Tuesday, 13 January 2026

If Trump attacks Iran. Dr Shabir Choudhry, 13 January 2026, London.

 If Trump attacks Iran

Dr Shabir Choudhry, 13 January 2026, London.


Regional Implications


Middle East explodes outward:

·       Hezbollah escalates against Israel

·       Houthis intensify Red Sea attacks

·       Iraq and Syria become active war theatres

Oil shock: Strait of Hormuz disruption sends global energy prices soaring, which will surely affect the economies of many countries and, of course, add to the problems of the people.

Arab regimes trapped:

The rulers of the Arab world have closer ties with America, and at no time would they like to annoy Washington.

The attack on Iran will upset the public opinion of the region, resulting in protests and anti-American sentiments. The public would like their countries to support Iran and oppose America, or at least distance themselves from Washington, despite security dependence.

Israel fully mobilised: Risk of a multi-front war becomes real, which will create more security problems for Israel. This would add to the anger and frustration of those Israelis who wish to have peace in the region. Thousands of Israelis have already left Israel and moved to safer places in America and Europe, and this may expedite the trend.

Implications for Russia

  • Energy windfall: Higher oil prices directly benefit Moscow.
  • Iran–Russia strategic deepening: Arms, intelligence, and drone cooperation expand.
  • Ukraine’s advantage: Western attention and resources are diverted.
  • Diplomatic positioning: Russia presents itself as a stabiliser and mediator.

Implications for China

  • Major energy vulnerability: China depends heavily on Gulf oil; instability hurts Beijing.
  • Strategic dilemma:
    • Publicly condemns US action
    • Quietly pressures Iran to avoid total war
  • Yuan-based oil trade expands: China pushes alternatives to dollar pricing amid chaos.
  • Global South leadership claim: China frames itself as the responsible great power. A clear alternative to America which has systematically attacked dozens of countries since the Second World war.

Overall Assessment

A US attack on Iran would:

  • Seriously damage Iran’s nuclear capability
  • Not eliminate Iran’s nuclear capability permanently because of the safety system they have in place
  • Accelerate regional militarisation
  • Strengthen Russia economically
  • Undermine US standing across the Global South

It would be a strategic own goal unless followed by a long, costly occupation, which the US public would not support.

3/ Britain and France send troops to Ukraine

Economic Implications

  • High cost, low scalability: Sustaining troops would have serious economic implications; already, budgets are under pressure. This will result in unrest and political costs.

 

  • Defence industry boost: Arms production and logistics contracts surge.
  • Some people will get richer, but the people as whole will suffer
  • Market instability: Risk premiums rise across Europe due to escalation fears.

Political Implications

Domestic backlash:

·       UK: Parliamentary resistance and public war fatigue

 

·       France: Street protests and constitutional pressure

 

·       EU division: Eastern states may welcome it; southern and neutral states oppose it.

  • US tension: If done without Washington’s backing, this fractures NATO command unity.

Strategic Implications

  • Tripwire effect: Any Russian strike killing British or French troops risks a NATO-Russia war.
  • Deterrence vs escalation paradox:
    • Intended to deter Russia
    • Increases the likelihood of miscalculation
  • Russia’s response:
    • Intensified strikes
    • Hybrid attacks on Europe
    • Nuclear signalling escalates

Overall Assessment

Anglo-French troop deployment would:

  • Raise the stakes dramatically
  • Shift the war from proxy to quasi-direct NATO involvement
  • Reduce diplomatic off-ramps

It would be the most dangerous escalation since February 2022.

Final Strategic Amalgamation

If all three scenarios occur in some form:

  • The post-1945 order collapses
  • Power politics fully replaces rules
  • Middle powers hedge, rearm, and regionalise security
  • Kashmir, Taiwan, the South China Sea, and the Middle East all become more volatile

This is the world of unchecked great-power opportunism, not stability. END

Monday, 12 January 2026

If Trump takes over Greenland by force. Dr Shabir Choudhry, 13 January 2026, London

 If Trump takes over Greenland by force

Dr Shabir Choudhry, 13 January 2026, London


Implications for NATO

·       Existential crisis for NATO: An attack on Greenland (Danish territory) would mean a NATO member attacking another NATO member.

