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“Israel: A U.S. Outpost to Exploit Middle East Resources”

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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 world has long decried Israel’s brutal campaign in Gaza. From charred hospitals and bombed refugee camps to the anguished cries of children buried beneath rubble, the imagery emerging from the Strip has rightly shocked global conscience. Yet the real puppeteer of this unending carnage is not Tel Aviv—it is Washington, D.C.
A chilling interview from the early 1980s by then-Senator Joe Biden revealed the U.S. logic behind Israel’s existence. Biden stated bluntly: “If there were not an Israel, the United States of America would have to invent an Israel to protect her interests in the region.” This was not a passing remark—it was a declaration of strategic doctrine. Israel is not merely a nation-state to the U.S.; it is an outpost of American power projection, a regional gendarme tasked with ensuring U.S. supremacy in the Middle East.
This context clarifies why the U.S. continues to bankroll Israel’s military-industrial complex with unwavering zeal. Since 1948, Washington has provided over $300 billion in aid to Israel—most of it military. In 2023 alone, despite deepening deficits and rising domestic discontent, the Biden administration approved $14.3 billion in additional military aid for Israel amid the Gaza war, bringing the annual military aid total to nearly $4 billion. This funding flows even as the world watches Gaza transform into what European commentators now call a “slaughterhouse.”
Eyewitness testimonies from international doctors and aid workers reinforce this grim reality. In a recent televised interview, a British trauma surgeon broke down in tears recalling the story of a Gazan child whose limbs were blown off while she watched her siblings die beside her. The doctor’s raw anguish mirrored a deeper horror: if frontline humanitarian workers are emotionally shattered by what they’ve seen, how can the leaders who finance the machinery of this devastation remain unmoved?
The answer lies in the structural alliance between the U.S. and Israel. This is not a partnership of equals. It is a symbiosis in which the U.S. leverages Israel to control the Middle East—its oil, its politics, and its people. From U.S. military bases in Bahrain, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia to drone strikes and surveillance coordination across the region, Washington’s grip is not only firm but deliberately hidden beneath the veil of Israeli action.
Consider the latest developments during Iran’s missile retaliation following Israeli strikes on its consulates in Damascus—attacks that killed Iranian military leaders. When Tehran responded with a barrage of missiles and drones, it wasn’t only Israel that scrambled to intercept them. U.S. forces from CENTCOM, using air defense assets stationed in Jordan, Iraq, and aboard naval carriers in the Mediterranean, actively participated in downing Iranian projectiles. The message was clear: in any war involving Israel, the U.S. is not just a supporter—it is a combatant.
Meanwhile, in global forums meant to uphold peace and human dignity, America’s duplicity becomes even more glaring. At the UN Security Council, multiple humanitarian resolutions—such as those demanding a ceasefire or the restoration of aid to starving Gazans—have been passed with near-unanimous international support. Each time, the U.S. stood alone in vetoing these motions. No explanation suffices for a country that claims moral leadership yet blocks food, water, and medicine from reaching dying civilians.
This moral collapse is now triggering a domestic reckoning. In universities across America, students are staging sit-ins, hunger strikes, and mass protests condemning U.S. complicity in what is widely being described as genocide. Hollywood celebrities, congressional staffers, and even Pentagon insiders have voiced dissent. A January 2025 Gallup poll showed a dramatic shift: 63% of Americans under 35 now disapprove of U.S. military aid to Israel, up from 29% just a year earlier. This generational rupture suggests that Washington’s pro-Israel orthodoxy is rapidly losing legitimacy at home.
The façade of Israel as a sovereign actor also cracks when one examines intelligence cooperation. The CIA, NSA, and Mossad are now known to operate in near-total synchronization. From satellite surveillance and cyberwarfare to human intelligence networks, the boundaries between American and Israeli operations are increasingly blurred. This integration was vividly demonstrated during joint U.S.-Israel military exercises simulating strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, including rehearsals for air dominance and precision bombardment of underground bunkers.
Moreover, the U.S. arms Israel with the very weapons used to decimate Gaza. In just the first three months of the 2023-2024 war, Washington approved emergency weapons shipments including 2,000-pound bunker-buster bombs, white phosphorus artillery, and guidance kits for JDAM precision munitions—all used in densely populated civilian areas. These are not defensive tools; they are instruments of annihilation.
The argument that the U.S. is merely reacting to Israeli aggression no longer holds water. Washington is not following—it is leading. The Biden administration has framed its Middle East policy as a defense of “democratic values,” but what democracy sanctions mass child casualties, systematic starvation, and the razing of hospitals and schools?
Nowhere is this hypocrisy more visible than in Washington’s handling of the International Criminal Court. When the ICC sought arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes, the U.S. didn’t simply reject the ruling—it threatened the court. Biden called the ICC action “outrageous,” and Congress introduced bipartisan bills to sanction ICC judges. In short, the U.S. declared war on international law to shield its regional proxy from justice.
This pattern is not new. From the invasion of Iraq under false pretenses to drone strikes in Yemen and extrajudicial killings in Pakistan and Afghanistan, America’s history in the Middle East is soaked in blood. But what makes the Gaza war different is that the mask has finally slipped. The world sees that the genocide is not just Israel’s—it is America’s. The billions in aid, the vetoes at the UN, the logistical coordination, and the political cover: all roads lead to Washington.
It is time for the world—and especially for Americans—to recalibrate their outrage. The protests outside Israeli embassies must now extend to the steps of the White House and Capitol Hill. The real accountability must be demanded not just of those dropping bombs, but of those writing the checks, scripting the strategy, and supplying the impunity.
Joe Biden’s old confession was prophetic. Israel was created, nurtured, and empowered not for its own sake but to serve U.S. hegemony. The tragedy is that this alliance has now birthed one of the gravest humanitarian catastrophes of the 21st century.
And if the world fails to confront the root of this horror, it won’t just be Gaza that burns. It will be the last embers of global justice itself.

