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HUNGARY-CZECHOSLOVAKIA-LIECHTENSTEIN-SWITZERLAND

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CONFESSIONS OF A GLOBAL GYPSY

By Dr. Chandana (Chandi) Jayawardena DPhil
President – Chandi J. Associates Inc. Consulting, Canada
Founder & Administrator – Global Hospitality Forum
chandij@sympatico.ca

After an enjoyable stay in Austria, we were ready to continue our six week-long winter trip to 16 countries. Vienna is a perfect hub to visit cities of countries adjoining landlocked Austria. Today, it is bordered by eight other countries – the Czech Republic and Germany to the north, Slovakia and Hungary to the east, Slovenia and Italy to the south, and Switzerland and Liechtenstein to the west. As the next step of our adventure, we planned to travel to Hungary and then Czechoslovakia, or Czecho-Slovakia

HUNGARY

Having arranged to travel to Hungary with a travel agency in Vienna, we woke up early morning to meet the Austrian driver/tour guide who came in a small van to pick us up. He was friendly and so were the other passengers, four British teachers working in Saudi Arabia. After an hour of travel from Vienna, we reached the Austria-Hungary border. There was a small challenge there. Hungarian visa officers required our photographs, but their photo machines were out of order. We were allowed to rush back to the Austrian side of the border to take photographs for Hungarian entry visas. After that, the trip was without any further setbacks.

Hungary is another landlocked country in Central Europe. The territory of present-day Hungary has for centuries been a crossroads for various peoples, including Celts, Romans, Germanic tribes, Huns, West Slavs and the Avars. The foundation of the Hungarian state was established in the late 9th century. By the 12th century, Hungary became a regional power, reaching its cultural and political height in the 15th century. After that it was partially occupied by the Ottoman Empire for over 150 years. Hungary came under Habsburg rule at the turn of the 18th century, later joining with the Austrian Empire to form Austria-Hungary, a major power into the early 20th century.

The Austro-Hungary Empire collapsed after World War I, and after World War II, Hungary became a satellite state of the Soviet Union. Following the failed 1956 revolution, Hungary became a comparatively freer, though still repressive, member of the Eastern Bloc. A few years after our visit in 1985, the removal of Hungary’s border fence with Austria accelerated the collapse of the Eastern Bloc and the Soviet Union. That was a part of a broad wave of revolutions in various communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe.

Győr

En-route to Budapest, the capital city of Hungary, we visited a small city with a population of 70,000, Győr. In spite of the small size, it is the sixth largest city in the country and it is also the main city of Northwest Hungary. As it is halfway between Vienna and Budapest, and situated on one of the important roads of Central Europe, it appeared to have some movement of tourists. In 1985, the total population of Hungary was around 10.5 million and today it has gone down below 10 million. Twenty percent of Hungarians or in 1985, over two million lived in Budapest.

Budapest

We reached Budapest by mid-morning and could not believe our eyes. Based on our first impressions and experiences in a few key cities in the Eastern Bloc countries in 1985, our expectations were not high. Budapest was clean, beautiful, grand and friendly. “No wonder that some call it the Paris of the East”, I told my wife.

The history of Budapest is the history of three cities: Óbuda (old Buda), Buda the high city found on the banks of the left bank, and Pest, found on the right bank. The history of Budapest began when an early Celtic settlement transformed into the Roman town of Aquincum. The Hungarians arrived in the territory in the late 9th century, but the area was pillaged by the Mongols in the mid-13th century. Re-established Buda became one of the centres of Renaissance humanist culture by the 15th century.

After the reconquest of Buda in late 17th century, after a 150 year long Ottoman rule, the region entered a new age of prosperity, in 1873, with the unification of Buda, Óbuda and Pest the name ‘Budapest’ given to the new capital of Hungary. Budapest also became the co-capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Bisected by the Danube River, Budapest’s cityscape is studded with architectural landmarks Buda’s medieval Castle Hill and grand neoclassical buildings along Pest’s Andrássy Avenue to the 19th-century Chain Bridge are impressive. Turkish and Roman influence on Hungarian culture explains the popularity of mineral spas, including at thermal Lake Hévíz.

