博客

  • Pakistan’s Saudi deployment reveals a new Gulf security reality

    Pakistan’s Saudi deployment reveals a new Gulf security reality

    In what geopolitical analysts are calling one of the most underreported yet consequential shifts in Middle Eastern security in recent years, unconfirmed reports of a major Pakistani military deployment to Saudi Arabia under a secret bilateral defense pact have reshaped understandings of evolving regional power arrangements. Citing anonymous security and government sources, Reuters first broke the story that Islamabad has deployed roughly 8,000 troops, a full squadron of JF-17 fighter jets, drone combat units, and a Chinese-built HQ-9 advanced air defense system to the kingdom, all under the terms of the 2025 mutual defense agreement signed by the two nations. Neither Pakistani nor Saudi officials have issued an official confirmation or denial of the deployment details, but the reported scope of the force makes clear this is far more than a limited symbolic advisory mission.

    The 2025 Saudi-Pakistan Mutual Defense Agreement was signed in Riyadh on September 17 by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, finalized against a backdrop of rapidly escalating regional volatility. The pact’s announcement came just days after an Israeli airstrike targeting a Hamas leadership delegation in Doha, Qatar — an operation that sent shockwaves through Gulf capitals far beyond Qatar’s borders. For decades, Gulf monarchies operated under the core strategic assumption that close alignment with Washington would deter unilateral Israeli military actions on Gulf territory. The Doha strike shattered that long-held confidence, exposing deep growing uncertainty around the reliability of existing regional deterrence frameworks and Western security guarantees. It is this uncertainty, rather than an attempt to displace long-standing American military leadership in the region, that the reported Pakistani military buildup reflects.

    The deployment, if confirmed, underscores an emerging new reality: Gulf states are actively pursuing additional layers of strategic protection as doubts grow about the stability and predictability of the regional security environment. Riyadh’s move to deepen security ties with Islamabad sends a clear but understated message to Washington: if existing security guarantees grow less reliable during periods of regional escalation, Gulf nations will diversify their strategic partnership networks. Crucially, this does not mean Saudi Arabia seeks to replace the United States with Pakistan as its primary security guarantor. That misinterpretation ignores both the deep-rooted structure of Gulf security and the scale of long-standing American military entrenchment across the region. The U.S. maintains an extensive, institutionally embedded military presence throughout the Gulf: the U.S. Fifth Fleet is headquartered in Bahrain, Qatar hosts the largest American air base in the Middle East, thousands of U.S. troops remain stationed in Kuwait, and Washington holds formal strategic access agreements with Oman and the United Arab Emirates. Saudi Arabia itself still relies heavily on American military hardware, intelligence sharing, and overarching regional deterrence architecture — a role Pakistan simply cannot fill.

    Instead, Riyadh and other Gulf states are increasingly focused on supplementing existing security arrangements, rather than relying entirely on a single external power for protection. It is important to note that deep military cooperation between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan is not a new development. Since the 1970s, Pakistani troops have periodically deployed to Saudi Arabia to support training, border security, and advisory missions. Pakistani military institutions have long-standing, close ties with Gulf defense establishments, and Saudi Arabia has repeatedly stepped in to provide critical economic support to Islamabad during periods of severe financial crisis. The bilateral relationship has also extended beyond conventional defense cooperation to include unspoken broader strategic understandings. For decades, analysts have speculated that decades of Saudi financial support for Pakistan’s nuclear program created an informal expectation that Islamabad’s strategic deterrent capabilities could be called on to support Gulf security if the regional balance of power deteriorated dramatically. Public remarks from former Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Asif, which implied Saudi Arabia falls under Pakistan’s “nuclear umbrella”, have only reinforced these assumptions, even though no formal nuclear security arrangement has ever been publicly acknowledged.

    While Saudi Arabia has long-standing concerns about Iran’s regional expansion and nuclear ambitions, framing the new agreement solely as a counter to Iran oversimplifies the complex regional context. By the time the pact was signed in September 2025, Iran’s nuclear infrastructure had already sustained major damage during the June 2025 Israel-Iran conflict and subsequent American strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. Instead, the timing of the agreement reflects broader anxiety across the Gulf about growing regional unpredictability, rather than just an immediate fear of Iranian expansion. The Doha Israeli strike made clear that Gulf territory itself is no longer insulated from spillover escalation from broader regional conflicts, a realization that has accelerated Gulf efforts to diversify security partnerships, build redundant deterrence capabilities, and reduce overreliance on any single security framework.

    For Pakistan, the new arrangement requires navigating an extremely delicate geopolitical balancing act. Islamabad holds two unique roles in the region: it is a formal military partner to Saudi Arabia, while also serving as a rare diplomatic intermediary between Washington and Tehran. In recent weeks, Pakistan has reportedly played a central role in brokering and maintaining the current ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran, and even hosted the only direct round of negotiations between the two parties. Few regional actors maintain open, working diplomatic channels with Riyadh, Tehran, Beijing, and Washington simultaneously. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei recently confirmed that indirect diplomatic engagement with the U.S. over the Iranian nuclear file remains ongoing rather than intermittent, and noted that Tehran reviewed proposed U.S. amendments to a draft agreement conveyed via Pakistani intermediaries before submitting its formal counterproposal — further underscoring Islamabad’s growing role as a critical communication bridge between adversarial powers.

