Sunday, April 26, 2026

THE FUTURE: A NEW WORLD ORDER OR A NO WORLD ORDER

By Askiah Adam

THE WORLD is in flux. For the average observer it’s a confusion tugging their focus every which way. The transition from a unilateral world dominated by the United States, and until recently with allies that pretend even as lapdogs it was better where they are than being elsewhere, namely the Group of Seven (G7) and other miniscule sovereign nations plus the genocidal nation of Israel. Meanwhile, manifesting a global resistance are the BRICS nations – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. So fast growing that it’s threatening the very integrity of the United Nations (UN), the post Second World War global organisation intended to prevent another global conflagration of a similar magnitude. But obviously the current chaos as witnessed by the war in Ukraine, the Gaza Strip where Israel is comfortably executing a genocide with US and European complicity and currently an on-the-brink US/Israel threat of a kinetic war on Iran.

While the collapse of the US dollar and hence its global reserve status may not happen as quickly as the world may wish, the signs are that it is afoot. That Malaysia’s Ringgit had a recent boost up the foreign exchange ladder was a moment of jubilation for us Malaysians, however, it did not, for Malaysia, reflect an improving global economic performance rather it reflected the weakening US dollar. And the recent divestment by China of its massive holding of US bonds left the dollar gasping for air. Who will pay for the liquidation of these bonds? The US debt is now some USD$38 trillion dollars. Servicing the debt comes to a trillion dollars annually. Trump has promised the US military a budget allocation of USD$1.5 trillion for the year. In short, the President is not mindful of the country’s financial predicament, one that will worsen quickly once the currency’s reserve status is smashed, which will be the “next change” schedule of its economic forecast! The US can no longer just print its way to global supremacy and support its overseas military bases and its imperial status. Printing paper money with wild abandon as they have done will lead to inflation thus devaluing the US dollar. Now that the US lender, China, has decided to abandon them to their self-inflicted fate that annual trillion-dollar debt servicing is a noose.

Additionally, that Saudi Arabia has deserted the US and will accept payments for their oil in the Chinese Yuan, for example, removes the petrodollar from the global economic scene, which in turn will stop the US from their reckless money printing. This will necessarily tighten their unlimited access to money which, in turn, will force the closure of their military bases all over the world. That should end the delusional belief that they have the best military might in the world. If this thought is not delusional why have the US not won any war of any significance? And, by the way, the Korean War was not won, it was frozen! And neither was the Second World War which was won by the Soviet Union’s Red Army.

And today, under the presidency of the narcissist, Donald Trump, who thinks history is for him to dictate, truth notwithstanding, he sends armadas to Iranian shores without restraint thinking that the US’ military supremacy is a given, ignoring the open declaration of support for Iran from China and Russia, the country widely recognised by most of the world as holding the enviable position as the world’s military leader with the might of its latest weapon, the Oreshnik, demonstrated in Ukraine last year, a weapon as destructive as nuclear bombs but without the radioactive fallout of nuclear weapons, giving it the utility value always absent from nuclear weapons thus giving the former a more “user-friendly” hue. There are too the hypersonic ballistic missile the Khinzal, Kh-47M2. By the way, hypersonic missiles remain absent from the US arsenal.

Therefore, one wonders why the combined West would continue deluding themselves that they stand a chance of defeating Russia in a frontal violent meet. Granted that to date they have used Ukraine as a proxy and despite the obvious defeat suffered by Ukraine the Europeans are adamantly insisting on continuing the war to the last Ukrainian standing. However, this evil is hampered by objective conditions. After ruining themselves economically the Europeans find themselves unable to arm Ukraine. They tried to criminally gift Ukraine the Russian reserves in their banks that they attempted to steal. The Russians have taken them to court hence short circuiting their attempt to steal.

But the consequences of this thieving has led to the total breakdown in the Global South of the trust that made holding reserves in Western banks a convenience availed widely by weaker sovereign nations. However, more than that we see how Donald Trump has alienated his Western allies too. Reports suggest that Canada has moved its gold bullions from New York to Shanghai of all places, for safekeeping. If true, this demonstrates how far the Euro-Atlantic alliance has cracked. Further, a more recent report suggests that the Germans are not as fortunate. The US has refused them the pleasure of repatriating their gold bullions.

How will this all end? While the multilateral world is looking good to succeed the insanity that is Donald Trump makes that future uncertain. He has clearly brought the nuclear option forward as a possible choice but Vladimir Putin, the Russian President has repeated his long held position. When questioned by a journalist recently, he said Russia retains its no first strike policy but Russia’s “Dead Hand” remains effective.