We visited most of the key tourist attractions in Budapest and nearby areas, including Matthias Church, Buda Castle built in the 13th century, Fisherman’s Bastion, which is an architectural icon of the city, and one of Europe’s oldest and most beloved coffee-houses, Café Gerbeaud. Our lunch at a small restaurant included goulash soup which was much hotter than the versions I had tasted before, and used to prepare when I was an executive chef. I also made a short visit to the best five-star international hotel in the city, Budapest InterContinential. On our way back to Vienna, we stopped again in Győr for refreshments.

CZECOSLOVAKIA

Towards the end of our stay in Austria, I planned a quick trip to Czechoslovakia. My wife wanted to skip that trip to spend the day with her mother and our Austrian friends, doing fun things in Vienna. I went alone to Czechoslovakia early in the morning with a group of tourists travelling in a coach. Learning from a bad experience at the Bulgaria-Romania border, 10 days prior, I took the advice from the Austrian travel agency, and armed myself with an additional visa for Czechoslovakia.

Czechoslovakia was an interesting country with a population of 10 million divided among two main ethnic groups – the Czech people and the Slovak people. Ethnic Czechs were called Bohemians in English until the early 20th century, referring to the former name of their country, Bohemia. Czechoslovakia was a sovereign state created after the World War I, when it declared its independence from Austria-Hungary. In 1938, at the eve of World War II, a major territory of the country became part of Germany, while the country lost further territories to Hungary and Poland.

After World War II, the country of Czechoslovakia was re-established, with the exception of Carpathian Ruthenia, which became part of the Ukrainian SSR (a republic of the Soviet Union). From 1948, Czechoslovakia was part of the Eastern Bloc. A period of political liberalization in 1968, known as the Prague Spring, was violently ended when the Soviet Union, assisted by some other Warsaw Pact countries, invaded Czechoslovakia.

Four years after my visit, in 1989, as Marxist–Leninist governments (and communism) were ending all over Central and Eastern Europe, Czechoslovaks peacefully deposed their socialist government in the Velvet Revolution. Later, in 1993, Czechoslovakia peacefully split into the two sovereign states of the Czech Republic and Slovakia as the result of nationalist tensions among the Slovaks.

Bratislava

The tour coach reached Bratislava, by mid-morning. Bratislava in 1985, the second city of Czechoslovakia and today the capital of Slovakia, is set along the Danube River by the border with Austria and Hungary. It’s surrounded by vineyards and the Little Carpathian Mountains, criss-crossed with forested hiking and cycling trails. The pedestrian-only, 18th-century old town is known for its lively bars and cafés. When we reached the city, the coach left us and the driver asked us to meet him in the same spot in eight hours.

That was a challenging excursion as no one at information and tour desks spoke any English. My German was not good enough to find my way. Bratislava and suburbs had several universities, and as a result there were many student excursionist. I eventually became friendly with a couple of students from West Germany, who liked to practice speaking English, and a Czechoslovakian student. We created our own city itinerary for the day, with the help of her Slovak-English dictionary.

Bratislava Castle

We visited the picturesque Bratislava whose Old Town banks the Danube River. It is relatively a smaller city with a population of around 350,000. It is one of the best preserved medieval old towns in Europe. Besides the colourful medieval houses, impressive churches, bell towers and beautiful baroque palaces, the most enchanting building is definitely the Bratislava Castle. Perched atop a hill, the reconstructed Bratislava Castle overlooks old town and the Danube.

My new friends and I spent hours at the castle in the midst of heavy snowing. When snow fall eased, we walked a lot around the city. We had lunch in a Slovak cellar type restaurant. After lunch we continued our discovery tour by foot. It was wet and cold, but fun.

An Assignment in Switzerland

When I returned to Vienna, I received a call from Sri Lanka. It was my father-in-law who ran our family business – Streamline Services, a travel agency and hospitality consulting company. We also represented a few well-known hotel schools in Europe for whom our company recruited students from Sri Lanka.

My father-in-law, Captain Wick chatted over the telephone for a long time. He said, “Chandi, the HotelConsult Hotel School contract you secured for us three years ago has progressed well. When you are in Switzerland, HotelConsult has invited you to check their facilities, meet our students, have a luncheon meeting with the President of the school, and also deliver a guest lecture. Their main campus is in Brig, which is only a three-hour train ride from Zürich which you have planned to visit. Can you go there and spend a couple of days?”

