war
Russia’s Pearl Harbor: Escalating the Horrors of War
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : In a dramatic escalation of the ongoing conflict, Ukraine launched a highly sophisticted drone strike on Russian airbases, reportedly damaging and destroying a substantial portion of Moscow’s strategic bomber fleet. This operation, codenamed “Spiderweb,” involved the deployment of 117 AI-guided drones, which targeted five key Russian airbases across regions including Murmansk, Irkutsk, Ivanovo, Ryazan, and Amur. The attack resulted in the destruction and severe damage of over 40 aircraft, including Tu-95, Tu-22M3, Tu-160 bombers, and A-50 airborne early warning and control aircraft. The damage to Russia has been estimated to be round $7 billion, marking a significant blow to Russia’s long-range aerial capabilities.
The timing of this strike coincided with peace talks in Istanbul, mediated by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. The peace talks highlighted the fundamentally opposing objectives of Russia and Ukraine. Russia demands recognition of its control over annexed territories, including Crimea and four other regions, the withdrawal of Ukrainian forces, and a commitment from Ukraine to remain neutral and non-aligned, effectively preventing NATO membership .
Conversely, Ukraine insists on the complete withdrawal of Russian troops, the restoration of its territorial integrity, and security guarantees from Western countries to prevent further aggression. Ukraine also seeks the prosecution of Russian leaders for war crimes and the return of abducted Ukrainian children.
The latest attack—an advanced, high-tech, and professionally maneuvered drone strike—has dealt a severe blow to Russia. If such attacks continue and Russia finds itself unable to respond with conventional forces in kind, there is a growing possibility that Moscow may seriously consider the use of tactical nuclear weapons.
Russia may seek not only to counterbalance the damage inflicted but also to punish those directly involved in planning, executing, and supporting the operation. This could mean that Russia may expand the scope of the war, targeting European capitals that have been providing aid and resources to Ukraine—actions which have now become a significant concern for the United States and its allies, as the war risks spiraling beyond its current boundaries.
By striking deep into the heart of Russia with such precision and devastation, Ukraine has gained a position of relative strength compared to Moscow, a factor that will provide Kyiv with greater bargaining leverage in any potential future negotiations—if such talks materialize at all. However, Russia is even more astute. It is unlikely to enter into any meaningful negotiation from a position of weakness.
Instead, Russia will likely seek to counterbalance the damage inflicted upon it, and may even surpass Ukraine’s gains with its own retaliatory strikes, in order to restore its strategic advantage before considering any talks. This tit-for-tat escalation is a profoundly dangerous dynamic, one that risks undermining any prospects for peace and threatens to prolong and intensify the conflict between the two nations
As the war drags into its fourth year, both Russia and Ukraine—along with their allies in Europe and the United States—are beginning to grasp the immense toll this war has taken. Russia has sustained military losses exceeding $94 billion as of May 2025, with inflation and a weakened ruble further straining its economy. Ukraine’s economy has been crippled, with a cumulative GDP loss of $120 billion, infrastructure damages topping $1 trillion, and reconstruction needs projected at a staggering $524 billion—nearly triple its pre-war GDP. Meanwhile, European allies have not been spared: German companies alone faced losses of at least €200 billion in 2022, particularly in the automotive, energy, and chemical sectors, as the sanctions and war-driven economic disruptions ripple across the continent. The war is bleeding resources, depleting tax bases, and pushing all involved nations toward economic strain.
The countries directly or indirectly involved in this conflict are draining their national wealth in a futile pursuit of land, power, and hegemony, while other nations, uninvolved in the war, are conserving their resources and channeling them into productive investments: building modern infrastructure, advancing research and development, exploring space, and fostering innovation. As a result, the economies of the United States, Russia, Europe, and their allies will bear the long-term costs of this war, while their adversaries—particularly China, which has been labeled a strategic competitor—will continue to grow stronger. China stands to benefit the most from this prolonged conflict, as the Western powers exhaust themselves financially, militarily, and diplomatically, effectively handing Beijing the advantage on the global stage.
Ukraine, heavily reliant on Western support, faces the risk of donor fatigue. Ukrainian officials have expressed concerns about growing donor fatigue, noting a $43 billion budget shortfall for 2024. Conversely, Russia, with its larger economy and resources, may continue to absorb the war’s costs, albeit at the expense of its own economic stability.
The recent talks in Istanbul, while limited in progress, have set the stage for potential future negotiations involving Presidents Putin, Zelenskyy, and Trump. For meaningful dialogue to occur, both sides must address the core issues: territorial integrity, security guarantees, and the future of Ukraine’s alignment with Western institutions.
This is perhaps a shorter and more intense replica of the First and Second World Wars, where alliances were drawn, and massive resources were expended. Now, allies are on one side, and Russia is on the other, both depleting their resources and indirectly enabling their adversaries to gain strength. The solution to this quagmire lies in recognizing the mutual losses and the unintended empowerment of non-involved nations.
It would be naive to think that European leaders and the USA have not calculated these aspects—their own losses and the strengthening of their adversaries—while they continue to fund and fuel the war. Sanity should prevail among all parties. The conflict results in losses for Russia, Ukraine, and their allies, while those outside the conflict stand to gain.
