Connect with us

war

Centrifuges at Iran’s Natanz site likely destroyed, nuclear watchdog says

Published

on

The centrifuges at Iran’s Natanz uranium enrichment plant were likely “severely damaged if not destroyed altogether” in Israeli strikes, the head of the global nuclear watchdog has said.

Rafael Grossi, of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), told the BBC this was a result of power cuts caused by Friday’s attack, in which the plant’s above-ground facility was “completely destroyed”.

The damage was likely caused despite the underground hall housing the centrifuges – machines that enrich uranium – not being directly hit, he said.

Four buildings were also damaged at the Isfahan site, he said, and no damage was visible at the underground Fordo enrichment plant.

Israel said it attacked the sites and killed nine Iranian nuclear scientists to stop Tehran developing nuclear weapons.

It alleged that Iran had in recent months “taken steps to weaponise” its stockpile of enriched uranium, which can be used to make fuel for power plants but also nuclear bombs.

On Sunday, Iran reiterated that its nuclear programme was peaceful and urged IAEA’s 35-nation board to strongly condemn the Israeli strikes.

“Our assessment is that with this sudden loss of external power, in great probability the centrifuges have been severely damaged if not destroyed altogether,” Grossi told the BBC.

“There was almost total damage to electrical installations.”

Earlier on Monday, Grossi told the IAEA’s board of governors that his agency had been monitoring the situation in Iran very carefully, ascertaining the status of the country’s nuclear facilities and assessing radiation levels through communication with local authorities.

He said Friday’s attack on Natanz destroyed the above-ground part of the Pilot Fuel Enrichment Plant (PFEP), where cascades of centrifuge were producing uranium enriched up to 60% purity – close to the 90% required for weapons-grade uranium.

“There has been no indication of a physical attack on the underground cascade hall containing part of the PFEP and the main Fuel Enrichment Plant. However, the loss of power to the cascade hall may have damaged the centrifuges there,” Grossi told the board.

He also said there was radiological and chemical contamination at the site, but that the level of radioactivity outside had remained unchanged and at normal levels.

The Israeli military has said that the underground centrifuge hall was also damaged as part of the attack on Natanz, but it provided no evidence.

Damage to Natanz nuclear site

Grossi said four buildings were destroyed in a separate attack on Friday on the Isfahan Nuclear Technology Centre – the central chemical laboratory, a uranium conversion plant, the Tehran reactor fuel manufacturing plant, and a facility to convert uranium hexafluoride to uranium metal, which was under construction.

As at Natanz, off-site radiation levels remain unchanged, he added.

The Israeli military said that the Isfahan strike “dismantled a facility for producing metallic uranium, infrastructure for reconverting enriched uranium, laboratories, and additional infrastructure”.

Grossi told the BBC there was In Isfahan you have underground spaces as well, which do not seem to have been affected.”

At the Fordo plant, Grossi said there was “very limited if any damage registered [there]”.

Damage to Natanz nuclear site

On Saturday, Iran’s semi-official Isna news agency quoted spokesman of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) as saying there was “limited damage to some areas at the Fordo enrichment site” following an Israeli attack.

However, the Israeli military has not confirmed carrying out any strikes there.

Grossi said no damage had been seen at Fordo, or at the Khondab heavy water reactor, which is under construction.

He urged all parties to exercise maximum restraint, warning that military escalation threatened lives and increased the chance of a radiological release with serious consequences for people and the environment.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told foreign diplomats in Tehran on Saturday that Israel’s attacks on his country’s nuclear facilities were a “blatant violation of international law”, and that he hoped the IAEA’s board would issue a strong condemnation.

He also said that Iran’s missile strikes on Israel since Friday were a “response to aggression”.

The Israeli military’s spokesperson, Brig Gen Effie Defrin said on Monday that its large-scale air campaign would “continue to act in pursuit of the operation’s objective, to neutralize the existential threat from Iran, from its nuclear project to the regime’s missile array”.

Iran’s health ministry says Israeli strikes have killed more than 220 people since Friday. Twenty-four Israelis have been killed by Iranian missiles, according to Israeli authorities.

