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  • How Xi Jinping is rewriting the rules of global power

    How Xi Jinping is rewriting the rules of global power

    An ancient Chinese proverb holds that a master hunter does not waste energy chasing prey — instead, they position themselves where the rabbit is destined to run. For critics and supporters alike, one fact stands out about Xi Jinping’s long-term statecraft: he has moved with extraordinary, deliberate patience. Now, over a single historic stretch of weeks, that patience appears to be paying off, as both Russian President Vladimir Putin and former U.S. President Donald Trump traveled to Beijing for high-level summits in quick succession.

    Far from a random confluence of diplomatic schedules, the dual visits are the product of decades of intentional geopolitical architecture. The fact that both Washington and Moscow — two powers that formally occupy opposing poles of the existing global order — have been drawn to Beijing in parallel carries a clear, unignorable message: the center of geopolitical gravity has shifted. China is no longer a passive actor responding to rules set by others; it is now actively, quietly reshaping the global system on its own terms.

    Putin’s Visit: A Partnership Framed By Growing Asymmetry
    Putin’s trip to Beijing carried a clear, unspoken subtext: what was framed as a meeting of equal partners was in reality a visit from a power increasingly dependent on Chinese goodwill. Since the outbreak of the full-scale war in Ukraine, Russia has faced sweeping Western sanctions, and has pivoted its entire economic infrastructure eastward, redirecting the bulk of its energy and raw material exports to Chinese markets. These sales are made at steeply discounted rates, negotiated from a position of weakness: Russia has few alternative buyers for its vast energy resources, a reality Beijing has leveraged to its full advantage.

    Take the long-stalled Second Power of Siberia natural gas pipeline as a case in point. Moscow has pushed aggressively to finalize the project for years, while Beijing has faced no pressure to rush the deal. This dynamic mirrors a broader historical pattern: great powers that allow themselves to become economically dependent on a single major partner gradually, then suddenly, lose their strategic independence. Just as Habsburg Spain, awash in New World silver but reliant on Genoese bankers for financing, saw its foreign policy constrained by financial obligation, modern Russia retains its military standing and nuclear deterrence, but its room for independent geopolitical maneuver has shrunk steadily into a corridor defined by Beijing’s priorities.

    This shift has ripple effects across South Asia, where India has long maintained a close relationship with Moscow as a counterbalance to Chinese and Western pressure. Today, every Russian arms deal, energy contract, and diplomatic signal carries an implicit Chinese veto, a reality New Delhi has noted with quiet but growing discomfort.

    Trump’s Summit: Exposing American Diplomatic Uncertainty
    If Putin’s visit laid bare Russia’s growing structural weakness, Trump’s trip to Beijing revealed a more striking shift: America’s growing diplomatic disorientation. Trump arrived in Beijing accompanied by a cohort of top U.S. corporate CEOs, a choice that read to global observers as a solicitation for Chinese investment and access, a far cry from the image of unrivaled American power that Washington has projected for decades.

    Xi received Trump with the calm authority of a leader who already holds the upper hand in setting the terms of engagement. When he invoked the Thucydides Trap — the theory that a rising power and an established hegemon are fated to clash — he framed it not as a warning to avoid, but as an almost settled verdict. China’s posture made clear it has already completed its rise; the open question is whether the U.S. will accept the new global order or exhaust itself trying to reverse it.

    The most striking outcome of the summit was what did not happen: there was no joint statement from the two sides. This absence speaks far louder than any negotiated communiqué could. When two leading global powers meet at the highest level and cannot agree on a shared public statement, it confirms that the gap between their core worldviews is too wide to paper over with diplomatic language. The two sides released separate readouts, and the U.S. version was notably muted, stripped of the triumphal rhetoric Trump typically deploys after meetings he claims as a win. A man who once described a brief phone call with a foreign leader as “incredible and productive” only called this meeting “good” — a telling retreat from his usual boosterism.

    On core issues from trade and Taiwan to technology restrictions and rare earth exports, China has clearly abandoned its past approach of quietly absorbing U.S. pressure. Today, it retaliates systematically, with growing confidence in its ability to impose meaningful costs on Washington. The 2025 Chinese export restrictions on critical rare earth elements, which directly disrupted U.S. defense supply chains, were not the action of a power afraid of confrontation. They were the calculated move of a state that has modeled its leverage and is confident in its position.

    The Push for a G-2 Global Order
    Xi’s most consequential move during the Trump summit was not a trade concession or a diplomatic compromise — it was a conceptual shift. By framing the bilateral relationship as a “constructive, stable strategic relationship,” and emphasizing that China and the U.S. share joint responsibility for global peace, Xi advanced a framework Washington has long resisted: the formal recognition of a G-2 world order.

    Beyond the headline disputes over tariffs and technology, this is China’s core demand. It is not chasing symbolic equality on paper; Beijing has long moved past that need. Instead, it wants structural recognition that the international system cannot function without Chinese consent, that no global crisis — from the Middle East to Ukraine to the Taiwan Strait — can be resolved without Beijing’s active or implicit cooperation.

