Showing posts with label Opinion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opinion. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2026

The Permanence of War: Why the World’s Conflicts Refuse to End—and What 2026 Is Likely to Inherit

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If wars truly ended when their original causes disappeared, the modern world would be largely peaceful. Colonial borders would have settled. National identities would have matured. Historical grievances would have faded into textbooks. Diplomacy would have replaced violence as the default language of international disagreement.

Instead, in 2026, the global conflict map look less like a series of discrete crises and more like a palimpsest whereupon old wars are not being erased but overwritten with new justifications. The world did not witness a dramatic surge in entirely new wars in 2025; rather, it endured the continuation, mutation, and entrenchment of existing ones. What has changed is not the presence of conflict but its structure, durability, and political utility.

Modern wars no longer seek decisive victory. They seek leverage, signalling power, domestic legitimacy, and strategic denial. Above all, they seek permanence.

The Myth of Resolution in a World That Profits from Stalemate

Most contemporary conflicts persist not because solutions are unavailable, but because resolution threatens entrenched interests. Frozen conflicts—Northern Ireland, Cyprus, Kosovo, Donbas—are often celebrated as diplomatic successes. In reality, they are conflicts placed in long-term storage. Violence subsides, but identity disputes, territorial ambiguity, and political resentment remain carefully preserved.

The Good Friday Agreement ended mass bloodshed in Northern Ireland, yet sectarian identities remain politically mobilised. Cyprus has been divided since 1974 not because reunification is impossible, but because ambiguity serves geopolitical convenience. Kosovo-Serbia relations remain deliberately unresolved, allowing nationalist leaders on both sides to periodically revive grievances for domestic gain.

A frozen conflict is not peace. It is violence postponed, often indefinitely.

Israel–Palestine: A Conflict Too Useful to End

Few conflicts illustrate structural permanence better than the Israeli–Palestinian struggle. Rooted in the mid-20th century creation of Israel and competing claims to land, sovereignty, and national identity, it has long outlived the conditions of its origin.

Israel retains overwhelming military superiority, yet no credible political roadmap for Palestinian self-determination exists. Gaza remains ungovernable, the West Bank increasingly fragmented, and Palestinian leadership divided and discredited. Meanwhile, Israeli politics have grown more securitised, less conciliatory, and increasingly shaped by coalition pressures rather than strategic foresight.

For Hamas, perpetual resistance legitimises authority. For Israeli hardliners, perpetual threat justifies militarisation and settlement expansion. External actors posture but rarely intervene decisively. The result is a conflict that renews itself through periodic explosions of violence, each one framed as exceptional while reinforcing the same deadlock.

In 2026, the question is not whether the conflict ends, but whether it regionalises further through proxy escalation involving Iran, Hezbollah, and Gulf interests.

Iran and Israel: The Shadow War That Prefers Darkness

The Iran–Israel confrontation remains one of the most consequential undeclared conflicts of the modern era. It is fought through assassinations, cyberattacks, sabotage, airstrikes, and proxy militias rather than formal declarations of war. Iran arms Hamas and Hezbollah not merely to challenge Israel, but to extend deterrence without direct exposure. Israel retaliates covertly to avoid triggering regional war.

This form of conflict thrives precisely because it avoids resolution. Open war would be catastrophic. Peace would require mutual recognition and compromise neither side can politically afford. Thus, escalation is carefully calibrated to remain below the threshold of full-scale war—until miscalculation intervenes.

In 2026, the danger lies less in deliberate escalation than in accidental convergence, where simultaneous crises overwhelm restraint.

Kashmir: Stability Without Peace

The Kashmir conflict between India, Pakistan, and China is often described as dormant. This is misleading. It is actively managed, militarily controlled, and politically unresolved. India maintains firm territorial control over its administered regions. Pakistan retains its grievance as a cornerstone of national identity. China views Kashmir through a strategic lens tied to border security and infrastructure corridors.

Large-scale war is unlikely, not because tensions are resolved, but because nuclear deterrence imposes restraint. Yet deterrence also entrenches stagnation. Political dialogue is absent, trust is nonexistent, and local alienation remains unaddressed.

In 2026, Kashmir remains stable in appearance, volatile in substance—a conflict neither side can win, but neither is willing to abandon.

Ukraine: When War Becomes the Architecture of Order

The Russia–Ukraine war, rooted in the 2014 annexation of Crimea and the separatist conflicts in Donetsk and Luhansk, has evolved into something larger than territorial dispute. It is now a structural conflict over the nature of European security and the post–Cold War order.

Donetsk and Luhansk are no longer merely contested regions; they are symbols of a fractured continent. Ceasefires have failed because they attempt to manage symptoms rather than causes. Russia seeks strategic depth and influence. Ukraine seeks sovereignty and survival. Europe seeks stability without escalation. The United States seeks deterrence without direct confrontation.

