Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Filmbar screening of Mani Kaul's Uski Roti (1970) at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Friday, April 17, 2026 at 5:00 pm. 
A desolate bus-stop on a highway, figure of a village woman Balo, waiting to deliver a meal to Sucha Singh, her husband, a bus driver. He expects the traditional duties of an average Indian rural wife. Balo in turn accepts her husband's independent lifestyle. Balo hurries to the bus stop. She is late delivering the meal, trying to save her younger sister, Jinda, from being seduced by the village rake.

The screening will be followed by an informal discussion over tea. Lift is operational. All friends are welcome.

Address: Research and Publication Centre (RPC), 2nd Floor, 65 Main Boulevard Gulberg, Lahore (next to Standard Chartered Bank, above Indesign showroom). 

Rashed Rahman

Editor, Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) (link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com)

Director: Research and Publication Centre (RPC) (on Facebook)

Email: rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

Cells: +92 302 8482737 & +92 333 4216335.

Business Recorder Column April 14, 2026

As written by me:


No war, no peace?

 

Rashed Rahman

 

Not entirely unexpectedly, the first ever face-to-face interaction in Islamabad between the protagonists of the Gulf war, the US and Iran, since the 1979 revolution in the latter, ended without agreement. Does this mean an end of the ceasefire and a return to military conflict? Perhaps not immediately. Both sides hinted at their respective positions after the conclusion of the talks and left open the possibility of their continuance in a second round. If nothing else, the talks laid out the respective positions of both sides on matters of utmost importance and concern to one side or the other, or even to both, although not everything has likely been shared with the public.

Going by what has been shared though, the issues that proved prickly can be reduced to six: 1) control of the Hormuz Straits; 2) the nuclear question; 3) full sanctions lifting (Iran), not partial, phased (US); 4) conflicting claims over Iran’s $ six billion frozen assets; 5) war reparations, and 6) complete end to war, including Israel’s continuing attacks on Lebanon.

Before departing Islamabad, US Vice President J D Vance, the leader of his delegation, said they had conveyed to the Iranians their “final and best offer”, without bothering to go into the details of what that might contain or entail. Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who led the Iranian delegation, said his country would not give in to threats after Trump’s social media bluster regarding the Hormuz Straits. “If they fight, we will fight, and if they come forward with logic, we will deal with logic,” was how he responded. Given the way the war has unfolded, this is no empty threat as Iran has exceeded most people’s pre-war assessment of its fighting strength. The really pointed part of his remarks was the tone struck by Mr Ghalibaf when he said the opposing side had “failed to earn their trust”. Certainly Tehran has good reasons for this posture since the US-Israel combine has by now attacked it twice while ostensibly in the middle of negotiations.

The Hormuz Straits conundrum turned out to be the key flashpoint. Iran has declared its control over the strategic waterway through which 20 percent of the world’s oil passes by applying a toll on ships passing through with its permission. Trump, after the talks ended, burst forth on social media insisting the Hormuz Straits would be blocked by the US and its Navy would interdict any ships linked to Iranian permission. This Trumpian move threatens the delicate peace since major powers such as China have declared their intent to use the Hormuz Straits for passage of oil-bearing ships for their domestic use. If Trump carries through on his stated intent (not always the case with him), it could produce the horrific scenario of US-China and US-other countries’ clashes in the waterway. No one with even a modicum of sense would want to see things come to such a dangerous pass.

On the nuclear question, the US betrays a stubborn refusal to accept the Iranian position that its late leader Ayatollah Khamenei (assassinated by the US-Israeli aggressor combine) had expressly forbidden his country to acquire nuclear weapons, an argument richly loaded with religious injunction against forging a weapon that threatens so many innocent people. Uranium enrichment for civilian use is the right of Iran as a member of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, watched over by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has in the past betrayed its objective mandate in favour of US designs. Iran has gone further in offering the concession that it would reduce its current 60 percent enrichment to lower levels. The US stubbornness smacks of a deliberate attempt to pillory Iran for a nuclear weapon venture it does not uphold.

The US offered phased, partial lifting of sanctions, no doubt dependent on Iran submitting to other demands. These sanctions have crippled the Iranian economy since 1979 and fed into the unrest that exploded throughout the country last year. The US-Israeli attack, ostensibly to bring about regime change, has done the opposite. Even the most hardened opponent of the clerical regime has joined hands to repel the foreign aggression.