    The unresolved standoff over Iran underscores this reality. Washington’s failure to decisively end the conflict over the Strait of Hormuz, through neither military pressure nor diplomatic leverage, served as visible evidence to Beijing that American power now overstretches its grasp. Xi did not need to point this out; the global status quo said it for him.

    The Quiet Construction of a New Geopolitical Center
    The deeper significance of these two back-to-back visits has little to do with Putin or Trump themselves. It is proof of the decades-long, patient project China has pursued to make itself indispensable to every corner of the global system: to energy markets, global supply chains, diplomatic crisis resolution, and the infrastructure ambitions of the Global South.

    China did not stumble into its central position in global affairs; it engineered it, through initiatives from the Belt and Road to its deliberate buildup of rare earth market dominance, to the construction of a trade network centered on its own economy. This kind of multi-decade strategic thinking is structurally difficult for Western democracies, bound by short electoral cycles and shifting public attention, to match.

    As former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger once observed, great powers rarely announce their dominance openly. Instead, they simply begin making decisions that other powers find themselves bound by. Beijing is increasingly in that position today. When both your primary geopolitical rival and your most prominent Eurasian partner travel to your capital within weeks, each seeking your support for their most urgent challenges, the question of who holds the structural advantage answers itself. Xi Jinping did not need a joint communiqué to declare victory; the visits themselves were the announcement.

    The world is not becoming Chinese in culture or ideology. But it is becoming a system where Beijing’s preferences carry a weight that cannot be erased by sanctions, tariffs, or rhetorical pushback. That is the new geopolitical reality that both Washington and Moscow are now forced to reckon with, whether they are willing to admit it publicly or not.

  • UK minister praises Israel’s ‘commitment to robust democratic governance’ after flotilla row

    UK minister praises Israel’s ‘commitment to robust democratic governance’ after flotilla row

    The fragile diplomatic balance between the United Kingdom and Israel has been thrown into sharp relief this week, as senior UK officials publicly praised the longstanding bilateral relationship at an event marking Israel’s 76th independence anniversary, just days after viral footage of a far-right Israeli minister’s confrontation with Gaza-bound peace activists triggered a formal diplomatic summons and shocking allegations of detainee abuse.

    On Wednesday, UK Security Minister Dan Jarvis delivered a pre-recorded video address to the London-based independence celebration, emphasizing the deep, historically rooted partnership between the two nations. Jarvis, a member of the newly elected Labour government, noted that the Labour Party has long stood as a formal backer of the Israeli state, highlighting shared values he said underpin the bilateral relationship. “Together we share a commitment to robust democratic governance, rule of law, and judicial independence … and an unwavering dedication to defending our open societies against security threats,” Jarvis said, according to reporting from Jewish News.

    Also in attendance at the event was Jon Pearce, a Labour lawmaker and parliamentary private secretary to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, and former chair of the pro-Israel lobbying group Labour Friends of Israel. Other high-profile British attendees included former Conservative Prime Minister Liz Truss, Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis, and senior leadership from the Board of Deputies of British Jews.

    The celebration went ahead just hours after graphic footage of Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir taunting activists from the Global Sumud Flotilla spread rapidly across social media platforms. The civilian-led flotilla had been attempting to break Israel’s long-running blockade of the Gaza Strip to deliver humanitarian aid when Israeli forces intercepted the vessels and detained all 430 activists on board.

    The following day, the UK Foreign Office formally summoned Daniela Grudsky Ekstein, Israel’s acting top diplomat in London—Israel has not had a permanent ambassador in the UK since Tzipi Hotovely completed her term last September—to protest Ben Gvir’s conduct. In a formal statement following the meeting, the Foreign Office condemned the confrontation. “This behaviour violates the most basic standards of respect and dignity for people,” the statement read. “We are also deeply concerned by the detention conditions depicted and have demanded an explanation from the Israeli authorities. We made clear their obligations to protect the rights of all those involved.”

    In remarks to event attendees earlier Wednesday, Grudsky Ekstein echoed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s public rebuke of Ben Gvir’s actions, distancing the Israeli government from the incident. “The unacceptable, harmful conduct of one of our ministers is not representative of our government’s policy. It is not the face of Israel,” she said. She also framed rising global antisemitism, a growing concern for Jewish communities worldwide, as a moral rather than purely political crisis requiring coordinated action.

    Following their detention, all 430 activists were deported by Israeli authorities to Istanbul, Turkey, on Thursday evening. Multiple activists have since come forward with detailed, graphic allegations of systematic abuse in Israeli custody, including claims of rubber bullet fire, physical beatings, and sexual assault. Miriam Azem, a legal representative with the Israeli human rights group Adalah, documented one account of a detainee being “forced to strip naked and run while guards were laughing.” Australian activist Juliet Lamont also gave a harrowing account of her treatment, saying she was “tied with cables, water-tortured and sexually assaulted,” adding that other detainees “had broken ribs, were tased in the face, and injected with unknown sedatives.”

