Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Could the Iran War Trigger a Nuclear Arms Race? Dr Shabir Choudhry, London, 15 April 2026.

 Could the Iran War Trigger a Nuclear Arms Race?

Dr Shabir Choudhry, London, 15 April 2026.

The escalating tensions surrounding Iran have revived a fundamental and deeply troubling question in international politics: could a war involving Iran trigger a nuclear arms race, particularly in the Middle East? While the answer is not straightforward, the dynamics of deterrence, double standards, and regional insecurity suggest that such an outcome is not only possible but increasingly plausible.

Nuclear Weapons and the Logic of Deterrence

Modern history demonstrates a stark reality: countries possessing nuclear weapons are far less likely to be directly attacked. The case of North Korea is often cited as a clear example. Despite its isolation, system of government, record on human rights, rhetoric, and internal system, no one has dared to launch a military invasion—largely because it possesses nuclear weapons and delivery systems capable of retaliation, and teaching a lesson to the invaders.

Similarly, the relationship between India and Pakistan has fundamentally changed since both acquired nuclear capabilities. While the two states fought a full-scale war in 1971, which resulted in the separation of East Pakistan and the humiliating surrender of the Pakistan army. Such a scenario is far less likely today. Nuclear deterrence has imposed limits on escalation, even during serious crises.

From this perspective, nuclear weapons are not merely instruments of destruction; they are also seen as tools of survival and a tool of deterrence.

The Middle East Equation

In the Middle East, the situation is even more complex. Israel is widely believed to possess nuclear weapons, although it maintains a policy of ambiguity. This has created a strategic imbalance in the region.

However, even if other countries in the region were to acquire nuclear weapons, their use would be highly constrained. Any nuclear strike against Israel would almost certainly result in catastrophic retaliation, not only devastating Israel but also causing immense destruction to neighbouring regions—including Palestinian territories and Islamic holy sites. Such an outcome would be politically, morally, and religiously unacceptable for Muslim-majority countries.

Moreover, Israel’s military doctrine—like that of the United States—is widely perceived as one that would not hesitate to use overwhelming force if its existence were threatened.

Perceptions of Double Standards

A central issue driving nuclear proliferation concerns is the perception of double standards in international politics. Nuclear weapons in the hands of some states are often described as “responsible” or “stabilising,” while the same weapons in the hands of others are labelled dangerous and unacceptable.

The President of America can attack a country that poses no threat to America, kill people and kidnap its President and take him to America. Take control of their natural resources, including oil reserves. This behaviour is condemnable because it’s an act of an ‘International Terrorist’.

If that does not explain what America, people need to understand that this ‘great’ country remains the only country to have used two nuclear weapons that completely destroyed two cities and innumerable innocent citizens who were not armed or engaged in a war.

Critics argue that despite this history, and its invasion of several countries, which resulted in death and destruction of innocent and unarmed civilians, and loot and plunder, President Trump’s threats to Iran like “the end of Iranian civilisation”,  which clearly indicated the use of nukes to wipe out Iran and its nuclear arsenal, are still framed as a force for stability.

By contrast, Iran is frequently portrayed as a threat, even though it has not initiated war since the Iranian Revolution. The Iran-Iraq War, often cited in this context, began with Iraq’s invasion of Iran, making it, from Iran’s perspective, a defensive war.

This raises an important question: if nuclear weapons are justified as deterrents for some states, why are they considered inherently destabilising for others?

Power, Intervention, and Global Order

Another argument frequently raised is the asymmetry of power in global politics. The United States and its allies have, at times, intervened militarily in smaller countries, justified under various doctrines such as security, democracy promotion, or counterterrorism. Critics argue that such actions—ranging from regime change to targeted killings—are often carried out with limited accountability.

In contrast, actions by states like Iran—even within their own territorial waters—are often framed as threats to global peace. For instance, disputes over maritime security highlight contrasting narratives: actions taken by Western powers are often described as enforcing international law. In contrast, similar or lesser actions by regional powers are portrayed as destabilising.

These perceptions, whether fully accurate or not, contribute to a growing sense of injustice and insecurity among states that feel excluded from the global power structure.

Does Iran Pose a Direct Threat?

