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  • Smotrich: Steve Witkoff called Gaza Palestinians ‘two million Nazis’

    Smotrich: Steve Witkoff called Gaza Palestinians ‘two million Nazis’

    A firestorm of controversy has erupted in Israeli and Middle Eastern political circles after far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich publicly alleged that a senior U.S. envoy made extraordinarily inflammatory remarks describing all two million residents of the Gaza Strip as “Nazis” during a closed-door meeting last year. The explosive claim was made by Smotrich during a public conference in Israel this Thursday, where he also repeated longstanding expansionist rhetoric that has drawn international condemnation for human rights violations.

    According to Smotrich’s account, the conversation took place shortly after U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff completed a visit to Gaza last August, a period marked by intense Israeli military operations and mounting global alarm over humanitarian conditions in the enclave. Smotrich stated that he, former Israeli ambassador to the U.S. Ron Dermer, and Witkoff reviewed a pre-prepared propaganda video during the closed meeting. After viewing the footage, Smotrich claims Witkoff turned to him and stated: “Bezalel, I will not let two million Nazis live next to your children on fences.”

    The allegation is particularly striking given the public framing of Witkoff’s 2024 Gaza trip. A former real estate property lawyer with no prior professional experience in foreign policy or humanitarian work, Witkoff publicly positioned his visit as a mission to advance a plan for delivering desperately needed food and medical aid to Gaza’s civilian population. At the time of his visit, Israel had imposed sweeping restrictions on the entry of food, fuel and other essential goods into Gaza, a policy that the United Nations and multiple humanitarian organizations have warned has driven a large share of Gaza’s population into acute famine and food insecurity.

    Beyond the explosive claim about Witkoff, Smotrich used the conference platform to double down on his longstanding ultranationalist expansionist agenda, calling for permanent Israeli territorial annexation of parts of Lebanon. He argued that “There is only one thing that hurts the enemy – land. Whoever messes with us will lose land for ever. A security zone needs to be created for years in Lebanon,” adding in a separate conversation with journalist Amit Segal that Israel would ultimately need to formalize permanent control over captured Lebanese territory.

    This latest rhetoric aligns with Smotrich’s repeated public calls for the ethnic cleansing of Palestinian residents from Gaza to make way for new Jewish Israeli settlements. Last December, he stated publicly: “We cannot live with two million antisemitic Nazis who live off hatred of Israel … That is why we need to encourage their emigration and settle Gaza.” Months earlier, he claimed former U.S. President Donald Trump backed a plan to remove Gazans from the enclave, saying “He supports his own plan of removing the Gazans from Gaza, so our kids won’t have to grow up within a spitting distance from two million Nazis who want to butcher, murder and rape.”

    Smotrich already faces mounting international legal scrutiny over his actions in occupied Palestinian territories. Independent regional outlet Middle East Eye has reported that the prosecutor’s office of the International Criminal Court has submitted a sealed application for an arrest warrant against Smotrich, covering alleged crimes committed in the occupied West Bank. The proposed charges listed in the application include forced displacement, forced population transfer, persecution, and apartheid, according to the outlet’s reporting.

    Middle East Eye confirmed that it reached out to the White House for comment on Smotrich’s allegation against Witkoff, requesting confirmation of whether the remarks were made. No response from the White House had been received by the time of the outlet’s publication. The outlet, which provides independent, on-the-ground coverage of the Middle East and North Africa region, did not immediately offer independent verification of Smotrich’s claim.

  • Israeli and Egyptian military officials ‘watched Argentina match together’ during Cairo meeting

    Israeli and Egyptian military officials ‘watched Argentina match together’ during Cairo meeting

    High-stakes diplomatic and military discussions between senior Israeli defense officials and their Egyptian counterparts unfolded in Cairo this week, framed by Israeli public media as a wide-ranging strategic dialogue centered on evolving regional tensions, the crisis in Gaza, and expanded bilateral security collaboration.

    Israeli public broadcaster Kan News reports that the negotiations focused on aligning policy coordination between the two nations, even as frictions persist over Israel’s ongoing military campaign in the Gaza Strip. Egypt has long been positioned as a central mediator between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas, and is expected to play a defining role in shaping Gaza’s political and administrative future once hostilities end. In a rare informal moment during the visit, the delegations reportedly watched Egypt’s 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifier against Argentina together.

    Israel and Egypt have maintained formal diplomatic ties since the historic 1979 Camp David peace treaty, with cross-border security and joint military cooperation serving as the cornerstone of their bilateral relationship. In recent months, however, relations have been strained by Israel’s large-scale military operation in Gaza, which Egyptian authorities have warned risks triggering widespread instability along Egypt’s northeastern border with the enclave.

