Trump and the end of Tehran’s illusion - opinion
The war with Iran must end with Iran’s terror state broken, America’s allies strengthened, deterrence restored, and the opening of a different future for Iran and for the Middle East.
The war with Iran must end with Iran’s terror state broken, America’s allies strengthened, deterrence restored, and the opening of a different future for Iran and for the Middle East.
In haredi society, religious authority matters more than warnings when it comes to missile safety.
Ongoing war, political tension, and societal strain cause many Israelis to feel growing despair and uncertainty about the future of Israel.
Turkey’s growing regional influence and ties to Hamas challenge NATO and US security.
Rather than collapsing, the Islamic Republic appears to be undergoing a structural shift. Power is gradually concentrating in the hands of a hardened security elite.
Israel’s economy shows familiar wartime resilience, but rising uncertainty, inflation risks, and prolonged conflict could deepen damage even as markets already look toward recovery.
Had President Franklin D. Roosevelt responded similarly to Europe’s calls during World War II, the continent’s fate could have been drastically different.
The police arrests in defiance of a court ruling pose a real danger to democratic norms but in parallel, the court must take into account the reality of wartime.
The Iran war was not just military; it targeted sovereignty itself across political, economic, and cognitive fronts, pushing the state to the brink.
Peace usually begins not with trust but with exhaustion. When both sides conclude that war no longer serves their interests, diplomacy becomes thinkable.
The UAE is redefining Gulf security, prioritizing capability and committed partners over rhetoric and ideology.