War on Humanity: America-Israel vs. Iran by Mahboob A. Khawaja, PhD.

Paradox of Political Wickedness

America and Israel are entrenched in an ill-informed and irresistible impulse of wrong thinking, wrong actions and wrong leadership. The war against Iran unfolds several self-contradictory aims of regime change, democracy, freedom and the return of the old oligarchy of Shah Pahlavi while they continue to bomb the people. The masses in Iran proclaim their allegiance and support to the Islamic leadership of Iran. Is it a war of attrition or a war of delusion and wickedness?

On February 28, the US and Israel launched an unprovoked attack on Iran pretending to put a finished answer on its nuclear development plan. After two weeks, America and Israel warfare means destruction of Iran and destabilization of the Arab oil-gas exporting states. The Arab leaders live in complete disconnect to the ultimate plans of the war. Netanyahu using Trump could envisage the surrender of Arab states. Is it the beginning of a New World Order of Chaos and Contentions? Implying American political favoritism, Israel is fast becoming the superpower of the Middle East. Are the aggressive and evilmongers' hangmen of the 21st century claiming peace and democracy? Could vice and virtue be combined in one character? Trump and Netanyahu propel sinisterism and unacknowledged sadistic motives leading the war against humanity. The spiritual leadership late Al Khomenei of Iran had clarified to the world that Iran was not going to produce nuclear arsenals as did Israel. The IAEA confirmed that Iran had no capacity to make nukes. Strangely enough, it is well known worldwide that Israel has some 50-100 nuclear devices in stock. Yet, none of the Western leaders ever raised any questions about Israeli threats to peace and stability in the Middle East. Recently, the Chris Hedges Report (March 4), sums it up:

The new world order is one where the weak are obliterated by the strong, the rule of law does not exist, genocide is an instrument of control and barbarism is triumphant. The war on Iran and the obliteration of Gaza is the beginning. Welcome to the new world order. The age of technologically-advanced barbarism. There are no rules for the strong, only for the weak. Oppose the strong, refuse to bow to its capricious demands and you are showered with missiles and bombs. Hospitalselementary schoolsuniversities and apartment complexes are reduced to rubble. Doctorsstudentsjournalistspoetswritersscientistsartists and political leaders — including the heads of negotiating teams — are murdered in the tens of thousands by missiles and killer drones.

Ironically, America and Israel have no respect for international law, Geneva Conventions and international commitments made within the existing global order. The war on Iran is a deliberate one-sided conspiracy to dismantle the very existence of an independent State of Iran. Recall former Shah Pahlavi had witnessed the life span of 7 American presidencies and Iran at the time was a preferred friend of the United States. Israel in coordination with the US intelligence have successfully eliminated the top Iranian Islamic leadership. They claim to have killed Ali Larjini and the commander of internal Security forces Soulemini. Obviously Iran has many domestic fault lines of security apparatus and missing systems of informed policies and decision-making. It should have improved its air defense systems against bombardments.

Western Imperialism and the Betrayal of Arab-Muslim Leaders

The US and Israel have a working plan to occupy and destroy the Arab States and Iran. Do the Arab-Muslim leaders have a plan to unite the people and their common interest to defend the Islamic world? Today American Chief of Terrorism, James Kent resigned from the Trump administration alleging President Trump is waging an Israeli motivated war against Iran while Iran was no threat to the US. The Arab Middle East is a static region of delusional oil-based economic prosperity and divided along regional and superficial colonial identities since the early 20th century. The colonial divides signify superficial geo-political identities carved up by European imperialism against the unity of Islam. Truth has its own language, America failed to provide security to its puppet Arab clients.

