Holding Trump
and Netanyahu Accountable for the Heinous War Crimes
On February
28,2026, in a joint military operation called ‘Epic Fury’, the US and Israel
attacked Iran, killing her supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei. It was an unprovoked illegal aggression; an
undeclared war that violated the international law and the UN charter. American President Donal Trump and Israel
Prime Minister Benjamin Nitanyahu mislead the world to justify the aggression
that Iran posed a serious security threat to America and Israel as it was going
ahead to make nuclear bomb. They claimed that the regime of the radical Islamic
clerics in Iran was very oppressive, hence it must change. Therefore,
de-nuclearizing Iran and changing the regime became the main war objectives. Iran was attacked, while Oman was mediating in
the US-Iran conflict at Geneva that yielded progress.
The American intelligence agencies, including the CIA, told Trump that Iran had no plan to make nuclear bombs and that it had posed no threat to the US. Yet, Trump chose to go with Netanyahu’s one-sided assessment that Iran was a serious threat to both Israel and America. It was at the instigation of Israel that the US carried out the ’Midnight Hammar’ against Iran in June 2025 and bombed its nuclear enrichment facilities.
There is some misconception about Iran. A journalist Sujit
John, who visited Tehran last November to participate in a blockchain &
crypto currency conference, organised by the Iranian government, has interesting
things to say about Iran in his write up in The Times of India, March 19.
According to him, the day-to-day reality in Iran is at variance with the Western
narrative that all women wear hijabs. It was totally a wrong perception;
barring some older women, no one wears hijabs. And socially, Iran is far from
what most of us imagine. The Indian
Embassy officials in Teran say ‘Iran is less religious today than India is…a
third of mosques in Tehran have shut down, because nobody goes to them’.
The people of Iran are warm and friendly; shopkeepers
routinely offering items freely. The West presents the Iranian regime as a
monolithic bloc of Islamic fundamentalists. ‘That may be far from the case. The
regime is a mix of hardliners and reformists, and reformists are gaining
ground. Even hardliners aren’t as hardline, as they once were.’ There are more women than men, in many science
and tech universities in Iran. Men are going into business, not doing higher
education, leading to incompatibility in marriages. Divorce rates are near 50%.
India did not condemn the US-Israel aggression on
Iran, nor condoled the death of its supreme leader, despite Iran being a
traditional friend with whom it had civilizational link. This had outraged the
opposition. The Modi government made a historical blunder by taking the side of
America and Israel, deviating from India’s well-established policy of playing
the role of a neutral umpire and mediating in international conflicts. In her
article Government’s silence on killing of Iran leader is not neutral, it is
abdication, The Indian Express March 3,2026, Sonia Gandhi was unsparing in criticizing
the government’s partisan stand:
“The Prime
Minister confined himself to condemning Iran’s retaliatory strike on the UAE,
without addressing the sequence of events that preceded it. When the targeted
killing of a foreign leader draws no clear defence of sovereignty or
international law from our country and impartiality is abandoned, it raises
serious doubts about the direction and credibility of our foreign policy. If
such acts pass without principled objection from the world’s largest democracy,
the erosion of international norms becomes easier to normalise.
For India,
this episode is especially troubling. Our ties with Iran are civilisational as
well as strategic. In 1994, when sections within the Organisation of Islamic
Cooperation sought to advance a resolution against India at the UN Commission
on Human Rights over Kashmir, Tehran played a consequential role in blocking
that effort. That intervention helped prevent the internationalisation of the
Kashmir issue. Iran has also enabled India’s diplomatic presence in Zahedan
near the Pakistan border — a strategic counter-balance to the development of
Gwadar port and the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.
India’s post-Independence foreign
policy was shaped by non-alignment — not as passive neutrality, but as a
conscious assertion of strategic autonomy. It was a refusal to become subsumed
into the rivalries of great powers. An
uncritical silence in the face of unilateral military action by powerful states
looks like retreat from that principle…an abandonment of our legacy. If
sovereignty can be disregarded without consequence, as it is in the case of
Iran, smaller powers are left exposed to the whims of the strong. India has
repeatedly argued for a rules-based international order that protects the weak
from coercion. At moments when the rules-based order is under visible strain,
silence is abdication. India has long aspired to be more than a regional power;
it has sought to serve as the conscience-keeper of the world.”
Antagonized by the stand taken by India of siding with
the US-Israel aggression, Iran did not allow easy passage of Indian ships
through the Strait of Hormuz which is closed for the ships from the hostile
countries, creating a serious oil and energy crisis at home. Prior to the
aggression, Iran was selling the oil to India in Indian currency at cheaper
rate. Now India is forced to buy the Iranian oil in the Chinese currency. It is
a self-inflicted pain. As the chairman
of the BRICS, India was expected to take a stand against the war on Iran- which
is a member of the BRICS.
Trump is getting extremely unpopular and isolated at
home and abroad; his NATO allies disapproving the war with Iran, carried under
the influence of Netanyahu. Both Trum and Netanyahu needed an alibi to
divert the people’s attention from the domestic issues, particularly the Epstein
files and the arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court respectively. The aggression against Iran provided that.
The war has not served any American interest. A PEW Poll reports that 61% of
Americans disapproved the war.
