war
Iran vs U.S.: When Demands Collide, Can Peace Survive?
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 Middle East today is not witnessing a single war, but a convergence of multiple battlefields—each feeding into the other and pushing the region toward a dangerous tipping point. What began as a confrontation between Iran, Israel, and the United States has now expanded into a multi-front conflict involving Lebanon, Yemen, the Gulf states, and beyond. The war is no longer linear; it is layered, interconnected, and increasingly uncontrollable.
One of the most intense theaters of this conflict is southern Lebanon, where Israeli operations have escalated dramatically. Infrastructure—bridges, homes, businesses—has been systematically targeted under the justification of creating a “buffer zone” to prevent missile threats. The humanitarian cost has been devastating: over a thousand civilians killed and more than a million displaced, forced into survival conditions that resemble a humanitarian catastrophe.
This front is deeply linked with the broader Iran-Israel confrontation. Analysts like Scott Ritter argue—controversially—that Lebanon’s political leadership has failed to defend its sovereignty, enabling external aggression. While such claims remain debated, they reflect a growing perception of state fragility in the region.
Ritter also warns that if Israel commits to a ground invasion, it risks repeating its past miscalculation, when Hezbollah forced Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon. In that sense, Lebanon could become a strategic trap—just as Iraq and Afghanistan became prolonged quagmires for the United States.
Against this volatile backdrop, Iran has articulated a five-point framework for negotiation. This proposal comes in direct response to what Tehran considers a “one-sided” and “maximalist” U.S. plan that demands strategic capitulation.
The first Iranian demand is simple and fundamental: an immediate cessation of attacks by the United States and Israel. From Tehran’s perspective, no negotiation can take place under active bombardment.
The second demand, however, is the most critical—and the most transformative. It calls for binding guarantees that Iran will not be attacked again. On the surface, this appears reasonable. But its implicit meaning is far deeper and far more consequential.
Iran is not asking for verbal assurances—it is demanding structural change. In essence, this demand implies that the United States must dismantle the very infrastructure that makes repeated attacks possible. This includes the network of U.S. military bases spread across the Middle East—particularly in the Gulf Cooperation Council countries and other regional states—that have historically been used to project power toward Iran.
From Tehran’s perspective, as long as these bases exist, any promise of peace is hollow. A missile launched from a distant continent is one thing; a missile launched from a nearby base is an immediate existential threat. Therefore, Iran’s logic is uncompromising: peace cannot coexist with a permanent war infrastructure positioned at its doorstep.
This makes the second demand the cornerstone of Iran’s entire proposal. It is not just about security—it is about redefining the regional balance of power. Accepting it would require the United States to rethink decades of military strategy in the Middle East, potentially withdrawing or significantly reducing its forward presence.
For Washington, this is a strategic red line. Its military bases are not only about Iran but about securing energy routes, maintaining alliances, and projecting global influence. Removing them would reshape the geopolitical order of the region.
This is why this clause is likely to become the breaking point in negotiations. It is binary—either the infrastructure of threat is removed, or it remains. There is little room for compromise. And if it remains, Iran believes that history will repeat itself: negotiations will occur, promises will be made, and attacks will follow.
The third demand introduces an economic dimension. Iran seeks recognition of its rights over the Strait of Hormuz—one of the most critical energy corridors in the world. Tehran proposes imposing transit or security fees on ships passing through, arguing that such a mechanism would help it recover war-related losses and assert sovereign control.
The fourth demand focuses on reparations. Iran calls for compensation for civilian casualties and infrastructure destruction, proposing an international mechanism to assess damages and enforce payments. This reframes Iran not as an aggressor, but as a state seeking justice under international law.
The fifth demand expands the scope of peace. Iran insists that Israel must cease attacks not only on Iran but also on regional actors aligned with it—in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen. This reflects Iran’s broader strategic vision: that regional peace cannot be achieved through isolated agreements but requires a comprehensive de-escalation.
When compared with the United States’ 15-point plan—which includes dismantling Iran’s nuclear program, restricting its missile capabilities, and ending its regional alliances—the gap becomes stark. The U.S. framework seeks to limit Iran’s power; Iran’s framework seeks to remove threats against it.
Both sides are effectively boxed into opposing paradigms. For the United States, compromise risks weakening its strategic dominance. For Iran, compromise risks surrendering sovereignty and deterrence.
In this rigid standoff, any concession by either side would be perceived not as compromise but as capitulation. This is precisely why diplomacy has stalled and why the risk of escalation continues to intensify. This evolving reality also reflects a broader and more troubling pattern in U.S. strategic behavior.
