See All News by Ravish Kumar
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There comes a point in every war when the official language collapses. Governments keep issuing statements. Anchors keep saying “strategic escalation.” Experts draw maps, speak of deterrence, corridors, leverage, retaliation, red lines, regional balances, and great power equations. But on the ground, the truth becomes embarrassingly plain. People die. Cities burn. Air turns poisonous. Fuel prices rise. Jobs disappear. Markets panic. Families suffer. And the leaders who helped drag the world into the crisis keep speaking as if they are managing history, when in fact they are merely managing public perception.
That is where we are now.
This war has entered a new and deeply dangerous phase: the targeting of oil depots, energy infrastructure, and the systems that sustain ordinary life. Once that happens, war no longer remains confined to battlefields or military installations. It enters kitchens, factories, transport networks, export chains, stock exchanges, and household budgets. The cost is no longer paid only by soldiers or by those directly under bombardment. It is paid by everyone, everywhere, in inflation, shortages, anxiety, toxic air, falling markets, and political cowardice dressed up as diplomacy.
And still, much of the media behaves as though this is a spectacle to be decoded rather than a catastrophe to be confronted.
That is the first outrage.
The second is that the most powerful people involved still pretend they are in control, even as events expose their weakness every hour. The third is that countries like India are being asked to remain calm, remain quiet, and remain obedient, while the economic consequences of someone else’s war begin showing up in our own homes.
Strip away the theatrical language and the war reveals its actual face: this is not a morally serious international order responding to crisis. It is a small club of arrogant men pushing the world toward ruin while the rest of humanity is expected to absorb the consequences.
When oil depots become targets, the war becomes everyone’s problem
The moment oil depots started burning, the meaning of this war changed. Israel struck multiple Iranian oil depots. Iran responded by hitting one of the largest oil depots in Bahrain. In Tehran, thick black smoke rose into the sky and remained there, hanging over the city like a second occupation. Reports of chemical contamination, toxic air, and the possibility of acid rain began circulating. The war was no longer just about missiles and counter-missiles. It had entered the bloodstream of the global economy.
That is what makes attacks on energy infrastructure so terrifying. An oil depot is not merely a strategic asset. It is a node in a vast system that determines how modern life functions. When such infrastructure is hit, the impact does not stop at the site of the explosion. It travels. It travels through shipping routes, insurance costs, market sentiment, refinery operations, aviation fuel supply, industrial production, household gas cylinders, electricity generation, freight, food prices, and inflation.
So when Iran warns that if its oil infrastructure is attacked, it will respond in kind, this is not empty rhetoric. It is a declaration that the war will no longer stay geographically limited. It will spill into the arteries through which the world’s energy flows.
And once that happens, nobody gets to act surprised.
If crude touches 200 dollars a barrel, as Iranian officials have warned could happen if the escalation continues, can any country simply shrug? Can any government, especially one already struggling with inflation, unemployment, and stagnant wages, pretend that this is a distant conflict with no domestic consequences? Of course not. The burden will not be borne by presidents. It will not be borne by prime ministers issuing reassuring statements from podiums. It will be borne by the public.
Petrol and diesel prices rise. Transport becomes costlier. Food becomes costlier. Electricity becomes costlier. Manufacturing slows. Businesses cut hours. Jobs are lost. The poor sink deeper. The middle class becomes anxious and brittle. And then governments, which were silent when the bombs were falling, suddenly discover the language of “stability” because the market is now bleeding.
That hypocrisy deserves to be named clearly.
Why does outrage begin only when markets are hit?
One of the most revealing features of this crisis is the order in which concern appears. Schools are bombed, civilians are killed, smoke fills the skies, and the official response remains muted, evasive, or selectively moral. But let oil depots burn, let stock indices slide, let investors lose money, let freight routes face disruption, and suddenly unnamed “sources” begin telling reporters that one ally is unhappy with another, that tensions are rising behind closed doors, that there is discomfort within strategic circles.
Why behind closed doors? Why through anonymous sourcing? Why is anger whispered only after the market starts reacting?
Because in today’s world, the injury that registers most quickly is not moral injury. It is financial injury.
When bombs hit schools, the global order can find excuses. When markets panic, it finds language. When children die, the system remains composed. When oil prices surge, it becomes nervous. That is the obscenity at the center of the present moment.
