Sunday, May 10, 2026

The Final Pillar Of western Dominance Cracks: The Economic Unraveling

Tahir Mustafa

For decades, the western-imposed global order has been presented as the only model of economic stability, prosperity, and economic predictability. Its architects, led by the United States of America and its European surrogates peddled the western economic system as the only viable path toward development and modernity.

Participation meant access to markets, capital, and institutional support. Alignment meant economic stability and prosperity.

This economic promise was one of the central pillars of western dominance along with the threat of use of military force without limits. However, military power alone could not sustain global hegemony; it required legitimacy. That “legitimacy” was derived from the perception that the western system delivered material well-being not only to its own populations, but also to those subservient to it.

Today, that pillar is visibly eroding. The system no longer guarantees stability. It does not deliver broad-based prosperity. Instead, it produces volatility, inequality, and systemic fragility.

Although we are not witnessing a sudden and total economic collapse, a gradual and strategic economic disintegration is in full motion.

Myth of Economic Prosperity

The post-1945 order was built on institutions such as the IMF and World Bank, backed by the dominance of the US dollar. The Bretton Woods framework and later the petrodollar system ensured that global trade, especially energy—remained tied to western financial structures.

This arrangement allowed the US to project power far beyond its borders. By controlling the global financial system, it could impose sanctions, regulate liquidity, and influence the economic trajectories of entire regions. For some states, subservience to this system appeared beneficial.

However, this “stability” was never neutral. It was conditional and hierarchical. It required political compliance and economic alignment with western interests. Those who resisted, whether Iran, Venezuela, or others, were subjected to economic warfare, sanctions, and isolation.

The promise of prosperity was, therefore, inseparable from the reality of coercion and subjugation.

Internal Decay: The Crisis Within

The most significant challenge to the western economic order is no longer external, it is internal. The system is failing to deliver for its own populations, let alone its external surrogates.

In the US, the signs of economic distress are impossible to ignore. Rising living costs, record levels of consumer debt, and widening inequality have transformed the economic landscape. Millions of people are no longer pursuing upward mobility; they are struggling to maintain basic living standards.

Evidence from recent data shows households turning to the cheapest possible food options, delaying essential payments, and relying on debt mechanisms simply to survive. Borrowers are falling behind on loans, while entire segments of society are being pushed toward financial precarity.

This is not an anomaly. It is structural. The western model has evolved into a system that concentrates wealth at the top while hollowing out the middle and lower classes.

Fractures Within the Western Bloc

The erosion of the system is also evident in growing disunity among western regimes. What was once presented as a cohesive bloc is increasingly fragmented, driven by divergent economic interests and strategic uncertainties.

Canada provides a sober example. Prime Minister Mark Carney’s acknowledgment that close economic ties with the US have become a “weakness” reflects a profound shift in perspective. For decades, integration with the US economy was considered a strategic advantage. Now it is seen as a liability.

This shift is driven by the unpredictability of US policy, tariffs, trade wars, and unilateral decisions that undermine long-standing agreements. As a result, even close allies are seeking to diversify their economic relationships, including deeper engagement with non-western powers.

This is a critical development. When the inner circle of the western order begins to question its central node, it signals a loss of confidence that extends far beyond bilateral relations and economics.

Petrodollar and the Illusion of Permanence

At the heart of western economic dominance lies the US dollar, particularly its role in global energy markets through the petrodollar system. This arrangement ensured continuous global demand for dollars, reinforcing US financial hegemony.

While the dollar remains dominant, its position is no longer unchallenged. Sanctions regimes have forced countries like Iran and Russia to develop alternative trading mechanisms, often denominated in Chinese yuan.

These alternatives are not yet capable of replacing the dollar completely, but they are eroding its exclusivity. More importantly, they emerge during periods of crisis, when the western system is weaponized and access is restricted.

Each crisis leaves behind a structural residue. More countries gain experience operating outside the dollar system. More financial institutions develop alternative channels. Over time, this creates a parallel infrastructure that weakens the centrality of the dollar without immediately displacing it.

The result is a system that appears stable on the surface but is increasingly fragile at its edges.

Iran and the End of One-Way Economic Warfare

One of the most significant developments in recent years is the shifting balance of economic power in geopolitical confrontations. The western model has long relied on the assumption that economic pressure flows in one direction, from western capitals towards others.

