Friday, 6 March 2026

The ‘Holy Land’ in the Quran: Scripture History, and Political Misuse. By Dr Shabir Choudhry, London.

 The ‘Holy Land’ in the Quran: Scripture History, and Political Misuse.

Sacred Texts, Political Claims, and the Struggle for the Holy Land

By Dr Shabir Choudhry, London.


Few regions of the world carry as much historical, spiritual, and political weight as the land known variously as Palestine, Israel, or the Holy Land. For Jews, Christians, and Muslims alike, it holds profound religious significance. Yet the very texts that speak of its sanctity have also become sources of intense political dispute.

One verse of the Qur’an that is sometimes cited in discussions about the Holy Land appears in Qur’an, Surah Al-Ma’idah, verse 21:


“O my people! Enter the Holy Land which Allah has destined for you ˹to enter˺. And do not turn back or else you will become losers.”

 

At first glance, this verse may appear to endorse a divinely ordained claim to the land for the Children of Israel. Some interpreters—particularly in political debates surrounding modern Israel and Palestine—cite it as evidence that Islam itself recognises a permanent Jewish right to the territory.

 

However, such readings often ignore the historical context of the verse and the broader ethical framework of the Qur’an. Like many scriptural passages, it addresses a specific historical moment rather than establishing a timeless geopolitical mandate.

The verse appears in the story of Moses (Musa in Islamic tradition), who urged the Children of Israel to enter the land after their liberation from the rule of Pharaoh. The Qur’an recounts how fear and hesitation among the people prevented them from doing so, resulting in their wandering in the wilderness for forty years.

Understanding this narrative requires distinguishing between a historical command given to a particular community at a particular time and a universal political claim that would apply to all generations.

In the heated debates surrounding the modern conflict between Israel and Palestine, such distinctions are often lost. Sacred texts are frequently invoked to justify contemporary political positions, even when the historical circumstances of those texts are very different from present realities.

Historical Context of the Verse

A careful reading of the Qur’an, classical Islamic scholarship, and historical context reveals that the issue is far more complex. The verse concerns a historical command to the Children of Israel during the time of Prophet Musa (Moses), rather than granting an eternal political entitlement to territory.

Understanding this distinction is essential not only for theological clarity but also for preventing the misuse of religious texts in contemporary political disputes.

The verse appears in Surah Al-Ma’idah (5:21) during a narrative about the Children of Israel after their liberation from Egypt under the leadership of Prophet Musa.

After escaping the tyranny of Pharaoh, the Israelites were instructed to enter a land described as al-ard al-muqaddasah—the “holy land.” Most classical commentators interpret this as the region historically known as Canaan, broadly corresponding to parts of present-day Palestine, Israel, Jordan, and surrounding territories.

However, the Qur’anic narrative continues by describing how the Israelites hesitated and refused to enter the land because they feared its inhabitants. As a result, according to the Qur’an, they were condemned to wander in the wilderness for forty years.

This context demonstrates an important point: the verse was part of a specific historical moment, not a timeless political decree.

What Classical Islamic Scholars Said

Traditional Islamic scholarship did not interpret this verse as granting an unconditional or eternal territorial entitlement.

Classical commentators such as:

generally explained the verse as a command from God to the Israelites of that particular generation.

They emphasised two key points:

  1. The command was conditional upon obedience to God.
  2. The Israelites actually lost the opportunity because they refused to enter the land.

In other words, the Qur’an itself records that the command was not fulfilled because of their disobedience.

Thus, from a classical Islamic perspective, the verse cannot easily be interpreted as an everlasting legal entitlement.

Conditional Promise, Not Eternal Ownership

Islamic theology consistently emphasises that divine favour is conditional upon righteousness and justice.

Throughout the Qur’an, God repeatedly states that:

  • Those who obey divine guidance are elevated.
  • Those who disobey lose privilege and status.

Therefore, the instruction to enter the Holy Land should be understood within this broader moral framework. It was not a permanent ethnic title deed but rather a historical directive tied to faith and obedience.

