The Palestine Precedent: Is Israel Using 1940s Tactics to Expel America From the Middle East?

The Empire’s Shadow - Historical Echoes in the Desert

How the insurgent playbook that drove the British from Palestine is being reinterpreted by analysts as a blueprint for a modern campaign to push the United States out of the Middle East, forcing a catastrophic showdown with Iran.

The hotel lobby was a swirl of khaki and linen, the clink of glasses barely masking the hum of colonial administration. It was July 22, 1946, at Jerusalem’s King David Hotel. The southern wing housed the nerve center of the British Mandate - the secretariat and military command of an empire that seemed as permanent as the ancient stones upon which the city was built. Within minutes, a thunderous explosion would tear through that wing, collapsing the façade and burying the illusion of British permanence under nine feet of rubble. The attack, carried out by the Irgun, a Zionist paramilitary group, was a pivotal act in a broader insurgent campaign of bombings, assassinations, and psychological warfare that would, within two years, convince a war-weary Britain to wash its hands of Palestine and withdraw entirely .

Fast forward eighty years. The year is 2026. The landscape is now the entire Middle East, and the superpower casting a long, weary shadow is not Britain, but the United States of America. And in the corridors of alternative media and geopolitical analysis, a provocative and deeply unsettling question is being asked: Is Israel, now a nuclear power, using the same brutal, asymmetrical playbook it once employed as an insurgent force to engineer the expulsion of its primary patron?

The thesis, as explosive as the milk churns filled with TNT that brought down the King David Hotel, posits that Israel is deliberately orchestrating a high-stakes gambit. The goal is to force the United States into a direct, catastrophic war with Iran - not to win it cleanly, but to create such profound domestic political upheaval in America, such a visceral anti-war backlash, that the US is compelled to retreat from the entire Middle East. This would, in theory, leave Israel as the undisputed regional hegemon, free to pursue its strategic and settlement ambitions without the constraining hand of its most important ally.

This is not a theory that has found a home in the pages of Foreign Affairs or the briefings of the State Department. Yet, in March 2026, it exploded into the mainstream via the immense megaphone of Tucker Carlson.

On his online show, Carlson laid out a labyrinthine narrative that connected ancient prophecy, messianic Jewish groups, and realpolitik. He spoke of a “religious layer” to the current conflict, but not the one typically associated with Shia militancy or the Islamic Republic’s apocalyptic rhetoric. Instead, he pointed toward Jerusalem. “The holiest spot on earth…called the foundation stone,” Carlson said, explaining its significance in Judaism. Without the ability to worship and sacrifice there, he argued, “you can’t really have Torah Judaism.” He then made his explosive claim: that influential elements within Israel, including some associated with the Chabad Hasidic movement, are pushing for the destruction of the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock to facilitate the rebuilding of the Third Temple . The ensuing global Islamic outrage, Carlson suggests, would be blamed on Iran, serving as the ultimate false flag to drag America into a war of civilizations .

Carlson’s presentation was immediately and fiercely condemned. The Jerusalem Post published a scathing op-ed, accusing him of descending into “dark conspiracy thinking” and launching an “anti-Israel crusade.” It dismissed his arguments as “mumbled and jumbled, disoriented claptrap,” pointing out that official Israeli policy maintains the status quo on the Temple Mount and that mainstream Jewish teachings relegate the Temple’s rebuilding to a future messianic era of peace, not a modern political act of war . The Chabad-Lubavitch movement itself issued a statement calling Carlson’s claims “false and misleading,” emphasizing that the movement “does not advocate violence or political efforts to demolish the mosque” .

Yet, to dismiss the entire thesis simply because its most prominent proponent is a controversial figure would be to ignore the geopolitical currents that give such theories their power. Carlson’s narrative, however embellished, taps into a deep well of historical memory and strategic anxiety. The tactics he describes - the “false flag” operation, the provocation of an overwhelming response from a larger power, the manipulation of an ally’s domestic politics - are not new. They are the classic tools of the weak against the strong. They are, in essence, the tools the Irgun used against the British.