This leads to a critical question: what direct threat does Iran pose to countries such as the United States, Britain, or Europe? While concerns about regional influence, missile development, and alliances are often cited, the absence of direct military aggression against these powers complicates the narrative.

For Iran, the pursuit of advanced military capability—nuclear or otherwise—may be driven less by expansionist ambition and more by a desire to deter external threats and ensure regime survival.

The Risk of a Nuclear Arms Race

Most Western experts, who are generally concerned about the future of Israel and the Jews, promote this view that if Iran were to move closer to acquiring nuclear weapons, the consequences would likely extend beyond its borders. Regional rivals could feel compelled to follow suit, leading to a multi-state nuclear competition in an already volatile region.

Such a development, they argue, would not only increase the risk of conflict but also weaken global non-proliferation efforts. The message received by many states would be clear: nuclear capability guarantees security, while its absence invites vulnerability.

One may ask, even an ordinary Tom, Dick, and Harry knows that Israel has more than 100 nukes, so why has it not resulted in a nuclear-armed race in the region? The bitter fact is that under the ‘imperial command’ of America and allies like Britain, under different pretexts attack Muslim countries and some other weak countries which are important for their imperial, economic and strategic interests.

Conclusion

The possibility of an Iran war triggering a nuclear arms race is rooted in deeper structural issues—deterrence logic, regional rivalries, and perceived global double standards. While nuclear weapons may prevent direct wars between powerful states, they also encourage their spread by reinforcing the idea that security ultimately depends on possessing them.

Unless these underlying contradictions are addressed through fair and consistent international policies, the risk of nuclear proliferation will remain—not just in the Middle East, but across the world.

The war has also proved without a shadow of any doubt that a determined country with appropriate planning can humiliate a Superpower and a state like Israel that you will not be allowed to challenge the sovereignty of Iran in future, else face the consequences. One Iranian scholar sealed it by saying:

Iran shows that sovereignty is not a gift, but the result of military self-reliance and anti-colonialist spirit”. END.

Thursday, 2 April 2026

If conflict in West Asia continues, what might the US and Israel do? United States strategy. Dr Shabir Choudhry, London. 2 April 2026

 If conflict in West Asia continues, what might the US and Israel do?

United States strategy. Dr Shabir Choudhry, London. 2 April 2026

The US typically pursues these parallel objectives in West Asian conflicts:

A. Prevent a full-scale regional war

Washington generally seeks to:

  • Protect Israel and ensure Israel’s dominance in the region
  • Give free hand to Israel to attack neighbours, destroy their infrastructure, occupy their land and terrorise them
  • Safeguard American strategic, political and economic interests
  • Avoid direct large-scale war with Iran
  • Protect Gulf allies
  • Keep energy routes open, especially the Strait of Hormuz
  • Maintain global economic stability

Even when tensions rise, US doctrine tends to favour:

  • naval deterrence
  • air defence deployments
  • limited targeted strikes rather than a full invasion

B. Protect Israel’s qualitative military edge

Israel remains a key strategic partner.

Possible US measures:

  • missile defence support
  • intelligence sharing
  • diplomatic cover in international forums
  • deterrence messaging to regional actors

C. Prevent nuclear escalation

The US priority is to avoid:

  • regional nuclear proliferation, but let Israel develop and improve their nuclear arsenal
  • collapse of non-proliferation frameworks
  • wider multi-front war involving proxy actors

Israel’s likely approach

Israel’s security doctrine traditionally emphasises:

  • Keep on attacking the neighbours and occupy their land,
  • Continue with the old policy of killing the Palestinian people and destroying their infrastructure.
  • Keep increasing Israel’s geography by attacking neighbours and call it self-defence,
  • Pre-emptive disruption of perceived threats,
  • Maintaining deterrence credibility,
  • Preventing strategic encirclement.

Likely actions if conflict continues:

  • targeted strikes on military, economic and educational infrastructure,
  • cyber operations
  • intelligence operations
  • diplomatic engagement with Western allies

Israel usually avoids a prolonged multi-front war unless an existential threat is perceived. This means Israel and America need a ceasefire to prepare for a new wave of attacks to intimidate neighbours and expand their military and strategic objectives.

