Beatty Secondary School Class 55
Thursday, March 19, 2026
CounterPunch: Iran War: We Have Met The Enemy, and He is U.S.
CounterPunch: The Idiocy of Trump's War on Iran: Thursday 19-03-2026: ****************
Truth about United States war on Venezuela and Iran
The Anglo-Saxon United States has always looked at other countries rapid progress and development
economically and militarily with jaundiced eyes. United States has stated very clearly and unabashly in its national policy that it will never allow any other country to rise up to become as rich and powerful as the United States and the moment it sees such signs of a country growing fast to overtake the US either economically or militarily it will smash down and destroy that country. This really unbridled arrogance and highly extreme vicious bellicose behaviour.
It is no surprise that China's rapid progress in economy and military as well as in science, technology and high tech has incur the wrath of American politicians in both the Republican and Democrat parties. India which is following China's footsteps in rapid development is also a target of American wrath.
It is the clear intention of the United States to do whatever it takes to stop China and India's development and prevent them from overtaking America and the Western countries in the field of economy, military, science and technology as well as in high tech and cyber. To carry out this dirty and vicious job of underminining China and India's development the God forsaken United States has enlisted the help and cooperation of the despicable Zionist Jewish state of Israel to ensure the success of its plot.
Below is a self explanatory article permissible by New Eastern Outlook ( NEO )
Israel and Its Staunch Allies: Turning Friends into Bitter Enemies
The global crisis around Israel and Iran reveals deeper processes that are changing the balance of power in the world and calling into question previous ideas about international politics.

Future generations will look back and wonder why we didn’t stop Trump and Netanyahu before they started WWIII.
There is something else happening in the background, something even greater at work. There are many factors to consider in both the starting and stopping of these stupid attacks, as both attacking sides are greedy and want to cling to power. They are definitely not thinking of the people. It is becoming all the more obvious that the Iranian state is not the root cause of the war, but China and India are. A concerted effort is being made to slow down and stifle those economies; however, it is not going to plan.
Proxy Wars of Choice
Just stop and reflect. For instance, the damage that other proxy wars of choice, such as the US starting a war in Ukraine back in 2014, inflicted on the European Union is already evident. The sad part is that most European Union countries still want to support the losing side, not out of a principled position but for self-interest and political survival. This can be summed up as clearly a case of cutting off one’s nose to spite your face.
It is ironic, with the age of AI and easy access to historic information, that few want to look back to reflect on when Iran held its first democratic elections and elected its first democratic government, which was led by Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh back in the early 50s. This was not in the interests of Britain and the US, as within the span of two years they conspired to implement “Operation Ajax,” which overthrew this democratically elected government. The reason was that the Iranians had nationalized the drilling and export of Iranian oil. How dare the Iranians take control of their own resources!
Targeting China, India, even the EU!
Less obvious is that the collective West wants to hurt China and India by disrupting the continuity of supply of oil products and thereby put the brakes on their economic growth, which rate currently far exceeds that of the West. Nobody should be so naïve as to accept the current justifications, lame at best, for an illegal war, as neither the US nor Israel has ever been interested in the democratic freedoms of Iranians. They want Iranians to live under the dictatorship of a US-backed leadership — just as the people of Arab countries across the Middle East suffer today.
It seems like nobody wants to remember history, as it is too inconvenient and will show who is the most right and who is dead wrong!
Even lesser friends are being turned into foes!
Even now, in small countries like Georgia, the Embassy of Israel is upset and has started a social media campaign to highlight that Georgia has to garner support for its aggressive and illegal policies against Iran and other neighbors in the Middle East, especially Lebanon.
The Israeli Embassy in Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia, expresses concern about Georgian society. According to the embassy, friendship is not measured only by words; it is highlighted in difficult situations — who are on the side of life and who are on the side of violence and terror.
They are trying to use the 2600-year historical connection between Georgian and Jewish people for political leverage and describe how it is based on respect and common values. It is these values that define the essence of true friendship: support, solidarity, and moral strength in difficult times, says the statement of the Israeli Embassy in Georgia.
True friendship between peoples is measured by the ability to distinguish between those who choose the path of life, stability, and cooperation, and those who continue to cultivate terror, extremism, and violence.
Such statements, and others, have been repeated on Georgian Public TV and various news sites, as this confirms the need to access Georgia as a staging area for actions from Azerbaijan and perhaps Armenia, two countries already taken under the control of Israel and the United States.
It was also pointed out, in response, by Georgian politicians and commentators alike, that during the 2008 war, the Jewish state allegedly provided kill codes to the Russian government that enabled the shutting down of drones the Georgian military had purchased from Israel.
So much for friendship, which the Israelis forget is a two-way street!
