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  • Danger of the US‑Iran ceasefire agreement is what it leaves out

    Danger of the US‑Iran ceasefire agreement is what it leaves out

    After the most recent round of direct military confrontation between the United States and Iran de-escalated, a curious public spectacle emerged: Washington declared its mission a success, Tehran claimed its own victory, and Israel reaffirmed it retained full autonomy to launch strikes against Lebanese Hezbollah. Competing claims over whether Lebanese de-escalation was a formal part of the agreement have left many outside observers writing off the deal as a confused, bad-faith arrangement already teetering toward collapse. But for scholars of war termination and peace durability who have spent decades studying how conflicts end, these apparent contradictions are not a red flag — they are evidence that negotiations are working as intended. The real threat to long-term peace is not competing narratives, but what the Trump-brokered ceasefire leaves unaddressed.

    Diplomacy is never a single negotiation between two parties. Political scientist Robert Putnam famously framed international statecraft as a “two-level game,” where leaders must simultaneously strike a deal abroad and sell that agreement to domestic political audiences. No international agreement survives unless it can win buy-in at home. The U.S.-Iran deal is far more complex: it functions as a five-level negotiating game. Washington must satisfy not only Iran, but also its closest regional ally Israel, a divided U.S. Congress, skeptical Gulf Arab partners, and wary European allies. For Tehran, the domestic and international constraints are equally daunting: leaders must win approval from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Iran’s most powerful military institution, contain widespread public anger over crippling economic sanctions that could spill over into mass unrest, and maintain the support of its key global backers Russia and China.

    Every concession and gain negotiated at the international table has to be packaged for stakeholders who were never present for the talks. This inherent dynamic is exactly what produces the contradictory public messaging that confuses outside observers. Each side is not speaking to its negotiating rival — it is speaking to its own domestic audience. Washington frames sanctions relief as a temporary, reversible move to appease hardline critics at home, while Tehran emphasizes its uncompromised national sovereignty to rally its public. Israel, meanwhile, underscores its unrestricted right to strike to satisfy its own domestic political base. This is not bad faith; it is standard diplomatic practice, with roots stretching back thousands of years.

    The earliest recorded peace treaty in human history, struck between Egypt and the Hittite Empire after the 13th century BCE Battle of Kadesh, follows this exact pattern. Two distinct versions of the treaty survive, each carved into stone for a domestic audience, with framing that serves each side’s narrative. Peace between the two great powers endured not because they agreed on a single public story, but because each could sell the outcome to their own people. The cost of compromise varies by context: in Washington, it may come in the form of electoral backlash, while in Tehran, hardline factions have a long history of extracting severe political costs from leaders who negotiate with the West, as former President Hassan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif learned after the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action nuclear deal.

    Contradictory public messaging is not the core problem with this latest deal. The real flaw is that the same multilevel negotiating pressures that produce messy public narratives also shape what negotiators are willing to include in the final text. Each side fights hard to secure visible, immediate rewards they can showcase to their domestic audiences, and pushes back hard against binding enforcement penalties that would force them to answer for noncompliance down the line. The result is a deal that is heavy on immediate benefits for all sides, and almost entirely lacking in credible enforcement mechanisms.

    Research on conflict resolution bears out this risk. In research for the 2009 book *Securing the Peace*, it was found that negotiated settlements ending civil wars break down at roughly twice the rate of conflicts that end in clear military victory. While the research focused on internal conflicts, the core lesson applies broadly to all war settlements: agreements fail not because of conflicting public narratives, but because they lack credible enforcement once implementation begins. This weakness is hidden at the time of signing, when all parties are still collecting the immediate benefits the deal promises. It only emerges later, once those rewards are exhausted, and there are no penalties left to deter parties from defecting.

    The 1979 Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty illustrates the alternative path to durable peace. The deal endured not simply because Egypt regained the Sinai Peninsula and Israel earned formal international recognition, but because those gains were embedded in a robust enforcement structure. Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai was phased and tied directly to ongoing compliance, the U.S. committed to long-term economic and military assistance for both nations, and the Multinational Force and Observers was deployed in 1981 to monitor demilitarization. More than four decades later, the treaty remains intact, proving the value of built-in enforcement.

    For the U.S.-Iran deal, this lesson is clear: lasting peace depends not just on what parties gain immediately, but on the institutions and incentives built to enforce compliance long after the signing ceremony ends. Measured by that standard, the current agreement is built on unstable ground. It offers generous immediate rewards: the U.S. lifts economic blockades, issues oil export waivers, releases billions in frozen Iranian assets, and promises over $300 billion in reconstruction support. In exchange, Iran reopens the Strait of Hormuz and agrees to dilute its enriched uranium stockpile on domestic soil, while retaining all the infrastructure to ramp up enrichment again in the future. Almost every step delivers immediate benefit to one side or the other, and almost no step imposes meaningful costs on a party that chooses to walk away from the deal.