    Per Kan’s reporting, the primary goal of this week’s meeting was to formalize and strengthen Egypt’s mediation mandate between Israel and Hamas. Israeli officials have noted that Cairo has adopted a notably firmer, more hawkish stance in its negotiations with Hamas in recent weeks. As part of emerging proposals, Egyptian negotiators have offered to pressure Hamas to relinquish its weapons stockpiles, which would be placed under a third-party custodianship arrangement as a core component of a broader postwar governance deal.

    The talks coincided with a landmark political shift within Gaza: Hamas announced this week it will dissolve the administrative body that has governed the blockaded enclave for nearly 20 years. Ismail al-Thawabta, head of Hamas’s government media office, confirmed to Agence France-Presse that Mohammed al-Farra, leader of Hamas’s emergency government committee, has formally submitted his resignation and dissolved the body to clear the way for a handover of power to the newly formed National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG).

    The NCAG is a panel of independent Palestinian technocrats based in Gaza, established to manage day-to-day governance of the enclave under a framework agreed in a September 2024 ceasefire deal brokered by the United States, Qatar, and Egypt. Critically, the committee has not been able to enter Gaza to assume its duties and currently operates out of Cairo amid ongoing Israeli military operations.

    These political developments unfold against a backdrop of persistent violence in Gaza, even after a temporary ceasefire was announced in October 2024. Data from the Palestinian Ministry of Health confirms that Israeli forces have killed at least 1,092 Palestinians in Gaza since the ceasefire went into effect. Since the start of Israel’s full-scale military campaign in October 2023, the total Palestinian death toll in the enclave has surpassed 73,000, according to ministry figures.

  • Israel announces theft of Palestinian land in West Bank to expand road for settlers

    Israel announces theft of Palestinian land in West Bank to expand road for settlers

    In a move that deepens long-standing tensions in the occupied West Bank, Israeli authorities have ordered the seizure of large swathes of privately owned Palestinian agricultural land to expand a major settler highway. The project, which focuses on widening Route 60 — one of the West Bank’s largest settler-controlled transportation arteries running east of Ramallah and south of Nablus — aims to add new lanes and strengthen connectivity between illegal Israeli Jewish settlements scattered across the occupied territory.

    Multiple Palestinian communities across the region face the loss of their historic farmland, with the town of Al-Mazra’a Al-Sharqiya, located east of Ramallah, among the hardest hit. The highway expansion runs parallel to thousands of dunams of the town’s cultivated agricultural land, much of which has been held by local families for generations.

    Unlike formal property seizure protocols that require direct notification to landowners, Palestinian farmers discovered crumpled confiscation orders discarded on their property rather than receiving them through official, direct channels. While the orders confirm the seizure of hundreds of dunams, the full extent of the land takeover remains unclear due to this haphazard notification process. Locals estimate the total confiscated land from Al-Mazra’a Al-Sharqiya could reach thousands of dunams, including thousands of ancient olive trees, some of which are more than 1,000 years old and form the backbone of the local economy.

    For families like the Salems, the order threatens to erase a multi-generational legacy. Taysir Salem, a landowner in Al-Mazra’a Al-Sharqiya, told Middle East Eye that his family inherited 180 dunams (18 hectares) of land planted with trees by his grandfather, all of which is now marked for seizure. “Route 60 will be extended through our land, and at our expense, they will take it by force and bulldoze half of a hill that belongs to us,” Salem said. “All the neighbouring towns will also be subjected to land theft because of this road.”

    Parallel to the official seizure order, Israeli settlers have launched a coordinated campaign of intimidation to bar Palestinian landowners from accessing their property. Last week alone, Salem said settlers arrived on tractors and expelled local farmers from their land at gunpoint, leaving residents in constant fear of further violence. “We are in great danger because they want to take the land by force,” he added.

    All affected Palestinian landholders hold full, formal ownership documents proving their legal claim to the properties that have been their livelihoods for decades. Outraged by the seizure and what they call Israeli impunity, landowners are calling for urgent intervention from the international community. Salem criticized the United States’ long-standing refusal to confront Israeli expansion in the West Bank, noting that “The American government has the power to stop Israel from taking our land, but it won’t. If it were any other country, it would have stopped them, but it won’t force Israel.”

    The Route 60 expansion is not an isolated incident. It aligns with a accelerating pattern of land seizure across the occupied West Bank that predates this latest order. Last June, Israel announced the confiscation of 464 dunams of land from the town of Sinjil, located north of Ramallah, which also sits along the path of the highway expansion. The current seizure will take land from at least five additional nearby Palestinian communities: Al-Sawiya, Al-Lubban ash-Sharqiya, Sinjil, and Turmusayya, in addition to Al-Mazra’a Al-Sharqiya.