Even within the Qur’an, the Children of Israel are praised at certain points but also criticised for rebellion and corruption at others.

This balanced portrayal further suggests that the Qur’an does not endorse unconditional national entitlement.

Modern Political Interpretations

In modern times, some political commentators and religious activists cite this verse as proof that the land of Palestine was divinely granted exclusively to the Jewish people.

However, such interpretations often overlook the historical and theological context of the verse.

The modern state of Israel was established in 1948 following a complex combination of historical migration, international diplomacy, and conflict. Its legitimacy and borders are debated primarily within the framework of international law and political negotiations—not solely religious scripture.

Reducing such a complicated geopolitical conflict to a single religious verse risks distorting both theology and history.

Religion and Territorial Claims

Religious texts have frequently been invoked throughout history to justify territorial claims. This phenomenon is not unique to Judaism or Islam; it has occurred in many traditions.

However, relying exclusively on ancient scripture to determine modern political borders raises serious questions.

If every historical religious claim were taken literally and applied politically today, countless conflicts around the world would become impossible to resolve.

Modern international systems are therefore based on legal principles such as sovereignty, human rights, and self-determination rather than ancient territorial promises.

The Ethical Message of the Qur’an

A broader reading of the Qur’an reveals that its central concern is not land ownership but justice, righteousness, and moral responsibility.

The Qur’an repeatedly emphasises:

  • Justice between peoples
  • Protection of the oppressed
  • Respect for human dignity

These principles suggest that any political solution to the Middle East conflict should prioritise fairness and human rights rather than selective readings of scripture.

Avoiding the Politicisation of Religion

The misuse of religious texts for political purposes has often intensified conflicts rather than resolving them.

When sacred scripture is treated as a political weapon, it risks deepening divisions between communities and transforming political disputes into existential religious battles.

The Middle East conflict is already one of the most emotionally charged geopolitical struggles in the modern world. Adding absolutist religious interpretations only makes compromise more difficult.

A responsible approach requires recognising the difference between theological narratives and modern political realities.

Conclusion

Surah 5, Ayah 21 refers to a historical episode involving the Children of Israel and their prophet, Musa. Classical Islamic scholarship interprets it as a command directed at a particular generation under specific circumstances.

The verse cannot reasonably be used as a universal or permanent political title deed to land.

Understanding this distinction is crucial in a world where religious texts are often drawn into political debates. Faith traditions deserve respect, but they should not be selectively manipulated to justify modern geopolitical claims.

Ultimately, lasting peace in the Middle East will not come from competing interpretations of ancient scripture but from a commitment to justice, coexistence, and respect for the rights of all people who live in the land.

The Verse and the Present Crisis

The continuing conflict in Palestine and Israel demonstrates the danger of transforming religious narratives into political weapons. When sacred texts are interpreted as permanent territorial mandates, compromise becomes almost impossible because each side begins to see the conflict not merely as political, but as divinely ordained.

The Qur’anic verse in Surah 5:21 must therefore be understood within its historical and theological context. It refers to a specific moment in the history of the Children of Israel under the leadership of Prophet Musa. It was not revealed as an eternal political decree that would determine sovereignty over land thousands of years later.

More importantly, the ethical framework of the Qur’an places justice, compassion, and accountability at the centre of human conduct. Any interpretation that leads to oppression, dispossession, or perpetual conflict contradicts these broader moral principles.

The tragedy unfolding in the Middle East today is not simply a struggle over land; it is also a struggle over narratives—religious, historical, and political. Competing interpretations of history and scripture are frequently used to legitimise violence and deny the rights of others.

A responsible reading of religious texts should encourage humility rather than absolutism. Scripture can inspire moral guidance, but it cannot substitute for political wisdom, international law, and respect for the dignity of all human beings.

