Friday, June 19, 2026

Israel Escalates Defiance of Trump, Demarcating Lebanese Land While Naftali Bennet Outlines a Political Revolution



Israel Escalates Defiance of Trump, Demarcating Lebanese Land While Naftali Bennet Outlines a Political Revolution

 

Israel is in discussions with the United States about maintaining troop deployments in southern Lebanon beyond previously anticipated timelines, according to Reuters. Israeli officials have also advanced plans related to border demarcation and security arrangements in the area despite ongoing diplomatic efforts.

Separately, former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett outlined plans for a new political movement and called for major changes in Israeli leadership and governance. Bennett’s remarks come amid continued debate over Israel’s security strategy and the country’s political future.

GhostofBasedPatrickHenry: Here is what President Trump posted yesterday to Truth Social around 2:00 PM EST.

Hours after President Trump made these comments, reports flooded social media of a major military operation by the IDF in southern Lebanon, concentrated around the city of Nabatieh. Countless reports of vicious close-quarter combat soon flooded the internet, with reports of armor columns that included armored bulldozers moving through the area. The IDF is said to have sustained heavy losses and had lost at least four Mekarva tanks that were destroyed.

Here is President Trump’s preferred Israeli journalist, Barak Ravid, affirming the report that Israel had likely invaded Lebanon in an attempt to seize control of the Strait.

According to The Times of Israel, the IDF did confirm that they had conducted a military operation last night in southern Lebanon.

The reports from various parties all agree that there is heavy close-quarter combat occurring right now in southern Lebanon. Israeli media has now confirmed that at least four IDF soldiers have been killed, including a senior officer.

The IDF published a map showing area in Lebanon in which they intend to establish a Security Zone.

A map published by the Israeli army-IDF, indicates the Security zone in which IDF soldiers are operating in southern Lebanon

This is not the first time they have publicly announced this objective, though this does appear to be the first that we are seeing a map where the Security Zone includes areas north of the Litani River. (For context, this new military operation is being waged against Nabatieh and the surrounding region, making it clear that this map does not show the full extent of area that they intend to claim.

Separately, Knesset Member and Prime-Minister Candidate Naftali Bennett called yesterday for the establishment of a constitution, “"in the spirit of the [US] Declaration of Independence," describing his vision and plans for the Israeli government should be elected in October.

"We're going to address some of the biggest problems we're facing: cost of living, education, crime, crazy housing costs, our international standing, and security above all," Bennett said.

Bennett said that his first order of business in office will be to establish a state commission of inquiry into the events surrounding October 7, 2023, and why such terrible mistakes that led to the massacre were allowed to take place.

Bennett spoke of his intention to cut benefits to [Ultra-Orthodox] draft-dodgers, and focus on AI development and innovation. But the most interesting comment he made regarding the economy was this one:

"Prices are high for one main reason: we don't have real competition. We'll break up monopolies, cut regulation, and open the market to imports," he said.

This is clearly a reference to the fact that Israel’s origin story is that of a communist/socialist state, and many of those elements still overtly exist today.

Above all else, Bennett—one of the main opposition leaders against President Trump— and his team have expressed their intent to restart the war against Iran. Meaning that a war between Israel and Iran is all but inevitable, so we might as well control and end it as quickly as possible.

Against this whole backdrop, President Trump and his cabinet still ostensibly support Netanyahu. It will be interesting to see what Bibi does next, and whether he will join the growing chorus of voices rebuking this entire conflict.

What is clear is that Netanyahu is Trump’s horse that he is backing in this race, most likely because he has lots of leverage over him and can therefore easily control Netanyahu’s moves.