I said, “Yes, Captain!” and changed my travel plans immediately. My wife and mother-in-law suggested that I go to Switzerland alone on the business trip while they went on to Munich to stay with our good Bavarian friends in West Germany. We agreed to part for three days.

After leaving Vienna, the train passed some beautiful Austrian villages as well as cities such as Linz, Salzburg, Innsbruck and Bludenz. Mr and Mrs. Schädler, an elderly couple returning to their country Liechtenstein, after a week in Vienna, became friendly with me, and were impressed with my hunger for global travels. “On your way to Zürich, why don’t you visit our country?” Mrs. Schädler asked me. When I told them that I don’t have a visa, Mr. Schädler was quick to encourage me saying “there are no border controls between Liechtenstein and Switzerland and, the Swiss visa is valid in Liechtenstein.” I was tempted.

The train reached the Swiss border city Buchs around 3:00 pm. When I realized that Liechtenstein was only five miles away, I changed my mind, and travel plans and got off the train. After leaving my bag in a station locker, I took a bus to Liechtenstein.

LIECHTENSTEIN

Liechtenstein is a German-speaking, 61-square mile wide principality between Austria and Switzerland. It’s known for its medieval castles, alpine landscapes and villages linked by a network of trails. In 1985, with a population of only 26,000 (today, 39,000 inhabitants) Liechtenstein is one of the smallest countries in the world. It is the same size as the District of Columbia, in the USA. Liechtenstein is the world’s wealthiest country. According to the World Bank, its annual per-capita income is $175,813, ranking Liechtenstein ahead of Monaco, Luxembourg, Switzerland and Bermuda in 2022.

Vaduz

Vaduz, the capital of Liechtenstein, sits on the Rhine River near the Swiss border. It is a cultural and financial centre, home to Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein, with galleries of modern and contemporary art. The Postmuseum displays Liechtenstein’s famous postage stamps. Although ideal for tourism, the largest hotel in the city had only 41 rooms! The main attraction is the Vaduz Castle.

Vaduz Castle

On a hillside overlooking the town, Vaduz Castle dates back to the 12th century and is a royal family residence. The nearby national museum houses archaeological and cultural artifacts in a medieval building. After a brief visit to Vaduz, I took a bus to return to Buchs in Switzerland. But I realized that it was now getting too late to travel to Brig according to my original plan before my spur of the moment decision to visit another country.

SWITZERLAND

Having travelled in Switzerland for studies and leisure three years ago, I was familiar with half a dozen key cities in this beautiful country. Switzerland’s political structure is fairly unique in the world. In total, there are 26 cantons (states of the Swiss Confederation) with an average population of 250,000 per canton. The primary language in 19 cantons is German, six cantons are French and one canton is Italian. In 1985 the population of Switzerland was only 6.5 million (today, nearly 10 million).

Before catching the last train from Buchs, I called HotelConsult to inform them about my slight change of travel plans. Then I called my Ceylon Hotel School batch mate and hostel mate for three years, Patrick Taylor (Patta) who was living in Zug with his Swiss wife, Judy. They met, fell in love and got married when Patta was the first Executive Chef of Triton Hotel and Judy was a Tour Leader for a Swiss tour operator in Sri Lanka. They invited me to their home, which was 30 minutes south of Zürich by train. They came to the Zug railway station to pick me up.

Zug

As I arrived in Zug, when it was very dark and cold, and did not see much. Zug is the main town and capital of the Swiss canton of Zug. The city is small and had a population of just over 20,000. Its name originates from the fishing vocabulary; in the Middle Ages it referred to the right to pull up fishing nets and hence to the right to fish. This town is well-known for its low taxes and affluence with beautiful nature. The historic town of Zug a favourite destination for those who are fond of discovering noteworthy landmarks.

I stayed in Patta and Judy’s house that night. Judy quickly prepared a traditional Swiss meal including Zürcher geschnetzeltes (meat cut Zürich-style), a simple but very tasty dish consisting of veal cooked with mushrooms, cream, onions and wine. Patta prepared rösti (a Swiss dish made with raw grated potatoes and butter).

