Monday, February 23, 2026

Iran sees the U.S. less as a guarantor of law than as an instrument of disruption

For nearly eight decades now, Iranians and many others across the globe have encountered a different America. From the 1953 coup in Iran to interventions across Latin America and Southeast Asia, U.S. power has appeared less as a guarantor of law than as an instrument of disruption.

Iran is not unique in this experience. What distinguishes it is how deeply these events have shaped its national consciousness. 

In an Opinion published in Newsweek on February 19, Ahmad Meidari, Iran's Minister of Cooperatives, Labour, and Social Welfare, has reacted to former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich’s recent Guardian essay, titled “Donald Trump poses a threat to civilization,” raising an alarm that deserves to be heard well beyond the borders of the United States. 

“His argument is not narrowly partisan; it is civilizational. At its core lies a question confronting all societies today: whether power will continue to abandon moral restraint, or whether humanity can still arrest the slide toward de-civilization,” Meidari wrote.

“On this point, I find myself in deep agreement with Mr. Reich.”

“In our ethical and religious tradition, defending the oppressed against the oppressor is not a slogan but a duty. An old maxim, familiar to many Iranians, captures this plainly: Be a pillar of support for the downtrodden. 

A civilization is not judged by the reach of its power, but by how that power is exercised. 

There was a time when many Iranians believed the United States embodied this principle. Before the world wars—and long before the Cold War hardened global divisions—America was seen in Iran as a civic republic, guided more by law than by force. That trust was tangible. 

Following Iran’s Constitutional Revolution of 1905, the country entrusted its most sensitive institution, its treasury, to Americans. William Morgan Shuster and later Arthur Millspaugh were appointed to reform Iran’s public finances; a responsibility no sovereign state assigns lightly. Their presence reflected confidence in American integrity rather than fear of American might. 

This image was reinforced by a more intimate memory. During the constitutional struggle, an American teacher in Tabriz, Howard Baskerville, joined Iranians resisting absolute monarchy. He was killed in 1909 while attempting to break the siege of the city. 

To this day, his death is remembered in parts of Iran during Ashura commemorations, an extraordinary place to honor a foreigner. 

Baskerville is remembered not as an outsider, but as someone who crossed a moral boundary to stand against tyranny. His tragic demise was commemorated for years in a folk song: “Three hundred red poppies and one cross among them—we shall never fear death.”

These memories matter because they remind us that hostility between nations is not inevitable. It is constructed, slowly, through deliberate choices, interventions and the erosion of restraint. 

For nearly eight decades now, Iranians and many others across the globe have encountered a different America. From the 1953 coup in Iran to interventions across Latin America and Southeast Asia, U.S. power has appeared less as a guarantor of law than as an instrument of disruption. Iran is not unique in this experience. What distinguishes it is how deeply these events have shaped its national consciousness. 

In recent decades, this perception has only hardened. Wars fought far from American soil, sanctions that hollow out civilian economies and selective applications of international law have steadily eroded the moral authority the United States once claimed. 

From the ruins of Vietnam to the ongoing devastation in Gaza, images of civilian suffering have come to symbolize power exercised without accountability. 

The threat does not lie solely in one leader or one country. It lies in a convergence of forces: the concentration of wealth and political power, the weakening of democratic constraints, the unregulated advance of technology and the normalization of permanent war. 

Artificial intelligence, economic policy and national militaries are increasingly deployed as tools of domination rather than as instruments of human progress.

Iran’s resistance to external pressure, particularly sanctions, is often misunderstood in this context. It is not rooted in a desire for confrontation, but in historical experience. 

The twentieth century offers a stark lesson. After World War I, Germany was economically strangled and politically humiliated. 

John Maynard Keynes warned that such punishment would not secure peace but prepare catastrophe. His warnings went unheeded, and the world paid the price. 

Sanctions imposed without moral and political responsibility follow a similar logic. They do not weaken abstractions called “regimes”; they fracture societies, radicalize politics and suffocate the social forces that make reform possible. 

The belief that suffering can be engineered abroad without consequence is among the enduring illusions of modern power. Iranians know this from experience. We also know the cost of misplaced trust. 

In recent years, while diplomatic negotiations were underway, assassinations and covert attacks, widely attributed to actors backed by the United States, continued. Negotiation conducted alongside violence is not diplomacy; it is coercion. No society can be expected to regard this as good faith. 

