war
“Death to the IDF”: A Chant Becomes a Global Reckoning
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : What began as a defiant chant by a single British artist at Glastonbury has erupted into a global phenomenon—a symbolic battle cry that has echoed across continents. “Death to the IDF,” shouted from the stage by Bobby Vylan of the punk-rap duo Bob Vylan, is no longer just a slogan. It is a collective cry of the oppressed, a reflection of unspeakable suffering, and a moral indictment of what is increasingly seen around the world as one of the most brutal and morally bankrupt military forces in modern history: the Israel Defense Forces.
The chant, delivered live on BBC’s broadcast from Glastonbury 2025, was not a slip or a shock tactic—it was a deliberate, explosive act of protest against the unfolding humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza and the West Bank. The reaction was immediate and deeply divided. The Israeli embassy in London called it “grotesque incitement.” The BBC apologized. Glastonbury’s organizers condemned the act. UK Health Secretary Wes Streeting, while denouncing the chant as appalling, said what few Western officials dare to utter publicly: “Get your own house in order.” He referred directly to the unchecked settler violence in the West Bank and the increasing brutality of Israel’s military operations. In one stroke, the moral lens was inverted—not on the protestor but on the perpetrators of the suffering.
Within hours, the chant had gone viral. From the streets of London and Berlin to the campuses of UCLA and Columbia, it was repeated, amplified, reinterpreted. In Johannesburg, banners bearing the phrase were raised next to Mandela’s warning that freedom is incomplete without the freedom of Palestinians. In Malaysia and Indonesia, it became a mainstay of anti-apartheid rallies. In Istanbul, it was sung from balconies during blackout protests. No PR campaign, no government declaration, no diplomatic silence could now erase it. What was once taboo was now mainstream—a visceral condemnation of what Israel has done and continues to do in Gaza and the West Bank under the silent complicity of the so-called civilized world.
And the rage behind the chant is not rhetorical. It is rooted in numbers that defy imagination. Since October 7, 2023, more than 38,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza. Over 14,000 of them were children. Thousands more remain under rubble. UNICEF reports that 9 out of 10 children in Gaza are acutely malnourished. According to WHO, 74% of Gaza’s hospitals are either completely destroyed or inoperable. The Red Crescent reports that over 300 paramedics have been killed in targeted strikes. The few surviving doctors speak of makeshift surgeries without anesthesia, of children screaming in agony as their limbs are amputated on cold concrete. One UN physician stationed in Rafah wrote in her dispatch: “This is not war. This is organized, mechanical, bureaucratized death.”
A young nurse from Médecins Sans Frontières wrote, “I have treated babies with phosphorous burns so deep I can see their bones glowing. I’ve seen a child still clinging to the leg of their dead mother, surrounded by debris, unaware that the mother is gone. We do not treat patients. We grieve for them while we try to save them.” These words are not exaggerations. They are real, raw testaments of horror. “Death to the IDF” is not a celebration of violence. It is a lament, a howl of anguish, a demand for the world to open its eyes.
And yet, instead of listening, the West is choosing repression. Donald Trump, now in his second term, ordered the revocation of Bob Vylan’s U.S. visa, calling the slogan “terrorist rhetoric.” But censorship only gave the chant more fuel. Protests erupted in front of U.S. consulates from Paris to Sao Paulo. Demonstrators carried signs that read: “You banned the voice. Not the truth.” Even progressive Jewish voices began to echo the sentiment—not as anti-Semitism, but as anti-militarism. “We will not let our identity be weaponized to protect genocide,” read one statement from a New York synagogue.
Israeli officials continue to invoke their mythology—that the IDF is the “most moral army in the world.” But the evidence now overwhelms the narrative. Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and B’Tselem have all documented war crimes. The use of white phosphorus in civilian zones. The targeting of journalists. The siege of entire hospital networks. The starvation of refugee populations. And while Netanyahu claims this is all in the name of security, millions of people now see it for what it is: apartheid enforced by cluster bombs, domination enforced by siege, religion used to sanctify slaughter.
Israeli commentator Yehoshua Pfeffer, writing in defense of Israel, called the current moment a sacred process. He compared Israel’s suffering and response to the flowering of Aharon’s staff, a symbol of divine blessing and continuity. But what is blossoming in Gaza is not fruit—it is charred flesh. What is flowering is not hope—it is funerals. To argue that this slaughter is part of a divine process is to desecrate every teaching of justice, mercy, and humanity. While Pfeffer invokes scripture, Palestinian families dig through rubble to find the limbs of their children.