Everything that is going on in the world, particularly the Middle East, was planned long before all the recent issues people talk about now. Everything recent is tactical; the strategic goes back much further. It is difficult to understand what is going on even if you have an understanding of where history, religion, markets, and geopolitics intersect.
It comes down to the future of American and Western financial dominance and keeping the dollar as the global reserve currency. We can’t have Iran selling oil in other currencies, and the same is true for Venezuela or anyone else. When the game ends, many countries, starting with the US, will collapse from their debt and economic decline. It is anybody’s best guess as to what will happen to a lot of the rest of the world as well!
I was just looking at the futures markets; they had dropped a lot by closing each Friday, now opening lower and dropping more. I think the financial implications are here. We will have to see how Trump and his team react to that.
And there is the issue of possible attacks on desalination plants. Iran was in a serious drought already, and Tehran was running out of water, not sure the Gulf countries are ever out of drought. Things could empty out in a hurry without a safe and constant water supply.
It is really akin to the beginning of the end of times, as I see no light at the end of the tunnel. The architects of war and destruction in Tel Aviv and Washington appear blind to the blowback. Even longtime allies in Europe and the Caucasus are being asked to cut off their noses to spite their faces, propping up losing bets in Ukraine and the Levant for the sake of political survival.
Future historians will not ask why the world turned against Israel at the supposed “end of times.” They will ask why Israel — and its enablers —worked so relentlessly to make that prophecy self-fulfilling. The age of unchallenged Western dominance is ending not with a divine trumpet but with the grinding mechanics of greed, hubris, and overreach.
And when the dust finally settles, it may not be God’s judgment the world remembers, but humanity’s long-overdue reckoning with how it could allow all this to happen.
Seth Ferris, investigative journalist and political scientist, expert on Middle Eastern affairs
Sunday, March 15, 2026
CounterPunch: The Long War: Iran's Oldest Strategy: 13-03-2026 FRI
March 13, 2026
The Long War: Iran’s Oldest Strategy
Peter Bach
Photograph Source: Cattette – CC BY 4.0
Most discussions of Iran revolve around oil, escalation, and regime change. Yet Iran today feels easier to understand as part of a much older pattern. For more than 2,500 years, states on the Iranian plateau have favoured patience, distance, and endurance over any kind of immediate full-on confrontation with stronger enemies.
To understand Iran today, it therefore helps to trawl through Persian military history.
Iran has been described, unfairly, as two deserts—one with salt and one without, though it is also forested and full of mountains. From all this has emerged one of the world’s most durable martial traditions.
From the chariot nobles and “Immortals” of the Achaemenid Empire to the armoured cavalry of later dynasties—and ultimately to the modern Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)—Iranian military institutions have repeatedly adapted.
During the Iran–Iraq War, Iraqi forces saturated the battlefield with chemical weapons while much of the world looked away. Yet Iranian forces endured. That experience still shapes the country’s strategic thinking.
Today, Iran famously emphasises asymmetric warfare—indirect and comparatively inexpensive methods designed to offset the technological advantages of powers such as the United States and Israel. But across the centuries, Persian warfare has often favoured similar patience, mobility, and indirect pressure.
Long before the Persian Empire came about, Indo-Iranian tribes spread like seeds across the Eurasian steppe. The ancestors of Persians, Medes, and Scythians were nomadic pastoralists whose warrior culture centred on horse archery and mobile raiding.
I will always remember the late Iran expert Michael Axworthy telling me at the French House in central London how Persian culture liked to preserve the memory of its warrior elites in the Shahnameh, where heroes famously fought knowing that “a man’s renown is what remains of him.”
Over time groups such as the Medes and Persians formed states. Emerging from these tribal warrior societies, they became more than capable administrators and empire-builders, though their romantic steppe heritage—particularly elite cavalry—continued to shape Iranian warfare.
The first great Persian imperial conqueror was Cyrus the Great. His empire, founded around 550 BC, became one of the largest the ancient world had ever seen. Achaemenid armies fielded archers and spearmen supported by cavalry and elite guards such as the Immortals—a 10,000-man corps whose ranks were continually replenished to that exact number. [It was pointed out to me that part of the weird Christian Zionist hagiography of Trump hailed him as a modern-day Cyrus the Great.]
During the Greco-Persian Wars, these armies brought together Egyptians, Babylonians, Greeks, and Central Asians under one single imperial command. One encounter remains especially famous: the Battle of Thermopylae, where Leonidas I’s Greek force resisted Xerxes I’s invading army. The episode has been retold so many times in Western culture, most recently in the film 300, where Persians appear less as soldiers than as grotesques—an example of how easily enemies become caricatures.
“From childhood we are taught to ride and to shoot,” declares the hero in Gore Vidal’s novel Creation. Vidal uses this idea repeatedly to show that Persians were raised as horsemen and warriors from youth, not trained later as professional soldiers. The Greeks admired individual glory in battle, Vidal is saying, while Persians value order, discipline, and organisation.
