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Thursday: 11 December 2025
  • 28 October 2025
  • 12:29
Think of the size of the homeland
Author: هاني الدباس

Khaberni - The state is not an institution that is managed, rather it is an idea that crystallizes and grows.
It is accumulated consciousness, willpower, and a decision that shortens the distances between the possible and the impossible.
When the state chooses to think big, it is neither a luxury nor a gamble, but a belief that nations are not measured by their size, but by their ability to dream and achieve.

Today, Jordan stands on the threshold of a different phase, its starting point being strategic thinking matching the scale of the homeland, embodied in major national projects that are not merely financial investments, but a redefinition of the state's role and its standing in the region.

The projects exceeding ten billion dollars set to start in 2026 are not just infrastructure, but pillars of national and economic sovereignty; they are an announcement of Jordan entering the era of integrated economy, based on efficiency, regional connectivity, and global competitiveness.

At the forefront of these projects, is the national water carrier, which is more than just an engineering project; it is a declaration of sovereignty that consolates the right of the state to secure its vital resources independently of dependency and subordination, a project that quenches our strategic needs and revitalizes confidence in the state's ability to transform scarcity into the energy of life.

In another direction, railways extend from Amman to Aqaba as a first step towards a giant logistics project, for this route is not just for transporting goods, but for conveying the idea of a modern state: a state that connects its ports with its cities, and its economy with the world, establishing infrastructure that reshapes the features of national development. It is a railway leading our economy into the future, where movement turns into life, and connection into renaissance.

As for Aqaba, it is not just a port or a coastal city, but a national platform for opening up to the world.
Today, the state is redefining Aqaba's role as a free, competitive regional center, to become a hub attracting investment, tourism, and trade, and a true gateway to the new Jordanian economy.

This scene signifies the thought of a state of institutions that knows how to plan, balance, and build, for a state that thinks with this depth is not seeking momentary achievement, but continuation in development and consistency in direction.

When the state thinks in the size of the homeland, it sends a series of messages implying
that confidence is not just a slogan, but a policy
and that development is not just promises, but a way of life.
We must realize that Jordan is not managed by crises, but built with will and vision.

This is how venerable states behave,
they build their silence with action, assert their presence with achievements, and write their future on the tracks of history not on the news pages.

Today, Jordan dreams not only of a better future, but of a cumulative building of ideas, visions, and major projects.
 

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