Iran’s frozen assets are its property. Their freezing offers one more example of the risks of secreting any developing country’s assets in the West. War reparations would likely amount to billions, given the sustained destructive power Washington and Tel Aviv have unleashed on Iran. Objective calculation of these sums could possibly be carried out by the UN. A complete end to the war, including Israel’s continuing aggression against Lebanon, is a no-brainer. Iran has been pummelled for totally dubious reasons that have more to do with the US’s global hegemony drive than anything else.

For that reason alone, the current no war, no peace interlude may quickly turn to war again.

 

rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

rashed-rahman.blogspot.com 

As printed by the paper:

No war, no peace?

 

Rashed Rahman

 

Not entirely unexpectedly, the first ever face-to-face interaction in Islamabad between the protagonists of the Gulf war, the US and Iran, since the 1979 revolution in the latter, ended without agreement. Does this mean an end of the ceasefire and a return to military conflict? Perhaps not immediately. Both sides hinted at their respective positions after the conclusion of the talks and left open the possibility of their continuance in a second round. If nothing else, the talks laid out the respective positions of both sides on matters of utmost importance and concern to one side or the other, or even to both, although not everything has likely been shared with the public.

Going by what has been shared though, the issues that proved prickly can be reduced to six: 1) control of the Hormuz Straits; 2) the nuclear question; 3) full sanctions lifting (Iran), not partial, phased (US); 4) conflicting claims over Iran’s $ six billion frozen assets; 5) war reparations, and 6) complete end to war, including Israel’s continuing attacks on Lebanon.

Before departing Islamabad, US Vice President J D Vance, the leader of his delegation, said they had conveyed to the Iranians their “final and best offer”, without bothering to go into the details of what that might contain or entail. Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who led the Iranian delegation, said his country would not give in to threats after Trump’s social media bluster regarding the Hormuz Straits. “If they fight, we will fight, and if they come forward with logic, we will deal with logic,” was how he responded. Given the way the war has unfolded, this is no empty threat as Iran has exceeded most people’s pre-war assessment of its fighting strength. The really pointed part of his remarks was the tone struck by Mr Ghalibaf when he said the opposing side had “failed to earn their trust”. Certainly Tehran has good reasons for this posture since the US-Israel combine has by now attacked it twice while ostensibly in the middle of negotiations.

The Hormuz Straits conundrum turned out to be the key flashpoint. Iran has declared its control over the strategic waterway through which 20 percent of the world’s oil passes by applying a toll on ships passing through with its permission. Trump, after the talks ended, burst forth on social media insisting the Strait of Hormuz would be blocked by the US and its Navy would interdict any ships linked to Iranian permission. This Trumpian move threatens the delicate peace since major powers such as China have declared their intent to use the strait for passage of oil-bearing ships for their domestic use. If Trump carries through on his stated intent (not always the case with him), it could produce the horrific scenario of US-China and US-other countries’ clashes in the waterway. No one with even a modicum of sense would want to see things come to such a dangerous pass.

On the nuclear question, the US betrays a stubborn refusal to accept the Iranian position that its late leader Ayatollah Khamenei (assassinated by a US-Israeli combine) had expressly forbidden his country to acquire nuclear weapons, an argument richly loaded with religious injunction against forging a weapon that threatens so many innocent people. Uranium enrichment for civilian use is the right of Iran as a member of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, watched over by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has in the past betrayed its objective mandate in favour of US designs. Iran has gone further in offering the concession that it would reduce its current 60 percent enrichment to lower levels. The US stubbornness smacks of a deliberate attempt to pillory Iran for a nuclear weapon venture it does not uphold.

The US offered phased, partial lifting of sanctions, no doubt dependent on Iran submitting to other demands. These sanctions have crippled the Iranian economy since 1979 and fed into the unrest that exploded throughout the country last year. The US-Israeli attack, ostensibly to bring about regime change, has done the opposite. Even the most hardened opponent of the clerical regime has joined hands to repel the foreign aggression.

Iran’s frozen assets are its property. Their freezing offers one more example of the risks of secreting any developing country’s assets in the West. War reparations would likely amount to billions, given the sustained destructive power Washington and Tel Aviv have unleashed on Iran. Objective calculation of these sums could possibly be carried out by the UN. A complete end to the war, including Israel’s continuing aggression against Lebanon, is a no-brainer. Iran has been pummeled for totally dubious reasons that have more to do with the US’s global hegemony drive than anything else.

