See All News by Ravish Kumar
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2026-MAR-14 1900
An Oil War Expands While Diplomacy Fails and Ordinary People Pay the Price
FACTS
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The United States carried out a major strike on Iran’s Kharg Island, through which Iran exports about 90% of its crude oil. Donald Trump said the island’s military infrastructure was destroyed, while Iran’s Fars News Agency claimed work resumed within an hour.
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The attack came after markets closed, was reportedly linked to a B-2 bomber mission, and was followed by U.S. orders to deploy a Marine Expeditionary Unit and an amphibious force toward the Middle East.
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Israeli strikes set Tehran’s oil depots on fire, while Iran responded with missile attacks and threats linked to shipping and regional energy infrastructure, deepening fears around Hormuz and Gulf supply routes.
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French President Emmanuel Macron, after speaking on March 12 with leaders connected to the Lebanon-Syria crisis, said Hezbollah had made a grave mistake by dragging Lebanon into war and said Israel should stop ground operations.
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India was already feeling the economic fallout: crude oil was nearing $100 per barrel, commercial gas shortages were affecting hostels, canteens, and food outlets, and the central government had arranged a ₹57,000 crore fund to manage the pressure.
CRITICISMS
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The United States has turned this into a larger oil war, hitting vital infrastructure and pushing the region closer to a wider catastrophe instead of containing the conflict.
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Washington talks with swagger and contradiction: it says sea routes are open even as ships are under attack, and it displays the damage it causes while keeping quiet about its own losses.
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Israel is setting entire regions on fire, ordering civilians to leave, denying or blurring the scale of its ground actions, and leaving behind displacement, destruction, and fear.
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Narendra Modi’s government has compromised India’s energy security by bending to American pressure, staying silent on the war, and leaving ordinary people to suffer the consequences through shortages and rising prices.
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BRICS has shown political weakness and selective morality by failing to speak clearly on attacks on Iran even though Iran is one of its own members.
2026-MAR-13 1900
Delayed Diplomacy, Hormuz Anxiety, and the Price India Is Paying for War
FACTS
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Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian for the first time on the 13th day of the war, after earlier speaking with Gulf leaders and with Benjamin Netanyahu.
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The rupee fell to ₹92.42 against the dollar, while Indian markets saw a sharp selloff: the Sensex dropped 1,470 points, the Nifty fell 488 points, and the Sensex was said to be down nearly 11,000 points over three months.
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Modi’s public statement after the call said India was concerned about rising tensions, loss of life, damage to infrastructure, the safety of Indian citizens, and uninterrupted movement of goods and energy.
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External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar spoke with Iran’s foreign minister, and India’s foreign ministry later said shipping security and India’s energy security were discussed, though no clear public confirmation was given about passage through the Strait of Hormuz.
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Reports cited in the video said LPG shortages were affecting daily life in India: Infosys advised employees to bring food from home because menus were limited, around 100 hotels in Kochi were shut due to LPG shortage, and sectors from restaurants to hospitals and community kitchens were under pressure.
CRITICISMS
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Narendra Modi called Iran too late. If the relationship were truly strong, a call would not have waited until the thirteenth day of war, especially when the crisis directly threatened India’s citizens, trade routes, and energy supply.
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S. Jaishankar said too little on a matter of enormous national importance. Iran’s side spoke in detail, while India reduced major diplomatic conversations to thin, vague lines that left the public guessing.
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India avoided clearly condemning the attacks on Iran even while holding the BRICS chair, and that silence allowed Iran to remind India of its responsibility instead of India taking a firm stand on its own.
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BJP and much of the “Godi” media turned an unverified claim about Hormuz access into a propaganda victory, celebrating a diplomatic triumph that neither side had clearly confirmed.
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The government kept denying or downplaying the domestic crisis even as LPG shortages, rising costs, falling markets, and energy insecurity were already hitting workers, businesses, and ordinary households.
2026-MAR-13 1500
The Gulf’s Illusion Has Broken: America Cannot Guarantee Security, and Israel Wants to Define the Region
FACTS
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Four crew members were confirmed dead after a U.S. KC-135 Stratotanker was destroyed over Iraq; the Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed responsibility, while the U.S. military said the aircraft went down in friendly territory without clearly explaining how.
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Reports cited in the video said Iran struck U.S. military positions in Kuwait on 28 February, killing 6 soldiers; CBS News was also cited as saying 100–150 others may have been injured, with some seriously wounded sent to Germany.
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Haaretz was cited as reporting that 11 Iranian cluster missiles crossed Israel’s air defenses, and one missile dropped 70 bombs in central Israel.
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Iran’s new Supreme Leader, Sayyid Mojtaba Hosseini Khamenei, said in his first message that Gulf countries should reconsider ties with Washington and shut down U.S. military bases on their soil because America cannot guarantee their peace or security.
