Saturday, 28 March 2026

Mind Your Language

As an undergraduate at Durham, I would amaze certain persons by understanding every word that the porters, the cleaning ladies and the kitchen staff were saying. In the 1980s and 1990s, County Durham would have been Matt Goodwin's dream come true, and I went right through the state school system here with people who did at least as well as I did while speaking a home dialect that would have been completely incomprehensible to people from Hertfordshire, although having been born into television had dramatically toned it down from the speech of their grandparents. Last year, most of my classmates' home wards, where numerous of them still live while still speaking like that, returned Reform UK Councillors, including Darren Grimes.

We send children to school at all because they have such absorbent minds, and well before they had left primary school, everyone had my own native level proficiency in British Standard English, knowing intuitively when to use what. Look how many doctors born, educated and trained in this country have come from homes where an Asian or, increasingly, an African language was spoken. Like a lot of academics, Goodwin thinks that he is an expert on everything. He is not, and if he grew up in an entirely Home Counties-speaking milieu, then he has led a very sheltered life by any standard that has ever obtained in England.

Friday, 27 March 2026

Intent To Influence Or Refrain

Within seconds of the close of poll at Gorton and Denton, an organisation of which no one had ever heard had alleged an offence of which no one had ever heard, and that was the news according to all outlets. Today, the Police finally told that organisation to get lost.

I do not defend a party of anti-industrial Malthusianism, drug legalisation, "sex work", gender self-identification, EU reaccession, war in Ukraine, municipal austerity, and parliamentary opposition to workers' rights. But the burning oil wells in the Gulf are the retort to the injunction to the Greens to stay in their environmentalist lane.

And John Ault is a veteran Liberal Democrat activist and a sometime Lib Dem parliamentary candidate, whose previously unknown Democracy Volunteers are funded by the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust. This was how it started against Jeremy Corbyn, not with the Far Right, but with centrist astroturfers such as Labour Together.

Honesty and Transparency?

Keir Starmer is planning to give the already knighted Sadiq Khan a peerage. Standard stuff under any Government, of course. If neither Ken Livingstone nor Boris Johnson has ever been ennobled, then neither of them was Mayor of London for as long as Khan has now been, and in any case, to my certain knowledge, Jeremy Corbyn seriously considered it for Livingstone even though they had never, and I do mean never, been the best of brethren. It is possible that Johnson has declined it because, like Ted Heath before him, he will believe to his dying day that one day he was going to be Prime Minister again.

But speaking of Johnson, if Nigel Farage needed hundreds of new Peers to get his programme through, then he might look to Aaron Roy, who was a Labour councillor in Hartlepool at the start of this week, who defected to Reform UK with great fanfare and in Farage's presence last night, who is an Indian national, who has been in this country only 10 years, whose real name is probably not Aaron Roy, and whom Georgina Hollifield, Membership Officer of Stockton and Hartlepool Green Party, spotted at a "Left Alliance" meeting a few days ago, speaking to Your Party and to the Green Party.

20 councillors joined Reform on 14 January. Five had been Independents, but 14 had been Conservatives, and one had been in the Green Party. Green and Reform councillors both vote for austerity, alongside Labour, Conservative, and Liberal Democrat councillors. Alongside Conservative and Lib Dem parliamentarians, Green and Reform parliamentarians vote against even such limited workers' rights as Labour proposed. Vote Green, and you may as well vote for Farage. Vote Reform, and you may as well vote for Zack Polanksi.

A Portsmouth City Councillor of 30 years' standing, Jason Fazackarley, who had sat both as a Green and for Labour, moved in November from the Lib Dems, who had made him Lord Mayor, to Reform, following at least one other sitting Lib Dem councillor, Jeff Sumner of Burnley. A Reform candidate to sit alongside Councillor Fazackarley is Addy Mo Asaduzzaman, a Boriswave immigrant who does not hold British nationality and who expresses the desire eventually to return to Bangladesh. From Labour to Reform defected, among at least five others nationwide last year, Councillor Mason Humberstone of Stevenage, who contested internal Labour Party elections on the slate of Morgan McSweeney's and Josh Simons's infamous Labour Together. Reform expects to take the Stevenage parliamentary seat from Labour.

And so it goes on. Under a Reform Government, Roy and Asaduzzaman would be unable to vote for themselves, with Commonwealth citizens in the position of women under 30 between 1918 and 1928, when they could be parliamentary candidates but they could not vote.

Museum Peace?

They could not restrict free museum access to British citizens or residents without digital ID, and anyone might try to enter a museum, so everyone would have to have it, enforced by David Soffer.

Restricting culture like that would in any case be offensive in a way that a Jewish volunteer ambulance service was not, but why did the State have to give that service five new ambulances to replace four decommissioned and insured ones that had been set on fire while mercifully empty? NHS Ambulance Trusts cannot dream of the like.

The suspects are out on bail, so we do not need digital ID to know that they are not Iranian Revolutionary Guards. But we are not allowed to know anything else about them. We do, though, know that the investigation into this non-terror incident is being led by Counterterrorism Police. How odd. How very, very, very odd.