    The post of Israeli ambassador to the UK has remained vacant for months amid a domestic political scandal in Israel surrounding the nominee, Tzachi Braverman, Netanyahu’s former chief of staff. Braverman has been accused of obstructing an official investigation into leaks of classified information related to Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, charges he and the prime minister’s office have repeatedly denied. In February, Israel’s civil service disciplinary board recommended a six-month suspension for Braverman, and opposition leader Yair Lapid has publicly called on Netanyahu to withdraw the ambassadorial nomination entirely.

    This week’s diplomatic friction is the latest in a growing string of strains on UK-Israel relations, which remain complicated by competing political priorities and international legal obligations. Netanyahu has not visited the UK since the 2023 outbreak of the Gaza war, and a visit is unlikely in the near future: the International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity related to the military campaign.

    Last June, the UK imposed formal economic sanctions on Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich over their repeated public incitement to violence against Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank and Gaza. In October 2023, Israeli Diaspora Minister Amichai Chikli sparked a diplomatic row when he made a derogatory comment referring to Starmer as “Palestinian” after the UK prime minister criticized Chikli’s decision to invite far-right British extremist and convicted criminal Tommy Robinson to visit Israel.

    Despite these public tensions, the UK has maintained extensive military and political cooperation with Israel throughout its 19-month campaign in Gaza. Declassified UK and independent investigative outlets have confirmed that Royal Air Force aircraft have carried out hundreds of surveillance flights over Gaza since the war began, a mission the UK Ministry of Defence has repeatedly claimed is solely focused on supporting efforts to rescue Israeli hostages held by Hamas. Critics have questioned this framing, however, noting that the program has been kept entirely secret from public scrutiny, and that UK intelligence has been shared with Israel on days when Israeli airstrikes killed British citizens in Gaza.

    The backbone of bilateral defense cooperation is a 2020 bilateral military agreement between the two states, which was designed to formalize and expand defense partnership and joint activities. The full text of the agreement has never been released to the public; in 2024, Labour junior defense minister Luke Pollard confirmed that the accord remains classified and cannot be released under freedom of information rules, with the Ministry of Defence confirming last October that the agreement is still in force.

  • ‘The mosque always felt like a safe space’: San Diego’s Muslims reel after deadly shooting

    ‘The mosque always felt like a safe space’: San Diego’s Muslims reel after deadly shooting

    A brutal mass shooting at the Islamic Center of San Diego, the largest Muslim place of worship in San Diego County, has claimed three lives and left the region’s Muslim community in profound grief, simmering anger, and shattered sense of safety. The attack, which investigators have classified as a bias-fueled hate crime, has sparked widespread criticism of local leaders who community members say ignored years of repeated warnings about surging Islamophobia across the United States.

    The violence unfolded shortly before midday prayers on a Monday, when two armed gunmen opened fire outside the mosque grounds. Killed in the attack were 51-year-old Amin Abdullah, 57-year-old Nadir Awad, and 78-year-old Mansour Kaziha, who was known to the community by the affectionate nickname Abu Ezz. The 140 children who attend the on-site mosque school were protected from further harm thanks to rapid action: Abdullah, who served as a security volunteer at the center, triggered an emergency lockdown that prevented the gunmen from accessing the full building. Community members have since honored the three victims as heroes, who all rushed toward danger to shield fellow worshippers and young people inside.

    Osama Shabaik, a San Diego attorney and long-time regular attendee of the mosque, described the disbelieving shock that gripped him when he learned of the deaths. “We’ve had so many times where someone has driven by the masjid fired a BB gun – throwing something at the masjid, just a lot of incidents like that,” he explained to reporters. “Then my wife called me, and she’s like ‘did you see the news? Amin is dead’. I kinda just stopped in my tracks.” Shabaik remembered each victim warmly: Abdullah always greeted everyone with a wide smile, Kaziha served as a beloved mentor and unofficial caretaker for the mosque for decades, and Awad selflessly ran toward the gunfire after hearing shots from his nearby home, an act that saved multiple lives.

    Two days after the attack, more than 2,000 people from across California and the United States gathered at the mosque for funeral prayers to honor the three men who gave their lives to protect their community.

    Investigators from local police and the FBI have confirmed the attackers were radicalized by extremist ideology. Evidence collected after the shooting shows the pair were influenced by neo-Nazi propaganda and drew inspiration from previous anti-Muslim massacres, including the 2019 Christchurch mosque attack that killed 51 worshippers in New Zealand.

    Community leaders say this deadly attack is the tragic culmination of a sharp national rise in anti-Muslim and anti-Arab hate incidents that began with the start of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza. The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights organization, has documented at least 8,658 reported cases of Islamophobia and anti-Arab discrimination across the U.S. since the start of 2024.

    For years, and particularly over the last three years of escalating anti-Palestinian hostility, Muslim organizers in San Diego have repeatedly reached out to local elected officials, university administrators, and law enforcement to flag the growing risk of violence. But those warnings, community members say, were largely dismissed.

    Much of the community’s anger is directed at San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria, a vocal supporter of Israel who has publicly condemned pro-Palestinian protests and aligned closely with anti-Muslim Zionist groups. When Gloria visited the mosque shortly after the shooting to announce increased police patrols, he was met with furious pushback from local residents. When the mayor bailed on a scheduled meeting with Muslim community leaders immediately after the October 7 attacks last year, residents say that neglect proved deadly.