There is also a striking historical hypocrisy that the global south and Muslim world can no longer ignore. When Serbia constructed ethnic concentration camps in Bosnia and slaughtered thousands of Muslims, it was the United States under Bill Clinton—alongside NATO—that intervened militarily to stop the genocide and dismantle Yugoslavia. But now, when Israel is doing the same, with U.S.-supplied weapons, the very same West remains silent. Their eyes are closed. Their ears are stopped. Their hearts have ceased to beat. There is no urgent summit, no red line, no NATO intervention. The same global community that once promised “Never Again” now provides the funding, logistics, and diplomatic immunity that enables genocide in real time.
Not a single world power—be it the United States, China, Russia, the European Union, or the OIC—has moved decisively to stop Israel. The Muslim world, shamefully fractured, remains content issuing hollow condemnations. Worse, some of its own governments have joined hands with Israel and the U.S. to target Iran instead of standing by the children of Gaza. In doing so, they are no different from the tyrants they once condemned. They have failed. Morally. Spiritually. Historically.
The United Nations, meanwhile, has turned into a factory of eloquent failure. Its general secretaries and humanitarian envoys deliver beautiful speeches, full of metaphors and moral anguish, but they remain utterly toothless. Every ceasefire call ends in more bombs. Every resolution ends in more rubble. The normalization of death is the new global policy. The normalization of slaughter is a new political strategy. If this continues, then ethnic cleansing, starvation, and concentration camps will not only be accepted—they will be imitated elsewhere.
The psychological toll of this horror is now global. People with even a fragment of humanity are losing sleep, losing sanity, feeling helpless, disoriented, convulsed by the cruelty they witness. But there is one man who can stop it all—Donald J. Trump. He has the leverage, the influence, and the geopolitical weight. With a single phone call, with a single declaration, he could force Israel into ceasefire. But he has not. And in his inaction, he has become morally complicit. The world will remember that he could have stopped the genocide—and did not. That he could have saved children—and chose silence. If this slaughter continues, history will not honor him as a peace-bringer. It will record him as a facilitator of bloodshed.
And the Muslim nations that continue to fund Israel indirectly, that remain passive while their own faith is defiled and their brothers and sisters massacred, will share in that legacy of shame—not only in this world, but in the hereafter. They will not escape the moral consequences of their silence.
It is the sound of the world’s moral compass spinning wildly in search of true north. It is the voice of the end of our conscience, echoing across Gaza’s broken streets. It is the stitching of bullet-ripped bones under candlelight in overcrowded clinics. It is the bleeding of infants in the arms of paramedics who haven’t slept for days. And it is also the dark shadow that now hangs over the leadership of the entire world—from the United States to Europe, from the United Nations to the Muslim world. Because they have all become complicit in this crime. Israel may be the one pulling the trigger, but all those who fund, defend, and shield it are part of the killing.
If justice cannot be delivered to the people of Palestine today, if those children buried under the rubble of Rafah cannot find justice in this era of humanity, then rest assured—justice will come. It may come not now, not next year, not even in this generation. But justice delayed is not justice denied. Be it in 50 years, or 500, the reckoning will come. Because blood has memory. Suffering writes history. And silence, too, leaves a legacy.
war
How the World Is Forced to Fund the Iran War
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : The most defining feature of the Iran War is not the missiles, the targets, or even the scale of destruction—it is the silent and systematic transfer of its cost to those who are not fighting it. In an extraordinary display of modern economic engineering, all three principal actors—Iran, United States, and Israel—have structured this conflict in a way that allows them to wage war without bearing its full financial burden. Instead, that burden is being shifted outward to global consumers, trade-dependent economies, and regional allies, transforming a regional conflict into a worldwide economic obligation.
This is what makes the Iran War fundamentally different from traditional wars. Historically, nations financed wars through taxation, borrowing, or internal sacrifice. Today, however, the interconnected nature of the global economy allows powerful states to externalize these costs. Oil prices rise, shipping costs surge, insurance premiums spike, and supply chains tighten—not as unintended consequences, but as embedded mechanisms through which the cost of war is distributed globally. The battlefield may be regional, but the bill is international.
At the center of this economic and strategic equation lies the Strait of Hormuz, the most critical energy chokepoint in the world. A significant portion of global oil, liquefied natural gas, and commercial goods passes through this narrow corridor every day. Control over this passage offers not only military leverage but also unparalleled economic influence.
Current estimates suggest that approximately $1.2 trillion worth of trade flows through Hormuz annually, including around $800 billion in energy shipments and $400 billion in non-energy goods such as fertilizers, chemicals, metals, and manufactured products. A 10 percent toll on this trade would generate roughly $120 billion per year. Such a mechanism would allow Iran, in theory, to recoup the economic damage of war within a single year—not through aid or borrowing, but by leveraging its geographic position within the global trade system.