When the Achaemenid Empire collapsed under Alexander the Great, however, Persian political power fragmented with it. Yet they say the military traditions of the Iranian plateau did not disappear. If anything, they evolved.
The Parthian Empire developed one of the ancient world’s most distinctive fighting styles. Its armies relied on highly mobile horse archers this time supported by heavily armoured cataphracts. Like the great horse warriors of the Native American Plains, the Parthians were legendary riders, able to twist in the saddle and fire arrows backwards in the famous ‘Parthian shot.’
These tactics proved devastating at the Battle of Carrhae, where Parthian forces destroyed a Roman army commanded by Marcus Licinius Crassus. Later writers claimed molten gold was poured into Crassus’s mouth—perhaps apocryphal, but too memorable to be lost.
The broader lesson was familiar on the Iranian plateau. Stronger enemies could often be worn down through distance, manoeuvre, and patience.
The Sasanian Empire refined this. Its elite warriors, the Savaran, were heavily armoured noble cavalrymen armed with long lances and swords, forming the backbone of a state that for centuries rivalled Rome and Byzantium.
Exhausted by long wars with Rome, however, the Sasanian state did eventually collapse under the Arab conquest in AD 651. The empire fell, but Persian administrative and military traditions continued. Early Islamic rulers adopted many of these, just as later conquerors—from the Seljuks to the Mongols—also found that governing Iran meant working within Persian traditions of statecraft and war.
A distant echo of this pattern perhaps appears today in the IRGC’s increasingly challenged support for regional militias from Hezbollah and Hamas to the Houthis in Yemen and the Muslim Brotherhood in Sudan.
Under the Qajar dynasty, attempts to modernise the army included the creation of the Persian Cossack Brigade, a Russian-trained unit that became Iran’s most effective military force. After the Russian Revolution the brigade passed into Iranian hands, and its commander, Reza Khan, used it to launch the 1921 coup that brought the Pahlavi monarchy to power—an event quietly tolerated by Britain.
Today, long after the overthrow of the Shah, Iran fields two main military institutions: the national army and the earlier mentioned, still powerful IRGC created after the 1979 revolution.
The Islamic Republic was immediately tested by war. Saddam Hussein’s invasion in 1980 forced Iran into an eight-year struggle fought under isolation and repeated Iraqi chemical attacks. Iran’s conventional forces struggled against Iraq’s better-equipped army.
Yet the war delivered a crucial lesson: survival itself could count as success.
Basically, endurance and mobilisation allowed the Islamic Republic to outlast what many expected would be swift collapse. The conflict left a deep imprint on Iranian military thinking, reinforcing a threatening preference for attrition and indirect pressure rather than conventional confrontation with technologically superior enemies. The pattern will be familiar.
The Iranian warrior is no longer a horseman but a modern soldier equipped with missiles, drones, and cyber capabilities. Yet the imagery of the past remains relevant. Heroes like Rostam from the Shahnameh appear alongside Sasanian cavalry and the martyr traditions of the Iran–Iraq War in Iran’s modern military imagination.
Their current strategy is therefore less an anomaly than the latest expression of a long tradition. The steppe archers who once hassled and harried their enemies, the Parthians who exhausted Roman legions through manoeuvre and distance, and later Persian states that absorbed new technologies while preserving older traditions all find an echo in Iran’s reliance today on missiles, drones, proxy militias, and dispersed forces.
Rather than seeking immediate battlefield triumph, Iran appears today to be preparing for something else. This is a long contest of attrition.
The “distance” once commanded by the Parthian horse archer has not disappeared—it has simply changed form. Where a nomad once used the range of a bow, the modern state uses missiles or the geopolitical buffer of proxy militias.
The principle remains the same: this is to keep the enemy at arm’s length and wear down their resolve.
Geography reinforces this strategy. Don’t forget Iran sits astride the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, surrounded by mountains and deserts that favour defence and attrition.
If history tells us anything, Iran will not try to win quickly. Instead it will aim to ensure that any enemy drawn into conflict finds itself fighting a long war.
Foreign powers have underestimated Iran for more than twenty-five centuries—and repeatedly discovered that Iranian states possess a stubborn capacity to endure, adapt, and outlast stronger enemies. What we are witnessing today may therefore be the opening phase of a highly regrettable conflict shaped not by decisive battles, but by endurance.
Peter Bach lives in London.
NEO: Shield of the Americas: The Geopolitics behind US-Led Counter-Cartel Coalition: Sunday, 15-03-2026
Security
Shield of the Americas: The Geopolitics Behind US-Led Counter-Cartel Coalition
Under Trump’s corollary to the Monroe Doctrine, the US has advanced a new coalition, “Shield of the Americas,” in the Western Hemisphere. While framed as a counter-cartel initiative, the effort also seeks to curb China’s expanding influence in Latin America. Beijing is closely monitoring the development and adjusting its regional strategy to preserve its long-term foothold.

