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Israel and the US Retreat as Iran Emerges Victorious

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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 : In a stunning admission that has reshaped the geopolitical narrative of the Middle East, President Donald Trump and U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth effectively acknowledged the end of America’s direct military campaign against Iran. Declaring that “Epic Fury” had ended for all practical purposes and that “Operation Freedom” was now in effect, the United States quietly shifted from aggressive military confrontation to strategic disengagement.
Yet the most revealing statement came from Secretary Hegseth himself, who openly stated that the United States no longer considered the Strait of Hormuz its responsibility because America was not dependent on the waterway for its energy needs. According to Hegseth, those nations suffering from the closure of Hormuz should themselves use whatever diplomatic or military tools they possess to reopen the route.
This statement amounted to far more than a tactical adjustment. To many observers across the globe, it sounded like an open acknowledgment of strategic failure. The very war initiated by Israel and the United States had triggered the instability that closed Hormuz in the first place, yet now both powers appeared eager to walk away from the consequences while the rest of the world continued to suffer.
Before the war, the Strait of Hormuz functioned as one of the world’s most critical energy arteries, carrying nearly 20 percent of global oil shipments and a substantial portion of liquefied natural gas exports. The closure and militarization of the region following the conflict sent shockwaves through the global economy. Oil prices surged beyond $140 per barrel at several points during the crisis., while shipping insurance premiums multiplied several times over. Freight costs skyrocketed, disrupting global trade routes from Asia to Europe and Africa. What began as a military operation against Iran evolved into a worldwide economic earthquake affecting virtually every continent.
Asia bore some of the heaviest economic consequences. China, India, Japan, South Korea, Pakistan, and many Southeast Asian economies depend heavily on Gulf energy supplies. The disruption in oil shipments dramatically increased manufacturing costs, transportation expenses, and inflation across the region. China reportedly absorbed economic losses exceeding $400 billion through disrupted supply chains, higher energy costs, and slowing exports. India, already struggling with inflationary pressure, saw fuel prices surge and industrial growth slow sharply. Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and other developing Asian economies faced intensified economic distress as energy imports became unaffordable. Millions of vulnerable households across Asia were pushed deeper into poverty due to rising food, electricity, and transportation prices.
Europe also paid a heavy price for the war. Already weakened by years of economic slowdown, energy insecurity, and the lingering consequences of the Ukraine conflict, European economies suffered severe inflationary pressure from rising oil and gas prices. Germany’s industrial sector, heavily dependent on stable energy costs, experienced declining production. France, Italy, and Spain faced rising transportation and manufacturing expenses. Analysts estimated Europe’s direct and indirect war-related economic losses in the range of $350 to $500 billion through reduced growth, inflation, trade disruption, and financial instability. European stock markets experienced repeated volatility as investors feared prolonged instability in the Middle East.
Africa, despite having no involvement in the war itself, became one of its greatest humanitarian victims. Many African nations rely heavily on imported fuel and food. The spike in shipping and energy prices sharply increased the cost of basic necessities. Countries already struggling with debt, unemployment, and food insecurity faced worsening humanitarian crises. Transportation costs surged across East and West Africa, while inflation reduced purchasing power for millions of ordinary citizens. International aid agencies warned that the war indirectly pushed millions more people below the poverty line across Africa.
South America similarly experienced major economic disruption. Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and other economies dependent on global commodity markets suffered from rising shipping costs, weakening trade flows, and market uncertainty. Airlines across Latin America struggled with increased jet fuel prices, while agricultural exports became more expensive to transport. Currency volatility intensified as investors shifted toward safe-haven assets amid fears of broader global instability.
Even the United States itself suffered enormous economic consequences. While Washington argued that it was less dependent on Gulf oil, the integrated nature of the global economy meant that rising energy costs affected all Americans. Gasoline prices climbed sharply, mortgage rates remained elevated, airline costs increased, and supply chains faced renewed disruption. U.S. military expenditures surged into hundreds of billions of dollars as naval deployments, missile defense systems, logistics operations, and regional base protection consumed vast financial resources. The Congressional Budget Office and independent analysts estimated that the broader economic cost of the war to the United States could ultimately exceed $1 trillion when inflationary pressures, military spending, market instability, and indirect economic damage are included.