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Tucker Carlson’s Revolt Against America’s Israel Policy

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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 : If there is one American media figure who has done more than any other to rupture the long-standing conservative consensus on Israel, it is Tucker Carlson. A son of a diplomat and a deeply patriotic American, Carlson has positioned himself as the most relentless critic of Israel’s outsized influence over U.S. foreign policy, congressional decision-making, business networks and geopolitical strategy. In his telling, Washington’s reflexive alignment with Israel has drawn the United States into wars, drained its treasury and compromised its sovereignty.
That argument was on full display in February 2026 at Ben-Gurion Airport, where Carlson conducted a combative, two-and-a-half-hour interview with U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee. Carlson accused American officials of “prioritizing Israel” over their own country, pressing Huckabee over civilian casualties in Gaza, biblical rhetoric invoked by Israeli leaders, extradition disputes and the scale of U.S. military aid.
Carlson’s contention was blunt: if American taxpayers provide billions in assistance — at least $16.3 billion in direct military aid since October 2023, with broader estimates exceeding $21 billion — then American officials have a duty to ask hard questions. He framed the issue as a defense of U.S. sovereignty. Why, he asked, should a prosperous, technologically advanced nation with a strong per-capita income require continuous American subsidy?
During the interview, Carlson raised the issue of Christian casualties in Gaza and the West Bank, as well as the destruction of churches, hospitals, and schools operated by Christian communities. He questioned the ambassador about reports that Christian civilians had been killed and Christian institutions damaged during military operations. The ambassador acknowledged that such incidents had occurred, describing them as unintended consequences of war and stating that Israel had expressed regret over those events.
The debate intensified when the ambassador argued that Christians enjoy greater protection in Israel than in many Muslim-majority countries. Carlson challenged that assertion, claiming that there are more Christians in Qatar alone than in Israel. He further argued that Qatar has provided land for churches, schools, and hospitals and that Christians there live openly and peacefully. In contrast, Carlson alleged that Christians in Israel face intimidation and harassment and that their numbers have declined in recent years due to emigration.
While referring to the Epstein files that have been made public in the United States, Carlson raised the issue of connections between Jeffrey Epstein, the established paedophile and blackmailer and Israeli intelligence agency Mossad, and the present President and former prime ministers of Israel. He said that Israel used Epstein’s facility to compromise influential political figures, royalty, senators, and members of Congress through illicit activities involving minors and used their engagement as a blackmailing tool to garner support for Israel in the important decision making in Washington and other influential political capitals. He confronted the Ambassador to hold the Israelis accomplices of Epstein accountable. The Ambassador admitted the connection between Epstein and Mossad but evaded the question by stating the responsibility for prosecuting crimes committed on U.S. soil lies with American authorities, since Epstein operated primarily within the United States.
During the interview, Carlson directly confronted a theological claim of Israel for the land promised to them by God “from the Nile to the Euphrates.” He pointed out that, if interpreted literally in contemporary geopolitical terms, such a claim would encompass parts of present-day Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and beyond.
Carlson pressed the ambassador on whether this scriptural narrative could justify territorial expansion under the banner of a so-called “Greater Israel.” In response, the ambassador said that if Israel conquered those territories then why not. The tone and tenor of the Ambassador clearly suggested that he was aligned with the Israel dream of greater Israel and was playing his part to pursue the elusive Israeli dream.
