So here we are again. The United States, in a fit of pique or strategy (one can never be entirely sure with the current administration), threatens renewed strikes on Iran. British diplomats, those eternal custodians of the global order, are scrambling to prevent a full-blown Gulf escalation. One might be forgiven for experiencing a sense of histori cal déjà vu. It is the Fall of Rome meets the Victorian era, with a dash of Suez Crisis for good measure.
Let us be clear: this is not about nuclear centrifuges or proxy militias. This is about the theatre of power. America, sensing its unipolar moment fading like a morning mist, feels compelled to remind the world that it can still inflict pain. Iran, ever the cunning adversary, plays the long game, knowing that time is on its side. And Britain? Poor, deluded Britain. Still clinging to the illusion of relevance, it dispatches its diplomats like modern-day Canutes, trying to hold back the tide of history with fax machines and joint communiqués.
The parallels to the late Roman Empire are striking. Like the Praetorian Guard, the Pentagon grows ever more assertive, seeking foreign adventures to distract from domestic decay. The intellectual decadence is palpable. Our elites, both in Washington and Westminster, have forgotten the wisdom of restraint. They speak of “limited strikes” and “proportional responses” as if war were a surgical procedure. But war, dear reader, is a messy, brutish affair that consumes all who touch it.
And what of national identity? The British, once masters of the globe, now reduced to pleading with their American cousins for moderation. It is a humiliating spectacle. We have become the well-mannered butler of international affairs, forever tidying up after the drunken antics of our transatlantic relation. The truth is this: our relevance is a fiction maintained by nostalgia and a permanent seat on the UN Security Council which France only tolerates because it amuses them.
The real question is whether we have the courage to acknowledge this reality. To accept that our role is now that of a spectator, perhaps an occasional mediator, but never a principal. Or will we continue the farce, dispatching more diplomats, issuing more statements, and pretending that we can still shape events? The threat of renewed strikes is a stark reminder that in the game of empires, there are players and there are pawns. We, it seems, have forgotten which we are.








