Monday, 1 June 2026

Israel’s Security Paradox: Strength Without Psychological Closure

Benjamin Netanyahu’s long political dominance has coincided with one of the most turbulent phases in Israel’s modern security history. For his supporters, he represents strategic clarity in a hostile region. For critics, his era reflects the entrenchment of a permanent conflict mindset. Both interpretations, in different ways, touch the same underlying reality - Israel’s security condition today is defined as much by perception as by power.

Militarily, Israel remains one of the most capable states in the Middle East. Its intelligence infrastructure, air power, and multi-layered defence systems have significantly strengthened deterrence. Several adversaries are either weakened, fragmented, or operating under constraints not seen in previous decades. From a purely conventional standpoint, Israel’s strategic position appears more secure than in many earlier phases of its history.

Yet this is only one side of the equation. On the ground, security is not experienced in abstract balances of power. It is experienced through sirens, shelters, alerts, and the unpredictability of escalation. For civilians—particularly children growing up amid periodic conflict—security becomes a lived rhythm rather than a stable condition. Even when attacks are intercepted or contained, the psychological imprint of uncertainty remains. This is where Israel’s central paradox emerges - growing military strength has not translated into a proportional sense of psychological security.

The reason lies in the changing nature of conflict. Traditional wars between defined states have increasingly been replaced by asymmetric threats—rockets, proxy forces, cross-border raids, and regional instability. These forms of confrontation do not require parity to create disruption; they require only unpredictability. As a result, even a militarily dominant state can remain socially alert, frequently mobilized, and psychologically exposed.

Within Israeli society, this produces a dual perception. One strand believes Israel is stronger than ever, capable of managing multiple fronts simultaneously. Another strand, equally present, sees a country that remains encircled not necessarily by conventional armies, but by persistent and evolving threats that rarely disappear entirely.

Netanyahu’s political approach has reinforced this condition of “managed insecurity”—a doctrine in which deterrence is maintained not by eliminating threats, but by continuously containing them. This may strengthen strategic positioning in the short term, but it also prevents a full transition from conflict management to post-conflict normalcy.

The result is a society that oscillates between confidence and anxiety. Military superiority coexists with civilian vulnerability. Tactical successes coexist with strategic uncertainty. And periods of calm are often interpreted not as resolution, but as interludes between escalations.

The question is not whether Israelis believe their enemies are weaker or stronger. The more accurate question is whether they believe threats can ever be fully removed from their horizon.

For many, the answer remains uncertain. And it is in that uncertainty—more than in battlefield outcomes—that Israel’s modern security condition is ultimately defined.

Sunday, 31 May 2026

Donald Trump and Corruption Debate

Few political figures in modern American history have generated as much controversy as Donald Trump. His supporters view him as a disruptive outsider who challenged entrenched political interests, while his critics see him as a president who blurred the boundaries between public office and private gain. The recent claim by The Independent that Trump has taken corruption to new highs reflects a debate that has become central to American politics.

The real story may not be whether Donald Trump has taken corruption to new heights. The real story is that America itself can no longer agree on what corruption looks like. In a deeply polarized nation, the same act is seen by one side as abuse of power and by the other as political persecution. That may be the most troubling development of all.

 Those who agree with the criticism argue that Trump’s presidency has been marked by an unprecedented overlap between political power and personal business interests. They point to controversies surrounding family business ventures, cryptocurrency projects, investment activities, and legal settlements that allegedly benefited Trump and those close to him. Critics contend that even when actions remain within the letter of the law, they can still raise serious ethical questions. In their view, public office should not create opportunities for private enrichment, nor should it create the perception that official decisions could be influenced by personal financial considerations. To these observers, the issue is not simply legality but the erosion of public trust in government institutions.

Supporters of Trump offer a very different interpretation. They argue that accusations of corruption have followed him since he entered politics and are often driven more by political hostility than objective analysis. They note that many allegations have not resulted in criminal convictions and that critics frequently present disputed claims as established facts. From this perspective, Trump’s business background inevitably creates scrutiny that career politicians rarely face. His defenders also argue that many of the policies he pursued were aimed at fulfilling campaign promises rather than advancing personal interests. They see the corruption narrative as part of a broader effort by political opponents and sections of the media to delegitimize his presidency.

The disagreement ultimately reflects different understandings of what constitutes corruption. For critics, the appearance of conflicts of interest can be as damaging as proven wrongdoing because public confidence depends on trust and transparency. For supporters, corruption should be defined more narrowly and require clear evidence of illegal conduct rather than assumptions based on political disagreements or ethical concerns.

What is beyond dispute is that the debate has become increasingly polarized. Americans are often evaluating the same events through entirely different lenses, reaching sharply different conclusions. To one side, Trump represents a dangerous fusion of political authority and private interests. To the other, he represents a target of relentless political and media opposition.