    “Right after October 7, he bailed on our meeting last minute… and then had the audacity to show up on the day of the shooting,” said Samar Ismail, a graduate student at the University of California San Diego and community organizer. Shabaik echoed that criticism, saying: “Mayor Gloria is not someone that I would welcome into our Muslim spaces. He is someone who turned his back on the Muslim community years ago, and he turned his back on the issues that affect us.”

    Beyond elected officials, community members are also questioning whether law enforcement missed clear warning signs that could have prevented the attack. Police have confirmed that one of the suspects’ mothers contacted authorities hours before the shooting to warn that her son was suicidal and had access to firearms. Shabaik also confirmed that community members were aware of threatening public posts made by one of the gunmen, Cain Clark, on the social platform Discord more than a month before the attack, where he shared photos of the same firearm and bulletproof vest he used in the shooting. Shabaik added that a member of the public had already alerted the FBI to Clark’s activity ahead of the attack, though federal authorities have not confirmed whether they acted on that tip.

    For San Diego’s Muslim community, the attack has destroyed the safe haven the mosque represented for generations. For long-time attendees who grew up facing anti-Muslim bigotry in the U.S., the center had long been a space to escape that hostility. “We always grew up knowing that there’s a target on our back, the mosque always felt like a safe space from that,” Shabaik said. Ismail, who described the Islamic Center as her “second home,” added that the “illusion of safety has been shattered. Fear has now exacerbated within the community.”

  • Sadiq Khan cancels Met police Palantir contract, with pressure to end all links to AI firm

    Sadiq Khan cancels Met police Palantir contract, with pressure to end all links to AI firm

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan has scrapped a planned £50 million AI intelligence partnership between the Metropolitan Police and U.S. tech firm Palantir Technologies, a move that has drawn cautious praise from pro-Palestine advocacy groups and British Green Party politicians who warn that unchallenged smaller existing contracts between the force and the controversial company still stand.

    Khan’s official rejection of what would have been Palantir’s largest ever UK law enforcement contract came on Thursday, with the mayor citing a clear, serious violation of UK public sector procurement protocols as the core justification for the decision. Under existing London governance rules, any Metropolitan Police spending exceeding £500,000 requires formal sign-off from the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime (Mopac), the independent oversight body tasked with ensuring legislative compliance and transparent public spending.

    According to Khan’s announcement during Mayor’s Question Time, Mopac identified multiple critical red flags during its review of the proposed deal. The Metropolitan Police failed to submit its full procurement strategy for pre-approval from the Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime, as required under Mopac’s formal delegation rules. Instead, the force advanced procurement negotiations all the way to the final contract award stage before requesting oversight approval. Beyond procedural violations, Khan’s office added that the agreement failed to demonstrate guaranteed value for taxpayer money and would have left the force locked into a long-term proprietary technological dependence on Palantir.

    The proposed £50m deal was intended to deploy Palantir’s artificial intelligence tools to automate criminal investigation intelligence analysis, but the company has long faced widespread condemnation for its deep ties to the Israeli government and military. In January 2024, after Israel launched its large-scale military campaign in Gaza, Palantir signed a formal contract with Israel’s Ministry of Defense to provide technology for “war-related missions”. Company CEO Alex Karp has openly acknowledged strong demand for Palantir’s services following the October 7, 2023 attacks by Hamas, and the firm’s board held a high-profile meeting in Tel Aviv explicitly framed as an act of solidarity with Israel. Human rights advocates directly link Palantir’s surveillance and AI tools to Israeli military operations in Gaza that have been labeled as genocide by multiple advocacy groups and global political bodies.

    Even before the proposed £50m deal, the Metropolitan Police had already secured a series of smaller, lower-value contracts with Palantir that fall just under the £500,000 threshold that triggers mandatory Mopac oversight, a structure that critics say was intentionally designed to avoid public scrutiny. The force launched an initial pilot program with a £10,000 contract, later extending the arrangement for three months at a cost of just under £490,000, bringing the total value to just under the oversight threshold. Under the pilot, Palantir’s AI is already being used to analyze data stored on Met officers’ personal devices, a policy that has drawn fierce criticism from the Metropolitan Police Federation, the union representing Met officers. In late April, the federation warned officers to be “extremely cautious” about carrying their work-issued devices while off duty, arguing that the AI monitoring has severely eroded officer trust in force leadership and sent already plummeting morale even lower.

    During a Wednesday meeting of the London Assembly’s Police and Crime Committee, Metropolitan Police Deputy Commissioner Matt Jukes defended the force’s choice to partner with Palantir for the pilot, noting that the firm is already an approved supplier on the UK government’s G-Cloud 14 procurement framework and is widely used across multiple British government departments. Jukes acknowledged that Palantir is a “divisive supplier” from a reputational standpoint, but emphasized that the company’s existing use across 72 NHS trusts and its status on national government frameworks made it a qualified choice for the Met. When asked whether Palantir had offered the pilot at a discounted rate to intentionally avoid crossing the oversight threshold, Jukes said the full cost of the pilot had been clearly documented.