Askiah Adam
Assistant Secretary-General
International Movement for a Just World(JUST)
Kuala Lumpur

JUSTICE FOR IMRAN KHAN

By Chandra Muzaffar

In the midst of all the earth-shaking events occurring in the planet at the moment, there is a major political crisis that revolves around an individual which has serious implications for humanity as a whole. This is the imperiled situation confronting the former Prime Minister of Pakistan Imran Khan who has been a political prisoner in his country since August 2023. He is languishing in the Adiela jail in Rawalpindi. It is now medically confirmed that his eyesight has been deteriorating in recent months. He is left with 15 % vision in his right eye.

According to a detailed 7 page report submitted to the Supreme Court of Pakistan ( SCP) by a barrister at the request of the SCP on the 12th of February 2026, it is alleged that Imran Khan “ suffered rapid and substantial vision loss over the past three months while in custody under former jail superintendent, Abdul Ghafoor Najum who was transferred in the middle of January 2026. Despite repeated complains of persistent blurred and hazy vision “no action was taken by the jail authorities to address the complaint.”

The report prepared by Talman Gafdar in his capacity as amicus curiae ( friend of the court) was based on a two hour interview he had with Imran Khan on 10th February. Imran subsequently suffered a sudden and complete loss of vision in his right eye. A medical report diagnosed his condition as right central retinal vein occlusion. An ophthalmologist from a leading government hospital in Islamabad was consulted and confirmed the diagnosis that a blood clot could have caused severe retinal damage.

From both legal and medical principles, the well-being of a political prisoner should be accorded the highest priority. As a former political prisoner in my own country Malaysia way back in October – December 1987, I can attest to the importance that a civilized government would attach to the health of political prisoners. This is the first reason why both doctors and lawyers everywhere should be concerned about Imran Khan’s health in custody.

There are four other compelling reasons why he should be regarded as a global cause in the struggle for justice. One, let us not forget that he was a democratically elected leader who was ousted from power in 2022 by forces inside and outside the country who had no right whatsoever to do what they did to Imran. Two, it is now clearer than ever before that these forces feared Imran’s stance on some major regional and international issues. His sincere commitment to the establishment of an independent, sovereign Palestinian state was undoubtedly an issue which concerned both Israel and the United States of America and perhaps some of the Arab and Muslim states within and without West Asia. They would have preferred a leader who was willing to play the usual hypocritical game of “ supporting “ the Palestinian cause while conniving and colluding with Israel and the US. For them, an honest leader of the only nuclear armed Muslim majority country in the world prepared to stand up to the diabolical, despicable manipulations of a violent Israel working in tandem with an equally crude and aggressive US was a nightmare that could not be allowed to a become a reality. Three, there are powerful vested interests in the arms and energy industries that want the economics and politics of West Asia and the world to continue to be dominated by US and Israel. It is an arrangement that serves their profits and their power. An independent minded leader in the region with the charisma to mobilise and galvanise the people against these vested interests is the sort of threat that would go all out to crush in order to ensure that they remain at the apex forever! Any wonder why Jeffrey Epstein viewed Imran Khan as “ dangerous.” Four, the manner in which the ruling elite in Pakistan and its underlings have gone all out to fabricate charges against Imran and his wife should convince the doubters and fence-sitters that there must be something in the man that provokes the Establishment to seek to destroy him with such furious determination. For those of us who believe in truth and justice that itself should persuade us that Imran Khan is a cause worth every ounce of our strength.

The reckless attempt to wreck Imran’s health appears to have failed for the time being. But he is still incarcerated. This why the noble struggle to free him from jail and to restore his rightful role as the leader of the people’s movement in Pakistan has to continue.

Now that we know why his role has a much wider and larger significance that goes beyond Pakistan’s shores, we have to get all segments of society to strive together for first his release and then to enable him to play his role as the figure who at this juncture of history will bring people from all walks of life and from different cultural and religious backgrounds and from all nationalities together in a united movement to end the injustices and hegemony, imperialism and racism that have plagued the human family for so long.

Only then will it be possible for us to achieve a just world where the dignity of all creation is manifested through our deeds for now and forever!

Dr Chandra Muzaffar is the president of the International Movement for a Just World (JUST)

Malaysia.

The Other War in the Af-Pak

By Junaid S. Ahmad

Pakistan’s generals have rediscovered their favorite political reflex: when legitimacy collapses at home, bomb a frontier and call it doctrine. The latest war against Afghanistan is being sold, with familiar deadpan absurdity, as a campaign of precision, necessity, and national resolve. One almost has to admire the performance. A state that spent decades cultivating militant infrastructure now speaks in the clipped prose of counterterror professionalism, as though its past can be neutralized by a change in vocabulary. Since late February, the fighting has become the worst in years, with major cross-border strikes, repeated clashes, and more than 100,000 people displaced in Afghanistan alone.