Lasting peace in the Holy Land will not emerge from claims rooted in ancient texts alone. It will require recognition that the land is sacred to many communities and that justice must extend to all who call it home. Without such recognition, the cycle of conflict will continue, and the very land once described as holy will remain a theatre of suffering rather than a place of peace. END

 

 

Thursday, 5 March 2026

Justice Department publishes some missing Epstein files related to Trump. By Stephen Fowler and Saige Miller

 Justice Department publishes some missing Epstein files related to Trump

March 5, 202610:09 PM ET

By 

Stephen Fowler and Saige Miller


An NPR investigation finds the Justice Department has removed or withheld Epstein files related to sexual abuse accusations that mention President Trump.

Department of Justice and Getty Images/Collage by Danielle A. Scruggs/NPR

The Justice Department has published additional Epstein files related to allegations that President Trump sexually abused a minor after an NPR investigation found dozens of pages were withheld.

They include 16 new pages that cover three additional FBI interview summaries with a woman who accused Trump of sexual abuse decades ago when she was a minor. Also included are two pages of an intake form documenting the initial call to the FBI from a friend who relayed the claims.

NPR's investigation previously found 53 pages that appeared to be missing from the public database.

Now that these documents are published, there are still 37 pages of records still missing from the public database, including notes from the interviews, a law enforcement report and license records.


Justice Department withheld and removed some Epstein files related to Trump

The Justice Department has repeatedly told NPR that any documents withheld were "privileged, are duplicates or relate to an ongoing federal investigation."

Last week, after NPR's initial story, the Justice Department said it was determining if records had been mistakenly tagged as duplicates and if any were found, "the Department will of course publish it, consistent with the law."

More detail, but less context

The interview documents are part of more than 1,000 new pages published to the Epstein files public database Thursday that also include what appears to be the complete case file from the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell initiated in 2006.

The new documents go into more detail about the allegations made against both Trump and Epstein when the woman was between 13 to 15 years old.

An FBI email summarizing the claims and a Justice Department PowerPoint slide deck note the woman claimed that around 1983, when she was around 13 years old, Epstein introduced her to Trump, "who subsequently forced her head down to his exposed penis which she subsequently bit. In response, Trump punched her in the head and kicked her out."

In the newly-published documents, the woman's described how Trump allegedly put her head "down to his penis" and she "bit the s*** out of it." She alleged that Trump struck her and said something to the effect of "get this little b**** the hell out of here."

Sponsor Message

During the final interview the woman had with the FBI in 2019, when asked whether she "felt comfortable detailing her contacts with Trump," she reportedly asked "what the point would be of providing the information at this point in her life when there was a strong possibility nothing could be done about it."

The new files do not shed any more light onto how credible federal investigators viewed her claims or how they were resolved. Still unanswered, too, is why the allegations were included in a Justice Department slide presentation last year summarizing the cases against Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

Trump has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing related to Epstein. The White House and Justice Department have warned that the raw files released to the public include "untrue and sensationalist claims," and a White House spokeswoman previously told NPR that the president was "totally exonerated."

"Just as President Trump has said, he's been totally exonerated on anything relating to Epstein," White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told NPR in a statement. "And by releasing thousands of pages of documents, cooperating with the House Oversight Committee's subpoena request, signing the Epstein Files Transparency Act, and calling for more investigations into Epstein's Democrat friends, President Trump has done more for Epstein's victims than anyone before him. Meanwhile, Democrats like Hakeem Jeffries and Stacey Plaskett have yet to explain why they were soliciting money and meetings from Epstein after he was a convicted sex offender."

Politics

Congressional Republicans will also investigate missing Epstein files related to Trump

Democrats and Republicans on the House Oversight Committee have demanded answers from the Justice Department regarding the missing files and the department's handling of the release of Epstein documents. This week, the committee voted to subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi to answer questions about the files.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

Have information to share about the Epstein files? Reach out to Stephen Fowler through encrypted communications on Signal at stphnfwlr.25. Please

 

https://www.npr.org/2026/03/05/nx-s1-5737562/justice-department-missing-epstein-files-trump

Keir Starmer apologises to Israel for noticing Israel carried out a false flag on RAF Akrotiri.

 Keir Starmer apologises to Israel for noticing Israel carried out a false flag on RAF Akrotiri.