America and Israel view it as a fun game to bomb the spacious Earth and destroy human habitats across Palestine and Iran. To stop the atrocities, America and Israel needed a formidable political challenge and the Arab leaders had no vision or courage to do so. The Western mythologist view the oil exporting Arab leaders a“camel jockeys” and brainless figures. They live in palaces protected by the American and European mercenaries, while erecting high-rise buildings, organizing football matches, Olympic Games and COP28, while 2.5 millions are being displaced and more than 27,100 are massacred across Gaza and some 12,700 innocent children killed. They have no sense of time and history and capacity to defend the interest of Islam as the Israeli Ultra Nationalists plan to dismantle the 3rd holiest site Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. Please see: “Al-Aqsa Mosque Waiting for the Arab Leaders

Planet Earth is Living -Those Bombing it are Not the Normal Human Beings

(Mothers Earth Cries: They Bombed Me Again: 07/25): “To destroy the Earth is a crime against humanity, for without the Earth and all her riches, we and all other life die.”
https://ovilehti.blogspot.com/2025/07/mother-earth-cries-they-bombed-me-again.html
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100063717270192

Earth is living and rotates itself at a speed of 1000 miles per hour at equator and orbits the Sun at average speed of 67062 MPH. Earth is a “trust” to humankind for its 

existence, sustenance of life, survival, progress and future-making. Those who bomb the Earth and destroy human lives and habitats are not normal human beings and God will hold them accountable for the consequences of their crimes against mankind.“Fear God” and ‘do not violate the covenants of peace and trust on earth’, remind the teachings of the Bible, Torah and Quran to all mankind, otherwise God’s punishment to the transgressor will be severe. (Quran: 40: 21):Do they not travel through the Earth and see what was the End before them? They were even superior to them in strength; And in the traces (they have left) in the land: But God did call them to account for their sins; And none had they to defend them against God.” 

We, the People, We, the Humanity Seek an Immediate End to War against Iran Would truth of human unity prevail and the phenomenon of bogus war end on its own? Politically perpetuated wickedness denies blind terror, religious awe and killings of people across Gaza, occupied West Bank and Iran. Are We, the People not witnessing a cataclysmic bloodbath being unleashed by continuous aerial bombardments and destruction of lives and habitats across Iran? Horrifying as was the killing of 168 school girls in Minob. The US and West European leaders would confer with Israeli planned displacement of Palestinians and the end of Iran as an independent country. We, the People reject the violent assumptions of militarization and egoistic triumphs by acts of genocidal plans across Palestine, Iran and humanity. Eric Bogle (1976) sung "The Green Fields of France" a soul searching reminder to humanity:.......But here in this graveyard that's still No Man’s Land
The countless white crosses in mute witness stand
To man's blind indifference to his fellow man,
And a whole generation who were butchered and damned.

And I can't help but wonder, no Willie McBride,
Do all those who lie here, know why they died?
Did you really believe them when they told you 'The Cause?'
You really believe that this war would end wars?
The suffering, the sorrow, the glory, the shame,
The killing, the dying, it was all done in vain,
For Willie McBride, it all happened again,

And again, and again, and again, and again!


Dr. Mahboob A. Khawaja specializes in international affairs-global security, peace and conflict resolution and has spent several academic years across the Russian-Ukrainian and Central Asian regions knowing the people, diverse cultures of thinking and political governance and a keen interest in Islamic-Western comparative cultures and civilizations, and author of several publications including: Global Humanity and Remaking of Peace, Security and Conflict Resolution for the 21st Century and Beyond,Barnes and Noble Press, USA, 2025 https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/global-humanity-and-remaking-of-peace-security-and-conflict-resolution-for-the-21st-century-and-beyond-mahboob-a-khawaja/1147150197 and We, The People in Search of Global Peace, Security and Conflict  Resolution. KDP-Amazon.com, 05/2025 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F6V6CH5W


Check Mahboob A. Khawaja, PhD. eBOOK,
Wars on Humanity:
Ukraine, Palestine and the role of Global Leaders
HERE!

Bragging rights in a war nobody asked for by Kingsley Cobb

There is something deeply unsettling about watching leaders boast about spending billions on a war that most Americans never truly asked for in the first place. It’s not just the numbers that raise eyebrows, it’s the tone. The chest-thumping rhetoric, the self-congratulation, the assumption that the public shares the same enthusiasm for endless financial commitments abroad. Increasingly, that assumption looks dangerously out of touch.