Last Thursday, the IAEA’s board formally declared Iran in breach of its non-proliferation obligations for the first time in 20 years. A resolution said Iran’s “many failures” to provide the agency with full answers about its undeclared nuclear material and nuclear activities constituted non-compliance.

Under a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, Iran was not permitted to enrich uranium above 3.67% purity – the level required for fuel for commercial nuclear power plants – and was not allowed to carry out any enrichment at Fordo for 15 years.

However, US President Donald Trump abandoned the agreement during his first term in 2018, saying it did too little to stop a pathway to a bomb, and reinstated US sanctions.

Iran retaliated by increasingly breaching the restrictions – particularly those relating to enrichment. It resumed enrichment at Fordo in 2021 and has amassed enough 60%-enriched uranium to potentially make nine nuclear bombs, according to the IAEA.

war

UK and France Join U.S.–Israel War Against Iran

Published

on

By

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 : When the first strikes were launched against Iran, the British government attempted to create distance from the unfolding conflict. Prime Minister Keir Starmer initially told the public that the United Kingdom was not involved in the attacks and would not participate in offensive military operations against Iran. The message was clear: Britain would support stability, protect its citizens, and avoid becoming another direct participant in a Middle Eastern war.
Yet within days that narrative began to unravel. Standing before reporters at Downing Street, Starmer revealed that Britain had in fact been preparing for the crisis long before the war formally began. Throughout January and February, the United Kingdom had already moved fighter jets, air-defense systems, radar installations, and other military assets to bases in Cyprus and Qatar, placing the country in what he described as a “heightened state of readiness.” Shortly after the strikes began, British aircraft reportedly intercepted drones approaching a base housing British personnel. Additional deployments followed quickly: four more fighter jets were dispatched to Qatar, helicopters equipped with anti-drone capabilities were sent to Cyprus, and the Royal Navy destroyer HMS Dragon was ordered into the eastern Mediterranean.
These developments revealed a deeper reality. Once aircraft, warships, missile defenses, and surveillance systems are placed inside a conflict zone, a country cannot convincingly claim to be merely watching events unfold. Whether described as defensive or not, those assets become part of the military architecture of war.
That reality became evident almost immediately. A drone strike targeted the British air base at Akrotiri in Cyprus, prompting criticism from Cypriot officials who said they had not been adequately informed of the risks surrounding British military activity on the island. The attack demonstrated how quickly military installations become targets in an expanding conflict. Even if Britain insists it is not directly participating in offensive strikes, its bases, personnel, and equipment are already inside the operational theatre.
Meanwhile the war has also strained relations between London and Washington. President Donald Trump publicly criticized Starmer for hesitating to provide full support for American operations, particularly after the British government initially resisted allowing the United States to use the Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean for strikes against Iran. Although Britain later permitted certain defensive uses of British facilities, the episode exposed unusual tension in what both governments continue to call the “special relationship.”
Starmer now finds himself walking a political tightrope. On one side lies Britain’s long-standing strategic alliance with the United States. On the other lies deep domestic skepticism about another Western intervention in the Middle East. Memories of Iraq remain powerful in British politics, and public opinion reflects that caution. Recent polling suggests that nearly half of British voters oppose the U.S. strikes on Iran, while only a minority support them.
Yet while Western leaders frame the war as necessary for stability and security, critics point to the familiar language that has accompanied earlier interventions. Iraq was presented as a mission of liberation. Libya was described as a humanitarian necessity. Afghanistan was framed as a campaign to rebuild a nation. In each case the promises of stability and prosperity ultimately gave way to fractured societies, weakened economies, and prolonged instability.