Line of Argumentation


At the beginning of the Iraq War, David Frum published an article in National Review entitled “Unpatriotic Conservatives,” attacking those on the right opposed to the war—including the founders of this magazine, Patrick J. Buchanan, Scott McConnell, and Taki Theodoracopulos. Almost a quarter-century later, Frum’s arguments stand out as particularly lazy and dishonest smears. Almost everyone acknowledges that the Iraq War was a mistake sold to the American people on false pretenses, directly causing the deaths of 460,000 Iraqis and 4,506 American servicemen, destroying Iraq’s ancient Christian community, and replacing a stable government with a power vacuum that has been ripe for sectarianism and terror. Those who opposed the war now stand vindicated, even if many lost their careers due to their opposition to the Iraq War.

But, at the time, the Bush speechwriter chalked their opposition to the war not up to well-thought-out (and later vindicated) analyses of the disaster that the war would bring to the Middle East and the quagmire that it would be for United States, but instead to supposed lack of patriotism and personal opposition to the neoconservatives. “They began by hating the neoconservatives,” Frum wrote, in the part of his article that has become the most infamous. “They came to hate their party and this president. They have finished by hating their country.”

One would expect Frum’s line of argumentation to remain in the dustbin of history. But, in the midst of the current war with Iran, somehow this argument returned. The most noteworthy proponent of this argument—albeit in a more lowbrow form—has been Ben Shapiro, the co-founder of the Daily Wire and a popular hawkish podcast host.

“There’s a coalition of people who are uniting to take down the United States,” Shapiro wrote in a recent op-ed, describing people who oppose the Iran War. “These people are cowards, plus liars, plus people who despise America.”

Another line of attack taken by both Frum and Shapiro is to attempt to accuse those on the right opposed to the war of not being real conservatives, as there are some on the left who also happen to oppose the war.

“They have made common cause with the left-wing and Islamist antiwar movements in this country and in Europe,” Frum wrote in 2003.

Shapiro has made similar arguments when attacking non-interventionists. For instance, in a December 2025 speech at the Heritage Foundation, Shapiro attacked the prominent conservative media presenter Tucker Carlson for his foreign policy orientation, which, according to Shapiro, “has become essentially indistinguishable from the thought of far-leftists like Noam Chomsky.”

Since the start of the war, Shapiro has continued this, calling those conservatives opposed to the war as being part of the “horseshoe right,” implying that they are somehow in cahoots with the left in opposing a foreign war.

Contra Shapiro, Frum, and others, if anything it is deeply conservative to oppose the war in Iran. America’s great conservative statesmen, from John Randolph of Roanoke to Robert Taft, have been markedly noninterventionist in foreign policy, seeking to preserve the republic bequeathed by the Founders and fighting back against attempts to turn America into an empire that, though (in the words of John Quincy Adams) it “might become the dictatress of the world” would “be no longer the ruler of her own spirit.” The principles of geopolitical noninterventionism and neutrality comprised an important part of the American tradition, and anyone who seriously seeks to conserve this tradition will recognize this. While Frum and Shapiro use the label “conservative” to describe themselves, are on matters of foreign affairs utterly disconnected from historical American conservatism.

Shapiro’s arguments, though mirroring Frum’s, are considerably less convincing. Whereas the Iraq War initially had broad support, the current Iran War only has the support of 27 percent of Americans. The original conservative opponents of the Iraq War were a small (though correct) minority, and Frum et al. could write them off as kooks. Today, it is implausible that the majority of Americans who oppose or question the war with Iran are “uniting to take down the United States” or “despise America.”

Shapiro is not the only one to make the argument that conservatives opposed to the Iran War are “anti-American.” The radio host Mark Levin often whines about those he deems to be “isolationists,” calling them “the Woke Reich” (apparently borrowing a phrase from Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu). Levin also routinely attacks noninterventionist media figures, such as Carlson—who Levin says “hates America, our Judeo-Christian beliefs, President Trump, and MAGA”—and Steve Bannon, whom he accused of “aiding the enemy” for hosting, Trita Parsi, one of America’s foremost scholars on Iran. 

But Shapiro, unlike Levin, is broadly intelligent. He is a Harvard Law graduate; unlike Levin, he does not write books criticizing the “Franklin School” or attacking St. Thomas More for writing a satire titled “Utopia.” One might expect him, as a former supporter of the Iraq War (he wrote an article in favor of invading Iraq in 2001, as a UCLA undergraduate), to have some level of introspection about adventures abroad, or to at least explain to the audience why they should trust him on matters of Middle Eastern war and peace. Instead he is reviving neoconservative canards about war skeptics. We’ll see how that ages.


English Catholics were in an assertive mood at the dawn of the 20th century. The Catholic Emancipation Act was passed in 1829, lifting many of the most important legal disabilities from Catholic citizens. A significant number began to serve in the Houses of Parliament.