The parallels, for those who draw them, are uncanny. The British Empire in the 1940s was overstretched, financially exhausted by World War II, and facing growing domestic opposition to its imperial commitments. Sound familiar? The United States in the 2020s finds itself in a remarkably similar position. After two decades of inconclusive wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the American public is deeply isolationist. A March 2026 poll by Reuters/Ipsos found that a staggering 56% of Americans believe President Donald Trump is too quick to use military force, a sentiment shared even by a quarter of his own Republican base . The US military, despite its unparalleled budget, is logistically overstretched, trying to maintain deterrence in the Pacific against China, manage a foothold in Europe, and respond to crises in the Middle East simultaneously .

It is into this picture of imperial exhaustion that the historical analogy is projected. The Irgun and its ideological kin, the Lehi (or Stern Gang), understood the psychology of the weary empire. Their campaign was not designed to defeat the British Army in the field - a military impossibility. It was designed to make the cost of staying in Palestine unbearably high, both in blood and in treasure, and, crucially, in the currency of domestic political will. The bombing of the King David Hotel, which killed 91 people, was a masterstroke of asymmetric warfare. It was an attack on the very symbol of British administrative power, broadcast around the world, and it shattered the perception of British control.

The modern analogy, in this telling, is not a single bombing but a cascade of provocations aimed at dragging Iran into a war with the US. The strategy, as theorists and some analysts describe it, is for Israel to act as the insurgent, striking at US interests or those of its Gulf allies, and ensuring the blame falls on Tehran. The desired result is an overwhelming American military response - a response that would mire the US in another Middle Eastern quagmire, this time against a far more formidable foe than the Taliban or Saddam Hussein’s depleted army.

The ultimate prize, in this Machiavellian calculus, is not victory over Iran per se, but the process of the war itself. A bloody, protracted, and costly ground invasion of Iran would be the modern-day equivalent of the King David Hotel bombing - a shock so profound that it would shatter the American public’s already fragile tolerance for foreign entanglements. The sight of American body bags returning from the Zagros Mountains would be the image that finally turns the United States inward for good.

This would pave the way for what some strategic analysts see as the logical conclusion of the “America First” doctrine: a full-scale strategic retrenchment. The Trump administration’s newly released National Security Strategy already signals a major pivot away from the Middle East and Europe, declaring that “restoring US pre-eminence in the Western Hemisphere is now Washington’s most important foreign-policy objective” . The strategy speaks of uniting the Americas as a single geopolitical unit and securing the homeland from migration and drugs. It implicitly downgrades priorities in East Asia and the Middle East .

This formal strategic document, written before the latest escalation with Iran, provides the essential backdrop. It confirms that the US is already looking for a way out. An analyst from the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) noted the core tension: “the revived emphasis on hemispheric primacy sits uneasily with Washington’s enduring operational commitment to forcing outcomes in other theatres” . Israel, the theory suggests, is merely accelerating this inevitable departure on its own terms - by slamming the door shut with such force that it destroys the hinges, ensuring that America can never come back.

But is this a cunning strategy or a paranoid fantasy? The difference often lies in the eye of the beholder, and in the next part, we will examine the mechanics of the trap as it is perceived to be closing around the United States, from the oil fields of Saudi Arabia to the volatile hilltops of the West Bank.

The Mechanics of the Trap - False Flags and Fiery Frontiers

Amidst the fog of a hot war with Iran, allegations of “false flag” operations surface, suggesting a deliberate campaign to immolate the Gulf states and chain the US military to Israel’s defense, leaving American forces overstretched and vulnerable.

By early March 2026, the fog of war that had descended over the Middle East was thick enough to obscure not just troop movements, but reality itself. The coordinated American-Israeli assault on Iran, which began on February 28, was well underway . US Central Command reported casualties - six American service members killed in the initial days, a number that would tragically climb . The fighting was no longer confined to the Persian Gulf; it had metastasized. Iran was striking at a “dozen or so countries,” widening the conflict into a truly regional conflagration . And within this chaos, a secondary battle erupted: a battle over the narrative of who was really striking whom.

On March 2, a dramatic twist emerged from Tehran. An Iranian military official made a stunning allegation: the drone attack on Saudi Arabia’s massive Ras Tanura oil refinery - a facility critical to global energy supplies - was not the work of Iranian proxies. Instead, the official claimed it was an Israeli “false flag operation,” a piece of black-ops theater designed to blame Iran and further inflame the situation .

The logic, from Tehran’s perspective, was impeccable. The attack on the Aramco facility served to galvanize Gulf Arab states against Iran, pushing them closer to the US-Israel axis. If Israel could bomb a Saudi oil facility and make it look like it came from Iran, it would achieve two critical objectives: it would eliminate any hope of Saudi-Iranian détente, and it would make the Gulf monarchies actively beg for American military protection, further entrenching the US presence in the conflict.