Now Iran faces a similar concentration of Western military power. The combined strength of the United States, Britain, and France vastly exceeds Iran’s conventional capabilities. France has already moved the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle and accompanying naval forces toward the Mediterranean, while Britain has reinforced its regional presence through aircraft, missile defenses, and naval deployments.
The imbalance of power is obvious. Iran has lived for decades under sanctions that have restricted access to modern aircraft and advanced military systems. Its air force and defense infrastructure cannot easily match the technological superiority of the Western coalition now gathering around it. In that context, triumphant declarations of military superiority begin to sound less like strategic analysis and more like expressions of overwhelming force against a far weaker adversary.
Another striking contradiction lies in the moral justification being offered for the war. Western leaders frequently argue that their actions are intended to protect the Iranian people from repression. Yet the human cost of the conflict already raises uncomfortable questions.
Reports emerging from the region indicate that more than a thousand people have been killed since the beginning of the strikes. Many of those casualties are civilians — the same ordinary citizens whose protection is repeatedly cited as one of the war’s objectives. Bridges, hospitals, economic facilities, and military installations have all been hit in the course of the expanding campaign, leaving ordinary Iranians to endure the consequences of decisions made far beyond their control.
The rhetoric surrounding regime change has also revealed a troubling attitude toward those who were once seen as potential political partners. During a press interaction, President Trump was asked whether any names existed to replace Iran’s current leadership. His response was stark. According to his remarks, many of the individuals once considered potential alternatives had already been killed, and others who might replace them could also be eliminated in the course of the conflict.
The statement highlighted a grim reality of modern geopolitical struggles. Individuals cultivated as future allies or political alternatives can quickly become expendable once military escalation takes precedence over diplomacy. The very people once viewed as assets capable of shaping a post-conflict political landscape can disappear in the fog of war.
Beyond the immediate battlefield, the strategic stakes extend even further. The Strait of Hormuz — through which a significant portion of the world’s oil supply passes — remains one of the most important chokepoints in global trade. Any escalation in the region risks disrupting the flow of energy to markets across Europe and Asia. At the same time, an expanded Western naval presence in the region would effectively place one of the world’s most vital maritime corridors under heavy military oversight.
Such developments inevitably raise questions about the broader geopolitical objectives of the war. While the official narrative emphasizes security and stability, the strategic implications of controlling key maritime routes and supply chains cannot be ignored.
Inside Britain, the government continues to emphasize that its role remains defensive and limited. Yet the pattern is familiar to anyone who has observed the early stages of past conflicts. Wars rarely appear all at once. They arrive gradually: a deployment here, a protective mission there, a logistical necessity followed by a defensive authorization. Each step appears modest when viewed individually. Taken together, they reveal a steady movement toward deeper involvement.
History offers many examples of this process. Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria all began with limited objectives and carefully framed justifications. Over time those conflicts expanded beyond their original scope, leaving behind societies struggling to rebuild amid political fragmentation and economic devastation.
The danger today is not simply that another war is unfolding. The deeper concern is that the lessons of previous interventions seem to fade each time a new crisis emerges.
Modern societies possess extraordinary scientific knowledge, technological capability, and access to information. Yet the same nations that lead the world in education and innovation often find themselves repeating patterns that history has already judged harshly.
Perhaps the most sobering conclusion is that history itself rarely lacks clear warnings. The tragedies of past wars remain visible for anyone willing to examine them. What often disappears is the willingness to listen.
When power becomes intoxicating and strategic dominance appears irresistible, the lessons of history are easily dismissed as relics of another era. And when that happens, humanity does not move forward through wisdom. It moves in circles — rediscovering through destruction what it once knew through memory.

