Jonathan Pollard served 30 years in an American federal prison for selling the United States' most classified secrets to Israel. Israel granted him citizenship, lobbied for his release and sent Netanyahu when he landed. He announced he is running for the Knesset. Nobody in Washington said a word.
Trump claimed credit for the ceasefire 80 times. Modi never contradicted him once. India sent seven multi-party parliamentary delegations — 59 members, 32 countries and the EU headquarters — to make one argument: Pakistan is a state sponsor of terrorism. Not one government said what India asked.
Pope Leo called for peace. Trump announced a deal. Strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure continued through the night. There is a moment in every prolonged conflict when the moral vocabulary of the powerful becomes entirely decorative — when prayers are offered and bombs are dropped together.
An Israeli naval vessel intercepted a European-flagged aid ship in international waters without legal basis. It was conducted anyway — because Israel has learned that the cost of violating international law in international waters is, for now, the price of a diplomatic protest.
Trump invoked the War Powers Act to declare the Iran conflict terminated. The strikes have stopped — for now. The naval blockade continues. The sanctions remain. The nuclear question is unresolved. The war has been declared over. The conditions that produced it have not changed.
Israel is not annexing the West Bank in a ceremony. It is annexing it in permits, bypass roads, settlement expansion and legal reclassification. The process is deliberate, incremental and designed to be complete before anyone formally objects. The annexation hides in plain sight.
The United States opened talks with Cuba by first threatening economic strangulation. Washington framed it as leverage. Havana called it coercion. The distinction matters: negotiations conducted under explicit threat produce agreements that last only as long as the threat does.
Iran built its oil infrastructure as an economic asset. The United States turned it into a vulnerability. With tanker traffic through Hormuz restricted and storage sites targeted, the weapon has turned around. Iran’s leverage over global energy markets has become a liability it cannot easily defend.
The US-Iran ceasefire was announced before terms were agreed, signed before the verification mechanism was designed and celebrated before either side confirmed what it had committed to. This is not how durable agreements are made. It is how pauses are managed before the next round.
The Trump administration’s approach to alliance management has a consistent logic: pay up or we withdraw. NATO members are being billed. Trade partners are being tariffed. The message is transactional and deliberate. What it is not is an alliance. It is a protection racket.
Mali’s military junta expelled French forces, invited Wagner in and declared a new era of sovereignty. The Bamako attack this week killed dozens in the capital. The junta bet that Russian mercenaries would deliver security where French forces had failed. The bet has not paid off.
Pope Leo delivered a powerful address condemning resource exploitation in Equatorial Guinea — a country whose president, Teodoro Obiang, has ruled for 46 years and whose family has looted its oil wealth with impunity. The words were right. The room was completely wrong.