Geopolitical Shifts: U.S. Policy Pivot from Ukraine to the Middle East

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The United States’ foreign policy is undergoing a notable transformation, with a strategic pivot from the failed war in Ukraine to escalating tensions in the Middle East. Since February 2022, the United States has allocated $182.8 billion in military and economic aid to support Ukraine. The European Union is so naive that it fails to understand the U.S. strategy to pivot, as the U.S. saves face over the defeat in Ukraine by blaming Europeans.It has become clear that Russia has decisively won.

Despite extensive military and economic sanctions and the delivery of Javelins, NLAWs, HIMARS, ATACMS, Leopard 2 tanks, Storm Shadow missiles, and even F-16s, these efforts have been systematically neutralized by Russian forces. The U.S. won’t risk F-22s or F-35s, knowing these would likely be countered by Russia’s Murmansk-BN system, which would humiliate its military industry. The only remaining option is nuclear, but Russia possesses more nuclear weapons than the U.S.

It is an open secret that U.S. foreign policy is heavily influenced by AIPAC, led by Zionists. The book The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy by renowned political scientists John Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt details this influence. Pro-Israel billionaire Miriam Adelson, who had spent $100 million backing U.S. President Donald Trump’s campaign for West Bank annexation with Israel. This suggests the likely direction of U.S. policy in the Middle East in the coming years.

Donald Trump has done more damage to Palestinian self-determination than any president in U.S. history. His first administration’s initiatives—including recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, contrary to the UN Charter; recognizing Syria’s Golan Heights, which is occupied Syrian territory; and pressuring neighboring Arab countries into normalization with Israel under economic and military duress—reflect this impact. Donald Trump, along with his son-in-law Jared Kushner—a hardcore Zionist who views Gaza as a real estate “Riviera for the Middle East”—embodies the immorality of such perspectives. Over 50,000 people in Gaza have been killed in the ongoing Genocide, with over 70% of the victims being women and children. The Middle East now faces significant risks as U.S. policy prioritizes confrontation with Iran, the only regional force capable of countering U.S. and Zionist interests.

It is a fact that Iran’s “strategic patience” over two decades has paid off, strengthening its position through its drone and hypersonic missile development, proxy forces (e.g., Hezbollah, Houthis), and alliances with Russia and China. Its October 1, 2024, strikes on Israel demonstrated credible deterrence, marking one of the most impressive military displays in history. Iran hit three designated targets with 180 of 200 missiles, striking one of the world’s most heavily defended airbases. To put this in perspective, most people couldn’t score a goal from 100 meters, yet Iran successfully hit targets 1,800 kilometers away.

What is Trump’s endgame? Intellectuals like Jeffrey Sachs and experts such as Colonel Wilkerson, Scott Ritter, and Colonel Douglas Macgregor describe Trump not as a dealmaker but a dealbreaker, as seen during both of his tenures. The U.S. is now employing the ancient “divide and conquer” (divide et impera) strategy, first developed by Rome, refined by the British, and now used by Zionists in the Middle East.

They exploit divisions between Sunni and Shia sects, thriving on fitna—the devil’s work—to sabotage peace and prosperity. This is a wake-up call for the Middle East. Failing to recognize this destructive agenda risks seeing the region’s prosperity, gained through the oil Lottery, revert to the Dark Ages, as seen in Iraq, Libya, Syria, and elsewhere. Expatriates running these economies would vanish in a single day if a regional war erupts between the U.S. and Iran, as the U.S. maintains over 50,000 troops and numerous bases in the Middle East.

The U.S. is already bogged down in the Red Sea, where Yemeni rebels have effectively challenged the U.S. Navy. Considering Iran’s firepower, countries hosting U.S. and Israeli assets would undoubtedly be targeted, as Iran has clearly warned. This is a gamble with millions of lives in the Middle East.

Last year, China and Russia brokered talks between Iran and Saudi Arabia, historic rivals in the Islamic world. Saudi Arabia has now extended diplomatic relations with Iran for defense cooperation, and Iran has welcomed this as a gesture of brotherhood. Realizing the Zionists’ plan to divide Sunnis and Shias, neutralize Palestinian resistance, and pursue a long-term strategy of a Greater Israel, unity—setting aside ideological differences in the Islamic world—is the only solution to oppose these destructive plans for the Middle East. History has proven that the world and human life are as fragile as glass.

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