For that reason alone, the current no war, no peace interlude may quickly turn to war again.

 

rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

rashed-rahman.blogspot.com

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Filmbar screening of Bi Gan's "Resurrecting" at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Saturday, April 10, 2026 at 5:00 pm

Filmbar screening of Bi Gan's Resurrecting (2025) at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Friday, April 10, 2026 at 5:00 pm. 

Set in a future where humanity has given up dreaming, a dying monster becomes different characters as he relives 100 years across four dreams, aided by a woman using the lost techniques of cinema. The six segments of the film each corresponds to one of the six senses recognized in Buddhist thought: sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch, and mind.

The screening will be followed by an informal discussion over tea. Lift is operational.

Address: Research and Publication Centre (RPC), 2nd Floor, 65 Main Boulevard Gulberg, Lahore (next to Standard Chartered Bank, above Indesign showroom).

Rashed Rahman
Editor, Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) (link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com)
Director, Research and Publication Centre (RPC) (on Facebook)

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The April 2026 issue of Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) is out

The April 2026 issue of Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) is out. Link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com

Contents:

1. Ashraf Jehangir Qazi: Iran – A Valiant, Heroic Nation Resisting Evil.

2. Vijay Prashad: Israel and the US cannot win the war against Iran.

3. David Moscrop: War and Imperialism, Science and Technology: Artificial Intelligence is Already Making War More Horrific.

4. Aisha Gaddafi: “Negotiating with a Wolf..”

5. Afghanistan: Five Years of Darkness and Women’s Resistance.

6. Fatima Shahzad: Red Books Day: Towards Building a Left Culture.

7. Fayyaz Baqir: Pakistan’s economy: Socialism for the rich, capitalism for the poor.

8. Ray Nunes: From Marx to Mao – And After: Continued Revolution.

9. From the PMR Archives: March 2020: Rashed Rahman: Book Review: Death of imagination.

10. From the PMR Archives: February 2019: From the Editor: Full Circle (Urdu translation).

Rashed Rahman

Editor, Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) (link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com)

Director, Research and Publication Centre (RPC) (on Facebook)

Email: rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

Cells: +92 302 8482737 & +92 333 4216335

Monday, March 30, 2026

Filmbar screening of David Lynch's "The Elephant Man" (1980) at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Friday, April 3, 2026 at 5:00 pm

Filmbar screening of David Lynch's "The Elephant Man" (1980) at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Friday, April 3, 2026 at 5:00 pm.

In Victorian London, Dr Frederick Treves with the London Hospital comes across a circus sideshow attraction run by a man named Bytes. In actuality, the creature on display is indeed a man called "The Elephant Man", 21-year-old John Merrick, who has several physical deformities, including an oversized and disfigured skull, and an oversized, disfigured right shoulder. Bytes, his 'owner', only wants whatever he can get economically by presenting Merrick as a freak. Treves manages to bring Merrick under his care at the hospital, not without several of its own obstacles, including being questioned by those in authority since Merrick cannot be cured. Treves initially believes Bytes' assertion that mute Merrick is an imbecile, but ultimately learns that Merrick can speak and is a well-read and articulate man. As news of Merrick hits the London newspapers, he becomes a celebrated curiosity among London's upper class, including famed actress Mrs Kendal. Merrick is being treated much more humanely, but are Treves' actions a further exploitation of him? And as he becomes more famous, others try to get their two-cents worth from him; he remains a curiosity and a freak to most, including Bytes, who has since lost his meal ticket.

The screening will be followed by any informal discussion over tea.

Address: Research and Publication Centre (RPC), 2nd Floor, 65 Main Boulevard Gulberg, Lahore (next to Standard Chartered Bank, above Indesign showroom). Lift is operational.

Rashed Rahman
Editor, Pakistan Monthly Review (PMR) (link: pakistanmonthlyreview.com)
Director, Research and Publication Centre (RPC) (on Facebook)
Email: rashed.rahman1@gmail.com
Cells: 0302 8482737 & 0333 4216335


Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Business Recorder Column March 24, 2026

A new form of imperialism

 

Rashed Rahman

 

Most commentators have puzzled over what is the end objective of the US-Israel war on Iran. That war has thrown the global order, such as it is, and the world economy into a tailspin from which it may not soon recover. If the aim was decapitation and regime change in Iran, that has clearly not worked. If Israel sought expansion into Palestinian territory and neighbouring Arab countries, e.g. Lebanon, that too seems a goal too far. In both these and any other territories the Zionist entity may target, resistance will be fierce and perhaps insurmountable. So what is this war really about?