 

·       Article 5 paralysis: NATO has no mechanism to respond coherently when the aggressor is the United States itself.

 

·       Collapse of trust: Smaller NATO states would question the alliance’s credibility and US security guarantees.

 

·       European strategic autonomy accelerates: Germany, France, and others would push hard for an EU-led defence structure independent of Washington.

Bottom line: NATO survives formally but is politically hollowed out.


Implications for Europe

·       Severe transatlantic rupture: Denmark, the EU, and possibly Canada would treat the US as an unreliable and aggressive power.

 

·       Sanctions against the US: Likely symbolic at first, but financial retaliation (tariffs, legal cases, frozen cooperation) could follow.

 

·       Militarisation of the Arctic by Europe: Nordic states would expand Arctic defence cooperation against unpredictability and to safeguard their interests.

  • Internal EU cohesion strengthens: Ironically, US aggression would unify Europe more than Russian pressure or the Ukraine war has.

Implications for China


·       Propaganda windfall: Beijing would frame this as proof that the “rules-based international order” was always selective.

 

·       Taiwan precedent anxiety: China would carefully study US justifications to repurpose them later.

 

·       It could also encourage China to carry out a similar action to take over Taiwan.

 

·       Arctic access opportunity: China would deepen ties with Russia and Nordic states excluded from US control of Greenland.

 

·       Moral high ground (temporarily): China would appear restrained by comparison, despite its own ambitions.


Implications for Russia


·       Strategic opportunity: Moscow would welcome NATO disarray.

 

·       Some small countries may establish closer ties with Russia.

 

·       Arctic leverage increases: Russia would argue it is a more predictable Arctic power than the US.

 

·       Ukraine war implications: European focus shifts away from Ukraine, weakening Kyiv’s support. Moscow will surely welcome that.

  • US-Russia tacit coordination? Unlikely openly, but parallel opportunism would occur.

Overall Assessment


A US seizure of Greenland would:

  • End US moral leadership
  • Fracture NATO
  • Legitimise territorial revisionism globally

This would be more destabilising than Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. END


--
Dr Shabir Choudhry

 Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) said: "Say what is true, although it may be bitter and displeasing to people."

A sad story, listen to your children and help them. By an American father who lost everything.

 A sad story, listen to your children and help them.

By an American father who lost everything.

I told my son, “Be a man,” and to stop making excuses. I never realised that I was shouting at a drowning person—until I found his bed empty, and the silence in his room became permanent.

My son, Leo, was twenty-three years old. To the outside world—and, if I’m honest, to me at the time—he looked like a failure.

I am a simple man. I grew up in a time when hard work paid off. At twenty-four, working in a local factory, I bought my first house. I drove an old, battered truck, fixed it myself, and never complained. That was the American way. Work hard, and you get a house with a white fence. Simple math.

So, when I looked at Leo, I didn’t see struggle. I saw laziness.

He had a college degree gathering dust. He was glued to his phone all day, delivering food for some gig-economy app, sleeping until noon. He lived in my basement, wore the same loose hoodie every day, and there was a hollowness in his eyes that I mistook for boredom.

I was constantly on his case.

“The world doesn’t owe you a living, Leo,” I would say, slamming my coffee mug on the table.

“Get a real job. Build some character.”

The Tuesday that changed my life began like any other day. I came home from the workshop, hands covered in grease, with the satisfying exhaustion of hard work.

Leo was in the kitchen, staring at a bowl of cereal. It was six in the evening.

“Just woke up?” I asked, irritation rising in my chest.

“No, Dad,” he said quietly. “I just got back. I did some deliveries.”

“Deliveries,” I scoffed. “That’s not a career, Leo. That’s a hobby. At your age I had a mortgage and a baby on the way. You can’t even cover your gas money.”

He put the spoon down. He looked pale, thinner than before.

“Dad, the job market is brutal. No one hires at the entry level without three years of experience. And rent… even a tiny studio is two thousand dollars a month. The numbers don’t add up.”