As part of its response to the modern world, the church had developed a very public celebration and proclamation of its faith that the bread and wine, once consecrated at Mass, truly become the body, blood, soul, and divinity of Jesus Christ. They called the 1908 event a Eucharistic Congress and decided that the 18th such gathering should happen in London, the seat of the world’s largest empire, and the most powerful Protestant nation on earth. The summit of any such Congress is a public procession — a religious march through the streets — with the Eucharist held aloft in a golden throne called a monstrance.

The papal legate of the time explained that the choice of London was meant to honor England for its tolerance. It was “proof,” he said, of England’s “liberty enjoyed by her subjects in exercising their own opinions, a system not merely written in her statute-book, but reduced to actual practice.” Cardinal Serafino Vannutelli explained to the Times of London, the real intent of the march: “The members of the Congress are not assembling in England with any political intent,” he said, “They come with an object which is exclusively religious — to affirm with all simplicity their faith in the Eucharist, recalling the time when that faith was universal in England.” In this way, Vannutelli was articulating what would later become a liberal orthodoxy, that religious belief, even when proclaimed publicly, is not a political act.

Not everyone agreed. “It is impossible to deny,” the London Spectator editorialized, “that this assemblage of princes of the Church and of lesser members of the Roman hierarchy from all parts of the world wears the appearance of a demonstration, and almost of a challenge, which excites apprehension in respectable quarters, and has given rise to regrettable effusions of bigotry in others.” Nevertheless, the Metropolitan police agreed to a parade route.

It turned out that Prime Minister Herbert Asquith would need to intervene. A few marginal “No Popery” groups had publicly campaigned that a Eucharistic procession was still technically barred by law. The very law that gave Catholics their political rights still restricted them from performing their rites and wearing their vestments outside of churches — out in public.

Asquith prevailed upon the organizers to desist from their plans. On the one hand, he would delicately mention that such a march was dubiously legal. But he also stressed a wish for safety, pointing to the passions of sectarian Protestants as a danger his police might not be able to control. This was the leader of the Liberal Party, a time memorialized in history as the zenith of “liberal England.” And yet, his liberalism was moderated.

A march would happen, just without the Eucharist. And members of religious orders — Dominicans, Franciscans, Jesuits — would process in their simple black clerical garb. Some of them carried their distinctive habits on their arms, in what was then a gesture of protest. Catholics had planned the event partly to highlight liberal tolerance. Instead, the event served to demonstrate the opposite.

I thought of this recently when Reverend Douglas Wilson, a pastor in Moscow, Idaho, was pilloried by all the good and the great for a video in which he said in his vision of a future Christian republic, there would be no public calls to Muslim prayer. Asked if there would be Catholic processions, he said they would be disallowed by law, too. Commentators treated him as if he were bearing the rack and rope of the religious wars, everything we escaped several centuries earlier. I happen to have met Wilson, after years of occasional correspondence, at a National Conservatism Conference. We patiently debated the finer points of soteriology with each other.

But for those familiar with the controversies of 1908, what Wilson is describing isn’t some pre-modern tyranny; it’s how a liberal state would function, or dysfunction, under Protestant cultural and political supremacy, a condition he means to achieve by means far more peaceful than those that England actually used to achieve it.

Far from an exotic threat, it should be a familiar one. We don’t live in a polity in which Wilson’s tribe of Calvinists predominates, but in which secular progressives do. Those secular progressives aren’t mad about Eucharistic processions. They’re mad that Catholic hospitals don’t perform abortions or “gender-confirmation” mutilations. They’re mad that Catholic colleges don’t allow same-sex couples to have couples’ dorms. Or that hospice nuns prefer not to remunerate their hired help in the form of discounted contraceptives. And they are suing and legislating on behalf of their convictions — convictions I would argue that are just as metaphysical as the doctrines they oppose.

And that is why I have a hard time accepting the account of Francis Fukuyama, that our modern polities have effectively pushed religious questions into a private realm. If they would, then the Catholic Church’s opposition to contraception wouldn’t be the subject of lawfare. Can he really be so sure that religious fights have disappeared into the background? Our last large legal fight about the definition of marriage was settled by the Supreme Court in 2015. It was settled along lines anticipated six years earlier by a doctrinal revision in the Episcopal Church, the ghostly ecclesial body that carries on the spirit of America’s now progressive establishment.

Chesterton said that America, having been founded on creeds, has the soul of a church. Well, it’s a church always redefining its heretics.


The Iran War of 2026 is more than simply a third Persian Gulf War, following George H. W. Bush’s 1991 Gulf War and the Iraq War launched by his son in 2003. Rival great powers didn’t back America’s enemy in the first two wars. In contrast, the current operation against Iran and the post-2022 war in Ukraine are two proxy flashpoints in the same great-power conflict — Cold War II.

At the global level, Cold War II is a struggle between the incumbent superpower, the United States, and a rising challenger, China. And unless Washington adopts a less ambitious global strategy, the United States is doomed to lose Cold War II.