Even if active combat diminishes in 2026, militarisation will not. Ukraine will remain armed, Russia entrenched, Europe anxious. Peace, in the classical sense, has already slipped beyond reach.

Syria, Afghanistan, and the Illusion of Post-War Landscapes

Syria and Afghanistan illustrate a disturbing modern pattern: wars that “end” without resolution. Syria’s civil war, which began in 2011, devastated the country, displaced millions, and fractured its social fabric. Its sovereignty is fragmented, reconstruction stalled, and reconciliation nonexistent.

Afghanistan followed a similar trajectory. After twenty years of war, the withdrawal of U.S.-led forces in 2021 did not produce peace but abandonment. The Taliban govern, but violence persists, economic collapse deepens, and extremism finds fertile ground. The conflict no longer dominates headlines because it no longer involves Western troops.

These wars demonstrate a brutal truth: modern conflicts do not end; they merely lose international attention.

Africa’s Resource Wars: Chaos with a Business Model

The conflicts in eastern Congo and Somalia defy simplistic explanations. They are not failures of statehood so much as examples of functional disorder. In Congo, armed groups, foreign interests, and corporate supply chains intersect around minerals essential to the global economy. Instability enables extraction without accountability.

Somalia’s prolonged conflict, compounded by insurgency, persists because governance remains fragmented and external interventions prioritise security over institution-building. Violence is sustained not by ideology alone, but by the political economy of disorder.

In 2026, these conflicts will continue precisely because they are profitable to too many actors to resolve.

Latin America’s Quiet Wars

In Colombia, decades of civil conflict involving the state, guerrilla groups like FARC and ELN, and paramilitaries have killed over 200,000 people. Peace agreements reduced violence but did not dismantle the underlying structures of inequality and criminal economies.

Mexico’s drug cartel violence and Central America’s gang wars represent a different category of conflict—undeclared wars where non-state actors rival state authority. These conflicts persist because they operate within global demand networks, weak institutions, and selective enforcement.

They are not aberrations. They are alternative systems of power.

Europe’s Supposedly Settled Fault Lines

Northern Ireland, Cyprus, Kosovo, and the Basque region are often cited as conflicts of the past. In reality, they are conflicts managed by fatigue rather than reconciliation. Political arrangements suppress violence but do not erase grievance. Identity remains mobilisable. Memory remains combustible.

In an era of rising nationalism and economic anxiety, these fault lines can reawaken with unsettling ease.

The Forces That Will Shape Conflict in 2026

What distinguishes 2026 from earlier years is not the number of conflicts, but the conditions that accelerate them. Technological diffusion has lowered the cost of violence. Drones, cyber warfare, surveillance tools, and disinformation allow states and non-state actors to inflict damage without overt confrontation. War has become deniable, modular, and continuous.

Climate stress will intensify resource competition, particularly in fragile states. Economic inequality will fuel internal unrest. Great powers will increasingly prefer proxy engagement to direct confrontation. The result is a world where conflict is normalised, regulated, and rarely resolved.

Potential New Flashpoints on the Horizon

As existing conflicts persist, several regions show signs of escalation that could redefine the global security landscape. The Red Sea and Horn of Africa risk becoming militarised trade corridors as shipping disruptions, militia activity, and naval deployments converge. Nigeria’s internal fragmentation, driven by ethnic tension, jihadist violence, and economic stress, threaten to spill beyond borders.

In South America, Venezuela–Guyana tensions over oil-rich territory could escalate as domestic pressures mount in Caracas. In Asia, China–Philippines confrontations in the South China Sea carry the risk of miscalculation, while India–China border tensions remain structurally unresolved despite temporary disengagements. Even seemingly minor disputes like the Thailand–Cambodia border issue could resurface amid nationalist mobilisation.

Finally, the least visible but most pervasive battlefield of 2026 may be cyberspace—a domain where conflict unfolds without maps, casualties are indirect, and accountability is elusive.

Will 2026 Be Any Different?

In form, yes. In substance, no.

Wars in 2026 will be more fragmented, more technological, and less formally declared. They will involve fewer soldiers and more machines, fewer decisive battles and more endless skirmishes. They may kill fewer people per episode, but they will persist longer, embed deeper, and resist closure more effectively.

The defining tragedy of contemporary conflict is not its savagery but its banality. War no longer shocks the world; it merely scrolls past it.

Peace remains possible, but it demands political courage that few leaders possess and institutional reforms that powerful actors resist. Until then, 2026 will not mark a turning point. It will mark another chapter in humanity’s long habit of managing violence rather than ending it.