    Enforcement is left to a hypothetical United Nations Security Council resolution that has not even been drafted, and the most contentious issue — long-term uranium enrichment limits — has been kicked down the road to a final agreement that may never be negotiated. An even deeper structural flaw is that the most powerful actors capable of derailing the deal are not bound by its terms at all. Israel, Hezbollah, and the broad network of Iranian-backed militias across the Middle East were never signatories to the agreement. They gain little from complying with its terms, and risk nothing if they choose to defect, leaving the deal with no mechanism to impose costs on spoilers that break the peace.

    None of this means the deal is destined for immediate collapse. The history of peacemaking, from the Battle of Kadesh to the Dayton Accords that ended the Bosnian War to the Belfast Agreement that resolved Northern Ireland’s decades-long sectarian conflict, shows that public disputes and threats to walk away are normal growing pains, not proof of imminent failure. But surviving early turbulence is not the same as lasting for the long term. History shows that setbacks are inevitable; the question is whether parties will build robust institutions to deter defection before the immediate rewards are exhausted and the incentives to comply disappear.

    The core task for negotiators moving forward is not what most analysts are focused on: it is not reconciling competing public narratives. It is building automatic, meaningful consequences for any actor that returns to violence — including the powerful regional actors that never took a seat at the negotiating table.

    This analysis is by Monica Duffy Toft, Professor of International Politics and Director of the Center for Strategic Studies at The Fletcher School, Tufts University, republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

  • Israel bans call to prayer at Hebron’s Ibrahimi Mosque for fifth day

    Israel bans call to prayer at Hebron’s Ibrahimi Mosque for fifth day

    For five straight days, Israeli forces have blocked the broadcast of the Muslim call to prayer, known as the adhan, at the Ibrahimi Mosque in the occupied West Bank city of Hebron, marking the latest escalation of Israeli efforts to reduce Palestinian access and control at the contested religious site. The ongoing ban, which began last Sunday, has been paired with punitive entry bans for two senior mosque officials: Sheikh Mutaz Abu Sneineh, the mosque’s director, and Hammam Abu Murkhiya, head of the site’s custodial team, who have been barred from entering the Ibrahimi Mosque for 12 days under Israeli military orders.

    Israeli authorities have framed the restrictions as a side effect of planned infrastructure work, saying the ban is tied to preparations to install a new roof over the mosque’s central courtyard. But Palestinian sources familiar with the situation say the real barrier to the call to prayer is deliberate Israeli access denial: the room from which the adhan is broadcast sits in the portion of the site currently under direct Israeli control, and Israeli soldiers have repeatedly refused to let the mosque’s muezzin enter the space to deliver the five daily calls to prayer. While worship is still permitted to take place inside the mosque, the adhan has been completely silenced since the ban went into effect.

    The Ibrahimi Mosque, revered by Muslims, Jews, and Christians as the burial site of the shared patriarch Abraham, has a long history of contested control in Hebron. The 1994 massacre of 29 Palestinian worshippers by an American-Israeli settler set off a major shift in the site’s administration: after the attack, Israel partitioned the holy compound, allocating nearly 60 percent of the space to Jewish worshippers and leaving the remaining portion for Muslim worshippers. Palestinian stakeholders and local activists say Israel has steadily expanded its control over the entire site in the decades since the partition, implementing a series of incremental policies designed to reduce Palestinian presence and entrench exclusive Jewish control.

    These long-running restrictions have accelerated sharply since the outbreak of the Israel-Gaza war in October 2023. The new wave of measures includes stricter access controls for Palestinian worshippers, the expulsion of imams and other mosque staff, and the gradual transfer of administrative authority away from the Palestinian Authority.

    The Palestinian Authority’s Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs has issued a strong condemnation of the latest restrictions, calling them “escalating repressive and arbitrary measures” targeting the holy site. The ministry said it views the entry bans on Abu Sneineh and Abu Murkhiya “with grave concern,” noting that the orders constitute a direct attack on the mosque’s officially recognized religious leadership and a deliberate attempt to remove the legally and religiously authorized administration from the site. The ministry added that the latest actions are part of a systematic, escalating policy to tighten full Israeli control over the Ibrahimi Mosque.

    Local activists emphasize that the current five-day ban is not an isolated or temporary measure tied to maintenance work, but rather the intensification of a decades-long Israeli policy. Hisham Sharabati, coordinator of the Hebron Defence Committee, explained that adhan bans have been a routine practice at the site since the mid-1990s, with the call to prayer regularly blocked on Saturdays and during Jewish religious holidays. Soldiers also frequently block muezzins from accessing the broadcast room arbitrarily, leading to dozens of missed calls to prayer every month.

    “In a single month, there can be 70 to 90 missed calls to prayer. The ban on the call to prayer has been ongoing. It’s an old policy,” Sharabati told Middle East Eye.

    Sharabati added that restrictions have grown far more severe since Israel’s current far-right government took office in late 2022. Over the years, successive Israeli governments have justified restrictions under different guises: during the COVID-19 pandemic, bans were framed as public health measures, while after the outbreak of the Gaza war, restrictions were justified on security grounds. Even when Israel relaxed gathering limits for other public spaces across the country, those relaxations were never extended to the Ibrahimi Mosque, Sharabati said. Today, Israeli soldiers routinely turn away Palestinian worshippers of all ages and genders at the site’s only Israeli-controlled entrance without explanation, further limiting Palestinian access to the holy site.

