See All News by Ravish Kumar
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What is hidden is part of the story
The real story of this war is not only in the missiles, the airstrikes, the official statements, or the maps shown on television. It is also in what is not shown. The most important facts are often buried under selective headlines, carefully chosen images, theatrical claims of victory, and a style of reporting that reveals everything except the condition of ordinary people.
That is why a basic question matters so much: when we repeatedly hear that Iran has fired missiles at Israel, why do we hear so little about where those missiles landed, what damage they caused, how civilians are living, what cities look like, and how daily life has been altered? If a country is truly secure, in control, and unshaken, then transparent reporting should strengthen that claim. But when the reporting is thin, evasive, or displaced into softer lifestyle coverage, the silence itself becomes meaningful. It begins to suggest that the public narrative of strength is not fully aligned with the reality on the ground.
The contradiction inside Israel’s wartime narrative
Israel is presented as a state of overwhelming military capability, a country with air superiority, technological depth, and sophisticated defense systems. Yet visible details point in another direction: airports shut or heavily restricted, civilians sheltering in bunkers, businesses affected, return routes disrupted, and everyday life visibly narrowed by fear and security constraints. That contradiction is difficult to ignore.
If control is so complete, why is civilian movement so restricted? If the skies are dominated, why are normal flights disrupted? If the enemy is being decisively contained, why are millions of people living under the logic of sirens and shelters? These are not minor details. They are the kinds of facts that test official narratives. They expose the distance between military language and social reality.
This is where the press becomes especially important. Not because it always states the truth plainly, but because it often reveals it indirectly through its choices. A newspaper can criticize a government and still participate in a larger wartime consensus. It can analyze political strategy while avoiding the raw condition of ordinary citizens. It can show damage elsewhere while withholding a fuller picture of damage at home. And when that happens, the reader has to pay attention not only to what is printed, but to what is strategically missing.
How headlines, images, and framing suppress reality
Modern war reporting is not only about facts. It is also about visual discipline and narrative management. A headline may say that attacks have occurred, but the images attached to it may direct attention elsewhere. A story may mention business closures, fear, or disruption, but those details are tucked away while bold numbers and approval surveys dominate the page. A society under attack may appear not through its hospitals, shelters, classrooms, or damaged streets, but through stories about cafes near bunkers, shortages of workers, or gestures of urban resilience.
That is not neutral reporting. It is a kind of displacement. The center of gravity shifts away from suffering and toward surface normalcy. The effect is subtle but powerful: the reader is led to feel that control remains intact, that the system is functioning, that morale is high, and that whatever pain exists is manageable, private, and politically insignificant.
This is why café reporting becomes more than a trivial detail. When a city under missile threat is being narrated through coffee shops, staff shortages, and fragments of urban routine, journalism is no longer simply documenting life; it is also managing perception. The hard questions are pushed aside. What are people eating in shelters? What is happening to children? How many businesses are truly shut? How much psychological strain is building? What kind of social breakdown is being concealed by lifestyle detail? Once these questions disappear, war itself is repackaged into a softer, more consumable story.
Bunkers, normalization, and the moral cost of militarized life
The bunker is not only a shelter. It is also a political symbol. It shows what a society has had to become in order to live with permanent threat, and it reveals what state decisions have done to civilian life. Yet even here, language and imagery attempt to smooth the edges. Bunkers are described as organized, adaptive, even culturally active spaces. There are apps, alerts, routines, jokes, digital habits, and stories of ordinary sociability continuing underground.
At one level, this is resilience. At another, it signals something darker: the normalization of violence. When bombing, sirens, and sheltering become integrated into lifestyle reporting, society is no longer merely surviving militarization. It is internalizing it. Waiting under threat is transformed into habit, even into social choreography. The deeper debate—why an entire population has been driven into this condition—begins to disappear.
There is also inequality inside this system. Protection is not distributed equally. Shelter availability and infrastructure can reflect older internal hierarchies, especially where marginalized communities receive less state protection even in wartime. War does not suspend inequality. It often reveals it with new sharpness.
The wider moral question, then, is unavoidable: what kind of public consciousness is formed when violence becomes ordinary, when the enemy is discussed endlessly but one’s own society is shielded from self-recognition, and when endurance itself is celebrated more than the need to question how the country arrived at this point?
War as domestic politics
War is never only external. It enters domestic politics immediately, and often profitably, for those in power. A leader facing legal, electoral, or legitimacy pressures can find in war an instrument of consolidation. Dissent is muted. Earlier protests recede from view. Institutions that were once under scrutiny become background noise. A nation under threat is easier to mobilize than a nation asking difficult constitutional questions.
Seen through that lens, wartime performance matters. Public gestures, choreographed appearances, images of command, symbolic participation in military operations, and spectacles of resolve are not incidental. They are part of a political grammar. They reassure supporters, intimidate opponents, and create the impression that the leader alone embodies national stability.