OPINION | Betrayal as Ritual in Negeri Sembilan: PMX versus Deputy



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OPINION | Betrayal as Ritual in Negeri Sembilan: PMX versus Deputy


19 Jun 2026 • 5:30 PM MYT



Mihar Dias on Microsoft Copilot


Betrayal as Ritual in Negeri Sembilan

By Mihar Dias June 2026


In Malaysia’s politics, betrayal is less scandal than tradition. PMX, with his trademark gravitas, insists there were “elements of betrayal” in Negeri Sembilan. https://www.facebook.com/share/1J8fb6tykV/



Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, Umno’s chief custodian of denial, counters with a straight face: no betrayal, just a brief flirtation with disloyalty. https://www.facebook.com/share/1J8fb6tykV/


The script is familiar. Fourteen Umno assemblymen toyed with rebellion, withdrew support, then sheepishly returned to Aminuddin Harun’s camp.



Zahid calls this discipline; Anwar calls it sabotage. The rakyat call it what it is—political déjà vu.


Pakatan Harapan and Barisan Nasional, sworn enemies turned federal allies, now accuse each other of treachery while insisting they are united. It is the political equivalent of a couple arguing in public, then assuring everyone they are “stronger than ever.”


The irony is almost too rich: unity performed, betrayal rehearsed, stability declared. Anwar insists his focus is on economic growth, not elections.



Yet Negeri Sembilan heads to the polls on Aug 1, with PH and BN set to clash like estranged lovers forced to share the same dinner table.


Betrayal, it seems, doubles as campaign material.Zahid’s denial is equally cynical. “We didn’t betray you,” he says, “we just briefly considered it.”


In Malaysian politics, that passes for loyalty. Promising to support Aminuddin “until the end of his term” is the political equivalent of “we’ll see.”The truth is that betrayal here is not an aberration but a ritual. It is how the Unity Government reminds us that unity is fragile, loyalty conditional, and politics a performance.



The actors rehearse their lines, the audience pretends to believe, and the show goes on. And while Anwar speaks of global economic crises and Zahid insists on party discipline, the rakyat are left to wonder whether these leaders are more invested in managing perception than policy.


The spectacle of betrayal—half-denied, half-acknowledged—becomes a convenient distraction from inflation, wages, and the everyday grind.In Negeri Sembilan, betrayal is not a crime but a plot device.


It keeps the drama alive, the alliances tense, and the headlines flowing. The only suspense left is whether the rakyat will keep buying tickets to this endless play.



Author's Note: This week's coffee-shop intelligence gathering included equal measures of human gossip, newspaper archives and artificial intelligence. Any errors remain stubbornly human.

OPINION | No worries about Johor, not flogging a dead horse.



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OPINION | No worries about Johor, not flogging a dead horse.


19 Jun 2026 • 12:30 PM MYT



Pointless flogging a dead horse while opponents have a prancing horse.
Credit-ChatGPT AI generated.


Johor is a lost cause. That is the reason why Prime Minister Anwar is so nonchalant about it when asked if he is worried about the Johor polls. He is not going to flog a dead horse.



PKR only held a solitary single seat. DAP had 10 seats but are expected to lose some seats due to their supporters’ anger and frustration towards them.


The other component party of PH, Amanah, similarly held a single seat. Amanah has now drifted to irrelevance and near anonymity.


BN had 40 seats out of the 56-seat state assembly. Economically the state is galloping away and investment is pouring in especially for data centers and high-tech industries. This is the one and only state where graduates are supposedly to be paid RM4,000 per month.



Johor is the prancing horse for UMNO. They want to use it as a springboard for other upcoming state elections in Negri Sembilan, Melaka and Perlis.


Rafizi Ramli new party Bersama has thrown their hat in the ring and this will dilute PKR and to some extent DAP support even further.


DAP, who will steal horses with Anwar to stay in power, has lost the confidence and trust of their supporters with their subservient and muted role in government, both federal and state. After the Sabah debacle, apart from announcing a July conference to decide whether to remain in government subject to reforms being accelerated, they remained mainly supine and subdued. To further demonstrate their lack of backbone, this conference has now been postponed to August.