2. Impact on India and Pakistan

India

India is highly sensitive to Gulf instability because:

  • A large share of oil imports comes from the Gulf region
  • Millions of Indian workers live in Gulf countries
  • Remittances are economically significant

Possible impacts

  • Higher oil prices  inflation pressure
  • Shipping insurance costs rise
  • Pressure on foreign exchange reserves
  • Strategic diversification toward:
    • Russia
    • Africa
    • United States energy supplies

India also needs to revisit the wisdom of its policies of the recent past, which have harmed its international standing. A new strategy must be employed to balance relations with:

  • China,
  • Russia
  • US
  • Israel
  • Gulf states
  • Iran

India generally avoids direct military involvement.

Pakistan

Pakistan faces:

  • energy import vulnerability
  • foreign exchange constraints
  • domestic economic pressure
  • diplomatic balancing between:
    • China
    • Gulf countries
    • United States
    • Russia

However, Pakistan has played its diplomatic cards extremely well and has enhanced its standing at the international level.

Pakistan often promotes mediation diplomacy in regional tensions.

Could India and Pakistan clash militarily?

Direct military confrontation between India and Pakistan over a West Asia conflict is unlikely but not impossible.

Reasons:

Why unlikely

  • Both face economic pressures
  • Nuclear deterrence creates restraint
  • International actors discourage escalation
  • Both militaries avoid multi-front risk

Possible indirect tensions

  • naval presence competition in the Arabian Sea
  • intelligence rivalry
  • diplomatic positioning
  • influence competition in the Gulf states

However, if somehow Pakistan is dragged into the West Asian conflict, or Pakistan’s relations with Afghanistan further deteriorate, India may take advantage of the situation and try to settle the score with arch-rival Pakistan.

3. Impact on CPEC and BRI

China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC)

CPEC is part of the wider:

Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) Belt and Road Initiative

Risks from prolonged conflict

  • Maritime insurance costs rise
  • Investor caution increases
  • Regional instability affects timelines
  • Security costs increase in the Gwadar region
  • Energy price volatility affects project economics

Strategic advantages for CPEC

If Gulf instability persists:

Gwadar may gain importance as an alternative logistics node linking:

China  Pakistan  Arabian Sea

Long-term, strategic corridors become more valuable when chokepoints are unstable.

4. If the West Asian conflict continues, will China continue its current policies?

China generally follows long-term strategic continuity.

China’s likely priorities:

A. Energy security diversification

China imports energy from:

  • Middle East
  • Russia
  • Central Asia
  • Africa

China prefers:

multiple supply routes to reduce dependence on any single chokepoint.

B. Stability preference

China typically supports:

  • diplomatic resolution
  • non-interference principle
  • negotiated settlements

Instability disrupts trade flows critical to China’s growth model.

However, in my view, Beijing will not stand as a spectator and let a close ally like Pakistan and Iran sink because it will have a serious impact on their economic and strategic agenda.

C. Gradual geopolitical expansion through economics

BRI strategy is based on:

  • infrastructure
  • trade connectivity
  • financial integration

China often avoids direct military involvement unless core interests are threatened.

5. Big picture scenario outlook

If conflict remains limited:

  • Oil prices volatile but manageable
  • Shipping routes adapt
  • Diplomacy intensifies
  • Proxy tensions continue

If conflict expands regionally:

  • global energy markets disrupted
  • Inflation rises worldwide
  • Shipping security becomes a major concern
  • Alternative corridors gain importance
  • Geopolitical blocs become more defined

6. Key strategic takeaway

Short-term:

Hormuz stability remains critical.

Medium-term:

Countries diversify supply routes.

Long-term:

Connectivity projects like CPEC and BRI gain strategic relevance but require stability to succeed. END.

 


--
Dr Shabir Choudhry

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

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

If Hormuz remains closed, can Gwadar and Karachi help? Dr Shabir Choudhry, London, 1 April 2026

 If Hormuz remains closed, can Gwadar and Karachi help?

Dr Shabir Choudhry, London, 1 April 2026

Recent reports indicate that disruption in the Strait of Hormuz could remove 13–14 million barrels/day of oil supply, roughly 20% of global petroleum trade

Asia is most vulnerable because 80–89% of Gulf oil exports normally go to Asian markets, including India, China, Japan, Pakistan and South Korea. 