“They add up if you work,” I snapped.

“Stop blaming the economy. Stop blaming the ‘system.’ This is about grit. Do you think it was easy for me in the nineties? We didn’t have safe spaces. We just got on with it.”

Leo looked at me. His eyes were heavy—not with sleep, but heavy, like they were holding up the ceiling.

“I’m trying, Dad. I really am. But I’m just… so tired.”

I rolled my eyes. I actually rolled my eyes.

“Tired? From what? Sitting in a car? Using your phone? I’ve been on my feet for ten hours. I’m tired. You’re just unmotivated. You get everything for free—electricity, food, a roof over your head—and you still walk around like the weight of the world is on you.”

The kitchen fell silent. The refrigerator hummed softly. The news droned on in the background about inflation, but I wasn’t listening. I was waiting for him to argue, to push back, to show some fire.

Instead, he just nodded.

“You’re right,” he whispered.

“I’m sorry I’m not like you were at my age. I’m sorry the math doesn’t work for me.”

He stood up, walked toward me, and did something he hadn’t done since he was ten years old. He hugged me. It wasn’t a strong hug; it was like collapsing against me for support.

“I won’t be a burden anymore, Dad. I promise. Go to sleep.”

I stood there, feeling justified. Finally, I thought. It finally got through to him. Tough love. That’s what this generation needs.

I went to bed thinking I was a good father.

The next morning, the house was quiet. Too quiet.

I woke up at 6:30, ready to drag him out of bed. Today we were going to look for “real” jobs. I was going to drive him to the industrial park myself.

“Leo! Wake up!” I shouted, banging on the basement door.

No answer.

I opened the door.

The room was spotless. The piles of clothes were gone. The curtains were open. The bed was made with military precision.

And on the pillow lay his phone and a folded piece of paper torn from his notebook.

A cold shock ran through my spine, sharper than any winter wind.

“Leo?”

I checked the bathroom. Empty. The backyard. Empty. The garage.

My old pickup truck was gone.

I ran back and grabbed the note. My hands were shaking so badly the paper nearly tore.

Dad,

I know you think I’m lazy. I know you think I’m weak. I wanted to be a man like you. I really did.

But the mountain you climbed no longer has a path. This year I applied for 400 jobs. I didn’t tell you because I was ashamed. I drove fourteen hours a day for that delivery app just to pay the interest on my student loans—I couldn’t even touch the principal.

You told me to save. I tried. But when rent is double what you paid and wages are half what they should be, saving feels like pouring water into a bucket with a hole in it.

I stopped taking my medication three weeks ago because my insurance ended and I didn’t want to ask you for money again. That’s why I was “tired.” My mind was screaming, and I had no volume knob.

You were right. The world is for strong people. And I don’t have the strength left to fight.

I’m taking the truck to the old bridge. I’m sorry. You won’t have to pay my bills.

Love,

Leo

 

The scream that came out of my throat wasn’t human. It was the sound of a trapped animal.

I dialled 911. I raced toward the bridge, driving so fast the world blurred into grey streaks.

I saw the flashing lights before I saw the river.

I saw the tow truck. I saw my pickup—the one I was so proud of fixing—being pulled out of the water, dripping mud and grass.

I collapsed onto the road. The officer who picked me up was about my age. He didn’t say, “Everything will be okay.” He just held me while I broke apart.

Six months have passed.

People say, “It wasn’t your fault, Jack. Depression is a silent killer.”

And they’re right. It’s an illness.

But I can’t stop staring at the math.

I later checked his phone records. He wasn’t lying. He really had applied to hundreds of jobs. He was working while I was sleeping. He was fighting a war I refused to see, because I was busy looking at the past through rose-coloured glasses.

I measured his success by the standards of the 1990s—and when he didn’t meet them, I used those standards to crush him.

We tell our children, “At your age, I had a house and a car.” We forget to say that back then a house cost two years’ salary, not twenty. We forget we had pensions, not gig contracts. We forget that we had hope.

Leo didn’t need a lecture on grit. He needed a father who understood that “I’m tired” doesn’t mean “I need sleep.”

