Ashifa Kassam, The Guardian, 27/12/2025
Israel turned its back as Palestinian Israeli society mourned the death of Mohammad Bakri, one of its most celebrated figures: an actor, director, and cultural icon, a Palestinian patriot and a man of noble soul
Gideon Levy, Haaretz, 28/12/2025
The hall adjacent to the mosque in the Galilee village of Bi’ina was crowded on Friday. Thousands of somber-faced people came to pay their respects and left; I was the only Jew among them.
Palestinian Israeli society mourns the death of one of its greatest members, an actor, director and cultural hero, a Palestinian patriot and a man of noble soul – Mohammad Bakri – and Israel, in death as in life, turned its back on him. Only one television station devoted a news item to his passing. A handful of Jews surely came to console his family, but on Friday afternoon, there were none to be seen.
Bakri was laid to rest Wednesday – late at night, at the request of the family – leaving no place in Israel in which to eulogize him, to thank him for his work, to bow our heads before him in appreciation and to ask for his forgiveness.
He deserved all of it. Bakri was an artist and a freedom fighter, the kind written about in history books and for whom streets are named. There was no place for him in ultranationalist Israel, not even after his death.
Israel crushed him, only because he dared to express the Palestinian pain as it is. Long before the dark days of Benjamin Netanyahu and Itamar Ben-Gvir, 20 years before October 7 and the war in Gaza, Israel treated him with a fascism that would not have shamed Likud ministers Yoav Kisch and Shlomo Karhi.
Its celebrated legal establishment rallied as one to condemn his work. A Lod District Court judge banned the screening of his film “Jenin, Jenin,” the attorney general at the time joined the war and the enlightened Supreme Court ruled that the movie was made with “improper motives” – this was the level of the arguments put forth by the beacon of justice.
And all because of a handful of reservists who were “hurt” by his film and sought to settle the score. It was not the residents of the Jenin refugee camp who were hurt, but the soldier Nissim Magnaji. His request was granted and Bakri was destroyed. All this was long before the Dark Ages.
Few came to his aid. The artists fell silent and the handsome star of “Beyond the Walls” was thrown to the dogs. He never recovered.
I once thought that “Jenin, Jenin” would one day be shown in every school in the country, but today it is clear that this won’t happen, not in today’s Israel and presumably not in the future either.
But the Bakri I knew did not anger or hate. I never heard him express a single word of hatred toward those who ostracized him, to those who hurt him and his people. His son Saleh once said: “[Israel] destroyed my life, my father’s life, my family, my nation’s life.” It’s doubtful his father would have expressed himself that way.
On Friday this impressive son stood tall, a kaffiyeh draped over his shoulders, and he and his siblings, of whom their father was so proud, greeted those who came to condole them for their father’s death.
I loved him so much. On a rainy winter night at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Mount Scopus campus, when people shouted “traitors” at us after the screening of “Jenin, Jenin,” and at the Israel Film Center Festival at New York City’s Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan, to which he was invited every year, and where protesters also shouted. At Tel Aviv’s erstwhile Cafe Tamar, which he used to visit occasionally on Fridays, and in the painful essays he published in Haaretz. Free of cynicism, innocent as a child and filled with hope just as he was.
His last, and very short, film, “Le Monde,” written by his daughter Yafa, takes place at a birthday party in a luxurious hotel. A girl handed out roses to guests, a violinist played “Happy Birthday,” bombed-out Gaza is on TV and Bakri stood up with the help of a young woman who sat with him and left. He was blind.
Three weeks ago, he wrote to me to tell me he planned to come to the Tel Aviv area for the funeral of a dear man, as he put it, the director Ram Loevy, and I replied that I was ill and we wouldn’t be able to meet. To the best of my knowledge, he also did not go to the funeral in the end.
“Be well and take care of yourself,” the man who never took care of himself wrote me.
Bakri is dead, the Jenin camp is destroyed and all its residents have been expelled, homeless once more in another war crime. And hope still beat in Bakri’s heart, until his death; we did not agree about it.
إسرائيل تعترف بأرض «أرض الصومال»: دبلوماسية الأمر الواقع وهندسة الأطراف
أيمن الحكيم،28/12 /2025
الاعتراف الرسمي بإسرائيل بأرض «أرض الصومال»، الذي أُعلن يوم الجمعة 26 ديسمبر 2025، لا يُمثل مجرد إعادة اصطفاف دبلوماسي. فهو جزء من استراتيجية إقليمية أوسع، حيث يصبح الاعتراف بالدولة أداة للإسقاط الأمني، وربما رافعة لهندسة ديموغرافية.