    Hebron has been under Israeli military occupation since the 1967 Six-Day War, and the broader Israeli occupation of the West Bank is widely recognized as illegal under international law.

  • Anti-drug day features public awareness effort

    Anti-drug day features public awareness effort

    On Friday, June 26, communities and public institutions across China gathered to observe the 39th International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, with a flagship series of outreach events held by the Jiangbei Compulsory Drug Rehabilitation Center in southwest China’s Chongqing municipality.

    Organized in partnership with three major stakeholders — the Chongqing Drug Rehabilitation Administration, the Chongqing Municipal Committee of the China Association for Promoting Democracy, and the Liangjiang New Area Committee of the China Democratic League — the multi-event program was designed to advance three core goals: boost widespread public understanding of the dangers of drug addiction, highlight the ongoing progress of China’s drug rehabilitation initiatives, and encourage broader community participation in supporting recovering addicts to successfully reintegrate into family life and wider society.

    International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, established by the United Nations in 1987, is observed annually on June 26 to coordinate global action to curb the illegal drug trade and reduce demand for harmful controlled substances. This year’s local events in Chongqing form part of a national ongoing effort to destigmatize addiction treatment, strengthen public prevention education, and improve outcomes for people completing rehabilitation programs. A photo of the day’s activities was provided to China Daily by event organizers.

  • Sanctioned ICC judges sue Trump in US over ‘attack on judicial independence’

    Sanctioned ICC judges sue Trump in US over ‘attack on judicial independence’

    In a historic legal challenge that tests the boundaries of executive power and the rule of law, three sitting International Criminal Court (ICC) judges have secured a court summons for former US President Donald Trump, forcing his administration to defend sweeping sanctions imposed over the tribunal’s investigations into alleged actions by US and Israeli nationals. The summons, issued Thursday by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, gives the administration 60 days to respond to the complaint filed one day prior by the three jurists: Kimberly Prost from Canada, Solomy Balungi Bossa from Uganda, and Reine Alapini-Gansou from Benin. Alongside Trump, the suit names Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (which manages the sanctions list), and OFAC director Bradley Smith as co-defendants. This marks the first time that sitting ICC judges have personally taken legal action to contest their designation under Executive Order 14203, the directive Trump signed into law on February 6, 2025. The order invoked a purported national emergency triggered by the ICC’s probes into US and Israeli citizens to authorize asset freezes and travel bans against foreign officials participating in or supporting those investigations. The three judges are not alone in facing penalties: they are among eight ICC-affiliated individuals sanctioned under the order, which has also targeted ICC prosecutor Karim Khan, his two deputies, the United Nations special rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian territories, and three Palestinian human rights organizations. Each of the three plaintiffs sits on judicial panels overseeing high-stakes investigations: Prost and Bossa work on the Afghanistan probe, while Alapini-Gansou handles the file on alleged crimes in Palestinian territories. James Goldston, executive director of the Open Society Justice Initiative and co-counsel for Prost, has denounced the sanctions as “an unprecedented attack on judicial independence and the rule of law.” The measures, Goldston confirmed, have inflicted severe tangible harm on judges who have done nothing more than fulfill their official, oath-bound duties. The complaint itself describes the sanctions as “tantamount to the financial death penalty.” According to Goldston, speaking to independent outlet Middle East Eye, Prost’s personal US bank accounts have been frozen, she has lost access to conventional credit card services, and her accounts with major US-based tech and consumer firms including Amazon, Google and Expedia have been restricted or terminated entirely. Worse, Prost has effectively lost access to health coverage after her existing provider refused to process her medical claims, and no other insurer will agree to underwrite a policy for her. Before joining the ICC in 2018, Prost built a career focused on international sanctions regimes: she served as a federal prosecutor for Canada’s Department of Justice, and later as ombudsperson for the UN Security Council’s al-Qaeda sanctions committee, overseeing the exact type of punitive measures that are now being used against her. “She knows a great deal about sanctions, and in some ways it is rather extraordinary that she is now being subjected to these severe sanctions, really solely for undertaking her job as a judge seriously and professionally,” Goldston noted. The legal team has laid out three core constitutional and statutory arguments for why the executive order must be struck down entirely by the court. First, the plaintiffs argue the order far exceeds the authority Congress delegated to the president under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), the legislation Trump relied on to impose the sanctions. They further contend that the penalties contradict a separate federal law, the 2002 American Service-Members’ Protection Act (ASPA), which was drafted specifically to address the risk of the ICC opening investigations into US or allied nationals who are not parties to the Rome Statute. Goldston explained that ASPA only permits the president to respond to such investigations through narrow, specific measures: providing legal representation for US citizens, submitting exculpatory evidence to the court, and defending US interests through official diplomatic and legal channels. The law does not grant any authority to impose punitive sanctions on ICC personnel. Even in the extreme scenario that an American citizen is taken into ICC custody, Goldston added, ASPA explicitly bars the executive branch from using financial or personal “inducements” to pressure the court into changing its rulings. The sanctions imposed under Executive Order 14203, he argued, fit exactly that prohibited definition. “They are trying to induce judges to refrain from deciding on the basis of facts and law, and instead take into account their own personal interests, that is, the threats to their own financial and personal well-being imposed by these sanctions,” he said. The plaintiffs also reject the administration’s claim of a national emergency justifying the order. IEEPA can only be invoked to respond to an “unusual and extraordinary” threat to US national security, but Washington’s opposition to the ICC’s exercise of jurisdiction over non-party nationals dates back nearly 30 years. President Bill Clinton first raised the same objection when he signed the Rome Statute in 2000, and earlier this year a senior US official confirmed to the United Nations that none of the concerns cited in the 2025 executive order are new, with Washington having reiterated the same position for almost three decades. Legal observers note that both Afghanistan and Palestine are ICC member states, and the Rome Statute has long enshrined the principle that the court can exercise jurisdiction over crimes committed on a member state’s territory, regardless of the nationality of the perpetrator. The second core argument centers on constitutional protections for property: the asset freeze imposed on Prost and Bossa, who both hold US-based assets, violates the Fifth Amendment in two distinct ways—by depriving them of private property without due process of law, and by seizing private property without just compensation. The third argument holds that the designation of the judges violates the Administrative Procedure Act, because the penalties are “arbitrary, capricious and an abuse of discretion.” The complaint notes that the Trump administration has failed to produce any specific, concrete evidence justifying the sanctions against the individual judges, and also neglected to weigh the severe damage the measures inflict on international accountability efforts—including ICC investigations that the US itself openly supports, such as the probes into alleged war crimes in Sudan, Libya, and Ukraine. Goldston emphasized that all three arguments revolve around the same core violation: the sanctions pressure judges to prioritize their own personal and financial security over their oath to impartially adjudicate cases based on law and facts. “The sanctions seek to compel these judges to refrain from their sworn oath, to decide cases on the basis of an impartial assessment of the facts and the law,” he said. “That is a fundamental threat to the rule of law.” This lawsuit is the fifth legal challenge to Executive Order 14203 to date. In four earlier cases challenging the order, US courts have already ruled that the directive is unconstitutional, finding it imposes unlawful restrictions on the free speech rights of individuals and organizations that cooperate with the ICC. One of those earlier successful challenges was brought on behalf of Francesca Albanese, the sanctioned UN special rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian territories. This current suit, however, is the first to directly challenge the designation of sitting ICC judges. The Open Society Justice Initiative leads representation for Prost, with international law firm Foley Hoag serving as co-counsel. When asked about the prospects of the suit succeeding, Goldston said his team is confident in the strength of their arguments, but noted that the judicial process will ultimately determine the outcome. “We are hopeful that these arguments will be persuasive, but that is what the judicial process is for. We will see what the outcome is,” he said.