#GlobalConflicts,#Geopolitics,#WorldAffairs,#InternationalRelations,#GlobalSecurity,#ModernWarfare,#ProxyWars,#ConflictAnalysis,#PoliticalRisk,#StrategicStudies,#WarAndPeace,#FrozenConflicts,#GreatPowerPolitics,#MiddleEastConflict,#UkraineWar,#IndoPacific,#SouthChinaSea,#KashmirIssue,#IsraelPalestine,#IranIsrael,#AfricaConflicts,#LatinAmerica,#EuropeanSecurity,#CyberWarfare,#FutureOfWar,#2026Outlook,#GlobalInstability,#MultipolarWorld,#SecurityStudies


Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Geopolitical Shifts: U.S. Foreign Policy Actions and Their Ramifications on Global Trade, Alliances, and UN Institutions

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Introduction

In the early months of 2026, U.S. foreign policy has intensified longstanding tensions, manifesting in aggressive manoeuvres toward Venezuela, Greenland, and Cuba, alongside escalating disputes with NATO allies. These actions, including the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on January 3, 2026, renewed threats to annex Greenland, and warnings to Cuba about cutting off Venezuelan oil supplies, have been compounded by European responses such as France's draft resolution to exit NATO and Italy's reluctance to engage militarily against Russia in Ukraine. China's admonition against U.S.A.’s unfounded claims over Greenland further underscores the multipolar strains. U.S. involvement has also extended to encouraging disturbances in Iran through public support for protesters and threats of military intervention, while its attitude toward China's recent aggression against Taiwan remains one of strategic ambiguity, bolstered by arms sales but lacking explicit defence commitments.

U.S. Actions in Latin America and the Arctic: A Pattern of Assertiveness

The U.S. military operation in Venezuela exemplifies brazen interventionism. On January 3, 2026, U.S. forces captured Maduro and his wife in Caracas, framing it as a law enforcement action tied to narco-terrorism indictments from 2020 and 2026. Maduro, accused of leading the Cartel de los Soles, was extradited to the U.S., where the President declared that the U.S. would "run" Venezuela temporarily to oversee a transition and access its oil reserves, which are the world's largest. This operation, involving airstrikes and special forces, resulted in over 100 deaths, including 32 Cuban officers aiding Venezuelan defences. Critics, including the United Nations and the Royal Institute of International Affairs condemned it as a violation of sovereignty and international law, evoking memories of U.S. dominance in Latin America.

U.S. aggression toward Cuba has also escalated. Cuba, reliant on Venezuelan oil (about 35,000 barrels daily), faces economic collapse amid U.S. sanctions dating back to 1960. The POTUS threatened Cuba with unspecified consequences if it does not "make a deal," explicitly cutting off Venezuelan resources. Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel rejected talks, denouncing U.S. "state terrorism." This builds on decades of embargo, which has cost Cuba billions, yet the island maintains strong health and education systems despite adversity.

The U.S. push to annex Greenland has provoked outrage. Reviving his 2019 proposal, the President insisted in January 2026 that the U.S. must "own" Greenland to counter Russia and China, warning of their potential takeover. A Republican bill, the Greenland Annexation and Statehood Act, authorises the President of United States to negotiate or use "necessary steps" for acquisition. Greenland's Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen rejected this, affirming ties to Denmark and NATO.

These actions reflect a U.S. strategy prioritising resource control and unilateral security, often bypassing international norms.

U.S. Involvement in Middle East Disturbances and Asia-Pacific Tensions

U.S. foreign policy in early 2026 has also played a significant role in aggravating the disturbances in Iran, where widespread protests erupted in late December 2025 over soaring prices, currency collapse, and broader anti-government sentiments. The unrest has reportedly resulted in over 500 deaths, including protesters and security personnel, amid a crackdown by Iranian forces. The American President has publicly incited the protests, posting on social media to urge Iranians to "KEEP PROTESTING – TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!!!" and warning of "strong action" if the regime continues its crackdown. The U.S. has imposed new sanctions, including a 25% tariff on countries conducting business with Iran, and canceled diplomatic meetings until the violence stops. The United States is considering military options, such as strikes on nuclear facilities or ballistic missile sites, as well as cyberattacks on Iran's domestic security apparatus, with officials indicating that any action is "at least several days away." Iran has accused the U.S. of seeking to "manufacture a pretext for military intervention”. It has threatened to target U.S. bases and Israel in retaliation. This U.S. positions itself as a supporter of regime change while risking broader regional escalation.

In the Asia-Pacific, the U.S. attitude toward China's escalating aggression on Taiwan remains one of strategic ambiguity, emphasising deterrence through arms sales while avoiding firm commitments to direct intervention. China conducted its largest-ever war games around Taiwan, dubbed "Justice Mission 2025," on December 29-30, 2025, involving over 30 warships, 201 aircraft, and live rocket firings, simulating a blockade and counter-intervention operations. These exercises, the most extensive by coverage area, were partly in response to a record $11.1 billion U.S. arms package to Taiwan, including advanced F-16V fighters set for delivery by 2026, which Beijing condemned as provocative. Taiwan's National Security Bureau assessed the drills as an attempt to undermine global support for the island and divert attention from China's domestic economic issues. The U.S. President has reiterated that peace in the Taiwan Strait is a vital U.S. interest but adhered to ambiguity, stating in interviews that any Chinese action would make him "very unhappy" and that it's "up to Xi" what happens, without specifying a U.S. response. Analysts note that the U.S. raid on Venezuela may provide China with narrative ammunition to justify territorial claims, though it does not meaningfully lower Beijing's threshold for invasion due to differing legal framings. This approach prioritises economic leverage over explicit military guarantees, potentially signalling U.S. reluctance amid broader global commitments.