None of this should be mistaken for a rejection of peace. On the contrary, it is precisely because war is so destructive that we avoid paths that make it more likely. 

Blood does not cleanse blood. What we reject is not compromise, but a version of “compromise” that merely postpones larger wars while entrenching injustice. 

Humanity stands at a threshold. The tools now at our disposal—economic, technological and military—are powerful enough either to accelerate collapse or to enable renewal. 

The difference lies in whether morality reenters political decision-making as a governing principle, and not simply a rhetorical ornament. 

Civilization does not require uniformity of ideology or culture. It requires restraint, accountability and a shared commitment to human dignity. 

If that commitment collapses, no amount of power will save us. If it endures, even deeply divided societies may yet step back from the edge.”

Photo: Ahmad Meidari, Iran's Minister of Cooperatives, Labour, and Social Welfare

Participants in scientific Olympiads up 40% year/year

TEHRAN – The number of students participating in Olympiad competitions has increased from 87,000 in the past Iranian year 1403 (March 2024- March 2025) to 121,000 this year, indicating an increase of 40 percent, the head of Young Scholars Club has said.

This year, the number of students has been the highest over the past ten years, ISNA quoted Reza Hosseini as saying.

The provinces of Tehran, Khorasan Razavi, and Mazandaran had the largest number of participants. The highest number of students in relation to student population belonged to North Khorasan (with 24 percent), Mazandaran, South Khorasan, and Kordestan, respectively.

The number of participants in Markazi, Kerman, and Ardabil provinces experienced an increase of 232, 119, and 109 percent, respectively, Hosseini noted.

Boys accounted for 52 percent of participants, and girls accounted for 48 percent, the official added.

According to Hosseini, Iran ranks eighth worldwide in international Olympiads as the country stood respectively third, seventh, and eighth in mathematics, computer, and physics Olympiads last year.

Many countries, such as China and the U.S., as well as the world’s big technological companies, are directly in touch with the club to attract Iranian Olympiad winners, he added.

He went on to say that the country allocates specific facilities to these gifted students. The gold winners can major in their specialized fields in Iranian universities without participating in the university entrance exam.

Students who have grabbed gold at the International Biology Olympiad can study medical sciences, and those who won gold medals at the International Mathematical Olympiad or International Physics Olympiad can major in technical and engineering fields.

The club aims to improve the country’s ranking in international Olympiads, Hosseini stressed.

31st scientific Olympiad slated for spring

The 31st scientific Olympiad for university students is scheduled to be held on April 17.

The event will be held in 23 fields namely, Persian Literature, Geography, Economics, Quran and Hadith, Educational Sciences, Law, Psychology, Earth Sciences, Chemistry, Physics, Plant and Animal Biology, Statistics, Mathematics, Electrical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Industrial Design, Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Materials and Metallurgical Engineering, Computer Engineering, agroecology and Plant Genetics Engineering, Stem Cell Science and Technology, and Tissue Engineering, Mehr news agency reported.

Established in the Iranian year 1366 (1987-1988) to promote and expand basic sciences in the country, the Young Scholars Club is in charge of holding scientific Olympiads and preparing students to participate in international scientific competitions in different fields, such as mathematics, biology, computer science, chemistry, astronomy, and astrophysics. 

Artists invited to contribute to intl. cartoon festival highlighting World Quds Day

TEHRAN- The call for the fourth edition of the International Cartoon Festival of Al-Quds Day has been announced. 

The event is organized by the international union of non-governmental organizations supporting the rights of the Palestinian people and the Iran Cartoon website, IRNA reported. 

The competition features two main themes, the primary category focusing on World Quds Day and a special section dedicated to the defeat of the Zionist regime in the 12-day war, the report added. 

Each cartoonist may submit a maximum of three works for each of the two competition themes. Additionally, the technique used is open and the submitted cartoons must be titled in English.

Works created using artificial intelligence (AI) will not be accepted. Entries from both sections will be judged simultaneously and side by side. 

Three top participants will receive certificates of honorand and Iranian handicrafts. Cartoonists whose works are selected for exhibition will receive an electronic version of the festival's art book.

The final deadline for submitting cartoons to the festival secretariat is March 5, 2026. 