The reason is simple: America’s strategic objective — perpetual US military hegemony in East Asia, Europe, and the Middle East — is far too costly to achieve. In contrast, the goal shared by China and Russia — a multipolar world of great-power spheres of influence — is not only possible but probably inevitable. The Chinese dragon and the Russian bear can patiently wait until Uncle Sam exhausts himself from overextension and then goes home, just as he did when he abandoned Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. And the major beneficiary of America’s military overextension is likely to be its greatest rival — Beijing.

The sharpest figures in the Trump orbit appreciate this, and see the linkages between the various flashpoints. But the administration as a whole can’t resist the strategic hubris and haphazardness that has characterised many post-Cold War American governments — indeed, with the new Iran War, the Trumpians have displayed this tendency on overdrive.

Consider: At last month’s Munich Security Conference, for example, America’s envoy to NATO, Matthew Whitaker, observed: “China could call Vladimir Putin and end this [Ukraine] war tomorrow and cut off his dual-purpose technologies that they’re selling.… You know, this war is being completely enabled by China.”

Whitaker was right. The People’s Republic has allowed both Russia and Iran to evade American and European sanctions by buying their oil, with the help of “shadow fleets” and transactions denominated in China’s currency, the yuan. In addition, Beijing has supplied the Islamic Republic with components used in its devastatingly effective (and remarkably cheap) Shahed drones. The Chinese are reportedly negotiating to provide Iran with antiship missiles and have likewise transferred dual-use technology, which can be used for both military and civilian purposes, to the Russian defense industry.

More: the Chinese regime has helped Iran to use its Beijing’s encrypted Beidou-3 global satellite navigation system and provided the Islamic Republic with stealth radar systems. For its part, the Kremlin has supplied Tehran with satellite intelligence showing the location of US naval ships and aircraft in the Persian Gulf. The backscratching is mutual. Iran has supplied Russia with thousands of drones used in Ukraine.

In one telling, America’s new war against Iran helps advance its position in Cold War II, by taking out the weakest of the three pillars that uphold the adversary’s Eurasian power. Yet this is a comforting after-the-fact narrative, typically offered by academics and magazine writers. They do it to console Western audiences dismayed by the war’s aimlessness and potentially devastating consequences for American prestige as the Iranian mullahs appear to hold on and even squeeze Washington.

In reality, China and its ally Russia benefit from Trump’s foolish diversion of American military resources to the Persian Gulf. To sustain the operation, the United States has stripped South Korea of missile defence systems and dispatched them to the Middle East and has diverted two guided-missile destroyers based in Japan to the Persian Gulf area. According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies, in a war with China over Taiwan, the United States would run out of missiles in less than a week.

The Iran war benefits the Sino-Russian entente in other ways. It has divided NATO, with President Trump denouncing America’s European allies as “cowards” and then calling on them for aid. Having stumbled into a trap, Trump has humiliated himself and the nation by begging Beijing to help in the Persian Gulf. On March 14, in a Truth Social post, Trump desperately called on China along with other countries to send “War Ships, along with the United States of America, to keep the Strait open and safe.” China declined the invitation.

What incentive does Beijing have to rein in its proxies Russia or Iran? While watching Uncle Sam struggle in the steel traps of Ukraine and the Persian Gulf, China’s leaders can focus on capturing one global industry after another and increasing the dependence on China of other nations — including America’s own allies.

Long ago, Chinese leaders viewed American over-extension abroad as a means for diminishing US power. In a 1958 speech, Mao Zedong told his fellow Chinese Communists that US military bases in Taiwan, Lebanon, and elsewhere were “nooses”: “The nooses have been fashioned by the Americans themselves and by nobody else, and it is they themselves who have put these nooses around their own necks…. The longer the US aggressors remain in those places, the tighter the nooses round their necks will become.” Then as now, China benefits when the United States wastes its resources on wars in peripheral countries.

The military realm is not the only area in which Washington is losing Cold War II. Whether in the form of hot wars or cold wars, modern great power struggles ultimately are wars of economic attrition. As in the two World Wars and the first Cold War, the side with superior industrial resources tends to prevail. It matters, therefore, that in the words of economist Richard Baldwin, China is “the world’s sole manufacturing superpower.”

In 2025, China manufactured more goods than the next eight largest manufacturing countries combined. In addition to being the workshop of the world, the Middle Kingdom dominates global trade. Today, only 30% of the world’s countries trade more with the United States than with China, down from 80% at the turn of the millennium.

During the first Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union competed for global influence in part by competing to finance projects like Egypt’s Aswan Dam. In today’s Cold War II, China has far outpaced America as the world’s leading source of development finance, providing $68 billion to developing countries, compared to only $39 billion from the United States in the first two decades of the 21st century. Indeed, the United States spent a paltry $76 billion on infrastructure in other countries over the past decade or so, compared to China’s $679 billion.

With the help of unpatriotic American corporations and investors, moreover, China has made the US defence and civilian economies dependent on Chinese factories. In 2023, China was the largest supplier in critical US military supply chains — ahead of Britain, India, and Japan.