In their attempt to switch Marina Ibrahim to the Tiram seat from Skudai, DAP lost a winning horse. Their horses for causes debacle lost them a winnable Malay candidate and made a mockery of their election promise not to appoint any party member to a GLC or statutory organization post.


BN, especially UMNO is ultra confident of winning the Johor election with caretaker Menteri Besar Onn Hafiz openly declaring they will never work with DAP. BN Chairperson Zahid Hamidi drove in the wedge deeper by pointedly reminding the 30 UMNO MPs is what give the Madini government a majority in Parliament and further thrown down the gauntlet to Pakatan Harapan in the Johor and Negri Sembilan polls.



Anwar Ibrahim and DAP cracked their whip at Onn Hafiz and told him to get off his high horse which he did but Zahid Hamidi did not bother to rein Onn in.


This oozing self-assurance and the gall to thumb their noses at their political allies in some state and at federal level must have brought reality to Anwar Ibrahim. He was late off the starting blocks for the polls and has been out maneuvered and is trailing badly behind.


Anwar Ibrahim will not flog a dead horse; there will be no regime change in Johor after the elections. He is playing uninterested and cool about it. Instead, he is trying to redirect the narrative and plot to national issues, especially fuel subsidize which he will not budge and hopes to be his redemption.



By diverting attention with the notion of solving national issues and problems, it could be spun and perceived as a contributing factor to PH loss and save face for himself and PH.


But of course, his main and only concern now is clinging onto the PM position till full term and hoping the fuel subsidized crisis, shaky economy situation, and political mess will turn around before GE16. Then he may be the winning horse galloping past the GE16 winning post.

Teenager brutally beaten, robbed and raped while jogging with brother



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Teenager brutally beaten, robbed and raped while jogging with brother


19 Jun 2026 • 7:06 AM MYT



The injured victim was found by members of the public near a bushy area at about 11am before being taken to hospital for treatment. Photo courtesy of reader


TUMPAT - A 15-year-old girl endured a horrific ordeal after she was brutally assaulted, robbed and raped by an unidentified man while out jogging during the Awal Muharram public holiday on Wednesday.

The victim had left her home at 7am to go for a jog in the Palekbang area with her 10-year-old brother.



According to the victim's 74-year-old grandmother, Rokiah, the siblings became separated during their run when the younger brother grew tired and fell behind.

Unable to find his sister, the boy assumed she had already returned home and headed back alone.


Concerns grew when the teenager failed to return, prompting her 50-year-old father to launch a search.

At 11am, members of the public discovered the victim lying semi-conscious in a bushy area near a canal.


Tumpat District Police Chief Assistant Commissioner Mohd Khairi Shafie said that initial investigations reveal the suspect hit the victim repeatedly on her face and head with a wooden stick.

The suspect then allegedly raped the teenager before fleeing the scene with her mobile phone.



The victim's father was alerted to the discovery shortly before noon.

The teenager, described by her family as an obedient daughter and the second of three siblings, sustained severe injuries to her face, head and body.


She was initially rushed to Tumpat Hospital before being transferred to the Raja Perempuan Zainab II Hospital in Kota Bharu for specialist treatment.

"Our entire family is in complete shock over this devastating incident. We have full faith in the police investigation and hope the perpetrator is swiftly captured and brought to justice," Rokiah told reporters on Thursday.

Khairi said the case is currently being investigated under Section 376 of the Penal Code for rape and Section 394 of the Penal Code for voluntarily causing hurt in committing robbery.

Authorities are urging anyone with information regarding the incident to contact their nearest police station or reach out directly to the investigating officer, Inspector Zulazri, at 011-11486922 to assist with the ongoing investigation.