Americans are not blind to the world. They understand that global conflicts exist and that the United States often plays a role in shaping international stability. But there is a vast difference between cautious engagement and celebratory spending. When political leaders proudly announce another multi-billion-dollar aid package while millions of citizens at home struggle with rising rent, expensive groceries and uncertain job security, the disconnect becomes painfully obvious.

For many voters, the frustration is not rooted in isolationism. It is rooted in priorities. Every announcement of another aid package inevitably invites comparison. That money, people argue, could have gone to infrastructure, healthcare systems that remain strained, public schools that need resources, or communities still trying to recover from economic shocks. When Washington celebrates foreign expenditures while domestic problems remain unresolved, the message to voters feels unmistakable, your struggles are secondary.

What makes the situation worse is the political theater surrounding it. Instead of acknowledging public skepticism, some leaders double down. They speak as if criticism itself is somehow disloyal or naïve. They frame the debate as a moral test rather than a legitimate policy discussion. But dismissing voter concerns is not leadership, it’s political arrogance.

History has shown that Americans have a long tolerance for international commitments when they feel those commitments are necessary and clearly explained. The problem now is that many citizens feel neither condition has been met. The objectives of the conflict appear murky, the timeline uncertain, and the costs seemingly limitless. Yet the messaging coming from Washington often sounds like a victory lap.

That tone matters. Politics is not just about policy; it is about perception and trust. When politicians sound proud of massive war spending, they risk appearing indifferent to the financial pressures facing ordinary households. It reinforces the growing suspicion that Washington operates in a completely different reality than the one most Americans inhabit.

And voters remember these things. As the midterm elections approach in November, frustration is quietly building. It is visible in town halls, in opinion columns, and in conversations across the country. People are asking simple questions, how much longer? How much more money? And most importantly, what about us?

Midterm elections often function as a referendum on the party in power. They are the political pressure valve of American democracy. When voters feel ignored, they use that moment to recalibrate the balance of power. If current leaders believe that proudly highlighting billions spent abroad will earn applause at home, they may be in for a rude awakening.

The truth is straightforward. Americans are not demanding perfection from their leaders. They are demanding humility, clarity, and a sense that their own challenges are being taken seriously. Celebrating war spending while households tighten their belts sends exactly the wrong message.

In November, the measure will arrive, not in speeches, not in press briefings but in ballots. And ballots have a way of delivering very clear answers.


Collateral masks by Thanos Kalamidas

There’s a familiar stench in the air, one that lingers long after the speeches end and the flags are lowered. It’s the smell of failure being repackaged as strategy. What was promised as a swift, decisive maneuver has instead collapsed under its own arrogance. And now, as history has shown time and again, the playbook shifts; when you cannot win cleanly, you make the battlefield dirtier.

The latest turn is as cynical as it is dangerous. By inching closer to scenarios where civilians become inevitable casualties, the narrative is being carefully reshaped. Not by accident, never by accident but by design. Civilian suffering becomes a tool, a grotesque bargaining chip. The logic is cold, outrage fuels headlines, headlines fuel pressure and pressure drags hesitant allies into conflicts they never truly chose.

Let’s not pretend this is about protection, democracy or stability. Those words have been hollowed out, stretched thin by overuse until they barely resemble their original meaning. What we’re witnessing is the desperate maneuvering of power structures unwilling to admit miscalculation. Instead of recalibrating, they escalate because escalation is easier than accountability.

And so the narrative sharpens; paint the adversary as monstrous enough, chaotic enough and any response, no matter how reckless, becomes justifiable. But here’s the twist. When civilians are pushed closer to the line of fire, when the distinction between combatant and bystander blurs, it’s not just the enemy being framed. It’s the entire moral argument being manipulated.