  • Eastern Libyan government releases Gaza convoy activists after month of imprisonment

    Eastern Libyan government releases Gaza convoy activists after month of imprisonment

    After 30 days of captivity in Libyan territory controlled by forces loyal to controversial Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar, 10 international activists from a Gaza-bound humanitarian convoy have been released, official and advocacy group sources confirmed this week.

    The detained activists, who hold citizenship from Spain, Poland, the United States, Argentina, Uruguay, Portugal, Tunisia and Italy, were part of the Global Sumud Convoy, a land-based humanitarian initiative aimed at breaking the years-long Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip and delivering critical aid and services to the strip’s 2 million residents. The convoy, which was first organized by North African activists before growing to include international participants, carried seven ambulances, 10 aid trucks, 20 mobile homes, and a cohort of medical workers, engineers, educators and independent legal observers. Its organizers sought to follow in the footsteps of earlier sea-based flotillas that attempted to deliver aid to Gaza by challenging the Israeli naval blockade.

    The convoy was halted by Haftar’s Libyan Arab Armed Forces (LAAF) in late May near the coastal city of Sirte, as it attempted to travel east across Libya toward the Egyptian border, from where it planned to enter Gaza. While most of the convoy’s members were deported immediately after the stop, the 10 activists were taken into secret detention in a remote Libyan desert location. In response to their arbitrary detention, the activists launched a hunger strike between June 1 and at least June 4 to protest their confinement and the authorities’ refusal to grant them access to legal counsel and contact with their families.

    Under a recent ruling from the Benghazi Court of Appeal, eastern Libya’s foreign ministry announced this Wednesday that all detained convoy members would be deported from the country. Footage shared on the Global Sumud Flotilla official Instagram account showed six of the freed activists arriving safely at Istanbul’s airport on Wednesday, where they were greeted by waiting friends and fellow activists. It remains unclear when the remaining four activists will complete their deportation process.