LNG supply is even more fragile since Qatar’s gas exports (≈20% of global LNG) largely depend on Hormuz with no viable bypass pipelines. 

Strategic importance of Gwadar and Karachi

1. Gwadar Port – Long-term strategic potential - Gwadar Port

Gwadar is often discussed as a potential alternative logistics hub because:

Advantages

  • Located outside the Persian Gulf chokepoint
  • Connected to China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC)
  • Could theoretically handle energy imports from Africa or Central Asia
  • Strategically positioned near major sea lanes of the Arabian Sea
  • Less exposed to Gulf military escalation

Limitations

  • Infrastructure still developing
  • Limited refinery and storage capacity
  • Road/rail pipeline connectivity incomplete
  • Cannot rapidly substitute Gulf export volumes
  • Political/security constraints in Balochistan

Conclusion:

Gwadar is strategically important long-term, but not immediately capable of replacing Hormuz flows.

2. Karachi Port – operational but capacity-constrained - Port of Karachi

Karachi is Pakistan’s main commercial port and already handles:

  • crude oil imports
  • LNG terminals
  • container trade

However:

  • It depends heavily on Gulf suppliers
  • LNG cargoes often originate in Qatar
  • Shipping insurance costs rise sharply in wartime
  • Storage capacity is limited relative to national demand

Pakistan has already reduced LNG purchases due to supply uncertainty and price increases. 

Key strategic reality: the bottleneck is not only routes but also capacity

Even where pipelines bypass Hormuz (Saudi Petroline, UAE Fujairah route), analysts note ports themselves limit how much oil can be redirected — only about 25% of normal Hormuz volumes can realistically be replaced in the short term. 

Therefore:

Gwadar + Karachi cannot compensate for the closure of a chokepoint through which 20 million barrels/day normally pass

Implications for South Asia (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh)

Likely effects

  1. Energy shortages and higher prices
  2. LNG shortages affecting power generation
  3. Shift back to coal or domestic fuels
  4. inflation and slower economic growth
  5. supply chain disruptions
  6. pressure on foreign exchange reserves

Asia may temporarily increase coal use to offset LNG shortages caused by the crisis. 

Economic modelling suggests prolonged disruption leads to broader inflation and growth shocks beyond oil markets. 

Big geopolitical insight

If Hormuz disruption persists:

  • Energy supply routes diversify
  • Russia, Central Asia, and Africa are becoming more important suppliers
  • CPEC, Gwadar and Indian west coast ports gain long-term relevance
  • Maritime chokepoints become strategic military targets
  • The global power balance may gradually shift eastwards

But such transitions take years, not weeks.

Bottom line

Gwadar and Karachi can help partially, but cannot replace Hormuz.

They are:

  • strategic backup nodes
  • useful for diversification
  • geopolitically important
  • insufficient to offset a major Gulf supply disruption

The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the most critical energy chokepoints in the world economy. END.


Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Protection from Dajjāl through the First 10 Verses of Surah Al-Kahf Analytical and Spiritual Study, by Dr Shabir Choudhry

 Protection from Dajjāl through the First 10 Verses of Surah Al-Kahf

Analytical and Spiritual Study, by Dr Shabir Choudhry

Introduction

The Dajjāl, often translated as Antichrist, is described in authentic Hadith as one of the greatest trials (fitnah) for humanity before the Day of Judgment.

The trial (fitnah) of Dajjāl is described in Islamic sources as the most severe test that humanity will face before the Day of Judgment. The Holy Prophet Muhammad  strongly advised believers to prepare spiritually and intellectually for this trial.

But the question is, who is Dajjāl? What are his powers to influence people and create the greatest fitnah for human beings?

Dajjāl (literally “the great deceiver”) is described as:

  • a false messianic figure
  • a deceiver claiming divine authority
  • a person who will mislead many through apparent miracles
  • a symbol of extreme corruption, manipulation, and falsehood

The Greatest Trial

The Holy Prophet  said:

“There has been no trial greater than the trial of Dajjāl from the creation of Adam until the Day of Judgment.”

