Saturday, April 04, 2026

DAP needs reforms too – Stephen Ng





DAP should do some serious re-thinking about their decision whether to remain or stay out of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim's cabinet, says this writer. – Scoop file pic, April 4, 2026


DAP needs reforms too – Stephen Ng


Party urged to stay in Anwar’s cabinet, with past electoral setbacks cited as a warning against breaking ranks


Updated 9 seconds ago
4 April, 2026
10:13 AM MYT


I am writing with tongue-in-cheek to prompt the DAP leadership to do some serious re-thinking about their decision whether to remain or stay out of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s cabinet.

Giving the prime minister to deliver reforms within six months was a convenient way to pass on the blame to the prime minister after the defeat of the DAP in Sabah.

DAP Secretary-General Anthony Loke would likely have already been part of the DAP during the period when the party, led by its two stalwarts Lim Kit Siang and Karpal Singh, suffered a major setback in the 10th general election in 1999.

That election marked one of the most humiliating defeats in DAP’s history, as both leaders— long regarded as politically invincible – were unseated in the constituencies they contested: Karpal as Chairman and Kit Siang as DAP Secretary-General.

DAP has a history of withdrawing from the coalition Barisan Alternatif that it joined. In the context of marriage, DAP has to learn that a marriage vow includes “For better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, until death do us part.”

When the marriage gets tough, it is the tough that gets going. Surely, Loke should know that the DAP is not so easily broken or “merajuk” when it comes to an important decision whether its leaders should stay on in cabinet.

DAP was the cause of the collapse of Barisan Alternatif when it withdrew on September 21, 2001, over a disagreement with PAS, causing the collapse of the Barisan Alternatif. This, of course, disappointed a lot of voters who saw Barisan Alternatif, albeit small, as a credible opposition front to contest against Barisan Nasional (BN).

DAP cannot stand as a lone ranger in a multiracial country where the then-ruling party was strongest, but it was pride and perhaps shortsightedness that led them to think they were able to make it alone by themselves.

In the following Election on March 21, 2004, we saw a landslide victory for BN, with DAP only winning 12 parliamentary seats. This simply showed that, unless the three major parties within the then opposition coalition were united, they stood no chance of winning the election in a big way, unlike in 2008 and 2018.

If just judging DAP’s performance by the two leaders’ performance, with Kit Siang winning back Ipoh Timur and Karpal returning to Parliament as MP of Bukit Gelugor after losing in 1999, DAP pundits would have thought that their strategy worked when they were willing to stand alone.

But one cannot dismiss the fact that it was in that year that BN, under the leadership of Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi won 198 out of 219 parliamentary seats, because most people were already very fed up with the former prime minister, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad. They thought they could rally behind a new and better prime minister.

This was BN’s largest majority since 1978, surpassing the outcome of any other general elections in the past, with the opposition’s seat count, even collectively as individual parties, was reduced to just 20 seats, no thanks to the DAP.

The 11th general election in 2004 is often cited as a key lesson in Malaysian opposition politics and coalition-building, and if this still does not wake up the leadership in DAP today, I wonder what will. The truth has to be better said than seen another major defeat by Pakatan Harapan as a whole.

What this shows is that the rakyat were fed up with the opposition parties not being able to put their act together. Compared to the days when they were together as Barisan Alternative, the coalition had 42 seats compared to 2004, when they were all operating as silos, all three parties only had 20 seats, half of that in 1999. It clearly shows that unity is what the rakyat are looking for.

DAP should also realise that it won the 1999 general election riding on the hype created by Anwar’s own Reformasi movement. Without the support from Anwar’s reformasi movement and the Malay votes, DAP is unlikely today to win many of the rural seats.


Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s Reformasi movement provided a turning point in the country’s political scenario in 1999. – Bernama file pic, April 4, 2026


I wish that DAP leaders learn from these lessons and be more mature now, unlike those days when they conveniently left Barisan Alternatif in the name of a non-compromise stance only to join back the newly-formed opposition front Pakatan Rakyat led by then PKR leader, Anwar, on April 1, 2008.

Within just a few months, PR gave BN a big blow, a feat which, without the united front, DAP alone would not have been able to make a dent in Malaysian politics.

In the current government, if not for Anwar, East Malaysian political parties also cannot work with the DAP. This is something that should come across very clearly by now to Loke and the top brass leaders within the party; otherwise, why did Loke do the most noble thing that even I never expected: to apologise to Sarawakians, followed by Lim Guan Eng’s public apology the next day.

