Friday, April 17, 2026

The paper tiger has finally revealed itself to the world

 In their unjust, illegal, and criminal war against Iran, the United States and Israel have suffered an undeniable, historic, and crushing defeat. They now find themselves forced to comply with Iran’s demands, despite all the victory posturing and triumphalist rhetoric from the very first days of the war.

Mohamed Lamine KABA

He had said that an entire civilization was dying that night. A few hours later, Donald Trump backed down. He threatened to raze Iran. He signed their plan as a useful basis for negotiations. It’s the ultimate expression of a paper tiger.

This article aims to demonstrate how America’s false power is exposed by the patience and determination of the Iranian nation. Its continuation will examine Israel through the lens of American military expansion in the Middle East.

Hegemony does not collapse under blows; it disintegrates from within, through loss of credibility, overextension, and accumulated contradictions

The initial uproar

This is no longer a hypothesis. Nor a slogan. It is a cold, methodical, almost clinical diagnosis.

The notion of a “paper tiger,” coined by Mao Zedong and openly and crudely attributed to Russia in the context of its special military operation in Ukraine by MAGA supporters and their European vassals, has shifted its focus. It has moved from the margins to the center. It no longer designates the peripheral enemy but the very architecture of American power. And this shift is not a rhetorical flourish. It is the product of a chain of events, a gradual unveiling, a stripping bare of reality.

Because it all started with a commotion.

In the early hours of the war, Washington spoke the language of certainty. The tempo was that of immediate victory: a brief, surgical, decisive war. A show of force intended to restore a supposedly intact hegemony. Donald Trump, true to his political theatrics, was already projecting himself into the post-war period. His martial and triumphant pronouncements suggested a war already won. The sequence was predetermined: shock, disbelief, capitulation.

But real war does not follow scenarios. Very quickly, a disconnect emerged. A gap, initially imperceptible, then increasingly glaring, between the initial pronouncements and the fabric of reality. What was meant to be swift became drawn out. What was meant to be controlled became uncertain. What was meant to be demonstrative became revealing.

It is in this gap that the reversal takes place.

The reversal

For decades, the United States imposed its worldview. It classified, named, and ranked “rogue states,” “revisionist powers,” and “systemic threats.” This language was not neutral; it structured reality as much as it described it. Yet, in this war, this language has turned against its source. It is no longer the adversary that appears fragile, but the Empire itself, overexposed, overextended, and riddled with contradictions.

Neither Vladimir Putin’s Russia nor any peripheral actor now embodies this image. It is the heart of the system that is faltering. And, in an almost caricatured form, Donald Trump’s presidency has become its visible manifestation.

Because between the initial proclamations and the present reality, the gap has become abysmal.

Hypertrophy

This weakening is not due to a sudden collapse. It stems from hypertrophy.

American power has expanded to the point of saturation. Too many bases, too many fronts, too many sanctions, too many contradictory narratives. This accumulation, far from strengthening dominance, dilutes its effectiveness. The Pentagon projects its force without managing to stabilize the theaters of operation. The Treasury multiplies sanctions without producing a decisive suffocation. Diplomacy threatens without convincing.

Excess becomes counterproductive. Power is dissipated.

In this context, the initial proclamations of victory appear in retrospect as discursive constructions. That is to say, instruments of internal political management rather than strategic interpretations of reality. They are less a matter of analysis than of staging.

MAGA: doctrine or pathology?

The MAGA movement accentuates this dynamic. It is not a rupture, but a revelation. Donald Trump did not create the contradictions of American power; he made them visible, exacerbated them, sometimes to the point of caricature. His approach is based on uncontrolled unilateralism, a transactional approach lacking credibility, and an escalation without any prospect of resolution.

Above all, it is riddled with permanent contradictions.

The war is alternately described as “almost over” and then as needing to be intensified. The adversary is declared “on its knees” before being redefined as a “major threat.” These shifts are not simply a matter of political spin. They signal a deeper breakdown: the inability to establish a coherent strategic line.

Under these conditions, deterrence itself loses its substance. Yet, it was the heart of the American strategy. Credible deterrence presupposes a correlation between the threat and the action. This correlation is eroding. Adversaries now factor in the political cost of an American escalation and exploit asymmetries. Iran, without necessarily limiting itself to achieving a conventional military victory, imposes a different tempo: that of attrition, of prolonging the conflict, of increasing complexity.