World Quds Day, observed annually on the last Friday of Ramadan, is a day of solidarity with the Palestinian people and a call for the liberation of Jerusalem (Quds). Initiated by Iran's late leader Imam Khomeini in 1979, this day serves to raise awareness about the ongoing plight of Palestinians and the broader issues surrounding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It aims to mobilize public opinion and encourage global activism against perceived injustices faced by Palestinians, emphasizing the significance of Quds as a symbol of resistance and a focal point in the struggle for human rights.

The observance of World Quds Day has grown beyond the borders of Iran, inspiring demonstrations, rallies, and events worldwide. Activists, organizations, and individuals come together to express their support for Palestinian rights and to protest against Israeli policies. 

The day also serves as a platform for cultural expressions, including art, music, and literature that highlight the Palestinian narrative. Through these activities, World Quds Day not only seeks to draw attention to the historical and ongoing struggles faced by Palestinians but also fosters a sense of unity among diverse communities advocating for justice and peace in the region.

Hamat Air Base: A critical test of Lebanese sovereignty

 By Sondoss Al Asaad 

SOUTH LEBANON — The growing controversy surrounding Hamat Air Base has ignited urgent questions about sovereignty, transparency, and Lebanon’s potential entanglement in a broader regional war.

Officially, the base is owned by the Lebanese Armed Forces and is situated in northern Lebanon.

Publicly, American presence there has long been framed as limited to training Lebanese army units and providing logistical support, including the transfer of equipment to and from the U.S. surveillance den (embassy) in Beirut. 

Yet recent incidents have cast doubt on the narrowness of that mandate.
According to a February 19 report in An-Nahar newspaper, tensions erupted after U.S. forces stationed at Hamat closed surrounding roads following suspicion that a drone had fallen in the vicinity.

The arbitrary closure reportedly prevented residents from reaching their homes.

Nicola Ayoub, the mayor cited in the article, acknowledged that armed American personnel blocked access routes and that Lebanese soldiers themselves expressed surprise, noting that such movements typically require coordination with the Lebanese army.

The mayor further describes that he was forcibly removed from the area and treated roughly.

Days later, the justification offered was that newly arrived troops — recently transferred from Iraq — had acted out of heightened security concerns. 

In the same report, the mayor claimed that relations with American forces at Hamat had generally been positive and stable.

This duality — cooperation on paper, friction on the ground — fuels deeper suspicions:

-If the base were strictly limited to training missions, why would foreign forces independently impose security perimeters and restrict civilian movement? 
-Why would logistical transfers reportedly occur beyond the scrutiny of Lebanese state oversight?
It is worth noting that the nature of the “equipment” transported between the base and the so-called U.S. embassy remains unclear!
In a region defined by proxy wars and strategic rivalries, ambiguity itself becomes politically charged. 

Strategically, Hamat’s coastal location on the Mediterranean enhances its significance.

Northern Lebanon lies within operational proximity to key regional military hubs: Cyprus, bases in occupied Palestine, Jordan, and Turkey.

In the context of escalating confrontation between Washington and Tehran, analysts have speculated that any accessible Mediterranean platform could serve as logistical or intelligence support infrastructure in a potential campaign.

While no official confirmation exists that Hamat would be used in such a scenario, its geographic positioning and the scale of American engagement inevitably invite scrutiny.

Meanwhile, concerns are amplified by parallel reports regarding American presence at Riyaq Air Base in the Bekaa Valley — notably near areas recently targeted by the Israeli enemy, resulting in dozens of martyrs and wounded.

The overlap between foreign military footprints and conflict zones deepens public anxiety about Lebanon’s vulnerability to external agendas.

Historical memory adds another layer. During the U.S.–led Israeli war (September–November, 2024), the arrest of Imad Amhaz in Batroun — a coastal region near Hamat — raised questions about maritime surveillance and potential intelligence coordination.


Whether or not direct involvement can be proven, the perception of foreign operational awareness in sensitive security events contributes to a broader narrative: that decision-making authority over Lebanese territory may not lie exclusively in Lebanese hands.

This perception extends beyond the military sphere; critics argue that Washington exercises disproportionate political leverage in Lebanon, from influencing presidential and governmental formations to imposing financial restrictions and shaping monetary policy.

Allegations have even circulated about potential American pressure regarding the timing of the May 2026 parliamentary elections.

Such claims, whether substantiated or not, reflect a climate of mistrust and a widespread belief among segments of the population that Lebanon operates under a form of indirect American tutelage.

