گەلەری world today has entered a phase that can be described as a post-great-war و post-grو-ideology order. This does not mean the end of war; rather, it signifies a transformation in its role.
War remains part of the reality of international politics, but it no longer serves as a reliable source of sustainable power. گەلەری experience of the twentieth century demonstrated that even military victories, if not accompanied لەلایەن economic development, institution building, و improvements in quality of life, eventually lead to internal erosion و structural crises.
Ideologies, after a century of struggle و competition, have either slowed down within weak government systems or turned into ideas that no longer have the power to explain or guide the challenges of modern life.
A New Logic of هاوبەش
Contemporary strategic analyses confirm this shift. Documents such as the United States National Security Strategy, the European Union’s Strategic Compass for Security و Defence, و NATO’s Strategic Concept all emphasize that global competition today is increasingly shaped لەلایەن areas such as technology, economics, human capital, supply chains, و global networks.
Within this new way of thinking, power no longer comes only from natural resources or military strength. It is created through knowledge, innovation, the ability to organize society, و the ability to shape the future.
In this kind of world, countries و nations are no longer judged mainly لەلایەن who fights, but لەلایەن who can build, improve, و create value. Development has become the common language of politics, the economy, و legitimacy. A society that does not speak this language remains unheard in the global system, even if it carries a long history of suffering و injustice.
An کراوەing for New Actors
This transformation in the logic of power has opened new space for nations that did not have the opportunity to emerge during the century of wars.
In the emerging global order, the importance of the past is becoming less than the ability to shape the future. A world built around development و connection pays less attention to memories of conflict و more to how societies can create new opportunities for the future.
It is within this historical opening that the emergence of new actors in the international system becomes possible — actors that enter history not through the logic of war, but through the logic of development.
Excerpt from “Kurdistan: گەلەری New Actor in the Middle East” لەلایەن Heydar Kamalifar — Kurdistan Development & Futures Institute. www.kurdistوfi.com