    Long-simmering human rights concerns have surrounded the LAAF, which has been repeatedly accused by global monitoring groups of systemic war crimes and widespread human rights abuses across the territory it controls in eastern Libya. Amnesty International has documented that the force and its allied armed groups systematically crack down on freedom of expression and peaceful association, deliberately targeting anyone perceived as a critic or opponent of Haftar’s administration.

    “Libyans, as well as refugees and migrants, detained by LAAF, which exercises government-like functions in areas under its control, risk torture and other ill-treatment, as well as prolonged detention amid flagrant due process violations,” explained Sara Hashash, Amnesty International’s deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa. Before the activists’ release, the organization confirmed the group faced charges of unlawful unauthorized assembly, which carried a potential penalty of up to six months of prison time and an additional fine.

    In the wake of the detention, Haftar’s eastern Libyan administration implemented a new travel restriction: all non-Libyan and non-Egyptian nationals are now barred from traveling onward to Egypt through eastern Libyan territory.

    The incident has also sparked internal debate within activist circles over the planning of the convoy. Some observers and participants have argued that the initiative was flawed from its early stages, pointing to a lack of contingency planning for confrontations with LAAF forces. Felipe, a 29-year-old Chilean-Palestinian activist with experience in previous Gaza-bound aid flotillas, told Middle East Eye that the group bore partial responsibility for the outcome of their journey. After a two-week waiting period in Tripoli, Felipe noted that it became clear the convoy had no backup plan if it was blocked from crossing eastern Libya, and that the group spent nine idle days waiting in the desert without any clear next steps. “If we were not able to go through east Libya, we should not have kept pressuring them because we were going to shift the narrative from Israel to Libya,” he said.

    Libya has remained fractured along political and geographic lines since the 2011 NATO-backed overthrow and killing of longtime authoritarian ruler Muammar Gaddafi. Today, Haftar’s administration controls eastern Libya with military and political backing from Egypt and the United Arab Emirates, while the United Nations-backed Government of National Unity holds authority over western Libya from its capital in Tripoli, with support from Turkey. The 5+5 security zone near Sirte where the convoy was halted was established under the October 2020 national ceasefire agreement, and remains a contested flashpoint between the two rival administrations.

  • Italy’s Meloni rejects Rutte claims of ‘massive’ Italian support for Iran war

    Italy’s Meloni rejects Rutte claims of ‘massive’ Italian support for Iran war

    A public dispute has erupted between Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte over the nature of Italy’s role in the U.S.-led conflict against Iran, opening a new rift in already strained transatlantic relations amid heightened tensions in the Middle East.

    Speaking to Fox News this Thursday, Rutte pushed back against recent criticisms from U.S. President Donald Trump, who had accused multiple European Union allies of refusing to back the U.S.-Israeli military campaign codenamed Epic Fury. The NATO chief claimed that a large number of allied nations had opened their military bases to support the operation, estimating that between 4,000 and 5,000 aircraft had departed from European bases for strike missions. Specifically, he highlighted that 500 U.S. warplanes had taken off from U.S. bases hosted on Italian territory to support Epic Fury, calling the level of European involvement “massive.”

    Meloni, who is already facing intense backlash from domestic political opponents over accusations that she has hidden the true extent of Italy’s involvement in the conflict from the public, swiftly rejected Rutte’s framing during a Franco-Italian summit held in southern France. She dismissed the NATO chief’s comments as an oversimplified and overly enthusiastic misrepresentation that blurred key distinctions between different categories of authorized flight activity. The Italian leader stressed that Rome had not taken part in active combat operations against Iran, noting that Rutte’s account directly contradicted Trump’s repeated public complaints that European allies have failed to contribute sufficiently to the conflict. “If we had participated in the Iran conflict, there would be no explanation for this disappointment that the US president keeps reiterating very often,” Meloni told reporters. She clarified that Italian bases were only used for logistical support activities, not for offensive combat sorties.

    The disagreement comes against a backdrop of growing friction between Rome and Washington, sparked by a series of hostile comments from Trump targeting Italy and its leadership. Just weeks before the NATO chief’s remarks, Trump drew fierce condemnation from Italian officials after he falsely claimed Meloni had “begged” him for a photo during a side meeting at the G7 summit. Meloni hit back at the accusation on social media, saying she could not understand why the U.S. president repeatedly takes such aggressive stances against his own allies. She added that it was disappointing that Trump shows far more leniency toward the leaders of Western and American adversaries than he does to close partners like Italy. In response to Trump’s “serious and offensive words,” Italy’s foreign minister also announced he would scrap a planned official trip to Washington, further escalating the diplomatic row.

    Iran has also weighed in on the dispute, with Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs Kazem Gharibabadi pointing to international law to back a critical stance. In a post on the social platform X, Gharibabadi noted that United Nations General Assembly Resolution 3314 clearly defines the act of a state permitting its territory to be used by a third country to launch attacks on another sovereign nation as a form of aggression.

    This report was originally published by Middle East Eye, an outlet that provides independent, in-depth coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and surrounding regions.