    Palestinian analysts and community leaders view the Route 60 expansion as a core strategy to entrench Israel’s illegal settlement project in the West Bank. The highway connects dozens of Israeli settlements and unauthorized outposts to one another and to mainland Israel, enabling further settlement expansion while simultaneously fragmenting contiguous Palestinian territory, cutting off Palestinian villages and towns from their surrounding agricultural lands, and fragmenting the geographic basis for any future independent Palestinian state.

    Abdul Samad Abdul Aziz, spokesperson for the Al-Mazra’a Al-Sharqiya municipality, explained that farmers brought the discarded seizure notices to municipal offices just a few days ago. The orders allow a 60-day window for affected landowners to file appeals, but community leaders say the process is stacked against them. “The decision is dangerous for the town and the farmers, and it is unjust because it will cut off their livelihoods after stealing their land and trees. We don’t know what we will do,” Abdul Aziz said. “The residents will not be able to live without their land while settlers continue to attack farmers and shoot at them whenever they try to reach their land.”

    Recent data from the Wall and Settlement Resistance Commission underscores the scale of ongoing land seizure in 2026. The group’s semi-annual report, released earlier this year, documents that Israeli authorities have seized more than 4,379 dunams of Palestinian land between January and the end of June 2026. Most of these seizures have been carried out through 40 separate military orders, under a range of official pretexts, to make way for four buffer zones around settlements, 16 new security roads, 12 military installations, and other Israeli state and settler infrastructure. The recent Route 60 land seizure fits directly into this broader trend of accelerated territorial takeover, Abdul Aziz said, leaving Palestinians with no option but to appeal to the global community for intervention to halt the expansion.

    Concurrent with the Route 60 controversy, ongoing settler violence continues to roil other West Bank communities. In late April 2026, a confrontation broke out in the village of Masafer Yatta after settlers attempted to steal livestock from a local Palestinian family. When the family confronted the intruders, Israeli military forces intervened, assaulting multiple Palestinians and detaining six people, including one woman, according to on-the-ground reporting from Middle East Eye.

  • Clock ticking down on Iran’s Hormuz gamble

    Clock ticking down on Iran’s Hormuz gamble

    Tensions around the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz have escalated sharply in recent weeks, following a series of Iranian actions on commercial shipping that have drawn a direct military response from the United States and thrown global energy markets into uncertainty. What Tehran frames as a defensive assertion of sovereignty over its adjacent waters is increasingly being analyzed as a high-risk short-term tactical gambit — one that could backfire spectacularly, leaving Iran politically and economically isolated across the Middle East if Tehran does not adjust its course quickly.

    The United States has launched a new wave of military strikes targeting Iranian assets, with an unclear timeline for operations but a clear, bounded core goal: guaranteeing unimpeded passage through the strait, which Iran has asserted full sovereign control over. This new round of confrontation has opened the door to both new negotiating possibilities and catastrophic escalation for Tehran.

    Shipping data underscores the immediate disruption of Iranian actions: on July 8, only 13 oil tankers completed transits of the strait, down from a seven-day daily average of 33 crossings prior to the escalation. The sharp drop in traffic came after Iranian forces targeted at least three commercial vessels, reigniting open hostilities with U.S. military forces deployed in the region.

    Global oil markets have not yet adjusted pricing to account for a full closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20% of the world’s daily oil supplies transit. But analysts warn market volatility and anxiety will spike sharply in the coming week if the two sides fail to reach a temporary truce to de-escalate.

    Current discussions around a potential truce center on a vague compromise framework under which Iran would drop open threats to block the strait, without formally committing to unrestricted passage in writing. This tactical, short-term agreement masks far deeper medium- and long-term strategic calculations for all involved.

    By following through on threats to disrupt Hormuz traffic, analysts argue Iran has already squandered its most powerful long-term strategic leverage: the implicit threat of closing the strait, a tool that only retained value as long as Tehran never actually used it. As regional powers move to bypass the choke point entirely, that leverage has been permanently weakened. Gulf Cooperation Council states have already accelerated development of alternative pipeline routes that would carry oil exports around Hormuz, connecting production fields directly to the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. Once these alternative routes are fully operational, the only oil that will remain dependent on Hormuz transits is Iranian crude itself, leaving Tehran trapped by the very blockade it imposed.