Ayman El Hakim, 28/12/2025
La reconnaissance officielle du Somaliland par Israël, annoncée le vendredi 26 décembre 2025, ne relève pas d’un simple réalignement diplomatique. Elle s’inscrit dans une stratégie régionale plus large, où la reconnaissance étatique devient un instrument de projection sécuritaire, mais aussi, potentiellement, un levier d’ingénierie démographique.
Ayman El Hakim, 28-12-2025
El reconocimiento oficial de Somalilandia por parte de Israel, anunciado el viernes 26 de diciembre de 2025, no responde a un simple realineamiento diplomático. Se inscribe en una estrategia regional más amplia, donde el reconocimiento estatal se convierte en un instrumento de proyección de seguridad y, potencialmente, en una palanca para la ingeniería demográfica.
Ayman El Hakim, 28/12/2025
The official recognition of Somaliland by Israel, announced on Friday, December 26, 2025, is not merely a diplomatic realignment. It is part of a broader regional strategy, where state recognition becomes an instrument of security projection and, potentially, a lever for demographic engineering.
Gideon Levy, Haaretz, 21/12/2025
My Hanukkah hero this year is an unidentified woman in black. It was Wednesday evening, the fourth night of Hanukkah, at Tel Aviv's Weizmann City Mall. With a hijab on her head, a purse on one arm and a cellphone in her other hand, she approached the menorah and blew out the four candles in a single breath. Her male companion applauded.
Then the woman returned: The shamash candle (used to light
the other eight candles) was still burning; she extinguished it as well. This
woman is the Palestinian Rosa Parks. A video of her protest was posted on
social media over the weekend.
Yair Foldes reported
in Haaretz that the police are investigating but have not yet decided on the
appropriate charge. They are considering Article 170 of Israel's Penal Law,
which prohibits "destroying, damaging or desecrating a place of worship or
any object held sacred by a group of persons with the intention of thereby
reviling their religion or with the knowledge that they are likely to consider
such destruction, damage or desecration as an insult to their religion."
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The maximum penalty:
three years in prison. All those who have burned Qurans in West Bank mosques
are free, and this woman will be arrested.
As I write these
lines, the police manhunt is in full swing. By Saturday evening, Monday night
at the latest, the woman will be arrested. The show trial is on its way, even
if Channel 14 host Yinon Magal is pessimistic: "They will catch her,
photograph her next to the Israeli flag, bring her to a detention hearing and
the judge will release her to house arrest."
It's well known that
Israel's houses are filled with Arabs whom the courts have released. Ask the poet Dareen Tatour, who was under house arrest for
half a year (!) before her trial for a Facebook post, long before October 7,
2023. For right-wingers, the candle extinguisher is a terrorist who deserves
the death sentence.
It's not nice to blow
out Hanukkah candles; I have no idea what motivated the brave woman, but it's
hard to think of a more spectacular nonviolent act of protest.
It's permissible to
disrupt the holiday that Jews celebrate to commemorate the victory of the
Hasmonean revolt against the Greek occupier. On a holiday during which Jews
sing, "We come to banish darkness, in our hands are light and fire,"
it's permissible to protest. On a holiday in which Jews sing, "Let's have
a party \ We'll all dance the hora \ Gather 'round the table \ We'll give you a
treat \ dreidels to play with and latkes to eat," it's permissible to
spoil things. Above all, on a holiday where Jews sing without shame: "When
thou shalt have prepared a slaughter of the blaspheming foe" (the literal
translation of part of the first verse of "Maoz Tzur"/"Rock of
Ages") – it's permissible to rebel.
It's permissible for a
Palestinian Israeli to think that this celebration should be shut down with a
personal act of protest: blowing out the candles in a mall. While her
co-religionists and perhaps her relatives as well – in Jaffa, for example,
there isn't a single Arab family without family in Gaza – are drowning in mud,
freezing in the cold and hungry dogs continue to scavenge through the bodies of
their trapped relatives, the Jews here will not celebrate as if nothing has
happened.
Someone must remind
them that the war in Gaza isn't over and the suffering is only intensifying.
Someone must remind Israelis that while they stuff their faces with fancy
sufganiyot, in Gaza, there are still people who are starving, or at least sick
and tired of eating lentils.