***


Almost similar to a case in Kedah years back, but with one sad difference - then the girl (Chinese) was murdered by the rapist (Malay) who was the scion of a local rich 'datuk'


MP SPEAKS | Selangor govt must clarify halal, non-halal waste separation policy










MP SPEAKS | Selangor govt must clarify halal, non-halal waste separation policy


Lee Chean Chung
Published: Jun 19, 2026 3:50 PM
Updated: 5:50 PM




MP SPEAKS | I welcome Housing and Local Government Minister Nga Kor Ming’s announcement that recycling facilities will become a licensing requirement for shopping malls.

The initiative will be implemented in four phases beginning this month, with full enforcement targeted by 2028. The ministry will also work with local authorities to introduce the necessary conditions and guidelines to ensure orderly implementation and compliance.

In reviewing the Selangor State Planning Guidelines and Standards for Community Facilities 2025 previously, I also came across another document, namely the Selangor State Planning Guidelines and Standards for Commercial Development 2025, which contains a provision on waste management in shopping malls that warrants further discussion.

According to the guidelines, shopping malls are required to provide dedicated waste collection areas that meet several conditions. One of these requirements specifies the segregation of waste into the following categories:

1. Halal organic waste

2. Non-halal organic waste

3. Recyclable solid waste (paper, cardboard, glass, and plastic)

4. Others

This raises several practical questions.

How exactly are “halal organic waste” and “non-halal organic waste” defined? Is the distinction based on the origin of ingredients, food preparation processes, or the nature of the discarded waste itself?

Furthermore, if shopping malls are required to introduce additional bins, storage facilities, and handling procedures, this will inevitably involve additional operational costs.


Selangor state legislative assembly


Has the Selangor state government conducted sufficient engagement with mall operators, food and beverage industry associations, local authorities, and waste management companies? Has any cost-benefit assessment been carried out?

To be clear, I am not questioning the importance of waste segregation, nor am I seeking to frame the issue through a religious lens. My concern is whether the policy objectives, implementation framework, and supporting mechanisms have been properly explained.

If this requirement is intended to improve recycling outcomes and enhance waste management efficiency, the state government should clearly communicate the rationale behind the policy as well as its expected benefits.

Conversely, if key definitions, operational procedures, and downstream waste processing systems remain unclear, then the policy should be reviewed and refined to avoid unnecessary burdens on businesses and confusion during implementation.

Given that the Selangor State Urban Planning Guidelines 2025 (Garis Panduan dan Piawaian Perancangan Bandar Negeri Selangor 2025) consists of six separate volumes, and concerns have already emerged from at least two of them, I once again urge the state government to withdraw the entire set of guidelines for a comprehensive review.

As of today, elected representatives in the state legislative assembly have yet to receive copies of all six volumes.

I therefore reiterate my call for the state government to engage MPs, state assemblypersons, and local councillors in an open consultation process to ensure any revisions are handled transparently and professionally.

LEE CHEAN CHUNG is the Petaling Jaya MP.


***


MKINI readers commented (selected few):



Selangor, when are you going to instruct Indah Water to seperate halal and non halal excreta. We definitely can't have them mixed up in Selangor!!
😆😄😁🙃💩💩💩
Taxes must also be separated, those from MM and NM!!! AND MORE SERIOUSLY, MUST HAVE 2 BLOOD BANKS, ONE FOR MM N ONE FOR NM.!!!!!
High time to segregate the cash we handle, the taxes on haram and halal products, taxes paid by NMs and MMs.
We are waiting for the segregation of halal and non halal taxes so that non halal taxes collected from non Muslim taxpayers can only be used for non halal purposes.
Soon these clowns will segregated halal and halal air for breathing by respective folks!
Seems the Selangor PH state gomen is becoming more Islamic than PAS and trying to be so one sided pandering to muslims and against the nons.
Good point. Why is there a need for waste segregation according to halal or non-halal guidance. Do we need to segregate halal or non-halal poop too
Ask them to separate the halal and non halal currency notes.