This is where the economic dimension of the war becomes unmistakably clear. Any increase in shipping costs through Hormuz would be passed on to importing countries, raising energy prices, increasing transportation costs, and fueling inflation worldwide. Consumers in distant nations, far removed from the battlefield, would ultimately bear the financial burden. In effect, the Iran War would be funded not just by those involved, but by the entire global economy.
At the same time, the United States operates within its own system of cost distribution. With daily war expenditures estimated at around $1 billion, a conflict lasting 60 to 70 days would cost approximately $60 to $70 billion. However, much of the U.S. military presence in the region is sustained through security arrangements with Gulf states. These host nations, dependent on American protection, often absorb a significant share of these costs. Thus, the United States projects power while redistributing its financial burden to its allies.
Israel follows a similar model. Its wartime expenditures, estimated in the tens of billions, are largely offset through extensive financial and military support from the United States and allied networks. This support ensures that Israel can sustain prolonged military operations without bearing the full economic impact domestically. In this way, Israel also participates in the broader system of cost externalization.
The result is a striking and deeply troubling paradox. The nations directly engaged in the Iran War are not the ones paying for it. Instead, the financial burden is transferred to a diffuse and largely uninvolved global audience. Energy-importing countries, trade-dependent economies, and ordinary consumers all become indirect financiers of the conflict. The war, in effect, is globalized—not only in its consequences but in its funding.
In addition, the indirect cost transfer is already visible across continents. The biggest burden of the war is not military spending—it is the imported economic shock spreading through energy markets, shipping routes, inflation, and financial systems. Nearly one-fifth of the world’s oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz, and any disruption instantly translates into higher fuel prices, increased freight costs, and cascading inflation worldwide. Countries far removed from the battlefield are paying through rising grocery bills, higher transport costs, and tightening monetary conditions.
The Middle East itself is already absorbing heavy indirect costs. Countries not directly involved in the war are facing fuel price shocks, subsidy burdens, and logistical disruptions. Pakistan, for instance, has raised diesel prices by over 50 percent and petrol by more than 40 percent, while struggling to sustain subsidy programs. India is considering trade restrictions to stabilize domestic markets as energy and freight costs surge. Across the Gulf and surrounding regions, shipping disruptions, stranded vessels, and rising insurance premiums are increasing the cost of doing business, effectively turning the war into a regional economic tax.
Europe is experiencing the same phenomenon through a renewed energy and inflation crisis. Oil prices have surged above $100 per barrel, forcing governments to cap fuel margins, cut taxes, and release reserves to protect consumers. At the same time, inflationary pressure is pushing borrowing costs higher, affecting mortgages, business financing, and household stability. The war’s economic shock is thus embedded not only in fuel prices but in the broader financial architecture of European economies.
For Asia and Africa, the impact is even more severe. Many countries in these regions depend heavily on Middle Eastern energy and trade flows. The war is functioning as a direct economic tax, triggering shortages, subsidy crises, and potential social unrest. African economies, already vulnerable, face slower growth due to rising food, fuel, and fertilizer costs, with projections showing measurable GDP losses if the conflict persists. Across the developing world, the cost of the Iran War is not theoretical—it is immediate, tangible, and deeply destabilizing.
The implications of this model extend far beyond the current conflict. If wars can be structured in such a way that their costs are borne by others, the traditional economic constraints on warfare begin to disappear. This lowers the threshold for conflict and increases the risk of prolonged and repeated wars. The deterrent effect of financial burden—once a powerful force for restraint—is weakened when that burden can be shifted outward.
In the end, the most important question is not who is winning on the battlefield, but who is paying for the war. And the answer is increasingly evident: it is the world at large. Through rising energy prices, disrupted trade, and cascading economic effects, the cost of the Iran War is being distributed across borders and societies, often without acknowledgment or consent.
This is the hidden economy of modern warfare—a system in which power is exercised, destruction is inflicted, and the bill is quietly passed on to others. In such a system, victory is no longer defined solely by military success, but by the ability to fight without paying. And by that measure, the Iran War reveals a profound and unsettling truth: those who wage war have learned how to make the world fund it.
war
Scholars Urge UN to Protect Iran’s Scientific Sites Amid Airstrikes Global Academics Warn Attacks Threaten Research, Health, and Civilian Safety
LONDON / GENEVA / PARIS / NEW YORK (Shabnam Delfani) — A broad coalition of academics, researchers, students, and members of the international scholarly community has issued a strongly worded open letter condemning a series of strikes on universities, laboratories, hospitals, and research facilities in Iran, urging immediate international action to safeguard civilian scientific infrastructure amid the ongoing U.S.-Israeli military operations against the country.