    Some factions within Iran’s leadership argue that leveraging the strait for short-term gain is a net strategic win. Their calculation holds that even a partial disruption of traffic, limited to sporadic attacks on commercial shipping rather than a full closure, can be enough to push global insurance premiums for shipping through the strait higher, driving up global oil prices and achieving maximum geopolitical impact with minimal direct military commitment. Even with 90% of traffic continuing as normal, the elevated risk premium would shift global markets in Iran’s favor, per this reasoning.

    In response to this threat, hardline factions in U.S. policy circles have floated a far more extreme option: a full military occupation of Iran’s Kharg Island, the major oil export terminal that controls northern access to the Strait of Hormuz. Critics warn this is a reckless proposal that would drag the U.S. into another open-ended Middle Eastern quagmire, echoing the costly failures of the Vietnam and Iraq wars. If U.S. forces occupied Kharg, they would immediately become fixed targets for Iranian missile batteries that have been pre-positioned and hidden across the Iranian mainland, forcing the U.S. to escalate further to protect occupying troops and sinking Washington deeper into an unwinnable conflict.

    While Israeli leadership has openly pushed for full regime change in Tehran to eliminate Iran’s nuclear program and regional influence, most other major regional powers — including Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Pakistan — oppose this outcome. These states currently maintain a transactional, pragmatic alignment with the U.S. but have fraught, tense relations with Israel. A full regime change that installed a pro-U.S., pro-Israel government in Tehran would completely upend the regional balance of power, forcing every state in the Middle East to renegotiate their strategic relationships, a prospect no existing government views as desirable. While no regional power supports a nuclear-armed Iran or Iranian control of the strait, a pro-Israel Tehran is seen as a far greater threat to their national interests.

    Against the backdrop of already overlapping global crises — an open, grinding war in Ukraine, tense undefined strategic competition with China, and accelerating nuclear rearmament in North Korea — analysts question whether launching an open-ended military adventure in Iran makes any strategic sense for the U.S.

    Currently, Iran’s entire strategic approach to the standoff remains rooted in short-term calculus, combining ongoing threats to Hormuz with incremental progress in enriching fissile material for a potential nuclear weapon. Both the U.S. and Iran are currently pursuing competing election-tied strategies: the Trump administration is seeking a quick resolution to the standoff to avoid it becoming a liability for Republican candidates in November’s midterm elections, while Iran aims to keep the threat of disruption alive through the election cycle to extract maximum concessions.

    But this Iranian strategy, much like its threats to block Hormuz, has a very limited shelf life. Trump’s willingness to negotiate concessions will disappear almost immediately after the midterm votes are counted. Furthermore, the combination of Iran’s nuclear progress and its chokehold on Hormuz has created an unexpected convergence of interests among regional powers opposed to Tehran, cutting across pre-existing divides. Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and India all share an interest in pushing back against Iran’s actions, and with sufficient time and diplomatic outreach, could be convinced to join a coordinated effort to reopen the strait and roll back Iran’s nuclear program. Such a coordinated regional push would look very different from the U.S.- and Israeli-led efforts Iran has faced to date, creating new strategic openings and risks for both Israel and Iran. For Tehran, the window to adjust course and strike a favorable deal is closing rapidly.

  • Iran’s late supreme leader Khamenei buried in Mashhad after week-long funeral

    Iran’s late supreme leader Khamenei buried in Mashhad after week-long funeral

    Six days after a joint US-Israeli air strike killed Iran’s former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei at his Tehran compound on February 28, the 86-year-old leader was laid to rest in the holy Shia shrine of his hometown of Mashhad. The multi-city funeral procession drew an unprecedented turnout of participants, drawing global attention to the shifting dynamics of the ongoing conflict between the US-Israel alliance and Iran.

    According to official Iranian media reports, an estimated 41 to 43 million Iranians took part in public ceremonies held across the country and neighboring Iraq. Iran’s state-owned broadcaster Press TV described the gathering as “the largest procession the world has ever witnessed.” State-led funeral rituals kicked off on Saturday, when tens of thousands of mourners packed Tehran’s Grand Mosalla religious complex to pay their final respects beside Khamenei’s flag-draped coffin. Commemorative events were staged across five major cities: Tehran and Qom in Iran, and Najaf and Karbala in Iraq, before the procession concluded with burial in Mashhad.

    Many attendees openly expressed anger at the attack that killed Khamenei, alongside his daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter. Mourners chanted anti-US slogans including “Death to America,” carried banners calling for the assassination of former US President Donald Trump, and raised red flags emblazoned with the word “Martyr” to honor Khamenei.