There are hundreds of
thousands of homeless people there who are being ravaged by winter. There are patients there who are
dying slowly, in excruciating agony, for lack of medical care. And there are
hundreds of thousands of children there whose friends have been killed, and for
over two years they have had no school or any other framework to go to, and who
are doomed to a life of ignorance and despair even if they survive the war,
which is far from over.
This affects Israel's
Arabs. It pains them, even if they're paralyzed by fear of a regime that
arrests anyone who dares to express humanity. And now an unknown woman came, on
the fourth night of Hanukkah, and for one moment blew out the candles of the celebrating
Israelis, with one breath. She is a hero.

La nouvelle Stratégie nationale de sécurité (NSS) publiée début décembre a été lue comme un retour de la doctrine Monroe, un durcissement trumpiste ou un simple recentrage anti-chinois. En la reprenant à la lettre et en la replaçant dans la séquence du 8–11 octobre, lorsque la Chine a montré qu’elle pouvait remodeler l’équilibre mondial sans tirer un coup de feu, une autre image apparaît : celle d’une puissance qui écrit à l’intérieur d’un ordre déjà structuré par Beijing, où l’hémisphère occidental n’est plus isolable et où l’Europe est traitée comme un risque à encadrer plutôt qu’un levier. La NSS 2025 proclame le « non-interventionnisme sélectif », renonce aux changements de régime, reconnaît implicitement l’emprise matérielle chinoise et requalifie la Russie en facteur de stabilisation continentale. Ce texte n’ordonne plus le monde : il tente de stabiliser un récit alors que le centre de gravité stratégique s’est déplacé hors de portée des USA.
The new National Security Strategy (NSS) published in early December has been read as a return of the Monroe Doctrine, a Trumpesque hardening or a simple anti-China refocus. If we take it literally and place it back in the 8–11 October sequence, when China showed it could reshape the global balance without firing a shot, a different picture emerges: that of a power writing inside an order already structured by Beijing, where the Western Hemisphere is no longer isolable and Europe is treated as a risk to be managed rather than a lever. The 2025 NSS proclaims “selective non-interventionism”, renounces regime change operations, implicitly acknowledges China’s material grip and recasts Russia as a factor of continental stabilisation. This text no longer orders the world: it tries to stabilise a narrative at a time when the strategic centre of gravity has moved out of reach of the United States.
👉 Read the article on Substack
La nueva Estrategia Nacional de Seguridad (NSS) publicada a principios de diciembre fue leída como el regreso de la doctrina Monroe, un endurecimiento trumpista o un simple recentraje antichino. Si se la toma al pie de la letra y se la recoloca en la secuencia del 8 al 11 de octubre, cuando China demostró que podía remodelar el equilibrio mundial sin disparar un solo tiro, aparece otra imagen: la de una potencia que escribe dentro de un orden ya estructurado por Beijing, donde el hemisferio occidental ya no es aislable y donde Europa es tratada como un riesgo que hay que encuadrar más que como un palanca. La NSS 2025 proclama el “no intervencionismo selectivo”, renuncia a los cambios de régimen, reconoce implícitamente la impronta material china y reclasifica a Rusia como factor de estabilización continental. Este texto ya no ordena el mundo: intenta estabilizar un relato en el momento en que el centro de gravedad estratégico se desplazó fuera del alcance de USA.
👉 Leer el artículo en Substack
Die neue Nationale Sicherheitsstrategie (NSS), die Anfang Dezember veröffentlicht wurde, ist vielfach als Rückkehr zur Monroe-Doktrin, als trumpistische Verschärfung oder als einfache Neuausrichtung gegen China gelesen worden. Liest man sie jedoch wörtlich – und setzt sie in Beziehung zu der Sequenz vom 8. bis 11. Oktober, als China zeigte, dass es das globale Gleichgewicht verändern kann, ohne einen Schuss abzugeben –, entsteht ein anderes Bild: das einer Macht, die in einem bereits von Peking strukturierten Ordnungsrahmen schreibt, in dem die westliche Hemisphäre nicht mehr isolierbar ist und Europa eher als Risiko zu kontrollieren denn als strategischer Hebel behandelt wird. Die NSS 2025 verkündet einen „selektiven Nichtinterventionismus“, verzichtet auf Regimewechsel, erkennt implizit die materielle Dominanz Chinas an und stuft Russland als Faktor kontinentaler Stabilisierung neu ein. Dieses Dokument ordnet die Welt nicht mehr; es versucht, eine Erzählung zu stabilisieren, obwohl sich der strategische Schwerpunkt bereits außerhalb der Reichweite der USA verschoben hat.