The war is becoming a war of thresholds, and Washington is gradually losing control of it.

The Economics of coercion

The same phenomenon can be observed in the economic sphere. Sanctions, once seen as an ultimate weapon, are entering a phase of diminishing returns. Their proliferation trivializes their use and reduces their impact. Parallel circuits are emerging, monetary alternatives are taking shape, and forms of financial cooperation are gradually circumventing the dominant order. The dollar must remain central, in Trump’s mind, but it is no longer unchallenged, and the Strait of Hormuz is putting the Chinese yuan on the spot.

In addition to this material erosion, there is a cognitive transformation.

Cognitive warfare

The Western narrative monopoly is crumbling. Where Washington once defined reality, it must now contest it. Public opinion in the Global South no longer passively accepts the Western narrative; it questions it, compares it, and sometimes rejects it. The war against Iran acts as a catalyst here. It exposes double standards, makes inconsistencies visible, and undermines the claim to universality.

In this context, the triumphalist declarations of the first days appear for what they are: instruments of propaganda, out of step with the dynamics on the ground.

Eurasian convergence

Simultaneously, a realignment is taking place across Eurasia. Russia, China, and Iran – three distinct trajectories, but a functional convergence. This is not a formal alliance in the strict sense, but rather a gradual de facto coordination: sustained dedollarization, alternative energy corridors, and direct cooperation. The American project of containment is thus encountering a new reality: Eurasia is no longer fragmented; it is learning to connect.

And every contradiction in America accelerates this process.

The obsession with control

Since the end of the Cold War, Washington has pursued a consistent objective: to prevent the emergence of an autonomous Eurasian bloc. This involves controlling trade flows, securing border crossings, and fragmenting continental powers. The war against Iran is part of this strategy. But it also reveals its limitations. Because controlling is not the same as mastering, and containing is not the same as neutralizing.

Bourdieu and depth

To fully grasp this transformation, one must, as Pierre Bourdieu suggested, “stand on the shoulders of others.” To see far ahead is to look beyond the event and understand its underlying structure. And that structure is clear: unipolarity is eroding, multipolarity is still hesitant to stabilize, and the international system is entering a phase of turbulence.

In this turbulent period, American excesses act as accelerators of decline.

The Strategic South

The Global South, for its part, observes and adjusts. Africa, Asia, and Latin America – these regions no longer seek automatic alignment. They are seeking room for maneuver, diversifying their partnerships, and exploiting rivalries. The war against Iran is becoming a textbook case: it indicates that it is possible to resist and therefore to negotiate differently.

The deconstruction of hegemony

This shift does not translate into a sudden collapse of American hegemony. Rather, it resembles a gradual deconstruction. Hegemony does not collapse under blows; it disintegrates from within, through loss of credibility, overextension, and accumulated contradictions.

The United States now ticks all these different boxes.

And Donald Trump, far from being an anomaly, is the catalyst. His contradictory statements, his prematurely proclaimed victories, his strategic about-faces are not accidents. They are the visible symptoms of a deeper disorder.

The Nakedness of power

At the end of this sequence, one thing becomes clear.

The paper tiger is no longer what we were led to believe it to be in Western rhetoric. It is now visible: the United States of America.

Not because American power has disappeared, but because it is no longer sufficient to structure the world. It remains immense, but it is no longer absolute. It is now contested, negotiated, eroded.

She doubts. She tests. She exposes herself.

And the world now knows it.

The war against Iran is not a victory. It is a revelation.

And in the history of international relations, revelations are often the first signs of irreversible shifts.

Mohamed Lamine KABA, Expert in the geopolitics of governance and regional integration, Institute of Governance, Human and Social Sciences, Pan-African University

Iran war and the new world order

 Trump’s war on Iran hasn’t just redrawn battle lines; it has fractured the very architecture of the post-Second World War global order: a transatlantic alliance pushed beyond limits and internally too fractured to be repaired, a rapidly remade Middle East, shifting rules of global oil transit, and a stark exposure of the limits of US power, leaving strategic space that China and Russia will be keen to fill in both geopolitical and geoeconomic ways.