What is the Shield of Americas (SoAs)?
The Shield of Americas (SoAs) is a newly launched multilateral military alliance between the US and Latin American states. The “Shield of the Americas” conference, which the White House described as such, was held by US President Donald Trump on Saturday in Miami at his golf club with Latin American leaders. As per the US officials, this multilateral grouping is aimed at dismantling drug cartels and criminal networks operating in the region through a combined security web. It is also meant to contain external powers’ influence in the region, which threatens American security.
“The alliance is our commitment to use lethal military force to destroy the sinister cartels and terrorist networks” (President Donald J. Trump – SoAs Summit)
The alliance is comprised of approximately seventeen member countries, with the exclusion of Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia. Another major interesting fact about the grouping is that it is mainly comprised of Trump’s like-minded partner nations – far-right conservative Latin American governments. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio heads the alliance, while Kristi Noem acts as the special envoy for the Shield of Americas, appointed by President Trump.
Rationale Behind the Alliance
The National Security Strategy of the US, launched in December 2025, clearly mentioned the implementation of the ‘Enlist and Expand’ strategy in the Western Hemisphere. It simply refers to the picking and choosing of like-minded governments, in particular the far-right conservatives, and creating a multilateral coalition to impose the Monroe Doctrine on the region.
The NSS stated, “We will enlist established friends in the hemisphere to control migration, stop drug flows, and strengthen stability and security on land and sea. By fostering and reinforcing new relationships, we will expand while simultaneously promoting our own country’s attractiveness as the region’s preferred economic and security partner.” The establishment of “Shield of Americas” is its actual implementation.
One of the major objectives of the coalition is the economic encirclement of the region, which includes a U.S.-backed alternative to the Belt and Road Initiative’s (BRI) advances in Latin America. To prevent Chinese transshipment, the United States is attempting to establish supply chain corridors through tax breaks, tariff reductions, and a shared set of rules of origin. Similarly, the “Americas Energy Compact” will require Latin American countries to import more liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the United States.
In terms of defense and security, the US wants to create a hemispheric security network with the overt objective of curbing transnational terrorism and drug cartels while covertly using such means to ensure maximum containment of the PRC in the region. As China has provided port-building facilities to Latin American states to boost its economic ties with the region, the US, through heightened security initiatives, wants to construct a ‘western port culture’ where the US-made rules would be implemented for trade and commerce. Through such measures, the US is trying to re-engage and mold the region into a strict Western governance order.
Chinese Countermeasures
Anticipating the upcoming threats, on December 10, 2025, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) issued its third policy paper, entitled “China Latin America and the Caribbean Policy Paper.” Preserving its foothold in the region, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China has put together a task force whose mandate is to maintain its gains in the region and take further countermeasures against any future American moves. Under this policy, China has launched five programs for building a China-LAC community, which include the Solidarity Program, Development Program, Civilization Program, Peace Program, and People-to-People Connectivity Program.
The policy paper came as a response to the Trump administration’s national security strategy, which contradicts China’s policies in the region. In spite of pressure from Washington, the PRC is maintaining its relations with the Latin American states, providing an alternative order surpassing the Western scrutiny and pressure points. Thus, China’s strategy in the region is centered around political and economic engagement rather than what the US tries to frame it as: ‘offensive intervention’ in its neighborhood.
Future Trajectory
No doubt, the launch of ‘Shield of Americas’ is a significant development, but it faces serious complications. The Western Hemisphere is already crowded with more than 40 organizations. The addition of a new one would only add to the mess and disrupt the status quo of the region. Moreover, the coalition is more symbolic in nature. Just like the Board of Peace, this grouping could face regional backlash and global condemnation. The results of such a coalition would be tactical, as seen.
This alliance consists predominantly of conservative governments, which is consistent with the Trump administration’s ideology. With geopolitical changes being very imminent, what if in the near future the region reneges on a left-wing wave again? Would the alliance remain intact? Likewise, if Democrats came into power in the US, the alliance could face serious setbacks. Therefore, the establishment of this regional coalition could be considered an accelerating change but not necessarily an inflection point.
Conclusion
The Shield of the Americas is basically another Chinese containment initiative taken by the Trump administration under the guise of counter-drug-cartel operations. From the inaugural address to the NDS, the Trump administration has accepted the fact that the PRC is now a peer competitor of the US, which has all the capabilities and intent to surpass US global power. Therefore, such so-called coalitions are being formed to either reduce or evade this reality. On the other hand, China has already started taking countermeasures and is determined to implement its strategies based on long-term strategic thinking, as compared to short-sighted, symbolic steps taken by the US.
Taut Bataut is a researcher and writer that publishes on South Asian geopolitics
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