The core question remains:
-Who ultimately commands operations at Hamat?
-What agreements define the scope and size of the American contingent?
-How many personnel are stationed there, and under what legal framework do they operate?

Transparency is crucial; in the absence of clear public accountability, speculation flourishes. Lebanon’s fragile sovereignty has long been tested by regional conflict and external intervention.

If Hamat is indeed limited to training and logistical cooperation, the Lebanese government must articulate that mandate clearly and assert oversight.

If, however, the base is evolving into a node within a wider strategic network aimed at confrontation with Iran, then Lebanon risks becoming a frontline state in a war not of its choosing.

At stake is more than a single airfield. It is the principle of national decision-making, and whether Lebanese territory can be insulated from being transformed into a launchpad in the next regional conflagration.

The final solution to Imran Khan

by Junaid S. Ahmad


Former Pakistani Prime Minister and Chairman of his political party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Imran Khan arrives to appear before Islamabad High Court seeking bail in corruption and other cases registered against him in Islamabad, Pakistan, on May 12, 2023 [Muhammad Reza – Anadolu Agency]
When a regime starts rationing a prisoner’s light, it is no longer governing — it is unravelling. If credible reports are accurate that Imran Khan’s eyesight has catastrophically deteriorated in custody, this is not bureaucratic failure, nor medical misfortune. It is escalation. It is the continuation — by more brutal means — of a four-year campaign of relentless state persecution against the most popular, electrifying, and historically singular political figure Pakistan has produced in its 78-year existence. The dimming of his vision is not incidental. It is terror by design.

Custody is sovereign monopoly distilled. The state controls light, air, medicine, sleep, contact — the total architecture of human survival. Under such conditions, physical deterioration is not “neglect.” It is the exercise of power.

When a regime commands every variable of a prisoner’s existence and that prisoner’s body breaks down, the state owns the outcome.

Field Marshal Asim Munir and the high command over which he presides do not operate as reluctant custodians. They operate as proprietors. Elections are pre-engineered, judges are corralled, media is disciplined, civilian governments are rearranged with barracks
precision. “Stability” is invoked as a doctrine of supervision — a euphemism for perpetual military arbitration of politics. The generals present themselves as indispensable guardians of order.

Yet this supposedly omnipotent machinery has chosen to brutalize the body of its most formidable rival. This is not incompetence. It is calculated persecution. If the top brass can choreograph parliamentary arithmetic and manipulate electoral outcomes with surgical accuracy, they can ensure medical integrity. The targeting of Khan’s physical and mental health must therefore be understood as an extension of the same war that has filled prisons with tens of thousands of his supporters. The message is unmistakable: no sanctuary, no mercy, no limit.

And here lies the regime’s profound miscalculation. Imran Khan is no longer merely a political competitor. He has become a historical force. For tens of millions, he embodies rupture in a system long monopolised by dynastic patronage and praetorian oversight.

His defiance has transformed him from politician into symbol; his incarceration has elevated him from symbol into legend. Each arrest, each humiliation, each confinement has fused biography into myth. Pakistan’s rulers have manufactured the singular icon they sought to extinguish.

Domestically, the regime’s legitimacy is not eroding — it is completely hollowed out. The barricading of Islamabad with thousands of shipping containers is not governance; it is fortress psychology. A capital sealed against its own citizens reveals estrangement, not authority. The repeated deployment of force against largely unarmed protestors reflects insecurity in uniform. Support for Khan has not dissipated under repression; it has hardened. What the generals intended as attrition has matured into consolidation.

More destabilising still is what the high command can no longer fully conceal: fissures within the security apparatus itself. Reports of reluctance among mid-level officers and rank-and-file soldiers to enthusiastically wage a domestic political war are not trivial whispers. Whether through quiet refusal, procedural slow-walking, or visible discomfort at brutalising their own communities, the signs point to an institution whose lower and middle tiers do not uniformly share the zeal of its apex. That fractures the regime’s monopoly on violence — the one asset it long assumed inexhaustible. A command structure that must constantly reassure itself of obedience and increasingly lean on underpaid police as expendable instruments is not projecting strength. It is signalling brittle dependence.

