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Great Game Returns to the Middle East

The launch of Operation Epic Fury marks more than a sharp escalation between Washington, Tel Aviv, and Tehran; it signals the crystallization of a new geopolitical struggle reminiscent of the 19th-century Great Game, now transposed onto the strategic landscape of the Middle East. The coordinated U.S.–Israeli strikes on Iranian military infrastructure, nuclear facilities, and command networks represent a decisive shift from shadow warfare and proxy contests to overt state-to-state confrontation. According to analysis published by the Atlantic Council, the operation reflects a calculated attempt to reset deterrence, degrade Iran’s escalation ladder, and reassert Western dominance in a region increasingly shaped by multipolar competition. The consequences extend far beyond the immediate battlefield. For decades, Iran cultivated what it termed a “forward defence” doctrine. Rather than waiting for conflict to reach its borders, Tehran embedded influence across the Levant and the Gulf throug...

Iran’s Waning Influence in a Shifting Global Order

The launch of Operation Epic Fury marks a dramatic turning point in Middle Eastern geopolitics, signalling not merely another military confrontation but the systematic unravelling of Iran’s regional architecture of influence. For decades, Tehran constructed a forward defence doctrine built on alliances with non-state actors and sympathetic regimes, embedding itself deeply within the political and security fabric of the Levant. Groups such as Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon functioned as strategic extensions of Iranian power, while the government of Syria under Bashar al-Assad provided territorial depth and logistical corridors. This “Axis of Resistance” allowed Tehran to pressure Israel indirectly, deter U.S. action, and project itself as a revolutionary counterweight to Western-aligned Arab states. Today, that axis appears fractured. Israeli military operations have severely degraded Hamas and Hezbollah’s operational capacity, and the overthrow of the Syrian government ...

Reforming Malaysia’s Defence Amid Corruption - Part 2

Technological adaptation alone is insufficient if the institutional integrity of the defence sector is compromised. Malaysia’s ongoing military procurement scandal has exposed significant vulnerabilities in the governance and oversight of its armed forces. Senior army personnel, including former army chief General Muhammad Hafizuddeain Jantan, are facing formal charges of corruption, money laundering, and irregularities in the awarding of high value defence contracts. The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) has conducted raids, seized luxury assets, and frozen company accounts linked to these allegations, underscoring the scale of systemic malfeasance. This crisis not only erodes public trust but also jeopardizes the country’s ability to invest strategically in next-generation technologies, including AI-enabled drones and autonomous systems. Corruption in defence procurement has direct implications for national security. Inflated contracts, opaque tender processes, and co...

Preparing Malaysia for AI Drone Warfare - Part 1

The modern battlefield is undergoing a seismic transformation. Across the globe, artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer a speculative component of military capability; it is rapidly redefining how wars are fought, how states project power, and how adversaries are identified and neutralized. Central to this shift is the development of AI-enabled drones, which are evolving from simple reconnaissance platforms into semi-autonomous systems capable of coordinating in swarms, identifying targets in real-time, and executing missions with minimal human intervention. Conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Indo-Pacific region have demonstrated that AI-driven unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) can achieve unprecedented operational effectiveness, overwhelm conventional defences, and drastically shorten decision cycles. For Malaysia, situated in a strategically sensitive region, the rise of autonomous warfare represents both a challenge and an opportunity. The Malaysian Armed Forces (MAF) must n...

From political turbulence to public disillusionment: Madani Reform Agenda Losing Momentum

When the Madani Government led by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim assumed office, it carried immense symbolic weight. After years of political turbulence, shifting coalitions, and public disillusionment, the administration was presented as a reformist reset: a moral and institutional recalibration of Malaysia’s governance culture. The “Malaysia Madani” framework promised compassion, sustainability, innovation, respect, trust, and prosperity. Yet more than a year into its tenure, a widening gap has emerged between rhetoric and structural transformation. While the government has stabilised the political environment relative to the post-2018 upheavals, it has struggled to translate stability into deep reform. Political fragmentation, economic inertia, and persistent social divisions continue to constrain its transformative ambitions, raising concerns that the reform agenda is losing momentum. Politically, the government operates within a coalition architecture that prioritises survival...

Afghanistan-Pakistan War: Border Fire Reshapes South Asia’s Security

The recent escalation between Pakistan and Afghanistan marks one of the most serious ruptures in South Asia’s security environment in years. What began as recurring border skirmishes along the contested Durand Line has expanded into open military confrontation, with Pakistan launching airstrikes deep into Afghan territory, including Kabul, and describing its actions as a response to cross-border militant attacks. Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities, in turn, have condemned the strikes as violations of sovereignty. This shift from sporadic frontier violence to overt cross-border bombardment signals a dangerous transformation: the normalization of interstate force between two historically intertwined yet mistrustful neighbours. At the heart of the crisis lies Pakistan’s long-standing accusation that militant groups such as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) operate from Afghan soil. Islamabad argues that Kabul has failed to dismantle or restrain these networks, which have conducted dead...

UK–Malaysia: Equal Partnership Beyond Colonial Shadows

The contemporary relationship between Malaysia and the United Kingdom must be decisively reframed. Any lingering perception of Malaysia through the prism of colonial legacy is not only outdated but strategically self-defeating. If the UK is serious about repositioning itself as a credible Indo-Pacific actor, it must approach Malaysia as an equal sovereign partner: not as a former colony within a nostalgic Commonwealth imagination. The geopolitical and economic realities of the 21st century demand nothing less. Historically, UK–Malaysia ties were shaped by asymmetry. Britain was the imperial centre; Malaya was the governed periphery. Even after independence, the architecture of engagement often reflected inherited hierarchies: educational pipelines, legal traditions, and diplomatic tone that subtly reinforced imbalance. While formal colonialism ended in 1957, psychological residues sometimes persisted in elite discourse and institutional attitudes. In today’s geopolitical climate,...