NATO Disputes and European Responses: Fracturing Alliances

U.S. relations with NATO allies have reached a nadir over burden-sharing and policy divergences. The present president has long criticized allies for under-spending, claiming the U.S. covers 70% of NATO costs—a figure debunked as it includes total U.S. defence spending, not just NATO-specific contributions. In 2026, only a few allies meet the 2% GDP target, with cumulative shortfalls exceeding $800 billion since 2014.The American President's ambiguity on Article 5 commitments has sown doubt, prompting allies to question U.S. reliability.

France's response highlights the rift. On January 8, 2026, MP Clémence Guetté submitted a draft resolution for a "planned exit" from NATO, citing U.S. actions in Venezuela, Greenland, and Gaza as violations of alliance principles. While not yet debated, it echoes Macron's criticisms of NATO as "brain dead" and signals frustration with U.S. unilateralism. Italy, meanwhile, rejects direct military action against Russia over Ukraine. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni affirmed Italy's support for Ukraine but ruled out troop deployments, advocating European talks with Russia. This reflects war fatigue and aligns with Macron's call for dialogue.

These developments indicate a potential NATO collapse, with European nations exploring independent security arrangements amid U.S. threats.

Impacts on International Trade

U.S. actions are disrupting global trade flows. In Venezuela, seizing oil assets—estimated at tens of billions to rebuild—could flood markets, but infrastructure decay limits output to 1.1-1.5 million barrels daily in the short term. This benefits U.S. firms like Exxon but risks volatility. Sanctions on Venezuela and Cuba exacerbate shortages, with Cuba's economy teetering without Venezuelan oil.

Greenland's minerals (rare earths) are critical for tech supply chains. U.S. control could secure them against Chinese dominance (China controls 60% of global supply), but forced annexation might trigger EU sanctions, disrupting transatlantic trade. NATO disputes fuel tariff threats; USA's reciprocal tariffs could dismantle WTO rules, raising costs and slowing global growth. In Iran, U.S. tariffs on trading partners add pressure on global energy markets, potentially spiking prices amid threats of strikes on Iranian facilities. For Taiwan, U.S. arms sales sustain semiconductor trade stability, but Chinese exercises risk supply chain interruptions, as Taiwan's role in global chip production amplifies economic vulnerabilities. Overall, these policies fragment trade, boosting bilateral deals while eroding multilateral stability.

Impacts on Alliances

The U.S. approach is fracturing alliances. NATO faces existential threats; France's exit draft and Italy's diplomacy signal a pivot toward autonomy. Greenland tensions have prompted UK, Germany, and France to consider troop deployments, viewing U.S. threats as aggression. Denmark warns that this could end NATO. China's warnings highlight multipolar shifts, with Beijing positioning as a defender of sovereignty.

Latin American alliances are strained; U.S. intervention in Venezuela revives anti-imperialist sentiments, bolstering ties among Cuba, Russia, and China. Europe may deepen EU defence integration, reducing U.S. influence. In the Middle East, U.S. threats against Iran risk alienating allies and could draw in Iranian-backed militias in Iraq. In Asia-Pacific, ambiguous U.S. support for Taiwan may embolden China while eroding confidence among allies like Japan and Australia, potentially accelerating rival coalitions like those in the Indo-Pacific. These fractures could lead to a realigned world order, with U.S. isolationism accelerating rival coalitions.

Impacts on UN Institutions

U.S. policy is undermining UN efficacy. On January 7, 2026, the U.S. Administration withdrew from 66 international bodies, including 31 UN entities, citing waste and anti-U.S. agendas. This saves ~$430 million but cedes influence to China in climate, health, and development arenas. Venezuela's operation violated UN Charter sovereignty principles, drawing condemnation.

Cuba's plight highlights UN human rights failures amid U.S. sanctions. Greenland disputes could erode UN territorial integrity norms. U.S. encouragement of Iranian protests and threats of intervention further strain UN norms on non-interference, with Iran's crackdown condemned but U.S. actions seen as hypocritical. Regarding Taiwan, Chinese aggression challenges UN resolutions on peaceful dispute resolution, while U.S. ambiguity weakens collective security mechanisms. Overall, U.S. retreats weaken UN legitimacy, allowing adversaries to fill voids and diminishing global cooperation on trade, security, and crises.