The entire geopolitical landscape is undergoing a profound shift due to this war, with a heightened possibility of shrinking the economic, trade, investment, business, and military influence of the warring nations—primarily European powers this time—while simultaneously creating space for their adversaries to expand. Let us hope that sanity will prevail sooner rather than later, bringing an end to the erosion of the geopolitical space of the warring parties and, conversely, halting the encroachment of their adversaries into their traditional spheres of influence.
war
Scholars Urge UN to Protect Iran’s Scientific Sites Amid Airstrikes Global Academics Warn Attacks Threaten Research, Health, and Civilian Safety
LONDON / GENEVA / PARIS / NEW YORK (Shabnam Delfani) — A broad coalition of academics, researchers, students, and members of the international scholarly community has issued a strongly worded open letter condemning a series of strikes on universities, laboratories, hospitals, and research facilities in Iran, urging immediate international action to safeguard civilian scientific infrastructure amid the ongoing U.S.-Israeli military operations against the country.

The letter, addressed to United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk, and the governments of all parties involved, highlights at least 21 reported attacks on scientific and educational institutions. It warns that such assaults endanger researchers, students, medical personnel, and the broader public while inflicting irreversible damage on scientific progress and societal well-being.
Recent strikes between March 28 and 31, 2026, have drawn particular alarm. Attacks targeted Isfahan University of Technology in Isfahan, as well as Iran University of Science and Technology and Amirkabir University of Technology in Tehran. On March 31, one of Iran’s largest pharmaceutical research and development centers, Tofigh Daru (also known as Tofiq Daru), was severely damaged. The facility is a major producer of anesthetics and critical treatments for multiple sclerosis and cancer.
“Scientific and educational institutions are civilian spaces essential to public health, knowledge, and human survival,” the open letter declares. “Their destruction endangers researchers, students, medical personnel, and the broader public, while causing lasting harm to science and society.”
The signatories issue a forceful call for all parties to the conflict to immediately cease attacks on civilian scientific and educational sites, including laboratories, universities, hospitals, research centers, libraries, and archives. They further demand that the United Nations, UNESCO, and other relevant international bodies take concrete steps: thoroughly document the damage inflicted on these institutions, provide protection and support to affected scholars and students, launch independent investigations into potential violations of international humanitarian law, and ensure that those responsible for unlawful strikes on protected civilian infrastructure are identified and held accountable through impartial legal mechanisms.
“Science is not a military target. Universities and laboratories must not become battlefields,” the letter asserts. It concludes with an urgent appeal to the international community to act decisively to protect scientific infrastructure, defend academic life, and uphold the fundamental principle that institutions dedicated to the advancement of knowledge must never be treated as expendable in times of war.
In response to the escalating strikes, Iranian officials have warned of possible retaliation against American and Israeli-linked academic campuses in the region, raising fears of a dangerous widening of the conflict into educational spheres.
The open letter, signed collectively by “academics, researchers, students, and members of the global scholarly community,” underscores the long-standing international consensus on preserving the sanctity of scientific and educational institutions even amid geopolitical tensions and armed conflict. It stresses that safeguarding academic freedom and scientific capacity serves the collective well-being of humanity and must be defended against future assaults.
This appeal comes as reports continue to emerge of significant material damage to Iranian academic and medical research facilities, with some accounts noting injuries among university staff. The global scholarly community’s unified stance reflects growing concern that the targeting of Iranian Scientists and knowledge-producing institutions threatens not only Iran but the broader fabric of international scientific cooperation.
Please Sign: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd9yA3741PhNbeae-pWxiNU-buR5PJTgi5lYHXmvB11ZoMybA/viewform
war
Iran on the Brink of a Ground War
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : Frustration is now visible on all sides of the U.S.-Israel war against Iran. After weeks of bombardment, strategic signaling, and diplomatic theater, the central objectives publicly associated with Washington and Tel Aviv still appear only partially achieved. The Strait of Hormuz remains the decisive choke point, Iranian retaliatory capacity has not been extinguished, and the war has entered its second month with fresh troop deployments rather than a settled outcome. Reuters reported on March 30 that thousands of U.S. Army paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne had arrived in the Middle East, joining Marines and other forces already in theater, while officials acknowledged that these deployments increase capacity for possible incursions into Iranian territory, including operations linked to Kharg Island and Hormuz security.
That is why the current moment is so dangerous. Even if a full-scale invasion still remains unlikely, the line between a “limited mission” and an expanding war is historically thin. The United States may initially contemplate a narrow ground operation: seizure of a strategic island, raids on coastal batteries threatening shipping, or even a special operation linked to Iran’s uranium stockpile. Yet history shows that once a great power commits troops and begins receiving body bags in return, its political logic changes. Retaliation produces counter-retaliation. A war presented as surgical starts demanding prestige, vengeance, and escalation. Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan all demonstrated that limited entry rarely guarantees limited exit.