Islamic Iran’s powerful asymmetric response changed this decades-long set up forever.

Despite facing unrelenting military and economic aggression, Iran demonstrated its ability to impose substantial economic costs on the entirety of western economies. Its strategic position over the Strait of Hormuz—a passage through which approximately 20 percent of global energy flows, allowed it to disrupt supply chains and trigger a global energy shock.

This disruption had immediate consequences: rising fuel prices, increased inflation, and heightened recession risks across western economies. More importantly, it exposed a critical vulnerability—the west’s sensitivity to economic pain.

The US, despite its material military superiority, was compelled to recalibrate its strategy, mainly due to internal and external economic pressures. Inflation, rising costs, and market instability translated into political pressure, forcing search for a face-saving political exit from a strategic quagmire.

This marks a turning point. Economic warfare is no longer a one-way instrument of western dominance. States targeted by sanctions and aggression can now see that leveraging structural vulnerabilities to impose reciprocal economic costs against American imperialism are quite realistic.

Financial Instability and the Decline of Trust

Another indicator of systemic decline is the changing behavior of global financial markets. The traditional role of US Treasury bonds as a safe-haven asset is being questioned.

Recent developments show central banks reducing their holdings of US treasuries during periods of geopolitical tension, contributing to rising yields and increased borrowing costs for Washington.

This is a significant departure from historical patterns. It suggests that confidence in the US as the ultimate guarantor of financial stability is weakening. When the core asset of the system begins to lose its safe-haven status, the implications are far-reaching.

It signals not only economic vulnerability, but also a deeper crisis of trust.

Israel and the Crisis of Western Credibility

An increasingly prominent factor in the erosion of western legitimacy is the role of the zionist entity in shaping western foreign policy. Across segments of western societies and even within parts of the political establishment, there is a growing perception that alignment with Israel has imposed significant political and economic costs.

Conflicts driven or intensified by this alignment, particularly in West Asia, have contributed to instability, rising energy prices, and economic strain. The recent aggression against Iran is a case in point, where western involvement closely tied to Israeli objectives, resulted in economic repercussions that directly impacted western populations.

This has led to a growing sense of disillusionment. Many perceive that their governments prioritize external agendas over domestic well-being. This perception erodes trust, undermines political cohesion, and further weakens the legitimacy of the western order.

In this context, the zionist entity is increasingly viewed not as a strategic asset, but as a key liability, one that accelerates the decline of western credibility on the global stage. It is now simply a matter of time before western regimes are forced to choose between their own strategic interests and those of Israel. Not out of principle, but due to the fact that alignment with Israel is too costly on multiple levels.

A System in Managed Decline

It would be premature to declare the immediate collapse of the western economic order. The United States still controls the most significant financial markets, the dollar remains the dominant reserve currency, and western institutions retain considerable influence.

However, the trajectory is unmistakable.

The system is transitioning from dominance to decline, characterized by fragmentation, volatility, and diminishing legitimacy. Alternative economic networks are emerging, not as complete replacements, but as functional complements that reduce dependence on western structures.

This transition is not linear. It will unfold through cycles of crisis and temporary stabilization. Each crisis will expose new vulnerabilities and accelerate the development of alternatives.

Collapse of the Final Pillar

The western-imposed global order was sustained by the belief that it delivered economic stability and prosperity. That belief is gone.

Internally, western economies face deepening inequality, rising costs, and declining living standards. Externally, allies are reassessing their dependencies, while adversaries are developing mechanisms to bypass western economic control.

At the same time, the political and moral credibility of the west is gone forever, with growing recognition of the role played by the zionist entity in driving policies that undermine both global stability and domestic well-being.

What remains is a system that still possesses immense power, but increasingly lacks coherence, legitimacy, and resilience. Its final pillar, economic stability is no longer a source of strength. It is a point of failure.

As this pillar continues to weaken, the western imposed order will continue its irreversible descent. It will lose its ability to shape the world, as it struggles to maintain control over itself.

Architecture Of The Invisible Battleground: Decoding The Cultural And Geographic Mechanics Of Global Collapse

Muslim Mahmood

In the corridors of power, a disturbing consensus is beginning to emerge: the Third World War has not only been planned, it has already commenced.