Zürcher geschnetzeltes mit rösti

As Judy was starting a new job next day, she went to sleep early leaving Patta and I to catch up about our memorable college years. After dinner I had a long chat with Patta till early hours in the morning. We talked about how our lives have changed since we first met 14 years ago in Colombo. Judy had motivated Patta to set up a small business in Zug called, Taylor Catering Services. “Machang, I also make some income from a new hobby of mine, Patta told me.

Their apartment was beautiful and had a collection of large abstract paintings. Patta surprised me when he told me that he is the artist. Painting had been something he tried after settling in Switzerland. I never knew about my friend’s artistic talent when we were college students. Those beautiful paintings inspired me to try abstract painting myself. I did this for many years after that, with a few solo abstract art exhibitions in four countries in South Asia, South America, the Caribbean and North America. Thanks for the motivation, Patta!

Patrick Taylor and I during a CHS trip in early 1970s

Patta was fascinated with my travel record and future travel ambitions. “Machang, where else are you travelling during this trip before returning to your base in London?” he asked. I said, “just a few brief stops in Zürich, Bern, Brig, Lax, Fiesch, Lausanne, Luzern, Munich, Paris, Amiens, Boulogne-Sur-Mer and Dover.” Patta laughed loud and said, “The travel bug has certainly bitten you, Chandana!”

The last lap of the six-week long trip

To be continued next Sunday…



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The Digital Pulse: How AI is redefining health care in Sri Lanka?

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A quiet yet profound shift is underway in American healthcare, and its implications extend far beyond the United States’ borders. A recent Associated Press report describes a scene that would have seemed improbable, even five years ago: a woman in Texas, experiencing side effects from a weightloss injection, does not call her doctor, visit a clinic, or even search Google. Instead, she opens her phone and consults ChatGPT. She tells the system how she feels, describes her symptoms, and receives an instant explanation. This behaviour, once the domain of early adopters and technology enthusiasts, has now entered the mainstream. A West Health–Gallup poll confirms that nearly onequarter of American adults used an AI tool for health information or advice in the previous month. For a country with one of the world’s most expensive and fragmented healthcare systems, this shift is not merely a technological curiosity. It is a sign of the public searching for speed, clarity, and affordability in a system that often fails to provide any of these.

Sri Lanka, though vastly different in scale, culture, and resources, is not insulated from this global transformation. If anything, the pressures that drive Americans toward AI—long wait times, high costs, difficulty accessing specialists—are even more acute in our own health system. The difference is that Sri Lanka is only beginning to experience the cultural and institutional adjustments that accompany widespread AI use. Yet the trajectory is unmistakable. What is happening in the United States today is almost certainly a preview of what will happen here tomorrow in Sri Lanka, though in a form shaped by our own social realities, linguistic diversity, and healthcare traditions.

The American experience shows that AI is becoming the new gateway to health information. As Dr. Karandeep Singh of UC San Diego observes, AI tools now function as an improved version of the old Google search. Instead of sifting through dozens of links, users receive a concise, conversational summary tailored to their question. This is precisely the kind of convenience that Sri Lankans, too, will find irresistible. In a country where a single specialist appointment can require hours of travel, waiting, and uncertainty, the appeal of an instant, alwaysavailable digital assistant is obvious. The idea that one could ask a question about a rash, a fever, a medication side effect, or a lab report and receive an immediate explanation—without navigating hospital queues or private consultation fees—will inevitably attract public interest. For example, one of my friends, who was with me in school, called me and said he is prescribed Linavic, a drug for type 2 diabetes. I told him that, as it is not widely known in the USA, to give me the generic name. He searched ChatGPT and told me it is called Tradjenta, which is widely available in the USA as a prescription drug for type 2 diabetes.

But Sri Lanka’s path will not be identical to America’s. Our adoption of AI in healthcare is emerging through institutions rather than individuals. Nawaloka Hospitals has already introduced AI-powered chatbots, including NASHA, an OPD assistant capable of guiding patients through symptom assessment and basic triage. This is a significant development because it signals that Sri Lankan hospitals are preparing for a future in which AI is not an optional addon but a core part of patient interaction. The government’s draft National AI Strategy reinforces this direction by identifying healthcare as a priority sector and emphasising responsible, transparent, and safe deployment. Academic bodies, such as the Sri Lanka Medical Association, have also begun training clinicians to understand and work alongside AI systems. These are early but important steps, suggesting that Sri Lanka is building the professional ecosystem needed for safe AI integration.