The letter, addressed to United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk, and the governments of all parties involved, highlights at least 21 reported attacks on scientific and educational institutions. It warns that such assaults endanger researchers, students, medical personnel, and the broader public while inflicting irreversible damage on scientific progress and societal well-being.
Recent strikes between March 28 and 31, 2026, have drawn particular alarm. Attacks targeted Isfahan University of Technology in Isfahan, as well as Iran University of Science and Technology and Amirkabir University of Technology in Tehran. On March 31, one of Iran’s largest pharmaceutical research and development centers, Tofigh Daru (also known as Tofiq Daru), was severely damaged. The facility is a major producer of anesthetics and critical treatments for multiple sclerosis and cancer.
“Scientific and educational institutions are civilian spaces essential to public health, knowledge, and human survival,” the open letter declares. “Their destruction endangers researchers, students, medical personnel, and the broader public, while causing lasting harm to science and society.”
The signatories issue a forceful call for all parties to the conflict to immediately cease attacks on civilian scientific and educational sites, including laboratories, universities, hospitals, research centers, libraries, and archives. They further demand that the United Nations, UNESCO, and other relevant international bodies take concrete steps: thoroughly document the damage inflicted on these institutions, provide protection and support to affected scholars and students, launch independent investigations into potential violations of international humanitarian law, and ensure that those responsible for unlawful strikes on protected civilian infrastructure are identified and held accountable through impartial legal mechanisms.
“Science is not a military target. Universities and laboratories must not become battlefields,” the letter asserts. It concludes with an urgent appeal to the international community to act decisively to protect scientific infrastructure, defend academic life, and uphold the fundamental principle that institutions dedicated to the advancement of knowledge must never be treated as expendable in times of war.
In response to the escalating strikes, Iranian officials have warned of possible retaliation against American and Israeli-linked academic campuses in the region, raising fears of a dangerous widening of the conflict into educational spheres.
The open letter, signed collectively by “academics, researchers, students, and members of the global scholarly community,” underscores the long-standing international consensus on preserving the sanctity of scientific and educational institutions even amid geopolitical tensions and armed conflict. It stresses that safeguarding academic freedom and scientific capacity serves the collective well-being of humanity and must be defended against future assaults.
This appeal comes as reports continue to emerge of significant material damage to Iranian academic and medical research facilities, with some accounts noting injuries among university staff. The global scholarly community’s unified stance reflects growing concern that the targeting of Iranian Scientists and knowledge-producing institutions threatens not only Iran but the broader fabric of international scientific cooperation.
Please Sign: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd9yA3741PhNbeae-pWxiNU-buR5PJTgi5lYHXmvB11ZoMybA/viewform
war
How Iran Humiliated U.S. and Israeli Power
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : The synchronized declarations from Washington and Tel Aviv—that objectives have been achieved and the war is nearing its end—are being projected as victory. Yet the ground reality tells a harsher story. When a war concludes with one side still striking, still deterring, still shaping the battlefield, and still holding the world’s most critical energy artery at risk, declarations of success begin to sound less like triumph and more like an organized exit.
President Donald Trump’s announcement of a withdrawal within weeks, echoed by Benjamin Netanyahu’s claim that the Iranian threat has been neutralized, collides directly with what is unfolding across the region. Iran remains operationally active, strategically coherent, and economically consequential. The Strait of Hormuz remains under pressure, global markets remain unsettled, and U.S. and Israeli deterrence has been openly challenged.
This was a war launched to break Iran. Instead, it has exposed the limits of American and Israeli power. From the outset, the strategy was clear: decapitate leadership, shatter command and control, demoralize the military, and trigger internal collapse. But Iran did not behave like previous targets of such doctrine. It was prepared. Leadership was decentralized. Decision-making was distributed. Authority was layered. Even after successive eliminations of senior figures, the system did not collapse—it adapted. It continued. It responded with discipline and precision.
This was not survival by chance. It was survival by design. Instead of paralysis, there was continuity. Instead of panic, there was proportionate retaliation. Iranian forces did not wait for instructions from the top; they operated with clarity at multiple levels, responding in a coordinated and calculated manner. This single factor alone dismantled one of the core assumptions of the war—that Iran could be broken from the top down.