Progressives get to test waters in Johor and Negeri Sembilan






Progressives get to test waters in Johor and Negeri Sembilan



Thursday, 18 Jun 2026 9:31 AM MYT
By Praba Ganesan



JUNE 18 — You are upset that Pakatan Harapan has not reformed the country enough. You are eligible to vote in Johor or Negeri Sembilan.

You are tempted to not get into the car and drive to Johor on July 11 or August 1 to vote.


You are upset reading this because it is the same narrative on repeat using a different font. Also, you skipped lunch.

Let’s flip this to give it dimension.


Is reform storming in the country? No. Is the deputy prime minister not facing the jeopardy of prison because the government he leads has an attorney-general unwilling to let the defence even try to wriggle out of a well-delivered prosecution, because he paused it? Yes.


Did you feel giddy in 2018, when Pakatan won, and giddier in 2022 because the messianic-like Anwar Ibrahim, the number one reformist candidate for a quarter of a century, was finally prime minister and was about to unleash the reform Kraken? Undoubtedly.

You are a disappointed Pakatan voter. Worse if you were one as far back as 2008 when it did not have a name for itself, just a hodgepodge of political parties not inclined to allow Barisan Nasional waltz to two-thirds in Parliament.


After all that, four elections with false starts to get to a tryst with destiny, the Madani Project delivers three and a half years of half measures and qualified successes.

The country is not falling apart but the feeling it’s still the dreary same is hard to fend off. The Middle-East conflict challenges Malaysia, as it does the world, but it’s manageable still.



File picture of Malaysians casting their votes at a polling station during the 15th Malaysia general election at Sekolah Kebangsaan Puncak Alam 2 on November 19, 2022. — Picture by Miera Zulyana



But what do you do as a voter?

I get this infuriating response from the random irate name on the electoral roll. “I just won’t vote, that will show them!”

Firstly, it shows nothing to no one.

This is not a typical buying decision. Choosing not to buy overpriced Starbucks drinks over politics has led to X number of stores shuttered in recent years.

But a country — or in this case a state — is not a retailer, therefore the analogy struggles to translate.

Voting decides who runs either state, by deciding to not vote, does not mean the respective states are not run for the next five years. The state is run the next day regardless how many per cent of the electoral roll shows up on election day.

Not showing up to vote means denying yourself the right to affect who gets executive power through accumulation of legislative representation.

It’s happening whether you like it or not, and no amount of grousing the next five years matters after polling day has as significant an impact as casting the vote.

The pickle in this tickle of retelling the same old is that the prime minister and the members of Pakatan are convinced that a high turnout on July 11 and then August 1, means only good things for them.

In their estimate, those who are mulling “to go or not to go” are disinclined by Pakatan’s performance in the past years but equally disinterested in the other mob.

They are numbed Pakatan voters who are not braindead to know the other lot, Barisan Nasional and Perikatan Nasional and its splinters are committed to limit Malaysia’s social evolution to an acceptable zero.

This is where the Johor and Negeri elections are different from the Sabah election late last year and the impending Sarawak election later this year.

Over there, state unity is at an all-time high, which seismically shifts choices to local choices versus Semenanjung-infused choices.

Over here in Semenanjung, it is whether apathy mixed with traditional incentives directly or indirectly to the voters yields seats for BN and PN, or social activism mixed with a general sense that things have to be progressive giving Pakatan and some like-minded parties wins.

Are you, the progressive, still upset? Of course you are because it is not ideal. It is a huge shout away from par.

But actions must be welded to what is possible and not on options unavailable on the menu.

Turn out and vote, if not for Pakatan, there are the other parties drawn to progressive ideas that are not BN or PN. Those in power may have come up short, but those not in power who are traditionalists are not going to pick your values, they are intent on burying them. To steady a Malaysia forever race-based, opposed to equality and divided.

However underwhelming the present feels, remember you sent a former prime minister to prison, and if 809-pages of a ruling holds out, he is looking at prison till he is in his eighties.