The US desires full spectrum global dominance, both economic and military. This is not a new objective. Clearly and unequivocally stated or not, this has been the overriding aim of successive US administrations since the end of WWII. The urge for economic dominance formally began with the Bretton Woods system whereby without colonial physical conquest of territories the US was able, through the mechanisms of the World Bank and IMF, to subject the Third World to economic extraction in a manner that makes it difficult to trace and identify. The military hegemony drive, on the other hand, began with the atomic bombs unleashed on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Successive US Presidents since have pursued this goal. The Trump administration is more unilateralist (note the treatment of long standing western allies) and certainly more open about its intention to maintain ‘full spectrum dominance’ with massive military superiority that no one, enemy or friend, would even think of challenging. However, the difference between the historically defunct colonial empires and the current US pursuit of hegemony needs explication.

The US is the first, and so far only, purely capitalist empire. This by no means implies that capitalist powers have not been empires in the past. However, the US seeks to dominate the world largely through manipulating the economic mechanisms of capitalism. The British Empire, to take a more familiar example, hoped to exploit the commercial wealth of the Subcontinent without incurring the inevitable costs of colonial rule. Instead, it found itself creating a tribute-extracting military despotism resembling more traditional imperialisms than a new mode of capitalist hegemony. Perhaps learning from that experience, the US’s preference has been to avoid direct colonial rule wherever possible and rely on economic hegemony, which is less costly, less risky, and more profitable. But this enterprise is stricken with a fundamental contradiction.

While the objective of US imperialism is economic hegemony without colonial rule, global capital still, in fact more than ever, needs a closely regulated and predictable social, political and legal order. Imperial hegemony relies now more than ever on an ‘orderly’ system of many states, and global economic hegemony depends on keeping control of the many states that maintain the global economy. This capitalist mode of economic imperialism is the first in history that does not depend simply on capturing territory, or dominating subject peoples. It needs to oversee the whole global states system and ensure that imperial capital can safely and profitably navigate throughout the global system (a more complex task than the current concerns about navigating, physically, the Straits of Hormuz). It has to deal not only with ‘rogue’ and ‘failed’ states. It also has to keep subordinate states open and vulnerable to exploitation. To be really effective, it has to establish its military and political supremacy over all others to avoid a system in which military power is more or less evenly distributed among various states. Hence the build-up of military power and bases all over the world by the US, to pre-empt any rivalry.

Once this kind of military preponderance is established, it takes on a dynamic of its own. This is because it has no specific and self-limiting constraints. With the kind of huge unchallenged military preponderance it enjoys, the US will use it to pursue what any administration takes to be in its interests, and particularly when its economic supremacy is no longer without challenge (e.g. China). It only takes a Donald Trump to use this power beyond any reasonable limits. But this tendency to military excess is not just the aberration of a Trump. It is in fact inscribed in the mission of global capitalism itself. That implies a continuation and repetition of Trump-like military excesses in the future.

The world has been warned. The ‘demonstration effect’, by now a major pillar of US military policy, makes it hard to predict where the next adventure might play out. But play out it will, so long as US dominance (challenged but still supreme) persists. We have yet to see any signs of an alternative to the imperial policy of endless wars, not continuous perhaps but without end, in purpose or time.

 

rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

rashed-rahman.blogspot.com 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Business Recorder Column March 10, 2026

New world disorder

 

Rashed Rahman

 

In just one year of his second term as US President, Donald Trump has shaken the so-called ‘rules-based international order’ to its roots. ‘So-called’ because in practice, the rules were chalked up in favour of the US-led West and against all countries that dared defy the former’s will. Nevertheless, that order functioned behind a veil of ‘principles’ that were trotted out when it suited the world powers-that-be and conveniently shelved or forgotten when it did not. That veil has been punctured and torn to shreds by Trump.

From the kidnapping of Venezuela’s President Maduro and his wife to essentially recapture the country’s oil, to threatening the takeover of Greenland, overthrow of the socialist government of Cuba, hijacking the peace process between Israel and the Palestinians by tailoring the Board of Peace in the former’s favour, signalling a reduction of military support to Europe implying the latter would no longer enjoy the luxury of reduced defence spending, and launching military action (with Israeli help) against Iran unless it bends the knee to Washington, Trump has upset the structure of international relations that emerged after WWII and to some extent, kept the world revolving. But it would be a mistake to confine the by now naked US drive for global hegemony and Israel’s expansionist ambitions in the Middle East to the Trump era alone.