    A towering figure in Iranian politics, Khamenei first took office as president during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War, and succeeded Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as Supreme Leader in 1989, leading the country for nearly 34 years. The strike that killed Khamenei marked the opening day of the ongoing US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, launched with the stated core goals of forcing Iran’s surrender and achieving regime change by removing the country’s top leadership. To date, the campaign has failed to meet these initial objectives,

    Rather than fracturing Iranian society and destabilizing the government, the strike has consolidated domestic support for the Iranian government and allowed Tehran to strengthen its strategic position in the region. Iran has since seized full control of the critical Strait of Hormuz, a major chokepoint for global oil trade, and forced the United States to enter diplomatic negotiations. Domestically in the US, widespread opposition to the conflict has dragged down former President Trump’s approval ratings, with a recent public poll showing a majority of American voters view the war in Iran as “not worth it.”

    Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has kept a low public profile since assuming office, but three of Khamenei’s sons, who had not been seen publicly since the outbreak of the war, were present at the funeral service. A wide range of international delegations also attended the ceremony to pay their respects, including senior diplomatic and government officials from Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Russia, China, and Turkey. Representatives from regional armed groups allied to Iran also took part: Hamas and Islamic Jihad from the Gaza Strip, Hezbollah from Lebanon, and Ansar Allah (the Houthis) from Yemen.

    The funeral takes place amid escalating tensions that threaten a fragile ceasefire between the two sides. The truce was formalized in a memorandum of understanding reached one month ago, but on Wednesday, Trump officially announced the end of the ceasefire and launched a verbal attack on Iranian leadership, calling them “scum.” Fighting has since resumed, leaving regional and global stability at heightened risk.

  • Barbados leader rejects ‘asinine’ claim by former UK minister that ex-colonies should repay Britain

    Barbados leader rejects ‘asinine’ claim by former UK minister that ex-colonies should repay Britain

    A fiery debate over colonial-era reparations has erupted after a senior former British official triggered widespread backlash across the Caribbean with her extraordinary claim that former British colonies should repay the United Kingdom for supposed historical investments made during imperial rule.

    Mia Mottley, the widely respected prime minister of Barbados, delivered a scathing rebuke of the comments this week, labeling the suggestion as nothing short of “asinine” in a public post on the social platform X Thursday evening. In her response, Mottley pushed back forcefully against the narrative that has been put forward, arguing that the idea that descendants of enslaved African people should be expected to compensate former colonial powers for the systems that brutalized and exploited their ancestors is unfathomable.

    “The Caribbean does not owe Britain for slavery, for colonial extraction, or for laws that treated African people as chattel,” Mottley wrote. “We are not asking for charity. We are asking for justice, and history itself has already told the truth.”

    The controversy stems from remarks made earlier this month by Suella Braverman, a former British Home Secretary who now holds a position with the right-wing, anti-immigration Reform UK party. Braverman made her original comments in a July 3 X post reacting to news that Jamaica intends to file a formal official petition for slavery reparations before the end of 2024. In her post, Braverman claimed the British Empire left a largely positive legacy across the globe, and argued that if the current UK government moves forward with any consideration of reparations claims, former colonies should reimburse Britain for the infrastructure, institutional development and resources the empire put in place that she claims underpin modern democratic systems in former colonies today.

    Mottley’s public pushback comes directly on the heels of a key regional gathering this week in St. Lucia, where Caribbean leaders from the Caribbean Community (Caricom), the region’s primary intergovernmental trade and policy bloc, convened to coordinate their collective push for reparations for the transatlantic slave trade and centuries of colonial rule.

    The Barbadian leader also suggested that Braverman’s comments are rooted in domestic UK political posturing rather than good-faith engagement with the history of colonialism. “I do not doubt there are some British parliamentarians who want to distract people from the domestic politics of the United Kingdom,” she said. “Those who wish to speak on this matter should first take the time to read enough history to understand it. The Caribbean will not be used as a prop for anyone’s politics.”

    Mottley has emerged as one of the most prominent global voices pushing for reparations for colonial-era harms. Just last month, she led a special subcommittee of Caribbean leaders to launch an updated formal reparations manifesto during an international reparations conference held in Accra, Ghana. Under her leadership, Barbados made historic changes to its constitutional status in 2021, formally severing its final ties to the British monarchy as the country transitioned to a full republic. A globally recognized advocate for climate justice as well as reparatory justice, Mottley won a third consecutive term as prime minister in national elections held this past February.

    For years, the UK government has maintained a firm stance refusing to offer reparations or formal apologies for the harms of the transatlantic slave trade and colonial rule. In contrast, Caribbean leaders have continued their diplomatic push, calling for a full formal apology from the British Crown and government alongside tangible remedial measures including full cancellation of outstanding sovereign debt held by former colonial states.