Israel also faced devastating consequences. The Israeli economy contracted sharply during the conflict, with reduced tourism, falling investment, declining consumer confidence, and repeated disruptions caused by missile attacks and mobilization costs. Israeli businesses faced uncertainty while infrastructure and military spending strained public finances. More importantly, Israel failed to achieve its central strategic objectives. Iran’s government remained intact. Iran’s missile and drone capabilities survived. Regional resistance networks in Lebanon and Gaza remained operational. Instead of emerging weakened, Iran emerged emboldened.
Indeed, the most profound geopolitical consequence of the war may be Iran’s transformed regional position. After surviving months of coordinated military pressure from both Israel and the United States, Tehran dramatically shifted its position. Iranian leaders now argue openly that negotiations can no longer revolve around limiting Iran’s capabilities. Instead, Tehran demands reparations for war damage, reconstruction of oil infrastructure, compensation for civilian casualties, recognition of Iranian sovereignty over Hormuz security arrangements, and an end to Israeli military operations in Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, and surrounding territories.
From Tehran’s perspective, the war proved that Iran could withstand the combined power of the United States and Israel while continuing to exert regional influence. Across much of the Global South, Iran increasingly presents itself as a symbol of resistance against Western military dominance. Even countries that do not politically align with Iran privately acknowledge that the conflict exposed the limits of American and Israeli military power in the twenty-first century.
Perhaps the clearest evidence of strategic failure lies in the final political reality itself. After months of military escalation, trillions in economic damage, global inflation, disrupted trade, and regional instability, the United States and Israel are now seeking disengagement while Iran stands politically unbroken. Washington’s own leadership now publicly signals that Hormuz is no longer America’s problem. Yet the closure of Hormuz was itself a direct consequence of the war launched by Israel and the United States.
History may ultimately remember this conflict not as a triumph of military power, but as a case study in strategic overreach. The United States and Israel entered the war promising deterrence, dominance, and regional transformation. Instead, they triggered global economic pain, strengthened Iran’s geopolitical standing, weakened confidence in Western leadership, and exposed the limitations of military force in an interconnected world. Today, while Washington and Tel Aviv search for an exit from the crisis, Iran stands defiant, presenting itself as the side that endured, resisted, and survived.

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The Great Decoupling of the United States and Israel

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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 : For more than half a century, the United States and Israel have been viewed as inseparable strategic partners in the Middle East. Successive American administrations, regardless of party affiliation, generally aligned their regional policies with Israel’s security concerns, often treating the two nations’ interests as largely identical.
Yet the diplomatic developments that followed the recent Iran war suggest that this assumption may no longer hold true. Rather, it is the beginning of something far more consequential: the gradual decoupling of American strategic interests from Israel’s broader regional agenda.
The clearest evidence of this shift is not coming from Tehran or Islamabad. It is coming from within the United States itself. The political shockwave generated by Tucker Carlson’s public break with the Republican Party illustrates a growing debate within conservative America.
Carlson, one of the most influential voices on the American right, declared that he could no longer support a political movement that, in his view, places the interests of a foreign country ahead of those of the United States. Whether one agrees with his conclusion or not, the significance lies in the fact that such criticism is no longer confined to the political fringes. Questions that were once whispered are now being discussed openly among conservatives, libertarians, progressives, and independent voters alike.
The debate intensified following the U.S.-Iran diplomatic initiative that emerged after the war. The architecture of this process is noteworthy. Rather than attempting to solve every dispute at once, the framework creates a pathway for addressing complex issues over time. The objective is not to produce instant solutions but to establish a structure capable of managing disagreements before they escalate into war.
Pakistan’s role in this process has been particularly significant. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian’s visit to Islamabad on 23rd June underscored the importance Tehran attaches to Pakistan’s mediation efforts. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif reaffirmed Pakistan’s commitment to facilitating dialogue and helping both sides move toward a durable peace. The symbolism was powerful: a regional Muslim power acting as a bridge between Washington and Tehran at a moment when military confrontation seemed inevitable only months earlier.
