Just International

Does Israel Katz Speak for Israel? Will Trump Diplomacy Accept ‘Greater Israel’?

By Prof. Richard Falk

27 Dec 2025 – The short assessment of Israel’s strategic objectives that are not addressed in the Trump Twenty-Point Plan was initially written in response to a question by a Brazilian journalist with a special interest in the Middle East.

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Reading Israel Katz’s Comments on Annexation of the West Bank, Permanent Presence in Gaza, and Policies of Disproportionate Reprisal

Israel Katz, Israel’s Minister of Defense, used blunt language to express his version of ‘Greater Israel’ that is alone an acceptable outcome of this long struggle culminating in the Gaza Genocide. What Katz proposes is at minimum the de facto annexation of the West Bank and Israel’s permanent presence in the 53% of Gaza that Israel now occupies, made irreversible by the establishment of Jewish settlements in Northern Gaza.

Katz can be read as implicitly recognizing Israel’s inability to reach these goals de jure, which can be understood as an expression of Zionist realism as to the limits of Israel’s influence at any given time. Such remarks may have been unscripted, and not indicative of how Netanyahu proposes to handle this interaction between the Trump Plan and the Zionist Endgame.

This controversial language of Katz should be interpreted both as trouble ahead for the Trump diplomacy, an exhibition of Israel’s growing awareness that the contradictions between the further implementation of remaining fundamental tenets of the Zionist vision and the Trump diplomacy may collide in the future. In the past this gap between what geopolitical managers were willing to grant Israel and what Israel insists upon as the price of peace meant a frozen diplomacy. Before Katz spoke this acceptance of a de facto version of realizing Israeli goals had rarely openly acknowledged by a public official in relation to these expansionist and hegemonic ambitions.

This official silence in relation to Israel’s unattained strategic objectives may have been intended as a temporary expression of deference to the international consensus on an endgame for the struggle between Jews and Palestinians, which has been the case since the General Assembly 1947 Partition Resolution of 181, continues to support a ‘two-state solution.’ Such solution is not favored by a wide spectrum of opinion among the political elites and citizenry of Israel that currently affirm a commitment to a single Israeli state, often known as ‘Greater Israel’, but seemingly excluded from the Trump Plan. This helps explain why Netanyahu and other prominent Israelis have in recent months made their determined opposition to Palestinian statehood in any form. Also relevant is that criticism directed at Israel’s tactics of starvation and civilian targeting has been made by the governments most complicit with the genocide (except the US), including France, the UK, and Canada, that pointedly and stubbornly support the establishment of a Palestinian state. [See French-backed New York Declaration:United Nations High-Level International Conference – New York Declaration on the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State solution (29 July 2025)]

A previous signal of Israeli one-statism was the refusal to declare existing territorial borders as final.

Katz has made other disturbing comments in his official response to a deadly stabbing attack in the West Bank a few days ago. Katz declared that he has “ordered a military action against the home village” of the Palestinian attacker, a measure of reprisal contrary to international law in two respects: openly attacking a civilian village and inflicting collective punishment on an innocent community. Israel newspapers reports more measured Israeli responses to the incident of course labeled as ‘terrorism’ that may suggest that Katz’s provocative words should be partially discounted given his reputation as a stand-alone ‘hothead.’

All along Israel has opted for disproportionate and indiscriminate responses to any signs of armed Palestinian resistance. Israel formulated the so-called Dahiya Doctrine, first enunciated in 2006 as an articulation of Israel’s response to Hezbollah operating out of Lebanon in solidarity with the Palestinian struggle. As Dahiya was long understood it was nothing new. It made explicit what Israel had been doing all along in the name of national security.

What may be noteworthy with respect to these utterances by Katz is their relevance to territorial sovereignty ambitions and the future of Gaza. It has long been agreed upon by expert observers of Israel that the current leadership of Israel to varying degrees adhered to Zionist ideology that included the prospect of West Bank annexation and further Judaification by way of the settlement movement as well as the partial annexation of Gaza reinforced by Jewish settlements situated in northern Gaza. That Zionist ambitions along these lines existed in Tel Aviv should not have come as a surprise in informed circles, although its open acknowledgement at this time is unexpected, especially as it rubs against the grain of US efforts to build wide international support for the Trump 20 Point Plan, which is strongly weighted in favor of Israel and dismissive of Palestinian grievances.

The timing of Katz’s utterances may reflect Israeli concern about the nature of Trump’s regional approach that seemed to preclude such territorial expansion. This might slow down Israel’s timetable, but would not likely inhibit the Israeli leadership, that Israel will move forward with its ‘day after’ diplomacy while paying lip service to the Trump Plan. Trump’s diplomacy has major benefits for Israel. It masks accountability issues, thereby ensuring impunity for Israel’s engagement with the criminality of genocide and apartheid, and possibly ecocide, exhibited daily in the past two plus years to the entire world. The Miami meeting scheduled for Monday, December 29 between Netanyahu and Trump may cast light on whether Katz’s comments touched on points of tension between Washington and Tel Aviv or were just a way of reminding the world of a major tenet of Zionist ideology at a critical moment when the non-Israelis were formulating the future of what has become known as Occupied Palestinian Territories. Time will tell us more about the relative leverage of Israel and the United States in crafting a post-genocide future for the two peoples. In this sense, it is most unfortunate that no modality of Palestinian participation could be agreed upon during this period of Trump diplomacy.

As such thoughts linger, the people of Gaza have not been treated with dignity but mostly left homeless amid the rubble to cope with fierce Winter without heat, adequate food, and a conscientious Israel effort to abide by the ceasefire that it has consistently violated in ways that overcome any uncertainty. There is little reason to doubt that Israel’s annexationist and expansionist goals retain their position at the top of Israel’s policy agenda.

Prof. Richard Falk is a member of the TRANSCEND Network, of the TRANSCEND Media Service Editorial Committee, Albert G. Milbank Professor Emeritus of International Law at Princeton University, Chair of Global Law, Faculty of Law, at Queen Mary University London, Research Associate the Orfalea Center of Global Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Fellow of the Tellus Institute.

5 January 2026

Source: transcend.org

Trump’s Venezuela Attack: It’s All About the Oil, Stupid!

By Mehdi Hasan

Here are five times Donald Trump himself admitted that illegally attacking Venezuela and toppling Nicolás Maduro was aimed at seizing the country’s massive oil reserves.

3 Jan 2026 – To understand why Donald Trump just (illegally) attacked Venezuela and kidnapped the country’s president and his wife, you only need to look at this chart, which is based on OPEC numbers.

Trump didn’t attack Venezuela because it produces fentanyl. It doesn’t. He didn’t attack Venezuela because President Nicolás Maduro controls the Tren de Aragua gang. He doesn’t. He didn’t attack Venezuela because Maduro is the head of the Cartel de los Soles. It doesn’t even exist.

It’s about the oil, stupid!

Don’t believe me? Think it sounds a little conspiratorial?

Well, here’s the thing: Donald Trump, the self-declared ‘peace president,’ the serial liar, also likes to say the quiet part out loud from time to time.

In 2003, George W. Bush and Dick Cheney at least pretended their illegal invasion of Iraq and toppling of Saddam Hussein wasn’t about Iraq’s oil. It was about democracy! WMDs! Al-Qaeda!

Donald Trump, weirdly, shamelessly, and luckily for us, has been brutally honest on the subject of Venezuela and his motivation for regime change in Caracas.

Here he is in his own words.

  1. “Return the oil”

On Dec. 16, Trump posted on Truth Social that he was ordering “A TOTAL AND COMPLETE BLOCKADE” of all Venezuelan oil tankers by “the largest Armada ever assembled” until “such time as they return to the United States of America all of the Oil, Land, and other Assets that they previously stole from us.”

To be clear, US companies, as even the Washington Post has pointed out, “never owned oil or land in Venezuela, home to the world’s largest proven reserves of crude, and officials didn’t kick them out of the country.”

  1. “We want it back”

[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAA4W5Fos4c]

On Dec. 17, a journalist asked the US president on the tarmac at Joint Base Andrews: “Is the goal of the blockade of Venezuela regime change?”

Trump replied: “You remember, they took all of our energy rights. They took all of our oil, from not that long ago. And we want it back.”

Another reporter then asked the president: “On Venezuela, sir, you mentioned getting land back from Venezuela. What land is that?”

To which Trump responded: “Getting land, oil rights, whatever we had. They took it away because we had a president that maybe wasn’t watching. But they’re not going to do that. We want it back. They took our oil rights. We had a lot of oil there. As you know, they threw our companies out, and we want it back.”

  1. “We’re going to keep it”
    On Dec. 22, Trump told reporters in Palm Beach that the US government planned on keeping the oil illegally seized from Venezuelan tankers in the Caribbean.

“We’re going to keep it,” the president said.

“Maybe we’ll use it in the Strategic Reserves – we’re keeping it. We’re keeping the ships also,” he added.

He also acknowledged having spoken to “all the big” US oil companies about them returning to Venezuela once Maduro was removed from office.

  1. “They have all that oil”
    Trump has a long history of coveting Venezuela’s oil reserves.

In his 2019 memoir The Threat, former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe quotes first-term Trump saying Venezuela was “the country we should be going to war with, they have all that oil and they’re right on our back door.”

