
How Western Narratives Invert Reality to Justify a Catastrophic War
For decades, Western governments and media outlets have insisted that Iran is the gravest threat to global peace—a rogue nation, a sponsor of terrorism, a destabilizing force whose very existence endangers the “rules‑based international order.” This narrative has been repeated so relentlessly that it has hardened into conventional wisdom in Washington, Brussels, and most major newsrooms. But repetition does not make truth. And today, as the United States and Israel escalate their joint military aggression against Iran, the gap between reality and Western storytelling has become impossible to ignore.
The uncomfortable truth—one that Western officials work tirelessly to obscure—is that Iran has not invaded its neighbors, has not launched preemptive wars, and has not violated the sovereignty of other states on a scale remotely comparable to Israel. Iran signed the Nuclear Non‑Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and remains under the most intrusive inspection regime in the world. Its leaders, citing Islamic jurisprudence, have repeatedly declared nuclear weapons forbidden. Meanwhile, Israel—an undeclared nuclear power with an arsenal estimated in the dozens if not hundreds—has refused to sign the NPT, rejects inspections, and has a long record of preemptive strikes across the Middle East.
Yet it is Iran, not Israel, that Western governments portray as the existential menace. This inversion of reality is not accidental. It is the product of a century‑long political project rooted in colonial dispossession, military domination, and the systematic erasure of Palestinian rights.
The roots of today’s crisis lie in 1917, when Great Britain issued the Balfour Declaration—an extraordinary document in which a colonial empire promised a national homeland in Palestine to the Zionist movement. As historian Arthur Koestler famously observed, it was “one nation solemnly promising to give to a second nation the country of a third nation.” The people of that third nation—the Palestinians—were never consulted.
Three decades later, on November 29, 1947, the United Nations voted to partition Palestine into Jewish and Arab states. The plan allocated 56 percent of the land to the Jewish state, even though Jews constituted roughly one‑third of the population and owned less than 7 percent of the land. Arab leaders, with the exception of King Abdullah of Transjordan, rejected the plan as unjust. Violence erupted, and armed Zionist militias—Haganah, Irgun, and Lehi—launched operations that resulted in the depopulation of hundreds of Palestinian villages.
The massacres at Deir Yasin, Qibya, and Kafr Qasim were not aberrations; they were part of a systematic campaign to empty Palestine of its indigenous inhabitants. By the time Israel declared independence on May 15, 1948, more than 770,000 Palestinians had been expelled or fled in terror. Many ended up in Gaza, where their descendants remain trapped to this day.
This foundational violence set the pattern for decades to come: territorial expansion, demographic engineering, and the use of overwhelming military force to maintain dominance.
A Record of Aggression, Not Defense
Since 1948, Israel has launched repeated preemptive wars and military operations across the region. In 1956, it joined Britain and France in invading Egypt. In 1967, it launched a preemptive strike against Egypt, Syria, and Jordan, seizing the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai Peninsula. In 1982, it invaded Lebanon, leading to the Sabra and Shatila massacres carried out by allied militias under Israeli supervision.
From Nablus to Jenin, from Tyre to Sidon, from the West Bank to southern Lebanon, the pattern has been consistent: overwhelming force, collective punishment, and the targeting of civilian infrastructure. The Oslo Accords, hailed in the West as a peace breakthrough, became a mechanism for deepening Israel’s control over Palestinian land through settlements, checkpoints, and a matrix of military restrictions.
Here I am reminded of Bertrand Russell’s final political statement, written in January 1970 and read aloud at the International Conference of Parliamentarians in Cairo shortly after his death: “For over 20 years Israel has expanded by force of arms. After every stage in this expansion Israel has appealed to ‘reason’ and has suggested ‘negotiations’. This is the traditional role of the imperial power, because it wishes to consolidate with the least difficulty what it has already taken by violence. Every new conquest becomes the new basis of the proposed negotiation from strength, which ignores the injustice of the previous aggression.”
Gaza, in particular, became the world’s largest open‑air prison. The blockade imposed in 2007 strangled its economy, restricted movement, and created a humanitarian catastrophe long before the events of October 7, 2024. That uprising—whatever one thinks of its tactics—did not emerge from a vacuum. It was the predictable result of decades of suffocation, the Israeli military metaphor of “Mowing of the Lawn”, dispossession, and despair.