From the prolonged engagement in the Vietnam War, to nearly a decade of conflict following the Iraq War, and two decades of entanglement in the War in Afghanistan, the United States has repeatedly found itself embedded in extended conflicts. Now, with Afghanistan no longer serving as a theater of engagement, a new front appears to be taking shape—one that risks drawing Washington into another prolonged and complex confrontation. This raises a critical question: whether sustained geopolitical engagement through conflict has become an embedded feature of U.S. strategic doctrine, where controlled instability in key regions is perceived as serving long-term national interests, even if those interests are not always clearly articulated.
At this critical juncture, what is required is not conventional diplomacy, but a deliberate, sincere, and strategically articulated effort to bring both parties out of their entrenched positions. A meaningful resolution will not emerge from forcing one side to surrender, but from crafting a mutually acceptable, win-win framework—one that preserves sovereignty while addressing security concerns.
Without this shift, the trajectory is clear. The war will expand, new fronts will open, and the region will descend deeper into instability. The pattern is not new. From Vietnam to Iraq to Afghanistan, history has shown that wars born out of strategic rigidity often evolve into prolonged quagmires. The danger now is that the Middle East is on the verge of becoming the next chapter in that pattern.
And while states negotiate, calculate, and posture, it is the civilians—from Lebanon to Iran and beyond—who continue to pay the price.
In the end, this is not just a war of missiles and military might. It is a war of narratives, perceptions, and strategic visions. And unless those visions can be reconciled through genuine diplomacy, the region risks remaining trapped in a cycle of conflict with no clear end.
war
How Iran War Is Grounding the World Economy
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 war in the Middle East has now moved far beyond the battlefield. What initially appeared as a regional military confrontation has evolved into a systemic global crisis—one that is tightening its grip not only on governments and markets, but on ordinary people struggling to sustain daily life. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, combined with targeted disruption of oil infrastructure, has triggered a cascading breakdown across energy supply chains, aviation networks, and tourism-dependent economies. The world is no longer merely watching a war; it is experiencing its economic consequences in real time.
At the center of this unfolding crisis lies the global jet fuel market—a sector often overlooked in geopolitical analysis, yet one that sustains the arteries of globalization. Prior to the conflict, global jet fuel demand had recovered strongly, reaching approximately 107 billion gallons annually in 2024, with projections climbing to nearly 7.2 million barrels per day by early 2026. This demand was supported by a finely balanced supply network spanning North America, Asia, and the Middle East. Today, that balance has been violently disrupted.
The Middle East, which typically contributes around 20% of global jet fuel supply, has seen a dramatic collapse in its effective output. War-related damage to refineries, combined with the strategic closure of the Strait of Hormuz, has removed an estimated 320,000 tons of jet fuel per day from global circulation. At the same time, approximately 3 million barrels per day of refining capacity across the الخليج region has either been shut down or rendered inoperable. This is not a marginal disruption—it is a structural shock to the global energy system.
Jet fuel prices have responded accordingly. Within weeks, prices surged from approximately $85–90 per barrel to well above $200, representing one of the sharpest increases in modern energy market history. For the aviation industry, where fuel accounts for up to one-third of operating costs, this is nothing short of catastrophic. Airlines are no longer operating in a demand-driven environment; they are navigating a survival crisis defined by cost pressures and supply scarcity.
The impact is most visible in Europe, where the aviation sector—and by extension, the tourism economy—is deeply exposed. Europe imports roughly 25–30% of its jet fuel from the Persian Gulf. With supply lines disrupted, airlines have begun aggressive capacity cuts. Major carriers have canceled thousands of flights ahead of the critical summer season. Lufthansa alone has reportedly removed tens of thousands of flights from its schedule, while other carriers are grounding aircraft, optimizing routes, and operating only essential services.
This contraction strikes at the heart of Europe’s economic model. Tourism is not a peripheral sector; it is a foundational pillar. The continent generates between $600 and $700 billion annually from tourism, supporting millions of jobs and contributing significantly to GDP in countries such as Spain, Italy, France, and Greece. This entire ecosystem depends on affordable, reliable air travel. Without it, hotels remain empty, restaurants lose customers, and entire regional economies begin to contract.
The crisis is not confined to Europe. In Asia-Pacific, where airlines depend heavily on Middle Eastern fuel flows, the situation is even more acute. Carriers have entered emergency operational modes, securing limited fuel supplies and preparing for prolonged disruption. Even in the United States—buffered by its status as a major producer—airlines face massive financial strain. Leading carriers have warned of billions of dollars in additional fuel costs, threatening profitability and forcing difficult operational decisions.