Conclusion

U.S. actions in Venezuela, Greenland, and Cuba, amid NATO rifts and China's warnings, have injected profound complexities into global geopolitics, further compounded by U.S. involvement in Iran's disturbances through protest encouragement and intervention threats, and its ambiguous stance on China's Taiwan aggression amid arms sales and exercises. International trade faces disruptions from resource grabs and tariffs, alliances like NATO risk dissolution, and UN institutions suffer from U.S. disengagement. While advancing short-term U.S. interests, this approach may foster isolation, embolden rivals, and fragment the post-WWII order. A balanced multilateralism could mitigate these risks, but current trajectories suggest turbulent realignments ahead.



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Friday, January 16, 2026

The One-Man Army: Subramanian Swamy and the Art of Permanent Combat

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Indian politics has produced many archetypes: the dynasty heir, the mass leader, the technocrat, the saintly fraud. But Subramanian Swamy belongs to a rarer species—the perpetual litigant-provocateur, a man who treats the Indian Republic not as a constitutional democracy but as a courtroom-cum-wrestling ring in which he alone refuses to leave the mat. If others play politics like chess or cricket, Swamy plays it like trench warfare—muddy, noisy, and designed to exhaust the enemy even if victory never arrives.

A Harvard-educated economist, former Union Minister, and serial Member of Parliament, Swamy comes wrapped in elite credentials but behaves like a man permanently spoiling for a street fight. He is often described—admiringly or fearfully—as a “one-man army,” though the metaphor is incomplete. Swamy is not an army marching under a flag; he is closer to a portable insurgency, carrying his own courts, megaphones, vendettas, and ideological grenades wherever he goes. His loyalty is less to party, principle, or process than to perpetual combat itself.

To his admirers, Swamy is an incorruptible sentinel, the last man standing against elite impunity. To his critics, he is a serial defamer with a law degree, a man who mistakes filing for fighting and accusation for evidence. Both views contain uncomfortable truths.

Litigation as Lifestyle

If activism were an Olympic sport, Swamy would compete not in sprints but in marathons without finish lines. His legal career is less a record of cases than a philosophy of attrition. Courts are not institutions to him; they are pressure cookers. His most famous weapon — the National Herald case — is a textbook example of litigation as siege warfare.

Filed in 2012 against the Gandhi family, the case alleged a byzantine fraud involving Associated Journals Limited, Young Indian, and Congress party funds. Swamy framed it as the political equivalent of catching the royal family with its hands in the treasury till. Thirteen years on, the case has outlived governments, chief justices, and multiple election cycles.

The Enforcement Directorate’s 2025 chargesheet and subsequent FIRs gave Swamy fresh oxygen, which he inhaled like a man who survives on litigation fumes. But just as the ED thought it had sharpened its spear, the trial court — endeavouring to make sense of PMLA jurisprudence — refused to take cognisance of the agency’s prosecution complaint, holding that it was legally impermissible because it wasn’t founded on a predicate FIR but on Swamy’s own private complaint. The judge noted that money-laundering proceedings under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act can’t simply ride into court on the back of a private citizen’s paperwork, no matter how persistent the citizen. 

The result? A rare moment of judicial clarity that felt like a spectacular off-day for the ED — the very agency christened by its critics as the “Extortion Directorate” — as the charge sheet was, at least for now, sent back to the investigative phase rather than to the dock. 

Congress, naturally, declared that truth had prevailed and unleashed victory slogans, insisting the order exposed political vendetta and “malafide” motives. The BJP, on the other hand, offered the surgical precision of a diplomat with an extra two shots of espresso: the case isn’t over, don’t mistake procedural rebuffs for acquittal. 

Unwilling to concede the field to semantics and the law of unintended consequences, the ED promptly marched to the Delhi High Court, challenging the lower court’s refusal to take cognisance and seeking to resurrect its money-laundering charge from procedural purgatory. The High Court has now issued notices to both Gandhi leaders and set future hearings, leaving the entire saga to endure yet another chapter. 

So the lawsuit that once threatened to topple dynasties now limps along the legal maze, where every procedural setback is repackaged as triumph or treachery depending on which megaphone you’re listening to.

Convictions remain elusive, but Swamy’s claim is not victory—it is endurance. Like a mythological curse, his cases are designed to ensure that his targets never escape the judicial maze.

This method is not unique to the Gandhis. His 1996 disproportionate assets case against J. Jayalalithaa remains his crowning achievement, cited endlessly as proof that persistence pays. And it does—sometimes. But the Jayalalithaa case is also Swamy’s rhetorical shield: one genuine success used to justify dozens of speculative pursuits. It is the legal equivalent of saying, “I was right once, therefore I am right always.”

His pursuit of P. Chidambaram, Karti Chidambaram, Shashi Tharoor, Karunanidhi, and an ever-expanding gallery of suspected rogues, has turned the judiciary into Swamy’s second home. Courts occasionally entertain him, occasionally indulge him, and occasionally swat him away for lack of evidence. But even dismissal serves his purpose. A rejected case still produces headlines, tweets, television debates, and the lingering odour of suspicion.