Voting did get things done. Our flag-bearers have poor scorecards but the larger agenda to move us in one direction rather than the other remains. Requires a heck of a lot of fighting daily, but still on the table.

Almost 30 years ago, I put my chips on Anwar not because he was worthy but he was the biggest bat to take a swing at the authoritarian and absolutist BN.

Anwar was from the system and as such the malfunctions are expected. BN and its splinter PN and every other splinter, are still the same, if anything more convinced in the unique unequal Malaysian solution.

I wrote at the start “four elections with false starts to get to a tryst with destiny.” The last four words were in the opening line of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru’s inaugural address at India’s independence in 1947.

He ends the sentence with “we shall redeem our pledge, not wholly or in full measure, but very substantially.”

Not wholly or in full measure. Just substantially. It’s a long game, this.

And if there is one thing progressives understand, no real gain is realised overnight. On July 11 and then on August 1, Malaysia hears from the south which side of substantial things fall.


The boomerang war: How Israel aimed at Iran and hit itself — Abbi Kanthasamy






The boomerang war: How Israel aimed at Iran and hit itself — Abbi Kanthasamy


Friday, 19 Jun 2026 9:33 AM MYT


JUNE 19 — There are wars that end in victory. There are wars that end in defeat. And then there are wars that begin with a press conference, a wall of flags, and the quiet arrogance of people who believe history works for them.


This one was supposed to be Israel’s grand vindication. Iran was meant to be cornered, isolated, sanctioned, lectured, inspected, and gift-wrapped for a triumphant Washington photo-op. Netanyahu was meant to stride across the stage like a regional Churchill. Trump was meant to pose as the dealmaker with thunder in one hand and a Sharpie in the other.

Instead, the whole thing has come back like a badly thrown boomerang and struck Israel squarely in the forehead.

Look at the shape of it. Israel starts the drama convinced it has the moral high ground, the strategic upper hand, and the American security blanket pulled up to its chin. Iran, supposedly, is on the ropes. The region is watching. Washington is growling. The headlines are obedient.

Then the alleged Islamabad memorandum appears, and suddenly Iran is not being buried. Iran is being bargained with. Iran is not outside the room. Iran is at the table. It is not merely asking for a ceasefire; it is looking at language about sanctions relief, oil waivers, frozen funds, maritime arrangements, sovereignty, reconstruction, and a massive economic package.


That is not defeat. That is a diplomatic rescue helicopter with leather seats.

The genius of Iran’s position, if this text holds, is sequencing. Tehran seems to get the early moves: blockade relief, shipping passage, oil permissions, access to money, no new sanctions, and time. The difficult nuclear questions are pushed into the “final deal,” that magical diplomatic cupboard where hard problems are stored until everyone has had lunch.


Israel gets a migraine. Iran gets oxygen.



A boy walks among the rubble of a neighborhood completely destroyed by an Israeli airstrike, following the US-Iran deal, in Qlailieh, Tyre district, Lebanon, June 18, 2026. — Reuters pic



Because the more Israel escalated, the more it exposed the limits of its own strategy. The more it bombed, the more it made diplomacy urgent. The more it demanded unconditional backing, the more it forced even Donald Trump — Donald Trump, of all people — to sound like the headmaster at a war-crimes finishing school.

When Trump says, in effect, that you do not bomb an entire building because there is one person inside, that is not a throwaway line. That is a loaded sentence. It is not a UN report, but it points in the direction of one. It drags proportionality, civilian harm and accountability into the room, kicks open the door, and turns on the lights.

And let us not pretend this is just theatre. Innocent people have died. Children have died. Families have been buried under decisions made by men who will later call everything regrettable, necessary and complex. Nothing funny sits in that. No satire can wash it clean. The dead do not return because the living have discovered irony.