What makes this crisis particularly dangerous is its compounding nature. Aviation is not only about passenger mobility; it is a critical component of global trade. High-value goods, pharmaceuticals, and time-sensitive cargo depend on air freight. As flight capacity shrinks, supply chains tighten, prices rise, and inflationary pressures intensify. Indeed, energy analysts have already warned that this crisis could add nearly 0.8% to global inflation—an alarming figure in an already fragile economic environment.
Meanwhile, the maritime dimension of the conflict is adding further instability. The Strait of Hormuz, through which nearly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply normally passes, has become a contested zone. Tankers are being intercepted, diverted, and in some cases seized. Insurance costs have soared, discouraging shipping companies from entering the region. Even where fuel is available, the ability to transport it safely has become uncertain.
China’s position offers a temporary buffer but not immunity. With substantial strategic reserves and a diversified energy portfolio, including large-scale investments in renewable energy, China can withstand short-term shocks. However, as the world’s manufacturing hub, any prolonged disruption will inevitably impact its output. A slowdown in Chinese production would have global consequences, affecting supply chains and economic growth worldwide.
This brings into focus a critical strategic question: what is the underlying objective of this disruption? One interpretation—gaining increasing traction—is that the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is not merely a byproduct of conflict, but a strategic lever. By constraining Middle Eastern supply, global demand is redirected toward alternative producers, most notably the United States. Over the past decade, the U.S. has transformed into a leading exporter of oil and liquefied natural gas. In a constrained market, its leverage increases significantly.
For Iran, the situation presents a profound strategic dilemma. Maintaining the closure of the Strait exerts pressure on adversaries but simultaneously inflicts economic pain on the wider world. Reopening the waterway, on the other hand, could reposition Iran as a stabilizing force while exposing the broader dynamics at play. It would restore global supply flows, ease economic pressures, and potentially shift international opinion.
From a strategic standpoint, reopening Hormuz could neutralize the leverage derived from disruption. It would deny the United States to exploit scarcity and would reestablish a degree of economic normalcy. More importantly, it would demonstrate that stability—not disruption—is the stronger strategic position in an interconnected global system.
The world today is facing more than an energy crisis. It is confronting the fragility of a system built on uninterrupted flows—of fuel, goods, people, and capital. When one critical node collapses, the effects ripple outward, disrupting industries and livelihoods across continents.
If the current trajectory continues, the consequences will be severe. Aviation networks may contract further, tourism economies could enter recession, and global trade may slow significantly. Inflationary pressures will rise, and economic uncertainty will deepen. What began as a regional conflict risks becoming a global economic turning point.
The solution lies not in escalation, but in recalibration. Restoring the free flow of energy through critical waterways, stabilizing supply chains, and reengaging in meaningful diplomacy are essential steps. The alternative is a prolonged period of economic disruption with far-reaching consequences.
The Strait of Hormuz is no longer just a geographic chokepoint. It has become the pivot on which the global economy now turns.
war
Aftermath of Iran-US War and A. J. Muste’s Quotes:
There is No Way to Peace, Peace is the Way
Akhtar Hussain Sandhu
Chicago (USA)

Iran-US War and Islamabad peace facilitation prompt me to recall the famous quotes of Abraham Johannes Muste, a US-based civil rights and anti-nuclear-weapons activist. To him, nothing can lead to peace, but peace, in fact, facilitates a positive change in relations therefore, not circumstances or ways, but ‘peace’ itself proves a nucleus of attention in the crisis-packed situation in a society or world. Social scientists usually count the factors and circumstances leading to peace in a conflict at the societal and international level, but A. J. Muste believes that ‘peace’ is the greatest force that attracts rival protagonists to create understanding and end conflict. A. J. Muste opposed World War I and the US-Vietnam War and also opposed nuclear weaponry. He worked zealously and nonviolently for labor rights and civil liberties in the United States. The US-Israel led war against Iran on 28 February 2026 caused a catastrophic results and the continuous bombing destroyed Iran’s civil infrastructure, and approximately 180 schoolgirls were killed in an aerial attack. It was condemned by the masses in the US and other countries. Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz as a war tactic, which created a global oil crisis, and all countries’ economies experienced an overnight major setback. The US President changed his initial war objectives and focused on the reopening of the Hormuz because multiple nations were bashing the US President for his unethical war mongering ambition, which caused the energy crisis. US President Donald Trump first decided to isolate the US from this dangerous drive and declared that the affected countries should send their troops to open this sea route for their vessels, but in April 2026, he issued a furious statement that if Iran did not open the Strait of Hormuz, it would be eliminated from the earth. It caused panic in the world because this message meant a nuclear attack on Iran. If it happened, any power could justify the use of nuclear weapons against the rival country, and the world could be an unsafe and hellish place. It could also convince every