The DAP must realise two important factors: whether in 1999 or in 2008, they were riding on Anwar’s reformasi movement to stay in government. A lot of people rallied behind Pakatan Rakyat because people wanted a change of government.

Many people gravitated towards Anwar, including the Chinese and Indian communities, which even caused the then prime minister, Datuk Seri Najib Abdul Razak, to utter these words headlined by Utusan Melayu: “Apa Cina lagi mau?” It was an arrogant and blatant blow to the Chinese community, coming from the prime minister himself.

This is why even Amanah parliamentarian Mohd Sany Hamzan, till today, is saying this in parliament, for which we are all grateful to the Hulu Langat MP for speaking up on behalf of the Chinese community, and the general election will not be on until 2027, proving this was coming out from his sincerity and own frustration with the other MPs in the Opposition.

We saw a sterling performance after the three major parties formed Pakatan Rakyat, which won five states in 2008, and many of Umno’s main leaders, such as the late Tun Samy Vellu and Tan Sri Rafidah Aziz, were trounced out of parliament for the first time!

I was in Mozambique in those crucial hours, monitoring the news together with a group of fellow Malaysians from all races at a Mamak restaurant in Maputo. Because of the time difference, we were able to read the news only at night as it went online late in the evening when the votes were counted. Malaysian time is about 5 hours ahead of Maputo time. I recall saying, “Gosh, even Rafidah lost her Kuala Kangsar seat!” Then someone announced, “Samy Vellu also lost badly!”

The victory could not have been won if all three opposition parties had gone their separate ways. For the first time, we saw that Mahathir’s “split- and-rule” failed to defeat Anwar’s leadership.

Today, Penang and Selangor are still under Harapan because of this unity within Pakatan Rakyat, not because of individual parties working separately to take on the general election.

In his early years, Kit Siang, as the general secretary, lacked the wisdom that working together as a team was the only way to make a credible presence. Loke should not repeat the same mistake to defect from Anwar’s cabinet when the going gets tough.

By pulling out from Anwar’s cabinet, it will be a big blow to the government of the day, and the repercussions will surely return to haunt the DAP, for causing a big blow to the government and not representing their voters in the Unity Government. The Unity Government will continue on, as Anwar only has to replace the outgoing DAP leaders.

On the other hand, I think Loke and the others should work together hand-in-hand with Anwar to deliver all the reforms promised in the manifesto. After all, the manifesto was crafted by representatives of all three parties.

It is a marriage where both husband and wife must work in unison, not to ‘merajuk’ and throw a tantrum, blaming the husband for her loss of seats. Grow up, Mr Secretary-General. I respect you a lot, but a wrong move by you will cost us many years of sacrifice to see this day where the country’s economy is slowly coming back together again, and Malaysians can now stand tall in the eyes of the world.

At this juncture, some of the DAP leaders are doing a good job. For example, Hannah Yeoh’s key reforms in Kuala Lumpur have earned commendation from even the Malay voters.

Building on the groundwork done by her predecessor, Datuk Seri Dr Zaliha Mustafa, who turned Kuala Lumpur into a more happening city, reviving the soul of a once soulless city, if Yeoh has to pull out from the Cabinet, this will definitely disappoint a lot of city folks who voted for the DAP in the past. Perhaps, a new minister may cancel the 50 per cent discount given to all the hawkers operating in the city.

Even Housing and Local Government Minister, Nga Kor Ming, who may not be well-liked by most people because of his mannerisms, has done some good things for which I am also grateful — he transformed many recreational parks, once abandoned by the local government, into parks that we can now feel proud of.

The recreational park in my housing estate, for example, was transformed from a “paddy field” after 30 years (I used to call it by this name because of the pool of water in the field after a heavy downpour).

When he was Human Resources Minister, Steven Sim promoted TVET to a lot of young people, urging them to continue their education until the university level through the TVET pathway.

Although I am not fully informed of how the pathway works, I was one of those ordinary Malaysians who used to say: “Not every young person is academically-inclined; some are more skills-based and putting them through the university education just to fill the quota is a big mistake, as they would be better off going through the TVET pathway where they can excel, but the government should follow the examples of both Germany and Australia, where the technical and vocational institutions have been upgraded to become universities.

Even Singapore has done this as early as the 1980s. Nanyang Technological Institute, for example, is today known as Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore.”