Allies, particularly those already uneasy, are being cornered. Not with direct demands but with something far more insidious, moral obligation manufactured through tragedy. “How can you not act?” becomes the refrain. “How can you stand by?” The pressure builds, not through diplomacy but through spectacle.

And behind it all, the real objectives remain stubbornly unchanged. Influence. Control. Resources. The language may evolve, the justifications may shift but the core motivations sit there, unbothered, unashamed. Strip away the rhetoric and you’ll find the same old hunger dressed in modern clothing.

What makes this moment particularly dangerous is not just the strategy itself, but the growing normalization of it. The idea that civilian risk can be leveraged, that suffering can be instrumentalized, is no longer shocking, it’s expected. And that should terrify anyone still paying attention.

Because once that line is crossed, once human lives are reduced to narrative devices, there’s no clean way back. Every future conflict inherits that precedent. Every decision becomes easier to justify, every consequence easier to dismiss.

This isn’t strength. It’s not even strategy in the traditional sense. It’s a refusal to confront failure, masked by increasingly reckless decisions. And the cost, as always, won’t be paid by those making the calls from a distance.

It will be paid in silence, in shattered streets, and in the quiet realization that once again, the truth arrived far too late buried beneath the noise of a story carefully constructed to hide it.


Berserk Alert! #097 #Cartoon by Tony Zuvela

 

Tony Zuvela and his view of the world around us in a constant berserk alert!
For more Berserk Alert! HERE!
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Worming #126 #cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

A family of worms and all their worm friends worming in new adventures.

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The real price of oil by Howard Morton

There is a familiar rhythm to modern conflict and it rarely begins with tanks. It begins with declarations; bold, theatrical and wrapped in certainty. The claim of strength. The promise of swift victory. And once again we are watching that pattern unfold as Donald Trump escalates tensions into open confrontation with a Middle Eastern regime.

On the surface it looks like a classic show of force, a leader projecting dominance, appealing to national pride and attempting to redraw geopolitical lines with the blunt instrument of military action. But beneath that surface lies a far more complicated battlefield, one that cannot be bombed, sanctioned or intimidated into submission. That battlefield is the global economic system and it has a long history of humbling even the most confident war architects.

Wars in the Middle East are never just about territory or ideology. They are entangled with oil, and oil is entangled with everything. From inflation to supply chains, from household energy bills to stock markets, the ripple effects move faster than any missile ever could. The moment conflict disrupts production or threatens key transit routes, the markets react. Prices spike. Uncertainty spreads. And suddenly, the war is no longer “over there.” It is everywhere.

This is where the contradiction emerges. A leader who champions capitalism as a symbol of strength may find himself undermined by its very mechanics. Markets do not salute. They do not obey. They respond. And when they respond to instability, they do so ruthlessly.

Rising oil prices might seem, at first glance, like a strategic advantage, especially for those who view energy dominance as leverage. But in reality, they act as a tax on the global economy. Consumers pay more. Businesses tighten. Growth slows. And political support, so often tied to economic comfort, begins to erode. What starts as a distant conflict quietly transforms into domestic pressure.

There is also the matter of endurance. Military campaigns can be planned with precision but economic consequences are far less predictable. A prolonged conflict does not just drain resources, it distorts priorities. Governments are forced to balance war spending with domestic stability and that balance is rarely sustainable. Meanwhile, adversaries who may be weaker in conventional terms can exploit this imbalance simply by waiting.

Capitalism, in this sense, becomes an unexpected counterforce. Not because it opposes war in principle, but because it punishes instability in practice. Investors withdraw. Allies hesitate. Supply chains fracture. The very system that rewards growth and expansion becomes intolerant of disruption.

And then there is perception. In a globalized world, narratives travel as quickly as commodities. A war framed as decisive and necessary can quickly be reinterpreted as reckless if economic consequences spiral. Public opinion, both at home and abroad, does not exist in a vacuum. It is shaped by prices at the pump, by market volatility, by the quiet anxiety of financial uncertainty.