Yet the most important development may be the evolution of American objectives themselves. For years, Israeli strategic thinking has viewed Iran’s nuclear program, ballistic missile capability, drone industry, cyber warfare assets, Revolutionary Guard networks, and relationships with Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis as components of a single threat architecture. From this perspective, lasting security requires not merely preventing nuclear weaponization but substantially weakening Iran’s broader ability to project power throughout the region.
The emerging American position appears different. President Donald Trump has drawn a clear distinction between Iran’s nuclear ambitions and its conventional military capabilities. In remarks that surprised many observers, Trump argued that if neighboring states possess missiles, drones, cyber capabilities, and conventional deterrent forces, it would be difficult to justify denying Iran every means of self-defense.
Interestingly, the MOU is formally bilateral between Washington and Tehran, mediated by Pakistan and Qatar. But its effects reach Israel, Hezbollah, Hamas, the Houthis, Gaza, Lebanon, the Strait of Hormuz, and the GCC. None of these actors fully sits at the table. The assumption is simple: America will manage Israel and its Arab allies; Iran will manage Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis. If that assumption holds, the deal can reshape the region. If it fails, the Middle East may again slide into fire.
Israel is the elephant in the room. Netanyahu has already signaled that Israel reserves “full freedom of action” in Lebanon, even while Washington tries to stabilize the ceasefire. That statement exposes the central problem: America may want de-escalation, but Israel still wants operational freedom. If Israel refuses to follow Washington’s larger strategy, then the U.S. will have to decide whether it is a superpower or merely Israel’s security subcontractor.
These goals of the USA and Israel are not identical but divergent. This divergence became more visible when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reaffirmed Israel’s determination to maintain operational freedom in Lebanon, even as diplomatic efforts sought to stabilize ceasefire arrangements. While Washington is investing political capital in de-escalation and negotiation, Israel continues to conduct military operations against threats it considers immediate and existential.
The growing gap between these approaches represents the core of the emerging decoupling. The debate surrounding Senator Lindsey Graham, a close associate of Donald Trump and staunch supporter of Israel. Graham openly warned that if the talks failed, which he hoped will, President Trump would seize control of the Strait of Hormuz by force, place the strategic waterway under American control, and charge transit fees on commercial shipping to recover the costs of military operations. He further declared that if Iran resisted such a move, the United States would “obliterate” Iran.
More significantly, Graham linked the success or failure of the negotiations to a broader regional realignment involving the expansion of the Abraham Accords and the normalization of relations between Israel and key Arab states. His comments reflected the traditional strategic school that has dominated Middle East policy debates for decades: maintain maximum pressure, preserve overwhelming military leverage, and keep the option of force constantly on the table.
The implications of Israel’s manipulative ability extend beyond the USA. Across Western democracies and especially in the UK parliament, public debate is intensifying over the role of Israeli influence, its lobbying networks, campaign financing, and the relationship between national interests and alliance commitments. Discussions that once centered exclusively on security concerns now increasingly include questions about accountability, transparency, and whether governments are acting primarily in the interests of their own citizens.
Nevertheless, the direction of travel appears increasingly clear. America is beginning to define its Middle East strategy through the lens of American interests rather than through automatic alignment with the preferences of Israel.
The real story of the current negotiations is therefore larger than Iran, larger than Israel, and larger than any single agreement. It is the story of a superpower rediscovering the distinction between partnership and dependency, between alliance and alignment, between supporting an ally and adopting all of that ally’s objectives as its own.
If that trend continues, historians may one day view post-Iran-war diplomacy not merely as a ceasefire initiative, but as the moment when Washington began charting a more independent course in the Middle East. And that may prove to be the most significant geopolitical shift of all.

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Iran-USA Peace Deal Under Siege

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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 snow-capped mountains surrounding Switzerland’s Bürgenstock Resort provide a picture of serenity. Inside its conference halls, however, some of the most consequential negotiations of the 21st century are unfolding amid extraordinary tension, diplomatic maneuvering, political resistance, and strategic uncertainty. What began as a breakthrough framework between the United States and Iran has now evolved into a global contest between advocates of diplomacy and champions of perpetual confrontation. The fate of the emerging peace process may well determine not only the future of U.S.–Iran relations but also the economic stability of the world and the security architecture of the Middle East.