Johanna Sydow and Nsama Chikwanka, Project Syndicate, 5/12/2025
Johanna Sydow is Head of the International Environmental Policy Division at the Heinrich Böll Foundation.
Nsama Chikwanka is National Director of Publish What You Pay Zambia.
As governments weaken environmental protections to promote new mining projects, the global scramble for critical minerals is deepening social divides and harming vital ecosystems. Only reduced consumption and robust, enforceable rules can prevent long-term harm and protect basic human rights.

BERLIN – The environmental and human toll of mineral extraction is becoming clearer – and more alarming – by the day. Roughly 60% of Ghana’s waterways are now heavily polluted due to gold mining along riverbanks. In Peru, many communities have lost access to safe drinking water after environmental protections were weakened and regulatory controls were suspended to facilitate new mining projects, contaminating even the Rímac River, which supplies water to the capital, Lima.
These environmental crises are exacerbated by deepening inequality and social divides in many mining-dependent countries. The Global Atlas of Environmental Justice has documented more than 900 mining-related conflicts around the world, about 85% of which involve the use or pollution of rivers, lakes, and groundwater. Against this backdrop, major economies are rapidly reshaping resource geopolitics.
The United States, while attempting to stabilize the fossil-fuel-based global economy, is also scrambling to secure the minerals it needs for electric vehicles, renewable energy, weapons systems, digital infrastructure, and construction, often through coercion and aggressive negotiating tactics. In its quest to reduce dependence on China, which dominates the processing of rare-earth elements, environmental and humanitarian considerations are increasingly brushed aside.
Saudi Arabia is likewise positioning itself as a rising power in the minerals sector
as part of its efforts to diversify away from oil, forging new partnerships – including with the US – and hosting a high-profile mining conference.
At the same time, the Kingdom is actively undermining progress in other
multilateral fora, including this year’s United Nations Climate Change Conference in Brazil (COP30)
and the ongoing pre-negotiations of the UN Environment
Assembly (UNEA7).
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In
Europe, industry groups are lobbying for further deregulation, with fossil-fuel
companies like ExxonMobil, TotalEnergies, and Siemens using misleading tactics to undermine newly established mechanisms designed to protect
the rights of communities in resource-producing regions. We should be worried
that the companies and countries which helped drive global warming,
environmental degradation, and human-rights abuses now seek to dominate the
mineral sector. Allowing them to do so will put all of humanity, not just
vulnerable populations, at risk.
Governments
must not remain passive. They must reclaim responsibility for steering the
primary driver of mining expansion: demand. Reducing material consumption, especially in developed
countries, remains the most effective way to protect vital ecosystems and prevent
the long-term harms that extraction inevitably causes.
Yet
despite overwhelming evidence that ramping up resource extraction threatens
water supplies and public safety, governments around the world are weakening
environmental protections in a bid to lure foreign investment, thereby
endangering the very ecosystems that sustain all life on Earth. From an
economic perspective, this approach is profoundly short-sighted.
In fact, recent research shows that responsible practices are not just morally right but economically sound. A new report by the UN Development Programme, based on five years of data from 235 multinationals, shows that companies that strengthen their human-rights record tend to perform better over the long run. Governments should therefore be wary of industry claims that profitability requires rolling back environmental regulations or ignoring human rights. When people cannot trust political leaders to protect their rights, they are highly likely to resist, with the resulting social conflict causing investment to falter.
The backlash against Rio Tinto’s Jadar lithium-mining project in Serbia is a prime example. Many Serbians believed their government was putting corporate interests first by pushing ahead with the project despite its failure to meet even basic sustainability standards. The public outcry halted development and left the company facing steep losses.
Only robust legal frameworks, backed by effective enforcement, can create the conditions for stable and rights-respecting development. That means safeguarding Indigenous rights; ensuring the free, prior, and informed consent of all affected communities; protecting water resources; undertaking spatial planning, establishing no-go zones; and conducting independent, participatory, and transparent social and environmental impact assessments. Given today’s heightened geopolitical tensions, multilateral forums such as COP and the UNEA remain essential for countering global fragmentation and advancing shared solutions. Mineral-rich countries should work together to raise their environmental standards, just as oil-producing countries jointly influence global prices. Through collective action, they can prevent a destructive race to the bottom and ensure that local communities, particularly Indigenous peoples and other rights holders, are heard.