    Global human rights leaders have backed the Caribbean reparations movement, with United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk confirming that an estimated 25 million to 30 million African people were forcibly displaced from their home continent during the transatlantic slave trade. Millions of those displaced were sent to Caribbean and American nations to work as chattel labor on colonial plantations, building wealth for European imperial powers while leaving generations of Black communities facing systemic intergenerational harm that persists today.

  • Pakistani forces say they killed 75 insurgents after attacks in Balochistan

    Pakistani forces say they killed 75 insurgents after attacks in Balochistan

    ISLAMABAD – Pakistani security forces, supported by military aviation, have eliminated 75 insurgents during multi-day counterinsurgency operations targeting a banned separatist faction that carried out a string of lethal attacks on security personnel, law enforcement, and civilian populations in Pakistan’s restive Balochistan province, senior government officials confirmed Friday.

    The official announcement came 24 hours after Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif traveled to Quetta, Balochistan’s provincial capital, to meet with families of the 42 people killed in the recent wave of attacks. During the visit, Sharif assured the grieving families that the lives lost would not be forgotten, pledging that all those responsible for the violence would face justice.

    The surge of violence this week has sparked growing regional and international security concerns, as analysts warn that separatist groups once dismissed as small, fragmented factions are rapidly expanding their operational capacity and geographic reach across Balochistan.

    According to official statements from the Balochistan provincial government, the joint counterinsurgency operations – which involve regular army units, the Frontier Corps paramilitary force, and local law enforcement – were launched late Monday, following a large-scale coordinated assault on a police outpost near Mangi Dam by dozens of fighters from the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), a group outlawed by the Pakistani government. Mangi Dam is a critical infrastructure site that supplies drinking water to millions of residents in Quetta and surrounding neighboring districts.

    Nine police officers and 15 attacking insurgents were killed in the initial opening assault on the outpost. During the attack, BLA fighters abducted 18 additional police officers, who were later found executed with blindfolds after the insurgents retreated into nearby mountainous terrain.

    Pakistan has long alleged that both the BLA and the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) maintain insurgent training and staging sanctuaries on Afghan territory, and receive material and political support from India. Both the Afghan government and Indian authorities have repeatedly denied these accusations.

    In addition to launching the sweeping counterinsurgency operations, the Pakistani federal government has approved 11.1 million Pakistani rupees (approximately $39,000) in compensation for the immediate family of each police officer killed in last week’s attacks.

    Balochistan, Pakistan’s geographically largest province by area, is also the country’s least densely populated region. It has faced a decades-long low-level separatist insurgency led by ethnic Baloch armed groups that demand greater political autonomy or full independence from Islamabad. The province also faces frequent attacks from the TTP, a militant faction separate from the Afghan Taliban but aligned with the group ideologically and operationally.

  • A US license could let Ukraine produce Patriot missiles, but it won’t be simple or quick

    A US license could let Ukraine produce Patriot missiles, but it won’t be simple or quick

    At the NATO summit held in Ankara, Turkey, alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday, former U.S. President Donald Trump made a landmark announcement: the United States would grant Ukraine a manufacturing license to produce American-designed Patriot air defense systems, the critical defensive capability Kyiv has pursued for years to shield its population, cities and critical infrastructure from relentless Russian missile and drone attacks.

    “We’ll give them the right to make Patriots. We’ll show them how to do it,” Trump told attendees, adding that he believed domestic production could be stood up relatively quickly. But the announcement left a critical detail unresolved: exactly what components or full systems Ukraine would be permitted to manufacture under the license. Zelenskyy framed the announcement as a symbolic and strategic win Thursday, telling reporters that Washington now recognizes Ukraine’s capacity to take on this manufacturing work, and that Ukrainian and U.S. diplomatic and defense teams will begin immediate work to finalize all licensing terms and arrangements.

    Patriot air defense systems, and their interceptor missiles specifically, are currently manufactured by major U.S. defense contractors Lockheed Martin and Raytheon, a subsidiary of RTX. Defense analysts and Ukrainian officials emphasize that a general production license does not automatically grant Ukraine the right to build an entire Patriot battery from scratch, which includes launch systems, advanced radar arrays, command and control centers, and interceptor missiles. Instead, the license could be limited to narrower production scopes, such as manufacturing interceptor missiles alone, conducting final assembly from imported component kits, or producing only non-sensitive individual components.