Normal Island News Mar 5.
 British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has been forced into a grovelling apology after mistakenly noticing that Israel had carried out a false flag operation against the UK. The drone incident at RAF Akrotiri followed a series of explosions on oil facilities from Saudi Arabia to the UAE that could not be traced back to Iran.

Blasts on sites like Saudi Aramco’s Ras Tanura refinery and Qatar’s LNG operations had sent global energy prices soaring. Naturally, we blamed Iran for the looming recession, but when officials denied attacks they should be gloating about, it was clear our propaganda wasn’t adding up. What do you mean—and not for the first time?

The intrigue deepened when UAE investigators uncovered a Mossad cell operating in the shadows of Dubai’s glittering skyline. In a shocking outburst of antisemitism, Dubai announced it had caught Israelis red-handed with “blueprints” for further bombings. Their aim was to trick Gulf nations into attacking Iran, who would then send rockets their way instead of towards Israel. The story echoed similar claims from Tucker Carlson, regarding Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

Israel was so incensed by the foiling of its latest plot that it has vowed to assassinate several Western influencers as punishment—a threat that has warmed many Brits to the Zionist cause, but may cause the collapse of Dubai’s tourism economy. What do you mean—every cloud has a silver lining?

As British “ex-pats” (white immigrants) are the lynchpin of Dubai’s economy, and Westminster hasn’t been entirely enthused about Israel’s latest round of genocide, Netanyahu decided the UK must be brought back into line. Tel Aviv figured now was not the time to release the kompromat on Starmer, instead opting for another false flag.

Our close friend and ally sent a series of drones towards RAF Akrotiri in the hope that Starmer would trigger Article 5 against Iran and the Goy Alliance would soak up bombs and bullets for Israel. After all, that is what goyim are best for.

Akrotiri is one of our proudest colonial achievements, a corner of Cyprus that we kept after the fall of the empire that now endangers the lives of every Cypriot. The strategic outpost, which hosts Typhoon fighters, F-35 stealth jets, and even a hangar for U-2 spy planes, had remained neutral by conducting surveillance flights for Israel, allowing the US to refuel there, and acting as a launchpad for attacks against the Houthis, as well as other neutral things that definitely don’t make us party to war crimes. Sadly, it seems such neutrality is antisemitic nowadays, so Israel cratered our airstrip and then attempted further damage, with two more drones being intercepted en route.

The strike was no 9/11, but Cyprus was jolted into the widening war, scramblingF-35s to defend its airspace. Everything was going according to plan, but blabber-mouth Starmer just couldn’t keep his mouth shut. The Prime Minister pointed out those drones did not come from Iran—they actually came from much closer—and now every insufferable conspiracy theorist gets to brag that they were right again.

If Starmer hadn’t told the truth, he would be committing treason against the UK, and if he had told the truth, he would be committing treason against the Israeli lobby, so he made a decision that was less likely to result in jail time: he told the truth while remaining as vague as possible.

Starmer was promptly summoned—or some would say marched—into a closed-door meeting with the Israeli ambassador for a dressing down. The Prime Minister’s boss demanded he issue a wholehearted apology and pretend those drones came from Lebanon. Starmer did exactly that, and the Israeli ambassador sent some Ukrainian models his way as a thank you. It’s amazing how nice the Epstein Class can be when you behave yourself.

Cypriot officials were fuming at the lack of communication, suggesting they might renegotiate Akrotiri’s status out of fear of what stupid thing Israel might do next. Cypriots say they have no interest in soaking up bombs for the Greater Israel Project, thank you very much, but Starmer is very much considering sending your children into war. To be fair, he might have no other choice.

Laura from Normal Island News <normalislandnews@substac

Sunday, 1 March 2026

Air Power, Technology, and the Myth of Emotion-Driven Warfare. Dr Shabir Choudhry, London. 2 March 2026.

 Air Power, Technology, and the Myth of Emotion-Driven Warfare

Dr Shabir Choudhry, London. 2 March 2026.