At a time when clean drinking water is growing scarcer, glaciers are melting, and agriculture is increasingly under threat, coordinated international action is no longer optional. A resolution that Colombia and Oman introduced for December’s UNEA, calling for a binding minerals treaty, represents an important step toward fairer global standards. Initiated by Colombia and co-sponsored by countries like Zambia, which understand all too well the costs of extractive industries, the proposal calls for cooperation across the entire mineral production chain to reduce environmental harm and protect the rights of Indigenous peoples and other affected communities.
By placing responsibility on resource-consuming
countries, it aims to ensure that the burden of reform does not fall solely on
mineral-producing economies. Importantly, it also addresses the dangers
posed by tailings dams and other mining waste, which have led to devastating
failures and hundreds of deaths. Taken together, these measures offer a
rare opportunity to begin correcting the inequalities that have long defined
mineral extraction. All countries, especially mineral producers that have
historically been excluded from the negotiating table, should seize this
moment. UNEA7 provides a window for achieving resource justice.
Sergio Rodríguez Gelfenstein,
4-12-2025
Translated by Tlaxcala
While Donald
Trump was sketching out the composition of his cabinet after being elected and
before taking office, he made a decision: the neoconservatives who had caused
him so many problems during his first administration would have no place this
time. Thus, he excluded, among others, Mike Pompeo, Mike Pence, Nikki Haley,
John Bolton and Elliott Abrams, who had held senior positions in his previous
government.
But something
went wrong. After the last Senate election, the upper chamber ended up with 53
Republican senators, 45 Democrats and 2 independents who usually vote with the
Democrats. Among the 53 Republicans elected, four — Rick Scott and Ashley
Moody, both part of the Florida mafia, Bernie Moreno, of Colombian origin and
senator for Ohio, and Ted Cruz, of Cuban origin and senator for Texas — later
joined by Lindsay Graham of South Carolina, identify ideologically with the
fascist far-right grouped within the neoconservative sector of the current U.S.
administration.
Although a
minority, they held enough votes to determine outcomes in the Senate. They made
this known to Trump, who needed them to pass his projects, so he reluctantly
had to accept whatever they demanded… and they demanded the State Department,
where they installed one of their own: Marco Rubio. From that moment, Trump
became politically blackmailed by this group. Many decisions stem from this
coercion exerted by the neoconservative wing of his government. And apparently,
he can do nothing, because thanks to them not only his cabinet was approved,
but also the budget and the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBBA),” an absurdity
passed by senators eager to please the president.
Thus, Trump
managed to get his cabinet nominations approved. However, when it came to
appointing the head of what was then the Department of Defense — now renamed
Department of War — the vote resulted in a tie that had to be broken by Vice
President J.D. Vance.
How to draw Pete Hegseth, by Michael de Adder
This is how
Peter Brian Hegseth, known as Pete, assumed the country’s highest military
office despite the rejection of half the senators, including three Republicans.
The arguments against him centered on his lack of experience, as well as rape
accusations brought by a woman in 2017 — apparently “resolved” through a
payment for silence.
Hegseth, a
shadowy figure born 45 years ago in Minneapolis, Minnesota, whose prior
“experience” amounts to being a television host known for ultra-reactionary and
conservative views — including pronounced and explicit homophobia based on the
notion that homosexuality was alien to Western civilization — had declared that
“the homosexual lifestyle is abnormal and immoral.”
Trump considered his brief participation in the U.S. Army National Guard sufficient grounds to appoint him secretary of Defence, ignoring the fact that he rose only to the rank of captain and completed no advanced officer or strategic command training. What must generals and admirals with 35 or more years of service think of being commanded by a captain? Someone might argue that expertise is not gained only within the armed forces — true — but this captain has no political experience either: he failed in his bid to become a senator for his home state, which pushed him into a television job at Fox News, where lack of qualifications are not a great obstacle.
In his speech,
Hegseth attacked “woke ideology”, claiming it had developed within the military
under previous administrations. Among measures he announced: no allowance for
overweight personnel, bearded personnel, long-haired personnel, or “superficial
individual expressions”. He also attacked women, saying they would not be
allowed in combat, and announced the return of “hard-core fighters” who had
left under the “woke department”. He promised reforms in
harassment-investigation methods, declared “the end of men wearing dresses”, as
well as of diversity, equity and inclusion policies, promising a new army
shaped after the MAGA administration.
