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Saturday, May 16, 2026

Arab Regimes Playing with Fire: Why Gulf Countries Can't Hide While the House Burns

The old saying goes that when your neighbor's house catches fire, you better start checking your own curtains. 


Yet here we are in May 2026, watching Arab regimes in the Gulf make the same mistake leaders have made for centuries thinking that geography alone will protect them when the flames are spreading fast. The current US-Israel military campaign against Iran has exposed something many of us already suspected: most of these countries aren't regional players anymore. They're spectators watching a war they helped create, hoping somehow they'll escape the blast radius.


Saudi Arabia stood alone in refusing to become a pawn in someone else's war. The kingdom took hits, faced pressure, and still said no. That's not nothing. Meanwhile, countries like the UAE rolled out the red carpet for American and Israeli forces, then tried to tell the world they were just "managing relationships." Let's talk about what's really happening across the Gulf right now, because the narrative being spun in capital cities doesn't match what we see on the ground.

Friday, May 15, 2026

Iran War, Day 76: Trump's China Gambit, Xi's Rise, and the New World Order Emerging Before Our Eyes

The War Nobody Wanted But Nobody Can Escape


We're now seventy-six days into what has become one of the most contentious military engagements in modern Middle Eastern history, and the picture emerging is far more complicated than anyone anticipated. The Iran conflict launched with what many hoped would be a swift, decisive operation has instead morphed into a grinding stalemate that has exposed deep fractures in American foreign policy, reshaped global alliances overnight, and left even the architects of the original strategy looking bewildered about what comes next.


The situation has evolved so rapidly that even seasoned geopolitical analysts are struggling to keep pace. Just three months ago, the prevailing assumption in Washington was that a combination of targeted strikes and overwhelming pressure would bring Tehran to the negotiating table within weeks. Today, the reality on the ground tells a dramatically different story, with the conflict not only continuing but actively reshaping the fundamental architecture of international relations in ways that will echo for decades.


At the center of this storm stands Donald Trump, whose foreign policy decisions have been called everything from brilliant to catastrophic depending on who you ask. But beneath the headlines and the political posturing, a more troubling pattern has emerged one that raises serious questions about the intersection of personal enrichment and national interest during one of the most consequential moments in recent memory.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Iran Hid Its Warplanes in Pakistan: The Hidden Air Assets That Could Sabotage U.S.-Iran Ceasefire

The war in the Middle East has taken yet another dramatic turn, and this time the spotlight is firmly fixed on Pakistan. 


In a revelation that has sent shockwaves through Washington, Tel Aviv, and Islamabad alike, intelligence reports confirms what many suspected but few could prove: Iran has been using Pakistani territory as a sanctuary for some of its most valuable military aircraft, shielding them from American and Israeli precision strikes.


According to classified intelligence assessments obtained by multiple news outlets, several Iranian Air Force assets remain strategically parked at Pakistani military installations. The most significant among them are a KC-707 ELINT electronic intelligence aircraft essentially a flying surveillance platform capable of detecting and tracking military movements across vast distances and two Boeing 747 transport aircraft that have been modified for military purposes. These aren't just spare planes being stored in a hanger; they're operational military assets that could play a crucial role in any future Iranian military operations.


The timing of this revelation couldn't be more sensitive. Just as diplomatic efforts appeared to be gathering momentum toward a potential ceasefire between the United States and Iran, this disclosure threatens to undermine months of delicate negotiations and has ignited a fierce debate within the Trump administration about whether Pakistan can be trusted as a neutral mediator in one of the world's most volatile conflicts.


Senator Graham's Explosive Comments: "I Don't Trust Pakistan As Far As I Can Throw Them"