The technical negotiations now underway in Switzerland are intended to transform the recently signed Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding into a permanent settlement.
The framework, reached after months of indirect and direct diplomacy and supported by Pakistan and Qatar, established a 60-day roadmap for resolving some of the most dangerous disputes in the region, including nuclear issues, sanctions, frozen assets, regional security, and freedom of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz.
Reports from Switzerland indicate that Vice President JD Vance is leading the American delegation, while Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf represent Iran. Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Qatari officials continue to play an active mediating role.
Yet even before negotiators could settle into substantive discussions, the process encountered turbulence. President Donald Trump, seeking to reassure domestic critics and maintain pressure on Tehran, warned publicly that military action could resume if Iran violated its commitments or threatened regional stability.
Iran reacted sharply, by expressing its displeasure through diplomatic distance and symbolic gestures, reflecting the deep mistrust that continues to define relations between the two countries. Negotiations nevertheless continued, highlighting both the fragility and importance of the diplomatic track.
The strongest resistance to the agreement has emerged from hawkish political circles in Washington. Several influential Republican figures have criticized the framework, arguing that it grants Iran economic relief without permanently eliminating what they regard as the core security threats posed by Tehran.
Senator Bill Cassidy described the arrangement as a major strategic mistake. Senator Roger Wicker expressed concern that hard-won leverage was being surrendered too quickly. Senator Lindsey Graham questioned both the substance of the agreement and the broader diplomatic strategy surrounding it. Collectively, these critics argue that sanctions relief, asset unfreezing, and economic normalization provide benefits to Iran before sufficient security guarantees have been secured.
Supporters of the framework offer a different perspective. They argue that diplomacy succeeds not through the humiliation of one side but through the creation of incentives that encourage compliance and reduce incentives for conflict. They contend that years of sanctions, pressure campaigns, military operations, and threats have failed to produce a durable solution. If military force could permanently solve the dispute, they argue, the issue would have been resolved long ago.
The most dramatic opposition, however, has emerged from Israel. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly emphasized that Israel’s strategic objectives differ from those of Washington. Israeli officials continue to insist that any lasting arrangement must permanently eliminate Iran’s enrichment capabilities, constrain its missile programs, and weaken its regional network of allied groups. Netanyahu has publicly stated that Israel will continue pursuing its security objectives and will not permit Iran to acquire nuclear weapons.
Israeli leaders have also signaled that they intend to maintain military pressure against Hezbollah in Lebanon regardless of broader diplomatic developments.
This disagreement reveals a profound strategic divergence between Washington and Jerusalem. The Trump administration increasingly appears focused on preventing a wider regional war, stabilizing energy markets, reopening maritime trade routes, and reducing the economic burdens associated with prolonged military engagement. Israel, by contrast, remains focused on achieving what it views as decisive security outcomes against Iran and its regional allies. The resulting tension has produced one of the most visible policy disagreements between the two allies in recent years.
The Lebanon issue has become the most immediate manifestation of this divide. Reports from the negotiations suggest that Tehran has made developments in Lebanon a central issue during the Swiss discussions.
Iran argues that regional stability cannot be achieved while military operations continue on multiple fronts. Israel, meanwhile, insists that its campaign against Hezbollah remains essential to its national security. The dispute threatens to complicate implementation of the broader framework and demonstrates how interconnected Middle Eastern conflicts have become.
At the center of this diplomatic storm stand Pakistan and Qatar. Their role has evolved from facilitator to guardian of the process itself. Throughout months of negotiations, repeated setbacks, periods of military escalation, and diplomatic breakdowns, both countries continued to maintain channels of communication between adversaries who often appeared incapable of speaking directly to one another.
Pakistan, in particular, has emerged as an increasingly significant diplomatic actor. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s direct involvement and the participation of Pakistan’s senior leadership underscore Islamabad’s determination to secure a peaceful outcome. The mediators now face the difficult challenge of preserving momentum while managing crises generated by regional developments and domestic political pressures.
