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

Sunday, March 1, 2026

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

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

Contents:

1. S Zulfiqar Gilani: Contextualising the Democracy Deficit in Pakistan: Colonial Legacy, Constitution, Justice and Rule of Law.
2. Ashraf Jehangir Qazi: Chomsky, Epstein, Parenti and the US.
3. Vijay Prashad: Migration is an Underdevelopment issue.
4. Ray Nunes: From Marx to Mao – and After: The Dialectics of History.
5. From the PMR Archives: January 2019: Rashed Rahman: The contemporary struggle for revolutionary change (Urdu translation).
6. From the PMR Archives: March 2020: Dr Maria Rashid: The Women’s Movement in Pakistan.

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 & +92 334 4728885.

 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Business Recorder Column February 17, 2026

US global hegemony drive in full swing

 

Rashed Rahman

 

In its latest effort to annex the West Bank captured by it in 1967 and occupied since, Israel has now claimed West Bank land as ‘state property’. This would register large parts of the Palestinian area as Israeli state land. Although this is a blatant violation of the international law that states an occupying power cannot confiscate land in occupied territories, the real purpose of this measure is to provide state security to the myriads of Israeli settlers who have been nibbling away at the territory for years. Palestinian protests against such actions have failed to budge the Zionists, underlining the helplessness of the by now discredited Palestinian Authority which, for all intents and purposes has been functioning as a collaborator with the Israeli state in the West Bank and otherwise. Although it is largely confined to Gaza, Hamas has nevertheless voiced its indignation at this blatant exercise in settler colonialism, now reinforced more than ever by the Israeli state.

Those of us entrapped in following Israel’s cruelties in Gaza since 2003 would do well to remember some history. Around the time East European socialism and the Soviet state began to unravel (1989-1991), US imperialism felt emboldened to pursue its long held ambition to emerge as the global hegemon. Since the Soviet state was no longer around to act as a brake on this ambition, Washington went pell mell down this path it had cherished during the Cold War and which it now found feasible to pursue without fear of any other power able to restrict its appalling plan.

A few examples of US military power being unleashed globally may serve to refresh our memories. Iraq, Libya and Syria were the three holdout Arab states when Egypt, and following in its footsteps Jordan and other Arab states folded in the face of Israeli aggression (supported by the US) and plumped instead for recognition of Israel and a shameful peace with the Zionist aggressor. One by one, all three regimes in these holdout Arab states were demolished. First came Iraq, which had foolishly under Saddam Hussein interpreted US seeming neutrality in its territorial and oil reserves dispute with neighbour Kuwait and embarked on an invasion and occupation of the latter, a move that invited two invasions by the US (ironically, when father and son Bush were US Presidents), overthrowing and eventually hanging Saddam. Libya came next when Muammar Gaddafi’s regime was overthrown, helped by US air bombardment. Gaddafi was subsequently killed in horrific fashion by his newly installed enemies. Those same enemies recently reached out and assassinated Gaddafi’s son, living peacefully in Libya for years. Last but not least, the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad was overthrown last year, with Assad and his family luckily making their escape to asylum in Moscow. However, having knocked out the three Arab holdout regimes was not enough for the US’s purposes. It now turned its attention to Iran and resistance groups in Lebanon (Hezbollah) and Yemen (the Houthis) with Israel playing the frontline role. Hezbollah’s leader Hassan Nasrallah was killed in the process and Hezbollah weakened, while the Houthis were quelled considerably.

Along comes Trump, and the theatre expands to Latin America. Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and his wife are kidnapped by the US military and transported to the US to face trumped up charges in a US federal court. Perforce, Maduro’s Vice President Delcy Rodriguez has had to ‘cooperate’ with US demands to stave off further military adventures by Trump. In the process, US multinational oil corporations evicted from Venezuela when its oil industry was largely nationalised, are once again returning to the extraction of oil and profit game in Venezuela. Trump has cut off oil supplies to Cuba, whose people, already struggling under punitive sanctions by the US, are now switching to electric vehicles and cycle rickshaws in the absence of fuel. Trump hopes this added sanctions pressure on Cuba may help him find the Cuban Delcy Rodriguez who would help the US dismantle the socialist regime in that country.