During the exchange, Carlson raised the issue of civilian casualties, specifically asking about how thousands of children had been killed during Israeli military operations. The ambassador acknowledged that large numbers of civilians, including thousands of children, have died in the conflict, but maintained that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) attempt to minimize civilian harm even much better than the US army does.
Carlson then pressed further, asking whether the ambassador was implying that the U.S. military operates with lower moral standards than the IDF. In response, the ambassador cited historical examples of American warfare, including the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the flattening of the entire Germany during World War-IIduring and civilian casualties in Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan. The Ambassador seemed so bought up by Israel that in defence of the IDF that he blamed the US army as worse than the IDF, clearly reflecting where his loyalties are and how, instead of defending the interests of the US in Israel, he was defending Israel which was against the term of employment of an Ambassador.
Under the Vienna Convention an ambassador’s foremost duty is to represent and protect the interests of the sending state—not to advocate for the host country. In a high-profile interview, the ideal ambassadorial posture would have re-centered the discussion on U.S. interests rather than theological or expansionist narratives.
Now the question has been raised as to why Israel has strengthened its regional deterrence capabilities while the United States has borne significant costs—deploying troops, maintaining military bases across the region, committing naval assets to protect sea lanes and allied interests, and providing substantial financial and military assistance. They argue that this burden has placed American personnel and infrastructure at heightened risk while increasing fiscal and geopolitical strain.
As a result of Carlson’s crusade against Israel’s tyranny in Gaza, West Bank, Lebanon, Syria, Qatar and Iran and its support based in Congress, Senate and White House, according to Pew Research Center, the public’s views of Israel have turned more negative over the past three years. More than half of U.S. adults (53%) now express an unfavorable opinion of Israel, up from 42% in March 2022 – before the Hamas attack of Oct. 7, 2023, and the ensuing Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip.
What began as a series of interviews has now evolved into a defining ideological confrontation within American conservatism. Carlson is not merely questioning battlefield tactics or diplomatic language; he is challenging the moral, financial, and strategic foundations of America’s unconditional alignment with Israel. By forcing senators and ambassadors to defend casualty figures, regime-change rhetoric, and billions in aid, he has exposed a widening rift between interventionist orthodoxy and nationalist restraint. Whether one views his campaign as courageous accountability or destabilizing provocation, it has undeniably shattered the illusion of consensus. The Republican Party may still stand institutionally with Israel, but the grassroots conversation has changed — and once a foreign policy doctrine is dragged into open public trial, it rarely returns to unquestioned authority.

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‘National security is non-negotiable’: Parliamentary secretary on Afghanistan strikes

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ISLAMABAD: Parliamentary Secretary for Information and Broadcasting Barrister Danyal Chaudhry on Monday stressed that national security was “non-negotiable” after Pakistan carried out strikes on terrorist targets in Afghanistan, killing over 80 terrorists.

“Pakistan has always chosen the path of dialogue and peaceful coexistence. But when Afghan soil continues to be used for proxy attacks, we have no choice but to defend our homeland. National security is non-negotiable,” Chaudhry said in a statement.

The PML-N MNA affirmed that the people of Pakistan “stand firmly” with their armed forces in the fight against terrorism.