The grotesque culmination, for now, is Kabul. Afghan officials say Pakistan’s latest strike hit a drug rehabilitation hospital in the capital, killing roughly 400 people and injuring around 250. Pakistan denies targeting civilians and insists it struck “military installations” and “terrorist support infrastructure” in Kabul and Nangarhar. That phrasing is a textbook example of modern statecraft. It is the language states use when they vaporize people first and classify them later. Even by regional standards, this is a grim accomplishment: to bomb a rehabilitation center and still speak as though one has merely updated a report.

What Rawalpindi cannot admit is that this war is less a strategy than a tantrum. Pakistan’s security establishment did not merely tolerate the Afghan Taliban; it helped midwife the political order it now denounces. The outrage today is not that Kabul is Islamist, brutal, or administratively deranged. Those qualities were never disqualifying. The real offense is sovereignty. The Taliban have refused the role Pakistan wrote for them: obedient proxy, grateful client, strategic furniture. Nothing enrages a patron quite like a former instrument developing a will of its own. The shift is stark: the sponsor now confronts its former ward as adversary.

Because Pakistan’s rulers cannot confront this failure, they translate it into something more familiar: a domestic security drama with Pashtuns cast as the usual suspects. This is not incidental. It is the old “War on Terror” script, reheated and presented to a public expected to applaud its own political diminishment. Pashtun regions are treated not as communities with memory and rights, but as expandable zones of punishment. The center falters in Kabul, and a village in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is expected to absorb the lesson. This is not counterterrorism. It is ethnicized state discipline.

The logic is as convenient as it is corrosive. Afghanistan resists subordination; therefore Pashtuns are suspect. The border frays; therefore Pashtun life must be tightened and monitored. Militancy persists; therefore civilians become administratively negotiable. It is governance reduced to classification. An entire population is turned into a category of risk so the state can avoid examining the risks embedded in its own policies.

Those policies now return as consequence. Attacks attributed to the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) have intensified within Pakistan, and Islamabad accuses Kabul of harboring those responsible. The charge may carry elements of truth. But its historical echo is unmistakable. For two decades, Afghan governments — backed by the United States — leveled the same accusation at Pakistan: that it sheltered the militants destabilizing Afghanistan. What was once dismissed as hostile narrative now returns as official grievance. The symmetry is not coincidence; it is the residue of a system that normalized ambiguity as policy and now confronts it as threat.

Diplomacy circles without resolution. Mediation flickers, ceasefires collapse, and civilian casualties accumulate. None of this alters the core reality: Pakistan’s establishment still believes force can repair a crisis produced by its own long investment in managed militancy. The premise endures even as its consequences deepen.

The most reactionary feature of this war is not only its brutality or recklessness, but what it reveals: a ruling elite incapable of learning. Every failed frontier adventure is repackaged as resolve. Every displaced family becomes collateral to a theory already discredited. The military continues to treat domination as intelligence and bombardment as analysis, expecting populations to forget who armed whom and to what end.

But the frontier remembers. Pashtuns remember. Afghanistan remembers. And that is what unsettles Pakistan’s rulers most. Not simply the loss of control, but the loss of narrative. Once people recognize that the language of security often masks impunity, the performance weakens. The uniforms still glitter, the briefings still thunder, the maps still glow — but the script has collapsed. What remains is a state bombing the consequences of its own illusions and calling the smoke sovereignty.

Prof. Junaid S. Ahmad teaches Law, Religion, and Global Politics and is the Director of the Center for the Study of Islam and Decolonization (CSID), Islamabad, Pakistan. He is a member of the International Movement for a Just World (JUST – https://just-international.org/), Movement for Liberation from Nakba (MLN – https://nakbaliberation.com/), and Saving Humanity and Planet Earth (SHAPE – https://www.theshapeproject.com/).

17 March 2026

Junaid S. Ahmad
Professor of Law, Religion, and Global Politics
Director, Center for the Study of Islam and Decolonization (CSID)
Islamabad, Pakistan
@Academicatarms

Within the United States, We Must Embrace Revolutionary Defeatism

By Shabbir Rizvi

World War I was a bloodbath for the working and oppressed people of the world. In an imperialist war, more than 60 million soldiers were sent into war at the behest of the capitalists of their nations, in a conquest to ultimately secure new markets and resources for each country’s ruling elite.

An estimated 20 million people – between soldiers and civilian casualties – would lose their lives as a result of capitalist greed.