Pratap Banu Mehta says, ‘the most worrying future of
American democracy at this moment is not that it has grown more disposed to
cruelty, but it seems to have reached a point where everyone seeks absolution
from responsibility.’ It is disturbing that the rise of the US as the sole
superpower has become oppressive. Iran, Libya, Somalia, Afghanistan, Venezuela
and now Iran’s destruction are sad reminders of this fact.
Trump faces ‘No Kings’ fury. As reported in The Hindu,
April 1, a slogan routed as a warning against rising authoritarianism under
Trump’s administration has grown into one of the largest protest movements in
American history with millions across the country and in cities abroad, taking
to the streets on March 28 under the banner: “No Kings.” The website of the ‘No
Kings’ movement declared: ‘In America, We Have No Kings’, a message that has
now become a rallying cry. It goes on to
accuse the Trump administration of unleashing masked secret police, pursuing
illegal catastrophic war and undermining civil liberties and that ‘power
belongs to the people – not to winnable kings or their billionaire cronies.
The demonstration was the largest, since Trumps’s
swearing in the second time on 20 January 2025, in which some 8 million people
participated in nearly every major US city, alongside solidary protests in
Paris, London, Lisbon and Rome, among other cities. In Washington, hundreds
marched past the Lincoln Memorial, holding signs that read ‘put down the crown,
clown’ and ‘regime change begins at home’. The demonstrators carried placards
reading ‘No Kings, No Crowns’.
Iran, in retaliation, has attacked the countries in
the Middle East - Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, UAE, and Iraq -
as they shelter the American military and air bases used by the American forces
to strike at Iran. Trump talks of the
regime change in Iran. But what about the family monarchies – the Sheikhdoms -
in the Gulf region, which have more oppressive dictatorial regimes supported by
America to protect its strategic interest? An outside power cannot affect the
change of regime in another sovereign country by using force. It is for the
people of that country to change the regime.
The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran brings
back the memories of 1956 Suez crisis. Following the nationalization of the
Anglo-Frech company that operated the Suez Canal, which fell in the Egyptian
territory, by President Nasser in the autumn of 1956, Egypt was attacked by Israel,
the UK and France. The Suez Canal served as a lifeline for global trade by facilitating
the shortest shipping route between Asia and Europe and America. The canal
remained closed for more than five months.
Prime Miniter Nehru played a decisive role in
resolving the Suez crisis. In a letter to the UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold,
he said: ‘It is clear and admitted that Israel has committed large scale
aggression against Egypt. Instead of trying to stop this aggression, the UK and
France are themselves invading Egyptian territory’. And following the UN
General Assembly passing a resolution to end the war, the UK and French forces
withdrew from Egyptian territory. The Suez crisis ended the hegemony of the British
in the Middle East.
Similarly, the US-Israel aggression on Iran is likely to end the American hegemony in the Middle East and ultimately strengthen Iran in the region, shattering Israel’s dream of dominating the region. Trump and Netanyahu miscalculated the strength of Iran and its power to resist the military might of a super power. And Modi erred in siding the US-Israel aggression. Iran is not Iraq or Gaza or Venezuela. Iran is a categorically different kind of political organism. It has a population of 90 million. It possesses a geography of mountains, deserts, and layered strategic depth that has exhausted conquerors across three millennia; an ancient civilisation that cannot be subdued. The people in Iran may be opposing the present regime that is so oppressive, but their nationalism and patriotism are too strong to accept an outside power to invade their country and destroy it.
Having failed to make Iran to surrender
unconditionally, Trump is now threatening to have a naval blockade of the
Strait of Hormuz, following the failure of peace talks in Islamabad. He is
treating the world as if it is his real estate, doing whatever he feels like,
hoping to have his own way eventually - a ‘delusion of omnipotence’. He lives
in his own world of make-believe, displaying the arrogance of military and
economic power.
He must listen to the Pope Leo XIV and end the war
that he started. The Pope is opposed to the US-Irael war on Iran and coveys the
message of the Gospel: “The message of the Gospel is very clear: Blessed are
the peacemakers. I believe that the Church has a moral duty to speak out very
clearly against war and in favour of pace and reconciliation. God does not
bless any conflict. Anyone who is a
disciple of Christ is never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and
today drop bombs. I will continue to speak out loudly against war, looking to
promote peace, promoting dialogue and multilateral relationships among the
states to look for just solutions to problem”.
Pope Leo, the first pontiff from the US, warns against
the risk of democracies sliding into majoritarian tyranny. In a letter issued
by the Vatican on 14 April, he said: "Democracies remained healthy only when they
were rooted in moral values. Lack of this foundation risks becoming either
a majoritarian tyranny or a mask for the dominance of economic and technological
elites....and that power should not be seen an end in itself, but as a means
ordered toward the common good…that the legitimacy of authority depends not on
the accumulation of economic or technological strength, but on the wisdom and
virtue with which it is exercised".
Trump and Netanyahu have committed heinous war crimes
against the people of Iran; waging an unprovided- undeclared illegal war; assassinating
several top leaders, killing thousands of civilians, including innocent children,
striking on schools and hospitals; bombing civilian areas and rendering lakhs
of people displaced. And Israel’s unabated bombing of Lebanon is a genocide. Trump
and Netanyahu have destroyed peace and security and international order,
heading to the jungle raj; created serious energy and economic crisis
across the globe. They should be held accountable for the heinous war
crimes.
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