The strategic motives behind such a move are not difficult to understand. Kharg Island is Iran’s principal oil export hub. The Strait of Hormuz carries a huge share of the world’s seaborne oil trade. Control of both would give Washington leverage over global energy flows while denying Tehran its most potent geoeconomic weapon.
At the same time, Iran’s expanding stockpile of highly enriched uranium remains a central concern. Reuters, citing the IAEA, reported earlier this month that Iran held about 440.9 kilograms of uranium enriched up to 60%, material that in theory could be further enriched for roughly 10 nuclear weapons. That figure alone explains why any U.S. operational planning would include not only maritime control and coercive strikes, but also thoughts of raids tied to nuclear assets.
But Iran is not waiting passively for such a contingency. Its parliament speaker has warned that Tehran sees public talk of negotiations as a cover for secret planning for a land assault, and Iranian leaders have vowed to burn any invading force and punish regional partners. Whether or not every Iranian threat is executable, the central point stands: Iran has prepared for attritional resistance, dispersal, underground storage, missile retaliation, drones, and proxy expansion. That means even a limited U.S. ground assault would not occur in a vacuum. It would likely trigger attacks on American bases, shipping lanes, partner infrastructure, and perhaps multiple secondary fronts beyond Iran itself.
This is why the destruction of civilian infrastructure now being threatened is so morally revealing. If ports, roads, bridges, refineries, and power systems are systematically targeted, the principal victims will not be the bunker-protected leadership or deeply buried military networks. The true burden will fall upon ordinary Iranians who never built shelters, never planned for prolonged blackout, and never volunteered to become the human cushion of a geopolitical struggle. Iranian missiles have already damaged Israel’s Haifa refinery complex and widening regional attacks affecting energy installations and bases. Such escalation shows that the war is moving beyond military targets into the economic bloodstream of entire societies.
The illusion that negotiations will easily stop this spiral is also fading. Pakistan has emerged as the most active intermediary, hosting regional discussions and preparing to facilitate U.S.-Iran talks in the coming days. Yet the diplomatic gap remains profound. Washington has promoted a 15-point framework; Iran has publicly rejected it and insists on sovereignty, security, and an end to attacks. Reuters noted on March 30 that Islamabad is preparing to host these efforts, but there was still no confirmation that any direct, substantive breakthrough had been achieved. In other words, the parties remain boxed inside terms that each side fears would amount to capitulation.
Meanwhile, the battlefield itself is expanding horizontally. Israel has widened pressure in Lebanon, the Houthis are threatening to reopen a Red Sea front, and the Saudi dimension has already become more exposed after Iran-linked strikes wounded U.S. personnel at Prince Sultan Air Base. Once Hormuz and the Red Sea are both destabilized, the consequences no longer belong only to Tehran, Tel Aviv, or Washington. They belong to Europe, Asia, Australia, South America, and every economy dependent on fuel, shipping insurance, manufacturing inputs, and stable freight routes. Reuters reported that the war’s energy shock is already dimming the outlook for many economies, according to the IMF.
In this background, four scenarios emerge. The first, and in my judgment the most likely, is a prolonged air-maritime war without a deep occupation of Iran. In this scenario, Washington and Israel continue heavy strikes while avoiding the political and military cost of trying to march into Iran’s interior. The second is a limited U.S. ground raid or seizure of a strategic site such as Kharg Island or coastal launch areas near Hormuz. The third is a negotiated de-escalation through Pakistani and regional mediation. The fourth, least likely but most catastrophic, is a broader regime-change campaign with sustained U.S. ground presence inside Iran.
My own estimate is this: a prolonged high-intensity war without major occupation carries about a 45% probability; a limited ground incursion about 25%; negotiated de-escalation about 20%; and a broad regime-change invasion about 10%. Those figures are not certainties, only judgments based on current force posture, public rhetoric, and the historical reluctance of Washington to bear the cost of long occupation when air and naval coercion can still be intensified. But the most important warning is that even a 25% chance of limited ground action contains within it the seed of a much wider war. Once U.S. boots hit Iranian soil and resistance produces American casualties, domestic pressure in Washington may drive escalation far beyond the original mission.
If the United States “wins,” it may reopen shipping, damage Iran’s missile and naval capacity, and perhaps enforce a new nuclear arrangement. But such a win would still leave behind an unstable region, a humiliated but not necessarily pacified society, and a new cycle of insurgent or proxy retaliation. If Iran holds the line and turns even limited ground operations into a grinding trap, the defeat would be historic, not merely military but psychological, undermining U.S.-Israeli coercive credibility across the region. If negotiations somehow succeed, the outcome will not be friendship. It will be an ugly compromise designed to stop the bleeding.
That is why the world stands at a catastrophic juncture. The danger is not only that a ground assault may occur. The greater danger is that once it begins, no one may be able to keep it limited. The war planners may speak the language of optionality, precision, and controlled force. History speaks a different language. It says that powerful states often enter wars believing they can calibrate violence, only to discover that resistance, pride, and fear rapidly seize control. Let us hope that this time the diplomats win before the generals do, because once the ground war begins, peace may become far more expensive than anyone now imagines.
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.
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