  • Netanyahu and Katz say Israel will remain in Lebanon, Syria and Gaza ‘without time limit’

    Netanyahu and Katz say Israel will remain in Lebanon, Syria and Gaza ‘without time limit’

    In a major policy announcement delivered at a combat officer graduation ceremony in southern Israel on Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz have formally confirmed that Israeli military forces will maintain an open-ended, unlimited presence in three key conflict zones: southern Lebanon, Syrian territory, and the Gaza Strip.

    Speaking from the Beaufort Castle overlook that Israeli forces control in southern Lebanon, Netanyahu emphasized that the country has no plans to pull back from the self-declared security zone it has established along its northern border. “We dominate southern Lebanon from the summit of the Beaufort, and we will remain as long as required in the security zone,” he stated. “We do not intend to withdraw from it.”

    Katz echoed this commitment, stressing that the Israel Defense Forces will hold security zones across Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza permanently regardless of external pressure. “Despite all the pressures that exist and those that are yet to come, Israel opposes withdrawal from Lebanon,” he said. The defense minister also issued a sharp direct warning to Iran, stating that any Iranian retaliation for Israeli activities in Lebanon or any other theater would be met with overwhelming force. “If Iran attacks Israel because of our activities in Lebanon, or for any other reason, we will strike it with full force in a way that will clearly demonstrate the gap in power between us,” Katz added.

    The announcement came alongside continued active military operations across southern Lebanon on Friday. Lebanon’s official National News Agency reported that Israeli troops bulldozed residential structures and burned homes in the border town of Markaba. Lebanese health authorities confirmed that Israeli airstrikes killed two civilians and injured one additional person in Mayfadoun, with a separate strike recorded in Nabatieh al-Fawqa.

    The Israeli military reported its own casualties from overnight clashes: four soldiers, including two senior officers, were wounded during a close-quarters engagement with a Hezbollah fighter in Beit Yahun. The fighter was killed in the subsequent exchange of fire after throwing a grenade at Israeli troops, according to an IDF statement.

    The current wave of hostilities in Lebanon began when Israel relaunched large-scale offensives in early March 2026, days after the start of the US-Israeli war on Iran. Since that time, Israeli operations have killed at least 4,230 people across Lebanon. Even after a ceasefire agreement was reached one week prior to this announcement, daily Israeli attacks in southern Lebanon have continued to claim dozens of civilian lives.

    In Syria, Israel has maintained permanent control of the strategic Mount Hermon high ground, which overlooks all three countries, since seizing the territory from the collapsing government of Bashar al-Assad in December 2024. The area had previously functioned as a United Nations buffer zone. Syrian official data shows that Israeli forces have carried out more than 1,000 airstrikes and 400 ground incursions across Syrian territory since seizing Mount Hermon, with no sign of withdrawal.

    In the Gaza Strip, internal Israeli government discussions have revived controversial plans to encourage Palestinian displacement from the enclave, according to reporting from Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz. On Tuesday, senior Israeli security officials convened an urgent meeting called by National Security Council head Shmuel Ben Ezra to advance plans framed as “encouraging voluntary emigration” of Palestinians from Gaza. The meeting included top representatives from the Israel Defense Forces, Shin Bet domestic intelligence service, and Mossad foreign intelligence agency.

    Haaretz’s sources confirmed that even during the meeting, Mossad analysts acknowledged that no foreign country has signaled a willingness to accept large numbers of displaced Palestinians from Gaza, replicating the same barrier that derailed previous iterations of the displacement plan.

    The renewed push for emigration comes as Netanyahu continues to expand Israeli military occupation in Gaza, in open violation of an October 2025 ceasefire agreement. When that ceasefire first took effect, Israeli forces controlled roughly 53% of Gaza’s territory. Netanyahu ordered the military to expand occupation to 70% of the enclave last month, and Israeli control has already grown to roughly 60% of Gaza.

    If Israel completes its expansion to 70% occupation, Gaza’s 2.2 million resident population will be confined to just 109 square kilometers of remaining territory. Since the start of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza in October 2023, more than 73,000 people in the enclave have been killed and over 173,000 wounded, according to local health authorities. Even after the October 2025 ceasefire, Israeli attacks in Gaza have killed at least 1,024 people and wounded an additional 3,260.

  • The flaws at the heart of Donald Trump’s Iran ceasefire deal

    The flaws at the heart of Donald Trump’s Iran ceasefire deal

    When former U.S. President Donald Trump formalized a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to end open hostilities with Iran on June 17, global markets and policymakers breathed a collective sigh of relief. But just days after the deal was signed in Versailles on June 18, that cautious optimism has curdled into widespread concern: far from resolving long-simmering tensions between Washington and Tehran, the agreement has merely kicked a growing crisis down the road, with its underlying contradictions already emerging to destabilize the arrangement.

    The catalyst that pushed Trump to the negotiating table was Iran’s four-month closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global chokepoint for oil shipments launched in February. The move triggered one of the most severe energy supply disruptions in modern history, sending inflation soaring across Western economies and leaving American motorists facing skyrocketing gasoline prices that eroded public support for Trump’s handling of the conflict. Facing growing domestic pressure ahead of November’s midterm elections, Trump had little choice but to enter talks to end the blockade.