The stakes extend far beyond diplomacy. For the United States, the consequences involve energy prices, inflationary pressures, military expenditures, and broader strategic priorities.
For Iran, the negotiations offer a potential pathway toward economic recovery, reconstruction, reintegration into global markets, and relief from years of economic isolation.
For Europe, Asia, and energy-importing nations around the world, the stability of the Strait of Hormuz remains a matter of immense importance. Any renewed disruption would reverberate through global supply chains, financial markets, and national economies.
The negotiations therefore represent far more than a bilateral dispute. They are a test of whether diplomacy can prevail over entrenched hostility, whether compromise can overcome ideological rigidity, and whether regional powers can choose stability over confrontation.
History often remembers the battles that start wars. It pays far less attention to the exhausting negotiations required to end them. Today, in Switzerland, diplomats, mediators, and political leaders are engaged in precisely that difficult task. Their challenge is not merely to sign documents but to create enough confidence, accountability, and mutual interest to sustain peace beyond signatures and ceremonies.
The road ahead remains uncertain. Hawks in Washington continue to criticize the agreement. Israel remains skeptical and defiant. Iran remains cautious and distrustful.
Yet despite these obstacles, the talks continue. That fact alone offers a measure of hope. If the negotiators can withstand political pressure, regional spoilers, and domestic opposition, they may achieve something far more significant than a temporary truce: the foundation of a new strategic equilibrium in the Middle East.
The alternative—a return to escalation, confrontation, and economic disruption—is a prospect neither the region nor the world can afford.

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America and Israel Destroy, China Builds

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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 is witnessing two sharply different models of power. One is built on guns, wars, sanctions, blockades, occupations, assassinations, regime-change operations and destruction. The other is built on ports, roads, railways, power plants, industrial zones, trade corridors, reconstruction and development. The first model is represented most visibly by the United States and Israel. The second is increasingly associated with China.
History is full of evidence that the American model of global power has often revolved around war. Some wars may have been unavoidable, especially when great powers were pulled into global conflicts such as World War I and World War II. But many others were wars of choice, launched or prolonged to impose American will, reshape regions, control resources, punish governments, or demonstrate military supremacy. Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, Yemen, Iran and now the wider Middle East are all examples where American power has produced extraordinary destruction, displacement and instability.
The financial and human cost of this approach is staggering. World War II cost the United States more than $4 trillion in today’s dollars and caused over 405,000 American military deaths, while the global death toll exceeded 70 million. The American Civil War killed between 620,000 and 750,000 Americans. The Vietnam War cost around $1 trillion and killed more than 58,000 U.S. soldiers, besides millions of Vietnamese. The Korean War cost nearly $389 billion and killed over 36,000 American troops. The post-9/11 wars alone have cost around $8 trillion, according to Brown University’s Costs of War project, while direct violence killed more than 940,000 people and indirect consequences may have caused several million more deaths.
These wars did not merely kill soldiers. They destroyed homes, schools, universities, hospitals, bridges, factories, roads, water systems and entire economies. They triggered mass migrations that reshaped Europe, America and many other host countries, creating new social, cultural, religious and political tensions. The victims were not statistics. They were sons, fathers, mothers, daughters, workers, teachers, doctors, soldiers and civilians whose lives were crushed under the machinery of geopolitics.
Israel has acted as a miniature version of this same model in the Middle East. It has lived in permanent conflict with its neighbors and has repeatedly used overwhelming military force in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Iran and beyond. Its doctrine of retaliation is often grossly disproportionate: one rocket, one soldier, or one security incident is used to justify the destruction of entire apartment blocks, neighborhoods and civilian infrastructure. Gaza has been reduced to rubble. Lebanon has been repeatedly bombed. Iran has been targeted through airstrikes, sabotage and assassinations. The West Bank is being swallowed through occupation, settlements and military domination.
Even more dangerous is the growing use of civilian technology for military and assassination purposes. Phones, cameras, digital platforms, satellites, navigation systems and commercial data can be turned into tools of tracking, targeting and killing. When such technologies are used to assassinate officials, scientists, commanders or political figures across borders, it violates not only sovereignty but also the basic principles of international law and humanitarian conduct.