  1. “We would have gotten all that oil”
    Don’t take Maduro’s word for it. Take Trump’s word for it. He has long been obsessed with seizing Venezuela’s oil.

In June 2023, while he was out of office, Trump said at a rally in North Carolina:

“When I left, Venezuela was ready to collapse. We would have taken it over, we would have gotten all that oil, it would have been right next door.”

5 January 2026

Source: transcend.org

They Kidnapped Maduro Because the World Is Ruled by Unaccountable Tyrants

By Caitlin Johnstone

After all those months of babbling about fentanyl and “narcoterrorism” and freedom and democracy, the Trump administration has come right out and admitted that its regime change interventionism in Venezuela has always been a good old-fashioned oil grab.

4 Jan 2026 – Well, Trump finally did it. US special forces attacked Venezuela and abducted President Maduro from Caracas, reportedly killing at least 40 people in the process.

And now that it’s all over, the White House is getting a lot more honest about the real motives behind its actions. After all those months of babbling about fentanyl and “narcoterrorism” and freedom and democracy, the Trump administration has come right out and admitted that its regime change interventionism in Venezuela has always been a good old-fashioned oil grab.

“We’re gonna take back the oil that frankly we should have taken back a long time ago,” Trump told the press following Maduro’s abduction, saying “We’re going to be taking out a tremendous amount of wealth out of the ground, and that wealth is going to the people of Venezuela, and people from outside of Venezuela that used to be in Venezuela, and it goes also to the United States of America in the form of reimbursement for the damages caused us by that country.”

“We’re going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country, and we are ready to stage a second and much larger attack if we need to do so,” Trump said.

“We have tremendous energy in that country. It’s very important that we protect it. We need that for ourselves, we need that for the world,” the president added.

[https://twitter.com/BenjaminNorton/status/2007505294293905595]

Trump made it explicitly clear that this is going to be some sort of long-term US occupation project, contradicting early claims of his supporters who had defended the president’s actions in Venezuela as a brief in-and-out, one-and-done special ops intervention.

“We’re going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition,” Trump said. “So we don’t want to be involved with having somebody else get in. And we have the same situation that we had for the last long period of years. So we are going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition.”

“We’re not afraid of boots on the ground,” the president said. “And we have to have, we had boots on the ground last night at a very high level. Actually, we’re not afraid of it, we’re we don’t mind saying it, but we’re going to make sure that that country is run properly. We’re not doing this in vain.”

You would think after all these incredibly honest admissions that this was a regime change operation aimed at controlling the resources of the nation with the largest proven oil reserves on the planet, people would get real and accept that they were lied to about the Trump administration’s real reasons for targeting Venezuela. But I am still getting Trump supporters prattling on about drugs and terrorism and democracy in my social media replies defending my criticisms of his monstrous act of war.

[https://twitter.com/TrumpFile/status/2007580924469526693]

I had one Trump supporter try to tell me the president’s admissions that it was all about the oil don’t necessarily prove it wasn’t also about fighting drug trafficking, arguing that it could possibly have been motivated by both. Which to me kinda sounds like a grandmother acknowledging that yes, she had been victimized by an email scam, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the nice man who scammed her wasn’t also a Nigerian prince.

Trump supporters would make excuses for literally anything he did. Literally anything. I am not using hyperbole for effect. There is literally nothing he could do that they wouldn’t twist themselves into cognitive pretzels trying to justify.

Trump is spelling out the truth of what he is and what the US empire is, and anyone with open eyes can see it plain as day.

For those whose eyes are open or are beginning to open, I hope you continue learning the same lessons with Venezuela that you learned with Gaza. The US empire always lies, the mass media always facilitate its lies, and the global south continues to be ransacked by the murderous abusers who run things.

[https://twitter.com/caitoz/status/2007573343206330740]

While I was decrying Trump’s Venezuela assault some empire simp mockingly told me, “It must be sad for you to lose a tyrant.”

I told him no, it’s sad for me that we live in a lawless world that is ruled by tyrants.

It’s sad for me that we are ruled by chaotic despots who can invade a sovereign nation and abduct its leader and suffer no consequences.

It’s sad for me that the people with their hands on the steering wheel of the fate of our species are a bunch of sociopathic thugs who can smash and rob any country they please with total impunity.

It’s sad for me that our planet’s population is subject to the whims of a globe-spanning empire which topples governments, wages wars, sponsors genocides, targets civilians with starvation sanctions, backs proxy conflicts, drops bombs, brainwashes entire nations with propaganda, uses its military and economic might to bully and cajole states into bowing to its dictates, and sows suffering, destruction and death around the world every moment of every day.

It’s sad for me that these are the people who are making the decisions which will determine humanity’s path into the future. The future of our society. The future of our planet’s resources. The future of our technological innovation. The future of our ecosystem. The future of our militaries. The future of our nuclear weapons.

That is what is sad for me. I have no special emotional attachment to Maduro as an individual, but I do have a strong emotional attachment to the possibility of a healthy world emerging in the future.

And as things stand right now it’s looking pretty dark.

I find that sad.

Caitlin Johnstone is a rogue journalist, poet, and utopia prepper. Contact: admin@caitlinjohnstone.com

5 January 2026

Source: transcend.org

“We’re Going to Run the Country:” Preparing an Illegal Occupation in Venezuela

By Michelle Ellner

3 Jan 2026 – I listened to the January 3 press conference with a knot in my stomach. As a Venezuelan American with family, memories, and a living connection to the country being spoken about as if it were a possession, what I heard was very clear. And that clarity was chilling.

The president said, plainly, that the United States would “run the country” until a transition it deems “safe” and “judicious.” He spoke about capturing Venezuela’s head of state, about transporting him on a U.S. military vessel, about administering Venezuela temporarily, and about bringing in U.S. oil companies to rebuild the industry. He dismissed concerns about international reaction with a phrase that should alarm everyone: “They understand this is our hemisphere.”

For Venezuelans, those words echo a long, painful history.

Let’s be clear about the claims made. The president is asserting that the U.S. can detain a sitting foreign president and his spouse under U.S. criminal law. That the U.S. can administer another sovereign country without an international mandate. That Venezuela’s political future can be decided from Washington. That control over oil and “rebuilding” is a legitimate byproduct of intervention. That all of this can happen without congressional authorization and without evidence of imminent threat.

We have heard this language before. In Iraq, the United States promised a limited intervention and a temporary administration, only to impose years of occupation, seize control of critical infrastructure, and leave behind devastation and instability. What was framed as stewardship became domination. Venezuela is now being spoken about in disturbingly similar terms. “Temporary Administration” ended up being a permanent disaster.

Under international law, nothing described in that press conference is legal. The UN Charter prohibits the threat or use of force against another state and bars interference in a nation’s political independence. Sanctions designed to coerce political outcomes and cause civilian suffering amount to collective punishment. Declaring the right to “run” another country is the language of occupation, regardless of how many times the word is avoided.

Under U.S. law, the claims are just as disturbing. War powers belong to Congress. There has been no authorization, no declaration, no lawful process that allows an executive to seize a foreign head of state or administer a country. Calling this “law enforcement” does not make it so. Venezuela poses no threat to the United States. It has not attacked the U.S. and has issued no threat that could justify the use of force under U.S. or international law. There is no lawful basis, domestic or international, for what is being asserted.

But beyond law and precedent lies the most important reality: the cost of this aggression is paid by ordinary people in Venezuela. War, sanctions, and military escalation do not fall evenly. They fall hardest on women, children, the elderly, and the poor. They mean shortages of medicine and food, disrupted healthcare systems, rising maternal and infant mortality, and the daily stress of survival in a country forced to live under siege. They also mean preventable deaths, people who die not because of natural disaster or inevitability, but because access to care, electricity, transport, or medicine has been deliberately obstructed. Every escalation compounds existing harm and increases the likelihood of loss of life, civilian deaths that will be written off as collateral, even though they were foreseeable and avoidable.

What makes this even more dangerous is the assumption underlying it all: that Venezuelans will remain passive, compliant, and submissive in the face of humiliation and force. That assumption is wrong. And when it collapses, as it inevitably will, the cost will be measured in unnecessary bloodshed. This is what is erased when a country is discussed as a “transition” or an “administration problem.” Human beings disappear. Lives are reduced to acceptable losses. And the violence that follows is framed as unfortunate rather than the predictable outcome of arrogance and coercion.

To hear a U.S. president talk about a country as something to be managed, stabilized, and handed over once it behaves properly, it hurts. It humiliates. And it enrages.

And yes, Venezuela is not politically unified. It isn’t. It never has been. There are deep divisions, about the government, about the economy, about leadership, about the future. There are people who identify as Chavista, people who are fiercely anti-Chavista, people who are exhausted and disengaged, and yes, there are some who are celebrating what they believe might finally bring change.

But political division does not invite invasion.

Latin America has seen this logic before. In Chile, internal political division was used to justify U.S. intervention, framed as a response to “ungovernability,” instability, and threats to regional order, ending not in democracy, but in dictatorship, repression, and decades of trauma.

In fact, many Venezuelans who oppose the government still reject this moment outright. They understand that bombs, sanctions, and “transitions” imposed from abroad do not bring democracy, they destroy the conditions that make it possible.

This moment demands political maturity, not purity tests. You can oppose Maduro and still oppose U.S. aggression. You can want change and still reject foreign control. You can be angry, desperate, or hopeful, and still say no to being governed by another country.