China controls 80% percent of global graphite, necessary for batteries, 62% of fluorspar used in nuclear fuel and semiconductors, and a majority of the world’s magnesium, necessary for aircraft and missiles. Raytheon, a major US defence contractor, has declared that it is so dependent on Chinese suppliers that decoupling its supply chains from China is impossible. And while the Biden and Trump administrations have sought to boost US rare earth mining and processing, the American military may be dependent on China for at least a decade.

But surely America is far ahead in tech research? Wrong. According to the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, China leads global research in 90 critical technologies, the United States in 74. In quantum computing, a frontier technology, China is ahead of the United States, according to the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation.

What, then, is America’s comparative advantage over China as a great power? China has surpassed us in manufacturing, but we Americans lead the world in militarism — in lashing out here and there without a sense of deep strategic purpose or an appreciation for the problems associated with scarcity.

Since Trump’s second term began in January 2025, the United States has bombed governments or nonstate actors in seven countries — Iran, Venezuela, Nigeria, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and Somalia. The Trump administration has illegally engaged in the extrajudicial murder of around 100 alleged drug smugglers on the high seas in the Caribbean and Pacific, even though drug smuggling doesn’t carry the death penalty in the United States. Likewise, the United States has kidnapped the president of Venezuela and allowed Israel to assassinate most of Iran’s leadership in a Pearl Harbour-style sneak attack, before unleashing an American military campaign of massive bombing of Iran with no evident plan to counter Iran’s violent response — or even a cogent definition of victory.

In the same period, China, while quietly enabling its Russian and Iranian proxies, hasn’t bombed any countries or killed any foreign nationals. Indeed, while the United States for decades has been almost constantly killing suspected terrorists, bombing and invading multiple countries, and piling up foreign civilian corpses all over the world, China has grown rich and influential without firing a shot.

Since 1979, when it fought a brief war with Vietnam, China hasn’t fought any wars, although it has engaged in border skirmishes with India and has bullied other countries with shows of force in the South China Sea. By avoiding military quagmires and concentrating on internal development and strategic trade, China in the last three decades has become the dominant manufacturing power on earth.

And here is the absurd result. Even though the United States gets less than 10% of its oil from the Persian Gulf, American soldiers must die or be maimed for life and American taxpayers must spend hundreds of billions of dollars to prevent Iran, whose largest customer is China, from blocking oil shipments to China by Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Iraq — all of whose largest trading partner is also China.

Meanwhile, American taxpayers must also spend money on European bases and fund the war in Ukraine to protect the European Union, which imports one and a half times as much from China as it does from the United States, from a hypothetical invasion by Russia, whose largest trading partner is… also China. In East Asia, Washington spends a fortune to defend Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan — all of which trade more with China than with America — from a hypothetical attack by China. Why China would want to attack its trading partners is never made clear.

In short, America’s global grand strategy consists of using the US military, reliant for weapons on Chinese supply chains, to protect China’s trading partners from China or other Chinese trading partners, at the expense of American soldiers and American taxpayers.

Cold War II is also fought in the arena of legitimacy or “soft power.” Does the claim that America fights other people’s wars for them so they don’t have to defend themselves result in gratitude to the United States? According to a poll this month, citizens of Canada, Britain, Germany, and France now regard China as a more reliable partner than America. In the United States itself, according to the Chicago Council on Foreign Affairs, public opinion has shifted under Trump, away from confrontation with China to “friendly cooperation and engagement with China,” rising to 53% of respondents last year, up from 40% percent in 2024.

Why wouldn’t people in nations all over the world have a more favorable view of a repressive but unwarlike state like China, which makes first-rate consumer products and offers trade and investment opportunities, than they would of the United States, which, under any president of any party at any given time tends to be killing people in multiple foreign countries while boasting that it is the greatest country ever?

While the People’s Republic has risen to global industrial and commercial supremacy by following former Chinese leader Hu Jintao’s slogan “peaceful rise,” the arc of the United States since the 1990s can be described as “violent decline.” Post-Cold War America has repeated the strategic mistake of leaders in London in the three decades after 1945, when Britain imagined that it was still a major power because its troops were still machine-gunning natives in places like Kenya and Oman, even as it lost its manufacturing leadership to Germany, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan; Uncle Sam is the new Colonel Blimp.

America’s bungling militarists in both parties can’t even tell us what they imagine a US “victory” in Cold War II would look like. In the world wars, the strategic goal was stripping Germany and Japan of their foreign empires, without which they would be nothing more than medium powers. In the Cold War, the similar goal of the United States and its allies was achieved when the Soviet Union gave up its essential Eastern European empire, even before the USSR disintegrated along lines of nationality, leaving the Russian core smaller than it has been in centuries.

But China’s power, like that of the United States, is based on its own internal population, workforce, and markets, augmented by peaceful, civilian trade and investment. Outside of Tibet and Xinjiang, China is an empire of commerce, not conquest. Absent total collapse, China is likely to be a superpower, and Russia a regional great power, for centuries or millennia, under regimes of any kind. If it survives the current American-Israeli onslaught, which is likely, Iran will likewise endure as a civilizational state, albeit as a client of Moscow and Beijing rather than a fully coequal partner in their Eurasian bloc.