  Yet, the public’s relationship with AI remains limited. Unlike in the United States, where consumers independently experiment with tools like ChatGPT, Sri Lankans tend to rely on doctors as the primary source of authority. Digital literacy varies widely, especially outside urban centres. Sinhala and Tamilcapable AI tools are still developing. And our society has a long history of health misinformation spreading rapidly through social media, from miracle cures to conspiracy theories. Without careful regulation and public education, AI could amplify these risks rather than reduce them. The danger is not that AI will replace doctors, but that poorly informed users may treat AI outputs as definitive diagnoses, bypassing professional care when it is urgently needed.

At the same time, Sri Lankans’ lived experiences reveal why AI will inevitably become part of the healthseeking landscape. Anyone who has visited the outpatient department of a major government hospital knows the reality: queues forming before dawn, patients clutching files and prescriptions, and overworked medical officers trying to see hundreds of cases in a single shift. In rural areas, the situation is even more challenging. A villager in Monaragala or Mullaitivu may have to travel hours to see a specialist, often relying on neighbours or family for transport. Many postpone care simply because they are unsure whether a symptom is serious enough to justify the journey. For such individuals, an AI-based triage tool—available on a basic smartphone, in Sinhala or Tamil—could be transformative. It could help them decide whether to seek immediate care, wait for the next clinic day, or manage the issue at home.

  Sri Lanka’s private healthcare sector, too, is ripe for AI integration. Private hospitals are increasingly turning to digital systems for appointment scheduling, lab report delivery, and patient communication. Anyone who has waited for hours at a private OPD, despite having an appointment, knows the frustration. AI-driven systems could help streamline patient flow, predict peak times, and reduce bottlenecks. They could also assist doctors by summarising patient histories, flagging potential drug interactions, and providing evidencebased guidelines. For patients, AI could offer explanations of lab results in simple language, reducing anxiety and improving understanding.

There are already glimpses of this future. Some Sri Lankan patients, especially younger urban professionals, quietly admit that they use AI tools to interpret their blood tests before seeing a doctor.

Others use AI to understand the side effects of medications prescribed to them. Parents use AI to check whether a child’s fever pattern is typical or concerning. Migrant workers, returning home for short visits, use AI to prepare questions for their doctors, ensuring they make the most of limited consultation time. These behaviours mirror the early stages of the American trend, though on a smaller scale.

Sri Lanka’s cultural context will shape how AI is used. Our society places great trust in doctors, often viewing them as authoritative figures whose word should not be questioned. This trust is a strength, but it can also discourage patients from seeking information independently. AI has the potential to shift this dynamic—not by undermining doctors, but by empowering patients to participate more actively in their own care. A patient who understands their condition is better able to follow treatment plans, ask relevant questions, and recognise warning signs. AI can support this empowerment, provided it is used responsibly.

The deeper question is not whether Sri Lanka will adopt AI in healthcare, but how. The American example shows both the promise and the peril. AI can democratise access to information, reduce anxiety, and empower patients. But it can also mislead, oversimplify, or create false confidence. The challenge for Sri Lanka is to build a culture of responsible use—one that recognises AI as a tool, not a substitute for clinical judgment. Hospitals must ensure accuracy and transparency. Regulators must set standards. And the public must learn to treat AI as a guide, not a guru.

 Sri Lanka has an opportunity to leapfrog. By studying the American experience, we can avoid its pitfalls and adopt its strengths. We can design AI systems that respect our linguistic diversity, our cultural habits, and our healthcare realities. We can integrate AI into hospitals in ways that enhance, rather than erode, the doctor-patient relationship. And we can prepare our citizens to use these tools wisely, with curiosity but also with caution.

The transformation is already underway. It will accelerate whether we prepare for it or not. The question for Sri Lanka is whether we will shape this future deliberately or allow it to shape us by default. The American shift toward AImediated healthcare is a reminder that technology does not wait for societies to catch up. It moves forward, and nations must decide whether to follow passively or lead thoughtfully. Sri Lanka, with its strong public health tradition and growing technological ambition, has every reason to choose the latter.

by Prof Amarasiri de Silva

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Not a dog barked

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I began running on the beach after a fall on a broken pavement left me with a head injury and a surgically repaired eyebrow. Mount Lavinia beach, world‑famous and crowded, especially on Sundays, is only a seven‑minute walk from home, so it became the obvious place for my rehabilitation jogs.