This allegation was quickly followed by another, even more explosive, claim. Tucker Carlson, building on his Temple Mount narrative, reported that his sources indicated Saudi Arabia and Qatar had actually arrested cells of Mossad agents who were planning bomb attacks within the Gulf nations themselves . The implication was staggering: that Israel’s spy agency was actively working to destabilize the very countries that were its tacit allies against Iran, all to ensure the war continued on Israel’s preferred trajectory.

These reports, emerging from the fever swamp of wartime information, were impossible to verify. The Times of India, reporting on the claims, presented them as part of the “new twist” in the conflict, a twist defined by dueling narratives and allegations of dark deceit . But whether true or not, their very existence altered the political landscape. For a US public already deeply skeptical of the war, the suggestion that their “ally” was manipulating events to trap them further was political poison.

The core of the “trap” thesis, as articulated by figures like Tucker Carlson and even some conservative writers, rests on this idea of entrapment - or, in a more evocative term used by the Heritage Institute’s John Daniel Davidson, being “chain-ganged” . In a piece published just days before the strikes on Iran began, Davidson argued that “Israel appears to have succeeded in such entrapment, forcing the Trump administration into a war not necessarily of its choosing or timing” . The imagery is powerful: the US, like a reluctant gunfighter, is dragged into a showdown by a more eager partner who has slipped the chains around its neck.

The mechanics of this entrapment, according to this view, are not reliant solely on dramatic false flags like the bombing of mosques or oil facilities. They are also structural. They are built into the very architecture of the US military’s global posture. As the Trump administration surged assets to the Middle East to counter Iran, it simultaneously redeployed significant resources - including a carrier strike group - to the Caribbean for operations in Venezuela . This created a strategic gap. The US military, despite its $1.5 trillion proposed budget, found itself in the position of a fire department with too many fires and not enough engines. As one analysis put it, “the United States lacks the military capacity to conduct overt and ongoing military operations at scale in every theater of the globe” .

This overstretch is the trap’s jaw. By forcing the US to concentrate its assets in the Middle East to defend Israel and strike Iran, the theory posits that Israel is deliberately weakening America’s posture elsewhere - most critically, in the Pacific, where China watches and waits. A carrier strike group redeploying from East Asia to the Gulf “only creates a new and worse strategic gap in the name of adventurism well outside of true U.S. interests,” the analysis continued .

But the trap is not just about moving ships. It’s about draining blood. The most potent political weapon in this asymmetric war is the American soldier. The IISS analysis presciently noted that the US commitment to forcing outcomes in the Middle East sits uneasily with its new hemispheric priorities . This unease translates directly into political risk for the commander-in-chief.

By early March, the human cost was already being tallied. Six dead. Then thirteen. Each name, each hometown, each flag-draped coffin became a data point in a political equation . A Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted as the news of casualties spread found a critical fault line within the Republican party. While 55% of Republicans supported the strikes on Iran, that support was deeply conditional. The poll revealed that 42% of Republicans said they would be less likely to support the action if it led to “US Middle East troop deaths” . The deaths were no longer hypothetical. They were real. And the political fallout had begun.

This is the heart of the alleged Israeli gambit. It is not about defeating Iran’s military. It is about defeating the US’s will to remain in the region by forcing it to fight a war on Israel’s terms - a war that is costly, indecisive, and deeply unpopular. By striking at US interests, real or perceived, and ensuring a spiral of escalation, Israel can force America’s hand. It can compel the US to strip other theaters of defense assets and pour them into the Gulf. It can force the US to put “boots on the ground” to protect its bases, its allies, and its reputation.

And then, the ultimate provocation: the false flag so enormous that it would shatter any remaining hope of diplomacy. Carlson’s focus on the Temple Mount is not arbitrary. He understands its power. “Right now, like this week, is the moment that some people…would like to begin the process of tearing down the Dome of the Rock, tearing down Al-Aqsa Mosque and rebuilding the Third Temple,” he claimed . An attack on the third-holiest site in Islam, blamed on Iran, would be a 9/11-scale event for the Muslim world. It would make the Iraq War look like a skirmish.