The dynastic auxiliaries — the Houses of Sharif and Bhutto-Zardari — remain fully complicit. These hereditary enterprises, sustained by patronage and allergic to genuine competition, have tethered their survival to military arbitration. Their silence in the face of escalating custodial brutality is not neutrality; it is collaboration.

They do not defend constitutional order; they subcontract it.

Yet the pressure is no longer merely domestic. Internationally, the façade is cracking. Field Marshal Munir has invested heavily in persuading Washington and other capitals that stability prevails — that unrest is containable, that repression is measured, that the army remains the indispensable anchor of order. The message is disciplined and repetitive: turbulence exists, but the institution is firm. Increasingly, that narrative collides with observable reality.

With the notable exception of overtly transactional figures such as Donald Trump and Marco Rubio — whose calculus privileges pliant strongmen over democratic optics — a widening segment of the international political establishment is growing uneasy. Diplomats and financial institutions observe a barricaded capital, intensifying crackdowns, and escalating custodial brutality. They see a regime that must deepen repression to simulate equilibrium. Stability, in such conditions, becomes rhetorical rather than empirical.

Financial hesitation and diplomatic recalibration reflect risk assessment. A state that appears unable to govern without escalating coercion is not a predictable partner; it is a volatility vector. Each new act of repression erodes the credibility the Field Marshal seeks to preserve abroad.

And in such brittle circumstances, the spectre of further escalation looms. Regimes that feel their control thinning often resort to manufactured crises, sweeping crackdowns, or orchestrated spectacles of “law and order” to justify expanded authority. The danger is not abstract: a state already willing to brutalize its most prominent prisoner may well be tempted to engineer broader repression under the banner of necessity.

This is not episodic. It is structural. Domestically, legitimacy has thinned while Khan’s stature has expanded into historic singularity. Within the security apparatus, cracks are visible. Internationally, confidence is fraying. In attempting to break one man, Pakistan’s rulers have exposed themselves. They command prisons and decrees. He commands allegiance — and increasingly, history’s attention.

In God We Trust: Trump's Christian republic continues Crusader cause

At the National Prayer Breakfast, the US president's reaffirmation of America's Christian identity extends a longstanding state doctrine that binds religion to US global hegemony

Joseph Massad

US President Donald Trump prays during a group prayer at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, DC, on 5 February 2026 (Al Drago/Reuters)
While attending the National Prayer Breakfast on 5 February, US President Donald Trump and his Secretary of War Pete Hegseth reaffirmed their commitment to maintaining America as a "Christian nation". 

Trump declared: "We're going to rededicate America as one nation under God," insisting that Americans' rights are bestowed by God. "We are endowed with our sacred rights to life, liberty and not by government, but by God Almighty himself," he said. 

Indeed, as a nation of Christian believers, Trump marvelled at Americans who vote for the Democratic Party, questioning their faith: "I don't know how a person of faith can vote for a Democrat. I really don't."

If communists were the enemy of American Christianity and "democracy" during the Cold War, today it is Democrats and liberals - once active in championing the demonisation of communists - who are the enemy.

Hegseth was more forthright in his comments, which began with a reading from the Gospel of Mark. He reiterated Trump's claim that the source of rights granted to American citizens was "a loving and benevolent God, not government".

Contrary to white American liberal assertions, Trump and Hegseth are in fact maintaining an age-old American Christian commitment that no US president has ever shrugged

This "gentle" God of Christianity has long been contrasted in the Christian West with the allegedly "angry" and "violent" God of Jews and Muslims. 

More directly, Hegseth proclaimed that "America was founded as a Christian nation, it remains a Christian nation in our DNA if we can keep it. And as public officials, we have a sacred duty 250 years on to glorify Him," pointing upwards, presumably to where the Christian God dwells. 

As Christianity is America's genetic and biological fate, Hegseth informed the audience of his recent Christian efforts, including "a monthly prayer service at the Pentagon". 

Several Democratic lawmakers condemned the event as "basically a church service with the endorsement of the United States Congress", arguing that "our founders would be horrified" and accusing the administration of a partisan hijacking of faith. Liberal advocacy groups likewise denounced Trump's "Christian nationalist" remarks as an "outrageous" politicisation of religion and an assault on America's constitutional tradition of church-state separation.

Yet contrary to white American liberal assertions, Trump and Hegseth are in fact maintaining an age-old American Christian commitment that no US president has ever shrugged.

