The New World Design Behind the Zionist Smokescreen
Zionism was a project promoted in the mid-20th century as a “solution” to both the post-colonial legitimacy crisis in the Western world and the strategic gap in the Cold War. Israel was not merely a state; it was the “laboratory” for the West’s guilt psychology, its industrial-military complex, and its power projection in the Middle East. However, this laboratory now appears to have reached its experimental limits.
The old videos circulating on social media today and the documents emerging from archives are the surface manifestations of the West’s subconscious questioning of Zionism within its own public sphere. The deterrent power of the accusation of “anti-Semitism” has weakened, and the language of fear has lost its effect. This signals the end of an era.
The West’s Test with Zionism
The West used Zionism both as a form of moral atonement and as a geopolitical lever. However, two developments over the past decade have fundamentally shaken this alliance:
- Geo-economic transformation: The US and Europe have now redirected their energy security focus away from the Middle East and toward renewable sources and Africa. Israel’s “strategic indispensability” has diminished.
- The information revolution: With the collapse of the media monopoly, the Western public is now in direct contact with the Palestinian reality. The Gaza tragedy of 2023–2025 has brought an end to Zionism’s propaganda superiority.
The West’s statement that “it is done with Zionism” is not a romantic wish but a cold-blooded analysis of interests. Israel’s military power is no longer an asset but rather a “public relations burden” for the global system.
Trump, Gaza, and Global Smoke Bombs
Donald Trump’s return to the stage is interpreted by many analysts as “the return of American isolationism.” However, it is more accurately a strategy of controlled chaos. While the ceasefire process in Gaza keeps international public attention fixed on a single focal point, new power balances are being constructed in the background.
The Gaza diplomacy revolving around the Trump, Biden, and Netanyahu triangle is, in fact, a “show war”: while drawing the world’s attention to the smokescreen, the re-centralization of artificial intelligence, energy, supply chains, and finance is being carried out behind the scenes.
What Comes After Zionism?
In history, every ideology gives way to a new “world design.” Fascism was replaced by liberalism; socialism gave way to neoliberalism. Now, as Zionism withdraws from the stage, three contenders are vying to take its place:
- Technocratic globalists: They seek to establish an “artificial order” governed not by states, but by algorithms.
- New Eurasianists: In pursuit of a multipolar system centered on cultural identity, aligned with the China–Russia axis.
- Neo-nationalists: Represented by figures like Trump, Le Pen, Meloni, and others—this trend builds inward-looking yet strong authoritarian blocs within the West.
These forces will not only accelerate the dissolution of Zionism but also shape the answer to the question of who will inherit its legacy.
Conclusion: When the Fog Clears
Today, all of humanity is caught between two massive smoke bombs: one is the smoke of Gaza, the other is the noise of Washington. The world’s 8 billion people are trapped between these two events. However, when the fog lifts, what we will witness will be either the birth of a new era of justice or a transition into an age of digital control.
Zionism may be fading into the dustbin of history, but the spirit of the order that will replace it remains unclear. The question that must be asked is:
“As Zionism collapses, what are the order-builders constructing?”