On my first day, my wife, a true Mount Lavinia girl, accompanied me. Though we’ve been married for over 40 years, this was the first time I had ever jogged on the beach. She practically shepherded me there and watched from a safe distance as I made my way towards the Wellawatte breakwater. Dogs were everywhere: some strays, some with collars. I’m not usually afraid of dogs, so I ran past them confidently. Then one fellow barked sharply, making me stop. He advanced even after I stood still. I bent down, picked up some sand, and only then did he retreat, still protesting loudly. On my return run, he repeated the performance.

The next time, I carried a stick. The beach was quiet, perhaps my friend had taken the day off. But on the third day he was back, barking as usual. I showed him the stick and continued. Further along, more dogs barked, and I repeated the ritual. Soon I found myself growing jittery, even numb, whenever I approached a dog. Jogging was no longer comfortable.

My elder daughter, an ardent animal lover who keeps two dogs and wanting to have more, suggested bribery, specifically, biscuits. So, on my next run, I filled my pocket with them. When the usual culprit appeared, I tossed him a biscuit before he could bark. He sniffed suspiciously, then ate it. I jogged on. The rest of the “orchestra” received similar treatment and promptly forgot to bark. Not a dog barked the entire run, or on my way back.

Some groups had five or six dogs, but bribing the noisiest one was enough to quieten the rest. Soon they grew used to me running close to them, and the biscuits made me a trusted friend. These round little sugary crackers turned out to be the perfect currency for seemingly aggressive but essentially harmless dogs, a fact well known to my daughter, Dr. Honda Hitha, but a revelation to me.

One day, a friendly dog decided to escort me home. After receiving his biscuit, he lingered near our gate before returning to the beach. Over time, the number of escorts grew until I found myself flanked by about 10 canine disciples. They became my strength instead of a source of fear. They were darlings. Unlike humans, their affection, even if won initially with biscuits, soon became unconditional.

They still accompany me home, whether or not they receive a treat. Bless them! May they be born human in their next lives, perhaps the only way our wicked world can become a better place.

by Dr. M. M. Janapriya

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It’s Israel and US that need a regime change

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Netanyahu and Trump

If there is one country that urgently needs a regime change it is Israel. The whole world is suffering and thousands of people, including children and women, are dying due to Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s political survival strategy. He needs the war to avoid going to jail and also certain defeat at the next elections. The corruption and other charges against him, if proved, would send him to jail. He had asked the Israel President for a pardon and his friend Trump also has written to the President, on his behalf.

Netanyahu is able to commit genocide in Gaza with impunity because the US backs him to the hilt, economically, politically, militarily and also in the United Nations. Without all this, Israel will not be able to fight its many wars and pursue its “Greater Israel” project in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, and also weaken the countries that oppose its grand plan, such as Iran, Yemen and Turkey. The US gives military aid to Israel, worth USD 3.8 bn, annually, which is used in these genocidal wars and expansionist projects. The US is, therefore, complicit in all these war crimes.

US presidents, beginning from Eisenhower (1950) to Joe Biden (2022), expressed displeasure at Israeli aggression. Ronald Reagan halted the shipment of cluster artillery shells, in 1982, over concerns about their use against civilians in Lebanon, and delayed the delivery of F-16 warplanes until Israel withdrew from Lebanon. George H.W. Bush (1990s) postponed $10 billion in loan guarantees in 1991 to pressure Israel to stop building settlements in the West Bank and to attend the Madrid peace conference. Barack Obama  frequently criticised Israeli settlement expansion and, in the final days of his term, withheld a US UN Security Council veto on a resolution regarding settlements. Joe Biden (2020s) threatened to withhold military aid if Israel launched a major offensive in Rafah during the 2024 conflict in Gaza, pausing a shipment of heavy bombs. Most of these presidents had been in favour of the two state solution for the Palestine problem as well.