Salman Rafi Sheikh

The Fracturing of the Western Alliance System

The most immediate and consequential rupture has occurred within the Western alliance system itself. NATO—long considered the institutional backbone of transatlantic security—has been pushed to the brink by Washington’s unilateral prosecution of the war. European allies not only refused to participate militarily, but in several cases actively restricted US operational access, underscoring the depth of strategic divergence.

In fact, in many ways the US-Iran war — and still is — about securing US dominance worldwide. Iran’s fall would have caused the entire Middle East to fall to US dominance

This is not merely a tactical disagreement; it signals a structural shift. European leaders have been explicit that the Iran war is “not NATO’s war,” rejecting its incorporation into the alliance’s collective security framework. At the same time, Washington’s threats to punish non-compliant allies—through troop withdrawals or political pressure—have further corroded alliance cohesion.

The result is a twofold crisis. First, NATO’s foundational principle of collective defense has been hollowed out by conditionality and mistrust. Second, the broader US–Europe relationship is undergoing a profound recalibration. European leaders, including Emmanuel Macron, have openly questioned Washington’s reliability, warning that inconsistent US policy is undermining the credibility of the alliance itself.

What is emerging is not simply transatlantic “burden-sharing fatigue” but a deeper political estrangement. Europe is increasingly exploring alternative security arrangements that are less dependent on US leadership development that would have been almost unthinkable a decade ago. In effect, the war has exposed a critical reality: the United States can no longer assume automatic alignment from its closest allies. The Western bloc, once the central pillar of global order, is now internally divided—strategically, politically, and normatively.

A Reconfigured Middle East

If the transatlantic alliance has fractured, the Middle East has been fundamentally reordered. Iran has emerged from the conflict battered but strategically empowered, most notably through its enhanced leverage over the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint through which a significant share of global energy flows.

Iran’s control over this corridor now rivals, and in some respects exceeds, the geopolitical significance traditionally attached to nuclear capabilities. Unlike nuclear weapons, which function primarily as deterrents, Hormuz offers Iran an active instrument of through which it can impose high economic costs on rivals, with immediate global repercussions.

This shift has had a profound effect on Iran’s relations with the Gulf Arab states. Prior to the war, there were tentative efforts at de-escalation and regional accommodation. Those dynamics have now been decisively reversed. Gulf states, deeply vulnerable to Iranian missile and drone capabilities, must now deal with Iran’s control of the energy corridor.

More significantly, the region’s sectarian geopolitics—long defined by a Sunni–Shia divide—are being reconfigured within a broader great-power competition. Sunni-majority Gulf states are increasingly embedded within a US-aligned security architecture, while Iran, as the leading Shia power, is consolidating its position within a China- and Russia-leaning geopolitical orbit. This does not imply a rigid bloc structure, but it does suggest that sectarian identities are now intersecting with, and being reshaped by, global power rivalries. The implications are far-reaching. The Middle East is becoming a central theater in a wider contest between competing visions of global order. In this emerging landscape, regional conflicts are less likely to be resolved locally and more likely to be subsumed into great-power competition.

The End of Unipolar Credibility

Perhaps the most enduring consequence of the war lies in what it reveals about the limits of American power. Despite overwhelming military superiority, the United States has failed to achieve its core strategic objectives—whether regime change, nuclear rollback, or the durable neutralization of Iran’s regional influence.

At the same time, Washington has struggled to mobilize international support, even among its closest allies. Its inability to assemble a credible coalition to secure the Strait of Hormuz—despite direct appeals—has underscored a broader erosion of influence. This dual failure—of outcomes and of coalition-building—marks a critical inflection point. For decades, US power rested not only on material capabilities but also on perceived legitimacy and leadership. That perceived leadership and legitimacy have eroded, giving China and Russia a crucial opening for expanding their geopolitical and geoeconomic footprint globally.

In fact, in many ways the US-Iran war — and still is — about securing US dominance worldwide. Iran’s fall would have caused the entire Middle East to fall to US dominance. It would choke China’s access to energy. A US control over the flow of energy from the Middle East would have given it massive leverage over Russia’s ability to influence the global energy market, too. That has not happened, meaning the US bid to bomb its way to unchallenged hegemony has been defeated, bringing the end of unipolarity.

