The U.S.–Israeli war on Iran has entered its third week, and the fog of war grows thicker with every claim and counterclaim.
Washington asserts Tehran sought a ceasefire; Iran’s foreign minister firmly denies it. Truth becomes the first casualty when narratives replace facts.
Wars launched in the name of security too often deepen insecurity, destabilize regions, and endanger civilians far from the battlefield. As missiles fly and rhetoric hardens, the world edges closer to a wider catastrophe.
History teaches that wars rarely end as their architects promise. They spread, they scar generations, and they drain humanity’s moral capital.
Before this conflict spirals further, the global community must demand transparency, restraint, and urgent diplomacy.
Because the longer wars continue, the harder peace becomes.