China, especially, is well-poised to inherit the outcome of Cold War II. If East Asia is defined as China, Taiwan, Mongolia, North Korea, South Korea, and Japan, then China accounts for around 90% of the East Asian population. If Germany had made up 90% of the population of Europe in 1914 or 1939, it would have been the European hegemon without any need to augment its strength by conquering its neighbours.

Even if China and Russia were to adopt multiparty liberal democracy tomorrow, national pride, expressed through free and fair elections, would prevent their new democratic leaders from accepting humiliating, permanent subordination to US military power in their own neighborhoods. The same would be true of a proud and patriotic Iranian democracy freed of the mullahs. Somehow, the Trump administration, which promotes nationalism and sovereigntism for the United States, hasn’t figured out that other nations may feel strongly about their sovereignty, too, and be willing to die for it.

Sadly, we know how today’s Cold War II will end: in the eventual abandonment by the United States of its attempt at permanent US global hegemony, and the adoption by default of the Chinese and Russian alternative, a multipolar world characterised by spheres of military influence and trade blocs based on a handful of regional great powers. One need not have any sympathy for Putin’s gangster regime or China’s Communist dictatorship to recognise that their vision of world order is likely to be achieved, while the delusory post-1989 goal of American global hegemony can never be realised.

A multipolar world order is inevitable, because American voters since the fall of the Berlin Wall have never been willing to pay the costs, in American taxes and American blood, that would be required for the United States to be “the sole superpower” in every region on Earth for generations or centuries to come. American voters thought they were getting less unnecessary foreign military intervention in 2008 with Obama, who then launched new wars of regime change in Libya and Syria, and in 2016 with Trump, who has now begun an unnecessary and disastrous third Persian Gulf War. But sooner or later, the war-weariness of the American people will bring an end to the fantasy of a global Pax Americana built on drones and bombs. Perhaps we Americans in the 2030s or 2040s will finally get the kind of patriotic statesman we did not get after the Cold War — an American de Gaulle, who will liquidate too-costly overseas commitments and focus, at long last, on nation-building at home.

Thursday, 26 March 2026

Community Interest

York City Council has unanimously stripped Sarah Ferguson of the Freedom of the City, just as in October, Hartlepool Borough Council unanimously stripped Peter Mandelson of the Freedom of the Borough. All members of either authority should now leave any party for which Jeffrey Epstein might have voted, or for which Peter Thiel might vote, or for which Noam Chomsky might vote. That is every party in the present House of Commons.

I do not know whether Councillor Aaron Roy was in attendance in October, but I do know that only two days ago, he resigned from the Labour Group because, in his absence, the council had voted to increase council tax by 1.98 per cent despite having promised to freeze it. Still, the Labour Party thanked him for his contribution.

Yet tonight, Nigel Farage is not in Clacton on Question Time, which certainly does have local MPs on the panel from time to time, because he is addressing a rally in Sunderland, where he has announced Councillor Roy's defection to Reform UK, the market leaders in putting up council tax having promised not to do so. As a director of Mariners United Sporting Club CIC, which is mostly notable for kabaddi, Companies House lists Councillor Roy's nationality as Indian.

The Billionaires Who Really Own London


The Esplanade isn’t much to look at. Just 800 metres long, the street in St Helier, Jersey, is a mixture of nondescript low rise new builds that block out the view to the nearby docks. It’s home to the island’s only bus station, as well as tyre shops, budget cafes, run-down Indian restaurants and skeezy nightclubs — all occasionally interspersed with the odd luxury apartment or understated office block.

It’s also where 2,224 of London’s most expensive and recognisable properties are all registered to. At least, that’s according to the official records.

While it’s well-known to the average Londoner that every inch of this city — from cavernous super-basements to the air above Canary Wharf offices — has become a prized asset for offshore investors, what hasn’t been known is who those investors are. Due to lax regulation, it’s been near-impossible to find the real owners of these buildings, who often hide behind firms registered in foreign tax havens like Jersey. In fact, much of who owns our city has long been utterly opaque.

But now, The Londoner can reveal that some 32,611 properties in London are owned by overseas entities. We can do this because a recent change in the law is forcing these foreign companies to register their real owners. We’ve spent the last week, using data compiled and shared with us by Dan Neidle of Tax Policy Associates, to go through thousands of those overseas entities to see who has bought up properties in the capital.

What we found was startling: a story that concerns some of London’s most iconic pubs, Camden market, President Trump’s golf buddy and even an Oxford Street Harry Potter store whose landlord is seemingly the sanctioned Libyan government.

The street that owns London

So why are thousands of London properties owned via tiny companies on a non-descript street in Jersey? Let me explain. Say, hypothetically, you’re a businessman who wants to buy a small slice of Oxford Street or Soho, but you’re not too keen on taxes or transparency.

Well, instead of purchasing it in your own name, the easiest solution is to set up a shell company — or use a management firm — to buy it in a tax haven like Jersey, where ownership of companies doesn’t have to be declared. While you still actually control the property, on all publicly accessible records there’s no way to trace it back to you.