The broader lesson is stark. The architecture of global order is not dismantled in a single moment; it erodes through a series of decisions that cumulatively undermine its foundations. The war on Iran represents one such moment—perhaps not decisive in itself, but undeniably transformative. What follows is unlikely to be a stable multipolar equilibrium, but rather a more fragmented and contested international landscape in which power is diffuse, alignments are fluid, and the rules of the game are increasingly uncertain and unstable.

Salman Rafi Sheikh, research analyst of international relations and Pakistan’s foreign and domestic affair

Iran restored dignity of Muslims worldwide

A political cartoon depicts US and Israel leaders trying to cut off the heads of Iran as seen by cartoonist Michael de Adder      


Iran restored the dignity of Muslims worldwide by single-handedly fighting against the world’s most powerful sole super power United States and the artificial political entity of Israel, planted by British and US powers for Jewish settlers, after driving out Palestinian, sons and daughters of the soil, by means of massacres and genocides.

This happens while oppressive Arab nations, installed in power by Britain and France in the aftermath of the collapse of Ottoman Empire during World War I, and now depending on United States  for their political survival, refused even to condemn US-Israeli illegal war on Iran.

Columnist Abdelkader Abderrahman said there was no nuclear threat. US-Israeli war on Iran is nothing but a blind vengeance. Adding to this, columnist Sami Al-Arian stated that Suez was the death knell for the British empire. Hormuz may do the same for the US.

It is an illegal war, not approved by the US Congress, manipulated by Israel to topple Iranian regime and  install corrupt and pliant stooges like  Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan and other regimes in the region to serve US-Israeli interests. These regimes were parties to all US-Israeli conspiracies against fellow Arab regimes. 

Perhaps knowing that the US-Israeli war mongers would kill him, days before his death Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a pre-recorded appeal, urged Arab leaders to leave US Israeli enemies and join Muslims to save themselves and Muslims from their wars and destruction to restore their dignity. 

However, leading Arab countries, depending on the US master to ensure the survival of their regimes, turned a blind eye to all US-Israeli wars and supported atrocities on Arabs and Muslims such as the wars on Iraq and Libya and the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza. Muslims worldwide will never forgive Arab despots who facilitated the US-European backed Israeli genocide in Gaza.

Added to it, they invested their countries’ wealth in US and Europe and also started joint ventures with Israel. Their investments of their oil wealth on Muslim countries is virtually insignificant.

These Arab countries continue to view Iran with suspicion and failed to understand that US and Israel are pursuing geopolitical and economic hegemony at the expense of the peoples of the region. 

Added to it Arab despots including Saudi Arabia the land of Islam allowed US to establish its military bases in their countries. The  question raised by Muslims worldwide has been that how can Saudi Arabia allow a military base of US which invaded and destroyed Muslim counties like  Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and now Syria, slaughtering millions of innocent Muslims.

Displaying their servility, countries such as Saudi Arabia, UAE and Qatar, competed with each other to provide lavish multimillion dollar receptions to US President Trump, dismissed Muslim sentiments and recognised occupied Jerusalem as the capital of Israel where Masjid Al Aqsa the first qibla  direction for prayer in Islam.

Muslims worldwide remain fed up with Arab despots, aligned and  depending on US-Israeli war mongers, despite their wars against Muslims. However US-Israeli war on Iran destroyed this concept, as the regimes were left by the US to face the wrath of Iran on their own.

Iran knew that these despots have abandoned Islam and Muslims. Thus once US-Israeli military strike began, Iran ruthlessly responded against   US-Israeli military bases in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries, and  took the war to the very heart of Israel.

In the midst comes the disgusting swipe by US President Donald Trump at Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince, Mohammed Bin Salman or MBS, saying, that he did not think that he would have to “kiss” the US President’s “a**”.    The comments came amid reports that MBS was asking the US to continue bombing Iran until the regime is toppled.  

Trump, described by Professor Jeffrey Sachs as most the stupid man in the world, said during his first term as President said without the US protection, Saudi Arabia Royal family would be overthrown, overnight.  

This remark not only insulted Salman but the entire Muslim world as Salman is the de facto ruler of the land of Islam although the concept of Royal family kings, prince and princess controlling the entire wealth and power from their palaces, is alien to Islam.After Trump insulted MBS, Trump’s ally, Steve Bannon, called  for Gulf royals to send their children to fight Iran. Meanwhile Iran issued a chilling warning to its Middle Eastern neighbours during an urgent United Nations Human Rights Council debate on April 1, asserting that they will become “accessible targets” if they continue to facilitate Israeli and US military operations. 