To the casual observer, the current global friction appears to be a series of disconnected crises—a trade war in East Asia, a stalemate in the Donbas, and a simmering confrontation in the Persian Gulf.

However, in the current era of global volatility, traditional political analysis often fails because it ignores the two most potent drivers of human history: the physical constraints of geography and the internal logic of culture.

While news cycles focus on immediate skirmishes and diplomatic rhetoric, a deeper investigative look suggests that a global shift is underway.

This conflict is not merely a struggle for territory; it is a clash between competing visions of reality, underpinned by an American attempt to maintain imperial hegemony and a growing resistance from a Eurasian alliance rooted in ancient cultural resilience.

To understand this landscape, one must first grasp the concept of geopolitics—the study of how a country’s geography influences its international relations.

Since the early 20th century, theories like the Heartland Theory have suggested that control over the vast landmass stretching from Eastern Europe to Asia is the key to global supremacy.

This geographic reality dictates why states sign trade deals, form rivalries, or go to war.

Today, this reality is being weaponized through a grand strategy often described as the creation of “Fortress America.”

Under this framework, the US is moving to secure the Western Hemisphere as its exclusive domain, demanding tribute from its neighbors while simultaneously attempting to strangle rivals like China and Russia economically.

This “National Defense Strategy” is built on four pillars: securing the Western Hemisphere, forcing allies in Europe and East Asia to bear more of the military burden, economically strangling China to maintain technological and maritime dominance, and rejuvenating the domestic defense-industrial base.

At the heart of this strategy lies the preservation of the US dollar’s status as global reserve currency.

For decades, the world operated under an unspoken agreement where the American financial system remained a neutral rail for global trade.

This system, often described as the “petrodollar” arrangement, allowed the US to finance its massive debt by ensuring the world remains dependent on American financial rails and military protection.

However, that agreement shattered in early 2022.

By freezing Russian assets and removing major banks from the global payment system, the US signaled that the dollar was no longer a neutral tool, but a weapon of war.

This move triggered an immediate and inevitable reaction across Eurasia.

Russia, China, and Iran began accelerating the construction of a Eurasian railway system and a “north-south corridor” designed to negate American sea power.

If trade moves by rail across the vast interior of a continent, the massive American naval fleets patrolling the oceans become strategically redundant.

This shift is not merely economic; it is strategic.

For example, Russia’s “Third Rome” strategy positions it as the true successor to the Roman Empire, seeking to unite the Orthodox world and build alliances across Eurasia to bypass American-controlled sea lanes.

This transition has forced the American empire into a policy of maritime desperation.

To maintain control, the current strategy involves occupying or controlling every major maritime choke point on the planet: the Strait of Hormuz, the Strait of Malacca, the Panama Canal, and even the waters surrounding Greenland.

By positioning naval assets at these key passages, the US seeks to control the flow of global energy and resources.

The goal is to create a global energy inventory that is entirely dependent on American permission, forcing the rest of the world to “pay tribute” for the very resources they need to survive.

We are already seeing the practical application of this through “Operation Southern Spear,” where the US Navy and Coast Guard have begun seizing “shadow fleet” tankers—vessels used by Russia and Iran to evade sanctions.

While these actions are framed as law enforcement, they are effectively acts of maritime piracy.

However, even the most sophisticated military and economic strategies often crumble when they collide with the invisible wall of culture.

Culture is more than just language or art; it is an integrated system of shared symbols, beliefs, and values that provides social order and dictates how a society responds to external threats.

The most glaring failure of contemporary western strategy is its profound misunderstanding of Iranian culture.

Western regimes consistently operate on the assumption that increasing economic pain will eventually force a rational actor to the negotiating table.

This reflects a western, individualistic, comfort-oriented worldview where status and material well-being are the primary drivers of behavior.

In contrast, the Iranian worldview—deeply rooted in centuries of resilience and religious fervor—possesses a high tolerance for pain and a historical resilience born from decades of isolation and conflict.

Within this cultural framework, the very word for “compromise” is often viewed as a slur, synonymous with capitulation or “selling out” one’s core principles.

Policmakers in Tehran look at the collapse of the Soviet Union not as an inevitable economic failure, but as a cautionary tale of what happens when a country compromises its core principles in the face of western pressure.