At the same time, Iran demonstrated a level of strategic reach that redefined the conflict. It struck where necessary, deterred where required, and maintained pressure across multiple fronts. It challenged U.S. positions, responded to Israeli actions, and signaled its ability to extend the battlefield beyond conventional limits. Even the perceived threat to maritime flows in the Strait of Hormuz was enough to shake global confidence, disrupt trade, and push major economies into
While Washington and Tel Aviv adjusted narratives, Iran maintained a consistent posture. It framed itself as resisting aggression, responding proportionally, and defending sovereignty. That narrative gained traction. In modern conflict, perception is power, and Iran captured that domain with striking effectiveness.
What, then, has this war actually produced? For Iran, the gains are unmistakable. It has shattered the myth of American military invincibility. It has broken the perception of Israeli untouchability. It has proven that a sanctioned nation can withstand and counter the most powerful military alliance in the world. It has elevated its status from a constrained regional actor to a central force capable of influencing global economics and geopolitics.
Most critically, it has turned geography into power. By demonstrating its ability to control or disrupt the Strait of Hormuz, Iran now holds leverage over a significant portion of the world’s energy supply. This changes everything. Countries that once supported sanctions must now consider their own survival. Their ships must pass through waters influenced by Iran. Their economies depend on uninterrupted flow.
Sanctions, in this new reality, begin to lose meaning. A country that can influence the movement of global trade cannot be easily isolated. On the contrary, nations may find themselves negotiating with Iran—not from a position of strength, but necessity. The possibility emerges that Iran could impose conditions: removal or dilution of sanctions, economic concessions, and even transit fees on shipping. In effect, the war may have handed Iran the very tool to recoup its losses—by monetizing the artery the world cannot avoid.
For Israel, the losses are equally significant. The aura of invincibility is gone. The ability to act without consequence has been challenged. The assumption of uncontested regional dominance has been exposed as fragile. Israel has not been destroyed, but it has been reduced to size—forced into a strategic reality where every action carries a cost and every escalation invites a response.
This has direct implications for the broader region. In Lebanon, Gaza, and the West Bank, the strategic environment has shifted. The space for unchecked expansion or unilateral military action is narrowing. The vision of dominance now faces a counterweight that is both capable and willing to respond.
For the United States, the implications are even broader. After decades of spending trillions to build the most powerful military machine in history, it now faces a sobering conclusion: superiority does not guarantee victory. A sanctioned nation, isolated for years, has not only survived but imposed costs and shaped outcomes. This is not merely a battlefield setback—it is a blow to credibility, deterrence, and global perception.
Yet beyond strategy, missiles, and geopolitics, the war has revealed something deeper about Iran itself. The strength of the Iranian system did not lie only in its weapons or its geography, but in its political cohesion and societal resolve. Despite sustained attacks, leadership losses, and economic pressure, the state did not fracture. Its constitutional structure held. Its political hierarchy remained intact. Most importantly, its people did not turn inward—they rallied.
Instead of division, there was unity. Instead of fatigue, there was resolve. Instead of collapse, there was collective resistance. This reflects a nation bound not only by institutions but by identity—by a shared commitment to sovereignty, independence, and the legacy of its revolution. In the face of external aggression, the Iranian population appears to have responded not with fear but with heightened patriotism, reinforcing loyalty to the state and its leadership.
Such moments often define nations. Rather than weakening the system, the war may have strengthened belief in it. Rather than undermining the revolution, it may have reaffirmed its relevance. And with that renewed confidence, a new possibility emerges: that Iran, secure in its strength, may now have both the space and the incentive to pursue internal political reforms while engaging more openly with the global economy—on its own terms, and from a position of power.
Yet even as declarations of withdrawal dominate headlines, the war itself may not be over. The possibility remains that these announcements are tactical—designed to calm global markets, stabilize oil prices, and ease domestic pressures—while leaving room for renewed escalation, including potential ground operations. The United States has, in past conflicts, shifted objectives even after signaling de-escalation. That pattern cannot be ignored.
Iran, for its part, appears prepared for that possibility. But if the withdrawal proves genuine—if escalation does not follow and hostilities truly subside—then the conclusion becomes unavoidable. In that case, the war stands as a strategic victory for Iran: a conflict in which it withstood the combined force of the United States and Israel, preserved its system, expanded its leverage, and reshaped the regional balance of power.
This was a war intended to break Iran. Instead, it has strengthened it. Strengthened its system. Strengthened its people. Strengthened its place in the world. And if this war truly ends here, history will not remember the declarations of victory—it will remember the reality that a nation under pressure did not break, did not bend, and instead emerged more united, more confident, and more powerful than before.
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