    Reaction to Khan’s decision to block the £50m deal has been mixed, with human rights and pro-Palestine groups welcoming the move while pushing for further action to cancel all existing Met contracts with Palantir. Amnesty International UK campaigns manager Kristyan Benedict called the cancellation “positive news”, noting that Palantir tools are currently deployed by the Israeli military during its military campaign in Gaza. The Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC), which has led widespread advocacy against the deal, credited its grassroots campaigning for pushing Khan to reject the contract, arguing that “Palantir supplies Israel with AI and surveillance technology used in its genocide in Gaza. It should not receive a penny of public money.” The group is now calling on Khan to go a step further and cancel the existing nearly £500,000 pilot contract, and is demanding the UK government scrap all national public sector contracts with Palantir, including a £330m deal with NHS England to build and maintain a national patient data platform that has been opposed by health workers, patients and human rights organizers across the country.

    Green Party London Assembly member Benali Hamdache, who first raised public questions about the Palantir partnership, also welcomed the cancellation of the large contract, but echoed calls to end existing agreements. “It’s good that this £50 million contract was blocked, but the Met still has contracts with Palantir worth nearly £500,000 that haven’t been challenged,” Hamdache said in a statement to Middle East Eye. He added that the current procurement rules, which allow deals under £500,000 to bypass mayoral oversight, create dangerous loopholes that could allow similar controversial agreements to move forward in the future. Hamdache also pointed to additional red flags around Palantir, including the company’s work with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for immigration enforcement operations, and a recent public manifesto adapted from Karp’s writings that openly espouses far-right ideological positions and defends high-profile far-right figures including Elon Musk.

    Palantir already holds nearly $1 billion in total contracts across multiple UK government bodies, including the Ministry of Defence, NHS, and multiple regional police forces. Founded by high-profile Donald Trump supporter Peter Thiel, the firm has faced growing grassroots resistance across the UK over its human rights record and geopolitical ties. Critics argue that the current case exposes deep flaws in UK public procurement rules that allow controversial contractors to split large projects into smaller agreements to avoid oversight and public accountability.

  • US intelligence chief Tulsi Gabbard resigns

    US intelligence chief Tulsi Gabbard resigns

    In a sudden announcement that has shaken the upper ranks of the Trump administration, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard confirmed Friday she will step down from her post, effective June 30, to stand beside her husband as he fights a newly diagnosed rare form of bone cancer. The departure also closes out a turbulent tenure defined by longstanding ideological clashes with the president over his push for war with Iran, a rift that left the nation’s top intelligence coordinator increasingly sidelined from key national security decisions in recent months.

    In a public letter to Trump posted to the social platform X, the 45-year-old laid out the deeply personal reason for her exit, writing, “My husband, Abraham, has recently been diagnosed with an extremely rare form of bone cancer. He faces major challenges in the coming weeks and months. At this time, I must step away from public service to be by his side and fully support him through this battle.” Gabbard’s role centered on coordinating global intelligence data and presenting consolidated national security assessments to the president.

    President Trump responded to the announcement with praise for Gabbard, one of the only remaining women in his cabinet, via his Truth Social platform. “Tulsi has done an incredible job, and we will miss her,” he wrote, noting that her desire to support her husband through cancer treatment was rightful. He also confirmed that Gabbard’s deputy, Aaron Lukas, will step into the role as acting Director of National Intelligence following her departure.

    Gabbard’s appointment to lead the sprawling U.S. intelligence apparatus was controversial from the start. A former Democrat and Iraq War veteran who served in the Army National Guard, her deployment experience shaped a long career of opposition to U.S. foreign military interventions, a stance that put her at odds with administration policy long before the current conflict with Iran. Most notably, she repeatedly voiced public opposition to launching a war against Iran, and grew increasingly isolated from Trump’s inner circle as he moved forward with strikes.

    Multiple reports indicate Gabbard was excluded from high-level strategy meetings in the immediate lead-up to the joint U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran launched February 28. After the war began, she repeatedly declined to back key administration justifications for the attack. She refused to endorse Trump’s claim that Iran posed an imminent military threat, the core assessment the administration used to justify the strikes. When testifying before Congress, she emphasized that the final call for military action rested solely with the president. Gabbard also contradicted another key administration justification, confirming U.S. intelligence had concluded Iran was not rebuilding the nuclear enrichment facilities destroyed in joint U.S.-Israeli strikes the previous year.

    Beyond her disagreements over Iran policy, Gabbard has long faced criticism from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle over past controversial positions. Her 2017 meeting with deposed Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad drew widespread scrutiny, and she has been accused of spreading Kremlin-aligned propaganda, including false conspiracy theories regarding the war in Ukraine. She also faced cross-partisan suspicion for her support of NSA leaker Edward Snowden, whose disclosures of secret U.S. surveillance programs were widely viewed as compromising American national security.