This is the paradox at the heart of the situation. Strength, when expressed through force, can trigger weaknesses elsewhere. Control, when asserted militarily, can be lost economically. And victory, defined narrowly on the battlefield, can look very different when measured against the broader cost.

In the end, the outcome of this conflict may not be decided by generals or strategies, but by something far less dramatic and far more relentless, the price of oil, the patience of markets, and the limits of an economic system that refuses to bend to political will.


The fractures in the MAGA-verse by John Kato

For nearly a decade Donald Trump’s political power has rested on a simple but formidable foundation, unwavering loyalty. His supporters were not merely voters; they were believers. The MAGA movement functioned less like a conventional political coalition and more like a cultural identity, one built around defiance, grievance, and a shared conviction that Trump alone spoke for them.

But movements built on emotion can shift quickly when the emotional center begins to wobble. Lately, there are signs, small but unmistakable, that the once-impenetrable MAGA wall is showing cracks. The cheers are still loud at rallies, the slogans still familiar but the tone has changed in corners of the movement that once echoed Trump’s every word without hesitation. Some supporters are grumbling about strategy. Others are frustrated with endless drama that yields little tangible victory. A few are beginning to ask an unthinkable question, is Trump still the right vessel for the cause he created?

What makes this moment unusual is not simply the criticism itself, but Trump’s response to it ...denial. For years, Trump thrived by presenting himself as the infallible champion of his movement. If he lost an election, it was stolen. If allies failed him, they were weak. If critics emerged within his own ranks, they were traitors. This formula worked remarkably well when the base was united and emotionally invested in the narrative of constant battle.

But denial becomes harder to maintain when the criticism comes from inside the tent. The MAGA coalition was never monolithic. It contained populists, culture warriors, anti-establishment conservatives, libertarian-leaning skeptics of government, and people simply drawn to Trump’s larger-than-life personality. As long as Trump appeared unstoppable, these factions held together under his banner.

Now, the political math is shifting. Some supporters worry that Trump’s personal legal troubles and relentless conflicts are exhausting the movement. Others fear that his dominance prevents new leadership from emerging. There is also a generational tension quietly brewing between older loyalists who see Trump as irreplaceable and younger conservatives who want the energy of the movement without the chaos surrounding its founder.

Trump, however, seems determined to pretend none of this exists. Instead of acknowledging internal doubts, he continues to frame every criticism as sabotage from enemies, media conspiracies, establishment Republicans, shadowy elites. It is the same rhetorical playbook that served him well for years. The problem is that this time, some of the skepticism is coming from people who once wore the red hats proudly.

Movements evolve. Leaders rarely do. History is full of political figures who mistook devotion for permanence. Loyalty in politics is powerful, but it is also conditional. Supporters who feel unheard, ignored, or trapped in a permanent cycle of outrage eventually begin to look elsewhere, even if they still agree with the broader cause.

The real question is not whether Trump still commands a massive following. He clearly does. The question is whether he recognizes that the movement he created is beginning to outgrow him.

If he cannot see the cracks forming in the MAGA mirror, he may one day discover that the reflection staring back is far smaller than the one he remembers.


The referee picked a side by Kasie Hewitt

There was a time, more myth than memory perhaps, when football’s governing class spoke in the pious tones of neutrality. The pitch, they insisted, was sacred ground, insulated from the vulgarities of politics. Today that illusion lies in tatters and no figure embodies its collapse more vividly than FIFA’s president. The recent decision to keep Iran’s World Cup matches in the United States rather than relocating them to Mexico is not merely a logistical call. It is a declaration quiet in tone, thunderous in implication that politics has not just entered the stadium; it has taken a seat in the executive box.

To pretend otherwise requires a suspension of disbelief that even the most loyal football romantic can no longer maintain. The argument for relocation was not abstract. It revolved around geopolitical tensions, player safety, and the charged symbolism of staging matches involving Iran on American soil at a moment of heightened diplomatic strain. FIFA’s refusal to act, cloaked in the familiar language of “operational feasibility,” feels less like prudence and more like indifference dressed as principle.