Addressing the UN Human Rights Council, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, defending their right to respond at the “resource” of these attacks,  urged regional unity against what it termed as the “malignant entity” of Israel, while formally protesting the diplomatic language used by Western powers.  

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Empire of Piracy blockades Iran and China

Pepe Escobar, Strategic Culture Foundation

Iranians are itching to fight – in case the ceasefire collapses.

All hail the almighty return of Pirates of the Caribbean, now upgraded to Pirates of the Persian Gulf.

The spectacular collapse of the Islamabad diktats – Barbaria came to dictate, never to negotiate – has been followed by a coercion psy ops on steroids: Jesus! (literally, as he posted it on Truth Social) threatening every single ship now paying the Strait of Hormuz toll booth.

As every grain of sand from the Gobi to the Sahara already knows, this is all about China.

So the question needs to be posed again. CENTCOM has now merged into INDOPACOM, a new pyrate hydra. Will INDOPACOM have the balls to harass a Chinese supertanker which sailed through the Strait of Hormuz after paying the toolbooth in yuan?

In his trademark delusional supremacy mode, US Treasury Secretary Bessent said that China will no longer be able to get oil from Iran.

This Baboon of Barbaria gimmick in fact translates as economic warfare against not only China but an array of mostly Asian nations, disturbing global energy flows, trade, and major shipping transporting all manner of goods from the West down to the East and from East to West. An oil blockade targeting not only China but also a great deal of the multipolar world.

Before the start of the American blockade, ships from only five nations could transit through the Strait of Hormuz: China, Russia, India, Iraq and Pakistan. Once again: will INDOPACOM dare to seize or sink ships from four nuclear powers?

South Korea went a step ahead and sent a special envoy for direct negotiations with Tehran to guarantee safe passage through Hormuz and buy more cheaper oil and gas. As it stands, at least 26 South Korean tankers remain stranded.

Now compare Bessent with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, in Beijing, after talking to Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and being received in person by President Xi:

“Russia can, without a doubt, compensate for the shortfall in resources that has arisen.”

Roughly 13% of China’s oil imports come from Iran – approximately 1.38 million barrels a day. In parallel, Power of Siberia-1 – operating at full capacity – delivers 38 billion cubic meters of gas a year of gas, and the ESPO oil pipeline is hitting record highs.

Power of Siberia-2 may only become operational next year. Russia already supplies as much as 20% of China’s oil. “Compensate”, in Lavrov’s terms, means pushing spare capacity to the limit. But that’s doable.

Iran for its part can count on an alternative pipeline and the Jask oil terminal, with capacity for 1 million barrels a day, which completely bypasses the Strait of Hormuz.

So far, 8 Chinese tankers transited via Hormuz since the blockade was announced. Moreover, China has as many as 1.3 billion barrels in inventories, enough to cushion some losses from Iran for months. And China will continue – in theory – to receive oil from tankers departing from other non-Iranian Persian Gulf ports (they will still need to pay the toll booth).

The big question is how long Iran – and China, for that matter – will tolerate the shadow fleet being interdicted by INDOPACOM without a ballistic response.

Waiting for the Al Aqsa Triangle Blockade

A blockade of all Iran’s ports – and not of the Strait of Hormuz per se – may soon meet its match: the incoming Al Aqsa Triangle Blockade (Bab-al-Mandeb, Yanbu port in Saudi Arabia, Suez, in connection with Hormuz), as qualified by Yemen’s Ansarallah. The Houthis are just waiting for the uber-strategic moment to join the chat. That will inevitably lead to oil reaching over $200 a barrel – and counting.

Translation: an irretrievable, system-wide supply shock.

The cowardly Baboon of Barbaria administration certainly did not think this through – as it’s obsessed with starving China of oil and US dollars while destroying, in theory, key nodes of the New Silk Roads/BRI.

What everyone else is paying attention to is how the INDOPACOM-enforced blockade will devastate scores of nations outside of China.

Which brings us to a pedestrian but quite feasible calculation – in tune with mutts such as Bessent: let’s starve everyone of oil and US dollars so they will be desperate to sell their US Treasury bonds back to the US way below face value, as long as they can get oil and/or US dollars in return.