Civil religion

Trump's commitment to the Christianity - and Christianness - of America and its values has been a hallmark of his courting religious voters since his first presidential campaign. 

He is banking on this commitment as his ticket to secure a place in Christianity's heaven once he is dead. He said at the prayer breakfast: "Even though I did that and so many other things… I won't qualify, I'm not going to make it to heaven… I really think I probably should make it. I mean, I'm not a perfect candidate, but I did a hell of a lot of good for perfect people… You know, I've done more for religion than any other president."

In line with this posture, and in the tradition of all of America's Christian presidents (and all American presidents have been Christian), he affirmed: "We live the motto of our nation: In God We Trust." 

The next day, the White House posted on X: "America is, and always will be, One Nation Under God."  

Such slogans have been the cornerstone of America's allegedly "secularised" civil religion for more than a century. By upholding their Christian meaning as paramount, Trump follows a longstanding presidential tradition.

The motto "In God We Trust" was proposed at the beginning of the American Civil War for inscription on US coins under the administration of none other than President Abraham Lincoln. This was a time when the Union, early in the war, had suffered multiple battlefield defeats. 

It was finally adopted in 1864 as an ideological weapon against the Southern Confederacy, which also thought that the Christian God was on its side. The measure introduced by Lincoln's treasury secretary to acknowledge God on the nation's currency was unanimously supported both in Congress and civil society at the time.

Lincoln, who supported racial segregation and hoped to expel all Black Americans to Africa or some other territory, remains a darling of American liberals for his role in ending slavery but not racism. 

'Under God'

It was after the Second World War, and as part of American Cold War propaganda against secular communism, supported by conservatives and liberals alike, that a renewed dedication of the United States as a Christian republic took place.  

President Dwight D Eisenhower launched a religious war against the Soviets, who were routinely depicted as "godless communists". 

Baptised as a Presbyterian while in office in 1953, Eisenhower appointed the fanatical evangelical reverend Billy Graham as a spiritual adviser to the White House. 

In fact, it was Eisenhower who established the National Prayer Breakfast, an innovation Trump lauded at this year's event as "a beautiful American tradition". Eisenhower also opened his cabinet meetings with a moment of silent prayer. As part of his anti-communist crusade, Eisenhower championed a joint resolution, unanimously passed by Congress in 1954, inserting the words "under God" into the Pledge of Allegiance.

The following year, Congress enacted a law, signed by Eisenhower, mandating that "In God We Trust" appear not only on American coins, as it had since the Civil War, but also on paper currency. In 1956, Congress, with overwhelming bipartisan support, codified the phrase as the national motto of the US amid Cold War tensions, supplanting the erstwhile "E pluribus unum" (out of many, one), which had been in use since 1776. 

At the height of McCarthyite terror and hysteria, when the Great Purge targeted Americans in government and private institutions for alleged "communist" sympathies, congressional support for the measure was unanimous. 

Even the American Civil Liberties Union, fearing the political climate, opposed it only mutedly and did not dare bring any constitutional challenge. 

In 2011, two decades after the Cold War had ended, Congress overwhelmingly passed a concurrent resolution, "reaffirming 'In God We Trust' as the official motto of the United States and supporting and encouraging the public display of the national motto in all public buildings, public schools, and other government institutions".

Weaponised religion

It was the Eisenhower administration that enlisted religion and invented anti-communist Islamist jihadism as a weapon against Soviet communism and Third World socialism, with Saudi Arabia subcontracted for the role soon after. 

In both cases, Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives, cheered these policies.

As a result of Eisenhower's institutionalisation of Protestant Christianity, the proportion of religious Americans rose from 49 percent in 1940 to 69 percent in 1960. 

Trump, however, will not be outdone by Eisenhower. He declared in his speech: "In 2025, more copies of the Holy Bible were sold in the United States than at any time in the last 100 years."

Trump's recent reaffirmation of America's Christian identity drew criticism from a number of interfaith and secular organisations

He added: "Some churches are seeing a 30 percent, 50 percent or even 70 percent increase in the number of converts. And also, the number of people going to church every week. To support this exciting renewal this morning, I'm pleased to announce that on 17 May, 2026, that we're inviting Americans from all across the country to come together on our National Mall to pray, to give thanks... we are going to do something that everyone said like, that's tough."