Trump abandoned these longstanding US policies on Israel that were upheld by Obama and later restored by Biden. Significant and far-reaching changes, included recognising Jerusalem as Israel’s capital,  moving the embassy, declaring settlements not inherently illegal, and recognising Golan Heights, which belonged to Syria, as part of Israel sovereignty. These evil deeds of Trump seem to have boomeranged on him as he battles to extricate himself from a war forced on him by Israel, which has resulted in enormous economic and political, not to mention military, losses for the US and Trump. Consequently Israel, in the eyes of many leading political commentators, is now a liability for the US.

   How this war was started reveals the dastardly and barbaric mentality of Netanyahu and Trump. The US and Iran were engaged in negotiations, with the mediation of Oman, to resolve their differences, and on 26 February, 2026, the Foreign Minister of Iran stated that a historical agreement with the US was about to be entered into and, the following day, Oman corroborated this announcement. Iran apparently had agreed that its nuclear programme could be brought under the surveillance of the International Atomic Energy Agency. Surprisingly on 28 February, 2026, Israel and the US attacked Iran, Trump saying that it posed a nuclear threat to the US! Oman said it was “dismayed” and the Iranian Foreign Minister said it was a “betrayal”. Obviously, Trump, who is under obligation to the Jewish lobby, which had funded his election campaign, had been drawn into the war. The Epstein files issue may have pushed Trump across the threshold. Iran’s response was calculated and appropriate. Trump says he will obliterate the Iranian civilisation in one night but soon agrees to have negotiations with Iran, in Islamabad.

However, Netanyahu cannot afford an end to the war he started to save his own skin. He goes ahead and drops 100 bombs in 10 minutes on Lebanon, killing 254 civilians, including children. The massacre in Lebanon continues with Israel pushing towards the Litani river in an attempt to annex southern Lebanon. Israel disqualifies itself not only as a reliable ally but also as an honourable member of the world community by having leaders of the calibre of Netanyahu. Israel is fast becoming internationally isolated, according to experts like Professors Robert Pape, John Measheimier, Richard Wolff, Jeffrey Sachs and Yanis Varonfakis. And these experts are of the view that if Israel continues its aggressive approach and expansionist policy, disregarding the historical facts of its origin and the Palestine problem, it will implode and destroy itself.

Israel must face the reality that Iran has emerged stronger after the war and may have control over the Strait of Hormuz and may even force the US out of the region. Israel, under Netanyahu, may not be willing to acknowledge these facts, but the people in the US must realise that it is not in their national interests to have Israel as an indispensable ally. This war is very unpopular in the US not entirely due to the economic impact but the extremely atrocious way it has been prosecuted by Israel  and also the equally horrendous threats made by the US against Iran. It is also very unpopular among the US allies who bluntly refused to join or even approve it. Australia, Japan and South Korea, though far removed from the theatre of war, seem to be pretty angry about the whole thing, as they are badly affected by the economic impact of the war. They may be concerned about the brutality of Israel, and the degree of support and approval it gets from the US.

Those who have significantly gained from the war may be Russia who could have a windfall on their oil sales, and China who could quietly weave its diplomatic network throughout the Middle East and watch the decline of US influence in the region. Saudi Arabia and UAE, two countries bombed by Iran, have already started a dialogue with Iran. These developments may hasten the emergence of the new world order, spearheaded by China.

The war, that was started by Netanyahu, with a willing Trump, seems to have backfired on them, with both facing a hostile world and a fast changing geopolitical global situation. Trump’s MAGA project was aimed at quelling the growth of the new world order that had China and Russia at the head. He attempted to hit Russia with sanctions but failed. He tried to curb China with tariffs but failed. Denying oil supplies to China was attempted by kidnapping the Venezuelan President. China’s monopoly on rare earth minerals was a headache to Trump and he proposes to annex Canada and Greenland which have rich deposits of these elements. War on Iran was another opportunity to do a regime change and get control over that country and its oil. He threatened to wipe out Iran saying that “the civilization would die tomorrow night”, only a psychopathic megalomaniac could make such utterances , not a president of the US. Fortunately, the changing world order would not allow Trump to achieve any of his crazy goals.

Netanyahu inadvertently may have hastened his own downfall by starting a war without realising that the global geopolitics have changed and he cannot have his way even with the full backing of Trump. Both Israel and the US need a regime change if the world is to have peace.

 by N. A. de S. Amaratunga

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