As a quick refresher, the contradictions that birthed the global conflict were, of course, the contradictions brought by capitalism, as Russian revolutionary and Bolshevik party leader Vladimir Lenin argued in one of his defining works – Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism (1917) – capitalism had reached its imperialist stage, which is defined by five key features:

  1. The concentration of capital and production: Corporations and financial institutions eliminated or absorbed their competitors, leading to the concentration of production and capital within a few powerful monopolies.
  1. Finance capital: The merging of industrial capital with powerful banking institutions, giving birth to “finance capital.”
  1. Capital Export: Up until the stage of imperialism, capitalists had been exporting commodities. At the imperialist stage, capital itself is exported to the colonies and periphery to generate massive profits for the imperialist country, while controlling the social fabric and productive forces of the colonized country.
  1. Monopolies and Cartels: The emergence of these organizations allows for control over resources and production in the hands of a few
  1. Division of the world by major capitalist powers: The flagship capitalist powers, propelled by capitalist exploitation and control of resources, divided the world amongst themselves.

Published during the last half of World War I, the book analyzed the emergence of the imperialist stage, sweeping aside each state’s propagandistic reasons for supporting the war effort. Lenin’s historical materialist analysis guided the Bolsheviks and the Russian masses, who were plunged into the war, in recognizing that this was not a war for the working and toiling masses, but a war for the capitalists who exploit them.

The same year of its publication, the Bolsheviks converted the imperialist war into a revolutionary struggle at home against their own government that sacrificed hundreds of thousands of Russian soldiers for the victory of the domestic capitalist class. The Russian masses, exploited and oppressed for decades by the Tsar, overthrew their bourgeois government, and the October Revolution triumphed with the slogan “All power to the Soviets!”

Why bring up this history now? Today, imperialism is driven by the United States of America. Being the victor of the “Cold War,” the collapse of the USSR created the conditions for the United States to project its power over nearly the entire globe. Still, the endless conquest to control new markets, resources, and forms of exploitation remains an objective for imperialism as it did over a century ago, just with different features and conditions. It is concentrated within one country’s capitalist class that operates internationally, the United States, which has its junior partners (the UK, European Union countries) and neocolonial partners (South Korea, the United Arab Emirates, Argentina, etc).

Progressive and revolutionary forces within the imperial core must clarify their orientation to imperialism and how to respond to their government’s aggression against sovereign states. This brings us to another Leninist concept: Revolutionary Defeatism.

Understanding Revolutionary Defeatism
The concept of revolutionary defeatism was coined during the First World War, when Vladimir Lenin argued that the war’s interests did not align with the working classes of all the nations involved. The Tsarist rule of Russia brought death and destruction to the working class, as did the imperialist governments of Germany, France, etc. The imperialist nature of the belligerents ensured that even with a country’s supposed victory, exploitation would continue, that the poor and oppressed masses would continue to be poor and oppressed, and that the arm of the ruling class would be strengthened, not creating the conditions for liberation and prosperity but rather expanding the scope of exploitation and strengthening the ruling class oppressors.

Conditions in Tsarist Russia were dire. Wages were at starvation levels. Resources were hard to come by. There was little to no authentic representation for the workers’ interests at the state level, and the state itself was repressing workers for speaking out or organizing against the Tsarist regime.

Therefore, it was in the working class’s best interests to oppose the war, and, as Lenin conveyed it, “transform the imperialist war into civil war” in a bid to put power into the hands of the working and oppressed masses.

Though conditions within the imperial core – the United States – are far from a revolutionary moment, in part due to the lack of a vanguard party or organized movement, and of course, the lack of ideological cohesion, one cannot discount the contradictions of American society that can be raised in pointing out the obvious reasons to oppose the multiple fronts of aggression the US is waging, most particularly against the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Axis of Resistance.

In the United States, poverty is widespread. Financial conditions are not improving for the working and oppressed masses, and the destiny of the working class is not in their own hands but rather at the mercy of a group of billionaire capitalists across multiple industries, particularly financial and technological. There is limited access to healthcare, and one must take on debt to receive an education that may be outdated by the time they complete a program, or, worse, made redundant by artificial intelligence, which, again, is not regulated by the working masses. Housing shortages and increased costs of living continue to drive crises across multiple major cities, all while the government, whether run by Republicans or Democrats, responds by strengthening the police state.

These are just a few major problems in a long and growing list, and of course, this is all by design. At the same time, the capitalist state insists on preserving this system, and it wages multi-billion-dollar wars on countries for the stated goal of resource extraction – resource extraction that cements the rule and power of the ruling class that oppresses society. As observed earlier this year, the kidnapping of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was a step towards securing the massive oil resources of Venezuelan society, now to be overseen by American capitalists. The aggression on Iran is no different, with even more dire consequences, as Iran has been the regional power that has prevented total US hegemony over the West Asian region for nearly fifty years.