Venezuela is a country where communal councils, worker organizations, neighborhood collectives, and social movements have been forged under pressure. Political education didn’t come from think tanks; it came from survival. Right now, Venezuelans are not hiding. They are closing ranks because they recognize the pattern. They know what it means when foreign leaders start talking about “transitions” and “temporary control.” They know what usually follows. And they are responding the way they always have: by turning fear into collective action.

This press conference wasn’t just about Venezuela. It was about whether empire can say the quiet part out loud again, whether it can openly claim the right to govern other nations and expect the world to shrug.

If this stands, the lesson is brutal and undeniable: sovereignty is conditional, resources are there to be taken by the U.S., and democracy exists only by imperial consent.

As a Venezuelan American, I refuse that lesson.

I refuse the idea that my tax dollars fund the humiliation of my homeland. I refuse the lie that war and coercion are acts of “care” for the Venezuelan people. And I refuse to stay silent while a country I love is spoken about as raw material for U.S. interests, not a society of human beings deserving respect.

Venezuela’s future is not for U.S. officials, corporate boards, or any president who believes the hemisphere is his to command. It belongs to Venezuelans.

Michelle Ellner is a Latin America campaign coordinator of CODEPINK.

5 January 2026

Source: transcend.org

US Invasion of Venezuela is State Terrorism

By Gerald A. Perreira,

Organization for the Victory of the People (OVP) unequivocally condemns the criminal US attack against Venezuela and the abduction of President Nicolas Maduro and Venezuela’s first lady, Cilia Flores, in the early hours of January 3, 2026. This attack tramples on Venezuela’s sovereignty and inalienable right to self-determination and can only be described as State terrorism.  

Centuries of US and West European imperialism, and their current behavior worldwide, has shown us that international law is a myth, a mental construct existing only on paper. We who are a part of the global resistance are well aware that international law does not exist in reality, since it cannot be enforced. It is very clear that the type of criminal activity and naked fascism being pursued by the Trump administration and its allies in Western Europe and the Apartheid State of Israel cannot be stopped by the invoking of international law, resolutions and declarations issued by an impotent and obsolete United Nations.

For centuries we have experienced the brutal reality: that US hegemony and continued plundering of our resources is enforced with miliary might alone, and that any country who dares to chart its own course will be subjected to ruthless sanctions and brutal military assaults. The US and West Europe, since the colonial project was initiated in our Americas and the Caribbean, have intervened in the affairs of our sovereign nations with impunity. In the face of this criminal and life-threatening behavior it is clear that we must resist by any means necessary. This attack on Venezuela is a pyrrhic victory. It may seem like a massive defeat for revolutionary and progressive forces worldwide, but the decline of the US Empire is in motion and cannot be reversed by the demonic trio, Trump, Hegseth and Rubio. Their reckless actions, supported by the governments of Guyana and Trinidad, will have dire consequences for all those involved.
 
The era of US fascism dressed up as “friendly fascism” pretending to be about ‘human-rights; and ‘democracy’ is over. The way that Donald Trump, members of his administration, US senators and congressman are brazenly expressing their racist and fascist views, is a signal that the threat to our very survival is becoming graver by the day. There is no better example of this brazen bravado, than the tweet from former US Secretary of State and war criminal, Mike Pompeo, on January 2, “Happy New Year to every Iranian in the streets. Also to every Mossad agent walking beside them.”

In the words of our sister Assata Shakur, who made the transition a few months ago having dedicated her life to the struggle against US imperialism: “Where there is oppression, there will always be resistance”.

Gerald A. Perreira, On behalf of the National Directorate, Organization for the Victory of the People (OVP)

4 January 2026

Source: countercurrents.org

Palestine’s Clarity, the Region’s Wars, and the New Activism: Forensic Reverse-Engineering of the Regional War Machine

By Rima Najjar

For most observers, the Middle East reads as chaotic noise — disconnected wars, perpetual emergencies. Yet from Palestine, a clear pattern emerges: a unified U.S.–Israel–anchored military-diplomatic order orbits one unresolved core — the political status of Palestine — while fueling conflicts across the region.

Gaza serves as the system’s primary template and proving ground.
Unlike the civil wars in Sudan and Yemen — internal non-international armed conflicts (NIACs) between rival domestic factions vying for state control — Gaza is not a civil conflict. It constitutes an international armed conflict rooted in Israel’s ongoing occupation and effective control over blockaded territory (as affirmed by the ICJ’s 2024 Advisory Opinion and subsequent rulings), involving direct state-to-non-state hostilities between Israeli forces and Palestinian armed groups.

This structural asymmetry and occupation framework make Gaza the system’s most transparent and intensely monitored proving ground, where direct field-testing of weapons, near-absolute diplomatic shielding, and systematic civilian harm expose the machinery with exceptional clarity.

A single integrated ecosystem of arms manufacturers, financiers, and logistics sustains the violence in Gaza, Yemen, and Sudan through shared supply chains, entrenched impunity, and a calculus that deems civilian lives expendable. Diplomatic failures — vetoed UN resolutions, blocked sanctions, uninterrupted arms flows — signal to all actors that brutality carries no enforceable price. Here, the United States and United Kingdom field-test weapon systems (often marketed as “battle-tested” post-Gaza); Washington and London deploy near-unrestrained diplomatic shields; and regional powers — Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Turkey, Iran, Qatar — reinforce the collapse of international law.

In response, Palestine-focused activists have become forensic analysts of this architecture: mapping supply chains (e.g., tracing Elbit Systems’ UK factories, whose disruptions contributed to site closures like Aztec West in September 2025 after products appeared in Gaza), tracking veto patterns, and extending this knowledge to Yemen, Sudan, and beyond.

These wars are bound into one regional system through three interlocking layers of power.

Layer One: The U.S.–Israel Axis

At the core lies the enduring confrontation between the U.S.–Israel axis and Iran. Iran sustains armed groups resisting dominance without formal alliances, while the U.S. and Israel bolster their stance through massive military aid, diplomatic cover, and strategic partnerships. This dynamic shines clearest in Palestine, yet it extends outward, shaping conflicts in Yemen and Sudan.

Gaza exposes the mechanics plainly. The United States props up Israel’s military freedom and shields it diplomatically. Israel wields direct coercive force over Palestinians. Iran, in turn, arms groups that challenge Israeli control.

The pattern intensifies in Yemen, escalating to open warfare. Houthis fire missiles and drones at ships linked to Israel’s Gaza operations — including those hauling arms — prompting retaliatory strikes from the U.S., UK, and Israel on Yemeni soil. Israel conducted repeated airstrikes on Houthi targets throughout 2025 (targeting ports, airports, and leadership in Sanaa and Hodeidah), though both sides paused direct exchanges after the October Gaza ceasefire.

In Sudan, the axis operates more covertly, but with equal strategic weight. Israel avoids direct strikes yet views the country as vital to its Red Sea map: maintaining intelligence networks, pursuing normalization (stalled since 2020–2023 efforts), and monitoring alleged Iranian smuggling routes to Gaza — routes long cited by Israeli and Western sources to justify surveillance. Iran’s renewed ties with Khartoum since 2023, including drone supplies to the Sudanese Armed Forces, alongside Gulf alignments with Washington, influence how powers back the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) or Rapid Support Forces (RSF). Far from purely internal, these wars orbit the Gaza-centered clash, drawn inexorably into its pull.

Layer Two: The Saudi–UAE Rivalry

A second layer overlays the region: the intense competition between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. This rivalry — fought over ports, militias, airbases, and political leverage — shapes outcomes in states hollowed out by war, determining who controls key assets in Yemen and Sudan.

Neither intervenes directly in Gaza militarily, yet both carefully calibrate their stances — from humanitarian aid and reconstruction pledges to public rhetoric and deliberate silences — primarily to bolster their influence in Washington, Tel Aviv, and the broader Arab world. By early January 2026, this rivalry had spilled into open confrontation in Yemen: Saudi-led coalition airstrikes struck UAE-linked arms shipments and separatist positions at Mukalla port in late December 2025 and in Hadramout, followed by UAE troop withdrawals and open accusations that Saudi actions endangered Emirati forces — laying bare the volatility and fragility of Gulf alignments.

In Yemen, the rivalry structures the conflict itself. Saudi Arabia arms and backs the internationally recognized government, aiming for a unified state. The UAE, by contrast, cultivates southern militias — particularly the Southern Transitional Council (STC) — to secure coastal influence and fragment authority into rival zones. Emirati logistical networks supply these forces while simultaneously arming the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in Sudan, illustrating how one set of supply chains sustains parallel wars.

Sudan sees a quieter but no less pivotal version of the same dynamic. The UAE provides the RSF with arms (including drones, vehicles, and ammunition, often via proxies or breaches of UN embargoes, as alleged in ongoing 2025–2026 reports). Saudi Arabia, alongside Egypt, offers diplomatic, financial, and military backing to the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), prioritizing stability along the Red Sea. Each power injects its own agenda: securing maritime corridors, gold/agricultural access, countering political Islam (a UAE priority), and aligning Sudan with U.S./Israeli Red Sea interests.

The result is that Sudan’s institutions are reorganized around external strategic demands rather than national needs: militarization deepens, civilian governance is weakened, and territorial fragmentation becomes politically acceptable to external powers and their regional partners so long as they retain secure access to ports, corridors, and resource flows.