Trump's recent reaffirmation of America's Christian identity drew criticism from a number of interfaith and secular organisations. In May last year, Trump established a "Religious Liberty Commission" housed in the Justice Department to advise the White House. 

coalition of interfaith groups, which includes Interfaith Alliance, Muslims for Progressive Values, Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund, and Hindus for Human Rights, filed a civil lawsuit against the Trump administration over the commission.

They argue that it unconstitutionally promotes conservative Christian nationalism - especially as its "members, consisting of almost exclusively Christians with one Orthodox Jewish rabbi, represent the narrow perspective that America was founded as a 'Judeo-Christian' nation and must be guided by Biblical principles…In President Trump's own words, the commission is part of his administration's efforts to 'protect the Judeo-Christian principles of our founding'". 

The Interfaith Alliance also published a report last month detailing the Trump administration's attacks on non-evangelical religious communities, including Christians of various denominations, Jews, Muslims and their places of worship. 

This is despite Vice President JD Vance's assertion last December that religious tolerance is not a secular concept but a "Christian" one.

'Little embers'

When Trump courted religious evangelical Protestant Christian voters during his 2024 election campaign, warning that "Jewish people would have a lot to do with the loss" were he not to win, he was criticised by Jewish and Catholic groups

Still, Trump's commitment to evangelical Christianity and Christian Zionism is not necessarily more pronounced than that of the Biden administration. 

While Hegseth is more ostentatious about his Christianity - sporting medieval Crusader emblems as tattoos on his body and describing Trump as "Crusader in Chief" - these are no more than flamboyant expressions of the same spirit that animated the Christian Zionist Biden, among others. 

It is ironic that American Jewish groups would support Hegseth, given his White Christian nationalism. After all, on their way to Palestine at the end of the 11th century, the European Christian Crusaders, the first Christian Zionists, visited death upon Muslim, Jewish and Orthodox Christian communities alike, leaving a legacy of blood and destruction. 

Yet when Hegseth was appointed secretary of war, major Muslim American organisations expectedly opposed his nomination, while pro-Israel Jewish groups and businesses, including the Orthodox Jewish Chamber of Commerce, celebrated him for his support for Israel.

The American Christian republic also guides Trump's foreign policy. 

It is in the name of the Christian God, the God of America, that Trump claims to have bombed Nigeria last December "as a Christmas present". It is in His name that he boasts to have brought "peace in the Middle East, by the way, first time in 3,000 years. We have peace. They're little - little embers, but it's nothing much." 

The more than 600 Palestinians Israel has killed since the declaration of the so-called ceasefire last October are "little embers", a mere sacrifice, like the Nigerians killed by Trump's bombing, offered at the altar of America's Christian God.  

Joseph Massad
is professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual history at Columbia University, New York. He is the author of many books and academic and journalistic articles. His books include Colonial Effects: The Making of National Identity in Jordan; Desiring Arabs; The Persistence of the Palestinian Question: Essays on Zionism and the Palestinians, and most recently Islam in Liberalism. His books and articles have been translated into a dozen languages.

Ramadan unites Muslims worldwide with unique traditions

 By Maryam Tavassoli

TEHRAN – Ramadan is a month that unites Muslims from all over the world by observing religious rituals with unique traditions that may be different but have the same purposes.

Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar and the month in which Muslims believe the Quran was revealed. Fasting during the month of Ramadan is one of the Five Pillars of Islam.

The month is spent by Muslims fasting during the daylight hours from dawn to sunset. Muslims believe that the Quran was sent down to the lowest heaven during this month, thus being prepared for gradual revelation by Jibraeel (Gabriel) to Prophet Mohammad (PBUH). The first day of the next month, Shawwal, is spent in celebration and is observed as the “Festival of Breaking Fast” or Eid al-Fitr.

Ramadan unites Muslims worldwide with unique traditions

Roughly two billion people from different cultural backgrounds celebrate the month in their own way. Ramadan is more than fasting and praying; it is a time to get together and uphold traditions and customs.

In addition to Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Turkey, Egypt, Syria, Morocco, Indonesia, Pakistan, India, Iran, the UAE, and other Muslim countries, many individuals in non-Muslim countries also participate in Ramadan traditions. Ramadan is celebrated in the UK, Canada, the US, and some other European countries. 

Although they have the same religious practices during the month, fasting and worshiping, but the rituals vary from country to country.