History will ultimately determine which interpretation carries greater weight. For now, the controversy serves as a reminder that in modern politics, perceptions of integrity can be almost as consequential as the facts themselves.

Saturday, 30 May 2026

Ukraine War: Bloodshed, Profits and Hypocrisy

Nearly four years after the first shots were fired, the Ukraine-Russia war stands as one of the greatest geopolitical tragedies of the 21st century. Hundreds of thousands have been killed, millions displaced, entire cities devastated, and critical infrastructure reduced to rubble. Despite this immense human suffering, there is little evidence that those with the power to end the conflict are genuinely interested in doing so.

What is increasingly difficult to ignore is that this war has long ceased to be merely a conflict between Ukraine and Russia. It has evolved into a US-backed proxy war aimed at weakening Russia strategically, economically, and politically. Ukraine has become the battlefield, while Washington and its allies continue to provide weapons, intelligence, and financial support that sustain a conflict with no visible endgame.

The official rhetoric revolves around democracy, sovereignty, and international law. However, the reality on the ground tells a different story. Four years of warfare have not delivered peace, stability, or security. Instead, they have produced death, destruction, and a humanitarian catastrophe on a scale that should shame the international community.

The greatest victims are ordinary Ukrainians and Russians. Young men continue to die in trenches and on battlefields. Families remain separated. Millions live under constant uncertainty. Entire generations are being sacrificed in pursuit of geopolitical objectives that have little to do with the welfare of those paying the highest price.

At the same time, clear beneficiaries have emerged. Arms manufacturers continue to secure lucrative contracts. Defense spending has surged across the Western world. Energy markets have been reshaped, creating opportunities for major oil and gas interests. While soldiers fight and civilians suffer, corporate profits continue to grow.

Equally disturbing is the failure of international institutions to bring meaningful pressure for a negotiated settlement. The United Nations has proven largely powerless. The NATO remains focused on military support. The European Union continues to deepen its involvement while offering no realistic roadmap to peace. Their actions may differ, but the outcome remains the same: the war goes on.

Four years later, the scorecard is brutally simple. Ukraine and Russia count their dead. Cities count their ruins. Families count their losses. As against these, defense contractors count their profits and geopolitical strategists congratulate themselves on another chapter of great-power rivalry.

History may ultimately judge this conflict not as a triumph of principle, but as a devastating example of how powerful nations can sustain war in the name of noble ideals while ordinary people bear the brunt.

When Rules Apply Only to Adversaries

The United States frequently speaks of a rules-based international order. Yet recent events involving Iran raise a fundamental question: are these truly universal rules, or merely rules that apply to America's adversaries?

The contradiction is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore. When Washington launches military strikes, the action is described as self-defense, deterrence, or a contribution to regional security. When Iran retaliates, the same commentators who justified the initial strike suddenly discover the dangers of escalation. Cause and effect disappear from the discussion. The response becomes the story, while the action that provoked it is conveniently forgotten.

The ceasefire narrative offers an even clearer example. If a ceasefire is violated, responsibility should logically rest with whoever broke it first. Instead, the international audience is often presented with a distorted version of events in which retaliation becomes the principal crime and the preceding action fades into the background. Such a narrative does not uphold peace; it merely protects one side from scrutiny.

An equally revealing contradiction surrounds American military bases in Arab countries. These installations are not humanitarian centers or cultural exchanges. They exist for one purpose: military power projection. They provide logistical support, intelligence capabilities, and operational platforms for military action throughout the region.

Yet a curious transformation occurs whenever these facilities come under threat. The military base suddenly ceases to be viewed as a military asset and is instead portrayed solely as the territory of a friendly Arab state. When attacks are launched from the base, it is considered a legitimate instrument of American strategy. When retaliation targets the same facility, it is presented as an attack on an innocent host nation.

Such arguments are not merely inconsistent; these expose the selective logic that increasingly defines international discourse.

The uncomfortable reality is that Washington's greatest challenge today is not Iran, Russia, or China. It is the widening gap between the principles it advocates and the policies it pursues. Power can compel compliance, but it cannot manufacture credibility. Every time one standard is applied to allies and another to adversaries, the claim of defending a rules-based order becomes less convincing.

The world is not questioning America's power. It is questioning whether the rules Washington promotes are genuinely universal or simply another instrument of that power.

Friday, 29 May 2026

US and Oil Producers: Always in Confrontation

A striking pattern runs through modern geopolitics. Over the past three decades, many of the nations that have found themselves in Washington’s crosshairs share one defining characteristic: they are major producers of oil and gas.

The historical record is difficult to ignore. Iraq was invaded and dismantled under a pretext of weapons of mass destruction that never existed. Libya, once Africa’s most prosperous energy producer, was reduced to a fragmented state following Western military intervention. Syria became a prolonged proxy theater where strategic energy routes carried immense weight. Meanwhile, Venezuela—holding some of the world’s largest proven crude reserves—has endured years of crippling economic sanctions.