Across both theaters, Gulf competition reinforces local militaries, entrenches external priorities, and perpetuates division — turning dysfunctional states into arenas for proxy influence.

Layer Three: Evasion in a Multipolar Order

The third layer emerges from the erosion of a U.S.-dominated regional order toward multipolarity. States and armed groups now routinely evade sanctions, diplomatic pressure, accountability mechanisms, and conditional aid by cultivating multiple patrons — each providing distinct forms of protection, from weapons and funding to political cover and sanctions relief.

In Sudan, this evasion has become a core survival tactic. The SAF draw support from Egypt (diplomatic and military backing, driven by Nile security), Russia (arms and potential naval base access at Port Sudan), Iran (drones and other supplies), and Turkey — a mix that shields them from full isolation. The RSF, meanwhile, rely heavily on the UAE (alleged arms deliveries, including drones and vehicles, often via covert routes despite denials), alongside sporadic ties to Russia (via Wagner/Africa Corps networks) and others. These overlapping patrons allow both sides to procure weapons, finance operations, and deflect consequences, prolonging the conflict amid a fractured global response.

Yemen mirrors this pattern even more deeply embedded in daily operations. The Houthis lean on Iran for advanced weaponry and financial lifelines (despite UN arms embargoes), use Omani mediation channels for diplomacy, and leverage control of Red Sea shipping lanes to generate revenue and blunt external pressure. Southern factions, particularly those aligned with the Southern Transitional Council (STC), depend on the UAE for military and financial sustainment, while Saudi Arabia provides backing to the internationally recognized government. Each actor secures a patron capable of offsetting sanctions, supplying arms, or blocking punitive measures — turning evasion into a structural feature of the war.

This diffusion of leverage does not diminish Washington’s enforcement power so much as reveal its selective restraint. The persistent lack of consequences in Gaza — even after the October 2025 ceasefire — sends a clear regional message: no major power, East or West, consistently imposes meaningful limits on belligerents. Armed actors in Sudan and Yemen draw the obvious lesson, operating with calculated impunity.

Together, these three layers — confrontation (U.S.–Israel–Iran), rivalry (Saudi–UAE), and evasion (multipolar shielding) — constitute a unified regional war-making architecture. Gaza remains the most transparent proving ground; Yemen the militarized spillover where direct clashes unfold; Sudan the competition arena where alignments and rivalries reshape the state, driving militarization, fragmentation, and governance oriented toward external imperatives.

What appear as isolated crises are, in reality, varied manifestations of the same system: intertwined supply chains, cross-cutting alliances that pit the same states against each other in different theaters, and mechanisms of external control that render civilian suffering strategically tolerable.

Sudan: A State Split Into Two Armed Machines

Sudan’s civil war erupted on 15 April 2023 between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), led by Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), commanded by Mohamed Hamdan “Hemedti” Dagalo. Rooted in internal fractures — competition over force integration, Darfur’s gold fields, ethnic tensions, and systematic civilian violence described as genocidal — these cleavages long predated regional involvement. Yet the current order ensures they cannot remain internal. External networks of arms pipelines, political shielding, and diffused veto points amplify the conflict, rewarding brutality with near-total impunity.

Sudan occupies a pivotal spot in the Red Sea control system linking Gaza, Yemen, and the Horn of Africa. Israel’s involvement stays strategic rather than direct military: intelligence ties persist, normalization efforts (2020–2023) linger in memory, and monitoring of alleged Iran-linked weapons-smuggling routes to Gaza keeps Sudan tied to the U.S.–Israel–Iran confrontation. Netanyahu’s past UN references to Sudan as a “friend” highlighted this interest. For Sudan’s ruling institutions, this geography makes Iranian alignment both tactically useful and strategically dangerous, inviting Israeli and Western retaliation and jeopardizing Gulf backing. For external powers and their regional partners, the country’s collapse becomes politically tolerable so long as the Red Sea corridor and associated ports and transit routes remain secure from Iran-aligned groups.

The U.S.–Israel–Iran triangle and Saudi–UAE rivalry exert powerful gravitational force. The UAE has faced persistent allegations of arming the RSF — including armored vehicles, drones, and other equipment (often via covert channels or proxies, breaching UN embargoes) — while Saudi Arabia and Egypt provide diplomatic, financial, and military support to the SAF. These patterns mirror their competing architectures in Yemen. Gulf competition hardens local militaries, sidelines civilian authority, and reorients Sudan’s institutions toward external priorities: control of Red Sea ports, access to gold and agricultural land, countering political Islam (a UAE focus), and alignment with U.S./Israeli Red Sea interests.

Civilian infrastructure turns into deliberate battlefield targets: hospitals, markets, water points, and transport routes face systematic attacks or militarization. The RSF’s 18-month siege of Al-Fashir (El Fasher) in North Darfur culminated in the city’s fall in late October 2025, unleashing mass killings, detentions, executions, and the destruction of basic services — leaving it nearly devoid of life and sparking mass exodus. Famine conditions (IPC Phase 5) persist in El Fasher and Kadugli through at least January 2026, driven by sieges, restricted access, market collapse, and ongoing violence. With over 12 million people displaced (UNHCR figures as of late 2025, including trends into early 2026) — making Sudan the world’s largest displacement crisis — the country exemplifies how local violence, fused with regional competition and global impunity, delivers predictable state collapse.

Yemen: A Long War Rewired by the Regional Machine

Yemen’s conflict began with internal fractures: the 2014 Houthi takeover of Sanaa amid widespread economic grievances, compounded by enduring north–south divides that continue to fuel separatist demands. These divides trace back to Yemen’s pre-1990 history as two separate states — the tribal-influenced, conservative North Yemen centered in Sana’a and the Marxist, secular South Yemen with Aden as its capital — whose rushed 1990 unification led to northern dominance, southern marginalization, economic neglect, and the failed 1994 secession attempt, entrenching grievances that birthed the Southern Movement (al-Hirak) from 2007 onward.

The Southern Transitional Council (STC)’s rapid December 2025 offensive — codenamed “Promising Future” — seizing control of much of Hadramout (including oil-rich facilities, Seiyun, Tarim, and key sites), al-Mahra (including the capital Al Ghaydah and Nishtun port), and other southern territories without major resistance demonstrates these rifts remain active and potent. By early December, UAE-backed STC forces had swept through eastern provinces, reaching Oman’s border and controlling most of the former South Yemen territory (Aden, Lahij, Dhale, Abyan, Shabwah, Hadramout, al-Mahra, Socotra), often against fragmented Saudi-backed government troops.

This advance has deepened Yemen’s de facto partition along north–south lines, creating rival authorities, currencies, and armed forces. In the north, Iran-backed Houthis maintain a separate administration in Sana’a with their own institutions, security apparatus, and economy. In the south, the STC dominates administration, security, and economic levers, operating via the Aden-based central bank, issuing banknotes, and pursuing independent monetary policies — resulting in rival currencies (with differing exchange rates, old vs. new notes, and Houthi rejection of post-2016 Aden-printed bills) and parallel economic systems. These developments underscore how the underlying north–south divide — rooted in historical separation, unequal unification, and persistent grievances — has evolved into parallel realities and a near-partition that overshadows any unified state vision.

Yet Saudi and Emirati intervention transformed Yemen from a domestic crisis into a theater reshaped by overlapping external networks. Saudi Arabia has long armed and supported the internationally recognized government, seeking a unified state. The UAE, in contrast, has cultivated southern militias — especially the STC — to secure coastal strongholds around Aden, Mukalla, and beyond. T

As noted before, the same Emirati logistical chains that supply these forces also arm the RSF in Sudan, showing how one rivalry powers multiple wars across the region. Rather than heal divisions, these interventions entrenched them: ministries split, revenue streams fragmented, and the currency divided. By 2025, Yemen functioned less as a unified state than as competing patronage zones anchored to external patrons.

Front-line clashes have eased, but the war has shifted to economic fronts — blocked salaries, rival customs systems, and fierce battles over ports and fuel. Diplomacy has reduced airstrikes without reversing fragmentation. More than 19 million people — over half the population — require humanitarian assistance and protection as the enduring baseline, with women, girls, IDPs, refugees, and migrants facing acute vulnerability amid ongoing economic warfare and service breakdowns.

The Red Sea crisis fully integrated Yemen into the U.S.–Israel–Iran confrontation. Houthis framed their maritime attacks as solidarity with Gaza, launching missiles and drones in rhythm with escalations there; U.S. responses aligned closely with Israeli threat assessments. Israel became a direct military actor, conducting repeated airstrikes on Houthi targets — most intensely from mid-2025 (targeting ports like Hodeidah, power stations, and leadership in Sanaa) — though both sides paused direct exchanges after the October 2025 Gaza ceasefire, with Houthis halting attacks on Israel and shipping (while reserving the right to resume if the truce breaks).

Saudi–UAE tensions exploded dramatically in late December 2025: Saudi-led coalition airstrikes targeted alleged UAE-linked arms shipments and military vehicles bound for STC separatists at Mukalla port (destroying trucks and equipment), followed by UAE troop withdrawals, public accusations of endangerment, and a brief cooling into early January 2026. This unprecedented escalation — including multiple strikes and warnings of threats to Saudi national security — exposed the rivalry’s volatility amid STC advances in Hadramout and al-Mahra, culminating in the STC’s January 2, 2026 announcement of a two-year transitional period toward southern independence. This includes a constitutional declaration for the “State of South Arabia” (capital Aden, based on pre-1990 borders) and a planned referendum on self-determination, with immediate independence possible if dialogue fails or attacks resume.