The slogan of every American who wants better living conditions, who wants actual power over their political system, who wants to rein in the havoc imposed on them by the ruling class, should be “No war on Iran!” More so, in this critical moment, as the aggression is already ongoing, the Americans wanting control over their own destiny should be calling for the defeat of their own military – the US military must be expelled from the region.

The imperialist army is an extension of the will of the capitalists that exploits the American at home, that creates the conditions for the repression of everyday Americans, that oversees the political system that ensnares them. The strengthening of the capitalist class makes any chance at revolution that much more difficult. For example, the profits from newly gained resources and markets for the capitalist are invested in politicians through the powerful lobbying arm of corporations, ensuring that laws are passed that favorably govern society in the capitalist class’s interests. There is no “third way” in which the United States military neither wins nor loses. It must be a strategic defeat that leads to the removal of the US imperialist mechanisms from the region. The imperialists cannot be allowed to gain any profits or strategic leverage from their aggression; otherwise, it will promote further aggression by setting a precedent.

Revolutionary Defeatism in Practice 

“Wartime revolutionary action against one’s own government indubitably means, not only desiring its defeat, but really facilitating such a defeat.”

– Lenin, The Defeat of One’s Own Government in the Imperialist War”

Though revolutionary defeatism, as we understand it, was coined during World War I, we must not make the mistake of treating that war as a “perfect example” to the current war of aggression by the United States on the Islamic Republic of Iran. WWI was a war of imperialists. The aggression against Iran has one imperialist belligerent, the United States, and an anti-imperialist nation, the Islamic Republic of Iran, defending itself.

To condemn the Islamic Republic of Iran for the act of defending itself is to carry water for imperialism. To carry the propaganda of the imperialist machine against Iran is to carry water for imperialism. To say “neither Washington nor Tehran” is materially taking a position on the side of Washington.

Iran is fighting for its sovereignty against imperialism. It is not an imperialist actor, or an aggressor, by any means.

Within the imperial core, the masses have the responsibility of stopping their own war machine, a war machine that enforces the cycle of exploitation domestically and abroad. Muddying the waters of solidarity is creating the conditions for imperialism to advance, and therefore is an action that only strengthens the shackles of all working class and oppressed people.

Furthermore, the Islamic Republic of Iran is an anti-imperialist state. Its orientation to imperialism is to resist its expansion. Iran does not have plans to dominate the region. It does not have a financial class that seeks resource extraction across the globe. It is not engaged in colonialism. A state does not have to be socialist or communist in order for it to weigh successful resistance to imperialism. And, of course, criticizing how Iran should defend itself, or orient itself in any regard, particularly while living within the imperial core, is not productive, and categorically absurd.

Revolutionary defeatism in our time materially means stopping the US war machine. It means calling for its defeat. Americans must be exposed to the reality of the war machine that destroys, maims, and plunders in their name. The anti-war movement must be focused on creating conditions to prevent the continuation of the war – and imperialist plots in general.

In practice, we can turn to the Student Intifada of 2024, building on hard lessons learned but re-examining tactics and strategies. The divestment movements across the nation specifically focused on Palestine must be expanded in scope to target the entirety of the imperialist war machine – from its AI tools to its logistical services. Connections between the war machine and the tools of repression utilized by “law enforcement” agencies at home must be examined, exposed, and added to the long list of entities that need to be boycotted, divested from, and ultimately economically disabled. The language of imperialism is the language of profit accumulation, and so the imperialists must be cut off from their profit making abilities.

The imperialist propaganda spell must also be broken. The dominant discourse within mainstream media against the war is that the strategy of the war against Iran is wrong, and therefore it cannot be supported. This is not a condemnation of the war against Iran. In fact, the mainstream framing of the war against Iran is framed as the war with Iran, framing it in a way that insists that Iran is an aggressor country. The definition serves to promote the war effort. To take up an orientation of revolutionary defeatism, those within the imperial core must not condemn the strategy of the war, but condemn the war and all aggression itself – whether led by a Democrat or Republican, it all serves imperialist interests.

The revolutionary defeatist position must popularize the true reasons for the war, resource plunder and destabilization, and the anti-war movement must confidently assert that the best way forward is the defeat of imperialism. It must be able to concretely convey the bleak material conditions of American life, its deterioration, and that the success of American imperialism would translate into worsening conditions at home and globally, as the capitalist class would continue to be strengthened, solidifying their grip on society. And within this effort, a serious campaign must be waged to discourage participation within all branches of the US armed forces.