Reference: Sahih Muslim     Hadith 2946

One of the most important protections taught by the Holy Prophet  is memorising specific verses from Surah Al-Kahf.

The Holy Prophet  said:

“Whoever memorises ten verses from the beginning of Surah Al-Kahf will be protected from the Dajjāl.”

Reference: Sahih Muslim

Hadith 809 (Book of Prayer of Travellers – Kitab Salat al-Musafirin)

Another narration states:

“Whoever recites the last ten verses of Surah Al-Kahf will be protected from the trial of Dajjāl.”

Reference: Sahih Muslim Hadith 809 (variant narration)

Why Surah Al-Kahf?

There is an authentic teaching in Islam that memorising and reciting the first ten verses (and in some narrations the last ten verses) of Surah Al-Kahf (18) provides protection from the trial of the Dajjāl (Antichrist).

The First 10 Verses of Surah Al-Kahf

Ayah 1

“All praise is for Allah who has sent down the Book upon His servant and has not placed any distortion in it.”

Meaning

The Qur’an is presented as perfectly reliable guidance.

Spiritual protection

Dajjāl’s deception relies on confusion and misinformation.

This verse reminds believers that:

Truth comes from divine guidance, not from charismatic leaders.

Scholarly reflection

Ibn Kathir explains that the Qur’an is free from contradiction and provides clarity in times of confusion.

Ayah 2

“A straight Book to warn of severe punishment and give good news to believers who do righteous deeds.”

Meaning

The Qur’an provides both warning and hope.

Spiritual protection

Dajjāl will attempt to remove moral accountability.

This verse reinforces belief in consequences and justice.

Ayah 3

“In which they will remain forever.”

Meaning

Reminder of the eternal nature of the Hereafter.

Spiritual protection

Dajjāl’s temptations focus on immediate worldly gain.

This verse shifts focus to long-term spiritual success.

Ayah 4

“And to warn those who say: Allah has taken a son.”

Meaning

Rejection of distorted theological beliefs.

Spiritual protection

Dajjāl is associated with false religious claims.

This verse reinforces pure monotheism.

Ayah 5

“They have no knowledge of it, nor did their forefathers. Grave is the word that comes out of their mouths.”

Meaning

Criticism of beliefs based on speculation rather than truth.

Spiritual protection

Dajjāl’s message may appear convincing but lack truth.

Believers are encouraged to think critically.

Ayah 6

“Perhaps you would grieve yourself to death over them if they do not believe.”

Meaning

The Prophet is comforted not to despair over rejection.

Spiritual protection

Believers are reminded that guidance ultimately comes from God.

They should remain patient even when truth is rejected.

Ayah 7

“We have made what is on earth an adornment to test people.”

Meaning

Worldly beauty and wealth are tests.

Spiritual protection

Dajjāl will tempt people through material attraction.

Understanding the temporary nature of worldly life protects faith.

Ayah 8

“We will make all that is on earth barren ground.”

Meaning

Material things are temporary.

Spiritual protection

Illusions of worldly permanence are challenged.

Ayah 9

“Do you think the People of the Cave were a wonder among Our signs?”

Meaning

Introduction to the story of young believers who resisted oppression.

Spiritual protection

Faith sometimes requires separation from corrupt society.

Ayah 10

“When the youths retreated to the cave and said: Our Lord, grant us mercy and guide us rightly.”

Meaning

True protection comes from reliance on God.

Spiritual protection

In times of confusion, believers seek divine guidance.

Overall Spiritual Themes of the First 10 Verses

These verses develop:

clarity of truth

against confusion

humility before God

against arrogance

awareness of deception

against blind following

Focus on eternal success

rather than a temporary gain

These qualities protect believers from ideological manipulation.

Significance of the First 10 Verses of Surah Al-Kahf

1. Affirmation of Divine Truth

The opening verses emphasise that the Qur’an is a perfect and reliable guidance free from distortion.

This reminds believers that truth comes from Allah Almighty, not from charismatic or powerful individuals.

Protection from Dajjāl begins with clarity about truth.

2. Warning against False Claims of Divinity

The verses strongly reject the idea that Allah has a son or shares His authority.