Like Sudan, Yemen stands far from peripheral to the Gaza-centered architecture. The Houthi Red Sea campaign, explicitly tied to Gaza solidarity, drew direct Israeli and U.S. military involvement, while the southern separatist surge — fueled by Gulf proxy rivalries — has further fragmented the country, complicating any unified response to regional threats. It serves as a frontline where confrontation, rivalry, and evasion converge: shared supply chains drive fragmentation, external priorities eclipse national ones, and civilian collapse solidifies as the norm.

Civilian Collapse

This regional war-making architecture reliably generates civilian collapse — eroding essential services first, then markets, and ultimately demographics.

In Sudan, the breakdown manifests starkly: emptied cities, destroyed hospitals, missing detainees, and mass displacement on a historic scale. Famine conditions (IPC Phase 5) persist in El Fasher (North Darfur) and Kadugli (South Kordofan), with reasonable evidence confirming starvation-level food insecurity as of September 2025 and expectations that these conditions will continue through at least January 2026, according to the latest IPC analysis and Famine Review Committee conclusions. Immediate deaths blend into long-term devastation: extreme malnutrition (with Global Acute Malnutrition rates reaching 38–75% in El Fasher and 29% in Kadugli), widespread disease, educational collapse, mass trauma, and forced demographic shifts through displacement and mortality.

In Yemen, institutional decay appears in currency fragmentation, chronic unpaid salaries, restricted movement and trade, and persistent underfunding of aid. More than 19 million people — over half the population — require humanitarian assistance and protection as the baseline in 2025–2026, per OCHA and UNHCR assessments, with women, girls, IDPs, refugees, and migrants facing acute vulnerability amid ongoing economic warfare and service breakdowns.

These patterns directly mirror mechanisms long entrenched in Gaza and the West Bank: systematic targeting of civilian infrastructure, normalization of mass harm, and long-term demographic engineering. When brutality in one theater faces no enforceable consequences, it reduces the perceived cost of similar violence elsewhere, embedding impunity across the system.

The New Activism as Systems Practice

This is the grim reality that contemporary activists now confront head-on. Since 2023, solidarity movements have matured beyond moral outrage into a sophisticated systems practice. They no longer ask whether the wars are wrong; they systematically expose how they are sustained — and apply targeted pressure at the precise pressure points of the machinery.

Activists map weapons supply chains in detail: tracing components from factories to frontlines, exposing banks that finance them, ports that transport them, insurers that underwrite them, universities that research them, and corporations that profit. Palestine Action’s pre-proscription disruptions of Elbit Systems’ UK factories — which forced public scrutiny and contributed to site closures like Aztec West in September 2025 — exemplified this forensic approach, directly challenging the supply lines feeding Gaza’s destruction.

These efforts transform ordinary infrastructure into contested terrain. Dockworkers across Europe — from France’s Fos-Marseille (June 2025 blockade of arms components) to Italy’s Genoa (multiple 2025 actions, including inspections and refusals on ZIM-linked ships), as well as ports in Sweden, Greece, and beyond — have refused to handle military cargo bound for Israel, responding to calls from Palestinian trade unions and generating immediate logistical friction. Banks reassess reputational and legal risks; universities cut ties to surveillance technologies; courts turn into arenas for injunctions, liability suits, and challenges to complicit transfers.

What emerges is not just narrative shift, but tangible friction: shipment delays, elevated risks for financiers, reputational damage for corporations, legal uncertainty for enablers, and rising financial costs for the war machine. This activism does not end wars through moral appeals alone; it constrains and slows them by disrupting the infrastructure that sustains them.

Yet friction cannot dismantle a system designed to neutralize resistance. The state’s juridical shield — anti-terror laws, proscriptions, diplomatic vetoes — activates rapidly when threatened. The July 5, 2025, proscription of Palestine Action under the Terrorism Act (following the earlier proscription of Samidoun) demonstrated this protective coherence. As of early 2026, the ban remains in force, but a landmark judicial review — heard over three days in late November/early December 2025, with interventions from Amnesty International UK, Liberty, and UN experts — contests it as a disproportionate violation of free expression, assembly, and protest rights under Articles 10, 11, and 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Judgment remains pending, even as mass defiance continues: over 2,000 arrests (many for simply holding signs stating “I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action”), hunger strikes by imprisoned activists demanding the ban’s reversal, and broad condemnation from civil liberties groups as Orwellian overreach.

Boycotts, blockades, and supply-chain disruptions have raised costs and slowed arms flows, yet systemic transformation stays elusive amid entrenched financing, UN vetoes, and legal fortifications. The region remains locked in managed catastrophe: external powers sustain their rivalries by fueling perpetual internal collapse.

For the first time in decades, however, this lethal equilibrium encounters sustained resistance from a new activism that targets the logistical and financial core directly. Activists recognize that halting the wars requires disrupting the machine — even in the face of repression, arrests, and daunting setbacks.

Everything connects.
Every component, from the bank to the bomb, has a function.
Everything has a cost.
And for millions across Gaza, the West Bank, Yemen, and Sudan, that cost is measured in life itself.

Rima Najjar is a Palestinian whose father’s side of the family comes from the forcibly depopulated village of Lifta on the western outskirts of Jerusalem and whose mother’s side of the family is from Ijzim, south of Haifa.

4 January 2026

Source: countercurrents.org

US Begins the Installation of an “Oil-garchy” in Venezuela

By Phil Pasquini

“American sweat, ingenuity and toil created the oil industry in Venezuela,” so said Steven Miller, top advisor to President Trump, on December 17 as reported in the New York Times. Miller went on to say that the nationalization of the oil industry in 1976 was a “…tyrannical expropriation…the largest recorded theft of American wealth and property. These pillaged assets were then used to fund terrorism and flood our streets with killers, mercenaries and drugs.” Miller called for the return of those assets formerly owned by ExxonMobil, Shell and Chevron that were expropriated and used to create Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA).

If stopping drug trafficking is cited as one pretext for an invasion to end the flooding of our streets with drugs, one must wonder why Trump pardoned former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández who was convicted in 2024 of smuggling 400 tons of cocaine into the US.

Lest anyone think otherwise, the illegal attack on Venezuela, a violation of international law, is primarily not about the issue of drug trafficking, gang violence, stolen elections or democracy for the Venezuelan people. Instead, it is one simply in which corporate oil interests reign supreme and continue to be integral in determining the direction of American foreign policy in the Middle East and now gaining a more expansive “Manifest destiny” of “our oil” being under other sovereign nation’s land.

The invasion and kidnapping of President Nicholás Maduro by the US military comes as no surprise to those paying attention as the relationship between the two nations has continued to devolve under the Trump regime. On December 17th, when addressing the blockade of Venezuela, Trump telegraphed his intention for regime change to gain access to its oil saying that the blockade would remain “until such time as they return to the United States all of the oil, land, and other assets that they stole from us.” One sure way to begin that process, Washington hopes, is through the removal of Maduro which has the added benefit of reestablishing American corporate control over the valuable oil industry.

Speaking to the nation from Mar-A-Lago on the kidnapping of Maduro on January 3, Trump further confirmed that “We are going to run the country until such time that we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition of peace and liberty and justice for the people of Venezuela.” No plan was laid out on just who would be involved or how Venezuela will be run “properly.”

During a protest outside the White House, one activist voiced concern that Trump’s plan would follow the proposal for Gaza of utilizing technocrats to run the country.

According to Trump, Venezuela’s “…oil business has been a bust for some time. We’re going to have our very large oil companies in the United States fix the badly run oil infrastructure to start making money for the country.” He went on to describe “Operation Absolute Resolve” as an “attack for justice” that would see Venezuela becoming “rich, independent and safe” through oil revenues utilizing America’s “greatest oil companies, the biggest of any in the world.”

Secretary of Defense Peter Hesgeth, following Trump, parroted the party line in referring to “our stolen oil” and noted that the invasion and kidnapping was a demonstration of “peace through strength.” Activists noted that under Hegseth’s leadership the US military would engage in “maximum lethality, not tepid legality.”

Outside the White House, not everyone was buying the party line along with seventy percent of Americans who are opposed to yet another war and protesters in more than seventy cities across the country, calling for No War on Venezuela. This was counter to Trump’s call for further military action in the country if that should become necessary as he forges ahead to install an “Oil-garchy.”

The White House protest in the aftermath of the Trump press conference saw activists saying, “Trump Must Go Now” and for people to get in the streets in resisting his regime. They were also clearly cognizant that Mexico and Cuba remain in the crosshairs for further scrutiny by Trump.

According to activists in demanding an end to these “illegal acts,” they summed up the Trump regime’s performance of “evil acts” thus far as “murdering fishermen, stealing tankers filled with oil, invading Venezuela and kidnapping the countries head of state.” Saying that a full military invasion of Venezuela would be undertaken by the young people from “working class” American families who would be sent by Trump to die for oil and not “the children of oil executives or those of CEOs from Lockheed Martin.”

