The Manufactured War: United States, Israel and the Structural Path to the Conflict in Iran
Kishan Kumar writes how the Israel-Iran Conflict in 2025 is not a failure of diplomacy. He argues that it is diplomacy by other means.
Kishan Kumar writes how the Israel-Iran Conflict in 2025 is not a failure of diplomacy. He argues that it is diplomacy by other means.
Oalid Islam revealed in a post on Tuesday that over 75% of the calls they are receiving on the numbers shared to assist people from Bangladesh are prank calls.
The Islamic regime thought could take up the anti-Israel mantle and Middle East would fall in line. It seemed a simple math; except, it didn’t add up.
Be careful what you wish for. The fall of Iran might sound like a victory, but it could unleash a storm that makes the last decade look like a warm-up.
The comment section is filled with Indians demonstrating their displeasure against the IDF. Israel normally enjoys great support among Indians.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio and others, firmly insisted that the United States was not involved in any way. Not in the planning. Not in the execution. Not even in the shadows.
There is a strong anti-Iran lobby in the Trump Administration and among his support base who are eager to see strikes on Iran.
The world’s collective sigh at Donald Trump’s second term is so laden that it could power a small nation.
If Iran develops nuclear weapons it would likely trigger a nuclear race in the region with Saudi Arabia and others chasing their own nuclear ambitions.
Hours after the Trump administration denounced uranium enrichment as a “red line,” Iran’s foreign minister declared that Iran will proceed with its uranium enrichment program whether or not a nuclear agreement with the United States is reached.