They believe that to yield is to cease to exist.

This cultural mismatch leads to a “game of uncle” where the US attempts to inflict pain, only to find that the Iranian state views endurance as a sign of spiritual and national strength.

Furthermore, geography reinforces this cultural resilience.

While the invasion of Iraq was facilitated by flat desert terrain that allowed for a “Shock and Awe” decapitation strike, Iran is a “mountain fortress.”

Its topography makes a conventional military victory nearly impossible for an outside power.

To counter American technological superiority, the Iranian military has adopted a “Mosaic Strategy,” decentralizing its command into 31 autonomous provincial armies.

Even if the central leadership in Tehran were silenced, the resistance would continue unabated in dozens of different theaters.

This cultural and geographic reality means that any conflict with Iran becomes a protracted war of attrition that is physically impossible to end with a single strike.

While the US projects power abroad, it is simultaneously decaying from within.

History teaches that empires generally last about two hundred years, and their decline is almost always characterized by the same symptoms: insurmountable debt, rampant corruption, and extreme social inequality.

The US is currently grappling with a $40 trillion debt and a decaying social fabric that makes civil instability a distinct possibility.

To maintain control over a fracturing domestic population, there is a visible move toward an “AI civilian state.”

This involves the implementation of digital IDs and currencies that allow for total surveillance and the categorization of citizens based on their behavior and loyalty.

This domestic shift mirrors the “Plato’s Cave” analogy of reality.

For decades, the global population has been conditioned to focus on “shadows” on the wall—the media narratives, the partisan bickering, and the illusory stability of global economy.

These shadows are projected by a financial and military elite who control the creation of money and the flow of information.

However, as the system becomes more wobbly and young generations begin to question the reality of these shadows, the state inevitably becomes more authoritarian.

It must force people to believe in a reality that no longer aligns with their lived experience.

The transition we are witnessing is not just a change in leadership, but a potential “Bronze Age collapse” for the modern world.

Three thousand years ago, the most powerful empires of the Mediterranean and Middle East collapsed simultaneously due to a perfect storm of climate crisis, famine, and internal revolt.

This led to a massive surge of refugees who overwhelmed civilizations that had grown too complex and fragile to adapt.

Today, our globalized world is similarly dependent on a fragile supply chain of energy and fertilizers.

If this system breaks, the resulting migration and chaos would render traditional military power obsolete.

The response to such a collapse cannot be found in grand strategy or military hardware, but in a return to local community resilience.

Historically, when empires fall and infrastructure fails, it is the creative and resilient individuals—those who can bring hope to their neighbors and build small-scale social order—who shape the future.

The survival of the human spirit will depend on our ability to reach out and form communities based on shared purpose rather than the dictates of a centralized, surveillance-driven state.

The current global conflict is ultimately a war for the fundamental nature of reality.

It pits the financial and technological elite, who seek to control human imagination and behavior through fear and surveillance, against populations seeking to preserve their cultural identity and sovereignty.

The outcome of this struggle will not be determined by who has the most drones or the largest bank accounts, but by which culture provides the most stable and purposeful framework for human life.

As the old structures crumble and the shadows on the wall flicker and fade, humanity is being forced to look behind itself and find a deeper, more enduring foundation for social and spiritual life.

Ultimately, humanity must align with the culture of Divine Power—the Qur’anic culture—that nurtures a Qur’an-centered and Apostolic generation, shaping human destiny.

This alignment calls for embracing the values, guidance, and spiritual framework rooted in the Qur’an, so that individuals and communities are formed according to its principles.

By fostering such a generation, people are directed toward a purposeful path that reflects divine intent and strengthens moral and spiritual identity.

In this way, Qur’anic culture becomes the foundation for cultivating a generation marked by faith, discipline, and commitment, guiding humanity toward its true destiny.

Islamic Republic of Iranwestern collapseHeartland TheoryAsiaEurasiaUS imperialismEuropeRussiaChina

Reality Does Not Support Carney’s Dream of Renewed Western Dominance

Crescent International

During a recent conference in Armenia, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney proclaimed that the “new world order” would be established by Europe.

Behind the diplomatic language was a familiar assumption: that the future international system would continue to revolve around western dominance, only this time with Europe positioned at its center instead of the US.