country, including Iran, to have nuclear weapons in future because having nuclear weaponry was to be left as the only option to survive against a rival nuclear power. However, Pakistan, China, Russia, Egypt, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia, enjoying cordial relations with the US and Iran, ultimately brought a truce of two weeks, and both countries consented to dialogue in Islamabad on 10 April. Army Chief Gen. Asim Munir, PM Mian Shahbaz Sharif, and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar from Pakistan played a pivotal role in the ongoing parleys between the rival leaders. The ceasefire created an environment in which both camps claimed victory, and both seemed busy proving their military strength and muscles, but despite all, they are heading towards peace through dialogue. Threatening Statements by the US President even before a day before the negotiations is an evidence that the agreement (if it is concluded) would be presented as Iran’s surrender before the US might. A. J. Muste quotes that not circumstances, but ‘peace’ itself pushed the rival forces away from the battlefield. Once, a reporter questioned his presence as a protest in front of the White House: ” Can you change the White House? A. J. Muste replied. ‘I don’t do this to change the country. I do this so the country would not change me.’ The ruling elite always use the name of ‘state’ to change the people as it desires, but the state’s predilections change with the passage of time; therefore, to curb the citizens proves havoc for the social fabric. Dissatisfied masses can hardly produce a beneficial human resource that truly serves a nation. A. J. Must says that the problem after a war is that the victor shows the fight has brought a bright future, and war has paid the nation a lot. In their perception, the war was a new form of reform that would ensure prosperity and psychological pride for the people. Iran and the USA have both been claiming victories and asserting that the conflict has brought blessings. Both countries closed their eyes to the human sufferings and loss of innocent lives, wealth, economy, infrastructure, and hatred generated against each other. Peace proved its importance and motivated them to approach the neutral countries for a ceasefire, which means the war had crippled both the rivals to the extent that they were unable to talk even of ‘peace’, which shows the weakness and impotency of the so-called victors. A. J. Muste opines that no big power in the war accepts itself as an aggressor; instead, it is always the rival that is the aggressor.’ However, I think that every fighting country thinks of itself as a big force, therefore both become ‘big powers’ under their own justifications. Look at the arguments of the US and Iran that have been justifying their righteousness and aggression toward the rival according to their own national narratives. None of them is ready to accept any lapse on the side. Perhaps it happens amid internal and external threats to the political leadership, who twist events and arguments to secure their political position and national morale. This is another form of stress and aggression against peace, humanity, and righteousness. For example, many US military and other officials refused to attack Iran who must be consulted about their current thinking on their decision. A. J. Muste says that peace is impossible if people are only concerned with peace. A war is an outcome of different ways of life. If people desire to attack war, they have to attack that way of life.’ A. J. Muste here can be disagreed because way of life is always different, which does not mean to be in a battlefield all the time. I think he wants to say that if people dislike war, they should change their vision to one of living in societies with divergent ways of life. This quote reflects Muste’s desire that prosperity and civil liberties can change society, and by this, war maneuvering can be suffocated. AJ Must was a member of the Fellowship of Reconciliation in the US, which struggled against war hysteria and the violation of civil liberties and for labor rights. He delivered lectures in different universities on the nonviolent struggle for rights. He joined the Montgomery Bus Boycott, led by Martin Luther King, Jr., in 1955. A. J. Muste’s struggle is still admired by Americans and Europeans because he worked selflessly for humanity, peace, and the dignity of all races.
Writer is a US-based Historian & Colmunist
9 April 2026
war
PM Shehbaz, Starmer Hold Key Call on Regional Security UK Backs Pakistan’s Peace Initiatives and Ceasefire Efforts
Prime Minister’s Office
Media Wing
ISLAMABAD: 10 April 2026.
Prime Minister’s Telephone Call with Prime Minister Keir Starmer of the United Kingdom
Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif received a telephone call from Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, His Excellency Keir Starmer, this evening.
Prime Minister Starmer deeply appreciated Pakistan’s effective diplomatic efforts in facilitating the U.S.-Iran ceasefire, and the resumption of dialogue. He felicitated Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif on hosting the peace negotiations in Islamabad and offered his best wishes for the success of this endeavor.
Reaffirming Pakistan’s sincere commitment to regional peace and stability, Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif welcomed the joint statement issued by key European and international leaders, including Prime Minister Starmer, endorsing Pakistan’s peace initiatives.
Both leaders emphasized the importance of ensuring that the ceasefire remains in place and creates the necessary conditions for lasting peace and stability in the region.
The two leaders agreed to work together to lend fresh impetus to the longstanding friendly ties between Pakistan and the United Kingdom, across all spheres of mutual interest.
The Prime Minister reiterated his cordial invitation to Prime Minister Starmer to undertake an official visit to Pakistan.
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