Following the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, Washington perceived its path clear to achieve its triumphalist goal. After the 1973 Arab-Israel war, a growing wish-list of Arab countries seeking normalisation with and recognition of Israel came into view, starting with Egypt under Anwar Sadat. The Gulf Arab states were willing to join this parade but waited for circumstances to smooth the path to normalisation. Meanwhile three Arab states were identified as hold-outs: Libya, Iraq and Syria. By now, all three have suffered catastrophic direct and indirect US military aggression, failed regime change, and, as a consequence, lingering internal conflict. Not that this bothered US Presidents past or current since in Washington’s world view, developing countries’ citizens’ lives are all too dispensable. When Hamas mounted its unprecedented attack on Israel in 2023, the genocidal campaign against the Palestinians in Gaza by Israel brought to the fore the ‘axis of resistance’, with Iran at its centre and Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen aligning themselves in solidarity with the Palestinians. The latter, before 2023 and to date, have also been the victims of the unwanted attention of Zionist settlers in the West Bank. Having concluded, on the basis of the post-2023 struggle, that this axis of resistance posed the last obstacle to Israel’s expansionist mania in the Middle East and the US’s drive for global hegemony (with oil playing a central role), these two ‘criminals-in-arms’ have relaunched an unprecedented military attack on Iran, sparing neither its leadership (Ayatollah Khamenei), military, economic, civilian infrastructure, nor even its children.

In the second week of the US-Israeli criminal aggression against Iran, the unremitting bombardment of the latter has yielded hundreds if not thousands of casualties, killed and wounded. The US may well be hiding the true numbers of its own casualties because of Iran’s defensive effective retaliation, having admitted so far to only seven of its soldiers killed. Lebanon, meantime, is being terrorised by Israel in its vain effort to crush Hezbollah, calling repeatedly by now for Lebanese citizens to evacuate southern Lebanon to clear Israel’s sights for another massacre. However, whether Iran or Hezbollah, the US-Israel criminal combine has failed to understand a basic, but undeniable series of truths. One, the US-Israeli desired regime change in Iran has yielded Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of the slain Iranian leader, as a result! So much for regime change from the air. Two, even if the US-Israeli criminal combine’s superior technologically advanced weapons succeed in knocking out if not wearing out Iran’s comparative arsenal (by no means to be sneezed at), what this aggression cannot do is overcome the spirit of resistance. This spirit amongst Shia believers embraces martyrdom as the highest, purest form of exalted sacrifice that guarantees a place in heaven. Can such a spirit be extinguished by material force advantage alone?

To Pakistan’s discomfort, its one day old ‘war’ against Afghanistan’s Taliban regime was overshadowed by the start of the US-Israel-Iran conflict. Pakistan, despite its heavy attacks on Taliban forces across the border or its successful interdiction of attempted Taliban infiltration into its territory, has had a hard time attracting the world’s attention to its conflict, fixed as the global gaze appears to be on what is transpiring further west. This is not the only cause for discomfort. Islamabad wishes to remain and prove its friendship with Tehran while not annoying the all too easily riled Trump. Those basking in Pakistan’s ability to retain a ‘balance’ in its relationship with China and the US simultaneously may be hoping such a ‘balance’ can also be struck between its relationship with Iran and the US. But the latter effort seems more difficult. And then there is the conundrum of our defence pact with Saudi Arabia, through which we may be called upon to protect Saudi targets from Iranian attack. And what will remain of Trump’s Board of Peace for Palestine after the destruction he has wrought in Iran? The Muslim world as a whole, and Pakistan in particular, would appear to have its knickers in a twist in this complex interplay of competing, contradictory interests.

The first priority for the Shahbaz Sharif government naturally would be to handle the fallout of the US-Israel-Iran war on oil prices. We may have attempted to pre-empt the anticipated rise in global oil prices with a Rs 55 jump, but two days after this ‘brave’ decision, the international price of oil has already crossed the dreaded $ 100 per barrel, with more to come no doubt. Hard times ahead, in which a hard rain’s gonna fall.

 

rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

rashed-rahman.blogspot.com