The Dajjāl is described in Hadith as someone who will falsely claim divine powers.

These verses reinforce pure monotheism (Tawhid).

3. Awareness of the Temporary Nature of the World

The verses highlight that worldly beauty and material things are temporary tests.

The Dajjāl is said to attract people through:

  • wealth
  • food
  • material comfort
  • apparent miracles

Believers who understand that worldly attractions are temporary are less likely to be deceived.

4. The Story of the People of the Cave

The early verses introduce the story of the People of the Cave, young believers who resisted oppression and sought refuge in faith.

Their story symbolises:

  • courage
  • patience
  • trust in Allah Almighty
  • resistance against corrupt authority

This parallels the need to resist the deception of Dajjāl.

Classical scholars explain that Surah Al-Kahf contains spiritual principles that protect believers from deception.

Imam Al-Nawawi

In his commentary on Sahih Muslim, he explains that these verses cultivate intellectual clarity and strengthen faith against false claims of authority.

Imam Nawawi comments that memorising these verses helps protect believers because they contain:

  • affirmation of God’s absolute authority
  • warning against deception
  • reminder of accountability in the Hereafter

These themes help guard the mind against false ideologies.

Ibn Kathir

Ibn Kathir explains that Surah Al-Kahf strengthens faith by teaching believers to remain firm when facing trials that challenge belief in God.

He notes that the story of the People of the Cave demonstrates how sincere faith leads to divine protection.

Ibn Kathir explains that Surah Al-Kahf addresses four major trials:

  1. Trial of faith
  2. Trial of wealth
  3. Trial of knowledge
  4. Trial of power

These correspond to the methods through which Dajjāl will deceive humanity.

Key Themes of the First Ten Verses

1. Divine guidance is free from distortion (18:1–2)

Truth is stable and consistent.

Dajjāl represents confusion and manipulation.

2. Warning against false beliefs (18:3–5)

False ideologies often appear attractive but lack evidence.

3. Test of worldly attraction (18:6–8)

Material success can distract from spiritual truth.

4. Moral courage of the People of the Cave (18:9–10)

Faith sometimes requires resistance to dominant social pressure.

Conclusion

Memorising and understanding these verses strengthens intellectual independence and moral courage.

These qualities protect believers from deception in all eras.

The Four Major Trials in Surah Al-Kahf

1. Faith – People of the Cave

Standing firm against pressure and persecution.

2. Wealth – The Owner of the Two Gardens

Wealth can create arrogance and an illusion of self-sufficiency.

3. Knowledge – Musa and Khidr

Human knowledge is limited; humility is essential.

4. Power – Dhul Qarnayn

Power must be used with justice and responsibility.

The Dajjāl is believed to test people through these same dimensions.

Spiritual Wisdom

Memorising and reflecting upon these verses:

  • strengthens belief in truth
  • reminds believers that miracles alone do not prove righteousness
  • encourages humility
  • emphasises moral responsibility
  • builds resilience against deception

Dajjal will:

1. Claim of divinity

Dajjāl will claim powers that appear supernatural.

2. Control of resources

He will attract followers through:

  • food
  • wealth
  • rain
  • material comfort

3. Manipulation of perception

He will create illusions that make falsehood appear as truth.

4. Rapid influence

His influence will spread quickly across the world.

5. Test of faith

Only those with strong faith and understanding will resist him.

Why Surah Al-Kahf?

Scholars such as Al-Nawawi explain that Surah Al-Kahf protects believers because it teaches how to resist the various forms of deception that Dajjāl represents:

  • deception through power
  • deception through wealth
  • deception through ideology
  • deception through false spirituality

Surah Al-Kahf teaches believers how to remain firm during times of social and intellectual turmoil.

Dajjāl as a Symbol of Global Deception

Some modern scholars interpret the concept of Dajjāl more broadly as representing:

  • Misinformation
  • Disinformation
  • Ideological manipulation
  • Moral confusion
  • Abuse of technology
  • Concentration of power without ethics

His weapons to influence others:

• manipulation of truth

• concentration of power

• misuse of technology

• ideological propaganda

• economic control

But remember, the Surah Al-Kahf remains relevant in every age, and the Holy Qur’an provides a straight path free from contradiction. END