This is Grifter Central: the Americans take their debt out of circulation – at a huge discount – and simply erase those humongous interest payments on the debt which they are unable to pay.

There’s no guarantee the Baboon of Barbaria administration will get what it wants. Tehran does not depend on maritime routes. After decades of sanctions, they developed an array of alternative land corridors, barter trade channels, and swapping mechanisms, for instance via Turkmenistan.

China, once again, is not a prisoner anymore of the Malacca Dilemma – between Malaysia and Sumatra in Indonesia – because they have meticulously diversified their sources, starting with the Sino-Russian pipelines.

Moroever, the China-Myanmar pipeline totally bypasses Malacca.

The long China-Central Asia gas pipeline spanning Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan – paid by China and bypassing American thalassocracy – has been in effect since the early 2010s.

Then there’s Gwadar deep-sea port in the Arabian Sea, the key node of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) and a stalwart of BRI. Gwadar is only 80 km east of the port of Chabahar in Sistan-Balochistan in Iran: hence far away from the Persian Gulf. That translates into an overland route from the Arabian Sea to Xinjiang.

China will not starve if deprived of Iranian oil. China leads in nearly every single energy and power production sector. They have the industrial capacity – talk about productive capitalism – the raw materials, the supply chains, and enough skilled labor to produce the technology and infrastructure necessary for every relevant energy system: solar panels, turbines, batteries, transmission lines, everything in solar, wind, hydro and next-gen nuclear power. That’s exactly what I saw traveling across Xinjiang back to back last year while shooting a documentary.

Obviously myopic Baboon of Barbaria minions cannot possibly understand how China’s strategy of total domination in EVs, solar batteries and exporting electricity is protecting the Middle Kingdom from artificial oil/gas shocks such as the blockade.

As it stands, The Invincible Armada remains in the outer fringes of the Gulf of Oman, out of range of many – but not all – Iranian missiles and drones, but certainly targeteable by long-range ballistics and hypersonics. The Americans will continue to use their ISR to track ships; then small boats and helicopters will engage in the “interdiction” procedure.

So far, nothing happened. Well, actually a big thing happened: a sanctioned, non-Iranian supertanker capable of carrying 2 million barrels of oil, sailed to Iran via the Strait of Hormuz with the AIS switched on for every tracker to see. INDOPACOM didn’t dare to touch it.

The Iranians, meanwhile, are just waiting. Asymmetrically. But make no mistake: they are itching to fight – in case the ceasefire collapses.

In this case, we’ll be plunged right into the Mother of All Cliffhangers. Iran just needs to sink one American destroyer; and/or “disable” one of those multibillion-dollar sitting ducks with a missile/drone volley, guided by Chinese intel.

The whole planet will then see it for what it is: the definitive, graphic strategic defeat of the Empire of Chaos, Lies, Plunder, Piracy and “If I Don’t Like You I’ll Kill You”.

Bring it on.

Iran condemns YouTube’s removal of AI-driven Lego-style channel over anti-US narratives

TEHRAN- A YouTube channel producing artificial intelligence-generated animations in a Lego-inspired format focusing on recent US-Israeli aggression on Iran has been taken down, drawing criticism over what some describe as selective enforcement of content policies.

The channel, operated by Explosive Media, had gained attention since 2025 for publishing politically themed videos created by a young Iranian artist. The group announced that its account on YouTube was suspended on the grounds of “violent content,” a characterization it has openly challenged.

In a post shared on X, the group questioned the decision, arguing that its stylized Lego-like animations could not reasonably be classified as violent. Despite the suspension, its presence remains intact across other platforms, including Instagram, TikTok, and Telegram.

The development comes as AI-generated media continues to expand globally, reshaping how political messages are produced and disseminated. Notably, even official institutions such as the White House have increasingly incorporated AI-generated visuals into their communications.

Esmaeil Baghaei, spokesperson for the Foreign Ministry, criticized the move, describing it as an attempt to silence alternative perspectives on the recent US-Israeli war imposed on Iran. He argued that such actions reflect a broader effort to control narratives in the digital sphere.