The recent war involving Iran, Israel and the United States has again exposed this destructive logic. According to the timeline reported by the Center for Preventive Action and several media outlets cited in that record, the conflict included U.S. strikes, Iranian retaliation, Israeli attacks in Lebanon and Iran, disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, damage to infrastructure, and serious questions over implementation of a U.S.-Iran framework agreement. By mid-June 2026, reports suggested a preliminary agreement that included a sixty-day cessation of hostilities, reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, phased sanctions relief, possible release of frozen Iranian assets, and a reported $300 billion private investment fund for Iran, with more than half already committed.
This is where the contrast becomes most striking. The countries that bombed, sanctioned, blockaded, occupied and destroyed are reluctant to pay for reconstruction. According to reported statements, the United States does not want to spend its own dollars rebuilding Iran, even though its military role contributed directly to the destruction. Instead, Washington wants other countries and private capital to finance recovery. This is the old imperial pattern: destroy with public military power, then outsource reconstruction to others.
China, by contrast, has stepped forward with a different language. Beijing has expressed sadness over the destruction in Iran and Lebanon and indicated willingness to participate in recovery and reconstruction. Even if the exact financial amount is not yet fully defined, the symbolism is powerful. While others dropped bombs, China offered to rebuild. While others destroyed roads, bridges, power stations and cities, China speaks of reconstruction, livelihood restoration and development.
This is not an isolated gesture. It fits China’s broader global strategy. The Belt and Road Initiative has become one of the largest development and connectivity programs in modern history. Its cumulative global financial engagement has reportedly reached around $1.399 trillion, including roughly $837 billion in construction contracts and $561 billion in non-financial corporate investments. Around 150 countries have joined the BRI through agreements with Beijing. In 2025 alone, BRI engagement reportedly reached $213.5 billion across hundreds of deals.
The economic impact is immense. Trade between China and BRI partner countries has reached nearly $19.1 trillion over the decade. BRI countries now account for roughly half of China’s exports and more than half of its imports. The initiative has financed roads, ports, railways, power plants, industrial parks, mining projects, renewable energy, digital networks and manufacturing facilities. In 2025 alone, reported BRI activity included $93.9 billion in energy, $32.6 billion in mining and metals, and $28.7 billion in technology and manufacturing.
Pakistan is one of the clearest examples. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, officially launched in 2015, became the flagship project of the BRI. Its first phase was initially valued at $46 billion and later expanded to about $62 billion. Around $33 billion was directed toward energy projects, including coal, solar and transmission infrastructure. About $11 billion went into transport infrastructure, including road modernization and strategic connectivity. Other funds supported Gwadar, urban transport, industrial development and communications.
The results are visible. Pakistan, once crippled by energy shortages, added thousands of megawatts of electricity generation capacity. Projects such as the Port Qasim Coal Power Project, Quaid-e-Azam Solar Power Park, Orange Line Metro Train in Lahore, road networks, Gwadar development and transmission lines changed the country’s infrastructure landscape. Around $25 billion has reportedly already been executed across dozens of completed or operational ventures. CPEC Phase II now aims to move beyond roads and energy into industrialization, agriculture modernization, special economic zones, mining, IT, research, corporate farming, small and medium enterprises and export-led growth.
This is how China projects power: by creating dependencies, yes, but also by creating assets. A road remains after the ceremony ends. A power plant keeps producing electricity. A port creates jobs. A railway connects markets. An industrial zone gives people work. A reconstructed bridge restores life. Whether one supports or criticizes Chinese policy, its method of influence is fundamentally different from the method of bombs and blockades.
The lesson for the developing world is clear. A country may be destroyed by military might, but a nation cannot be won by destruction. Fear can silence people temporarily, but respect is earned by helping them live, work, trade, travel and prosper. The United States and Israel may win battles through firepower, but China is winning influence through infrastructure, investment and reconstruction. In the end, history will not only remember who fired the missiles. It will also remember who rebuilt the bridges.

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