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Is Washington Quietly Reshaping the Israel–Turkey Rivalry?

 The Israel–Turkey confrontation after Iran is often explained as a natural shift in regional power. Iran weakens. Türkiye rises. Israel adjusts. That story is neat. It feels logical. But it is not complete. A quieter force is at work. One that rarely makes headlines but shapes outcomes just as strongly. The United States is not just observing this transition. It is influencing how it unfolds, not through direct confrontation, but through alliance management. That changes everything. Power is shifting. But also being redirected For years, Iran served as the central axis of resistance in the Middle East. Israel built its security doctrine around that reality. Gulf states reacted to it. Washington contained it. Now that structure is weakening. Türkiye has stepped into the space with increasing confidence: Expanded military presence in Syria and Iraq Strategic footholds in Libya and Somalia A growing defense industry, especially in drones According to the Stockholm I...

What Happens to Gulf Economies if the War Drags On? Oil, Risk, and Hard Choices

 Gulf economies war impact oil prices is no longer a side question. It sits at the centre of the current crisis. Israel appears financially capable of sustaining a long conflict. The real pressure may fall elsewhere. In the Gulf, where oil flows, capital moves, and confidence decides growth. At first glance, higher oil prices look like a windfall. The reality is more complicated. And less comfortable. Why Oil Prices React First Roughly 20% of global oil supply moves through the Strait of Hormuz . Any escalation in the region introduces three immediate risks: Disruption to shipping routes Higher insurance premiums for tankers Market speculation driven by uncertainty The pattern is well documented. After tanker attacks in 2019, prices rose within days. During the Ukraine war in 2022, Brent crude crossed $120 per barrel. A prolonged conflict in the Middle East would likely produce similar spikes. Short term, that helps oil exporters. Long term, it complicates everythin...

Can Israel Sustain Endless War? The Economics Behind a Long Conflict

 A new war economy is emerging. But money may not be the real limit. Israel war economy sustainability is no longer a theory. It is unfolding in real time, and the numbers are unsettling. The country is spending around NIS 1.5 billion every single day on war. Its defense budget has surged to NIS 177 billion , the highest in its history. On paper, that should strain any economy. It hasn’t. Not yet. That gap between expectation and reality is where the real story begins. The Financial Base: Stronger Than It Looks At first glance, prolonged war should drain a country. Israel’s case is different. $234.55 billion in foreign exchange reserves Roughly 38% of GDP A net external asset surplus of $331 billion Debt approaching 70% of GDP , but still manageable According to the Bank of Israel and Moody’s (2026 outlook) , investor confidence remains intact. Israel recently raised $6 billion in international bonds , and demand was strong. This is not an economy on the edge. It is o...

Israel–Turkey Confrontation After Iran: The New Middle East Power Shift

  The Israel–Turkey confrontation after Iran is no longer a speculative headline. It is already shaping military thinking in Tel Aviv and Ankara. Iran’s weakening position has not calmed the region. It has made it more crowded. More actors. More overlap. More room for miscalculation. Power does not disappear. It moves For years, Iran anchored a predictable pattern of confrontation. Israel planned around it. Gulf states reacted to it. The United States contained it. That anchor is loosening. Iranian networks have come under sustained military and financial strain Israel now operates with fewer immediate constraints in Syria Türkiye has expanded steadily across multiple fronts Data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute shows Türkiye’s defense spending crossing $15 billion annually, backed by a fast-growing domestic drone industry. This is not symbolic power. It is deployable power. The shift is visible. And it is structural. A different map is eme...

The Myth of a 50-Nation Muslim Army: Why Saudi–Pakistan Defence Talk Signals Fear, Not Unity

  A visual representation of rising tensions between Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and Iran, highlighting the exaggerated narrative of a unified Muslim military bloc. The Saudi Pakistan defence pact has suddenly reappeared in headlines, wrapped in a dramatic claim: if Saudi Arabia enters a war with Iran, Pakistan will join, and fifty Muslim nations will line up behind Riyadh. It sounds like a geopolitical earthquake. A united Muslim bloc. A decisive moment. But pause for a second. When was the last time the Muslim world acted as one? Exactly. What the Saudi Pakistan Defence Pact Actually Means Let’s start with what is real. In September 2025 , Saudi Arabia and Pakistan formalised a Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement . According to reporting by the Financial Times and Associated Press , the agreement includes a key clause: an attack on one may be treated as an attack on both . That is not symbolic. It matters. Pakistan has long provided: Military training and advisory suppor...

UAE Influencer Narrative During Conflict: How Social Media Risks Escalating Tensions

 The UAE influencer narrative during conflict is no longer just digital noise. It is becoming a strategic risk. Open X.com today. The contrast is unsettling. Some posts show calm beaches and luxury dinners in Dubai. Others hint at fear, missiles, and quiet exits. Both streams exist at the same time. That contradiction matters more than it looks. Because in the Gulf, perception does not follow reality. It shapes it. How Dubai Built Its Image and Why It Matters Now Dubai’s rise was not accidental. It was engineered. A promise of safety A reputation for neutrality A controlled, predictable environment Over decades, this image attracted capital, talent, and trust. By 2024, the UAE hosted over 130,000 millionaires , with private wealth exceeding $700 billion . That success depends on one fragile layer. Confidence. Not buildings. Not oil. Confidence. When Influencers Become Unofficial Diplomats Social media has changed the rules. Influencers today act as: Brand ...

War Narratives and Misinformation: Why “Everyone Is Evil” Is a Dangerous Shortcut

  It sounds honest at first. Raw, even. “This war isn’t good vs evil. It’s evil vs evil.” That line travels fast online. It feels balanced, detached, almost wise. But when you look closely, this kind of framing often rests on war narratives and misinformation , not careful analysis. And that matters. Because once facts blur, judgment follows. How War Narratives and Misinformation Take Shape Conflicts like the one involving Iran, Israel, and the wider Middle East are not simple. They stretch across decades, sometimes centuries. Yet social media compresses all of that into a few lines, a few numbers, a few accusations. Here is the pattern. First, real events are selected . Iran supports militias. Israel strikes Gaza. These are facts. Then, numbers get inflated or detached from context . Casualty figures are reassigned. Attack counts are exaggerated. Responsibility becomes singular instead of shared. Finally, a conclusion is pushed: everyone is equally guilty . It feels fair...