“In a land that proudly hosts Pixar, DreamWorks Animation, and The Walt Disney Company, an independent animated YouTube channel — which had organically grown by depicting US aggression & warmongering, and garnered millions of viewers — was abruptly shut down!! Why?! Simply to suppress the truth about their 'illegal war' on Iran and shield the American administration’s false narrative from any competing voice.” Baghaei wrote on X. 

The channel’s content frequently employed satire and elements of American popular culture to critique Washington’s policies. In several widely circulated clips, figures such as Donald Trump were portrayed in exaggerated, cartoonish forms, often conveying themes of political failure and retreat.

Observers note that while a wide range of AI-generated content continues to flourish online, material that challenges dominant Western narratives appears to face greater scrutiny. The removal of the channel has therefore reignited debate over freedom of expression and the boundaries of acceptable content on major technology platforms owned by corporations such as Alphabet.

As AI tools become more accessible and influential, the contest over digital storytelling—and which voices are allowed to be heard—appears set to intensify.

The Lego-style animated videos produced by Explosive Media seek to present a narrative aligned with the experiences of Iranians, using accessible and visually engaging storytelling to reach a global audience. Through satire and simplified imagery, these productions aim to shed light on the realities of the recent war imposed on Iran, while criticizing what they portray as US aggression and unilateralism. By drawing on familiar elements of popular culture and reinterpreting them through a political lens, the creators attempt to raise awareness among international viewers and challenge dominant narratives surrounding American policies.

Farhadi’s “Parallel Tales” to premiere at 79th Cannes Film Festival

TEHRAN – The Cannes Film Festival has announced the auteur-driven competition lineup fort its 79th edition including the new film by the celebrated Iranian filmmaker Asghar Farhadi.

Titled “Parallel Tales,” Farhadi’s 10th feature film will vie for the coveted Palme d'Or with the latest films by well-known figures including Polish filmmaker Paweł Pawlikowski, Japanese writer-director Ryusuke Hamaguchi, American filmmaker Ira Sachs, Spanish director Pedro Almodovar, and Romanian filmmaker Cristian Mungiu among others, Honaronline reported.

“Parallel Tales” marks Farhadi’s second French-language film after “The Past” with Berenice Bejo, who won the Best Actress award for her performance at Cannes in 2013.

The new film by the two-time Oscar-winning filmmaker was shot in Paris during fall 2025. Its stellar cast includes Isabelle Huppert, Vincent Cassel, Virginie Efira, Pierre Niney, Adam Bessa, and Catherine Deneuve.

Written by Farhadi, the story deals with a young man who falls madly in love with an older woman, leading him into a dangerous obsession.

A French-Italian-Belgian coproduction, the film is produced by long-time collaborator Alexandre Mallet-Guy alongside Farhadi and David Levine. The prestige project will be launched by Charades and UTA Independent Film Group at the upcoming Cannes Film Market. Charades will handle international sales, while UTA Independent Film Group will rep U.S. rights. Memento will handle distribution in France.

It is the fifth collaboration between Farhadi and Memento Production after “The Past,” Oscar-winner “The Salesman,” “Everybody Knows,” and “A Hero”.

The 79th annual Cannes Film Festival will take place from May 12 to 23. South Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook will serve as jury president for the main competition section.

One of Iran's most prominent cinematic voices, Farhadi, 53, is known for his thought-provoking films that explore social issues. He earned a bachelor's degree in dramatic arts from the University of Tehran in 1988 and later a master's degree in theater direction.

Farhadi won the Best Foreign Film Oscar in 2012 for “A Separation” (which was also nominated for Best Screenplay) and once again in 2017 for “The Salesman”.

He has been selected four times in competition in Cannes with “The Past,” “The Salesman,” “Everybody Knows,” and “A Hero”.

“The Salesman” won Best Screenplay and Best Actor awards at Cannes in 2016 and “A Hero” scooped the Grand Prize at the 2021 festival.

“Everybody Knows,” Farhadi’s Spanish-language debut starring Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem, opened and competed at Cannes in 2018.

Farhadi was also selected twice in Berlin. He was awarded the Silver Bear for Best Director in 2009 for “About Elly” and the 2011 Golden Bear for “A Separation”.

Last week, when Iran was fighting an imposed war by the US and Israel, Asghar Farhadi, in a message, called on artists and filmmakers around the world not to remain silent in the face of the destruction of Iran's civilian infrastructure and be a voice for stopping the aggression against Iran.