Ramadan Lantern / Egypt

During Ramadan, Egyptians decorate the streets with lanterns to illuminate the entire city during the holy month. These lanterns symbolize unity and joy.

Ramadan unites Muslims worldwide with unique traditions

The origins of the Ramadan lantern history trace back to Egypt during the Fatimid era, specifically in 358 AH (around 969 AD), when Caliph Al-Mu’izz li-Din Allah entered Cairo for the first time on the fifth day of Ramadan. He arrived in the city after sunset. So people welcomed him with candles placed in wooden frames that prevented them from going out. Later, these wooden frames evolved into lanterns decorated with colourful glasses.

Suhoor drummer /Turkey

Like many other Middle Eastern countries, more than 20,000 drummers roam the streets of Turkey to wake Muslims up for the morning prayer and suhoor (pre-dawn meal) before sunrise. Drummers in Turkey wear traditional Ottoman attire, red hats, and vests. 

Recently, Turkish authorities have introduced a membership card for drummers to instil a sense of pride in them and encourage the younger generation to keep this long-standing tradition alive in the country.

Children recite poems / the UAE

Haq Al Laila is a tradition observed on the 13th, 14th, and 15th of Ramadan in the UAE. Children put on colorful clothes and go from door to door to sing songs and receive sweets. The song means give sweet to us, may God reward you, and you visit His house in Mecca. 

Ramadan unites Muslims worldwide with unique traditions

Eating food prepared by neighbors / Thailand

In Thailand, women leave their houses before they break their fast (iftar). They sit in front of one of their homes and have iftar together. The men do not eat the food their wives have made. Instead, they eat the foods prepared by other men’s wives. 

Dawn caller / Morocco

Dressed in traditional gandora, hat, and simple pair of slippers, a dawn caller walks through the streets, gently beating his drum and calling out to wake people up to eat before dawn. He is chosen by people because of his honesty. The tradition dates back to the 7th century when a companion of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) would roam in the street at dawn singing melodious prayers. 

Bathing to purify / Indonesia

Before the beginning of Ramadan, Muslims in Indonesia hold a ritual called ‘Padusan’, which means bathing in natural pools to purify themselves physically and spiritually.  

Canon firing / Syria, Lebanon, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Known as Madfa al iftar, the tradition started 200 years ago when the Ottoman ruler Khosh Qadam occupied Egypt. At that time, Qadam accidentally blasted a cannon while testing it during sunset. The sound echoed throughout Cairo, and many civilians thought it was a new way to announce the end of Ramadan. Later, Syria and Lebanon started to observe the tradition.

Ramadan unites Muslims worldwide with unique traditions
What makes the tradition unique for Bosnia and Herzegovina is that they fire cannons before breaking fast. They do not use war canons but traditional ones that are 100 years old.

Mheibes game / Iraq

In Iraq, after breaking the fast, people gather to play a traditional game of deception called Mheibes. The men’s game involves two teams of about 40 to 250 players who take turns hiding rings. 

Traditional songs / Albania

For more than a century, members of Albania’s Muslim community, which dates back to the Ottoman Empire, have celebrated the beginning and end of Ramadan with their traditional songs. Every day during Ramadan, they gather in the streets to play the lodra, a homemade double-ended cylinder drum covered in sheep or goatskin. To celebrate the start of iftar, Muslim families often invite them into their homes to play traditional ballads. 

Special name for newborns / Chechnya

One of the most distinctive Ramadan traditions in Chechnya is the use of special names for newborns born during the holy month. If it’s a boy, the name will be “Ramadan,” and if it’s a girl, the name will be “Marha.”

Seheriwala / India

People in India play a type of drum called seheriwala. The tradition dates back to the Mughal Empire. They walk in the street chanting the names of God and Prophet Mohammad.

Foods and pastries / Iran

A variety of foods and pastries are served during the month of Ramadan in Iran. 

Ramadan unites Muslims worldwide with unique traditions

Although there is no prescribed food for the meals, Iranians have some unique cuisines, such as Zoolbia Bamieh – a crispy Persian doughnut, made of deep-fried dough drunk in tasty syrup; Halim – a very popular food made of barley, shredded meat (beef, lamb, chicken or turkey) and spices; Ash Reshteh – a traditional Persian stew made of vegetables, fried onion, meat, nuts, beans, and Persian noodle; and Sholezard – an Iranian traditional saffron rice pudding dessert.