We are told that America is upset with Israel’s attacks. If that is true, why was it silent when the destruction was already unfolding? Why did the public language of restraint emerge only when energy infrastructure became the target and oil prices started threatening the stability of the global market?
The answer is brutally simple: because money is harder for power to ignore than blood.
This is why the public should be suspicious whenever governments suddenly begin speaking the language of caution after refusing to speak the language of humanity.
Trump’s statements reveal power and helplessness at once
Donald Trump’s role in this crisis exposes something even more dangerous than recklessness: a peculiar mixture of swagger and dependence. He speaks in the language of domination, but events keep revealing limits he does not want to acknowledge.
In one breath, he suggests that without American and Israeli action, Iran would have destroyed Israel. In another, he implies that decisions on ending the war cannot really be made without Netanyahu. What does that tell us? That he wants the image of command without carrying the burden of accountability. He wants to sound like the man shaping history while remaining politically entangled enough to avoid owning the disaster fully.
This matters because war is often sold through the performance of certainty. Leaders speak as if they know exactly what they are doing. But the contradictions in Trump’s words reveal what the public is rarely encouraged to see: even the most powerful state in the world is not operating from some divine script. It is improvising, reacting, posturing, denying, adjusting. Its leaders are not masters of events. They are trapped inside events of their own making.
That weakness shows up in other ways too. America appears unable to straightforwardly control escalation. It appears unable to decisively restrain Israel. It appears uncertain about how to respond to relatively low-cost asymmetric tactics like drone warfare. And it appears increasingly anxious about the economic consequences of an energy shock it cannot simply lecture away.
Yet the performance continues. The officials go on television. They say there is no need to panic. They say supply disruptions are manageable. They say price spikes are temporary. They say the world should remain calm.
But who are they talking to? People are not blind. People can see the prices. They can see the markets. They can see the smoke. They can see evacuation advisories. They can see supply chains stalling. The age of televised reassurance is not what it once was. Reality reaches households faster than propaganda now.
The moral collapse of leadership is visible in the details
Sometimes the truth of a political moment is captured not in a treaty or a speech, but in a single vulgar detail. A president golfing while the war deepens. A leader speaking casually while soldiers are dying. A system more attentive to optics than grief. These details matter because they tell us how power feels about human suffering when it believes it no longer needs to hide its indifference.
What are citizens supposed to conclude when soldiers are dead, families are grieving, cities are burning, and the symbolic conduct of leadership still reflects leisure, vanity, and detachment? That war has become normalized at the top in a way it can never be normalized at the bottom.
This is not about superficial outrage over etiquette. It is about the disappearance of seriousness. When leaders treat catastrophe like an interruption to their personal routine, they send a message far beyond symbolism: that the pain being produced is absorbable, manageable, politically useful.
And this is not merely an American problem. Across the world, leadership increasingly appears insulated from consequence. Decisions are made at the top. The fallout is socialized downward. Those who decide do not pay. Those who pay did not decide.
That is the pattern ordinary people must learn to see.
The drone lesson: empires are not as invincible as they look
One of the most embarrassing developments for the American security establishment is the growing recognition that high-cost military systems are struggling against relatively inexpensive drones. This is not merely a tactical problem. It is a philosophical one. It punctures the myth of technological invincibility on which so much military prestige rests.
If a drone costing tens of thousands of dollars can force a response using interceptors worth millions, then the economics of power begin to look absurd. The mighty start spending themselves into strategic exhaustion while their opponents keep imposing costs cheaply. This is not how imperial power likes to imagine itself. It prefers overwhelming superiority, clean victories, and reassuring hierarchies of force. But the battlefield has changed.
The humiliation becomes sharper when America must seek practical lessons from Ukraine, a country still enduring war, because Ukraine has had more real experience countering the kind of drone warfare now shaping events in West Asia. Consider the irony. The superpower that arms others, instructs others, and lectures others is now turning to one of its own proxies for expertise in surviving the consequences of modern attritional conflict.
That should force a wider realization: the media narrative that endlessly celebrates military sophistication often conceals deep vulnerability. It tells you how advanced a system is, but not how sustainable it is. It tells you how powerful a country looks, but not how intelligently it is actually fighting. It tells you about missiles and radars and alliances, but not whether the exchange ratio of cost and damage makes any strategic sense.