Adam from the Palestinian Youth Movement reflected that the Trump administration is using the same old playbook of lies and tactics by “creating regime change to ‘Bring in democracy’ resulting instead in the decline of world order as a result…that won’t stop with Venezuela.” He ended by calling on all people of consciousness all around the world, saying, “We have a duty to raise our voices and fight back!”

Several protesters carried signs referencing the still very much alive ongoing controversy over the release of the Epstein files taking a back seat to yet another diversion. One speaker noted a primary difference between Maduro and Trump by saying that Maduro was “not on the Epstein List.”

Several speakers warned about turning over Venezuela’s oil and mineral resources to a puppet government under US corporate control in furtherance of capitalistic hegemony in Latin America. This while demanding a return of both President Maduro and his wife First Lady Sylvia Flores to Venezuela, an end to the war and military violence, along with a withdrawl of all military assets and buildup in the Caribbean for intervention purposes in the region by SOUTHCOM. Added to this was a call for all US unilateral sanctions anywhere in the world to end, noting that an estimated half a million people die every year due to their imposition.

Report and photo by Phil Pasquini

4 January 2026

Source: countercurrents.org

Xi Jinping Thoughts and its Relevance Beyond the Borders of China

By Bhabani Shankar Nayak

In an ideologically barren landscape of opportunistic and anti people politics, where leadership is largely reduced to protecting the interests of crony capitalism and its modes of governance in the name of ficticious individual freedom and supercilious democracy, the ideas of Chinese Premier Comrade Xi Jinping offer hope in a world marked by imperialist wars, religious conflicts, and deepening capitalist economic and social crises. Xi Jinping’s ideological contributions not only deepen socialism in China but also provide politically enriching strategies relevant to working-class struggles seeking to develop socialist alternatives beyond China’s borders.

Xi Jinping’s concept of the “Road to National Rejuvenation” fundamentally opposes the narrow ethnonationalism of Westphalian nation-states, where national interests are shaped by the capitalist classes. Such systems generate contradictions between nations, manufacturing military, economic, and political crises while promoting a culture of crony capitalism in which the interests of the national bourgeoisie override those of the working masses. In contrast, Xi Jinping’s thought emphasizes linking China’s national interests with those of other nations in order to build solidarity and address the most pressing global challenges. Therefore, Xi Jinping Thought is not merely an abstract form of internationalism but is grounded in the interconnected realities and struggles faced by working people across the world.

Xi Jinping’s thoughts on socialism with Chinese characteristics is not a narrow nationalist vision rooted solely in the “Chinese Dream” for China and the Chinese people. Xi argues that “socialism with Chinese characteristics is the dialectical unity of the theoretical logic of scientific socialism and the historical logic of China’s social development. It is a scientific socialism rooted in China’s soil, one that reflects the aspirations of the Chinese people, and one that is adapted to the conditions of progress in our times. It is the only way to comprehensively build a prosperous society, accelerate socialist modernization, and realize the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.” His ideas not only enrich socialism but also develop Leninist insights, particularly the principle that “concrete analysis of concrete conditions is the living essence of dialectics,” within the Chinese context.

This approach demonstrates how socialist theory can be adapted to diverse local, regional, and national conditions while maintaining the international solidarity of the working class beyond national boundaries. Xi’s thought also emphasizes that the “consolidation and development of the socialist system will require its own long period of history… it will require the tireless struggle of generations, up to ten generations.” Socialism and its revolutionary upsurge cannot be built in a single day; rather, they are the result of the collective and sustained efforts of working people striving for their own emancipation.

Theoretically, Xi Jinping thought helps us understand the contradictions and continuities of history. There is no escape from history or historical reality. While acknowledging and lamenting the failures of the socialist experiment in the Soviet Union, Xi’s thought provides a framework to analyze the reasons behind its disintegration. Xi cautions working people against the depoliticized historical nihilism that emerged within the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which led to its ideological failure to uphold the values and achievements of the socialist revolution.

Xi argues that working people, their revolutionary parties, and their cadres must adopt Marxist revolutionary principles as a “way of life.” His Ten Affirmations represent political masterstrokes in socialist ideological praxis, offering guidance for a continuous revolution aimed at safeguarding the interests of the working people and building a socialist state that genuinely serves the masses. Similarly, Xi’s Fourteen Commitments are crucial for constructing a working-class party composed of ideologically committed cadres capable of upholding the interests of the people, peace, and the planet while advancing a prosperous society. These ideals are further reinforced through Xi’s “Six Musts,” which articulate harmonious principles for cultivating socialist values and fostering responsible global citizenship both within and beyond China. Xi emphasizes the pursuit of truth, science, history, and dialectics as essential to defending the interests of those at the bottom of society. Xi Jinping Thought also reaffirms the mass line advocated by Mao Zedong, emphasizing the need to serve, represent, and uphold the interests and values of the working masses.

In the name of critiquing China and its development, Eurocentric scholars and capitalist ruling class scholarship often promote falsehoods, misunderstandings, and ideologically driven propaganda aimed at undermining China and its modernization processes. State-owned enterprises in China are frequently labeled as examples of “state capitalism.” However, in reality, there is no such thing as state capitalism in China, as capitalists do not control the Chinese state or government. Instead, it is workers’ democracy that guides the Communist Party of China, the Chinese state, the government, and public policy.

Xi Jinping has rightly argued that state-owned enterprises are central to laying the material foundation of China’s development. As he notes, “without the major innovations and key core technologies achieved by state-owned enterprises, and without their long-term commitment to bearing extensive social responsibilities, there would be no economic independence or national security for China, no continuous improvement in people’s livelihoods, and no socialist China standing tall in the East of the world.” Socialist China today stands not only tall in the East but also as a significant force on the global stage. China thus offers hope to working people and their struggles across the world by demonstrating a path of development rooted in socialism, sovereignty, and collective advancement.

Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign represents a masterclass in good governance grounded in truth. Truth, in this context, he “means to focus on the nature of things, to speak frankly, and to follow the truth. This is an important embodiment of a leading official’s commitment to truth-seeking, justice, devotion to the public interest, and uprightness. Moreover, the premise of telling the truth is to listen to the truth.” These principles form the foundation of governance and justice that seeks to “enable the people to see that justice is served” in China today.

Xi Jinping’s economic thoughta are grounded in the principle that “common prosperity is an essential requirement of socialism and a key feature of Chinese-style modernization. Common prosperity is for all, encompassing affluence in both material and spiritual life, but it is neither for a small minority nor based on uniform egalitarianism.” His political praxis is rooted in democratic ideals based on Mao’s mass line emphasizing that “a party and its authority rest on winning the hearts and minds of the people. What the public opposes and hates, we must address and resolve… As material and cultural needs grow, demands for democracy, the rule of law, fairness and justice, security, and a better environment are also increasing each day.” These principles are central to empowering the people and deepening democracy in China. At the same time, they hold broader significance for strengthening working-class movements worldwide in the struggle to build socialism.

Xi Jinping encapsulates the future of socialism by affirming that “China’s success proves that socialism is not dead; it is thriving. Just imagine this: had socialism failed in China, had our Communist Party collapsed like the party in the Soviet Union, then global socialism would have lapsed into a long dark age, and communism—like Karl Marx once said—would have remained a haunting specter lingering in limbo.” In this sense, Xi Jinping’s thought on culture, society, politics, the economy, and ecology revolves around the task of building socialism under all forms of adverse conditions. His thoughts underscore the importance of constructing a strong socialist party, a socialist state, and a revolutionary system of governance capable of upholding the interests of the working people and ensuring that their rights and aspirations are protected and advanced. Xi Jinping thought thus develops and advances Marxist, Leninist, and Maoist political praxis for socialist transformation in China and beyond its borders. Xi consistently calls for continuous reform in response to changing historical and material conditions in order to uphold the ideals of socialism and reaffirm its relevance for the emancipation of working people from the bondage of capitalism and its illusory “American Dream.”

Bhabani Shankar Nayak, London Metropolitan University, UK

3 January 2026

Source: countercurrents.org

A Clean Break with the Old Order: Zohran Mamdani’s First Executive Acts and the Assertion of the Politics of People’s Power in New York City

By Feroze Mithiborwala

Passes Executive Orders Prioritising: Working Class Rights and Dignity, Enforcing Tenancy Rights, Affordable Housing, Public Land, Economic Justice, Human Services, Defends Free Speech and Right to Protest, Scraps IHRA & Reinstates BDS

Zohran Mamdani’s inauguration on January 1, 2026 was not staged as a ritual of elite continuity but as a declaration of political alignment. Standing on the steps of City Hall, Mamdani delivered his oath and inaugural address in the presence of Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the two figures most closely identified with the insurgent democratic socialist tradition that carried him into office. Sanders invoked New York’s working-class history and warned that “a city governed by billionaires is not a democracy,” while Ocasio-Cortez framed Mamdani’s victory as proof that “organized people can defeat organized money — even in the capital of real estate.”[1]

Mamdani’s speech echoed their themes. He spoke not of managerial competence or market confidence, but of rent, debt, wages, dignity, and power — insisting that government must be an instrument for those “who keep this city alive but are being priced out of it.”[2]

At his side stood Rama Duvaji, New York City’s new first lady, whose composed presence, her quiet elegance and mystique drew immediate attention. Comparisons to Princess Diana — less about royalty than about symbolic intimacy with public life — were not accidental. Duvaji’s visibility reinforced the sense that this administration understood politics not merely as policy, but as moral narrative and popular identification.