He urged the Afghan government to take “decisive action to prevent its land from being used for cross-border militancy”, warning that lasting peace in the region depended on the “complete dismantling of terrorist sanctuaries”.

Noting that the recent operation “successfully neutralised militants involved in attacks on Pakistani soil”, Chaudhry stressed: “This action was aimed solely at those responsible for violent attacks inside Pakistan. Every precaution was taken to protect innocent lives.”

He also pointed to Afghanistan’s emergence as a “sanctuary for multiple terrorist groups”. Referring to a United Nations report, he noted that militants from 21 terror outfits were operating from Afghan territory, posing a serious threat to regional stability.

He specifically called out India’s “continued support for terrorist networks”.

“India is actively funding and training these groups, equipping them to carry out cross-border attacks against Pakistan. Such elements deserve no concessions,” the parliamentary secretary asserted.

His remarks came after Pakistan carried out airstrikes on Afghanistan in a retaliatory operation targeting groups responsible for recent suicide bombings in Pakistan.

The strikes killed “more than 80 terrorists”, according to security sources.

The strikes were conducted in retaliation for a series of suicide attacks in IslamabadBajaur, and Bannu that had claimed the lives of Pakistani security personnel and civilians. Authorities described the operation as intelligence-based and proportionate, aimed solely at those responsible for the attacks.

‘Decisive struggle against terrorism’

Separately, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Governor Faisal Karim Kundi asserted that the country will “not allow our soil to be destabilised by forces operating from across the border in Afghanistan”.

In a post on X, he said: “The citizens of Pakistan, especially the resilient people of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, stand firmly with our armed forces and security institutions in the defense of our homeland.”

He further said: “The sacrifices of our martyrs bind us together as one nation. In this decisive struggle against terrorism, Pakistan stands united, resolute, and unwavering.

“Our sovereignty is non-negotiable, and the people of this country stand shoulder to shoulder with the state to protect it at all costs.”

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More than 1,500 Venezuelan political prisoners apply for amnesty

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A total of 1,557 Venezuelan political prisoners have applied for amnesty under a new law introduced on Thursday, the country’s National Assembly President has said.

Jorge Rodríguez, brother of Venezuelan interim President Delcy Rodríguez and an ally of former President Nicolás Maduro, also said “hundreds” of prisoners had already been released.

Among them is politician Juan Pablo Guanipa, one of several opposition voices to have criticised the law for excluding certain prisoners.

The US has urged Venezuela to speed up its release of political prisoners since US forces seized Maduro in a raid on 3 January. Venezuela’s socialist government has always denied holding political prisoners.

At a news conference on Saturday Jorge Rodríguez said 1,557 release requests were being addressed “immediately” and ultimately the legislation would extend to 11,000 prisoners.

The government first announced days after Maduro’s capture, on 8 January, that “a significant number” of prisoners would be freed as a goodwill gesture.

Opposition and human rights groups have said the government under Maduro used detentions of political prisoners to stamp out dissent and silence critics for years.

These groups have also criticised the new law. One frequently cited criticism is that it would not extend amnesty to those who called for foreign armed intervention in Venezuela, BBC Latin America specialist Luis Fajardo says.

He noted that law professor Juan Carlos Apitz, of the Central University of Venezuela, told CNN Español that that part of the amnesty law “has a name and surname”. “That paragraph is the Maria Corina Machado paragraph.”

It is not clear if the amnesty would actually cover Machado, who won last year’s Nobel Peace Prize, Fajardo said.

He added that other controversial aspects of the law include the apparent exclusion from amnesty benefits of dozens of military officers involved in rebellions against the Maduro administration over the years.

On Saturday, Rodríguez said it is “releases from Zona Seven of El Helicoide that they’re handling first”.

Those jailed at the infamous prison in Caracas would be released “over the next few hours”, he added.

Activists say some family members of those imprisoned in the facility have gone on hunger strike to demand the release of their relatives.

US President Donald Trump said that El Helicoide would be closed after Maduro’s capture.

Maduro is awaiting trial in custody in the US alongside his wife Cilia Flores and has pleaded not guilty to drugs and weapons charges, saying that he is a “prisoner of war”.

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