The result is a public conversation full of awe and almost no honesty.
The media keeps showing war as spectacle, not consequence
This is perhaps the most important critique of all. War coverage today often avoids war itself. What fills the screen instead? Maps. Arrows. graphics. “Explainers.” Terms like escalation ladder, theatre dynamics, axis response, deterrence signaling, strategic ambiguity. Everything except the simplest question: what is this doing to ordinary life?
The public is shown missiles, not medicine shortages. Military analysis, not LPG scarcity. High rhetoric, not export disruption. Studio debates, not the slow terror of workers wondering what happens when factories cut production because gas supply becomes uncertain.
This is why the dominant language of geopolitics has become fraudulent. It creates emotional distance from suffering and intellectual glamour around destruction. It turns mass vulnerability into a puzzle for strategic consumption. It flatters the viewer into thinking they are understanding history while actually numbing them to its consequences.
A war that should be covered as a human catastrophe gets covered as a chessboard. Civilians disappear into phrases like collateral impact. Economic pain becomes an abstract chart. Media institutions behave as though the true story lies in which state gained leverage rather than in how many people were forced into fear, hunger, debt, displacement, or silence.
That is not serious journalism. That is aestheticized detachment.
And the fraud becomes even worse in countries like India, where large sections of the media combine this sterile language with outright hero worship of power. Instead of asking what the crisis means for India’s energy security, trade routes, inflation, migrant workers in the Gulf, or domestic industrial capacity, they often slip into admiration for one military machine or another, or into ideological posturing disconnected from material reality.
The public deserves better. It deserves coverage that begins from consequence, not spectacle.
India is not a distant observer. India is exposed.
A dangerous myth circulates every time a major international crisis erupts: that India can remain emotionally invested without becoming materially affected. That illusion collapses very quickly in an energy shock.
India is deeply vulnerable to sustained volatility in oil and gas supply. Any major disruption in the Gulf or around critical maritime routes has consequences here. Not eventually. Immediately.
That is why it is not enough for the government to repeat that stocks are sufficient and there is no need to panic. If there is no need to panic, then there is every reason to be transparent. How much stock exists? For how long? What are the contingency plans? How will commercial LPG supply be protected? What is the status of gas supply to industrial clusters? What exposure do Indian exporters currently face? What is the plan for Indians living in Gulf countries if escalation broadens?
These are not opposition talking points. They are legitimate public questions.
When Parliament asks for an emergency discussion on energy security and the condition of Indians in the Gulf, that is not opportunism. That is democracy trying to do the job television often refuses to do. And when ministers respond selectively, avoiding the full political and moral dimensions of the crisis, the suspicion only deepens.
India cannot afford strategic vagueness dressed up as confidence. The public has already seen what happens when governments say there is nothing to worry about while markets and supply systems behave otherwise.
If there is no crisis, why are markets behaving like there is one?
This is one of the sharpest questions raised by the current situation. If supply is stable, if reserves are adequate, if the war’s effects are limited, if there is no immediate danger, then why is the market responding with such visible fear?
Markets are not omniscient, but neither are they sentimental. They react to expectations of disruption, risk, cost, delay, and uncertainty. When stock indices fall sharply, when sectors linked to logistics, trade, energy, transport, or manufacturing wobble, that is not ideology. That is a pricing-in of danger.
The Indian market’s decline, investor wealth erosion, and broader nervousness cannot simply be dismissed as irrational panic. Markets are telling us that they do not fully trust the official optimism. They are reading the same war, the same shipping vulnerabilities, the same energy threats, the same geopolitical disorder, and arriving at a more anxious conclusion.
And the market is not the only place where doubt is visible. Reports of gas-based factories reducing operations, commercial LPG scarcity, logistics disruption, and rising input costs point to the same underlying truth: even before a full-scale shortage arrives, the fear of shortage begins distorting economic behavior.
That is how crises spread. Not only through actual absence, but through anticipated absence.
Businesses slow activity. Traders hold back. Exporters delay. Distributors ration. Consumers worry. Governments deny. Media distracts. The system enters a psychological crisis before a physical one fully arrives. And that psychological crisis itself causes damage.