For many who asked what reforms we see, since Anwar became prime minister, this is, to me, a very significant reform.


DAP Secretary-General Anthony Loke. – Bernama file pic, April 4, 2026


I have to share my honest opinion about Loke. He may appear to be the most impressive minister DAP has, at least to me in the early months, but to me, he needs to do more to earn my respect.

For example, till today, the names of the three MRT stations are still retained despite the confusion they create- MRT Sri Damansara Barat, MRT Sri Damansara Sentral and MRT Sri Damansara Timur. Most people would assume that MRT Sri Damansara Sentral is the station next to Kepong Sentral station (KTM), instead, you have to remember that Sri Damansara Timur is the station you should stop at if you want to change over to Kepong KTM Sentral station.

This is the same with Kwasa Sentral, where you would assume that it is the station to change to the Putrajaya MRT line; instead, you would need to change trains at Kwasa Damansara. One can blame Datuk Seri Wee Ka Siong for the mistakes, but when Loke is now the minister, he should take heed and make the necessary changes instead of allowing the mistakes to continue.

At this juncture, I also want to bring up the case of a husband-and-wife team who founded the Green Pastures Drug Rehabilitation Centre in Puchong.

After their retirement, the couple moved back to Seremban, where the cost of living is low, and the wife has a kind brother who allowed them to stay in the house inherited after their mother passed on.

When I met the couple after many years, I asked about their well-being. It was then that I learnt the couple does not have EPF to survive on. They are mainly depending on their savings.

Thinking that informing Loke, he would at least send one of his service centre staff to assist the couple in applying for social welfare just like what Anwar’s wife Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail did, after i informed her of another social worker who spent some 30 years serving with Malaysian Care to look after former prostitutes and women addicts who agreed to turn on a new leaf; in her retirement, she is now a widow and with very little savings.

On learning this, Kak Wan immediately sent her special officer Kuek Zhe Han, who assisted the retired widow to apply and is now receiving her monthly subsistence.

Meanwhile, the DAP voter now living in Seremban went to the DAP office recently (April 1, 2026) and was told by a young lady that the service centre does not assist people to apply for social welfare.

Knowing well that the Social Welfare Department is notorious for rejecting applications without giving any reasons, people like the social worker living in Kak Wan’s constituency definitely needed someone from the MP’s office to follow up closely with the social welfare department.

My disappointment is that this retired social worker from Seremban went to Loke’s service centre, and Loke should be aware that the young Chinese lady just brushed her off. She just left without any assistance with the application being made, while Kak Wan’s aide, Kuek Zhe Han, helped to follow through the entire process.

She may not want to put up a complaint, but at least Loke should make an effort to assist in whatever way he can to ensure that this lady and her husband get some subsistence from the Social Welfare Department.

Although the current minister, Datuk Seri Nancy Shukri, should have carried out reforms to the Social Welfare Department (I have known the department’s way of handling even genuine applications since some 25 years ago, when I was actively helping wheelchair-bound people.

Nancy’s main task is to ensure that genuine cases are given the subsistence government without even Kak Wan or her special officer’s intervention, if possible, so that the case in Taman Len Seng could get her monthly subsistence.) This is the contrast that I can see between a Madani MP in Bandar Tun Razak and Loke himself in Seremban.

I hope that with just one more year to go before the next general election, Loke and his fellow leaders from DAP will work harder to resolve issues on the ground told to them. I had once wanted to introduce him to a former primary school classmate of mine, who wished to alert him in advance to potential shortcomings in the LRT lines.

However, even after being informed, no action was taken to inspect the depots or warehouses. That’s one of the reasons why the LRT line suffers from service disruption. The warehouses for the entire LRT network are just a couple of shop lots to store all the engine parts.

One can only wonder where all the maintenance money went, if the parts are not available whenever there is a breakdown. In fact, train engineers like my own brother-in-law working with a train manufacturer in Germany in the past, told me that regular maintenance was crucial to ensure that the trains would not suffer from frequent breakdowns.

When he was sent to service the aerotrains at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport, I asked him for an honest answer as a brother-in-law, and he told me that he was truly shocked to see all the engine parts worn off, showing there was a failure to carry out the regular maintenance.

I wonder if, after Loke took over the Ministry of Transport has he implemented the necessary reforms, including inventory control to make sure all the parts are available in the event of a breakdown? Are the trains put on regular maintenance to ensure that they are always in their tip-top condition?