Public discourse in parts of South Asia often frames military conflict in emotional or ideological terms. While morale and public sentiment are undeniably important elements in national resilience, modern warfare is ultimately determined less by rhetoric and more by technology, intelligence integration, and operational capability.


Recent developments in the Middle East illustrate this reality with clarity. When a state is capable of deploying hundreds of advanced combat aircraft, conducting coordinated strikes against hundreds of targets in a single operational window, and maintaining sustained air dominance, the decisive variables are not passion or symbolism. They are surveillance systems, electronic warfare, satellite intelligence, precision-guided munitions, airborne early warning platforms, and network-centric command structures.


The Technological Gap

The contemporary strategic imbalance between Israel and Iran is rooted primarily in air and systems capability.

Iran does maintain an air force composed of American-origin aircraft such as the F-4 Phantom and F-5 Tiger, alongside Russian platforms including the MiG-29 and Su-24. However, many of these aircraft are decades old. Operational readiness, maintenance constraints, and limited modernisation options reduce their effective combat potential.

Israel, by contrast, operates a modern fleet that includes F-35I Adir stealth fighters, F-15I Ra’am, and F-16I Sufa aircraft. These platforms are integrated with air-to-air refuelling, advanced electronic warfare suites, and real-time intelligence networks. The combination enables deep penetration capability, reduced radar detectability, and coordinated multi-domain operations.

This disparity does not imply the absence of Iranian capability. Iran has significantly advanced its drone technology and ballistic missile program, reportedly fielding thousands of systems, including loitering munitions such as the Shahed-136. Missile stockpiles can serve as strategic deterrence tools. However, deterrence through missile quantity differs fundamentally from sustained air superiority supported by integrated battle management systems.

Air Superiority as the Decisive Factor

Modern air superiority depends on:

  • Multi-role stealth aircraft
  • Airborne Early Warning and Control Systems (AWACS)
  • Electronic warfare platforms
  • Integrated air defence networks
  • Real-time intelligence fusion
  • Precision-guided strike capability

Israel’s layered missile defence architecture — including Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and Arrow systems — adds another dimension by reducing vulnerability to incoming rockets and ballistic missiles. Such multi-tiered systems are designed not merely for interception, but for maintaining operational continuity during sustained conflict.

Iran’s air defence assets, including the Bavar-373 and Russian S-300 systems, provide defensive depth but are not generally assessed as equivalent to Israel’s fully integrated and battle-tested network with advanced electronic countermeasures and centralised command integration.

The Changing Nature of War

Contemporary conflict increasingly unfolds in stages that are technological rather than territorial:

  1. Suppression of radar and surveillance networks
  2. Disruption of communications and command-and-control systems
  3. Cyber operations targeting infrastructure
  4. Precision strikes on strategic assets

The first visible explosion is often the final phase of a process that began long before kinetic action. In this environment, emotional resolve cannot compensate for systemic vulnerability.

Morale and Preparation

Morale remains essential in warfare. Societal cohesion, leadership confidence, and psychological resilience matter greatly. However, morale without preparation is insufficient. Strategic deterrence in the modern era requires sustained investment in technology, training, integration, and adaptability.

The Holy Quran says:

“Prepare against them what you ˹believers˺ can of ˹military˺ power and cavalry to deter Allah’s enemies and your enemies, as well as other enemies unknown to you but known to Allah. Whatever you spend in the cause of Allah will be paid to you in full, and you will not be wronged. (Qur’an 8:60)

This Qur’anic injunction in Surah Al-Anfal is urging believers to prepare whatever force they can — has historically been interpreted as a call for readiness and capability. In contemporary terms, this principle aligns with technological preparedness and institutional competence rather than symbolic assertion.

Sadly, most of the rulers of Muslim countries have other priorities, and they do not invest in new technology or even let students study other subjects which can help them to prepare against aggression, as they are busy spending their resources on promoting sectarianism and extremism.

Implications for South Asia

For states in South Asia observing developments in the Middle East, the lesson is not about choosing sides. It is about recognising that modern conflict is multidimensional and technology-driven. Strategic planning must prioritise:

  • Airspace control capability
  • Cyber resilience
  • Intelligence coordination
  • Defence modernization
  • Economic sustainability during a crisis

The central takeaway is straightforward: in modern warfare, control of the air and the information domain shapes the battlefield long before ground forces are engaged.