Before
Hegseth’s remarks, Trump had declared that major urban centers were “very
dangerous places [so] we will bring them to order one by one […] It will be an
important task for some of the people in this room […] It is an internal war,”
he concluded.
The meeting
will not go down in history for its content but for the stunned faces of
generals and admirals listening to the speeches and to the tirades against
obesity, beards, homosexuality in the armed forces, and the need to limit the
presence of women.
Another facet
of Hegseth’s management is his unprecedented attacks on the media, targeting
individual reporters and the industry as a whole. Since his arrival, some
outlets have been expelled from shared spaces, journalists’ movement inside the
Pentagon has been restricted, and some press credentials have been revoked.
Among the
journalists harshly attacked is Jennifer Griffin of Fox News, a veteran
Pentagon reporter repeatedly targeted by Hegseth’s “acid” remarks. Courtney
Kube of NBC News was also targeted after coverage that — according to The New
York Times — included unflattering information about Hegseth’s past, such as
testimony from a family member regarding abusive behavior toward his second
wife. These details surfaced during his nomination. Shortly after taking
office, Hegseth ordered that she be expelled from the Pentagon — an order that
could not be executed for lack of legal basis.
In his most
recent action, Hegseth allegedly ordered the killing of two fishermen who
survived an attack after being baselessly accused of drug trafficking.
Democratic Representative Jim Himes of Connecticut called the attacks “illegal
killings” and “troubling”, and stated that Congress is receiving very little
information from the Trump administration. Himes, the ranking member of the
House Intelligence Committee, acknowledged but dismissed a White House
memorandum justifying the attacks. “Based on what I know now and on reading
this memo, these are illegal killings,” he said. “They are illegal because the
idea that the United States — and this is the administration’s justification —
is engaged in an armed conflict with any Venezuelan drug trafficker is absurd.
It would not stand in any court.”
In this
context, a true internal war has erupted, with discussion emerging about the
loss of “confidence” in Hegseth’s ability to negotiate at high levels,
according to a Politico article published on November 21. This led to an
escalation of rhetoric within MAGA circles. One of its most notorious
representatives, far-right activist Laura Loomer, accused Driscoll of ties to
the Democratic Party and of “planning a coup d’état against Hegseth.”
According to Politico,
the latest trip to Kiev by senior Pentagon officials, led by Army Secretary Dan
Driscoll, illustrates Hegseth’s loss of credibility and relevance.
No one knows
whether Hegseth can withstand the heavy pressure he is under. Weeks ago, a
source close to the Pentagon said he appeared so nervous that he seemed “on the
verge of exploding.” Surrounded by one of the world’s most powerful protective
apparatuses, he has been particularly concerned for his safety since the
assassination of ultraconservative activist Charlie Kirk during a public event.
According to
the British Daily Mail on September 29, citing sources close to him,
Hegseth’s fear “is reflected in erratic behavior toward his staff.” Two
anonymous Pentagon insiders said that in recent weeks he has launched tirades,
lashed out at subordinates and become obsessed with security matters. “He has a
manic quality — or rather, an even more manic quality, which is saying
something,” said one source, describing him as visibly distracted, restless,
standing up and pacing during meetings.
Now, like the
coward he is, he has refused to take responsibility for the “kill them all”
order that led to the murder of the fishermen in the Caribbean, pushing Admiral
Frank M. Bradley, head of U.S. Special Operations Command, to absorb all the
repercussions. According to The Washington Post, “Bradley, then head of
Joint Special Operations Command, oversaw an attack in the Caribbean on
September 2, 2025, ordered by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth against a vessel
suspected of drug trafficking. The Post reported that “Bradley ordered a second
strike after identifying two survivors via drone feed, following Hegseth’s
directive to leave no survivors.”
We shall see
what consequences might arise from admirals with more than 35 years of service
— now commanding aircraft carriers, nuclear submarines, destroyers and cruisers
— ending their careers by destroying small civilian vessels and killing
peaceful fishermen. This may also help explain why suicides, drug addiction and
post-war trauma are rising daily within the U.S. armed forces. To maintain this
machinery, they also need the drug trade they claim to fight. It is part of the
functional framework of that decadent society.