
In a high-stakes geopolitical game, Bangladesh has allegedly become a pawn in the United States’ larger strategy to cripple China’s influence in South Asia — with Nobel laureate Dr. Muhammad Yunus at the helm of a covert proxy war.
Key Allegations and Developments:
Dr. Yunus is accused of leading a U.S.-mandated proxy war against Chinese dominance in the region, particularly targeting the Kyaukpyu deep seaport in Myanmar’s Rakhine State — a strategic cornerstone of China’s Belt and Road Initiative.
Turkey is reportedly supplying weapons for this proxy war, under U.S. funding, with cargo ships and planes from Pakistan and the U.S. arriving in Chattogram Port under Yunus’s watch — their contents undisclosed.
Bangladesh’s interim government, allegedly led by Yunus, is rapidly executing moves to cede control of key assets, including Chattogram Port, and has greenlit a controversial “humanitarian corridor” through Bangladesh into Rakhine, Myanmar.
The Players Behind the Curtain:
The report claims a tight-knit network is working under Yunus’s leadership to execute this geopolitical agenda:
- Dr. Khalilur Rahman (National Security Advisor and Rohingya Affairs High Representative)
- Mohammad Mahfuz Alam (Information Advisor)
- Mahmudur Rahman (Editor of Amar Desh)
- Pinaki Bhattacharya, Elias Hossain, and Kanak Sarwar (YouTubers and diaspora journalists)
They are said to be shaping public opinion in Yunus’s favor while maintaining direct contacts with Turkish intelligence and military officials.
The Bigger Game — Undermining China:
The Kyaukpyu Port project connects China’s Yunnan province directly to the Bay of Bengal, allowing China to reduce dependence on the Malacca Strait and strengthen its regional trade and energy networks. To derail this project, the U.S. had allegedly supported Aung San Suu Kyi, but after her failure to block it, and her subsequent arrest post-2020 elections, the focus has shifted to Bangladesh.
In 2019, U.S. Congressman Brad Sherman proposed incorporating Rakhine into Bangladesh — a move firmly rejected by then-PM Sheikh Hasina. Analysts claim Sheikh Hasina’s fall on August 5, 2024, was a direct result of opposing U.S. interests.
Now, Yunus allegedly carries that mandate — implementing U.S. plans to weaponize the Rohingya crisis, supply arms to Arakan Army, and destabilize Myanmar and India via a corridor through Bangladesh.
Intelligence Insights:
- Turkish-origin weapons and drones are reportedly being transferred to the Arakan Army, with alleged oversight by Yunus’s inner circle.
- Meetings between Turkish military officials and Mahmudur Rahman, Mahfuz Alam, and others are said to have occurred in secret.
- India, sensing regional destabilization, has suspended all trade with Bangladesh, suspecting cross-border arms trafficking.
Implications:
Geopolitical experts warn that if this corridor is fully activated:
India’s northeast (Seven Sisters) could become vulnerable to infiltration. A new U.S.-backed “independent state” in the Bay of Bengal region could emerge, serving as a military outpost against China. The fate of Yunus may mirror that of Suu Kyi — a rise under U.S. support, followed by an inevitable fall if objectives fail. This explosive report reveals a chilling convergence of foreign influence, covert arms deals, and internal betrayal, raising urgent questions:
Has Bangladesh become the front line of a new Cold War in South Asia?
Is Yunus a reformer — or a proxy for Western hegemony?
What is the real cost of silence from global powers?