I do not know the details enough, but I was willing to introduce him to someone who could assist him on a voluntary basis, yet there was no interest in finding out what has been happening over the years from someone within the same industry.

Sorry, Loke, you may think you are a minister, but if you do not do your job, when problems crop up, people need to know what you have failed to do – and all the whispers that fell on deaf ears.

Blaming others is easy, but if you have failed to implement the reforms to the public transport system, you have equally to be blamed for any failure by the Madani government. It is not too late to change your ways and withdraw your intentions to pull out DAP leaders from the cabinet.

It is, in fact, an honour for DAP leaders to be given the ministerial posts. Not even Lim Guan Eng was given such honour; therefore, to withdraw from the cabinet is really an irresponsible act that would surely cause DAP to suffer from greater repercussions compared to the losses DAP made during the recent Sabah state election.

DAP must learn from its own past misjudgements, particularly when leaders such as Kit Siang believed that the party could perform better by withdrawing from coalition politics. As the saying goes, “United we stand, divided we fall.”

Remember, the rakyat is watching DAP’s next move. Another mistake, DAP will suffer another disaster, probably far worse than the 2004 elections. It will become a party where people say they never learn from their past mistakes. – April 4, 2026



Stephen Ng has always been a supporter of the DAP. Although politically inactive, he is an ordinary Malaysian and a keen observer of Malaysian politics since 2008. He believes in saying what needs to be said in order to see changes for the better.


More than 1,500 US sailors and family members have fled military bases in Bahrain and elsewhere in the region


From the FB page of:

BREAKING NEWS
More than 1,500 US sailors and family members have fled military bases in Bahrain and elsewhere in the region, NPR reported yesterday.
They “were evacuated back to the United States from their base in Bahrain after the base was attacked by Iranian missiles and drones,” the US news service said.
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IRANIANS MAKE SEVEN SUCCESSFUL HITS
NPR published a map showing air strikes in Bahrain, which is the home base of the US Navy's 5th Fleet.
“On the opening day of the war, the base, known as Naval Support Activity Bahrain, was struck multiple times,” NPR said. “Posts on social media showed a ballistic missile and Iranian drones slamming into the base.”
There have “been evacuations at other U.S. military bases in the region,” NPR said, adding that details were not provided by the military authorities.
Satellite images from Planet Lab showed that seven buildings were struck between 28 Feb and 6 March.
The US side appears to be underplaying the difficulties it is facing. Meanwhile, some Gulf authorities have ordered that all missiles strikes be described as "minor damage from successful interceptions".




Malay Unity or Political Mirage? Why Calls for a Single Malay Front May Be Doomed to Fail





OPINION | Malay Unity or Political Mirage? Why Calls for a Single Malay Front May Be Doomed to Fail


4 Apr 2026 • 12:00 PM MYT


Image Credit: Graphic by GeminiAi


The latest push by Tun Mahathir Mohamad for Malay political unity has once again stirred debate - but analysts argue the idea may be more illusion than reality.


In a political landscape shaped by decades of fragmentation, the notion of uniting Malays under one political banner appears increasingly detached from historical and present-day truths.


Political analyst Syaza Shukri of International Islamic University Malaysia has dismissed the idea as unrealistic, pointing out that Malay political unity has been fractured long before independence. The formation of Parti Islam Se-Malaysia (PAS) in the 1950s - following a split from United Malays National Organisation - marked the beginning of ideological divergence among Malay leaders. Since then, competing visions of governance, religion, and national identity have made political cohesion elusive.



Syaza’s critique goes deeper than mere political practicality. She argues that framing Malay unity as a prerequisite for leadership risks reducing a diverse community into a monolithic bloc. “It’s as though we’re children who cannot function when there are differences in opinion,” she remarked, highlighting the patronising undertone behind such calls. In reality, political plurality among Malays reflects a mature and dynamic electorate, not a weakness.


Mahathir’s repeated attempts to forge unity - through coalitions like Gerakan Tanah Air - have yielded little success. The coalition’s poor showing in the 2022 general election, where even Mahathir lost his deposit, highlighted the limits of nostalgia-driven politics. His subsequent efforts to revive a Malay unity alliance have also struggled to gain traction, with key figures such as Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin and Dato' Sri Hamzah Zainudin reportedly at odds over direction and leadership.



