With the Strait of Hormuz effectively shut after a month of US and Israeli strikes on Iran, Washington is no longer pretending the war is about "regime change." The real prize, argues Turkish foreign policy writer Zeynep Gürcanlı in her column in Turkish news site Ekonomim, is rerouting Gulf oil away from vulnerable chokepoints and toward the Mediterranean — a shift that makes a long-frozen Cyprus settlement suddenly urgent. Gürcanlı writes that after one month of war, Hormuz — previously the free highway for Gulf crude — is largely closed. She cites Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf's bitter summary: the enemy that claimed to have destroyed Iran's air force, navy and missiles now says its operational goal is to "open Hormuz," though the strait was open before the war started. Tehran's response, according to the column, is to turn the strait into a toll road. A draft law to charge for passage has already cleared the National Security an...
Moroccan academic Dr. Tarek Lissaoui says the recent US-Iran confrontation ended not with an American triumph but with a negotiated pause that reveals how military superiority no longer guarantees political control, and he urges Arab states to draw a hard lesson about self-reliance. In his latest assessment, published by Rai al-Youm, Lissaoui opens with the old fable of the sticks: one breaks easily, a bundle held together resists even strong hands. That, he writes, is the law of states as much as families. From Threats to a Repost Lissaoui argues the turning point came within days. The United States, he notes, moved from rhetoric threatening to erase a deep-rooted Iranian civilization to a quieter moment on April 8, 2026, when President Donald Trump's official account on Truth Social, and the White House account on X, republished a statement by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. For Lissaoui, this was not a routine media step. It was an implicit acknowledgment that the Irani...