In this terrifying scenario, the US would have no choice. It would be forced to launch a full-scale invasion of Iran, not out of strategic choice, but out of an obligation to avenge an act of sacrilege perpetrated, in this telling, by the very ally it was defending. The “chain-gang” would have reached its destination: a ground war in the most difficult terrain on earth, against a nation of 85 million people, with the entire Muslim world watching.

And as the first American Marines waded ashore, or parachuted into the Iranian plateau, the trap would snap shut, not just on the US military, but on the political future of Donald Trump and the Republican Party.

The Domestic Front - Blood, Ballots, and the Breaking of Will

As American casualties mount and gas prices soar, the political ground shifts beneath President Trump. With midterm elections looming, the “Israel’s war” narrative threatens to fracture his coalition and ignite a domestic firestorm that could redefine American globalism.

In the cold, calculating calculus of geopolitics, it is easy to forget that wars are not fought by abstractions like “hegemony” or “strategic depth.” They are fought by sons and daughters, and they are paid for by families at kitchen tables struggling with the price of a gallon of milk and a tank of gas. It is in this visceral, human space that the political fate of presidents is decided. And it is here, in the hearts and wallets of the American electorate, that the alleged Israeli strategy finds its most fertile ground.

By the second week of March 2026, the human and economic costs of the US-Israeli campaign against Iran were no longer theoretical. They were starkly, painfully real. The headlines told a story of escalation: “6 US soldiers killed” . The number would soon climb to 13, each name a private tragedy with public consequences . The financial news was equally grim. Brent crude futures spiked 10%, hurtling toward $80 a barrel, with analysts predicting a climb to $100 . For millions of Americans living paycheck to paycheck, the war had arrived not as a call to patriotism, but as an unwelcome visitor at the gas station and the grocery store.

The political impact was immediate and devastating for the Trump administration. Polling conducted by Reuters/Ipsos in the wake of the strikes showed the president’s approval rating dipping to 39% . But the more dangerous numbers were hidden in the cross-tabs. A CNN poll found that a staggering 59% of Americans opposed the military action against Iran . This wasn’t just the “usual suspect” opposition from the Democratic base. It was a broad, cross-cutting sentiment rooted in deep war-weariness and economic anxiety.

The data painted a portrait of a nation that had lost its taste for foreign adventures. The poll found that 60% of Americans believed Trump had no clear plan for dealing with Iran, and 62% thought he should be required to get congressional approval for any further military moves . This wasn’t just partisan sniping; it was a constitutional crisis in waiting. The administration was conducting a war without a clear mandate, and the public was beginning to notice.

Most ominously for a president facing a crucial midterm election, the economic pain was directly linked to support for the war. The Reuters/Ipsos poll found that 45% of respondents - including 34% of Republicans and 44% of independents - said that rising gas prices would make them less likely to support the military action . The anti-war vote was no longer confined to college campuses and left-wing blogs. It was forming in the checkout lines of suburban Walmarts.

This is the political trap that the theorists claim Israel has set. It is not a trap of military defeat, but of political self-immolation. By forcing the US to lead a war against Iran, Israel has handed a political weapon to every opponent of Donald Trump. The narrative began to crystallize in the media, articulated most bluntly by commentator Megyn Kelly. “The US service members who were killed by the Iranian drone died for Iran or for Israel,” she declared. “This is clearly Israel’s war. Our government’s job is not to look out for Iran or Israel” .

The phrase “Israel’s war” became the meme that could sink a presidency. It frames the conflict not as a battle for American security, but as a proxy war fought with American blood and treasure for the benefit of a foreign power. This is an incredibly potent political attack, especially in an era of heightened isolationism. It taps into a deep American suspicion of being used, of being the “sucker” who pays the price while others reap the rewards.

Within the Republican party, the strain began to show. While a majority of Republicans initially supported the strikes, the coalition was fracturing. The 42% of Republicans who said US casualties would make them reconsider their support represented a potentially fatal crack in the base . The party of Reagan, the party of muscular internationalism, was now deeply divided between a leadership class still committed to the alliance with Israel and a populist base that wanted to “come home.”

Enter Tucker Carlson, stage left. For years, Carlson has been the tribune of this populist, anti-interventionist wing of the Right. His relentless focus on the “Israel’s war” narrative is not just a bid for ratings; it is a political project aimed at realigning the American Right along nationalist, non-interventionist lines. His March 2026 monologues, weaving together tales of Chabad conspirators and Temple Mount plots, were the intellectual (or anti-intellectual) fuel for this fire . He was giving his audience permission to be suspicious of Israel, to question the alliance, to see the war not as a noble cause but as a con game.