Even the Muafakat Nasional alliance between UMNO and PAS, formed to forge Malay unity, failed to endure due to a lack of sincerity and self-serving agendas in the competition for power.


Meanwhile, voices within PAS, such as deputy president Tuan Ibrahim Tuan Man, maintain that unity is achievable - but only if parties abandon personal ambitions. Yet, such idealism clashes with the realities of political competition, where power, ideology, and influence rarely align seamlessly.


Adding another layer to the debate, analyst Mazlan Ali of Universiti Teknologi Malaysia expressed skepticism over whether emerging leaders like Dato' Seri Ahmad Samsuri Mokhtar possess the national and international stature to fulfill Mahathir’s vision of a unifying figure.


Ultimately, the push for Malay political unity may be chasing a romanticised past that never truly existed. Malaysia’s strength lies in its diversity - not just across ethnic lines, but within them. Expecting uniformity in thought and allegiance ignores the complex realities of modern politics.


Rather than forcing unity, perhaps the more honest question is this: should unity even be the goal, or is managing diversity the true mark of political maturity?


By: Kpost



Sun Tzu: Why Iran has won




Sun Tzu: Why Iran has won


Iran seized control of the Strait of Hormuz, where roughly one-fifth of global oil passes. This classic Sun Tzu manoeuvre, winning without fighting any decisive battle, has spread economic pain worldwide.

Updated 1 day ago 
Published on 03 Apr 2026 8:18AM





By Murray Hunter


IN the span of just over a month, the geopolitical landscape of the 21st century has been rewritten.

What began as a calculated, unprovoked joint military operation by the United States and Israel on February 28, 2026, dubbed Operation Epic Fury, has ricocheted spectacularly.

The surprise airstrikes, which assassinated Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and dozens of top officials while targeting Iranian missiles, air defences, and infrastructure, were intended to decapitate the regime and neutralise its nuclear and ballistic capabilities. Instead, Iran has emerged not only intact but strategically victorious.

By standing firm against two of the world’s most advanced militaries, Tehran has exposed the limits of Western power projection and accelerated a multipolar world order that analysts had long predicted but few anticipated would arrive through open conflict rather than quiet diplomacy.

US President Donald Trump said that he would bomb Iran back into the Stone Age, where it belongs. However, Iran has won the war.

Iran’s victory cannot be measured by conventional battlefield metrics.

Initial U.S.-Israeli barrages inflicted heavy damage, with thousands of dead, critical sites hit, and leadership murdered. Yet the regime did not collapse.

There were no mass defections that occurred as the US expected. Protests failed to materialise.

Instead, Iran retaliated with hundreds of missiles and thousands of drones, striking both Israeli targets and U.S. bases across the region simultaneously.

More decisively, Iran seized control of the Strait of Hormuz, a body of water where roughly one-fifth of global oil passes.

Iran now imposes tolls payable in Chinese yuan to vessels wanting to pass. This classic Sun Tzu manoeuvre, winning without fighting any decisive battle, has spread economic pain worldwide.





Oil prices have surged past $100 per barrel, triggering a global fuel crisis. Iran’s daily oil export revenue has reportedly doubled in some assessments, funding its resilience while punishing the aggressors through secondary effects.

This type of economic warfare has proven more potent than kinetic strikes.

Consequently, the petrodollar, which is the cornerstone of U.S. financial hegemony since the post-World War II era, is fracturing is weakened beyond redemption.

For decades, oil traded in dollars reinforced American dominance, allowing Washington to weaponise sanctions and control global energy flows.

Iran’s demand for yuan-denominated payments through the Strait has fast-tracked de-dollarisation.

China’s currency is gaining traction as a viable alternative, with reports of tankers rerouted under yuan terms.

Analysts at Deutsche Bank and others note that the conflict has exposed vulnerabilities in the U.S. security umbrella for Gulf infrastructure.

The war has not ended the petrodollar overnight, but it has accelerated its decline, reshaping the global economy.

Trade patterns are shifting eastward, and energy markets now operate with greater multipolarity.

Nations once tethered to dollar liquidity are exploring alternatives, from petro-yuan experiments to localised currencies.

Militarily, Iran’s performance signals a broader truth. Global South powers are no longer subordinate.

Tehran has publicly bloodied the United States, demonstrating that asymmetric tactics using drones, missiles, maritime denial, and economic leverage are neutralising superior conventional forces.





U.S. supercarriers, once symbols of unchallenged dominance, appear increasingly symbolic of obsolescence in modern warfare.