    Yet the tangible benefits of the deal for the United States remain murky at best. Former President Barack Obama, who negotiated the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, has already cast doubt on the agreement, noting it is unlikely to deliver meaningful improvements over the framework he oversaw. Tehran used its closure of the strait to leverage major concessions from Trump – concessions that experts say go beyond the terms of the 2015 nuclear deal – without offering any new concessions on Iran’s nuclear program beyond the proposals it put forward in Geneva just before open hostilities began in February. Even prominent senior Republicans, including Senator Bill Cassidy, have criticized the deal for granting substantial financial incentives to the Iranian regime that they argue undermine U.S. strategic interests.

    Within just 72 hours of the MoU being signed, Iran’s military command announced it had reclosed the Strait of Hormuz, a move that came as little surprise to analysts. The swift action underscores a critical shift in the regional balance of power: the Trump deal has inadvertently emboldened Tehran, granting it new leverage to hold the global economy hostage to advance its strategic goals. Despite absorbing massive damage to its military infrastructure, political leadership, and economy over four months of conflict, Iran has emerged from the fighting in a position to dictate ceasefire terms, holding the constant threat of renewed energy disruptions over Washington to force concessions. This outcome signals a major loss of strategic control for both the United States and its closest regional ally, Israel.

    Iran framed its closure of the strait as a response to Israeli strikes against Iranian-backed Hezbollah forces in Lebanon, a justification that lays bare the fundamental structural flaw in Trump’s approach to diplomacy. Iranian officials have openly stated that preventing further Israeli strikes in Lebanon is the top priority for their negotiating team. This sets up an inescapable vicious cycle: every time Israel exercises its right and political obligation to retaliate against Hezbollah attacks on its territory, Iran can threaten to close the strait again, triggering new energy price shocks and U.S. inflation.

    This puts Israel in an impossible position. No sovereign state can permanently surrender its right to self-defense as a condition of a U.S.-brokered diplomatic agreement, and it is highly unlikely that Israel’s security cabinet will accept a framework that allows Iranian-backed militias to attack Israeli territory with impunity. As Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir emphasized, “Israel is not subject to the United States, and we are an independent and sovereign nation.” The deal, critics argue, is not a sustainable strategy of deterrence – it is blatant coercion disguised as diplomatic progress.

    For Trump, the domestic political calculus of the deal is equally unstable. While the former president claims the agreement delivers on all its stated goals, he acknowledged at the recent G7 summit in France that he acted to avoid an “economic catastrophe” driven by sustained high energy prices. Skyrocketing gasoline prices have already made the conflict deeply unpopular with American voters, and continued volatility would severely damage his party’s prospects in the upcoming November midterms. Trump’s decision to enter the ceasefire was not a deliberate strategic choice: it stemmed from a recognition that continued military pressure was producing diminishing domestic political returns, leaving him with little room to continue open hostilities.

    Worse still, the deal fails to restore meaningful U.S. strategic agency in the region. Iran has now demonstrated to the world, its regional allies, and its own population that it can act aggressively against U.S. and Israeli interests and still negotiate from a position of strength. Nothing that has occurred over the past four months has pushed Tehran to revise its long-held core worldview, shaped by revolutionary ideology, deep-seated mistrust of the United States, and its self-conception as a regional protector of Shia communities across the Middle East. If anything, the outcome of the conflict has reinforced Tehran’s commitment to its aggressive regional posture.

    Today, the entire agreement hinges on developments in Lebanon, the new fault line for U.S.-Iran-Israeli tensions. While Israel recognized this reality from the start, the Trump administration has only just begun to grasp the stakes. Trump’s recent incendiary threat to “blow the shit out of them” if Iran fails to comply with the terms of the deal already signals that his patience with his own agreement is wearing thin.

    In the end, the Trump-Iran MoU is nothing more than a ceasefire with a built-in detonator. As both Trump’s domestic political base and Israeli leadership increasingly conclude that diplomatic restraint no longer serves their core interests, further escalation will stop being a choice – and will become the only available outcome.

  • How match fixing robbed Algeria in 1982, and changed the World Cup forever

    How match fixing robbed Algeria in 1982, and changed the World Cup forever

    Forty-one years before modern football’s biggest debates over competitive integrity, a prearranged match at the 1982 FIFA World Cup in Spain permanently altered the structure of the world’s most popular sporting tournament. That controversial fixture, forever remembered as the Disgrace of Gijón, saw West Germany and Austria collude to knock North African underdog Algeria out of the competition in one of the most infamous scandals in World Cup history.

    Algeria, a first-time qualifier making its debut on football’s biggest stage, had already completed all of its Group 2 matches the day before the West Germany-Austria fixture, and sat perched on the cusp of advancing to the tournament’s second round. The two European sides quickly realized a narrow 1-0 win for West Germany would check all the boxes for both nations: as long as Austria did not lose by three or more goals, both sides would move forward at Algeria’s expense, edging the North African side out of second place on goal difference.