What followed in Mamdani’s first hours in office made clear that this was not rhetoric detached from action.

Clearing the Slate: Revoking the Adams Era

Mamdani’s first executive decision was sweeping and unambiguous. He signed an order revoking all executive orders issued by former mayor Eric Adams after September 26, 2024, the date of Adams’s federal indictment.[3]

Roughly nine executive orders were nullified, spanning antisemitism policy, restrictions on political expression, policing practices, and immigration enforcement.[4]

The choice of cutoff date was deliberate. By tying the revocation to the indictment, Mamdani framed the late Adams administration as politically compromised, a period in which executive authority was increasingly exercised without democratic legitimacy. The move provided Mamdani not merely a symbolic reset, but a legal foundation for reconstructing executive power in line with his mandate.

IHRA, BDS, and the End of Ideological Enforcement

Among the rescinded orders were two that had become flashpoints in New York politics.

The first was the formal adoption of the IHRA “working definition” of antisemitism, imposed across city agencies in mid-2025.[5]

Civil liberties advocates had long argued that IHRA’s expansive language was being used to collapse criticism of Israel into antisemitism, chilling speech and targeting Palestinian solidarity organizing.

The second was an executive order barring participation in the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, prohibiting city agencies and officials from supporting or engaging in boycotts or divestment related to Israel.[6]

Those New Yorker’s who stand for the cause of Palestine, who speak out against the ongoing Israeli genocide of Gaza, who speak up for the children of Gaza, now can speak, can protest without fear of being criminalised as an antisemite.

The order placed municipal power on one side of a global political struggle, restricting constitutionally protected political expression.

The backlash was swift. Several Jewish organizations accused Mamdani of weakening protections against antisemitism.[7]

Mamdani responded by drawing a clear distinction: antisemitism must be confronted forcefully, but political dissent cannot be policed by executive decree.

Importantly, he indicated that certain institutional functions created under Adams — including the Office to Combat Antisemitism — would continue under new frameworks and oversight.[8]

Reorganizing Power Inside City Hall

Mamdani’s break with the old order extended inward. Executive Order 02 reorganized mayoral governance, elevating housing, economic justice, and human services into core deputy mayor portfolios.[9]

This restructuring was a rejection of the neoliberal city model, where social policy is subordinate to “business confidence.” Mamdani embedded class politics directly into executive authority, signalling that inequality would not be treated as a downstream problem but as the central task of governance.

Tenants Move from the Streets to the State

Housing was central to Mamdani’s campaign, and it quickly became central to his governance. Executive Order 03 revived and empowered the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants, a body long marginalized even as rents soared and displacement accelerated.[10]

In a city where nearly 70 percent of residents are renters, and where more than half are rent-burdened, the move carried immediate political weight. The office is tasked with coordinating tenant protections across agencies, enforcing housing codes, and legitimizing tenant organizing as a driver of policy rather than a nuisance to be managed.

Public Land, Public Purpose

Mamdani’s Land Inventory Fast Track (LIFT) Task Force, created through Executive Order 04, aims to identify and deploy city-owned land for housing development.[11] Unlike the past that enriched developers while delivering minimal affordability, LIFT is explicitly oriented toward long-term public benefit, union labour, and durable affordability.

Economically, the task force signals a potential reassertion of public power over land use, challenging decades of real-estate dominance over urban planning.

The Meaning of Mamdani’s First Days

Taken together, Mamdani’s early executive acts mark a decisive shift in New York City politics. He has:

·        Rolled back ideologically driven executive orders

·        Restored democratic legitimacy after a compromised administration

·        Shifted power toward tenants and working people

·        Brought back focus on the public sector as an active shaper of markets

This is not moderation; it is alignment.

Mamdani is governing as he campaigned.

Conclusion: Governing as Promised

Zohran Mamdani’s first days in office demonstrate what it looks like when an administration takes its mandate seriously.

The policies will face resistance — from real estate interests, political elites, and ideological gatekeepers. But the direction is unmistakable.

For the first time in years, New York City is not pretending neutrality. City Hall has taken sides.

And that, in the capital of American urban capitalism, is already a profound assertion of people’s power.

References

Sanders, B., & Ocasio-Cortez, A., Inauguration remarks, NYC, Jan 1, 2026.

Mamdani, Z., Inaugural Address, Jan 1, 2026.

Haaretz, “BDS, Synagogue Protest Bans Revoked as Mamdani Scraps Adams-Era Orders,” Jan 2026.

ArcaMax Publishing, “Mamdani Axes

Adams Executive Orders,” Jan 2026.

Madhyamam, “NYC Mayor Revokes IHRA Definition,” Jan 2026.

Madhyamam, “Mamdani Revokes Anti-BDS Order,” Jan 2026.

Times of Israel / JNS reporting, Jan 2026.

Axios, “What Mamdani Keeps and Cuts,” Jan 2026.

NYC Mayor’s Office, Executive Order 02, Jan 2026.

NYC Mayor’s Office, Executive Order 03, Jan 2026.

NYC Mayor’s Office, Executive Order 04, Jan 2026.

Feroze Mithiborwala is an expert on West Asian & International Geostrategic issues. He is the Founder-Gen. Sec. of the India Palestine Solidarity Forum.

3 January 2026

Source: countercurrents.org

‘We Will Govern Expansively and Audaciously’: Zohran Mamdani’s Inaugural Address

By Zohran K Mamdani

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani prepared these remarks to deliver at his inauguration on January 1, 2026.

My fellow New Yorkers—today begins a new era.

I stand before you moved by the privilege of taking this sacred oath, humbled by the faith that you have placed in me, and honored to serve as either your 111th or 112th Mayor of New York City. But I do not stand alone.

I stand alongside you, the tens of thousands gathered here in Lower Manhattan, warmed against the January chill by the resurgent flame of hope.

I stand alongside countless more New Yorkers watching from cramped kitchens in Flushing and barbershops in East New York, from cell phones propped against the dashboards of parked taxi cabs at LaGuardia, from hospitals in Mott Haven and libraries in El Barrio that have too long known only neglect.

I stand alongside construction workers in steel-toed boots and halal cart vendors whose knees ache from working all day.

I stand alongside neighbors who carry a plate of food to the elderly couple down the hall, those in a rush who still lift strangers’ strollers up subway stairs, and every person who makes the choice day after day, even when it feels impossible, to call our city home.

I stand alongside over 1 million New Yorkers who voted for this day nearly two months ago—and I stand just as resolutely alongside those who did not. I know there are some who view this administration with distrust or disdain, or who see politics as permanently broken. And while only action can change minds, I promise you this: If you are a New Yorker, I am your Mayor. Regardless of whether we agree, I will protect you, celebrate with you, mourn alongside you, and never, not for a second, hide from you.

I thank the labor and movement leaders here today, the activists and elected officials who will return to fighting for New Yorkers the second this ceremony concludes, and the performers who have gifted us with their talent.

Thank you to Governor Hochul for joining us. And thank you to Mayor Adams—Dorothy’s son, a son of Brownsville who rose from washing dishes to the highest position in our city—for being here as well. He and I have had our share of disagreements, but I will always be touched that he chose me as the mayoral candidate that he would most want to be trapped with on an elevator.

Thank you to the two titans who, as an Assemblymember, I’ve had the privilege of being represented by in Congress—Nydia Velázquez and our incredible opening speaker Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. You have paved the way for this moment.

Thank you to the man whose leadership I seek most to emulate, who I am so grateful to be sworn in by today—Senator Bernie Sanders.

Thank you to my teams—from the Assembly, to the campaign, to the transition and now, the team I am so excited to lead from City Hall.

Thank you to my parents, Mama and Baba, for raising me, for teaching me how to be in this world, and for having brought me to this city. Thank you to my family—from Kampala to Delhi. And thank you to my wife Rama for being my best friend, and for always showing me the beauty in everyday things.

Most of all—thank you to the people of New York.

A moment like this comes rarely. Seldom do we hold such an opportunity to transform and reinvent. Rarer still is it the people themselves whose hands are the ones upon the levers of change.

And yet we know that too often in our past, moments of great possibility have been promptly surrendered to small imagination and smaller ambition. What was promised was never pursued, what could have changed remained the same. For the New Yorkers most eager to see our city remade, the weight has only grown heavier, the wait has only grown longer.

In writing this address, I have been told that this is the occasion to reset expectations, that I should use this opportunity to encourage the people of New York to ask for little and expect even less. I will do no such thing. The only expectation I seek to reset is that of small expectations.

Beginning today, we will govern expansively and audaciously. We may not always succeed. But never will we be accused of lacking the courage to try.

To those who insist that the era of big government is over, hear me when I say this—no longer will City Hall hesitate to use its power to improve New Yorkers’ lives.

For too long, we have turned to the private sector for greatness, while accepting mediocrity from those who serve the public. I cannot blame anyone who has come to question the role of government, whose faith in democracy has been eroded by decades of apathy. We will restore that trust by walking a different path—one where government is no longer solely the final recourse for those struggling, one where excellence is no longer the exception.

We expect greatness from the cooks wielding a thousand spices, from those who stride out onto Broadway stages, from our starting point guard at Madison Square Garden. Let us demand the same from those who work in government. In a city where the mere names of our streets are associated with the innovation of the industries that call them home, we will make the words “City Hall” synonymous with both resolve and results.