Israel’s response was devastating: genocidal, the near‑total destruction of Gaza, mass civilian casualties, and the annexation of additional territory. Peter Maurer, the former President of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), who saw the aftermath of the Operation Protective Edge and said, “in all of my life I have never seen destruction like I saw in Gaza.”The campaign soon expanded into Lebanon and Syria, and now, with U.S. backing, into Iran.
The Manufactured Threat: Why Iran Became the Villain
To justify this escalation, Western officials have revived the familiar script: Iran is the world’s leading sponsor of terrorism; Iran seeks regional domination; Iran threatens global stability. But beyond its support for Palestinian resistance groups—Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis—Western governments offer little evidence that Iran poses a threat to Europe or the United States.
Iran has not invaded another country in over four centuries. It has repeatedly engaged in diplomacy, even when the United States violated agreements such as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). It has sought a negotiated resolution to disputes over its nuclear and ballistic programs, consistent with the guidance of Imam Ali(R) to his governor Malik al‑Ashtar: pursue justice, avoid oppression, and seek peaceful solutions whenever possible.
Contrast this with Israel’s posture. Israeli leaders routinely describe Palestinians, Lebanese, and Iranians in dehumanizing terms—“Amalekites,” “human animals,” “existential threats.” Several Israeli officials face international investigations for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Yet Western governments continue to embrace Israel as a moral beacon and strategic ally.
That hypocrisy is now in full display. In a stunning display of moral bankruptcy, after more than two years of arming and enabling Israel as it pulverizes the Gaza Strip—even after an October ceasefire deal—the United States last week formally intervened at the International Court of Justice to help Israel fend off genocide charges.
The double standard is glaring. When Israel bombs civilian neighborhoods, it is “self‑defense.” When Iran supports groups resisting occupation, it is “terrorism.” When Israel violates international law, it is “complex.” When Iran asserts its sovereignty, it is “aggression.”
None of this would be possible without the complicity of Western media. Major outlets routinely adopt Israeli and U.S. government framing, marginalize Palestinian voices, and portray Iran as irrational and fanatical. Context disappears. History is erased. The aggressor becomes the victim, and the victim becomes the threat.
This narrative discipline serves a purpose: it prepares Western publics for war. It transforms a nuclear‑armed state with a long record of regional aggression into a misunderstood democracy under siege. It transforms a non‑nuclear state that has abided by international treaties into an existential menace.
The result is a political environment in which Israel and the United States can launch preemptive strikes on Iran—twice in less than a year—while claiming the mantle of peace and stability.
Israel’s strategic doctrine has always been clear: maintain overwhelming military superiority, weaken neighboring states, and expand territorial control whenever possible. From the Nile to the Euphrates, the vision of a Greater Israel has animated political and religious extremists for generations.
This is not speculation. Israeli leaders have said so openly. They have threatened to use nuclear weapons—the so‑called “Samson Option”—if their dominance is challenged. They have repeatedly demonstrated a willingness to strike first and justify later.
A state with such a doctrine, armed with nuclear weapons, and backed unconditionally by the world’s most powerful military is not a stabilizing force. It is a recipe for perpetual conflict.
Time to Call a Spade a Spade
The world can no longer afford the comforting illusions propagated by Western governments and media. Iran is not the primary threat to Middle Eastern stability. Israel is. Its history of dispossession, occupation, preemptive war, and nuclear opacity makes it the most destabilizing actor in the region.
The tragedy is that this was not inevitable. A just peace was possible—still is possible—if the international community confronts the reality it has long avoided: Israel’s policies, not Iran’s existence, are the root cause of the region’s instability.
Until the world acknowledges this truth, the cycle of violence will continue, and the Middle East will remain trapped in a nightmare of endless war.
The time has come for the global community—especially nations of the Global South—to speak plainly. The time has come to reject the distortions that have justified so much suffering. The time has come to say what Western leaders refuse to say:
It’s Israel, not Iran, that endangers the region. And unless the world confronts this fact, the path ahead leads only to deeper catastrophe.
Dr. Siddiqui is a peace activist.