The reaction from pro-Israel forces and the administration was swift. They called “bullsh*t” . Axios reporter Marc Caputo, citing top administration officials, flatly denied Carlson’s claims that he was being investigated by the CIA, framing the commentator as a useful, but unwitting, tool spreading disinformation that just so happened to align with the adversary’s narrative . But the denial did little to stop the spread of the idea. Once “Israel’s war” entered the political lexicon, it became a self-replicating meme, immune to fact-checks.

This domestic firestorm has a deadline: the November 2026 midterm elections. These elections will determine whether Republicans maintain their narrow control of Congress. The strikes on Iran began just days before the midterm primaries . The timing could not have been worse for Trump. Historically, the president’s party loses seats in midterms. An unpopular, costly war with no end in sight is the kind of “October Surprise” (or in this case, “March Surprise”) that can flip entire chambers.

If the Democrats were to retake the House or the Senate, Trump’s political agenda would grind to a halt. More importantly, a Democratic Congress would almost certainly launch investigations into the lead-up to the war. They would subpoena emails, call witnesses, and probe the back-channel communications between the Netanyahu government and the Trump White House. The “collusion” narrative of 2026 would not be about Russia, but about Israel. It would be a political circus of epic proportions.

And what if the public’s anger boils over? The poll numbers hint at a deeper rage. A quarter of Americans said that the prospect of putting “boots on the ground” in Iran would make them “much less supportive” of the war . If the conflict escalates to a ground invasion, as some fear, and the body bags start coming home in the hundreds, the political pressure could become irresistible. It could lead to a full-blown constitutional crisis.

The most extreme scenario, whispered in the darker corners of the internet and picked up by Carlson, is that Trump could face impeachment - or worse, that the political system could buckle under the strain . While this seems far-fetched, the underlying dynamic is real. A president leading an unpopular war, facing a hostile Congress, and confronting a public that believes they were lied into the conflict is a president in existential political danger.

From this maelstrom of domestic discontent, a new strategic horizon begins to emerge for America - one that has very little to do with the Middle East and everything to do with the shores of the Caribbean and the icy expanse of Greenland.

The New World Disorder - America’s Retreat and Israel’s Dominion

As the US pivots to the Americas, seizing assets and sealing borders, the Middle East is left to a new reality. With its superpower patron gone, Israel stands alone, unshackled, ready to redraw the map from the river to the sea - and beyond.

The bombs are still falling on Iran. American soldiers are still dying in a faraway land. But in the corridors of power in Washington, a different map is being unrolled. It is a map of the Western Hemisphere, and on it, the future of American grand strategy is being drawn in bold, uncompromising lines. The war with Iran, whatever its outcome, may be the last gasp of an old America - the global policeman - while the real action is shifting to a new America: the hemispheric sheriff.

The official doctrine is already in place. The National Security Strategy released in December 2025 is clear: “Restoring US pre-eminence in the Western Hemisphere is now Washington’s most important foreign-policy objective” . This is not a temporary tilt; analysts from the IISS and China-US Focus describe it as a “major shift,” a “true return to isolationism and nationalism” that represents a medium- to long-term trajectory for the country .

The logic is brutally pragmatic. The post-Cold War era of liberal globalism is dead. It died in the sands of Iraq and Afghanistan, and it was buried by the 2008 financial crisis, which laid bare the hollowing out of the American middle class. As one analysis put it, “The unchecked growth of capital globalization has widened the wealth gap, with the rich reaping most of the benefits. The broad middle and lower classes have lost out” . The resulting political force, “America First,” is now the establishment.

This new strategic doctrine, however, is not passive. It is an aggressive, expansionist isolationism. It seeks to secure the homeland by dominating its immediate neighbors. The Trump administration has already demonstrated its willingness to use force in the region, launching strikes on Venezuela and threatening action against Mexico, Cuba, and Colombia . It seized Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro . It has talked openly of purchasing Greenland, a territorial ambition that, while quixotic, signals a desire to extend US power deep into the Arctic .