This war is already shutting things down, even far from the battlefield
Once energy routes and supply expectations are shaken, disruptions begin appearing in places that seem unrelated to war. Factories start cutting output. Hotel businesses worry about commercial gas cylinders. Export consignments get stuck at ports or in transit. Shipping becomes more expensive. Insurance becomes more expensive. Route risk rises. Delivery schedules become unreliable. Entire sectors begin operating under uncertainty.
For a country like India, where margins are often tight and supply continuity matters enormously, these disruptions are not minor inconveniences. They can become triggers for layoffs, losses, and secondary inflation. A container delayed is not just a logistics problem. It is capital frozen. It is an exporter in distress. It is a possible payment delay. It is contractual uncertainty. It is a stress point that ripples outward.
And when trade experts say that sending ships through vulnerable waters has become dangerous, that matters profoundly. The public often sees only the final price rise on a commodity. It does not always see the layered chain of costs beneath it: route alteration, fuel cost increase, insurance premium increase, detention charges, demurrage, port delays, warehousing strain, cancellation risk, and exchange-rate effects.
War does not have to physically arrive in India to start extracting a price from Indian society. It is already doing so through systems.
That is why the lazy television habit of treating West Asia as an external theatre is so misleading. In an interconnected economy, war does not stay “there.” It becomes a structural pressure “here.”
The Gulf is not just facing an oil problem. It may face a water problem.
Another frightening dimension of this escalation is the possibility that desalination infrastructure may become a target. This is the kind of development that should terrify the entire region, because it would move the war from the economics of fuel into the fundamentals of survival.
Large parts of the Gulf depend heavily on desalination plants for drinking water. If these plants are damaged, threatened, or drawn into retaliatory logic, the humanitarian consequences could be immense. Oil shocks hurt economies. Water shocks threaten life itself.
And here the asymmetry becomes critical. Iran is less dependent on desalination than many Gulf states. That means any turn toward targeting such infrastructure could generate disproportionate suffering across neighboring countries. Once basic water systems are endangered, the war ceases to be merely an energy crisis with military overlays. It becomes a civilizational emergency.
Yet how much serious discussion do we see about this? Very little. Again, the spectacle of missiles overwhelms the deeper reality of systemic vulnerability. The public is encouraged to think in terms of who hit whom, not what happens when drinking water becomes strategic collateral.
This is what shallow war coverage always misses: modern societies rest on fragile infrastructures. You do not need total invasion to produce social collapse. You need repeated stress on fuel, food, freight, electricity, water, and confidence.
Inflation is not an abstract word. It is organized punishment
Whenever oil prices surge, governments and media often speak of inflation as though it were a technical event, almost meteorological in character. But inflation of this sort is not weather. It is organized punishment delivered through the economy.
A rise in crude does not remain confined to energy. It moves into transport, logistics, fertilizer, food, industrial production, aviation, household budgets, and services. It eats purchasing power. It widens insecurity. It punishes wage earners hardest because they cannot pass costs onward. It punishes the poor even more because so much of their spending is already non-negotiable.
And when inflation rises in the aftermath of war-driven energy shocks, citizens are often told to accept it as a regrettable but necessary side effect of grand geopolitical necessity. Necessary for whom? Necessary for which public? Necessary in the service of which democratic consent?
The truth is that ordinary people are repeatedly conscripted into elite strategic adventures through prices. They are never asked whether they endorse the conflict. They are never asked whether they consent to bearing its cost. Yet they pay anyway.
That is why the language of “shared sacrifice” in such moments is so dishonest. The sacrifice is not shared. The powerful remain protected. The weak absorb the damage.
Around the world, the same pattern is visible
Look across countries and the pattern is unmistakable. Fuel price caps are discussed. Reserve stocks are readied. Emergency meetings are called. Workweeks are altered. Consumption is curtailed. Supply anxieties spread. Governments issue calming statements while simultaneously preparing for worst-case scenarios.
This contradiction is itself revealing. Publicly, leaders insist there is no cause for panic. Administratively, they begin behaving as though panic would be rational. That gap is where trust erodes.
