Friday, May 15, 2026

Xi Jinping's 'Thucydides Trap' Warning Is Really About American Decline


Xi Jinping's 'Thucydides Trap' Warning Is Really About American Decline
PNW STAFF



Google searches for the phrase "Thucydides Trap" surged after Chinese President Xi Jinping used the term during discussions surrounding his high-stakes meeting with President Donald Trump. For many Americans, it was likely the first time they had ever heard the phrase.

But in Beijing, it was not an obscure historical reference casually thrown into conversation.

In China's leadership circles, the phrase carries enormous strategic weight. It refers to the ancient idea, first written about by Greek historian Thucydides, that war often becomes likely when a rising power begins challenging an established one. In this case, the rising power is clearly China, and the established superpower is the United States.

But the most important part of Xi's warning may not be that China is rising. Rising powers have always existed throughout history. The deeper issue is this: China increasingly appears to believe America is vulnerable enough to challenge.

That should concern every American regardless of political party.

China No Longer Sees Itself As A Secondary Power

For decades, China carefully avoided directly confronting the United States on the world stage. Its leaders emphasized "peaceful rise," economic cooperation, and global trade integration. China became the factory of the world while America remained the unquestioned military and economic giant.

That tone has changed dramatically.


Today, Beijing openly speaks about reshaping the global order. China is rapidly expanding its military, increasing pressure on Taiwan, deepening alliances across Africa and the Middle East, and investing heavily in artificial intelligence, cyber warfare, and naval power.

Xi Jinping no longer speaks like the leader of a developing nation trying to find its place in the world. He speaks like the head of a civilization convinced its moment has arrived.

And perhaps more importantly, convinced America's best days may be fading.

Great Powers Are Usually Challenged When They Look Weak

Historically, rising powers rarely challenge nations that appear unified, economically dominant, culturally confident, and militarily overwhelming. They move when weakness becomes visible.


That is where this story stops being only about China and starts becoming about America itself.

The uncomfortable truth is that America increasingly projects instability to the outside world. China watches America's soaring debt, political paralysis, violent social division, border chaos, inflation struggles, and cultural fragmentation. It sees a nation deeply distracted by internal conflict.

America's national debt continues climbing toward levels once considered unimaginable. Trust in institutions has collapsed across much of the population. Military recruitment has struggled in recent years. Entire sectors of American manufacturing have become dependent on Chinese supply chains. Political tribalism has grown so intense that many Americans now view each other as enemies rather than fellow citizens.

From Beijing's perspective, this matters.






Israel, Lebanon Enter New Round of Talks as U.S. Pushes Beirut Toward Historic Peace Framework


Israel, Lebanon Enter New Round of Talks as U.S. Pushes Beirut Toward Historic Peace Framework


Israel and Lebanon are set to resume negotiations Thursday in Washington, with Israeli officials describing the talks as a potential turning point in the long and violent struggle between the Jewish state and the Iranian-backed Hezbollah terror organization.

Israeli Ambassador to the United States Yechiel Leiter said the discussions have moved beyond the narrow question of Israeli military withdrawals and are now focused on a broader dual-track framework: pursuing a formal peace treaty with Lebanon while simultaneously confronting the security reality posed by Hezbollah’s arsenal.

“We’re going to move into, hopefully, setting the framework for two teams,” Leiter told i24NEWS. “One team that will deal with achieving peace, a peace treaty, full peace, as if Hezbollah doesn’t exist, and a security track, as if the peace talks don’t exist.”

The framework reflects Israel’s long-standing position that peace cannot be built on paper while Hezbollah remains an armed state-within-a-state on Israel’s northern border. Leiter said Israel has “no immediate plans of withdrawal” from positions in Lebanese territory, while stressing that Jerusalem has “no designs in Lebanese territory” and is focused solely on national security.

The talks come shortly before the expiration of a three-week ceasefire announced by President Donald Trump, whose administration is pressing Lebanon to take concrete steps toward normalization. According to sources familiar with the discussions, Washington has urged Beirut to repeal its 1955 law banning normalization with Israel — a move that would mark a major political shift in Lebanon’s posture toward the Jewish state.

“The Americans are telling the Lebanese: it is time for Beirut to offer something in return as well,” a source told The Jerusalem Post. “So far, Israel has maintained the ceasefire and has taken significant measures to improve the atmosphere, and without action from the Lebanese side, it will be difficult to continue the ceasefire.”

