Dog bless God!
“Dog bless God!” — the phrase sounds absurd, but sometimes geopolitics makes absurdity feel real.
Many observers around the world quietly ask: who truly holds the leash of power — the United States or Israel? The question grows louder when actions appear less like strategic independence and more like political obedience.
When U.S. President Donald Trump seemed closely aligned with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, critics argued that Washington’s foreign policy in West Asia looked unusually synchronized with Tel Aviv’s security priorities.
Take Iran. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), tasked with monitoring nuclear compliance, has at various points stated that it had no definitive proof of Iran actively building a nuclear bomb. Yet suspicion, anticipation, and political distrust often travel faster than verified evidence.
In geopolitics, perception frequently outweighs proof. If one leader “sniffs” a potential threat, another may act — not always because of confirmed danger, but because of ideological alignment, domestic politics, or strategic calculation.
Supporters argue that strong alliances deter greater instability. Critics counter that preemptive aggression based on assumptions risks turning speculation into catastrophe. When powerful nations act on perceived threats without global consensus, the result can be sanctions, proxy wars, economic shocks, and regional chaos — with ordinary citizens paying the price.
Thus emerges the sarcastic inversion: “Dog bless God.” The supposed master of global power appears to serve another’s agenda. Whether fair or exaggerated, the sentiment reflects a deeper frustration with modern leadership — where national interest, personal legacy, and geopolitical maneuvering blur into one.
In the end, shameless politics — driven by ego, rivalry, and strategic gamesmanship — can leave the world in shambles. And the people, as always, are left wondering who truly commands whom.
From another angle, is it Congress or the President of the USA? Who is superior?
Yesterday Iraq, today Iran and tomorrow?
People are mad, at times, that's acceptable; but not at all times.
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