    Beyond her public service, Gabbard, a Hawaii native, was raised in the Hindu tradition by her mother, who converted to the faith; her first name, Tulsi, references a plant considered sacred in Hinduism, and she has been a vegetarian her entire life. She married Abraham, a Hawaii-based cinematographer, after the pair met while filming her campaign advertisements, and he proposed to her during a sunset surf session.

  • Tulsi Gabbard resigns as US director of national intelligence

    Tulsi Gabbard resigns as US director of national intelligence

    In a sudden announcement that has rippled through U.S. political and intelligence circles, former U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has confirmed she will resign her post in the second Trump administration, citing an urgent personal crisis: her husband Abraham has recently been diagnosed with bone cancer.

    The resignation, which will take full effect on June 30, was revealed through a resignation letter obtained by CBS News, a U.S. partner of the BBC. In the heartfelt correspondence, Gabbard emphasized the foundational role her husband has played in her public life. “His strength and love have sustained me through every challenge,” she wrote, adding that she could not in good conscience leave him to navigate his cancer treatment alone while fulfilling the relentless, time-intensive demands of leading the U.S. intelligence community. “I cannot ask him to face this fight alone while I continue in this demanding and time-consuming position,” Gabbard stated.

    Following the official confirmation of the resignation, former President Donald Trump took to social media to publicly praise Gabbard’s service. The departing intelligence chief “has done an incredible job, and we will miss her,” Trump wrote, noting that Gabbard’s choice to prioritize her family’s health is both understandable and honorable. “She rightfully, wants to be with him, bringing him back to good health as they currently fight a tough battle together. I have no doubt he will soon be better than ever,” Trump added. To ensure a smooth transition, Trump announced that Aaron Lukas, the current principal deputy director of national intelligence, will assume the role of acting director once Gabbard departs at the end of June.

    Gabbard’s tenure at the helm of U.S. intelligence was relatively short but marked by its place in a shifting U.S. foreign policy landscape. A steadfast supporter of Trump during his successful 2024 presidential comeback campaign, Gabbard was confirmed to the top intelligence post just weeks after Trump reclaimed the White House in 2025. As Director of National Intelligence, her core responsibilities included coordinating operations across 18 separate U.S. intelligence agencies and serving as the president’s primary advisor on all national security and intelligence matters, making her one of the most powerful figures in the U.S. national security apparatus.

    Notably, Gabbard has remained largely out of the public eye in recent months, even as the Trump administration oversaw a series of high-stakes foreign policy actions: expanded military operations against Iran, increased diplomatic and economic pressure on Cuba, and the controversial removal of Venezuela’s sitting president. Her sudden departure from the role adds a new layer of uncertainty to the administration’s intelligence leadership as it continues to advance its aggressive global policy agenda.

  • Ebola risk now at highest level in DR Congo, says WHO

    Ebola risk now at highest level in DR Congo, says WHO

    On Friday, the World Health Organization announced it has upgraded the Ebola outbreak risk assessment in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to the highest possible level — very high — as confirmed cases and deaths from the rare virus strain continue to climb faster than response teams can contain.

    Current official figures from the WHO place the count of confirmed Ebola cases at 82, with seven confirmed fatalities. When including suspected cases, those numbers jump to nearly 750 potential infections and 172 suspected deaths. WHO leaders emphasize that the true size of the epidemic is already far larger than the confirmed case count, as the virus circulated undetected for weeks before being identified.

    The outbreak is caused by the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, an uncommon variant that has no specifically approved vaccines or antiviral treatments currently available to combat it. This critical gap in medical countermeasures has forced the global health body to fast-track testing of existing experimental treatments to assess their effectiveness against the strain.

    Speaking to reporters at WHO headquarters in Geneva, director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus described the situation as deeply worrisome and uniquely challenging. Response teams are working in highly insecure regions of the country, scrambling to track the virus’s spread, trace close contacts of infected people, and establish full outbreak control measures. “We know the epidemic in DRC is much larger than the confirmed cases,” Tedros said.

    The outbreak is centered in the northeastern DRC’s Ituri province, where more than 1,400 contacts are currently being monitored by health teams. Anne Ancia, WHO’s representative in the DRC, reported from the field that the virus spread silently and rampantly across the region for several weeks before detection, leaving response teams in a sprint to catch up. As of now, Ancia confirmed, “the spread is not yet under control.”

    Without targeted vaccines or treatments, public health officials rely on the core Ebola control strategy of contact tracing and 21-day isolation to break chains of transmission. While rising case counts have raised alarm, WHO officials note the current increase is actually a positive sign that improved surveillance systems are working to uncover the true scale of the outbreak, rather than evidence of a sudden acceleration in new spread.

    Neighboring Uganda has so far avoided sustained community spread, with the WHO reporting a stable situation: just two confirmed cases in travelers who crossed from the DRC, and one death. Intense contact tracing efforts are credited with halting further spread in the country.

    Internationally, two U.S. citizens with links to the outbreak have been evacuated for care: one who tested positive was moved to Germany for treatment, while a second high-risk contact was transferred to the Czech Republic. The global risk level for the outbreak remains low, with regional risk assessed as high, per the WHO’s updated classification.