But indifference is itself a political stance. What makes this moment especially revealing is not the decision alone but the pattern it confirms. FIFA has, under its current leadership, mastered the art of selective neutrality. It invokes apolitical ideals when convenient and discards them when they become inconvenient. This is not the absence of politics; it is politics in its most unaccountable form, unmoored from transparency, shielded from scrutiny, and justified by a rhetoric that no longer convinces.

The president’s defenders will argue that global sport cannot function if it bends to every geopolitical gust. There is truth in that. But there is a vast difference between resisting pressure and ignoring reality. To host matches involving a politically contentious nation in a host country with which it has a fraught relationship is not a neutral act. It is a choice, one that carries consequences beyond the ninety minutes on the clock.

And yet, the governing body seems increasingly comfortable with this ambiguity. It speaks of unity while presiding over division, of inclusion while making decisions that alienate, of neutrality while practicing discretion that looks suspiciously like preference. The result is an organization that has not transcended politics but absorbed it, metabolized it, and redeployed it without accountability.

The call for leadership change, once a fringe murmur, now sounds less like outrage and more like inevitability. Institutions, like teams, reflect the character of those who lead them. When leadership blurs the line between principle and expedience, the institution follows.

Football deserves better, not in the sentimental sense, but in the structural one. It deserves governance that is honest about its choices, that acknowledges the political realities it navigates, and that resists the temptation to hide behind outdated myths of neutrality. Because the game’s global appeal rests not just on its beauty, but on its credibility.

And credibility, once squandered, is far harder to recover than any lost match.


Ghostin’ #125 #Cartoon by Thanos Kalamidas

 

They are like neighbours we are aware of,
except we are NOT aware of and
they have absolutely nothing to do with Halloween.

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For more Ovi Cartoons, HERE!


The deal of blame game emperor by Robert Perez

There is an old political trick, start a fire, then point at someone else while the flames spread. It is a strategy as old as politics itself. Yet few modern leaders have practiced it with the theatrical consistency now on display in Washington.

The war with Iran has rattled global markets, shaken shipping routes, and pushed oil prices upward. The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil flows, has become a choke point of geopolitical tension, sending energy markets into volatility and anxiety across the global economy.

But rather than owning the economic fallout, the political narrative emerging from the White House has taken a familiar detour ...blame Joe Biden.

In the surreal theatre of modern American politics, responsibility has become optional. The war may unfold under Donald Trump’s command, the economic tremors may follow his decisions, yet somehow the culprit is still the man who left office more than a year ago. This is not merely political spin; it is a strategic redistribution of blame.

The formula is simple. If gas prices rise because war disrupts oil supply, it is not the war’s fault; it is “Biden’s economy.” If inflation creeps back, it is the result of “Biden’s spending.” If global markets wobble, it is supposedly the delayed consequence of a predecessor’s policies.

The logic is astonishing. A president launches aggressive military action in one of the most sensitive energy corridors on the planet, and when oil jumps above $100 per barrel and fuel prices surge, it becomes someone else’s economic legacy.

Meanwhile, the rest of the world is being invited or pressured, to share the consequences. Calls for allied warships to patrol the Strait of Hormuz and protect shipping lanes are framed as collective security. In reality, they also distribute the political cost of the conflict. If the war widens or the economy falters, responsibility will be multinational, diluted across allies and partners.

It is a clever maneuver. When everyone is involved, no one person can be blamed. But the American public is not blind to economic reality. When fuel costs jump, when food prices creep upward, when markets wobble, voters instinctively connect the dots. Presidents historically receive credit for good economies and blame for bad ones, fairly or not. The difference today is the scale of the deflection.

What we are witnessing is the normalization of permanent blame displacement. Every consequence must belong to someone else. Every crisis must be inherited. Every failure must be rebranded as a legacy problem from the previous administration.