Continue Reading

war

The Iran War That Turned Against Trump

Published

on

By

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 decision to plunge the United States into a direct confrontation with Iran—taken at the urging and strategic direction of Israel—has triggered a chain of events that few in Washington appear to have fully anticipated. What was originally conceived as a swift military operation designed to cripple Iran’s capabilities and compel regime change has instead evolved into a widening regional conflict whose consequences are now rippling through military, political, and economic systems across the globe. Inside the United States, the mood has shifted from early confidence to growing anxiety as policymakers, military planners, and the public begin to reckon with the scale of the unfolding crisis.
From the earliest hours of the conflict, Iran responded with an intensity that surprised even seasoned defense analysts. Waves of drones and missiles targeted American and allied installations throughout the Middle East. Several facilities used by U.S. forces experienced direct hits or operational disruption, forcing commanders to reassess their logistics and operational posture across the region. While Washington maintains that the majority of its capabilities remain intact, the attacks have nevertheless exposed the vulnerability of a military architecture heavily dependent on forward bases and allied infrastructure.
These bases—spread across the Gulf and the broader Middle East—serve as the backbone of American air and naval power projection. They are critical for refueling aircraft, replenishing munitions, and maintaining sustained combat operations. Once they became targets, the operational calculus changed dramatically. Aircraft carriers, naval task groups, and combat aircraft that had been positioned for sustained operations suddenly faced logistical strain. War planners who assumed a short campaign now confront the reality of an adversary capable of prolonged resistance.
Compounding the strategic difficulty has been the hesitation of several allied countries to allow their territory or bases to be used as launch platforms for the campaign. Spain publicly declined to allow its bases to be used for offensive operations against Iran, while Britain clarified that it would not join offensive strikes and imposed restrictions on the use of its installations. Several Gulf states adopted a posture of neutrality, unwilling to risk retaliation by becoming direct participants in the conflict. Even allies who expressed rhetorical support have quietly avoided deeper involvement, reflecting their fear that the war could spread across the region.
This reluctance among partners has further constrained Washington’s options. Modern warfare, especially for expeditionary forces like those of the United States, depends not only on military power but also on the political willingness of allies to provide territory, logistics, and legitimacy. When that support becomes uncertain, the operational environment becomes far more complex.
Inside the United States itself, the political atmosphere is rapidly evolving. Members of Congress from both parties have begun questioning the strategic purpose of the war. Media commentators and policy analysts are asking what the ultimate objective is—whether it is regime change, deterrence, or simply punishment. Even the president’s own public statements have hinted at a reassessment. After initially projecting confidence in the military campaign, Donald Trump acknowledged in later remarks that Iran had signaled a willingness to talk and that diplomatic channels could be reopened.
This shift reflects a growing realization that the conflict may not be as controllable as originally assumed. Iran’s strategy appears to rely not on conventional military parity but on asymmetric endurance. Years of sanctions forced Tehran to accept that it could not compete with the United States in traditional air and naval warfare. Instead, it invested heavily in missile technology, drones, underground facilities, and decentralized command structures. Many of its most important missile centers are buried deep beneath mountains or fortified bunkers, rendering them extremely difficult to destroy even with advanced bunker-busting munitions.
