The Islamabad Memorandum: The Cartography of American Retreat and Israel’s Existential Reckoning
T he most consequential things about the Islamabad Memorandum are not written in it. What is written, a 14-point framework suspending hostilities, immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon, regularising maritime passage through the Strait of Hormuz, opening a pathway toward sanctions relief, and establishing a negotiation mechanism for the unresolved nuclear question, is significant enough. But what the document encodes without stating , what it reveals about the structural transformation of American power, and what it portends for Israeli strategic calculus, is where the deeper and more disturbing story resides. History has a habit of disguising turning points as diplomatic events. The 1783 Treaty of Paris did not merely end the American Revolutionary War; it announced that Britain’s unipolar dominance of the Atlantic world was over. The 1956 Suez Crisis did not merely force a Franco-British withdrawal from Egypt; it confir...