And that’s how you end up in the situation where 432 London properties — mostly apartments in two luxury blocks in Canary Wharf and Greenwich Peninsula — can be run from companies all registered from one single address: 28 Esplanade. The building is an office that’s home to JTC, a fund management firm. But many of the addresses are little more than empty shells with a shared, overfilled P.O. box. After all, the companies registered to them don’t need to do anything operationally, other than being a name on formal documentation; a go-between for a wealthy aspiring landowner and the London land they so badly crave.

It’s a problem that has been a major hurdle for The Londoner before. Back in August last year, we were looking into controversial billionaire developer Asif Aziz, who we had been told was responsible for the closure and redevelopment of beloved pubs across the capital. But tracking his footprint was next to impossible, as his empire of properties is not primarily run through his public firm Criterion Capital — but through dozens of holding companies, most of which are registered in the Isle of Man, another tax haven.

The system began to change somewhat in 2022. While the practice wasn’t outlawed, the government passed a new rule mandating that any overseas entities that owned UK real estate had to register their real ownership with UK authorities. That disclosure allowed Dan Neidle and the Tax Policy Associates to create a database of all of those properties that they released in January. After seeing their stellar work, we reached out, and Neidle very kindly offered to share the vast swathes of raw data with us.

Finally, we were able to pull back the curtain on the capital’s overseas landlords.

Who owns Oxford Street?

The size and scale of these multi-billion pound mega property empires is almost impossible to get across in full; a web that criss-crosses the entirety of the city. Instead, it’s easier to illustrate its sheer magnitude by looking at one small sliver. A single road, in fact: Oxford Street.

London’s première shopping destination is a notoriously strange beast. It’s one of the most famous streets in the world, with some of the most valuable real estate in the city. Yet ever since the decline of its giant department stores in the mid-to-late twentieth century and the rise of internet shopping, the street has been a problem that London can’t quite solve (though with his plans for pedestrianisation, Sadiq Khan hopes to). Who, precisely, is Oxford Street for these days? Who wants to be there, other than gaggles of French teenagers who don’t seem to understand “excuse me”, despite the phrase being near-identical in their own language?

The answer, it turns out, is overseas billionaires — and foreign governments, investment firms, corporations and pension funds. In fact, as our map shows, a large proportion of Oxford Street is owned by shell companies registered overseas (for the purposes of this exercise, we excluded Tottenham Court Road, New Oxford Street and any of the alleys and courts off the main drag). Many of its most recognisable buildings, often old department stores that take up entire blocks, are owned by entities registered in Jersey, Guernsey or the British Virgin Islands.

This new data reveals that their ultimate owners are often thousands of miles away: the Private Department of the President Of UAE, say, or the Qatar Central Bank. There’s also the Libyan Investment Authority, the sanctioned sovereign wealth fund based in Tripoli whose enormous property (484 to 504 Oxford Street) is currently the home to knock-off Harry Potter shop Wizards and Spells, where morose Dobby dolls stare out alongside an array of generic tourist memorabilia.

While some of these offshore owners are both benign and unsurprising — Uniqlo owns the Uniqlo store, Nike owns the Nike store — others have simply not complied with the new regulations to disclose. And still more have circumvented disclosure by wrapping their ownership structures in such complicated networks of shell companies, asset managers and charitable trusts that it’s impossible to find out who the real owners are.

Often, an Oxford Street property will be just one piece of a larger London property empire. Dig around Stl Ptc Uk (No 2) Limited, the “real owner” of Orosi (Oxford Street Limited) — which owns multiple Oxford Street properties, including the Dr Martens store at 192–194 Oxford Street — and you’ll find that name listed as a trustee for the Samuel Tak Lee charitable trust, founded by billionaire Hong Kong real estate developer, Samuel Tak Lee. Reportedly worth $3.7bn, Tak Lee has an extensive portfolio of property holdings in London, including the colossal Shell Centre redevelopment on South Bank.

If you look just south to Soho, the picture isn’t much better. There are some 459 different properties in or on the borders of Soho owned by foreign entities. They range from the luxury fine dining of Noble Rot — whose Soho site is owned by Cypriot property moguls Hermioni Khenkin and Marios Hadjiroussos (both of whom appear in the Panama Papers) via a Virgin Islands company — to gay pub the Admiral Duncan which, despite being owned by the English pub chain Stonegate, is managed through a holding company in the Cayman Islands.

This is a familiar tactic for Stonegate, and one that they use throughout the capital. In fact, out of the 13 pubs we found in Soho that are owned by offshore entities — including classics such as the Kings Arms and the Shakespeare’s Head — nine of these were owned by Stonegate through its Cayman Islands shell company.

Which buildings do they own?

