So the bombs fall on Tyre again. The ancient Phoenician city, once the jewel of the Mediterranean, now serves as another grim footnote in the endless tragedy of Middle Eastern war. Israel, in its characteristic fashion, has launched air strikes on southern Lebanon despite Iran’s theatrical warning that ‘any aggression will be met with a crushing response’. And what does the UK do? It calls for a ceasefire. How wonderfully predictable. How utterly useless.
Let us step back from the carnage for a moment and observe the intellectual decadence at play. Here we have a conflict where every party is performing for a gallery of ghosts. Iran rattles its sabre, knowing full well that its proxy forces are already scattered and degraded. Israel pounds Tyre, knowing that military victory is a chimera without a political solution. And Britain, the once-proud empire that shaped the modern Middle East, reduces itself to issuing press releases. We are witnessing the slow collapse of strategic thinking, the triumph of gesture over substance.
The historical parallels are almost too perfect. Tyre was besieged by Alexander the Great, who understood that conquest requires audacity and sacrifice. Today’s leaders understand neither. They wage war by drone and declaration, pretending that these pinprick strikes will somehow restore order. But order cannot be restored by men who believe that a ceasefire call is a substitute for a strategy. The Victorians at least had the decency to send gunboats. Now we send tweets.
And what of national identity? Israel, supposedly the bastion of Western civilisation in a hostile region, acts like a paranoid hermit, lashing out at shadows. Lebanon, a nation once celebrated as the Paris of the East, has become a failed state run by militia thugs. Iran, the would-be Persian Empire, can barely keep its economy afloat. This is not the clash of civilisations we were promised. It is the collapse of civilisations into petty squabbling.
The UK’s call for a ceasefire is particularly galling. It reveals a government so devoid of a moral compass that it cannot even choose a side, let alone act with conviction. Ceasefire means nothing when one party has a history of violating every truce. It means nothing when the other party is dedicated to its own destruction. It is the diplomatic equivalent of telling a man being mauled by a lion to ‘take a deep breath’.
We are living through the late Roman Empire of international relations. The borders are porous, the barbarians are at the gate, and our leaders are more interested in their own comfort than in defending what remains of our civilisation. The strikes on Tyre are not an isolated incident. They are a symptom of a deeper rot: the loss of belief in the nation state, the inability to make hard choices, the preference for empty moralising over realpolitik.
Do not mistake me for an apologist for Israeli aggression. I am merely stating the obvious: that war, when fought, should be fought to win. Anything less is a war crime against your own soldiers. And peace, when pursued, should be pursued with clear demands and consequences. Anything less is a surrender to chaos.
Tyre will survive, as it always has. But the civilisations that wage these wars may not. We have forgotten why we fight. We have forgotten who we are. And until we remember, the bombs will keep falling, and the worthless calls for ceasefire will keep echoing into the void.











