After U.S. and Israeli strikes, Iran's IRGC isn't just managing a military problem — it's managing a survival problem. Former intelligence officer Dino Buloha breaks down why Mojtaba Khamenei's name keeps rising, and what Washington must not miss.
Former national security professional D.W. Wilber exposes Vladimir Putin’s praise of Iran’s slain supreme leader, his long record of brutality and assassination, and what the U.S.–Israeli strikes and Iranian street uprising mean for Russia’s fading influence.
The Houthis used time, captured weapons, and Iranian backing to turn a local Yemeni insurgency into a strategic threat on the Red Sea. If Washington keeps treating Yemen as background noise, it risks facing a permanent Iranian‑style forward base on its doorstep
Lebanon is not doomed by its size. It is weakened by one thing: a state that has been forced to share authority with factions that do not answer to it. Lebanon can live with diversity. What it cannot survive is diversity without a strong referee.
Hatred of Jews has learned to survive by changing its language. What was once shouted openly is now whispered behind academic jargon, activist slogans, and media-approved euphemisms. The word "Zionist" has become the preferred substitute for "Jew."
Douglas Murray has distinguished himself by doing something both rare and dangerous in modern media: telling the truth clearly, publicly, and without apology—pulling no punches, regardless of who the truth offends.
Former U.S. intelligence officer Dino Buloha dissects Iran’s brutal crackdown, Washington’s dilemma over striking Tehran, China’s quiet lifeline, and the economic and regional fallout that make the world pretend this crisis is merely “complicated.”