The work is cut out for the movement. Americans can see that their material conditions are worsening. Even the most politically removed person can understand that something is deeply wrong with society. It is up to the politically advanced sectors of society to confront the powerful propaganda machine, promote the defeat of imperialism, and call for a retreat of imperialism. Anything less than the retreat of the US war machine is a material victory for imperialism.

Shabbir Rizvi is the Political Director of Vox Ummah. He is also a contributor to Sovereign Media and has been featured on PressTV, Al Mayadeen, and Orinoco Tribune.


(Vox Ummah)

China, America, and the Ceasefire of Imperial Decline

By Junaid S. Ahmad

History has a nasty sense of irony. In 1971, Pakistan helped carry secret messages between Washington and Beijing so that an anxious American empire could welcome China into the diplomatic architecture of the modern world. In 2026, Pakistan is again carrying messages between Washington and a power orbit shaped by Beijing — only this time America is not opening the door with strategic confidence. It is being marched to it, sulking, by the logic of its own decline.

That is the real meaning of Pakistan’s role in the ceasefire diplomacy around the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran. The sentimental version says Islamabad rose unexpectedly as a peacemaker. The flatteringly patriotic version says Pakistan rediscovered its historic vocation as a pivot state. The more accurate version is less romantic and more revealing: Pakistan functioned as the courier of a transition in world order. It was not the author of the new script. It was the familiar intermediary through which the new balance of power announced itself.

The comparison with 1971 is irresistible. Then, Pakistan under Yahya Khan — a military ruler with a wretched domestic record and a fine reputation among foreign patrons for being useful — served as the discreet channel through which Henry Kissinger reached China. The United States approached that opening with something close to strategic enthusiasm. It had decided that admitting China into the geometry of great-power diplomacy served American interests. Washington was still imperial enough to choose adaptation before compulsion.

Today the choreography is eerily similar, but the mood has inverted. Pakistan, once again fronted by a military strongman whose legitimacy at home is inversely proportional to his value abroad, has been used as the go-between in a crisis whose real diplomatic center of gravity lies farther east. This time, however, the United States is not ushering China into the system. It is confronting the much grimmer realization that the system no longer belongs to it in the old way.

The war on Iran exposed that truth with unusual cruelty. Forty days of threats, bombardment, and theatrical ultimatums did not produce Iranian capitulation. They produced strategic turbulence: energy panic, maritime disruption, regional escalation, and a steadily shrinking margin for American bluff. Empires love the language of red lines because it allows them to confuse vocabulary with leverage. But leverage is not what one tweets at midnight. It is what remains when the other side declines to tremble.

That is why the ceasefire mattered less as a peace document than as an x-ray. It showed that Washington could still destroy, certainly; that is rarely the problem. The problem is that destruction no longer guarantees submission. The old imperial formula — threaten annihilation, impose terms, call it order — now yields diminishing returns. Iran, bruised but unbowed, did not enter diplomacy because it suddenly discovered trust in Trumpian statecraft. It entered because a broader architecture of assurance emerged around it, and at the center of that architecture was not Pakistan’s eloquence, nor America’s goodwill, but China’s weight.

This is the crucial point. China does not ordinarily rush to play impresario in hot wars. Its preference is structural influence, not melodrama; ports, corridors, markets, and slow positional gains rather than the pyrotechnics of coercive diplomacy. When such a power moves more assertively in an active conflict, one should assume the stakes have exceeded the ordinary. And they had. A prolonged war with Iran threatened shipping lanes, energy flows, regional investments, and the wider Asian commercial ecosystem in which China is now the indispensable gravitational force. Beijing’s intervention, by all credible indications, was decisive precisely because it offered something Washington could not: reassurance that was not instantly interpreted as a prelude to betrayal.

Pakistan’s role, then, was both important and humbling. Important, because geography, military channels, and political access still make Islamabad useful in moments when rival powers need a Muslim-majority intermediary with links into multiple camps. Humbling, because usefulness is not sovereignty. Pakistan did not impose a settlement on the warring parties. It facilitated a transition already being authored by larger forces. It was, to borrow the old diplomatic euphemism, a valued conduit. One should not confuse the envelope for the letter.

Still, even envelopes can tell you who now writes history. In 1971, the United States used Pakistan to reach a rising China it wished to integrate. In 2026, the United States used Pakistan to navigate a crisis in which China had become too consequential to ignore. That is not a sequel. It is a reversal.

The first opening of China was undertaken by an America still confident enough to redesign the board. The second has arrived through a ceasefire brokered in the shadow of American exhaustion, Israeli overreach, Iranian resilience, and Chinese indispensability. Washington came to this diplomacy not with the swagger of a system-maker, but with the irritated posture of a declining power forced to negotiate with realities it did not choose.