In Swamy’s world, acquittal is not innocence; it is merely procedural inconvenience.

Twitter as a Weapon of Mass Distraction

If courts are Swamy’s trenches, X (formerly Twitter) is his artillery. His feed reads less like political commentary and more like an unfiltered cross-examination of the entire Indian establishment, conducted without rules of evidence or contempt. His bio—“I give as good as I get”—is not a warning; it is a mission statement.

Swamy tweets the way medieval kings issued proclamations: loudly, frequently, and with the assumption that truth follows authority. Allegations blur into insinuations, facts dissolve into conjecture, and conspiracy becomes commentary. His obsession with the origins of Mrs. Sonia Gandhi, alleged KGB links, and supposed foreign loyalties turns Cold War paranoia into political theatre. Courts have never substantiated these claims, but Swamy treats legal silence as moral endorsement.

Swami is a master of rhetorical arson. He ensures condemnation, attention, and martyrdom in equal measure. For him, outrage is not a side effect—it is the fuel.

His appetite does not stop at Congress. Islam, Prophet Mohammed, Muslims as a political community—these too become targets, treated less as citizens or faiths and more as ideological props in his war against pluralism. His old calls for disenfranchising Muslims sound today like relics from a pamphlet nobody officially owns but many quietly circulate. When outrage follows, Swamy responds not with retreat but with escalation, as if backlash were proof of relevance.

Even his own party is not spared. The Prime Minister, whom Swamy alternates between praising and flogging, becomes another exhibit in his permanent trial of India. The PM is too soft, too mediocre, too diplomatic, too indulgent—until he isn’t. Swamy’s criticism of India’s Russia policy in 2025, couched in moral grandstanding, revealed the paradox: a man who despises liberal values invoking them when geopolitically convenient.

Character Assassination as Political Philosophy

What separates Swamy from ordinary polemicists is not merely volume but method. His approach is not to debate policies but to contaminate reputations. Once a name enters his vocabulary, it rarely leaves unscarred. The Trivandrum MP’s acquittal in the Sunanda Pushkar case did little to erase the stain Swamy helped apply. In Swamy’s universe, suspicion has a longer shelf life than evidence.

This tactic works because Indian politics remains deeply tribal. Swamy understands that truth is secondary to repetition, and repetition need only be loud enough to drown nuance. His defenders call this fearlessness. His critics call it recklessness. A more accurate description might be strategic irresponsibility.

Ironically, Swamy has benefited from the very legal protections he claims to despise. His battle against criminal defamation laws—prompted by cases filed against him—ended with the Supreme Court upholding those laws, preserving a tool he himself uses liberally. It is difficult to imagine a more perfect metaphor for Swamy: a man who fights censorship while wielding the threat of prosecution like a cudgel.

The Utility of a Liability

Within the BJP, Swamy occupies the awkward space reserved for inconvenient allies. He is useful when attacking the Congress, embarrassing when attacking everyone else. He is tolerated, rarely empowered, frequently ignored, and never fully disowned. Like an unruly uncle at a wedding, he is allowed to speak because silencing him would cause a bigger scene.

Swamy thrives in this ambiguity. He is too famous to discard, too erratic to trust, too loud to ignore. His followers see him as fearless; his detractors see him as unhinged. Both underestimate the real skill at work: attention management. Swamy understands that in Indian politics, survival depends less on credibility than on constant visibility.

Gadfly or Grenade?

Subramanian Swamy’s legacy is not one of coherence but of collision. He collides with institutions, individuals, ideologies, and occasionally reality itself. He exposes genuine corruption but also manufactures suspicion. He champions accountability but corrodes discourse. He fights impunity but often replaces it with vendetta.

In a healthier democracy, Swamy might have remained a gadfly—annoying, persistent, occasionally useful. In India’s polarised ecosystem, he has become something else entirely: a political grenade with a law degree, rolled repeatedly into public space and applauded for the explosion rather than the shrapnel.

Whether history remembers him as crusader or crank may depend less on his intentions than on his consequences. What is certain is this: Subramanian Swamy did not merely participate in India’s political battles—he turned battle itself into a career. And like all men who live permanently at war, he leaves behind neither peace nor resolution, only scorched reputations and deeper trenches.

The one-man army marches on. The nation, exhausted, watches—wondering whether the enemy was ever external, or always within.


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Friday, January 9, 2026

The Fractured Atlas: Guṇḍā Rāj and the Geometry of Power (2045)

 


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History, that unreliable narrator permanently retained by the victorious, will describe 2026 as an inflection point. Footnotes will sanitise it as strategic recalibration. Think tanks will confidently label it the inevitable correction of a multipolar anomaly. But those still permitted to remember—and memory, by 2045, is a regulated commodity—will recognise 2026 as the year the mask slips, shattering on the marble floors of power.