The third round of negotiations will be held at the State Department and will include military representatives for the first time. The Israeli delegation will be led by Leiter and include a National Security Council representative, IDF Head of Strategy Brig.-Gen. Amichai Levin, and Israel’s acting military attaché in Washington.

In a striking development ahead of the talks, Lebanon’s Foreign Ministry filed a complaint Wednesday with the United Nations Security Council accusing Iran of interfering in Lebanon’s internal affairs and dragging the country into a war it did not choose. 

Beirut also disputed Iranian claims involving the transfer of Iranian diplomats to a Beirut hotel later targeted by Israel, saying some of the Iranian officials killed in the strike had not been formally registered as diplomats in Lebanon.

Hezbollah, meanwhile, has sharply criticized the prospect of direct negotiations with Israel. Hezbollah official Nawaf al-Moussawi called on Lebanese President Joseph Aoun to hold a national referendum on peace talks, claiming the president had been “cornered” by outside pressure.

The emerging diplomatic track places Lebanon at a historic crossroads. For decades, Hezbollah has turned the country into a forward operating base for Iran’s war against Israel, often at a devastating cost to the Lebanese people. Now, with Washington applying pressure, Israel refusing to compromise on security, and Beirut itself accusing Tehran of destabilizing interference, the region may be witnessing a defining test of whether Lebanon can reclaim its sovereignty from Iran’s terrorist proxy — Hezbollah.

For Israel, the message remains clear: peace is possible, but not at the price of ignoring a terror army entrenched on its border.


Israeli Ministers Call For Rebuilding Temple On Jerusalem Day


Israeli Ministers Call For Rebuilding Temple On Jerusalem Day


Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and fellow Otzma Yehudit lawmaker Yitzhak Kroizer used Jerusalem Day to issue some of the strongest public calls yet from sitting Israeli officials for expanded Jewish control on the Temple Mount — and, in Kroizer’s case, the rebuilding of the Jewish Temple.

Ben Gvir and Kroizer were seen waving an Israeli flag on the Temple Mount ahead of the annual Jerusalem Day Flag March through the Old City, a highly charged event marking Israel’s reunification of Jerusalem during the 1967 Six-Day War. The site, revered by Jews as the location of the First and Second Temples and known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, remains one of the most sensitive religious and political flashpoints in the world.

“We restored governance on the Temple Mount thanks to determination and deterrence,” Ben Gvir declared. “This year, Ramadan was the quietest, thanks to deterrence. The Temple Mount is in our hands.”

The two lawmakers then danced and sang near the Dome of the Rock while holding the Israeli flag, a move certain to draw sharp reaction from Arab governments, Muslim authorities, and international diplomats.

Earlier Thursday, Kroizer visited the Temple Mount with his children and father, a prominent Kahanist rabbi, to mark Jerusalem Day. He was photographed prostrating himself on the ground facing the Dome of the Rock — an act of Jewish prayer that remains officially prohibited under the long-standing status quo arrangement governing the site.

“The time has come to get rid of all the mosques and work to construct the Temple!” Kroizer later wrote on Facebook, according to Israeli media.

On Wednesday, Negev, Galilee, and National Resilience Minister Yitzhak Wasserlauf, also a member of the far-right Otzma Yehudit party, urged Israelis to visit the Temple Mount to witness what he called the “revolution” led there by Ben Gvir.

Under the traditional status quo, Jews may visit the Temple Mount but are not officially permitted to pray there. In practice, however, Israeli police under Ben Gvir’s ministry have increasingly tolerated Jewish prayer at the site, despite repeated statements from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the decades-old arrangement remains unchanged.

For Israel’s supporters, Jerusalem Day remains a celebration of the Jewish people’s return to their ancient capital after nearly 2,000 years of exile. For Israel’s enemies, it remains a rallying point for incitement and confrontation. And for students of Bible prophecy, the renewed political and religious focus on the Temple Mount is difficult to ignore.


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Cuba says it has completely run out of fuel, blames U.S. embargo


Cuba says it has completely run out of fuel, blames U.S. embargo


 Cuban Energy Minister Vincente de la O Levy said the country's diesel and fuel oil stocks had run completely dry and that the energy system was on life support due to the oil embargo imposed by the United States in January.

"We have absolutely no diesel," O Levy said in an interview broadcast on state-run national television Wednesday night in which he repeatedly stated that oil stocks to generate power for the electrical grid were pretty much exhausted too.

O Levy said that a lone delivery of 730,000 barrels of oil gifted by Russia in March had run out and the national grid was now completely dependent on Cuba's home-produced crude oil, natural gas and renewable energy.

