine The encounter between Netzah Yehuda reservists and a CNN team triggered global outrage because it was visible. Journalists were obstructed. Settler aggression unfolded. Soldiers intervened—not to stop violence, but to control presence: who could stand, who could film, who could remain. The institutional response—suspension and retraining—signaled embarrassment, not transformation. Because as Hagit Ofran observed from her own past encounters with the same unit, the out...

Anatomy of a Moral Collapse A Critical Appraisal of Malik Mukhtar’s Five-Book Series

There are books that inform. There are books that persuade. And then there are books that accuse. Malik Mukhtar’s Anatomy of Moral Collapse series does not ask for your agreement—it puts you on trial. Across five tightly interwoven volumes, Mukhtar attempts something unusually ambitious: not merely to document the catastrophe in Gaza , but to construct a broader theory of how modern systems—political, humanitarian, digital, and psychological — have converged to normalize human suffering . This is not conventional analysis. It is a moral autopsy of our time. And like any autopsy, it is unsettling. A Theory of Collapse, Not Just a Chronicle of War What distinguishes this series is its refusal to remain confined to events. Mukhtar is not just describing what is happening—he is asking why it has become acceptable . The central argument unfolds with relentless clarity: modern systems no longer fail to prevent suffering—they produce, manage, and normalize it . Institutions meant t...

The Endurance War: When Pain Becomes Strategy

  There are wars fought with missiles. There are wars fought with money. And then there are wars like this one— where the real battlefield is human endurance , and the real weapon is pain tolerance . The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is being presented as a masterstroke by —a clean, calculated move to choke Iran’s economic lifeline. But beneath the polished language of “strategic pressure” lies a far simpler, far more uncomfortable truth: This is not a test of power. It is a test of who can suffer longer. And in that contest, Washington may have chosen the wrong opponent. The Fantasy of Economic Collapse The theory is elegant: Strangle oil exports Collapse revenue Trigger unrest Force surrender It is also, historically speaking, remarkably ineffective . A major study by RAND Corporation on coercive economic strategies concluded that: “ Economic sanctions alone rarely achieve major political objectives, particularly against regimes with strong internal sec...

Four Ways to Weaken a Superpower (or, How to Lose a War Before It Even Begins)

  There are wars that redraw borders. There are wars that rewrite history. And then there are wars like this one — where the only thing decisively defeated is credibility. The tried, with admirable restraint, to explain how managed to weaken the United States in just six weeks of strategic improvisation. But restraint, in moments like this, feels almost dishonest. Because what unfolded was not merely a policy failure. It was a live demonstration of how a superpower can stumble into self-inflicted decline — loudly, confidently, and on television. 1. The Strait That Turned Into a Noose Let’s begin with the most poetic irony. A war launched to “contain” Iran ended by handing it leverage over the global economy. The — that narrow artery through which roughly 20% of the world’s energy flows — is no longer just a shipping route. It is now a bargaining chip. Iran didn’t need to win a naval battle. It didn’t need to defeat an armada. It simply had to exist menacingly enoug...

21 Hours, One Strait, and the Illusion of Victory

There are wars you win on maps, and wars you lose in reality. And then there is this one — where press briefings declare victory , while the global economy quietly suffocates. The Strait That Mocked a Trillion Dollars Let’s begin with the most inconvenient truth of this entire spectacle: the is not just a stretch of water. It is the artery of the modern world. Roughly a fifth of global oil flows through this narrow passage. Not theoretically. Not symbolically. Physically. Daily. Relentlessly. It is where globalization becomes geography. And Iran didn’t need to “win” the war in the Hollywood sense. It simply needed to touch the artery . Which it did. In doing so, it exposed a brutal asymmetry: The United States can spend nearly a trillion dollars on military dominance But it cannot force geography to obey Aircraft carriers cannot widen straits. Precision bombs cannot escort every tanker. Missile shields cannot insure global trade confidence. So when Iran effectively...

He Was ‘Trump Before Trump.’ Now His Model Is Cracking. And So Is the Illusion That Strongmen Always Win.

  There was a time when was treated as the prototype for modern right-wing power. Long before captured the political imagination of the global populist right, Orbán had already perfected the formula: turn fear into a governing strategy, capture institutions quietly, weaponize culture wars, and label it “national revival.” For years, he presented his system as proof that illiberal democracy could outperform messy liberal pluralism. Today, that claim is beginning to look less like a political revolution and more like an experiment nearing its expiry date. A Fortress Built on Fear, Running Out of Stories At a gathering at the in , allies of Orbán seemed less triumphant than tense. Polls show his opponent, , leading comfortably. That matters because Orbán’s governing party, , has built a fortress of power over 16 years — but even fortresses crack when the ground beneath them shifts. Orbán’s campaign message is no longer a vision for prosperity or renewal. Instead, it is a warni...

The Real Outcome: Not Victory, Not Defeat — A New Strategic Ceiling

  The recent confrontation between and produced a paradox. On paper, Israel demonstrated technological superiority and operational reach. In practice, it also exposed constraints that cannot be solved by airpower or intelligence dominance alone. The campaign did not resemble a short punitive operation . It resembled a prolonged stress test — of Israel’s economy , of its defensive systems , and of its capacity to sustain simultaneous pressure on multiple fronts. Economic Impact: A War That Burned Through Tens of Billions Israel’s war bill — estimated between 50–100 billion shekels — places this conflict among the most expensive in the country’s history. Key Cost Drivers Air defense expenditures : Intercepting rockets, ballistic missiles, and drones with systems such as Iron Dome, David's Sling, and Arrow Missile System costs far more than the relatively cheap weapons used to saturate them. Reserve mobilization : Extended call-ups removed tens of thousands from the work...