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The Red Crescent was cited as saying that 24,000 civilian sites in Iran had been attacked, including more than 19,000 residential locations; at the same time, the IRGC warned that any protests would be crushed even more harshly than in January.
CRITICISMS
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America is no security guarantee for the Gulf. Countries that stood with Washington have still seen embassies shut, factories close, energy plants stop, and attacks continue around them.
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Netanyahu is speaking the language of domination, not peace. When he says Israel is a regional and global superpower, he is telling Gulf states to keep producing oil and gas but accept Israel as the boss.
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Israel wants Gulf countries to normalize relations on its terms, yet shows no interest in protecting them when missiles, drones, and economic disruption hit their cities and infrastructure.
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Trump keeps boasting that Iran has been destroyed, but if America is so strong, then why can it not secure the Gulf, protect shipping through Hormuz, or end the war on its own terms?
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Modi reacted too late and too weakly. Calling Iran only on the thirteenth day of war and still not condemning the killing of Khamenei shows hesitation at a moment when the crisis is already affecting India and the wider region.
2026-MAR-12 1900
When a Gas Shortage Becomes a “Rumour” and Speaking About It Becomes the Real Crime
FACTS
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The central government’s Home Secretary asked states to monitor and act against those spreading “rumours” about LPG shortage, and several states issued related orders.
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The government said that none of India’s 25,000 LPG distributors had reported any cylinder shortage, and that about 50 lakh cylinders are distributed every day.
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In Parliament and press briefings, the government maintained that there was no supply shortage; it said panic booking and hoarding at the distributor or retailer level were creating the appearance of scarcity.
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The petroleum secretary said the domestic LPG cylinder price in Delhi was ₹913 after a recent ₹60 increase, while Ujjwala beneficiaries were paying ₹613, with the government saying prices would have been even higher without intervention.
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Multiple reports and examples cited in the video pointed to disruption on the ground: canteens shifting to induction cooking, menu cuts, commercial establishments struggling, black-marketing raids in places like Meerut, and rising demand for alternative cooking arrangements such as bhattis in Lucknow.
CRITICISMS
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The government wants people to deny what they are seeing with their own eyes. Even if families are standing in line with cylinders, the public is being told not to say cylinders are unavailable.
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A real hardship is being turned into an “afwah” problem. Instead of honestly addressing shortage, delay, panic, or distribution failure, the state is threatening action against those who speak about it.
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The official story does not add up. On one side there is “no shortage,” and on the other side there is hoarding, panic booking, black-marketing raids, kerosene quota release, menu cuts, and emergency workarounds.
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Fear has been pushed so far that even reporting, posting a receipt, sharing a video from a queue, or discussing no-gas recipes begins to look risky. The message is clear: silence is safer than truth.
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“Godi” media and the IT cell live under selective immunity. Ordinary people, shopkeepers, YouTubers, and opposition voices face the pressure of being branded rumor-mongers, while propaganda continues without consequence.
2026-MAR-12 1500
This War Is No Longer About Frontlines Alone — It Is About Oil Routes, Political Ego, and the Price Paid by Ordinary People
FACTS
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Iran’s president said the war can end only if the United States and Israel accept Iran’s lawful rights, pay compensation for the damage caused, and guarantee that Iran will not be attacked again.
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Reports cited in the video said Iran was laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz; U.S. Central Command confirmed the destruction of 16 vessels, while Trump claimed 28 had been destroyed.
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Since 28 February, only 66 ships were said to have crossed Hormuz, insurance costs on ships had risen sharply, and attacks or attempted attacks were reported on ships and oil-related targets near Iraq, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Dubai, Kuwait, Bahrain, and the wider Gulf region.
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India’s foreign minister and Iran’s foreign minister were said to have spoken three times, with the last conversation covering shipping security and India’s energy security, but reports about guaranteed passage for Indian-flagged ships through Hormuz were described as unconfirmed.
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Crude oil was said to have crossed $100 a barrel, global markets were falling, and India’s Sensex was described as having dropped as much as 9,787 points from its 1 December 2025 peak of 86,169.
CRITICISMS
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Trump and Netanyahu have turned war into spectacle. One keeps issuing lines and boasts, the other stays silent in a way that shows he has no desire to let the war stop.
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Netanyahu does not want this war to end, because the real decisions are no longer being made with Iran but in the power equation between Netanyahu and Trump.
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The media has stripped war of its human pain. It shows B-1s, B-2s, missiles, charts, and runways, but pushes aside the bodies, the destroyed schools and hospitals, and the families erased by bombing.
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America keeps claiming Iran has been crushed, but if that were true, Hormuz would not still be a threat, ships would not still be burning, and the Gulf would not still be in fear.
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Modi’s silence stands out. When Indian kitchens, fuel costs, and more than a crore Indians in Gulf countries are tied to this crisis, the absence of any reported Modi-Pezeshkian call looks like a serious political failure.