The USS Gerald R. Ford, America’s newest and largest carrier, deployed to the region amid the crisis, suffered an onboard fire and was forced into temporary port repairs in Crete. While not a combat loss, the episode underscores vulnerabilities where advanced platforms struggle against swarms of low-cost drones and anti-access strategies.

Iran’s approach offers a lesson for others. Turkey, with its drone fleet and regional ambitions, and India, with its growing naval and hypersonic capabilities, stand as proof that military relevance no longer requires Western-scale budgets or alliances.

European powers, by contrast, appear diminished as some deployed military assets to Cyprus after Iranian strikes on British bases offered limited direct assistance due to their potential vulnerability.

The conflict has isolated Washington as a “lone ranger.” Europe has not fully committed, while Australia has stayed on the sidelines. Reports indicate reluctance from many nations to allow U.S. forces transit or basing rights, citing risks of entanglement.

NATO’s cohesion is strained, with questions emerging about its relevance in a Pacific-centric era. The United States, once the hub of a global network, now operates with fewer reliable partners.

This isolation is not temporary; it reflects a deeper erosion of soft power.

The war’s images of civilian casualties, damaged cultural sites, and economic fallout have alienated neutrals. Globally, the balance of power has shifted in ways most analysts underestimated.

A new global balance towards the south is not being negotiated in conference rooms or trade pacts but through raw military confrontation. U.S. hegemonism, built on post-1945 dominance in finance, technology, and military reach, has been gravely weakened.

The era of unchallenged American primacy, which defined the second half of the 20th century and the early 21st, is closing.

Europe now faces pressure to chart an independent course, free from Washington’s orbit. The Arab world, long fragmented by external meddling, must reorganise around new realities.

Iran’s resilience has emboldened regional actors to prioritise sovereignty over alignment.

Most profoundly, the Global South gains a louder voice. Nations in Asia, Africa, and Latin America watch as Iran, a non-Western power, defies the current old order and survives. BRICS, despite internal challenges, stands poised to fill the organisational vacuum, if it can repair fractures.

A coordinated BRICS could effectively provide the institutional backbone for a post-Western multipolar system, one not dictated by Western dogma, sanctions regimes, or ideological export.

The fate of Israel remains a critical wildcard. The conflict has escalated its long-simmering shadow wars, including renewed clashes with Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The dream of “Greater Israel,” rooted in expansive territorial and theological ambitions, faces unprecedented strain. Domestic emergency measures, settler violence, and international condemnation have compounded internal divisions.

Whether the conflict destroys this vision outright is uncertain, but it has certainly damaged it.





Iran’s survival and counterstrikes have reframed the regional power dynamic, forcing Israel into a defensive posture amid global scrutiny. In the United States, the war’s political reverberations may prove the most enduring legacy.

The Trump administration touts tactical successes, degraded Iranian missile capacity, and destroyed infrastructure, but the strategic picture tells a different story.

Skyrocketing energy prices, supply chain disruptions, and the visible limits of U.S. power have fueled domestic discontent. The conflict threatens to fracture the MAGA movement.

Trump’s claims of imminent victory ring hollow amid ongoing operations and economic fallout. Recovery may prove elusive as voters confront the costs of unilateralism. This could mark the beginning of a profound realignment in American politics, hastening the end of interventionist consensus.

What emerges is a world less dominated by Western structures and apparatus. The 2026 Iran war has not produced neat victors in the traditional sense, but Iran’s ability to absorb punishment, impose asymmetric costs, and catalyse systemic change positions it as the clear strategic winner.

Other nations are taking notes. The multipolar era, long discussed in theory, has arrived through fire and economic disruption.

As the old order recedes, a new one, driven by the Global South’s rising confidence, is taking shape. History will record February 28, 2026, not as the day Iran was humbled, but as the day it helped bury unipolar illusions.

The question now is not whether the world has changed, but how quickly the rest of it will adapt. – April 3, 2026


***


Iran has not been the first to resist and survive American brutal callous aggression - there was Vietnam, then Afghanistan. In the two latter cases, the wankees cabut-ed with its tail behind its hind legs. Perhaps we'll, we hope to see the same in the current Iran War - never did like a frigging evil bully.