Emotion inspires. Technology decides.

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

Email: drshabirchoudhry@gmail.com

Ripples of a Regional Conflagration: How the Middle East Crisis Is Reshaping Security Dynamics in Pakistan and South Asia. Dr Shabir Choudhry, London.

 Ripples of a Regional Conflagration:

How the Middle East Crisis Is Reshaping Security Dynamics in Pakistan and South Asia.

Dr Shabir Choudhry, London.


The recent escalation in the Middle East has underscored a stark geopolitical truth: localised conflicts now have global reverberations. What began as shifting regional alignments in West Asia has rapidly evolved into a cascade of political, security, and societal effects — extending far beyond the immediate theatre of confrontation. Pakistan and the broader South Asian region are currently experiencing the early shockwaves of this unfolding crisis.

1. A Regional Flashpoint and Its Global Ripples

Reports of the death of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in a reportedly coordinated U.S.–Israeli airstrike marked a strategic inflection point in the Middle East’s volatile power dynamics. Iranian retaliation, including missile strikes intercepted over Gulf skies, indicates that we have moved beyond episodic proxy skirmishes into an era of more direct and high-risk engagement.

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s swift condemnation — branding the killing as a “cynical murder” and warning against destabilisation — illustrates the broader global stakes. Russia’s interventionist posture underscores how this conflict is no longer just a regional confrontation but a flashpoint carrying global strategic implications.

2. Pakistan: Political, Social, and Security Repercussions

A) Domestic Protests and Political Pressure

Across Pakistan’s major cities, demonstrations erupted in solidarity with Iran and in protest against foreign military action. In Karachi and other urban centres, clashes between demonstrators and security forces have led to multiple fatalities. These events point to a volatile mix of domestic political expression and regional solidarity — a blend that creates complex challenges for governance.

B) Airspace Disruptions and Flight Cancellations

As the conflict mounted, commercial aviation felt the strain. Flights destined for Middle Eastern hubs were rerouted, diverted, or cancelled altogether due to safety concerns in the region’s airspace. Pakistan found itself temporarily hosting these diversions, placing additional pressure on its airport operations and raising questions about civil aviation resilience in times of diplomatic breakdown.

C) Military Alerts and Rumours of Escalation

Heightened security alerts — including red alerts in Pakistan-administered Kashmir (PoK) and increased readiness along international borders — are symptomatic of how rapidly risk perceptions can change. Rumours circulating on social media about possible external targeting, particularly in sensitive regions such as PoK, reflect a broader atmosphere of anxiety. While such claims should be treated cautiously, they nonetheless demonstrate how fragile strategic confidence has become.

3. Why These Ripples Matter for South Asia. South Asia is indirectly linked to West Asia through multiple strategic vectors:

A) Geopolitical Alignments

India’s deepening defence and intelligence cooperation with Israel — covering surveillance technology, cybersecurity, and armaments — places New Delhi within a broader constellation of U.S.–Israel–Gulf strategic realignment. Pakistan, by contrast, navigates a far more complex web of competing pressures involving Iran, Gulf states, China, and the U.S.

B) Economic Interdependence

Remittances from Gulf states, energy imports, and labour mobility create economic linkages. Disruption in Middle Eastern stability could economically stress South Asian economies already operating under tight fiscal conditions.

C) Narrative Transmission

Public opinion, religious solidarity, and media dynamics can amplify distant conflicts into domestic political pressures. As seen in Pakistan, public demonstrations often echo emotional responses rooted in shared cultural and religious identities. These, in turn, can feed back into political decision-making.

4. Global Responses and Strategic Signalling

Putin’s public condemnation is not merely rhetorical. It reflects an ongoing strategic competition between major powers to shape the post–Middle East Order:

  • Russia frames itself as a counterweight to U.S.–Israeli military preemption.
  • The United States reaffirms its strategic commitments to Israel and broader security architectures.
  • China seeks to protect its energy interests and expanding economic footprint.
  • Gulf states find themselves pulled between alignment and autonomy.

