How selective outrage over Iran war exposes the limits of realpolitik
People hurry past damaged residential buildings in southern Tehran, on March 27.
Photo: EPA As with any conflict, the war in Iran has driven people to choose sides and adopt partisan positions.
This includes the view that, despite the acts of aggression by the US and Israel, the Islamic Republic somehow “deserves” the attacks due to years of regional instability caused by its Axis of Resistance.
This is not to suggest that the Iranian regime has always been a victim.
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ transgressions through the Quds Force have been well documented.
But let’s be honest about what we are witnessing.
This is realpolitik.
This is how states operate within the paradigm of realism in international relations: the selfish and often ruthless protection and projection of national interests.
From a humanitarian perspective, this is deeply troubling.
Realism is no friend of human welfare.
Its only consistent outcome is the erosion of human life and dignity in pursuit of strategic gain.
Yet, to single out Iran for pursuing its interests and justify foreign aggression and attacks on its soil as a form of punishment for its strategic behaviour is intellectually inconsistent.
If we accept realism as the framework, then it must be applied universally, not selectively.
Meanwhile, Iran’s actions against its adversaries and US-aligned states in the region, particularly Arab states, have also contributed to the instability.
Many would argue that countries like the United Arab Emirates, and others, deserve retaliation for their past conduct.
But in targeting these states, Iran has created real and immediate consequences that extend far beyond governments and elites.
Oil production has plummeted throughout the Persian Gulf.
The Strait of Hormuz has been disrupted.
Oil shipments have been delayed or blocked, sending ripples through global markets.
Workers sit on a wall against the backdrop of the city skyline in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates, on March 11.
Photo: AFP But these macro-level disruptions translate into deeply human consequences.
Workers, both local and migrant, and low-income households bear the brunt.
Jobs are at stake.
Many are stranded, unable to return home.
And even if they do, they return to uncertainty, without livelihoods to sustain them.
The human toll cuts across borders.
In Iran, more than 1,400 civilians have been killed, with strikes hitting schools and residential blocks.
In Lebanon, the civilian death
原文链接: 南华早报