It is the year the post–World War II order finally reveals what it has always been: a prolonged ceasefire between empires pretending to be moral philosophies.

The United States, long the self-appointed custodian of a “rules-based international order”—whose rules it drafts, edits, violates, and selectively enforces—no longer pretends otherwise. A resurgent isolationist administration, buoyed by a public exhausted by nuance and addicted to spectacle, concludes that global leadership is an unnecessary burden when empire proves so much more efficient.

The shift does not begin with tanks. It begins, as all modern crusades do, with a PowerPoint presentation.

Venezuela is framed as an urgent threat to “energy security,” “regional stability,” and—always the crowd favourite—“democracy.” The intervention is described as targeted, a word that in Washington has come to mean as expansive as necessary but emotionally reassuring. Within months, the operation transmutes into full-scale occupation. President Nicolás Maduro is captured in a raid choreographed with the cinematic precision of a streaming-service thriller. Shackled, grim, and paraded before the cameras, he ceases to be a man and becomes a message.

The message is uncomplicated: sovereignty is conditional.

The international community performs its ritual choreography. Statements are issued. Emergency meetings are convened. Grave concerns are expressed with admirable grammatical consistency. Then oil flows, markets stabilise, and everyone remembers they have elections to win, shareholders to pacify, pipelines to protect. Silence resumes its role as the most versatile dialect of diplomacy.

Emboldened by consequences that fail to materialise—a silence so thunderous it might as well be applause—the United States looks north. Greenland, once a frozen afterthought leased politely from Denmark, is rebranded a strategic climate asset. Canada’s Arctic territories, inconveniently melting, become shared hemispheric security zones. Climate security, that most elastic of doctrines, proves infinitely stretchable. After all, if rising seas threaten everyone, who better to manage melting ice than the world’s largest military?

Denmark protests with the weary dignity of a retired professor citing a syllabus no one reads. Ottawa objects with the mild indignation of a neighbour watching someone rearrange their furniture. Both are dismissed as relics—civilised, articulate, irrelevant. NATO schedules exercises. Aircraft carriers linger. The Arctic becomes a classroom where power teaches its oldest lesson: possession outperforms permission.

Thus, the guardian of the liberal order transforms openly into its chief arsonist.

And the world takes notes.

The Return of the Lathi: Geopolitics in the Age of Guṇḍā Rāj

By the early 2040s, the world no longer pretends that global order is governed by rules. It is governed by reach. The language of international relations—once bloated with “normative frameworks,” “shared values,” and “collective security”—undergoes brutal dietary correction. What survives is not elegance but efficiency. Power speaks plainly now, and its grammar is ancient.

Hindi, long dismissed in elite global discourse as insufficiently “theoretical,” provides a far more precise diagnosis of the age than any UN resolution or policy brief: गुंडा राज.

This is not rhetoric. It is taxonomy.

Guṇḍā Rāj describes a system in which authority does not flow from consent or legitimacy but from the capacity to impose costs, absorb backlash, and outlast outrage. Institutions persist not as constraints on power but as stage props—rolled out for summits, dismantled for operations, ignored when inconvenient. By 2045, geopolitics operates as a refined system of organised intimidation, conducted with satellites instead of street muscle, but driven by the same instinct.

Its governing axiom is older still: जिसकी लाठी, उसकी भैंस.

Whoever holds the biggest stick claims the buffalo. Territory, trade routes, data flows, orbital slots, seabed minerals, even populations—these are merely updated livestock. They are claimed not through moral entitlement but through enforceable dominance. International law does not disappear; it becomes ornamental. It is invoked by the strong against the weak and quietly bypassed by the strong against themselves. The rulebook remains immaculate on the shelf while the game proceeds entirely by muscle memory.

What distinguishes 2045 from earlier eras of imperialism is not restraint but candour. The United States does not cloak expansion in democracy; it speaks of “security architectures” and “hemispheric stability.” China does not preach revolution; it offers “harmony” enforced by drones and debt. Russia invokes “historical continuity.” Germany prefers “stability.” Japan speaks of “defensive necessity.” India invokes “civilisational responsibility.” Different slogans, identical mechanics. Each power polishes its lathi with ideology, but none pretends it is anything other than a weapon.

Smaller nations grasp this faster than analysts do. They stop appealing to justice and begin shopping for patrons. Sovereignty becomes modular. Independence becomes conditional. Neutrality becomes a temporary status requiring constant renewal. Flags still fly. Anthems are still sung. But decisions are made elsewhere—in capitals large enough to absorb consequences without apology.

The tragedy of this global Guṇḍā Rāj is not that it is barbaric. It is that it is efficient. Wars are fewer, shorter, more decisive. Resistance exists, but it is surgically managed. Moral outrage circulates freely on digital platforms, carefully monitored, strategically ignored. The weak are no longer crushed indiscriminately; they are integrated, optimised, managed.