In that sense, the Iran conflict is not just a geopolitical gamble; it is also a narrative battle. If the war ends quickly, the victory will be claimed as decisive leadership. If it drags on, disrupts global trade, and sends prices soaring, the talking point is already prepared, Biden did it.

The danger of this strategy is not merely political cynicism. It erodes the basic expectation of democratic accountability. Leadership means owning the results of decisions, especially the costly ones. War is perhaps the most serious decision any government can make and its consequences ripple far beyond the battlefield.

When a leader demands global cooperation for a war but refuses to accept responsibility for the economic fallout, the message is clear; share the burden, but not the blame.

And that, perhaps more than the war itself, is the most revealing part of this moment.


Orbán’s gold grab and the politics of paranoia by Maddalena Conti

Relations between Hungary and Ukraine were never exactly warm in recent years, but they have now slipped into something darker and more personal. When Viktor Orbán, Hungary’s long-serving prime minister confiscated a shipment reportedly containing Ukrainian gold and cash, the move alone would have been enough to provoke outrage. Instead, Orbán escalated the drama further with a campaign video accusing Ukraine of targeting him and even threatening his family. What might have been a tense diplomatic disagreement has now turned into a political spectacle driven by suspicion, nationalism and domestic political theater.

Orbán has built much of his political identity on defiance; defiance of European Union institutions, defiance of Western pressure and often defiance of Ukraine itself. Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Hungary has repeatedly positioned itself as the awkward partner in Europe’s otherwise unified support for Kyiv. Budapest has slowed sanctions discussions, resisted military aid initiatives and maintained a cautious, sometimes ambiguous stance toward Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s government. But confiscating Ukrainian assets takes this tension into unprecedented territory.

From Orbán’s perspective, the move may be framed as a matter of national sovereignty or legal authority. His government often portrays Hungary as a small state forced to defend its interests against larger geopolitical pressures. In this narrative, every confrontation becomes proof that Hungary is standing strong against outsiders. Yet critics argue that the confiscation looks less like principled policy and more like political opportunism, another symbolic act designed to reinforce Orbán’s image as the stubborn defender of Hungarian autonomy.

The campaign video accusing Ukraine of plotting against him, however, changes the tone entirely. Once politics moves from policy disagreements to personal accusations, diplomacy becomes almost impossible. Claiming that a neighboring country is targeting not only a prime minister but also his family is an extraordinary allegation. Without convincing evidence, such claims risk appearing less like security concerns and more like calculated messaging meant to energize supporters at home.

And that is perhaps the heart of the matter. Orbán’s political success has long relied on turning complex international issues into simple stories of threat and resistance. Migrants, Brussels bureaucrats, liberal activists, each has at different times been cast as an external force trying to undermine Hungary. Ukraine now seems to have been added to that familiar list.

For Ukraine, the dispute is both frustrating and strategically awkward. Kyiv relies heavily on European unity, particularly as the war with Vladimir Putin’s Russia drags on with no clear end in sight. Hungary’s continued friction threatens to complicate decisions on aid, sanctions, and diplomatic coordination within the EU. Even when Hungary ultimately compromises, as it sometimes does after months of resistance, the delay alone can weaken Europe’s collective position.

There is also a broader lesson here about the fragility of regional cooperation. In theory, European integration was meant to prevent precisely this kind of bilateral hostility. Yet domestic political incentives often pull leaders in the opposite direction. Confrontation sells. Defiance mobilizes voters. And suspicion, once planted, is hard to uproot.

Whether the confiscated gold and cash will eventually be returned or whether the accusations will escalate further, remains unclear. What is certain is that Orbán has once again demonstrated his instinct for turning geopolitical tension into political theater. The question Europe now faces is how long it can tolerate that strategy before the costs begin to outweigh the spectacle.


War on Humanity: America-Israel vs. Iran by Mahboob A. Khawaja, PhD.

Paradox of Political Wickedness America and Israel are entrenched in an ill-informed and irresistible impulse of wrong thinking, wrong ac...