Modern colonial dynamics utilize transactional diplomacy and Orientalist rhetoric to replace regional sovereignty with external management, financial pressure, and business-centric stability.
Browsing: Trump
From blockade to bargain: converting Iran’s Hormuz control into a negotiated stake in stability.
Iran’s Hormuz “leverage” is a myth. The strait is its economic lifeline, not a weapon.
Tehran exploits Europe-US rifts, offering nuclear and strait concessions to fracture Washington’s pressure campaign.
Blockade threatens Asia’s oil lifeline as Iran’s dark fleet defies pressure but faces new escalation risks.
Washington bets on economic strangulation, but Iran’s endurance and U.S. domestic pain could reverse the pressure.
Trump’s maritime blockade and maximalist demands risk a global energy crisis and a protracted war of attrition with an increasingly resilient Iran.
Islamabad failed as the U.S. swapped negotiation for an ultimatum, demanding Iran surrender its nuclear sovereignty and regional influence for limited relief.
Dismissing Iran as “barbaric” ignores its highly educated leadership and academic rigor, a misconception that continues to undermine Western strategic assessments.
Islamabad must leverage its shifting geopolitical dependencies to broker Iran-US de-escalation while pursuing domestic reconciliation to secure genuine international diplomatic legitimacy.