As we embark upon this work, let us advance a new answer to the question asked of every generation: Who does New York belong to?

For much of our history, the response from City Hall has been simple: It belongs only to the wealthy and well-connected, those who never strain to capture the attention of those in power.

Working people have reckoned with the consequences. Crowded classrooms and public housing developments where the elevators sit out of order; roads littered with potholes and buses that arrive half an hour late, if at all; wages that do not rise and corporations that rip off consumers and employees alike.

And still—there have been brief, fleeting moments where the equation changed.

Twelve years ago, Bill de Blasio stood where I stand now as he promised to “put an end to economic and social inequalities” that divided our city into two.

In 1990, David Dinkins swore the same oath I swore today, vowing to celebrate the “gorgeous mosaic” that is New York, where every one of us is deserving of a decent life.

And nearly six decades before him, Fiorella La Guardia took office with the goal of building a city that was “far greater and more beautiful” for the hungry and the poor.

Some of these Mayors achieved more success than others. But they were unified by a shared belief that New York could belong to more than just a privileged few. It could belong to those who operate our subways and rake our parks, those who feed us biryani and beef patties, picanha and pastrami on rye. And they knew that this belief could be made true if only government dared to work hardest for those who work hardest.

Over the years to come, my administration will resurrect that legacy. City Hall will deliver an agenda of safety, affordability, and abundance—where government looks and lives like the people it represents, never flinches in the fight against corporate greed, and refuses to cower before challenges that others have deemed too complicated.

In so doing, we will provide our own answer to that age-old question—who does New York belong to? Well, my friends, we can look to Madiba and the South African Freedom Charter: New York “belongs to all who live in it.”

Together, we will tell a new story of our city.

This will not be a tale of one city, governed only by the 1%. Nor will it be a tale of two cities, the rich versus the poor.

It will be a tale of 8 and a half million cities, each of them a New Yorker with hopes and fears, each a universe, each of them woven together.

The authors of this story will speak Pashto and Mandarin, Yiddish and Creole. They will pray in mosques, at shul, at church, at Gurdwaras and Mandirs and temples—and many will not pray at all.

They will be Russian Jewish immigrants in Brighton Beach, Italians in Rossville, and Irish families in Woodhaven—many of whom came here with nothing but a dream of a better life, a dream which has withered away. They will be young people in cramped Marble Hill apartments where the walls shake when the subway passes. They will be Black homeowners in St. Albans whose homes represent a physical testament to triumph over decades of lesser-paid labor and redlining. They will be Palestinian New Yorkers in Bay Ridge, who will no longer have to contend with a politics that speaks of universalism and then makes them the exception.

Few of these 8 and a half million will fit into neat and easy boxes. Some will be voters from Hillside Avenue or Fordham Road who supported President Trump a year before they voted for me, tired of being failed by their party’s establishment. The majority will not use the language that we often expect from those who wield influence. I welcome the change. For too long, those fluent in the good grammar of civility have deployed decorum to mask agendas of cruelty.

Many of these people have been betrayed by the established order. But in our administration, their needs will be met. Their hopes and dreams and interests will be reflected transparently in government. They will shape our future.

And if for too long these communities have existed as distinct from one another, we will draw this city closer together. We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism. If our campaign demonstrated that the people of New York yearn for solidarity, then let this government foster it. Because no matter what you eat, what language you speak, how you pray, or where you come from—the words that most define us are the two we all share: New Yorkers.

And it will be New Yorkers who reform a long-broken property tax system. New Yorkers who will create a new Department of Community Safety that will tackle the mental health crisis and let the police focus on the job they signed up to do. New Yorkers who will take on the bad landlords who mistreat their tenants and free small business owners from the shackles of bloated bureaucracy. And I am proud to be one of those New Yorkers.

When we won the primary last June, there were many who said that these aspirations and those who held them had come out of nowhere. Yet one man’s nowhere is another man’s somewhere. This movement came out of 8 and a half million somewheres—taxi cab depots and Amazon warehouses, DSA meetings and curbside domino games. The powers that be had looked away from these places for quite some time—if they’d known about them at all—so they dismissed them as nowhere. But in our city, where every corner of these five boroughs holds power, there is no nowhere and there is no no one. There is only New York, and there are only New Yorkers.

8 and a half million New Yorkers will speak this new era into existence. It will be loud. It will be different. It will feel like the New York we love.

No matter how long you have called this city home, that love has shaped your life. I know that it has shaped mine.

This is the city where I set landspeed records on my razor scooter at the age of 12. Quickest four blocks of my life.

The city where I ate powdered donuts at halftime during AYSO soccer games and realized I probably wouldn’t be going pro, devoured too-big slices at Koronet Pizza, played cricket with my friends at Ferry Point Park, and took the 1 train to the BX10 only to still show up late to Bronx Science.

The city where I have gone on hunger strike just outside these gates, sat claustrophobic on a stalled N train just after Atlantic Avenue, and waited in quiet terror for my father to emerge from 26 Federal Plaza.

The city where I took a beautiful woman named Rama to McCarren Park on our first date and swore a different oath to become an American citizen on Pearl Street.

To live in New York, to love New York, is to know that we are the stewards of something without equal in our world. Where else can you hear the sound of the steelpan, savor the smell of sancocho, and pay $9 for coffee on the same block? Where else could a Muslim kid like me grow up eating bagels and lox every Sunday?

That love will be our guide as we pursue our agenda. Here, where the language of the New Deal was born, we will return the vast resources of this city to the workers who call it home. Not only will we make it possible for every New Yorker to afford a life they love once again—we will overcome the isolation that too many feel, and connect the people of this city to one another.

The cost of childcare will no longer discourage young adults from starting a family—because we will deliver universal childcare for the many by taxing the wealthiest few.

Those in rent-stabilized homes will no longer dread the latest rent hike—because we will freeze the rent.

Getting on a bus without worrying about a fare hike or whether you’ll be late to your destination will no longer be deemed a small miracle—because we will make buses fast and free.

These policies are not simply about the costs we make free, but the lives we fill with freedom. For too long in our city, freedom has belonged only to those who can afford to buy it. Our City Hall will change that.

These promises carried our movement to City Hall, and they will carry us from the rallying cries of a campaign to the realities of a new era in politics.

Two Sundays ago, as snow softly fell, I spent 12 hours at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, listening to New Yorkers from every borough as they told me about the city that is theirs.

We discussed construction hours on the Van Wyck Expressway and EBT eligibility, affordable housing for artists and ICE raids. I spoke to a man named TJ who said that one day a few years ago, his heart broke as he realized he would never get ahead here, no matter how hard he worked. I spoke to a Pakistani Auntie named Samina, who told me that this movement had fostered something too rare: softness in people’s hearts. As she said in Urdu: logon ke dil badalgyehe.

142 New Yorkers out of 8 and a half million. And yet—if anything united each person sitting across from me, it was the shared recognition that this moment demands a new politics, and a new approach to power.

We will deliver nothing less as we work each day to make this city belong to more of its people than it did the day before.

Here is what I want you to expect from the administration that this morning moved into the building behind me.

We will transform the culture of City Hall from one of “no” to one of “how?”

We will answer to all New Yorkers, not to any billionaire or oligarch who thinks they can buy our democracy.

We will govern without shame and insecurity, making no apology for what we believe. I was elected as a democratic socialist and I will govern as a democratic socialist. I will not abandon my principles for fear of being deemed radical. As the great senator from Vermont once said: “What’s radical is a system which gives so much to so few and denies so many people the basic necessities of life.”

We will strive each day to ensure that no New Yorker is priced out of any one of those basic necessities.

And throughout it all we will, in the words of Jason Terrance Phillips, better known as Jadakiss or J to the Muah, be “outside”—because this is a government of New York, by New York, and for New York.

Before I end, I want to ask you, if you are able, whether you are here today or anywhere watching, to stand.

I ask you to stand with us now, and every day that follows. City Hall will not be able to deliver on our own. And while we will encourage New Yorkers to demand more from those with the great privilege of serving them, we will encourage you to demand more of yourselves as well.

The movement we began over a year ago did not end with our victory on Election Night. It will not end this afternoon. It lives on with every battle we will fight, together; every blizzard and flood we withstand, together; every moment of fiscal challenge we overcome with ambition, not austerity, together; every way we pursue change in working peoples’ interests, rather than at their expense, together.

No longer will we treat victory as an invitation to turn off the news. From today onwards, we will understand victory very simply: something with the power to transform lives, and something that demands effort from each of us, every single day.

What we achieve together will reach across the five boroughs and it will resonate far beyond. There are many who will be watching. They want to know if the left can govern. They want to know if the struggles that afflict them can be solved. They want to know if it is right to hope again.

So, standing together with the wind of purpose at our backs, we will do something that New Yorkers do better than anyone else: We will set an example for the world. If what Sinatra said is true, let us prove that anyone can make it in New York—and anywhere else too. Let us prove that when a city belongs to the people, there is no need too small to be met, no person too sick to be made healthy, no one too alone to feel like New York is their home.

The work continues, the work endures, the work, my friends, has only just begun.

Zohran K. Mamdani is the mayor of New York City.

3 January 2026

Source: countercurrents.org