    The match opened with genuine energy, as West German striker Horst Hrubesch nodded a close-range shot into the net to put his side up just 10 minutes after kickoff. But after that opening goal, the intensity of the fixture drained away almost immediately. By halftime, the pattern of play had shifted dramatically: players stopped pressing forward, committed barely any tackles, and spent nearly all of the remaining 80 minutes circulating the ball laterally across the pitch or back toward their own half. Every sideways pass drew deafening jeers from the 41,000 fans packed into the Gijón stadium.

    Scottish referee Bob Valentine, who oversaw the match, later recalled recognizing the collusion by the 30-minute mark, but said he had no official framework to act on the unspoken agreement. “I refereed the game in front of me. It’s all I could do,” he told *The Scotsman* in a 2011 interview.

    Spectators and broadcasters caught on within minutes. One on-air commentator urged viewers at home to turn off their broadcasts and fell silent for the rest of the match, while another pundit remarked that even saying the players’ names left “a nasty, nasty taste” in his mouth. The next day, local Gijón newspaper *El Comercio* published its match report in the publication’s crime section, and leading French sports daily *L’Equipe* argued that all 22 players on the pitch deserved to be shown red cards for their conduct.

    Despite widespread public outrage, players and officials from both European nations defended their actions. West Germany’s goalkeeper dismissed criticism, noting he had only faced two routine possessions during the entire match: “What should I have done? Run up front and throw myself on the ball?” Hans Tschak, head of the Austrian FIFA delegation, went even further, framing the collusion as a legitimate tactical choice and unleashing a vulgar, racist tirade against Algerian fans. “If 10,000 ‘sons of the desert’ here in the stadium want to trigger a scandal because of this, it just goes to show that they have too few schools,” Tschak said. “Some sheikh comes out of an oasis, is allowed to get a sniff of World Cup air after 300 years and thinks he’s entitled to open his gob.”

    Benali Sekkal, then-president of the Algerian Football Federation, called the fixture “scandalous and immoral” and submitted an official complaint to FIFA calling for both West Germany and Austria to be suspended from the tournament. FIFA ultimately rejected the appeal, and the two European sides advanced as planned. Neither went on to claim the trophy: West Germany fell 3-1 to Italy in the tournament final.

    Though Algeria was robbed of a historic second-round spot in 1982, the scandal left a lasting positive legacy for the World Cup. In response to public outcry over the blatant collusion, FIFA changed its tournament rules to require all final group-stage matches to kick off simultaneously. That rule remains in place today, eliminating the opportunity for teams to manipulate results based on pre-existing group standings and protecting the competitive integrity of the world’s biggest sporting event.

  • US considering moving Gulf bases damaged by Iran to Israel

    US considering moving Gulf bases damaged by Iran to Israel

    Amid shifting military and political dynamics across the Middle East, the United States is actively evaluating a major restructuring of its military footprint in the Gulf region, with a potential relocation of some key assets to Israel following a series of damaging Iranian retaliatory strikes earlier this year, according to a recent exclusive report from The Wall Street Journal.

    Under the proposal being discussed, the US would revamp its long-standing naval base in Bahrain, while drawing down its permanent military presence in both Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Two anonymous senior officials cited in the WSJ investigation confirmed that shifting a portion of Gulf-based operations to Israeli territory is a core option under consideration.

    The discussion of this major strategic shift comes in direct response to escalating regional hostilities that unfolded earlier this year. On February 28, the US and Israel launched a coordinated military offensive against Iran, framed by US leadership as a necessary action to eliminate what former President Donald Trump described as imminent threats posed by the Iranian regime. The primary public objectives of the campaign included the complete destruction of Iran’s nuclear program and key military infrastructure.

    In retaliation for the joint attack, Iran launched targeted strikes against American military assets across the Gulf region between late February and June. The US Navy’s central base in Bahrain, a critical hub for American naval operations in the Middle East, was hit repeatedly. The WSJ documented extensive damage to the site, including severe harm to the base’s command headquarters and at least a dozen other supporting structures. To date, the Pentagon has declined to publicly confirm the full scale of destruction caused by the strikes.

    Parallel to these military deliberations, shifting public opinion within the United States has emerged as a major political factor, following the signing of the 60-day Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding between Washington and Tehran. The ceasefire pact paused active hostilities to allow space for negotiations on a permanent end to the conflict, and has coincided with a sharp turn in public sentiment against the war, new polling data shows.

    A national public opinion survey conducted by Quinnipiac University finds that 60 percent of registered American voters now view the US military campaign against Iran as “not worth it.” The poll also reveals that the temporary ceasefire has eroded public confidence in the US’s ability to achieve its core war goals: 61 percent of respondents believe it remains likely that Iran will eventually develop nuclear weapons, despite the joint offensive.

    Notably, this skepticism crosses traditional partisan lines in American politics. Majorities of both Democratic and Republican voters agree that Iran is still either somewhat or very likely to pursue a nuclear weapons program, marking a rare point of consensus between the two major political camps on a divisive foreign policy issue.

    This reporting is part of independent coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and broader global affairs from Middle East Eye, an outlet focused on original, on-the-ground analysis of the region.