The war in the Arabian Gulf...
The war in the Arabian Gulf...
Has diplomacy been killed? Have the strategic institutes and universities concerned with international politics committed suicide? Have the United Nations and the Security Council disappeared from the global scene, or have they been buried in the sands of the Gulf region? We are facing a very strange scene: the world's largest and most powerful nations are taking military action against a country like Iran, and the Iranian response is commensurate with its military capabilities and its allies among the militias and armed movements in the region. But the question that arises is: how can America and Israel strike Iran for a whole month without Iran surrendering or making any concessions? On the contrary, the Iranian response is present, and Iranian targeting of the Gulf states and Israel with missiles and drones is being successfully intercepted by ground defenses. This is a catastrophic situation for these countries, which have closed their airspace and whose economic interests have been disrupted. This situation has severely disrupted the global economy, as there are eight countries that produce oil and gas for the world, and production has almost decreased. Their production was halved... and so the problem became not just the high prices of oil... but the shortage of oil supplies, especially for Asian countries that depend on Arab oil coming from the Arabian Gulf, will lead to problems in their imports to other countries... In fact, there are entire countries in Africa that will suffer from a lack of jet fuel to refuel the planes that land on them... and consequently most airlines will cancel their flights to Africa..
script async src="https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-7519727374201004"
crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
. and consequently many countries in Africa will be isolated... and air freight to and from them will stop... and most of the exports of African countries go to Europe... and consequently they will suffer from a shortage of imports to them and a rise in their prices. The Gulf Arab states, the biggest losers and victims of this war, have cash reserves in European and American banks which they will withdraw to cover these losses. However, African countries rich in natural resources do not have cash reserves to cover their losses. Negotiations, diplomacy, international law, and its institutions have been completely absent from this crisis. The international inspection teams that were sent to Iraq in the past to search for nuclear and chemical weapons have not been given the opportunity to operate in Iran. If the goal was to destroy Iran's ability to produce ballistic or long-range missiles, a month of American and Israeli bombing has not been sufficient to accomplish this task. A ceasefire and the intervention of the European Union, China, and Russia to begin negotiations with the Iranian side are urgent necessities to save the global economy from further suffering, because worse is yet to come with the prolongation of this war, which affects half the world's population, while the other half is suffering from rising prices. Oil and rising inflation rates... so who wins and who benefits? Everyone loses on this planet, and this is the nature of protracted wars. But a swift war, which stirs stagnant waters and compels diplomacy to act to resolve international disputes, is the least costly for everyone. This is the ideal and best approach to resolving international political crises.
Oil and rising inflation rates... so who wins and who benefits? Everyone loses on this planet, and this is the typical, best way to resolve international political crises.
script async src="https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-7519727374201004"
crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
Comments
Post a Comment