If there were truly no reason for concern, why would finance ministers meet urgently? Why would governments prepare reserve releases? Why would countries dependent on Gulf energy start contingency planning? Why would price controls, consumption cuts, or fuel-saving directives emerge?
The public should learn to read this pattern carefully: when official speech minimizes danger but administrative behavior signals alarm, believe the behavior.
Because systems tell the truth more honestly than spokespersons do.
India’s silence is political, not accidental
One of the strongest arguments in the transcript is that India’s response has not merely been cautious; it has been politically timid. It has failed to show moral clarity and strategic autonomy at the very moment both were needed.
This matters because India constantly speaks the language of sovereign decision-making, civilizational confidence, and independent foreign policy. But when crisis hits, the public is entitled to ask: independent in what sense? If America can alternately pressure countries on energy purchases, define acceptable timelines, and shape the climate of response, then what exactly remains of sovereign rhetoric?
A truly self-respecting policy would not mean reckless grandstanding. It would mean clear articulation of national interest, transparent public communication, equal moral standards, and refusal to become a passive spectator to decisions made elsewhere that carry direct consequences here.
Instead, the public often gets selective silence. No strong condemnation here, no clarity there, vague reassurance everywhere. This is not what strategic maturity looks like. It looks like discomfort. It looks like fear of displeasing the wrong power center. It looks like a government trying to manage optics rather than trust citizens with reality.
And that is especially dangerous during crises involving energy, migration, and regional war, because opacity breeds rumor, and rumor breeds instability.
A small group of leaders has turned the world into a hostage zone
Perhaps the most devastating argument in the piece is also the broadest: that the world increasingly does not resemble a system of nations governed by principle, but a loose and cynical arrangement among a handful of leaders whose whims produce consequences for millions.
This is not a literal claim about formal institutions vanishing overnight. It is a moral and political claim about how power is actually experienced from below. To ordinary people, it increasingly feels as though governments no longer answer to public need but to ego, alliance vanity, selective loyalty, and the theatrics of domination. Two leaders strike. Others remain silent. Populations are dragged behind them like cargo.
In such a world, old diplomatic language starts sounding fraudulent. Restraint becomes a word in textbooks. Peace becomes a phrase in speeches. On television, all one sees is bombardment, escalation, retaliation, and analysis masquerading as wisdom.
The public is told this is geopolitics. But what kind of geopolitics is this, if its most consistent output is death, displacement, inflation, fear, and democratic helplessness? Perhaps it deserves a harsher name. Not geopolitics, but the politics of death. A politics that tells the world: we will act as we please, and the rest of you will live with the ruins.
That is the raw meaning of the present.
The final truth: ordinary people are paying for a war they did not choose
In the end, every grand political lie can be tested against one simple question: who pays?
Not who speaks. Not who postures. Not who claims victory. Who pays?
The answer is painfully clear. Ordinary people pay. Children in bombed schools pay. Families breathing toxic smoke pay. Workers facing factory shutdowns pay. Traders with stuck consignments pay. Hotel owners worrying about LPG cylinders pay. Commuters pay. Farmers pay. Exporters pay. Migrant workers in the Gulf pay. Households staring at rising fuel bills pay. Citizens watching their savings melt in falling markets pay.
And while they pay, powerful men keep talking in the language of history, national honor, deterrence, civilization, and strategy.
The fraud must end there.
This war is not a television graphic. It is not a studio argument. It is not a game of strategic brilliance. It is a machine for transferring pain downward. It takes decisions made in insulated rooms and converts them into fear in ordinary lives.
That is why the central moral demand of this moment is not better commentary, but sharper public honesty. Citizens must stop accepting euphemism where truth is required. They must stop mistaking military spectacle for political wisdom. They must stop believing that silence from powerful governments equals stability. And they must stop allowing the language of geopolitics to hide the actual content of what is happening.
Because what is happening is not sophisticated. It is primitive. A handful of leaders are gambling with human life, economic survival, and regional stability, while asking the rest of the world to keep calm, trust the process, and admire the choreography.
No. The choreography is over.
What remains is smoke over cities, fear in markets, instability in supply chains, anxiety in homes, and the steadily growing realization that the world is being held hostage by leaders who no longer speak the language of responsibility.
Call it what it is.
This is not geopolitics.
This is the politics of death.