The problem with Carney’s narrative is that ground realities no longer support western dominance claims.

As pointed out by the former Italian diplomat Marco Carnelos, the EU’s backing of genocide in Palestine has completely eroded its political credibility in most parts of the world.

The world no longer accepts western moral or political leadership.

It views it as hypocritical pushing an imperialist agenda.

The European Union regimes stand exposed as one of the principal diplomatic, economic, and political backers of Israel during its destruction of and genocide in Gaza.

For many countries across Asia, Africa, Latin America, and West Asia (aka the Middle East), the message is unmistakable: international law is enforced not only selectively but is misused to advance western interests.

The Daesh (ISIS) representative in Syria is now a political partner of the European regimes, while an Iranian student in France is imprisoned for writing about genocide in Palestine.

Few outside the western political elites are still persuaded by the EU’s slogans about human rights, democracy, and universal values.

Even Carney himself recently acknowledged that the western dominated system was never truly applied equally.

That admission confirmed what much of the non-western world has argued for decades: the “liberal” international order was not genuinely universal.

It functioned primarily as a structure organized around western interests and western power.

This erosion of trust is now colliding with broader geopolitical realities, and nothing demonstrates this more clearly than Russia’s ability to break NATO’s political and economic isolation policies against it.

Despite unprecedented sanctions, diplomatic isolation campaigns, and sustained efforts to economically weaken Moscow, much of the world continues to trade with Russia.

Countries across the Global South have refused to follow western dictates against Russia.

This does not necessarily mean those states support Russian policy.

Rather, it demonstrates that western regimes no longer possess the unquestioned authority and most importantly the power to dictate the behavior of the international system.

The continued integration of Russia into global trade networks reveals a broader transformation: the world is becoming increasingly multipolar.

Western regimes no longer monopolize economic legitimacy, diplomatic influence, or political authority.

The second major factor is the growing realization that western regimes can be resisted.

The ability of the Islamic Republic of Iran to withstand a sustained economic war for decades and hit back hard in a military conflict, has completely eroded the aura of western dominance.

The significance lies in perception.

When countries observe that even heavily sanctioned states can survive and continue projecting influence, the image of western dominance weakens.

At the same time, the material attraction of the west itself has declined.

Western economies no longer project the same image of guaranteed prosperity and stability that they once did.

Rising inequality, political polarization, inflation, social fragmentation, and declining public trust have weakened the image of Europe and North America as uniquely successful governing models.

Taken together, these developments point toward a fundamental transformation in international politics.

The emerging global order is unlikely to be defined by renewed western dominance led by Europe.

Instead, it will likely be shaped by fragmentation, competing centers of power, and states increasingly seeking an end to western domination.

Carney may hope that Europe can lead the future world order, but much of the world no longer appears interested in being led by a power bloc whose political credibility, economic appeal, and moral authority are no longer seen as worthy of emulation.

GeopoliticsCanadaEuropean Union (EU)Mark Carney

UAE: Trojan Horse of the Emerging Islamic Civilization - Part II

Muslim Mahmood

The decision by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to exit OPEC on May 1, 2026, was not merely a dispute over production quotas; it was the final architectural piece of a decade-long plan to achieve total strategic and economic autonomy.

By abandoning the constraints of the Saudi-led organization, Abu Dhabi has effectively bet its future on a high-stakes race against time.

The goal is to aggressively monetize its massive oil reserves—aiming for a production capacity of six million barrels per day—before the global energy transition renders those assets redundant.

This “market-responsive” strategy is designed to generate the massive capital inflows required to fund the UAE’s transformation into a post-carbon, high-tech power house.

However, as the conflict with Iran intensifies, this economic ambition is colliding with the brutal realities of geography and regional warfare.

At the heart of the UAE’s vision for an “Emerging Islamic Civilization” is a radical pivot toward technology and innovation, often facilitated by its controversial alignment with zionist Israel.

Through the framework of the Abraham Accords, the UAE has sought to integrate Israeli cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and defense systems into its internal infrastructure.

This technological nexus is the engine behind the “Muslim zionism” policy—a model that prioritizes secularism, technological integration with the west and Israel, and the absolute suppression of movements seeking solutions to societal problems through Islam.