Israel wanted the world to focus on Iran’s danger. Instead, the world is once again staring at Israel’s methods. Israel wanted to show resolve. Instead, it has shown appetite. Israel wanted America locked in behind it. Instead, America is publicly irritated, privately calculating, and visibly exhausted.

Israel is not abandoned. It is worse than that. It is embarrassing its friends.

There is a special panic when a patron realises its client has become expensive. Not morally inconvenient — great powers survive moral inconvenience before breakfast — but strategically expensive. Oil prices. Shipping lanes. Gulf capitals. Chinese positioning. Civilian images. Legal language. Elections. The machine starts to creak.

History has seen this movie. In 1956, Britain, France and Israel thought Suez would be a clean imperial correction. Militarily clever. Politically catastrophic. Eisenhower looked at his allies and told them to climb down. They had won the operation and lost the century.

In Iraq, America believed shock and awe would rearrange the Middle East. It did, just not in the way the PowerPoint promised. Saddam was removed, Iran’s greatest enemy disappeared, and Tehran gained strategic depth courtesy of the U.S. taxpayer. Trillions spent. Iran strengthened. That is geopolitical slapstick with aircraft carriers.

Now we are watching another familiar disaster: force producing the opposite of its advertised purpose.

Israel wanted Iran contained. Iran has become necessary. Israel wanted America more committed. America has become more nervous. Israel wanted moral clarity. It got Trump accidentally discovering proportionality. Netanyahu wanted deterrence. He got a memorandum.

And Trump looks ridiculous too. One minute he is the thunderous strongman. The next he is the emergency plumber called in because the basement is flooding. He wants to be Caesar, Kissinger and a real-estate closer all at once. Instead, he looks like a man who helped light a match, watched the curtains catch fire, then called it interior design.

But the larger lesson is not about Trump, Rubio or even Netanyahu alone. It is about impunity.

Occupation corrodes judgment. Permanent domination makes states stupid. When every civilian death is explained away as unfortunate, every violation as necessary, every excess as security, the moral muscles waste away. A government starts believing that because it has been defended before, it will be defended forever.

But forever is where fools go to lose money.

There comes a point when even friends get tired. Not because they suddenly become saints. Because the bill arrives. Because the excuses sound thin. Because the ally becomes less a strategic asset than a diplomatic drunk uncle at a wedding, grabbing the microphone while everyone else searches for the exits.

That is Israel’s problem now. Not that Iran is innocent. It is not. Iran is ruthless, repressive, calculating and deeply cynical in its own regional game. But geopolitics is not a morality play. It is a knife fight conducted with maps, money, missiles and memory. Iran understands survival. It knows Hormuz. It knows oil. It knows American fatigue. It knows that sometimes the side that refuses to collapse wins by remaining on the board.

And that is exactly what seems to have happened.

Israel tried to turn pressure into surrender. Iran turned pressure into leverage. Israel tried to make the crisis about Tehran’s danger. Tehran made it about American limits, maritime stability, sanctions fatigue and regional fear. Netanyahu tried to look indispensable. He now looks like a man who set a trap, stepped into it, and is blaming the trap for being antisemitic.

So yes, this has gone full circle. The invasion logic. The occupation arrogance. The assumption that every excess will be forgiven because the enemy is worse. At some point, karma stops sounding spiritual and starts looking procedural.

Sometimes it arrives as public criticism from your closest ally. Sometimes it arrives as a sanctions waiver. Sometimes it arrives as an MoU in Islamabad.

Israel began this drama expecting Iran to crawl out weakened. Instead, Iran walked back into the diplomatic room, dusted off its jacket, and asked where to sign.

Netanyahu wanted Churchill. He got Mr Bean with air cover.

Trump wanted a triumph. He got a contradiction with hair.

And the world learned the oldest lesson in foreign affairs: if you build your strategy on permanent impunity, do not be surprised when the bill comes back addressed to you.

Signed, witnessed, and delivered by the Department of Geopolitical Karma.