The longer you spend delving into the data the more you realise just how much of the capital — from iconic tourist spots and newbuild luxury apartments, to local high streets and corner stores — are owned via overseas tax havens. It may even go some way to explaining why so many apartment buildings have seemed to become “ghost blocks”: mostly empty, unused blocks of housing that serve as little more than housing-shaped investment assets. Centre Point, the imposing modernist high-rise by Tottenham Court Station that’s made headlines for its seemingly vacant flats, was a repeat feature in the data. At least 11 apartments in the tower block are owned by overseas investors, mostly in Hong Kong.

The kind of sums being handed over are wince-inducing. All in all, according to TPA’s data, it’s likely that hundreds of billions of pounds have been spent by overseas entities to purchase London properties. They include buildings such as the former Met police headquarters, the Olympia Exhibition Hall, and an office block and the “air above” it on Bishopsgate.

Many of the most expensive properties on the list are owned by billionaires from countries such as Hong Kong, Taiwan, Iraq, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and America. These include everyone from royals like Hazza bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the younger brother of the president of the UAE (owner of New Scotland Yard and 84 Theobalds Road), to President Trump’s self-professed friend and golf-buddy, Barry Sternlicht (owner of Milroy Walk, Rennie Court and Kings’ Reach Tower).

At £793,000,000, the most expensive price tag belongs to Arundel Great Court, the new hotel and apartment complex you’ve probably spotted being erected along the Thames, just east of Somerset House. That’s owned by Kenneth Dart, the US-born billionaire who owns the company that makes Solo Cups (the red disposable plastic cups used at frat parties, for readers unfamiliar with American teen films). An avid buyer of sovereign debt in countries such as Ecuador, Ivory Coast and Venezuela, Dart is now a citizen of beloved tax haven the Cayman Islands — though, surprisingly, the shell company he used is based in Jersey.

Other offshore owners of the capital’s costliest real estate include Ding Yumei, ex-wife of Hui Ka Ya, the disgraced chairman of collapsed Chinese property giant Evergrande and one-time richest man in China. As well as 33 flats in Nine Elms worth £49.8m, Ding owns 2–8a Rutland Gate, a 45-room property overlooking Hyde Park that can only be described as palatial. Covered in gold leaf, it features an indoor swimming pool, underground parking and several lifts, design choices which no doubt helped it set the record for the most expensive house in Britain when sold in 2020. But though it’s once again back on the market, don’t rustle for change down the back of the sofa just yet — due to a freezing order on Ding’s assets, the property is unsellable and currently abandoned.

Meet the people behind the overseas companies

So who are the biggest players, I hear you ask? Well, it’s a harder question than it seems, in part due to a long list of holes and inaccurate listings in the data, the explanation of which could take up an article in itself.

That having been said, from what we could find, among the biggest were Simon Reuben (129 properties), Thai billionaire Rit Thirakomen (120), the private office of the UAE president (84), the fittingly-named aristocrat Richard Hobart John De Courcy Moore (71) and Saudi prince Turki bin Salman Al Saud (35).

It may not be too surprising to see Reuben’s name near the top of the list, given how often he and his older brother David are regulars on the highest echelons of The Sunday Times rich list. The pair own huge swathes of the capital, from Millbank Tower, the imposing high-rise office on the banks of the Thames that currently serves as the Reform Party’s HQ, to the Primark store on Oxford Street. According to the TPA data, though, a surprising swathe of that empire, from decaying shopfronts in Mile End and high end offices on Piccadilly to Millbank Tower itself, are run via companies registered in Switzerland.

Expat cleaning billionaire James Dyson was also a repeat feature on the list. When not inventing innovative new ways to vacuum, Dyson is the landlord of a Sainsbury’s in North Cheam, offices in Clerkenwell and a lingerie shop near Oxford Street, through companies registered in Singapore and the Virgin Islands.

Other major names may be less well-known, like Israeli gambling billionaire Teddy Sagi, who has mostly avoided the limelight since slowly buying up Camden Market and much of the properties and businesses surrounding it in 2014. Since his takeover, the once-rough street market has gone through a total reinvention, becoming a polished, viral tourist destination. But those changes have left many of the market’s traders struggling to pay the rising rents. Last year, plans for a new immersive experience space with “a stage for hologram performances” were proposed to replace a section of the market where the application claimed 70% of traders were in rent arrears.

The long list of names we’ve covered in this piece are almost certainly incomplete. Many of the wealthiest individuals in the world either used different company registrations, or even just different versions of their own names, to avoid declaring their full ownership. For nearly half of the properties caught in the TPA’s data, they simply listed their asset managers in Jersey or Guernsey, or other paperless holding companies, as the ultimate owners of their property empires, or didn’t even register at all, despite the legal obligation to do so.

Take Asif Aziz. While only eight properties are directly listed in his own name, we found nearly 250 all over the capital registered at addresses in the Isle of Man linked to him, including the Kingsland Shopping Centre in Dalston, the Cineworld in Leicester Square and vape shops in Camberwell and Sutton.

And in some ways that’s the most telling detail of this data. For all the work we’ve put in and the threat of a government crackdown, it’s still only a small peek behind the curtain, a tiny and rare insight into some of the ways the capital is increasingly shaped by its wealthiest residents and investors. Real wealth, as always, prefers to whisper.