    Abdi Rahman Mahamud, the WHO’s director of emergency alert and response, explained the upgrade to very high risk for the DRC stemmed from three key factors: the severe threat to human health, the high potential for rapid spread, and the limited current response capacity on the ground. “The potential of this virus spreading rapidly is very high, and that changed the whole dynamic,” Mahamud noted.

    To address the gap in treatments, the WHO has fast-tracked plans for clinical trials of existing experimental drugs. The agency’s technical advisory group has prioritized two monoclonal antibodies — Regeneron’s 3479 and Mapp Biopharmaceutical’s MBP134 — for testing. It has also recommended evaluating the oral antiviral obeldesivir as a post-exposure preventive treatment for high-risk contacts. WHO chief scientist Sylvie Briand said the drug shows promise for preventing infected contacts from developing symptomatic disease.

    For vaccines, the existing widely approved Ervebo vaccine only targets the Zaire strain of Ebola, with very little evidence that it provides cross-protection against Bundibugyo. While work on a Bundibugyo-specific vaccine has begun, no doses are currently available for clinical trials, and development would likely take six to nine months even if the project is prioritized. Another candidate vaccine targeting the strain, built using the ChAdOx platform, is currently in production but has not yet completed animal testing required to move forward with human trials.

  • Newly declassified video shows fighter jet shoot down UFO

    Newly declassified video shows fighter jet shoot down UFO

    In a recent disclosure that has reignited public fascination with unexplained aerial phenomena, the U.S. government has released newly declassified footage showing a military fighter jet shooting down an unidentified flying object (UFO). The long-speculated event, once shrouded in classification barriers, has finally come into public view, but leading researchers and defense experts are already pushing back against widespread assumptions that the object came from beyond Earth.

    For decades, reports of military encounters with UFOs have circulated in fringe communities and mainstream media alike, fueled by classified government programs that explored unexplained aerial sightings across the country. This latest release marks one of the few times the federal government has publicly confirmed a hostile intercept of an unidentified object, with clear video footage capturing the sequence of the shootdown. Despite the sensational nature of the disclosure, experts who have analyzed the declassified video emphasize that the visual evidence provides no concrete confirmation that the downed craft relied on alien technology, nor does it offer any proof that extraterrestrial life was involved in the object’s origin.

    Many defense analysts have put forward alternative, more grounded explanations for the incident. Most common among these is the theory that the UFO was actually an unauthorized civilian drone, a high-altitude research balloon, or a piece of uncrewed surveillance technology developed by another nation-state. Officials have not yet confirmed any of these alternative theories, and the object’s origin remains officially unconfirmed following the video’s release.

    The declassification comes as the U.S. government has gradually increased transparency around UFO-related incidents in recent years, shifting away from the decades-long policy of dismissing or covering up unexplained sightings. A congressional mandated task force on unidentified aerial phenomena has published multiple reports in recent years, noting that the vast majority of unexplained sightings can be linked to natural atmospheric phenomena or human-made technology. This latest disclosure is expected to renew public and congressional interest in further declassification of government documents related to UFO encounters, as researchers continue to work through the backlog of classified material related to unexplained incidents.

  • Right-wing Slovenian politician confirmed as prime minister in shift from liberal government

    Right-wing Slovenian politician confirmed as prime minister in shift from liberal government

    After two months of political gridlock following a tightly contested parliamentary election, Slovenia’s national assembly has appointed veteran right-wing populist leader Janez Jansa to the post of prime minister, marking a sharp ideological shift for the small Alpine European Union member state previously led by a liberal administration.

    The 90-member legislative body cast 51 votes in favor of Jansa’s appointment, with 36 lawmakers voting against the nomination. The new prime minister-designate now has a 15-day window to put forward his proposed cabinet lineup, which will require a second confirmatory vote in parliament before the government can officially take office.

    The political stalemate that followed April’s election followed an almost evenly split result. Former liberal prime minister Robert Golob’s Freedom Movement secured a razor-thin plurality in the vote, but failed to cobble together a workable parliamentary majority to form a new government. This week, Jansa’s Slovenian Democratic Party broke the impasse by signing a formal coalition agreement with multiple aligned right-wing factions. The incoming government also secures outside support from the non-establishment Truth party, a group that originated as an anti-vaccination movement during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Friday’s appointment marks the fourth term as prime minister for the 67-year-old veteran politician, who is known for his open admiration of former U.S. President Donald Trump and long-standing close political alliance with Hungary’s populist former prime minister Viktor Orbán — who suffered a landslide election defeat just one month prior.

    In his post-appointment address to parliament, Jansa outlined his administration’s core priorities: revitalizing the national economy, cracking down on systemic corruption and bureaucratic red tape, and decentralizing state power to regional and local authorities. He has pledged to cut taxes for high-income earners and expand state support for private education and private healthcare providers. Jansa sharply criticized the outgoing liberal government for what he called widespread inefficiency, promising his leadership would transform Slovenia into “a country of opportunity, prosperity and justice, where each responsible citizen will feel safe and accepted.”

