War Without End: How a Global System Fuels Conflict and Crisis While Public Money Fuels Private Profit
The world is being reshaped by a cascade of overlapping emergencies that are no longer separate events but a single, interconnected crisis. From the battlefields of Ukraine and Gaza to the collapsing ceasefires in the Middle East and a record-strength climate event, a brutal pattern is emerging: public resources are funneled into militarization and corporate profit while ordinary people bear the costs of conflict, hunger, and displacement.
The fragile United States-brokered ceasefire between Iran and Israel has collapsed within days, triggering direct missile exchanges and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway that carries 20% of the world’s oil supply [14115]. This has sent global energy prices soaring, compounding a crisis that has already pushed world hunger to a record 363 million people, according to the United Nations World Food Programme [14076]. The war in Ukraine has now lasted as long as World War I, with Ukrainian forces using cheap, domestically produced drones to systematically destroy Russian supply lines, while Kyiv faces “unavoidable” summer blackouts after Russian strikes crippled its power grid [14110]. In a massive overnight attack, Russia launched 70 missiles and 611 drones at Ukraine, severely damaging a UNESCO World Heritage monastery in Kyiv and killing at least five rescuers in a separate strike on Kharkiv [14176]. The human cost of this militarization is stark: grieving Russian families are turning to artificial intelligence to create lifelike digital avatars of soldiers killed in the war, as new data reveals over 226,000 Russian troops have died in the conflict, including more than 200 aged just 18 [14159].
In Gaza, the October 2025 ceasefire has failed to stop the killing. Israeli military operations have killed at least 981 Palestinians since the deal took effect, pushing the total death toll since October 2023 to nearly 73,000 [14137]. The United Nations has formally placed Israel on its blacklist for sexual violence in conflict, demanding equal accountability alongside other listed nations like Russia [14137]. In the occupied West Bank, Israeli settlers and military checkpoints are systematically blocking Palestinian children from reaching their classrooms, crushing a generation’s access to education [14074]. A new investigation reveals that European countries are systematically importing massive quantities of agricultural products from illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, with France, the Netherlands, and Germany accounting for 71% of all settlement goods entering the European Union [14170].
These wars are not isolated events but symptoms of a global system that prioritizes profit over people. A new Peace Report warns that international law is failing as warlords and powerful states increasingly ignore legal boundaries [14110]. The economic model itself is under fire: a group of leading economists, including a Nobel laureate, has declared that the current system has failed, arguing that poverty and inequality are deliberate policy choices, not accidents [14076]. Russia now spends 46% of its entire budget on its military, even as government revenue declines and Ukrainian strikes bring the war home to Russian civilians, fueling growing public anger [14175].
The climate emergency is accelerating this breakdown. A powerful El Niño has officially formed in the Pacific Ocean, with scientists warning there is a 90% chance it will become the strongest in over a century, threatening severe drought, catastrophic flooding, and extreme heat across the globe [14112]. The United Nations reports that global sea levels are now rising at twice the rate they were a decade ago, placing coastal communities under severe threat [14134]. Africa, which contributes the least to global greenhouse gas emissions, is bracing for the worst as its health systems are already overwhelmed by climate-fueled disease outbreaks [14112]. Water emergencies are unfolding on multiple continents: the Colorado River is shrinking, Bangladesh farmers warn of “war over water,” and Johannesburg residents face a 12.5% water price hike that critics say turns a basic necessity into a burden only the wealthy can afford [14117].
The privatization of essential services and the prioritization of profit are starkly visible in these health crises. Kenya has declared an emergency over a surge in femicide and gender-based violence [14092]. Yet, the United States has demanded Kenya establish an Ebola quarantine camp despite the country reporting zero confirmed Ebola cases, raising questions about the strings attached to American health aid [14094]. The United States has also deported a group of migrants, including Iranian women, to the Central African Republic, one of the world’s most dangerous countries, under a controversial third-country agreement [14154]. In Turkey, women’s rights organizations are protesting a proposed judicial bill they say weakens protections for women, as allegations emerge that police subjected a detained activist to a forced strip search described as sexual torture [14133].
Political systems are cracking under the strain. In the United Kingdom, Prime Minister Keir Starmer is fighting for his political survival after his defence secretary and defence minister resigned over claims the government is not spending enough to protect the country from a potential Russian attack [14122]. In Bulgaria, the new government has banned state arms supplies to Ukraine, breaking with European Union policy, while the EU will resume membership negotiations with Kyiv after Hungary lifted its veto [14123]. In Nigeria, governorship aspirants spent 30 billion naira on primary elections ahead of the 2027 vote, as the country’s anti-graft agency vows to stop vote-buying [14167].
As the planet burns, wars rage, and inequality deepens, the pattern of endless conflict is reshaping global politics—not to resolve crises, but to serve the interests of powerful nations and war industries while ordinary people pay the price in hunger, displacement, and death. The question remains whether the world can deliver the urgent, coordinated action needed to prevent the damage from becoming irreversible.