And Pakistan, faithful to its familiar function, stood once more in the corridor between empires: not quite sovereign, never quite irrelevant, carrying papers for history while pretending to host it.

About the Author

Prof. Junaid S. Ahmad teaches Law, Religion, and Global Politics and is the Director of the Center for the Study of Islam and Decolonization (CSID), Islamabad, Pakistan. He is a member of the International Movement for a Just World (JUST – https://just-international.org/), Movement for Liberation from Nakba (MLN – https://nakbaliberation.com/), and Saving Humanity and Planet Earth (SHAPE – https://www.theshapeproject.com/).

Contact & Links

Junaid S. Ahmad
Professor of Law, Religion, and Global Politics
Director, Center for the Study of Islam and Decolonization (CSID)
Islamabad, Pakistan
@Academicatarms

The Pasteur Institute in Tehran: Imperialism in Full Display

By HS Wong

For over a century, the Pasteur Institute of Iran stood as a testament to what international scientific cooperation could achieve and to the possibilities of national self-determination outside Western tutelage. Established in 1920 in partnership with the famed Institut Pasteur in Paris, it was Iran’s premier center for infectious disease research, vaccine production, and public health. From eradicating smallpox to manufacturing hepatitis vaccines, the institute saved countless lives and trained generations of Iranian scientists. It was proof that Iran could build world-class institutions on its own terms, drawing upon the depth and richness of a civilization that predated European ascendancy by millennia.

On April 2, 2026, American and Israeli warplanes reduced much of it to rubble.
The airstrike, one of at least twenty verified attacks on Iran’s healthcare system since March 2026, destroyed laboratory equipment and several buildings at the Middle East’s oldest and most prestigious biomedical research center. The World Health Organization confirmed the institute could “no longer continue delivering health services.” Iranian officials called it a “barbaric assault on basic human core values” and a “crime against humanity.” Neither Washington nor Tel Aviv claimed responsibility.

This was not an accident of war. It was the violent expression of a worldview that sees Iran through the lens of threat and subordination. A lens ground and polished over centuries of colonial domination.

Earlier this year, American Secretary of State Marco Rubio offered a telling glimpse into this mindset when he invoked Europe’s “glorious past” of colonial conquest. Perhaps not in those precise words, but in the unmistakable celebration of imperial achievement over subject peoples. To the Global South, such rhetoric does not read as historical reflection. It reads as an admission that Western powers still understand their relationship to the non-Western world through hierarchies of superiority and inferiority, of civilized and backward, of those destined to rule and those destined to obey.

Edward Said in his Orientalism illuminated this phenomenon – the construction of the “East” as fundamentally different, inherently threatening, and perpetually in need of Western management. The Orientalist framework does not see Iranian scientific achievement as evidence of capability, creativity, or contribution to human knowledge. It sees only potential danger, latent duplicity, the perpetual suspicion that beneath the surface of any Iranian institution lies something hidden, something sinister, something that must be uncovered and controlled by Western power.

The Pasteur Institute existed for a century in plain sight, its work transparent, its collaborations international, its publications peer-reviewed. Yet in the Orientalist imagination, this visibility meant nothing. The institute could never be merely what it was – a public health institution – because Iran can never be merely what it is. A nation with its own history, its own intellectual traditions, its own legitimate aspirations. It must always be something else. A puzzle to be solved, a threat to be contained, a civilization to be managed by those who presume themselves superior.

This reflects a colonial hangover that persists long after formal empires have dissolved in many regions. Although direct British political influence in Tehran has long since ended, patterns of unequal power in global scientific and security governance remain. Many Western states continue to play a significant role in determining which countries may access sensitive technologies, develop advanced scientific capacity, or operate outside extensive surveillance and export control regimes. The “dual-use” framework applied to the Pasteur Institute operates within this broader security logic, in which scientific capability in countries such as Iran is often treated with heightened scrutiny, while similar capabilities in Western states are more readily normalized as legitimate and necessary.

The hypocrisy is structural. In the 1990s, the international community sought to strengthen the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) with a verification protocol that would allow independent inspections of laboratories worldwide. The United States single-handedly torpedoed the effort. Washington’s excuse was that inspections might expose sensitive biodefense secrets; in this way, preserving a system of unequal accountability. Western powers would remain free from intrusive oversight while reserving the right to cast suspicion on others.