"In Havana, the blackouts now exceed 20-22 hours [per day]. The situation is very tense, it's becoming hotter," he said, referring to surging demand for energy with the arrival of summer on the island.

In a post on X on Wednesday evening, Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel blamed a 2,000 megawatt electricity shortfall overnight and 1,100 megawatts that could have been produced during the day had the fuel to generate it been available to power stations on a "criminal siege."

"This dramatic worsening has a single cause: the genocidal energy blockade to which the United States subjects our country, threatening irrational tariffs against any nation that supplies us with fuel," Diaz-Canel wrote.

The comments came as Havana and Washington traded claim and counterclaim over purported behind-the-scenes U.S. offers to provide $100 million in assistance that the Cuban government claimed it was unaware of, with the State Department formally reiterating Wednesday that its offer was still on the table.

In a news release, the State Department said Cuba had rebuffed repeated private offers of financial assistance made by the United States, including support for free and fast satellite internet.

"The regime refuses to allow the United States to provide this assistance to the Cuban people, who are in desperate need of assistance due to the failures of Cuba's corrupt regime. Today, the Department of State is publicly restating the United States' generous offer to provide an additional $100 million in direct humanitarian assistance to the Cuban people that would be distributed in coordination with the Catholic Church and other reliable independent humanitarian organizations," the news release said.

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Thursday, May 14, 2026

Indian Ship Sunk Near Oman; Iranian Commandos Seize Vessel Off UAE


Indian Ship Sunk Near Oman; Iranian Commandos Seize Vessel Off UAE
TYLER DURDEN


Summary: 

  • Indian Cargo Ship Sinks in Suspected Drone Attack off Oman 

  • Iranian Commandos Board & Seize Honduras-Flagged Ship Off UAE

Indian Cargo Ship Sinks Near Oman

Maritime data company Windward revealed on X:

Indian cargo vessel sunk by suspected drone attack off Oman The MSV HAJI ALI (MMSI: 419908021) has gone down in the Strait of Hormuz region. The 57m vessel was running dark (AIS disabled) at the time of the incident.

The ship had recently transited from Somalia. All crew members have been successfully rescued. No fatalities reported. Note: As a vessel under 500 GT, it does not have a formal IMO number.

This incident highlights the escalating risks for smaller commercial vessels operating in regional chokepoints. While attention is often on large tankers, small tonnage like the Haji Ali is increasingly exposed in this shadow war.

Iranian Commandos Board & Seize Honduras-Flagged Ship Off UAE

It appears the Iranians have boarded and seized another ship in the Persian Gulf region - this time as the vessel was anchored off the coast of the United Arab Emirates, and while it was reportedly en route to Iranian territorial waters.

The UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said Thursday that the vessel was seized by "unauthorized personnel", with the initial incident being reported about 38 nautical miles northeast of the UAE port of Fujairah.

The agency said the ship's company security officer reported that "the vessel has been taken by unauthorized personnel while at anchor and is now bound for Iranian Territorial Waters."

UKMTO said it is seeking more information incident and urgently advised vessels operating in the area to report any suspicious activity. While the agency did not immediately identify the vessel, Reuters in follow up interestingly described that is a mere fishery research vessel. According to the report:


A vessel was boarded by unauthorized personnel ​on Thursday while at anchor northeast of the ‌United Arab Emirates port of Fujairah and was heading towards Iranian territorial waters, United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations said.

Two maritime security sources ​said the ship was believed to be the Honduras-flagged ​Hui Chuan fishery research vessel.

Ship tracking data on the MarineTraffic platform indicates vessel ⁠was last seen in the Gulf ​of ‌Oman, just within Iran's exclusive economic ​zone (EEZ) on ⁠May 12; however, an EEZ can still be considered international waters - though the Iranians are apparently not interpreting it that way.

In the face of the ongoing US naval blockade of Iranian ports, Tehran is seeking to assert its geographic and military leverage, enforcing an 'Iranian protocol' over the vital Strait of Hormuz oil and goods shipping waterway.

This week has seen Iran begin to let more Chinese vessels through, at the request of Beijing, and reportedly without imposing tolls either.

Bloomberg freshly reports Thursday of 30 Chinese ships, "The vessels were allowed to pass the Strait of Hormuz with the coordination of the Iranian authorities and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ navy, state TV reports, citing an IRGC naval official."

Diplomacy has taken a back seat at the moment, as each warring side seeks to 'wait out' the other in hopes that enough economic pain can be imposed to 'cry uncle' - as President Trump himself has recently expressed.