It means: “I’m running out of reasons to live.”

I go to his grave every Sunday. I tell him about the truck. I ask for forgiveness.

But he can’t hear me.

The world today is full of Leos—young men and women working harder than we ever did for half the reward, carrying the weight of a broken economy and a digital loneliness we don’t understand.

If your child says they’re tired…

If they seem stuck…

If they’re struggling to stand in a world that has clipped their wings…

Please, set your judgments aside. Throw away your “back in my day” stories.

Don’t tell them to “be a man.”

Tell them you’re with them.

Tell them their worth isn’t measured by salary or property.

I would give everything—my house, my pension, my pride—just to see my son “lazily” sleeping on that couch one more time.

A “perfect” dead child leaves nothing but regret.

Listen to the silence before it becomes eternal.

 


--
Dr Shabir Choudhry

 Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) said: "Say what is true, although it may be bitter and displeasing to people."

Friday, 9 January 2026

Why Is Seven Kings Called “Seven Kings”? By Dr Shabir Choudhry

 Why Is Seven Kings Called “Seven Kings”?

A Local History — From Saxon Legend to Elizabeth Line

By Dr Shabir Choudhry

Resident of Seven Kings for 30 Years.

If you’ve ever wondered why our neighbourhood is called Seven Kings, you’re not alone. It’s a fascinating name with roots that stretch back through medieval records, Roman roads, Victorian railways, and even folklore about Saxon times.

What the Name Might Mean

The earliest recorded form of the name appears in documents from 1285, written as Sevekyngg or Sevekyngges. Historians believe this may have originally referred to a settlement of the family or followers of a man called Seofoca—a personal name typical of early England. 

Although there’s a long-standing local tradition that “seven kings” once met here in the age of the Saxon Heptarchy, there’s no direct historical evidence for such a meeting, and it remains part of local lore rather than confirmed fact. Still, it’s easy to see how a name like this could grow out of an area rich with ancient history. 

Roman Roads and Medieval Hinterland

Seven Kings sits beside what was once a Roman road between London and Colchester—a route of great importance for centuries. The settlement here would have been connected to this network of routes long before the modern city spread eastward. 

Moreover, we live near Epping Forest, one of London’s great ancient woodlands. For hundreds of years, these woods were royal hunting grounds and gathering places for nobles and elites. While we can’t say definitively that kings met here, it’s entirely plausible that important figures from the region once passed through, sheltered under ancient trees, and used the surrounding landscape for hunting and travel.

The Railway and Modern Growth

For most of its early history, Seven Kings was quiet farmland and woodland, but everything changed in the late 19th century with the advent of the railway.

The Seven Kings railway station opened on 1 March 1899 on the Great Eastern Main Line, connecting our neighbourhood with London Liverpool Street and beyond. This was a catalyst for housing development and growth, bringing new residents and turning the area into a thriving commuter suburb. 

At one time, Seven Kings was linked to a branch line known as the Fairlop (or Hainault) Loop, which connected to the area around Woodford and Hainault. Though the connection to Ilford and Seven Kings was eventually closed in the mid-20th century, it remains part of the story of how transport shaped our community. 

Underground Connections: Newbury Park, Gants Hill and Redbridge

Even though Seven Kings never got its own tube station, the area enjoys excellent Underground access through nearby stations:

  • Newbury Park on the Central Line opened post-World War II as part of the Hainault Loop extension. 
  • Gants Hill, just a short distance away, is famous for its barrel-vaulted design and was opened in December 1947 as part of the post-war expansion of the Central Line.
  • Redbridge station on the Hainault Loop opened in December 1947, helping bring East London residents closer to central London. 

These links helped knit Seven Kings into the fabric of Greater London as transport expanded rapidly after the war.

The Elizabeth Line and Today’s Connectivity

Today, Seven Kings station is part of the Elizabeth Line, delivering fast connections to central London, Paddington, Heathrow and Reading — transforming travel for residents and making the area even more desirable. 

A Name Worth Celebrating

So, while the exact origin of the name Seven Kings may still be a blend of documented history and local legend, what is clear is that this place has always been connected to ancient routes, to forests of history, and to transport networks that shaped modern London.