This asymmetry reproduces the colonial relationship. The hegemon claims exemption from the rules it imposes on the periphery. It demands transparency from subordinate states while shrouding its own activities in secrecy. It speaks of universal norms while practicing selective enforcement against those who challenge its dominance. And it cannot perceive its own double standards because the Orientalist lens renders Western actions inherently reasonable and Eastern responses inherently suspect. When suspicion proved insufficient to contain Iran’s scientific development, the imperial powers resorted to direct destruction.

The April 2026 strike came alongside attacks on the Tofigh Daru pharmaceutical company, one of Iran’s largest producers of cancer treatment drugs, and the Delaram Sina Psychiatric Hospital. The pattern is similar. First criminalize civilian infrastructure through rhetoric that questions the target’s right to exist outside Western control, then destroy it through military action, all while maintaining the moral language of “security” and “nonproliferation.”

This is how imperialism adapts to the modern era. Where nineteenth-century colonial powers seized territory and extracted raw materials, their successors seek to control technological development and scientific capacity. The Pasteur Institute was targeted not because it threatened anyone, but because it demonstrated that Iran could operate at the frontiers of biomedical research without Western permission. Such independence is intolerable to powers accustomed to dictating the terms of development in the Global South. Powers who cannot see the depth and richness of Iranian civilization because their Orientalist worldview permits them to see only deficiency or danger.

The destruction of the institute also serves as a clear lesson familiar to historians of empire: it shows that resistance to Western demands will be punished, and that the cost of independence will be made extremely high. The message is directed not only at Tehran but at any state contemplating independent scientific or technological programs that might challenge Western monopolies. The Rubio-esque celebration of colonial “glory” lurks behind this ‘lesson’ – the assumption that world order requires civilizational hierarchy, that scientific progress must remain a Western prerogative, that the Global South must accept subordinate positions or face violent correction.

The broader pattern is clear across the imperial system. Western powers invoke international law and multilateral institutions when these serve their interests, then disregard or undermine them when they constrain imperial prerogative. The United States rejects the International Criminal Court’s jurisdiction over its own personnel while demanding accountability for others. It abandons arms control treaties when they become inconvenient, then accuses rival states of undermining global security. It speaks of a “rules-based order” while reserving the right to violate those rules with impunity.

These actions show what the Orientalist framework hides: the West’s inability to treat other civilizations as equals or to see Iranian scientific achievements as anything other than a threat or imitation. The Pasteur Institute collaborated with the Institut Pasteur in Paris for a century, yet this cooperation meant nothing when imperial imperatives demanded destruction. The West cannot see such collaboration as legitimate partnership because it cannot see Iran as a legitimate partner – only as a subject to be managed, a civilization to be contained, an Oriental “other” whose independent capabilities must always be suspect.

This dynamic is not unique to Iran but reflects a broader pattern. The same imperial logic has shaped Western responses to other centers of technological development, including China’s semiconductor industry, which has been constrained through export controls and supply chain restrictions. Different methods were used, but the same underlying purpose was evident. Whether through military force or bureaucratic limitation, the message remains consistent: technological capacity in the Global South is acceptable only in subordinate forms, and genuine independence will be met with containment or destruction.

If the United States and its allies were genuinely concerned about biological weapons risks, they would not have sabotaged verification efforts. They would not maintain secret biodefense programs while demanding openness from others. They would not destroy vaccine laboratories while claiming to protect global health security. Their actions reveal that “nonproliferation” has become a mechanism for preserving Western technological supremacy, not preventing the spread of weapons. And that this supremacy is understood as a civilizational right, a colonial inheritance they cannot relinquish.

The ruins of the Pasteur Institute testify to the persistence of Orientalism in Western policy. The institute was built through international cooperation and contributed to global public health. It also drew upon Iranian intellectual traditions that stretch back to Avicenna and the medieval translation movements, and ultimately to the foundations of modern medicine. Despite this history, it has been dismantled by powers that see it only as having “dual-use” potential and as a hidden threat.
The Pasteur Institute of Iran deserved to be judged by its contributions to human health, not by the suspicions of powers trapped in colonial mindsets. These powers often cannot even recognize those mindsets.
Its destruction shows that the real danger to global security does not lie in Tehran’s vaccine laboratories. Instead, it lies in the belief that technological power should remain a Western monopoly. It also lies in an Orientalist tunnel-vision that prevents the West from seeing its own actions as violent, treating them instead as necessary management of an “inferior” and “threatening” civilization.
Until the international community confronts the colonial logic that grants some states unchecked military sovereignty while denying others the right to scientific self-determination, institutions like the Pasteur Institute will continue to be targets. They are not attacked because they threaten peace, but because they represent the possibility of a world no longer structured around Western dominance. To the imperial imagination, that possibility is more unsettling than any weapon.

HS Wong is a member of the Executive Committee of the International Movement for a Just World.