This is the future: a United States that is drawing a protective bubble around the Americas, using whatever means necessary - military, economic, diplomatic - to control migration, secure resources, and eliminate perceived threats. It is a fortress America, with the drawbridge pulled up and the moat patrolled by carrier strike groups that used to be stationed in Japan or the Persian Gulf .

The implications for the Middle East are profound and, for the states there, terrifying. If the US is serious about this pivot, it means the gradual, or not-so-gradual, abandonment of its traditional allies. The strategic analyst community is already warning of this risk. “The administration’s clear agenda…is to frame its hemispheric vocation” in a way that “implicitly downgrades related US priorities in East Asia, the Middle East and Europe” . The US is choosing its neighborhood over the world.

This is the point at which the theory and strategic reality converge. The theory posits that Israel wants the US to leave, to create a vacuum it can fill. The reality is that the US wants to leave, to tend to its own garden. The convergence of these two desires creates the perfect storm.

If the US were to accelerate its retreat from the Middle East - perhaps triggered by a political implosion over the Iran War - it would leave Israel in a position of unchallenged, but also unsupported, dominance. The Gulf Arab states, who have spent decades building their defense architecture around the American security guarantee, would be left exposed. The US bases in Qatar, Bahrain, and the UAE, built at a cost of billions and over decades, would become either irrelevant or vulnerable. The theory suggests Israel is willing to see these “Gulf states get hurt,” to see their infrastructure damaged, because it serves the larger purpose of clearing the field .

In this new, post-American Middle East, Israel would be the only nuclear power, the most advanced military, and the most aggressive actor. Unconstrained by a US administration that often counsels restraint (however futilely), Israel would be free to pursue its maximalist goals. This includes the expansion of settlements in the West Bank, the eventual annexation of territory, and the management of the Palestinian population through force. It could mean a more permanent military solution to the threat from Hezbollah in Lebanon and from Iran’s remaining proxies. The dream of a “Greater Israel,” from the river to the sea, would no longer be a revisionist fantasy but a potential policy platform.

This is the vision that alarms not just the Arab world, but also many American strategists who see the US retreat as a betrayal of allies and a gift to rivals like China and Russia. Yet, the domestic political momentum is almost impossible to stop. The American public is tired. As the China-US Focus analysis noted, “The United States is finding it increasingly challenging to sustain its global hegemony” . The country is suffering from “hegemonic decline,” marked by dysfunctional institutions and a populace that no longer believes in the mission.

For Israel, this creates an extraordinary opportunity, but also an existential danger. The opportunity is to reshape the region in its own image. The danger is that without the US as a buffer and a deterrent, Israel’s enemies may eventually coalesce into an even more formidable alliance. Iran, battered but not broken by the 2026 war, would harbor a generations-long grudge. The Arab street, inflamed by the destruction of Al-Aqsa, could topple the remaining pro-Western monarchies, replacing them with Islamist governments.

Yet, the proponents of the “trap” theory believe Israel is willing to take that risk. They believe that figures like Netanyahu and the messianic right see this moment as a divinely ordained opportunity. The rebuilding of the Third Temple, the ingathering of the exiles, the defeat of modern-day Amalek - these are not just political goals; for some, they are religious imperatives. Carlson’s fixation on the “religious layer” resonates because, for a small but powerful group of Jewish and Christian Zionists, the end-times are now. The chaos, the war, the suffering - it is all part of the plan.

As the United States turns its gaze from the deserts of the Middle East to the shores of Greenland and the oil fields of Venezuela, it leaves behind a region in flames. The question of whether Israel deliberately lit those flames to force the American departure may never be definitively answered. The official record, if it ever sees the light of day, will be redacted and contested. The truth, as always, will be the first casualty.

But what is undeniable is the trajectory. The American empire is contracting. Its citizens are exhausted. Its politicians are afraid. And into that void of power and will, other forces rush. Whether Israel is the puppet master or merely the primary beneficiary of these historical currents, the result is the same: a Middle East left to its own devices, dominated by a single, powerful, and ideologically driven state, free at last from the constraints of its most important friend. The lessons of the King David Hotel have been learned, perfected, and applied on a continental scale. The empire struck back, not by staying, but by finally, irrevocably, going home.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

الأزمة الخفية في القطاع المصرفي المصري: لماذا يهرب الموظفون من البنوك وكيف يواجهون بيئة العمل السامة؟

The Largest Countries in Debt as of 2025: A Global Economic Overview

The Islamic Golden Age: How a Civilization Kept the Light Alive