Whether the name commemorates an ancient settlement, a meeting of Saxon chiefs, or simply an early family, it’s a reminder that even ordinary places have extraordinary stories behind them. END

Thursday, 8 January 2026

The Plight of Rohingya Muslims in Bangladesh Camps By Dr Shabir Choudhry, 04 January 2026, London

 The Plight of Rohingya Muslims in Bangladesh Camps

By Dr Shabir Choudhry, 04 January 2026, London


A recent fact-finding visit by a UK-based humanitarian delegation has once again exposed a humanitarian catastrophe that the world — and especially the Muslim world — continues to ignore.


This registered Charity sent a delegation to Bangladesh to investigate the plight of the Bihari people, who have been stranded in Bangladesh since the separation of Bangladesh in 1971. Also, the delegation visited the camps of the Rohingya people who escaped persecution from Burma.


Forgotten People: The Biharis of East Pakistan

Before addressing the Rohingya tragedy, the delegation drew attention to another long-forgotten group: the Bihari Muslims.

These people migrated from Bihar, India, to East Pakistan in 1947, believing in the promise of a Muslim homeland. After the war of 1971, they found themselves abandoned — first by Pakistan, which they had supported during the armed conflict, and then marginalised by the new Bangladeshi state. Many were left at the mercy of hostile armed groups and unsympathetic authorities.

More than five decades later, thousands of Bihari Muslims still live in camps, trapped in conditions of extreme poverty, legal uncertainty, and social exclusion. Their suffering is a painful reminder that political loyalties often mean nothing once states redraw borders and rewrite narratives.

The Rohingya Catastrophe: Survival Without Dignity

If the plight of the Biharis is tragic, the situation of the Rohingya Muslims is nothing short of catastrophic.

The Burmese military has killed tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims. Those who were massacred may, tragically, have been the “fortunate” ones. The survivors — now living in refugee camps in Bangladesh — endure a life stripped of dignity, opportunity, and hope.

According to the delegation:

  • Refugees are confined to restricted zones deep in jungle areas, isolated from towns and economic life.
  • They are not allowed to work, travel freely, or seek sustainable livelihoods.
  • Education is severely limited, creating a lost generation.
  • Healthcare and sanitation facilities are inadequate, increasing disease and suffering.
  • There is a severe shortage of clothing, particularly warm clothes — the delegation witnessed children without proper clothing in December, exposed to cold and illness.

Life in these camps is not merely difficult; it is a slow erosion of humanity. Survival is permitted, but dignity is denied.

A Moral Failure of the Muslim World

What makes this tragedy even more painful is not just the cruelty of the perpetrators but the silence and indifference of those who could help.

While millions of Muslims languish in camps:

  • Some rulers of wealthy Muslim states gift luxury aircraft worth hundreds of millions of dollars, complete with gold-plated fittings.
  • Others squander vast sums in casinos, elite holiday resorts, and lavish lifestyles in Europe and elsewhere.
  • Yet the refugees — men, women, and children — remain invisible, except when used rhetorically in speeches or slogans.

This is not a lack of resources. It is a lack of moral priority.

Islam teaches that the worth of a society is judged by how it treats its weakest. By that standard, the global response to the Rohingya — and to other displaced Muslim populations — represents a profound ethical failure.

Beyond Charity: The Need for Conscience

Charities perform vital work, often filling gaps left by governments and international bodies. But charity alone cannot resolve a crisis created by state violence, geopolitical calculations, and global apathy.

What is required is:

  • Sustained international pressure on Myanmar
  • Legal recognition and protection for refugees
  • Education and livelihood opportunities
  • And above all, a restoration of human dignity

The Rohingya do not need pity. They need justice, protection, and the right to live as human beings.

Until the world — and particularly the Muslim world — aligns its actions with its moral claims, these camps will remain not just places of refuge, but monuments to our collective failure. END

Dr Shabir Choudhry is a London-based political analyst, author, and expert on South Asian affairs, with a focus on Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Kashmir.