    Serhii Beskrestnov, an advisor to Ukraine’s minister of defense, explained that standard U.S. defense manufacturing licenses typically include access to full technical documentation, specialist training, connections to approved parts suppliers, and on-site support from foreign consultants to help launch domestic production. Even so, many experts warn that the first phase of any production will be far more limited than full domestic manufacturing of complete systems.

    Anatolii Khrapchynskyi, development director of Ukraine-based defense firm Fly Group Ukraine, notes that Trump’s original announcement was intentionally ambiguous, referencing broad production of “Patriots” without clarifying whether the license covers missiles, launchers, radar, command centers or individual components. Even manufacturing Patriot interceptors alone requires an extensive, interconnected global supply chain, with hundreds of separate suppliers producing specialized parts ranging from control surfaces and rocket engines to precision guidance systems and military-grade communications electronics.

    While the Trump administration has not released official details about the scope of the proposed license, an anonymous senior administration official confirmed that the U.S. is already drastically accelerating and expanding its own domestic Patriot production to meet surging global demand, and is forging new industrial partnerships with allied nations around the world to boost output of the systems. The war in Ukraine has already demonstrated how rapidly domestic weapons production can scale when a country gains access to design documentation, technical support, and a steady flow of core components: Ukraine has already become a global leader in low-cost, mass-produced expendable attack drones, while Russia has scaled up its own domestic production of Iranian-designed Shahed-type attack drones (rebranded as Gerans in Russia) at a dedicated facility in Tatarstan. But experts stress that Patriot systems are orders of magnitude more complex than these unmanned vehicles, requiring cutting-edge precision guidance, advanced radar technology, high-performance solid-fuel rocket motors, military-grade microelectronics, and rigorous quality certification standards that Ukraine’s existing defense industrial base cannot yet meet.

    Yehor Chernev, deputy chairman of Ukraine’s parliamentary committee on national security, defense and intelligence, projects that while the bureaucratic and legal process for finalizing the license could begin within a few months, actually launching full production will take multiple years. Even if Ukraine receives fully assembled component kits from foreign suppliers, Chernev estimates it would take at least 18 to 24 months to launch the first pilot production line, with additional time required to roll out the first completed finished weapons. The PAC-3 MSE interceptor, the most modern variant designed to shoot down incoming ballistic missiles, takes roughly 24 months to produce in the U.S. alone, with the solid-fuel rocket motor alone requiring around 30 months of manufacturing work. Chernev added that the most sensitive technologies, particularly the interceptor’s active radar seeker, are unlikely to have their full design documentation transferred to Ukraine for domestic manufacturing, meaning Ukraine will almost certainly have to import the most complex high-tech components and focus initial efforts on final assembly, systems integration, or production of less sensitive parts.

    Dr. Thomas Withington, an electronic warfare, radar and military communications analyst at the London-based Royal United Services Institute, emphasized that public expectations for quick results need to be tempered. While Ukraine’s existing defense industrial base can support early steps toward production, the country still requires significant time to construct specialized manufacturing facilities, train a skilled domestic workforce, and secure stable, uninterrupted supply chains for all required components. “This is not going to be a fix for the air-defense threats Ukraine is going to face tomorrow,” Withington noted.

    The U.S. has a history of allowing allied nations to produce Patriot components under license, and these past examples illustrate that while licensed production is achievable, it proceeds far slower than many observers hope. Japan has produced Patriot missiles under U.S. license for decades: Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has assembled PAC-3 interceptors under an agreement with Lockheed Martin, and Japan relaxed its post-World War II arms export restrictions several years ago to allow for the export of U.S.-designed Patriot missiles back to the U.S., a shift that could indirectly help replenish American stocks drawn down by support to Ukraine. A more recent example comes from Germany, where Raytheon and MBDA Deutschland announced a licensed Patriot GEM-T missile production plan in 2022. A major NATO procurement contract for up to 1,000 missiles followed in 2024, with a new production facility in Schrobenhausen set to supply both Ukraine and replenish depleted European alliance stockpiles.

    But Ukraine faces a unique challenge that neither Japan nor Germany has had to contend with: constant, large-scale Russian strikes on Ukrainian industrial and infrastructure targets. Khrapchynskyi explained that any Patriot production facility in Ukraine would immediately become a top priority targeting for Moscow, meaning all production operations would have to be moved to heavily protected locations, likely underground or inside hardened blast shelters. This reality frames the license agreement as a long-term strategic investment rather than an immediate solution to Ukraine’s urgent frontline air defense needs. If successfully implemented, the licensing deal would position Ukraine as a future major producer of air defense weapons, reducing its reliance on Western allies that have already seen their own weapons stockpiles severely strained by months of donations to Kyiv. As Khrapchynskyi put it: “It would not solve the current missile shortage in 2026, but it would lay the foundation for Ukraine to become one of Europe’s leading producers of air-defense systems in the future.”