His message was a reaction to the US President Donald Trump who had threatened to decimate Iran's power plants, bridges and other vital infrastructure.

Farhadi emphasized that the destruction of these centers is a direct blow to the life and human dignity of Iranian citizens.

“I appeal to artists and filmmakers everywhere in the world, in these sensitive days and hours, to use every possible means to be a voice for stopping the devastating aggression that has increasingly led to the destruction of civilian infrastructure,” he said in the message.

“These infrastructures belong to the people of Iran and are related to their basic daily needs. The destruction of infrastructure is not just the destruction of buildings; it is a blow to human life and dignity,” he added.

“Attacking a country's infrastructure is a war crime. Regardless of any belief or perspective, let us unite our voices to stop this inhumane, illegal, and devastating process,” he noted.

The US and Israel attacked Iran on February 28 and for 40 days martyred about 3,000 people including the Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, several officials, and military commanders as well as numerous civilians, including women and children.

The aggressors claimed at the beginning that the attacks were aimed at preventing Iran’s nuclear program but they later revealed their real objectives. For Israel, the maximalist goal was the regime change in Iran and the US sought to seize the oil and gas resources of the country.

Therefore, besides some military targets, the US and Israel launched organized attacks against civilian infrastructure, including residential homes, hospitals, refineries, power plants, schools, universities, art and cultural spaces, bookstores, museums, and ancient sites in several cities, causing total or partial damages and injuring innocent people, in an attempt to force the country to surrender to their illegitimate demands.

The attacks prompted a swift response from the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC), with missile and drone launches targeting Israel and several U.S. bases in the region, which were gradually intensified.

Iran, the US and Israel agreed to a two-week ceasefire on April 8. The Supreme National Security Council of the Islamic Republic of Iran announced in a statement that Iran had achieved a great victory and forced the US and Israel to accept its 10-point plan.

Seyyed Abbas Araghchi, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, wrote on X: “Considering the request by the US for negotiations and acceptance of the general framework of Iran’s 10-pont proposal as a basis for negotiations, I hereby declare on behalf of Iran's Supreme National Security Council: If attacks against Iran are halted, our Powerful Armed Forces will cease their defensive operations. For a period of two weeks, safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz will be possible via coordination with Iran's Armed Forces and with due consideration of technical limitations”.

Iranian psychology body calls for an assessment of Trump’s mental health

TEHRAN – The National Psychology and Counseling Organization of Iran, in an open letter to psychologists in the United States, has called for an assessment of the mental health of US political leaders, particularly Donald Trump, in the interest of world peace.

The letter, which includes the scientific and humanitarian concerns of the Iranian psychological community and counselors, criticizes the destructive and antisocial behaviors of American leaders and their direct impact on creating psychological disorders, violating world peace, and creating trauma among nations, IRNA reported.

Referring to the recent US military aggression against Iran, the assassination of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, and the killing of elementary school children, the letter emphasizes the clear conflict of these actions with global mental health standards.

The American scientific community has also been asked what the mechanism is for assessing the mental health of their political leaders in response to impulsive and psychopathic decisions that are leading the world into the abyss of fire.

As Trump threatens to wipe out Iran and attacks the pope, even some former allies and advisers are questioning whether he has grown increasingly unbalanced, describing him as “lunatic” and “clearly insane.”

Democrats who have long challenged Trump’s psychological fitness have issued a fresh chorus of calls to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove the president from power for disability, The New York Times reported.

The same can be heard now among retired generals, diplomats and foreign officials. And most strikingly, it can be heard now on the political right among onetime allies of the president.

Former Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Georgia Republican who recently broke with Trump, advocated using the 25th Amendment, telling CNN that threatening to destroy Iran’s civilization was “not tough rhetoric, it’s insanity.” 

Some of the questions about Trump’s soundness come from people who once worked with him and have since become critics. Even before the civilization post, Ty Cobb, a White House lawyer in Trump’s first term, told the journalist Jim Acosta that the president is “a man who is clearly insane” and that his recent string of belligerent, middle-of-the-night social media posts “highlights the level of his insanity.” 
Stephanie Grisham, a former White House press secretary for Trump, wrote online last week that “he’s clearly not well.”