Of concern to thinking Pakistanis is our return to currying favour with our on-again, off-again ‘friend’, the US, by flattering the infamous ego of Trump and, most alarming, hitching our wagon to his so-called Board of Peace intended (under Trumpian tutelage) to ‘sort out’ the Gaza conflict. Theoretically a ceasefire exists between the Palestinians and Israel in Gaza, but this has not stopped Israel continuing to kill Palestinians on a daily basis on the pretext it is striking Hamas, while pulverising the Gaza Palestinians by constant displacement and cutting off food, supplies and medical care to the besieged suffering denizens of Gaza. If Hamas continues to resist the Board of Peace plan’s insistence it must surrender its weapons, the International Security Force envisaged to implement this demand, and which Pakistan has yet to commit to, may be drawn into conflict with Hamas. If Pakistani troops are part of this International Security Force, it may be forced into another shameful conflict with our Palestinian brothers, an eventuality that would revive the horrific memories of our role on the side of the Jordanian monarchy against the Palestinians in 1970. Tempting in terms of benefits our being part of the Board of Peace may seem superficially, but it threatens once again to pitch us on the wrong side of history via-a-vis the Palestinians.

Time for a sober review of our race to get into the good books of Trump. Our embarrassment because of this link with the US may not end here. If the above brief recapitulation of post-Cold War US actions and the ambitions they expose is kept in mind, more embarrassment and discomfort may ensue if we insist on being dragged along while holding onto the tiger’s tail of US (by now) unrestricted plans to secure global hegemony, leaving even its longtime Western allies in the lurch.

 

rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

rashed-rahman.blogspot.com

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Business Recorder Column February 10, 2026

Insurgency, terrorism, literature and kites

 

Rashed Rahman

 

The last week or so has been a very ‘busy’ one. On January 31, 2026, an unprecedented coordinated series of attacks in Balochistan rocked the country. Pakistan had barely got over that shock when an anti-Shia sectarian bomb blast in a mosque in Islamabad once again sent the country reeling. While this mayhem was afoot, Pakistan, particularly Lahore, witnessed Literary Festivals, the annual Asma Jahangir Conference and a revived Basant. Balochistan’s troubles are hardly new. The nationalist insurgency has been part of our news cycle since 2002. However, this time the extent and nature of the attacks suggested that the insurgent group Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) is by now better organised and enjoys enhanced capability. The Islamabad bomb blast was claimed by the Islamic State (IS), in a reminder that while we concentrate our counterterrorism efforts against the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), there still exist other fundamentalist terrorist groups like the IS, whose bloody signature was all over the Islamabad bomb blast.

Call it escape or relief, Lahore in particular, but also Karachi, were entertained to another annual feature: Literary Festivals. Timed to coincide with Lahore’s revived Basant, the sum total of all this activity could be taken as relief from our continuing woes. Whether it also enhanced our grasp of what the country faces, and accompanying it the virtual collapse of our intelligentsia, is a matter for deep introspection. Terrorism is the fallout of our decades-old engagement in Afghanistan, with the final result of all these efforts and sacrifices less than satisfactory, to put it mildly.

Balochistan found a questioning audience at the Asma Jahangir Conference, particularly in response to Akhtar Mengal’s hard-hitting speech, in which he castigated the powers that be with failure to engage with the peaceful nationalist camp for a way out of the morass the province seems trapped in. As part of his exposition on the missing persons issue, he referred to the assassination of his brother, Asad Mengal in the 1970s struggle in Balochistan, when Asad and his companion Ahmed Shah Kurd were killed in Karachi, their bodies disappeared, leaving only their blood stained car as a tragic reminder. Akhtar Mengal’s argument was that his family was never contacted regarding Asad Mengal’s disappearance. He said the same playbook of enforced disappearances still sears the soul of his province’s people, arguing for a political solution through negotiations with the peaceful nationalist forces. It remains to be seen however, whether his pleas again fall on deaf ears, particularly since now the state’s narrative describes both the Baloch insurgents and TTP, etc, as India-backed terrorists. With this maximalist description dominant, Akhtar Mengal’s voice promises to once again be lost in a sea of tragic longing, without change.