As the war drags on, the economic consequences are beginning to reverberate far beyond the battlefield. One of the most dramatic developments has been Iran’s declaration that the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow maritime corridor through which a significant portion of the world’s oil supply passes—will be closed to commercial shipping except vessels carrying Chinese flags. Whether fully enforceable or not, the announcement alone has sent shockwaves through global energy markets.
Oil prices surged almost immediately. Markets reacted with alarm to the prospect that even partial disruption of shipping through Hormuz could remove millions of barrels of oil per day from global supply chains. The result has been a rapid rise in crude prices, which is already being felt at gasoline stations across the United States and Europe. Higher oil prices inevitably translate into higher transportation costs, and those costs cascade through the entire economy.
The economic logic is straightforward but devastating. When fuel becomes more expensive, the cost of transporting goods—from food to consumer products—increases. Airlines raise ticket prices, trucking companies pass on their fuel surcharges, and shipping costs climb. These increases ripple outward, affecting nearly every product and service used by ordinary citizens. Inflationary pressures intensify, eroding household purchasing power and deepening public frustration.
For political leaders, the consequences are immediate. Rising gasoline prices have historically been among the most sensitive indicators of public discontent in the United States. When voters see the cost of filling their cars jump dramatically, the issue quickly becomes political. Analysts already warn that if the conflict continues to disrupt oil markets, the economic backlash could undermine the administration’s domestic support and influence the outcome of upcoming midterm elections.
Beyond the economic sphere lies an even deeper concern: the potential for the conflict to ignite wider instability. Israel has already expanded its operations into neighboring theaters such as Lebanon, attempting to suppress rocket attacks from Hezbollah. Meanwhile, reports indicate that Kurdish opposition groups are being encouraged to challenge the Iranian government, raising the possibility of internal unrest inside Iran itself. Such strategies carry enormous risk. History has repeatedly shown that arming or empowering insurgent groups can produce unintended consequences, sometimes turning yesterday’s proxy into tomorrow’s adversary.
In the streets of American cities and towns, ordinary citizens are grappling with a mixture of fear and uncertainty. Many worry that a prolonged war could provoke retaliatory actions or terrorist incidents far from the Middle Eastern battlefield. Others question whether the United States had sufficient justification to launch the attack at a moment when diplomatic negotiations—mediated by Oman—were reportedly making progress toward a nuclear agreement.
According to diplomatic sources involved in those talks, Iran had indicated a willingness to dilute highly enriched uranium by mixing it with lower-grade material, effectively reducing its weapons potential while allowing continued civilian nuclear activity. Negotiators believed a framework agreement was within reach. If true, the abrupt shift from diplomacy to war has left many observers wondering whether a peaceful solution was abandoned prematurely.
The result is a conflict that now appears increasingly difficult to control. What began as a calculated show of force has become a contest of endurance between a global superpower and a regional state determined to resist. The United States still possesses overwhelming military superiority, yet military power alone cannot easily resolve the complex political and economic dynamics now unfolding.
For that reason, voices calling for diplomacy are growing louder. Even those who supported the initial strikes increasingly acknowledge that negotiations may be the only realistic path toward de-escalation. Wars often begin with confidence and resolve, but they end through dialogue and compromise.
At this critical juncture, the choice facing Washington is stark. Continuing down the path of escalation risks widening the conflict, destabilizing global markets, and entrenching hostility across the region. Reopening diplomatic channels, by contrast, offers at least the possibility of limiting the damage and preventing the war from spiraling into a broader catastrophe.
History may ultimately judge this moment not by the missiles fired or the targets destroyed, but by whether leaders possessed the wisdom to step back from the brink and rediscover the power of diplomacy before the costs became irreversible.