At the same time, the alliance between the United States and Israel does not necessarily mean identical goals. The two may fight on the same side while imagining different endgames. One may still be calculating regional stability, bargaining space, or eventual re-entry into negotiation. The other may be pushing toward deeper destruction, prolonged confrontation, and a far more maximalist outcome. This difference matters because it explains why allied rhetoric can sound coordinated while strategic interests quietly diverge.
Iran’s signaling and America’s contradictions
Iran’s behavior, too, must be read as political signaling rather than as isolated contradiction. Apologizing to Gulf countries while warning the United States is not necessarily confusion. It is a message. It says: your geography does not become American simply because American military bases sit on your land. You remain exposed. Your choices have consequences. You may host power, but you cannot outsource danger.
Against this, American rhetoric appears unstable. Public declarations present Iranian restraint as surrender, even when Iran explicitly says it has not surrendered and continues to threaten key strategic routes such as the Strait of Hormuz. This attempt to relabel the situation is revealing. It suggests anxiety beneath bluster. It suggests a need to narrate control more loudly precisely because control is not absolute.
Again, the absence of transparent proof becomes important. If regional threats were empty, then commercial movement, logistics, airport recovery, and unrestricted military visibility would quickly disprove them. But when flights remain affected, when reporting is tight, when damage claims cannot be easily checked, and when cameras do not decisively settle the matter, uncertainty itself becomes part of the battlefield.
Censorship across the region
This war is being fought not just through missiles, but through restricted visibility. Across the region, information appears partial, delayed, controlled, or legally risky to document. Damage is difficult to verify. Military facilities are protected from scrutiny. Civilian consequences remain underreported. In such a climate, propaganda does not always take the form of outright lies. Often it works through omission, imbalance, and emotional steering.
The result is a public sphere where everyone is told enough to stay emotionally invested, but not enough to make an informed judgment. War becomes a managed spectacle. Governments speak in absolutes; publics receive fragments.
The business behind the battlefield
There is also an economic machinery beneath the moral language of war. Patriotic rhetoric may dominate screens, but behind it stand arms manufacturers, oil companies, military contracts, energy traders, and industries that thrive on prolonged conflict. The language of civilization, deterrence, security, or national honor often conceals the fact that somebody is being paid, and being paid very well.
This is why the economics of war cannot be treated as a side issue. The expansion of weapons production, the anticipation of large contracts, the rise in oil prices, and the financial upside for defense and energy firms are not accidental consequences. They are structural features of modern conflict. Nationalism shouts in public, but profit counts quietly in the background.
Why India cannot be treated as a distant observer
The most urgent political point emerges when the war is connected to India. International conflict is often consumed in India as spectacle—maps, diplomacy, military graphics, dramatic language—but its real consequences are far more intimate. They arrive in household budgets, wage work, transport costs, industrial shutdowns, and financial anxiety.
When LPG prices rise, the impact is immediate and democratic in the most basic sense: millions of households feel it. When there is uncertainty around petrol and diesel, the question is not merely one of macroeconomics but of honesty. If governments insist that supplies are stable and there is no reason to worry, why are prices rising? Why is there no clear public accounting of what may come next? If the citizen is expected to absorb the cost, the citizen is owed the truth.
That truth becomes even more important when the effects spread beyond consumption into employment. If ceramic units in Morbi, Gujarat, begin shutting down because fuel-linked supply disruptions hit production, then the war is no longer “over there.” It has entered the factory floor. It has entered the lives of daily-wage workers who may have no savings, no cushion, and no voice in the geopolitical conflict that has suddenly interrupted their livelihood. This is how global war descends into local precarity.
The same applies to market losses and household investment anxiety. Not everyone in the market is a speculator. Many are ordinary people with modest savings, retirement hopes, or exposure through mutual funds and pension-linked instruments. A falling market, a weakening currency, and continuing volatility create a broader atmosphere of insecurity.
And then comes the sharpest question of all: where is democratic accountability? Where is the government’s honest explanation? Where is the sustained media focus on prices, jobs, supply chains, and economic vulnerability? The same television ecosystem that is loud in moments of political theater often becomes strangely quiet when the cost of crisis lands on ordinary citizens. Cameras are plentiful when power wants amplification. They are scarce when power owes answers.
Conclusion
War today is not only fought in airspace and on borders. It is fought in headlines, in silences, in selective images, in market movements, in kitchen budgets, and in the shrinking space for honest public questions. Power hides vulnerability, media packages fear as resilience, corporations profit from escalation, and in the end ordinary people pay—in shelter, in wages, in fuel bills, in anxiety, and in the slow erosion of democratic accountability.