  • Watch: Typhoon Bavi forecast to bring heavy rains and floods to Taiwan, Japan and China

    Watch: Typhoon Bavi forecast to bring heavy rains and floods to Taiwan, Japan and China

    A powerful tropical cyclone, Typhoon Bavi, is on track to sweep through key regions of East Asia this Saturday, bringing life-threatening heavy downpours and widespread flooding to parts of Taiwan, Japan, and mainland China, meteorological agencies have warned. Weather tracking models currently show the storm system moving steadily across the East China Sea after forming in the western Pacific basin, with its projected path taking it directly through heavily populated coastal areas that are no stranger to extreme typhoon-season weather.

    Local and regional weather authorities have already begun issuing preliminary warnings, urging residents in low-lying and flood-prone zones to prepare for potential evacuations, secure outdoor property, and stock up on essential supplies ahead of the storm’s arrival. Forecasters note that Bavi’s strong wind speeds, combined with sustained heavy rainfall, could also trigger landslides in hilly and mountainous areas, disrupt regional air and sea travel, and damage critical infrastructure across the impacted regions.

    As of the latest update, meteorological teams are continuing to monitor the typhoon’s trajectory and intensity closely, updating forecasts regularly to reflect any shifts in its path that could alter the scope of expected impacts. Residents across the warned areas are advised to stay tuned to official emergency announcements and follow instructions from local disaster management authorities in the coming hours.

  • Man fatally shot by ICE in Houston was not intended target, DHS says

    Man fatally shot by ICE in Houston was not intended target, DHS says

    A fatal shooting by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in Houston, Texas has sparked widespread public anger and diplomatic tension after federal officials confirmed the 52-year-old victim, Mexican national Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, was not the target of the planned enforcement operation.

    The incident unfolded at approximately 7 a.m. on Tuesday, when Salgado was en route to a construction job with three of his co-workers. According to Department of Homeland Security (DHS) statements, agents initiated the traffic stop after identifying a white van matching the description of the suspect vehicle, and a driver who physically resembled the target of their pre-planned arrest operation. The encounter ended with an agent opening fire, killing Salgado, who was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.

    In the days following the shooting, DHS has walked back its initial narrative. The agency’s first statement on Tuesday claimed Salgado had attempted to evade arrest and rammed an ICE vehicle, justifying the agent’s use of deadly force on the grounds of self-defense. Two days later, officials acknowledged the fatal stop was a case of mistaken identity. Further controversy has emerged over the fact that none of the participating agents were wearing body cameras, and no photographic or video evidence of the encounter has been released to the public. A DHS spokesperson told CBS News, the BBC’s U.S. partner, that currently only half of the agency’s field officers are equipped with body cameras, and the remaining personnel are not expected to receive the devices for another 60 days.

    Salgado’s family has pushed back against the official narrative, saying the 52-year-old had worked as a builder in the Houston area for 30 years after entering the U.S. as an undocumented migrant. They added he had no criminal record, was on the verge of securing a legal work permit, and posed no threat to the agents involved in the stop.

    News of the mistaken identity killing drew hundreds of protestors to Houston streets on Wednesday, demanding accountability for Salgado’s death. Four Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives have formally called for a full independent investigation into the shooting. In a joint letter addressed to DHS leadership, Representatives Sylvia Garcia, Al Green, Lizzie Fletcher and Christian Menefee noted that this killing is far from an isolated incident, writing that “this is not the first time ICE agents have used unnecessary, deadly force.” The lawmakers reminded DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin of two earlier fatal incidents: the January shooting deaths of U.S. citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti at the hands of federal agents in Minneapolis. They criticized DHS and ICE’s repeated pattern of justifying fatal shootings with claims of self-defense after encounters where suspects allegedly attempt to evade arrest, calling for full transparency and accountability rather than the same unsubstantiated excuses that have followed previous deadly encounters.

    The killing has also drawn a formal response from the Mexican government, which announced it would file criminal complaints in the U.S. over the deaths of 17 Mexican citizens connected to ICE custody and operations. Mexican Foreign Minister Roberto Velasco said 14 Mexican nationals have died while held in ICE custody, and an additional three have been killed during ICE arrest operations. Velasco confirmed he received direct instructions from Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum to file the complaints, with the goal of forcing U.S. authorities to open full criminal investigations into each of these deaths.

    The BBC has reached out to DHS for additional comment on the incident and the demands for an independent probe, but has not yet received a response.