By 2045, geopolitics no longer asks who is right. That question belongs to a gentler, more delusional century. The only question that matters now is: who is strong enough to make their right stick?

Domino Logic and the End of Pretence

By 2030, precedent acquires momentum. Not because chaos is desired, but because chaos is now permitted. Russia, long sanctioned, scolded, and strategically contained like a misbehaving adolescent, watches carefully. Moscow understands precedent better than morality. If borders are suggestions and sovereignty a subscription service, there is no reason to remain bound by rules drafted during weakness.

With Washington consolidating its hemispheric estate, the Kremlin launches what it calls a reunification campaign in Ukraine. The phrase reeks of nostalgia, carefully laundered for contemporary consumption. Eastern Ukraine is absorbed outright. Western regions are administered by compliant proxies fluent in the language of independence while practising obedience.

Sanctions follow, ceremonially. They are comprehensive, symbolic, and circumvented with impressive creativity. Energy markets adjust. European capitals wring their hands while negotiating exemptions. The UN Security Council convenes, debates, vetoes, adjourns—its chamber now less a forum for peace than a museum of institutional decay.

In a speech that goes viral precisely because it articulates the obvious, President Putin summarises the new doctrine: if America redraws borders for oil and ice, Russia reclaims its historical heartland. Hypocrisy proves more contagious than any pathogen.

From Ukraine, logic spreads outward. Estonia and Latvia experience “protective interventions.” Borders blur through cyberattacks, disinformation, and deliberately ambiguous troop movements. NATO protests. NATO hesitates. NATO recalibrates its vocabulary. Everyone learns that escalation ladders exist primarily to be avoided.

China, observing patiently, proceeds differently. Where Washington prefers spectacle and Moscow nostalgia, Beijing prefers choreography. In 2032, under the banner of historical rectification, China moves on Taiwan—not dramatically, but inexorably.

The amphibious assault is swift. The cyber campaign is devastating. Global supply chains dependent on Taiwanese semiconductors collapse with the elegance of a consultant-designed disaster. Markets panic. Governments plead. Statements proliferate. Then reality intervenes: no one fights a war over principles already sold at auction.

Taiwan becomes a “Special Administrative Region.” Resistance is archived. Future students watch documentaries with the distant sympathy reserved for Prague in 1968 or Budapest in 1956. The lesson is not cruelty. It is efficiency.

China accelerates. The South China Sea is finalised—not negotiated. Autonomous drone fleets enforce the nine-dash line with algorithmic calm. Disputed islands fade into administrative adjustments. Bhutanese and Indian border territories are “realigned” through infrastructure, intimidation, and patience.

Smaller nations do not fall; they evaporate. Brunei and Timor-Leste lower their flags quietly. Museums preserve their independence more faithfully than treaties ever did.

Empire Without Apology

By the mid-2030s, cartography becomes speculative art. Borders thicken into zones, thin into corridors, dissolve into influence. Nation-states are not destroyed; they are outgrown.

The United States emerges as a hemispheric colossus, a Pan-American Union in practice if not proclamation. From Alaska to the Andes, resources feed an AI-driven economy lubricated by surveillance and sanctified by security. Venezuela becomes an energy appendage. Parts of Canada become strategic reserves. Latin America is invited into prosperity, provided it does not insist on autonomy.

Russia rebrands itself as a Slavic Federation. Pipelines replace constitutions. Energy substitutes ideology. Authoritarianism becomes a feature, not a flaw.

China’s Greater Harmony Sphere dominates Asia-Pacific, insisting it is not an empire because it has no colonies—only partners who cannot say no. Southeast Asia becomes a lattice of dependencies. Mongolia and Siberia are discussed as “future cooperation zones.”

India, abandoning the fantasy of neutrality, asserts itself as a South Asian hegemon. Nepal and Bhutan are absorbed through “protective alliances.” Kashmir remains volatile. Innovation thrives alongside curated pluralism.

Germany forges Mitteleuropa. Japan re-arms with ceremonial solemnity. Hypersonic missiles replace apologies.

Technology orchestrates it all. AI enables precision annexation. Quantum computing weaponises economies. Drones enforce borders without sentiment. Space follows Earth’s example. The Moon is mined. Mars is claimed. Orbits are zoned.

By 2045, the world does not collapse into chaos; it settles into something far more disturbing—clarity. The age of moral camouflage ends, replaced by a system that no longer pretends to be just, only effective. In this order, गुंडा राज is not a breakdown of governance but its perfected form, and जिसकी लाठी, उसकी भैंस is not a proverb but a policy framework. Empires no longer apologise, institutions no longer restrain, and ideals survive only as ornamental language for press releases. History, having briefly flirted with conscience, returns to muscle memory. And the most unsettling truth is not that power wins—but that the world, tired of hypocrisy, finally agrees to play by its rules.



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