Pete Hegseth, the US Secretary of Defense—until recently a Fox News commentator—is boasting about what America did to Iran in the recent conflict. The United States is more than 20 times larger than Iran in economic and military terms, and Iran is vastly poorer, with limited conventional military capabilities beyond its batteries of small and medium-range missiles. Yet this much weaker nation went toe-to-toe with the world’s most powerful military and forced it to the negotiating table on terms largely set by Tehran. In politics and geopolitics, victory is not measured by the number of deaths or casualties, but by who achieves their objectives. When historians record the outcome of Nazi Germany versus the Soviet Union, they focus on who surrendered, not merely on lives lost. Similarly, when the United States sought to withdraw from Vietnam, it sent a senior military officer to negotiate the terms. The boastful American general reportedly told his Vietnamese counterpart, “ Don’t forget—...
The Hidden Math of Representation: Why Fast-Tracking Women’s Reservations Might Leave Millions Behind
By Nagesh Bhushan The Calculated Mirage For centuries, the archaic dictum of the Manusmriti— “Nastri Swatantram Arhate” (women do not deserve freedom)—cast a long shadow over the Indian subcontinent. The passage of the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (106th Constitutional Amendment) was presented to the public as the final shattering of that cage, a historic leap toward gender parity. Yet, beneath the celebratory thumping of desks in Parliament lies a calculated political maneuver. The original Act contained a vital safeguard: implementation only after the 2027 Census and subsequent delimitation. Now, reports suggest a government rush to fast-track the process, bypassing these prerequisites. What is being marketed as an acceleration of empowerment is, in reality, a systemic effort to cement structural inequality. By decoupling the reservation from a fresh census, the state is effectively legalizing a "representation gap" that will haunt the Other Backward Classes (...