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Iran's Atomic Ambitions Is Losing Its stratigic Value

  The End of the Nuclear Illusion: Why Iran's Atomic Ambition Is Losing Its Strategic Value For decades, the pursuit of nuclear weapons was seen as the ultimate guarantor of national security. Iran's leadership invested vast portions of the nation's wealth in that logic, calculating that a nuclear capability would allow them to deter adversaries, intimidate neighbors, and project power across the Middle East. The program became the center of gravity for Iranian foreign policy — and the primary lens through which the world viewed Tehran. Yet a hypothetical scenario worth taking seriously — a coordinated US-Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities, missile infrastructure, and command networks — exposes a more complicated reality. Even after catastrophic damage to its military apparatus, a resilient Iran would likely continue fighting through dispersed drone attacks, cyber operations, and regional proxy networks. The nuclear program, for all its cost and sacrifice, ...

What the Iran-Russia Alliance Teaches the Arab Gulf States

      What the Russia-Iran Alliance Teaches the Arab Gulf Do not rely on the United States for your security. Shifting priorities and uncertain commitments mean that national survival is no longer guaranteed by foreign guarantees. The lesson for Arab states is urgent: sovereignty is secured at home, not in Washington.   Last year, Vladimir Putin and Masoud Pezeshkian signed the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Treaty, committing their countries to oppose interference by third parties in each other's affairs. The ceremony was warm. The language was sweeping. Moscow and Tehran celebrated the culmination of years of deepening alignment. Then the United States struck Iran. When Washington launched its attack—killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and dismantling Iran's air defenses—Russia stood idly by. Putin called the killing a "cynical violation." The foreign ministry called for "de-escalation." Neither statement named the United States. Nei...

Kabul March 2028

  The sky over Kabul is a dirty bandage, partly clouded. Fog rolls through the streets, swift and low, mirroring the city’s frantic political pulse. Snow still clings to the Hindu Kush peaks like old scars, but down here, in the gutters, it has melted into slush—a gray soup of last week's snow and last night's rain. But no one looks down. Everyone looks up, or ahead, or at each other, eyes wide with disbelief. The sound is the first thing that hits you. It is not the Kabul they have known. No, this is a symphony of chaos: the victorious, percussive  honk  of motorists gridlocked on Jalalabad Road. Music—raw, defiant, bleeding from rolled-down car windows—clashes with the ancient call from the minarets. And beneath it all, a roar. A human roar. Crowds spill from side streets like a dam has broken. Young men chant until their voices crack:  "Long live freedom! Long live justice!"  Their fists pump the wet air. Women, some still in burqas, others with their...

The Talibanization of US

  When Religion Enters the War Room By Wahab Raofi When a nation’s senior military officials begin quoting scripture to justify the use of force, something fundamental has shifted — not just in rhetoric, but in the relationship between government and the governed. Forceful language can inspire, but it is not the language of statesmanship. It is the language of those seeking conviction rather than consequence. And when that language is religious, deployed in the context of war, it raises questions that go far beyond political preference. Over the past two decades, a quiet but persistent pattern has emerged in certain corners of American public life. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation, an advocacy organization that monitors religious influence within the U.S. armed forces, has documented hundreds of complaints from active-duty service members alleging that commanders used explicitly Biblical language — including imagery from the Book of Revelation — when discussing milit...
  The Perils of Putting American Troops on the Ground Why the United States Should Declare Victory and Resist the Temptation of Ground War By Wahab Raofier   A Strategic Achievement — and Its Limits The American and Israeli air campaign against Iran has achieved something remarkable: it has destroyed much of Iran’s military infrastructure, eliminated its supreme religious leader, and left the regime badly weakened. The strikes have degraded Iran’s capacity to project regional power, at least in the near term. For an administration that prizes decisive action, the temptation to press further — to demand unconditional surrender and send troops to finish the job — must be considerable. That temptation should be firmly resisted. Before proceeding, the moral and legal questions raised by this campaign — including the killing of Iran’s supreme leader and the civilian toll of the bombing — deserve serious attention and cannot be brushed aside by military success alone...

. WHAT IS NEXT IN IRAN?

  The Regime Built on Iran’s Backs—and What Comes After Khamenei's legacy is not a nation — it is a system designed to survive at any cost to those it rules. By Wahab Raofi The death of a dictator is rarely a private event. It is the closing chapter of national suffering — and the opening of a reckoning. When that dictator has held absolute power for nearly four decades, his end does not merely mark a change of leadership. It forces an accounting of everything built in his name, and everything destroyed along the way. For more than 45 years, the Iranian people have lived under a regime that has treated their ancient civilization as an ideological fortress rather than a nation meant to serve its citizens. The clerics who seized power in 1979 constructed something more durable than an ordinary dictatorship. They built a theocratic military state — one in which revolutionary ideology and institutionalized repression fused into a permanent structure. At its apex stood A...