    Like his political ally Orbán, Jansa adopted a hardline anti-immigration stance during the 2015 European migrant crisis, and during his 2020-2022 previous term as prime minister, he faced repeated accusations of undermining independent democratic institutions and restricting press freedom. Those allegations sparked large-scale public protests across Slovenia at the time, and triggered formal oversight scrutiny from EU institutional bodies.

    Outgoing prime minister Golob used his address to parliament to issue a stark warning about Jansa’s leadership, framing the right-wing leader as “the greatest threat to Slovenia’s sovereignty and democracy.” Golob also claimed Jansa had previously threatened to have him arrested, arguing that Jansa’s vision of democracy “is that anyone who dares speak a word against you deserves only the worst.”

    Beyond domestic policy, Jansa is a vocal supporter of Israel, and has been a prominent critic of the outgoing Golob administration’s 2024 decision to formally recognize a Palestinian state. The April parliamentary election that set this political process in motion was marred by widespread allegations of foreign interference and campaign corruption, leaving the nation of roughly 2 million people deeply ideologically divided between liberal and conservative political blocs.

  • Deported flotilla activists allege ‘sadistic’ sexual abuse and torture in Israeli captivity

    Deported flotilla activists allege ‘sadistic’ sexual abuse and torture in Israeli captivity

    After Israel’s unauthorized raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla in international waters, hundreds of detained activists who were finally deported have come forward with harrowing accounts of widespread abuse, torture, and sexual violence during their Israeli captivity, triggering global condemnation and diplomatic backlash against the Israeli government.

    A total of 430 activists participating in the Global Sumud Flotilla, a mission to deliver humanitarian aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip, were taken into Israeli custody when Israeli military forces intercepted and raided their vessels in open international waters. On Thursday evening, all detained activists were expelled from Israel and arrived in Istanbul, with public footage capturing the group stepping off the plane clad in gray prison tracksuits and traditional Palestinian keffiyehs, raising their fists in defiance as waiting family members and supporters welcomed them home.

    Since their release, multiple activists and journalists among the group have shared detailed, consistent accounts of brutal mistreatment starting from the moment of the raid. Italian journalist Alessandro Mantovani, one of the deported detainees, spoke to reporters at Rome’s Fiumicino Airport after being transferred from Israeli custody. He described how he and other detainees were transported to Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport in handcuffs with heavy chains bound around their ankles before being put on a deportation flight to Athens. He confirmed that Israeli soldiers beat the group during the process, kicking and punching detainees while taunting them with the words “Welcome to Israel.”

    Israeli human rights organization Adalah, which is representing the detainees, has corroborated many of these accounts. Miriam Azem, a representative from Adalah, shared that one female activist was forced to strip naked and run while prison guards stood by laughing at her humiliation. One anonymous activist described in a recorded video interview how Israeli soldiers dragged her across the ground while her hands and feet were bound, with tight cuffs cutting off circulation and leaving her hands completely numb. She emphasized that guards acted with open cruelty, laughing throughout the abuse, adding: “They took off my shirt, took pictures. Mistreated us all night long. They were super sadistic.”

    Australian activist Juliet Lamont, one of the high-profile detainees, gave a particularly chilling account of her captivity. She said she was bound with heavy cables, subjected to water torture, and sexually assaulted by Israeli personnel. Lamont also detailed the severe harm inflicted on other detainees, noting that multiple activists suffered broken ribs, some were shot with tasers directly to the face, and many were injected with unlabeled sedative substances with no medical explanation. Online photo shares from the activists show visible bruising, cuts, and other injuries consistent with their allegations of severe beatings.

    Brazilian activist Thiago Avila, who was previously detained by Israel during an earlier aid flotilla mission, shared a video confirming that the abuse extends far beyond this latest operation, alleging that multiple activists were raped by Israeli soldiers during the detention process. Avila stated that numerous cases of sexual violence were documented, occurring both on the prison transport boats and during transfer to the Israeli port of Ashdod.

    Adalah has emphasized that the entire Israeli operation, from the unprovoked raid on civilian aid vessels in international waters to the systemic torture, humiliation, and arbitrary detention of the activists on board, amounts to a blatant violation of longstanding international law. The deportations and release of the activists come after a wave of global outrage sparked by a leaked viral video showing far-right Israeli Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir personally overseeing the abuse and humiliation of detained flotilla participants.

    The leaked footage shows Ben Gvir waving an Israeli flag while confronting bound detainees, who are being manhandled by Israel Prison Service officers and forced to kneel with their faces pressed to the ground. While the video sparked backlash within Israel, most domestic criticism focused not on the abuse itself, but on fears that the public release of the footage would severely damage Israel’s international reputation. The video also drew sharp condemnation from leaders and governments across the globe, particularly from nations whose citizens were among the detained activists.

    Antonio Costa, President of the European Council, stated publicly that he was appalled by the content of the leaked footage. In a coordinated show of diplomatic disapproval, multiple countries including the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, and France have formally summoned Israel’s top diplomatic representative to their capitals to protest the abuse of their citizens.