Minor quake hits Batu Pahat


FMT:

Minor quake hits Batu Pahat


MetMalaysia says the 3.1-magnitude tremor was recorded at 1.54pm


MetMalaysia said the earthquake was recorded at a depth of 10km off Batu Pahat, Johor. (MetMalaysia pic)


PETALING JAYA: A minor earthquake measuring 3.1 on the Richter scale struck off the coast of Batu Pahat, Johor, this afternoon.

The Malaysian meteorological department (MetMalaysia) said the tremor was recorded at 1.54pm at a depth of 10km.

The last quake in the area occurred on March 14, measuring 3.2 on the Richter scale.

Johor has experienced a series of mild earthquakes since Aug 24, beginning with a magnitude 4.1 quake that struck 5km west of Segamat at a depth of 10km.

The initial 4.1 quake was followed by several aftershocks in the same region, with magnitudes of 2.8, 2.5, 3.2, 3.4 and 2.7 recorded in various locations around Segamat and nearby areas such as Kluang and Batu Pahat.


TRUMP will defund the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the CIA-adjacent body responsible for black propaganda


From the FB page of:

BREAKING NEWS: DONALD TRUMP said last night he will defund the National Endowment for Democracy, the CIA-adjacent body responsible for the Uyghur genocide hoax and multiple other political scams in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Moldova and other places.
“The Budget eliminates wasteful and dangerous spending for NED, an unchecked, partisan organization that… attempts to destabilize sovereign governments with whom America is not at war,” a new White House document said, using unusually honest language.
Trump’s budget cutters want to remove the NED’s US$315 million funds, among others, so it can lift the US military budget, already the world’s highest, to a staggering US$1.5 trillion a year.
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WE ADMIT: NED CREATES UNREST
NED circles the world cultivating conflicts, as independent reporters have repeatedly said. The new US budget document doesn't hide this.
“NED has no Senate-confirmed leadership and routinely funds programs that undermine the foreign policy of the elected President of the United States and his Senate-confirmed Secretary of State, endangering trade deals and threatening peaceful relations with partner governments,” the document said.
“The United States does not need a shadow State Department fomenting anti-American sentiment and global unrest with no constitutional oversight and ready access to hard-earned taxpayer funds.”
The admission that the NED fomented unrest is astonishing.
Independent reporters, from Brian Berletic to Max Blumenthal to the present writer, have been saying this for years. But not a single western mainstream media outlet has mentioned this. The New York Times said claims of foreign involvement in the Hong Kong unrest was “a shopworn canard”, although records showed that NED had been building up to it for years, working with the Oslo Freedom Foundation and cash distributed by Jimmy Lai and Mark Simon.
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POLITICAL INTERFERENCE
No one will miss the NED. It has engaged in regime change since its first operation, targeting China, in 1984. It has committed acts of political interference in more than 100 places—acts which would be illegal in the US or other western countries.
Its most frequent target has been China.
The Uyghur hoax was launched in 2019, and from that date, the western mainstream media printed countless reports from “independent” groups with names such as the World Uyghur Congress, the Uyghur American Association, the Uyghur Human Rights Project, the Campaign for Uyghurs, the Uyghur Transitional Database, and so on.
In fact, none were independent. All were NED projects. The western corporation media routinely hid the funding of these groups from their readers.
When data showed that there was the opposite of a genocide in China, with Uyghur numbers growing faster than those of Han Chinese, NED breezily abandoned the theme and switched to pushing a “slave labor” narrative – which was equally false.
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TRUMP’S REAL REASON
But Donald Trump is not doing this to benefit the world. He is angry because staff at the NED leaned left. The CIA and the NED financed press indexes, such as RSF and the GDI.
The second of these widely criticized not just foreign press, but right-leaning newspapers popular with MAGA readers. This was specified in the new paper released yesterday as one of the reasons for the shut-down.
“NED funded the Global Disinformation Index, that has been integrated by major U.S. ad exchanges to demonetize conservative media outlets and advocacy organizations, falsely labeled as ‘hate groups,’ including: the American Family Association; Alliance Defending Freedom; The American College of Pediatricians; the Center for Family and Human Rights; and the Center for Immigration Reform,” the document says.
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BUDGET FIGHT AHEAD
Records show that the US Democratic Party used the NED as much as the US Republican Party. But it is unlikely that they will fight hard to save it in the forthcoming fight over this budget.
The new budget document lists many hundreds of organizations which Trump intends to defund, some of which will attract more attention.
And as for the US$1.5 trillion a year military budget, even the Democrats may realize that this is an insane amount of money. That’s going to be their focus.