Pakistan has a penchant for latching on to what seems like a good promotional idea. After Ameena Syed, when she was still heading Oxford University Press in Pakistan, established the Karachi Literary Festival as a go-to annual get together, Literary Festivals have bloomed all over the country like spring flowers. The Lahore Literary Festival was the first to follow, and by now, big cities and little, all seem to savour their own annual literary festivals. While I would be the last one to decry such activity in an otherwise increasingly barren intellectual and cultural milieu that has overtaken us, one may be forgiven for questioning the quality of the fare now available in these literary festivals. The vacuum inside is sought to be filled with contributions from guest participants from abroad, with local talent, struggling as it is, demoted to a secondary status. Are we then truly rid of our colonial hangovers or is this merely wishful thinking?

Lahore’s sorely missed Basant festival returned after an absence of 19 years, rendering the younger generation enthusiastic newcomers to the city’s once famed festival heralding the arrival of spring. Lahoris, and their many keen compatriots from all over the country, gathered to fly kites, play music and enjoy the city’s delicious cuisine, with strict SOPs largely followed that prevented the fatal accidents of yore (largely kite strings cutting motorcyclists’ throats). The Punjab government of Maryam Nawaz deserves our commendation for restoring the Basant spirit to a deprived Lahore. But the revival also makes one wonder whether the original ban made any sense. The critical problem was string being manufactured that was fatal when it met human flesh. If such string could be prevented from being manufactured now, and sparing Lahoris those tragedies of yesteryear, why could this not have been done 19 years ago instead of throwing the baby out with the bathwater by banning the festival entire? One can only call this our penchant for doing things without even a smidgin of thought, and then moaning our loss…till now. May the spirit of Lahore Lahore Ai (Lahore is Lahore) once again march forward with the best the city has to offer to an otherwise troubled realm.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

rashed.rahman1@gmail.com

rashed-rahman.blogspot.com

Monday, February 9, 2026

Filmbar's screening of Michael Haneke's "The Piano Teacher" (2001) at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Friday, February 13, 2026 at 5:00 pm

Filmbar's screening of Michael Haneke's "The Piano Teacher" (2001) at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Friday, February 13, 2026 at 5:00 pm.
Erika Kohut is a pianist, teaching music. Schubert and Schumann are her forte, but she's not quite at concert level. She's approaching middle age, living with her mother who is more domineering than submissive; Erika is a victim but combative. With her students she is severe. Walter is a self-assured student with some musical talent; he auditions for her class and is forthright in his attraction to her. She responds coldly then demands he let her lead. Next she changes the game with a letter, inviting him into her fantasies.

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

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

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


Tuesday, February 3, 2026

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

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

Contents:

1. Rashed Rahman: Marx and the Asiatic Mode of Production – IV: The impact of Colonialism.
2. Vijay Prashad: How many International Laws can the US break against Venezuela and still get away with it?
3. Mir Mohammad Ali Talpur: Obituary: Mama Qadeer.
4. Jagdeesh Ahuja: Bhutto, Yahya and Tikka Khan: One Civilian, Two Army Men.
5. Ray Nunes: From Marx to Mao – And After – VI: Why a Cultural Revolution?
6. From the PMR Archives: December 2019: Rashed Rahman: Is China still a revolutionary socialist country -I & January 2020 – II.

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


Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Filmbar's screening of Park Chan-wook's "No Other Choice" (2025) at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Friday, January 30, 2026 at 5:00 pm

Filmbar's screening of Park Chan-wook's No Other Choice (2025) at Research and Publication Centre (RPC) on Friday, January 30, 2026 at 5:00 pm.
It is a dark satirical thriller following Man-su (Lee Byung-hun), a 25-year veteran paper industry worker laid off after an American takeover. Desperate to maintain his family's upper-middle-class lifestyle and support his cello-prodigy daughter, he embarks on a murderous rampage to eliminate top candidates for potential jobs. 
Address: Research and Publication Centre (RPC), 2nd Floor, 65 Main Boulevard Gulberg, Lahore (next to Standard Chartered Bank, above Indesign showroom). Lift is operational. The screening will be followed by an informal discussion over tea.

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