Each actor’s posture sends signals that reverberate across regions — including into South Asia.

5. Interconnected Risks and Strategic Imperatives

The crisis in West Asia is a stark reminder that in the 21st century, no conflict is purely local. The dynamics are:

  • Alliance-based instead of proximity-based
  • Narrative-fuelled instead of geography-limited
  • Economic and societal as much as military

For Pakistan and other South Asian states, the challenge lies in navigating these interconnected pressures without being drawn into direct confrontation.

This demands:

  • Strengthened diplomatic channels across competing blocs
  • Clear communication strategies to manage public perception
  • Enhanced intelligence cooperation to prevent misinformation from escalating into conflict
  • Economic planning to buffer against external shocks

6. Conclusion: From Conflict to Containment

The current phase of Middle East instability carries a heightened risk of spillover into South Asia, not through tanks or direct military intervention, but through alliance networks, economic dependencies, and narrative cascades.

What began as a strategic realignment in the Middle East has become a litmus test for regional resilience. South Asian leadership — political, economic, and intellectual — must engage with this reality not as distant observers but as stakeholders in a geopolitically interconnected world.

Only through measured diplomacy, strategic foresight, and an emphasis on stability can the region mitigate the ripple effects of a conflict that shows no sign of being contained within its geographic origins.

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

Email: drshabirchoudhry@gmail.com

Saturday, 28 February 2026

From the Abraham Accords to South Asia: Realignment, Escalation, and the Risk of Strategic Spillover. Dr Shabir Choudhry

  From the Abraham Accords to South Asia: Realignment, Escalation, and the Risk of Strategic Spillover.

 Dr Shabir Choudhry


The current turbulence in the Middle East is not an isolated eruption of violence. It is the visible phase of a deeper structural transformation that began years ago with shifting alliances, normalisation agreements, and recalibrated power balances. The question now confronting policymakers is not merely whether the conflict will intensify within West Asia, but whether its consequences will extend into South Asia.

The concern is not about tanks moving across continents. It is about alliance systems, strategic compression, and geopolitical contagion.

1. The Transformation of Regional Architecture

The Abraham Accords marked more than diplomatic normalisation between Israel and certain Arab states. They represented the institutionalisation of a new security architecture in West Asia. Over the past decade:

  • Israel deepened security and intelligence cooperation with the United States.
  • The UAE and Bahrain formalised normalisation.
  • Gulf states diversified relations toward China while maintaining U.S. security dependence.
  • India strengthened defence and technological cooperation with Israel.
  • Iran expanded its missile capabilities and proxy network as asymmetric deterrence.

What was once a fragmented regional system began evolving into overlapping security blocs.

The crucial shift occurred when normalisation moved from diplomacy to operational integration — particularly in air defence coordination and intelligence sharing. If Gulf states intercept projectiles aimed at Israel, normalisation becomes not merely political recognition but shared military infrastructure.

This practically mean defence alliance and reduces strategic ambiguity and increases bloc consolidation. It is clear when you have a defence alliance with one country there will be consequences if there is a serious tension or a war.

2. The Iran–Israel Threshold

For years, confrontation between Iran and Israel remained a shadow war — fought in Syria and Lebanon through cyber operations, assassinations, and proxies.

Recent escalations suggest a lowering of thresholds. Direct missile exchanges, public signalling, and overt retaliatory measures indicate that deterrence stability is under strain.

If sustained confrontation emerges, three immediate consequences follow:

  1. Maritime insecurity in the Gulf and Red Sea.
  2. Energy market volatility.
  3. Increased U.S. military involvement.

But beyond these tactical effects lies a deeper systemic shift: the polarisation of the region into more rigid alignment structures.

And alignment structures rarely remain geographically confined.

3. India’s Position in the Emerging Order

India’s strategic partnership with Israel has grown significantly, encompassing missile systems, surveillance technologies, cybersecurity, and intelligence cooperation.