Continue Reading

war

Iran’s Strategy: Stretch the War

Published

on

By

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 : When President Donald Trump authorized direct military confrontation with Iran alongside Israel, many strategic planners expected a short and decisive military campaign. Precision strikes, intelligence dominance, and coordinated airpower were believed capable of crippling Iranian command centers and missile infrastructure within days. Yet what was envisioned as a swift operation is increasingly evolving into a prolonged conflict with humanitarian, geopolitical, and economic consequences extending far beyond the Middle East.
For decades, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had warned that confrontation with Iran was inevitable. Several U.S. administrations resisted being drawn into a full-scale war, wary of escalation and long-term entanglement in another Middle Eastern conflict. President Trump himself had previously pledged that his presidency would avoid new wars and focus on ending the long cycle of military interventions. However, the launch of coordinated strikes against Iran marked a historic shift, transforming strategic rivalry into direct confrontation.
The early assumption that Iran would collapse under aerial bombardment has not materialized. Instead, Tehran has adopted a measured and calculated strategy. Rather than unleashing its entire missile arsenal in dramatic retaliation, it has responded gradually, sustaining pressure while preserving strategic capabilities. Instead of triggering regime instability, the conflict appears to have consolidated national sentiment—particularly after the reported killing of Iran’s 86-year-old Supreme Leader during the opening phase of the war.
Within Iran, the death of a religious authority of such stature was expected by some analysts to create political fragmentation. Instead, it triggered widespread mobilization. In Shiite tradition, martyrdom carries profound historical and spiritual significance rooted in the memory of Karbala and the sacrifice of Imam Hussain. Mass mourning ceremonies, public processions, and national demonstrations reflected a collective resolve rather than internal collapse.
That emotional surge intensified dramatically after a tragedy that has come to symbolize the human cost of the conflict. In the southern Iranian city of Minab, a girls’ school was struck during the early days of the Israel-USA air campaign, killing more than 150 students and staff. The incident was independently confirmed by International media including Al-Jazeera and BBC. This deplorable and cruel act of Israel and the USA immediately became a powerful political and humanitarian symbol.
Images broadcast by Iranian media and reported by Al Jazeera showed thousands of mourners gathering in Minab’s central square for a mass funeral ceremony. Families held photographs of young victims while crowds chanted slogans condemning the United States and Israel.
The reaction from international institutions was swift. The United Nations human rights office called for a prompt and impartial investigation into the incident. Officials emphasized that schools, hospitals, and humanitarian facilities are protected under international humanitarian law and must not be targeted during armed conflict.
The Minab tragedy quickly resonated across the international media landscape. Major European outlets such as The Guardian, Le Monde, and Der Spiegel published editorials raising concerns about the humanitarian consequences of the escalating war. Commentaries in several European newspapers questioned whether the air campaign risked repeating the mistakes of previous conflicts in which civilian casualties undermined strategic objectives.
Public reaction extended beyond the media. Demonstrations erupted in several regions of the world. In cities across the United States—Washington D.C., New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles—anti-war protesters gathered to demand congressional oversight and an immediate halt to escalation.
Across parts of the Global South, governments including China, South Africa, Brazil, Turkey, Malaysia, and Pakistan voiced concern about the expanding conflict. In Pakistan and Iraq, protests outside U.S. diplomatic missions turned tense as demonstrators condemned the bombing campaign and expressed solidarity with Iranian civilians.
Meanwhile, Iran’s military strategy appears rooted in endurance rather than rapid escalation. Decades of sanctions and conflict have forced the country to develop hardened infrastructure, dispersed missile systems, and underground facilities designed to survive sustained bombardment. Iranian officials and analysts sympathetic to Tehran argue that the missiles and drones seen in the early days of the war represent largely older or less sophisticated systems deliberately used in the opening phase. According to this narrative, Iran is pacing the conflict by gradually introducing more advanced and destructive missile capabilities only if the war escalates further. Such a strategy would allow Tehran to sustain pressure over time while reserving its most capable weapons for later stages, potentially targeting U.S. bases across the Middle East, Israeli infrastructure, and naval forces operating in the Persian Gulf and nearby waters.
The vulnerability of American bases across the Middle East has become increasingly evident as the war expands. Countries hosting these bases now face complex political pressures, as retaliatory attacks threaten nearby infrastructure and civilian populations.
Economically, the war carries enormous global implications. The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world’s most critical maritime chokepoints for oil transportation. Even limited disruptions in this narrow corridor can trigger spikes in global energy prices and destabilize international markets.
Yet perhaps the most consequential development emerging from Washington is the possibility that the war could escalate beyond aerial bombing. In recent remarks, President Trump did not rule out deploying American troops on Iranian soil if military objectives cannot be achieved through air power alone. U.S. defense officials have similarly acknowledged that ground forces remain an option should the conflict expand or if key strategic targets require physical control.
The implications of such a decision would be profound. Iran is a vast country of nearly ninety million people with rugged terrain, dense urban centers, and deeply entrenched military structures. Any attempt to place foreign troops on Iranian soil would almost certainly transform the current air campaign into a full-scale regional war.
Strategic history offers sobering lessons. In Afghanistan, overwhelming aerial superiority failed to produce durable political outcomes. Military dominance on the battlefield did not translate into long-term stability, and ultimately the conflict ended with a negotiated withdrawal after two decades.
A ground war in Iran could prove even more complex. Iran possesses a much larger population, stronger state institutions, and extensive missile capabilities capable of striking across the Middle East. Military analysts warn that any foreign troop deployment could trigger prolonged insurgency, regional retaliation, and widespread disruption of global energy markets.
Iran appears to be pursuing a strategy of strategic patience. By absorbing attacks while maintaining steady retaliation, it places increasing economic and political pressure on its adversaries. Time, rather than immediate battlefield victories, becomes the decisive factor.
The tragedy in Minab illustrates how quickly humanitarian events can reshape global perceptions of a war. Images of mourning families and schoolchildren’s funerals resonate far beyond military calculations. They influence public opinion, diplomatic relationships, and the political legitimacy of those conducting the war.
What was initially framed as a short military operation has increasingly taken the shape of a war of endurance. Iran appears prepared for a prolonged confrontation built on resilience, geography, and ideological mobilization. The United States and Israel still maintain overwhelming technological and military superiority, yet superiority alone does not guarantee swift submission.
Wars that begin with expectations of rapid victory often conclude in negotiations after extended human suffering. Whether this conflict ultimately follows that path will depend not only on military strength but on political wisdom. If diplomacy re-enters the equation, escalation may still be contained. If not, the region—and perhaps the wider international system—may face months of instability with consequences reaching far beyond the battlefield.

Continue Reading

Trending