Tag power politics

GAZA-Made in the USA – Part 2 – The End of Accountability

Part two shifts the focus from the rubble in Gaza to the centers of power in Washington and Berlin. It shows that the central question is not only which weapons were delivered, but why the political and legal mechanisms of control failed - or were deliberately dismantled. From National Security Memorandum 20 to the Leahy Law and the Arms Export Control Act, a picture emerges of a system in which the relevant rules do exist, yet are not enforced when it matters most. The removal of reporting obligations, the bypassing of congressional scrutiny, and the institutional silence of the responsible agencies do not merely suggest bureaucratic failure, but a possible transition into a new phase: the end of accountability.

BOARD OF PEACE – Part 1

Donald Trump presents himself as a peacemaker for Gaza – through the creation of a so-called “Board of Peace.” But behind the humanitarian rhetoric lies a far more disturbing reality.
In Part 1 of this three-part series, I dismantle the origins, historical backdrop, and legal contradictions of this initiative. When those who enabled destruction suddenly claim to deliver peace, the claim itself demands scrutiny.
This first installment exposes why the “Board of Peace” is not a solution, but a structural continuation of power, impunity, and geopolitical coercion. Parts 2 and 3 will reveal who stands to gain – and why Gaza is merely the test case.

Greenland as a Turning Point

Greenland is not a frozen backwater — it is the breaking point of the Western security order. If the United States is willing to threaten NATO territory, a taboo collapses: who defends the alliance when the aggressor comes from within? This analysis explains why Greenland marks the next escalation after Venezuela — and why NATO may not survive it.

Venezuela: Breaking Democracy

The abduction of a sitting president, the seizure of oil tankers on the high seas, and the open violation of the UN Charter mark a historic rupture in international norms. Venezuela is not an isolated case—it is a blueprint. This article examines how power has replaced law, why the “rules-based order” no longer protects smaller states, and what this precedent means for global security in an emerging post-legal world order.