India also has strong ties with some Arab states, particularly with the UAE, which is openly standing with Israel. India maintains strong relations with other Arab States and expanding engagement, and the proposed India–Middle East–Europe economic corridor symbolises this emerging strategic connectivity.

However, it must be noted that India is not a direct party to the Middle Eastern conflict. Nevertheless, it is embedded within the broader alignment network that supports Israel’s security ecosystem, and recent agreements to further cement their relations.

This alters South Asian strategic perceptions — particularly in Pakistan — where Israel–India cooperation has long been viewed through a security lens.

4. Strategic Compression and Pakistan

Pakistan faces a uniquely delicate balancing environment:

  • It cannot openly normalise with Israel without domestic upheaval.
  • It relies economically on the Gulf states.
  • It shares a sensitive border with Iran.
  • It is strategically tied to China.
  • It remains in long-term rivalry with India.

If the Middle East hardens into two visible blocs — a U.S.–Israel–Gulf alignment on one side and an Iran-centred axis on the other — Pakistan’s manoeuvring space narrows.

This is strategic compression. Compression does not automatically produce war. It produces vulnerability, internal strain, and increased exposure to external pressures.

Economic fragility compounds this risk. When regional polarisation increases, economically weaker states experience stress first — through energy shocks, remittance fluctuations, and political polarisation.

5. Potential Spillover Mechanisms into South Asia

Spillover is unlikely to occur through conventional military expansion. Instead, it may unfold through several indirect pathways:

A. Sectarian Polarisation. Heightened Iran–Israel confrontation could intensify sectarian narratives across South Asia, particularly in Pakistan and parts of India.

B. Proxy Activation. Militant or ideological networks may seek to exploit Middle Eastern tensions to mobilise or establish symbolic linkages.

C. Diplomatic Repositioning

India could leverage deeper integration with the Middle East to strengthen its strategic partnerships, potentially altering the regional balance of power vis-à-vis Pakistan.

D. Energy and Economic Shockwaves

South Asian economies are heavily dependent on Gulf energy supplies and remittances. Prolonged instability would generate inflationary and fiscal pressures.

E. Great Power Overlay

China, the United States, and Russia all maintain strategic interests spanning both West and South Asia. Escalation in one theatre increases friction in the other.

6. Scenarios for the Coming Years. Three trajectories appear plausible:

Scenario 1: Contained Escalation

Limited but repeated exchanges between Iran and Israel, controlled through deterrence signalling. Spillover remains economic and rhetorical.

Scenario 2: Sustained Regional Polarisation

Gulf states integrate more deeply into Israeli security systems. Iran intensifies asymmetric responses. South Asia experiences indirect political and ideological turbulence.

Scenario 3: System-Level Confrontation

Direct prolonged Iran–Israel conflict draws in major powers. Energy markets destabilise. South Asian states are forced into clearer alignment positions. Internal instability risks increase.

The third scenario remains less probable but cannot be dismissed.

7. Could It Get Worse? Yes — particularly if:

  • Lebanon becomes a sustained battlefield.
  • Gulf states transition from defensive coordination to overt alliance commitments.
  • Iran’s strategic patience erodes.
  • The United States deepens visible military involvement.

At that stage, the conflict would shift from event-driven escalation to alignment-driven confrontation.

Alignment conflicts travel through economic systems, ideological networks, and power balances.

8. Conclusion: A Shrinking Neutral Space

The central risk is not immediate war between West and South Asia. The central risk is the shrinking of neutral strategic space.

As alliances consolidate and polarisation intensifies, mid-level powers and fragile states face harder choices. Strategic autonomy becomes more difficult to maintain.

South Asia is not insulated from West Asia’s transformation. It is economically connected, strategically entangled, and politically sensitive to its shifts.

Whether the current crisis stabilises or expands will depend on deterrence management, economic resilience, and the capacity of regional actors to avoid binary bloc politics.

If those mechanisms fail, the ripple effects will not stop at the Arabian Sea.

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

Email: drshabirchoudhry@gmail.com