The UAE aspires to be more than just an oil producer; it wants to be the indispensable tech hub in West Asia.

Yet, this reliance on Israeli military technology, such as the Iron Dome batteries deployed on Emirati soil, has turned the entity into a primary target for Iranian retaliation, undermining the very stability that attracts global investment.

The most immediate threat to this grand vision is the ongoing blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

For a state that built its identity as a global logistics and maritime center, the closure of this vital artery is an existential crisis.

While Abu Dhabi has invested heavily in bypass pipelines to the port of Fujairah, these routes are currently only capable of handling 40 to 50 percent of normal export volumes.

The sight of the Fujairah oil facilities on fire and South Korean cargo ships being struck while attempting to breach the Iranian blockade has sent shockwaves through global markets.

The UAE’s “safe haven” status, which was the cornerstone of its economic diversification strategy, is being systematically dismantled.

As munitions strike within 140 kilometers of Dubai, the narrative of a secure, investor-friendly oasis is increasingly difficult to maintain.

This military pressure is placing an unprecedented strain on the Emirati social contract.

For decades, the ruling families have offered their citizens and a massive expatriate population unparalleled wealth, luxury, and security in exchange for political passivity and total state control of civil society.

This contract is now being tested by the sounds of air defense interceptions over the Burj Khalifa and Dubai International Airport.

The targeting of these landmarks is a psychological warfare tactic intended to trigger investor flight and erode the confidence of the global elite who call the UAE home.

If the UAE cannot guarantee the safety of its symbols of prosperity, the foundation of its economic model—investor confidence—threatens to collapse.

Furthermore, the UAE’s pursuit of strategic autonomy has led to a deepening diplomatic isolation within the Gulf Cooperation Council.

By exiting OPEC without consulting Saudi Arabia and maintaining a divergent path in regional conflicts like Sudan and Yemen, Abu Dhabi has alienated its closest neighbors.

Qatar and Kuwait have maintained a wary distance as the UAE’s Trojan Horse strategy brings direct military conflict to the shores of the Arabian Peninsula.

The federation now finds itself as a lonely outlier: too aggressive for its traditional Gulf partners, yet too exposed to withstand a prolonged war with Iran without total reliance on the US-Israel alliance.

The UAE’s role in Sudan’s civil war further illustrates the contradictions of its overall strategy.

By backing the Rapid Support Forces, the UAE seeks to secure agricultural land, and influence over the Red Sea, viewing the conflict through the lens of food security and the eradication of Islamic influence.

However, the international outcry over humanitarian atrocities and the UAE’s alleged complicity in genocide have created a significant diplomatic deficit.

The Emiratis are beginning to learn that the pursuit of strategic autonomy through proxy wars often carries a reputational cost that even the most sophisticated public relations campaigns cannot mask.

As we assess the long-term sustainability of the UAE’s current trajectory, the results are precarious.

The “Trojan Horse” strategy—using the cover of Islamic identity to advance a secular, tech-driven, and Israel-aligned regional order—has successfully disrupted the regional status quo.

It has created a state that is more agile and technologically advanced than any of its peers.

But in doing so, the UAE has stripped away the traditional layers of protection that religious and regional solidarity once provided.

The ultimate question is whether the UAE can remain the center of a new kind of civilization while under constant bombardment.

The exit from OPEC and the aggressive expansion of oil production are designed to buy the future, but that future is currently being held hostage by the geographic bottleneck of the Strait of Hormuz and the ideological fury of its regional rivals.

Abu Dhabi’s bet on a fast, decisive victory for the US-Israeli alliance over Iran has not materialized.

It has left the Beduoin-ruled entity to face a protracted war of attrition that its glass-and-steel economy was never designed to endure.

The UAE stands at a crossroads.

It has the capital to lead a technological revolution in West Asia and the political will to redefine the role of Islam in the modern state.

Yet, its path to strategic autonomy is paved with high-risk gambles that have invited the very chaos it sought to avoid.

The “Trojan Horse” has entered the gates of the future, but the walls are closing in, and the price of independence may ultimately be the very stability upon which the Emirati dream was built.

UAETrojan HorseGCCPersian GulfIslamic Republic of IranUS imperialismzionist war crimesSaudi ArabiaOPEC - Organization of Oil Producing Countries