The containment list does not end there. Russia and Iran, two global energy titans, remain subject to unprecedented, extensive sanctions regimes. While each conflict features its own local political and security dimensions, the recurring intersection between energy wealth and geopolitical confrontation points to a deliberate strategic template rather than mere coincidence.

Iran has become the latest focal point of this enduring struggle. Recent military escalations against Iranian targets and the heightened friction surrounding the Strait of Hormuz have once again exposed the raw mechanics of global power politics. Officially, Washington and its allies frame these interventions as efforts to secure maritime routes, combat terrorism, or prevent nuclear proliferation. Critics, however, see a much broader, calculated agenda: squeezing regional producers to assert strategic dominance over the world's most critical energy corridor.

This raises uncomfortable economic questions. If market stability and uninterrupted energy flows are the ultimate objectives, why does the Arabian Peninsula repeatedly find itself pushed to the brink of conflict? The unsettling answer is that instability itself creates strategic leverage. A region under perpetual tension remains dependent on external security architecture, keeping energy markets highly vulnerable to artificial supply shocks.

For a superpower seeking to control global pricing power and enforce political alignment, a peaceful, independent, and smoothly operating Strait of Hormuz may simply not align with the broader geopolitical playbook.

PSX benchmark index up 6.7%MoM

According to a report by Taurus Securities, at the end of May 2026, the benchmark index of Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) closed at 173,963, up 10,969 points or 6.7%MoM. Net FIPI outflow was recorded at US$17.08 million. Average daily traded volume was slightly more than 705 million shares, down 23%MoM. The average traded value also declined by 11%MoM to PKR36.8 billion. Nevertheless, overall activity remained dull in terms of volume and value.

Overall, mixed sentiments were witnessed at the bourse during the month. The earlier half was dominated by bearish sentiment, cautious activity and profit-taking. However, some recovery was seen in the latter half. Sentiments also got a boost from multiple IPOs in May’26 like Wahdat Poultry and Sitara Petroleum.

Key triggers for the market during the month under review included: 1) Pakistan stepped up mediator role as US-Iran draw closer to a deal; while global energy prices remain volatile as supplies remain affected, 2) IMF Executive Board approved third EFF review and disbursement of US$1.3 billion. The IMF adds 11 new structural conditions for future, 3) Pakistan issued Panda Bonds at a competitive 2.5% coupon, 4) Pakistan committed to 2% Primary Surplus for the next fiscal year, 5) LNG supplies remained disrupted due to the Middle-East conflict, 6) April 2026 balance of payments came under pressure on a sequential basis, as oil import bill spiked due to the US-Israel war on Iran and remittances also declined, 7) Headline inflation in April 2026 was reported at 10.9% and May 2026 NCPI is expected to rise to 12.4%, 8) the GoP increased petroleum levy to bridge revenue short-fall, 9) Pakistan auctioned offshore exploration blocks after 20 year gap, and 10) Internal security situation became fragile with fresh terrorist attacks in KP and Baluchistan.

Ceasefire Diplomacy or Managed Conflict?

Every morning brings fresh reports suggesting that the United States and Iran are inching closer to a ceasefire understanding. Yet, by evening, contradictory statements emerge, once again clouding the picture with uncertainty and strategic ambiguity. The pattern has now become too repetitive to ignore. It increasingly appears that both Washington and Tehran are buying time rather than genuinely pursuing peace, while carefully concealing their actual strategic objectives.

The initial justification for the US-Israel military campaign against Iran centered on Tehran’s refusal to accept Washington’s conditions regarding its nuclear and missile programs. However, the conflict narrative now appears to be evolving. The focus increasingly seems linked to reshaping the political architecture of the Middle East through expansion of the Abraham Accords, effectively compelling key Muslim countries, including Saudi Arabia, toward formal recognition of Israel.

Simultaneously, the continued tension surrounding the Strait of Hormuz raises another critical question. Despite repeated calls for de-escalation, there appears to be little urgency in Washington to fully restore normal maritime stability in the region.

Such instability serves multiple strategic purposes for the United States. It constrains oil exports from Gulf producers, complicates China’s energy security calculations, and strengthens Washington’s leverage in global energy markets by enhancing demand for American oil and gas supplies.

The domestic political environment inside the United States also adds another dimension. Repeated but unsuccessful attempts to politically weaken or impeach Donald Trump suggest that influential power centers may still consider him indispensable in managing an increasingly volatile geopolitical environment. His aggressive foreign policy posture, particularly towards Iran and the broader Middle East, continues to align with powerful strategic interests within Washington.

Taken together, these developments indicate that the current crisis may not be moving toward immediate resolution. Instead, the world may be witnessing the management of a prolonged controlled confrontation designed to gradually exhaust Iran economically, diplomatically, and militarily until Tehran is pushed toward accepting terms that resemble unconditional surrender. Until then, ambiguity itself may remain the most effective weapon in this conflict.