    This diplomatic flexibility has emerged as one of Pakistan’s most valuable geopolitical assets in the current regional order, but balancing between rival regional and global camps carries clear risks. Iran has historically tolerated Pakistan’s defense relationship with Saudi Arabia because the relationship was limited to defensive and advisory roles. A visibly expanded Pakistani military deployment directly tied to regional confrontation could eventually undermine Islamabad’s credibility as a neutral intermediary, complicating its diplomatic work. This strategic tradeoff helps explain why Pakistani officials have remained deliberately vague and cautious in public responses to the Reuters report, as strategic ambiguity continues to serve Islamabad’s core interests.

    Beyond its geopolitical implications, the reported deployment also carries technological significance that points to shifting defense markets in the Gulf. The inclusion of Chinese-origin defense systems — the JF-17, which is co-produced with China, and the HQ-9 air defense system — highlights Beijing’s growing indirect footprint in Gulf defense ecosystems. While China remains far from replacing the United States as the dominant military power in the Middle East, and lacks Washington’s extensive alliance network, regional basing infrastructure, and expeditionary military capabilities, Chinese defense technologies are increasingly being integrated into Gulf national procurement plans. This trend is fostering a more diversified, multipolar regional defense environment.

    The development is also being closely watched in New Delhi, as Chinese-built defense systems from Pakistan are now entering Gulf security calculations. While the deployment does not fundamentally reshape the regional balance of power, it does reflect the growing strategic interconnectedness between South Asian and Middle Eastern security theaters, a shift that will have ripple effects across the Indo-Pacific.

    Ultimately, regional states are not abandoning the United States as a core security partner. Instead, they are taking deliberate steps to reduce their strategic vulnerability by expanding partnership networks and building overlapping security relationships that can adapt to an era of growing geopolitical uncertainty. In this sense, the significance of the Saudi-Pakistan defense arrangement is far more political than it is military. The pact signals the emergence of a new Gulf security order that is more flexible, layered, and strategically diversified than the post-Cold War framework that dominated the region for decades. The United States remains the central external security actor in the Middle East, but Gulf states are increasingly unwilling to rely exclusively on any single power amid intensifying regional fragmentation and shifting global great power priorities. For Pakistan, the greatest challenge will not be deploying military assets to the Gulf, but preserving its valuable strategic flexibility without being pulled irreversibly into competing regional confrontations.

    This analysis is contributed by Saima Afzal, a research scholar at Justus Liebig University in Germany, whose work focuses on South Asian security, counterterrorism, and cross-regional geopolitics across the Middle East, Afghanistan, and the Indo-Pacific.

  • US lobbied Saudi Arabia to release funds for Gaza ‘Board of Peace’ amid cash crunch

    US lobbied Saudi Arabia to release funds for Gaza ‘Board of Peace’ amid cash crunch

    A high-stakes diplomatic push by the United States to secure long-promised funding for Donald Trump’s Gaza-focused Board of Peace initiative has come to light, with multiple regional and U.S. officials confirming to Middle East Eye that a senior American envoy traveled to Saudi Arabia in April to shore up Riyadh’s $1 billion commitment.

    The visit was led by Aryeh Lightstone, a key Trump administration appointee tasked with overseeing post-war Gaza planning, who held direct talks with Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan to revisit the pledge Saudi Arabia made during a February donor conference for the U.S.-led body. A close ally of Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and an American rabbi by profession, Lightstone is part of a small handpicked team that includes Israeli technology industry leaders and close associates of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, all working to draft a long-term governance framework for the war-ravaged Gaza Strip.

    The Board of Peace, which currently counts more than 25 member states, is designed to place daily governance of Gaza in the hands of a committee of Palestinian technocrats pre-approved by Israel. However, MEE has learned that Saudi Arabia has publicly pushed for broader, more inclusive Palestinian representation on the body, a key sticking point that has contributed to delays in disbursing pledged funds. While Trump has committed $10 billion in U.S. taxpayer dollars to the initiative, Western and Arab officials familiar with the matter confirm the initiative’s entire funding structure is heavily dependent on contributions from Gulf Cooperation Council states.

    The U.S. pressure campaign comes as Saudi Arabia prioritizes a separate financial issue: unlocking roughly $5 billion in withheld Palestinian Authority tax revenues that Israel has frozen for months. Regional officials tell MEE that Riyadh prefers to see Israel release these critical funds to shore up the cash-strapped PA, rather than committing its own resources as an emergency lifeline without first securing meaningful political and financial reforms within the Palestinian governing body. It remains unclear whether Saudi officials are tying the two files together in ongoing negotiations.

    Details of the U.S. planning process have already sparked controversy: as of late last year, Lightstone and his team of American advisors were based out of two luxury beachfront hotels in Tel Aviv, the Kempinski and the Hilton, while drafting their post-war blueprints for Gaza. In a November interview with The New York Times, Lightstone confirmed one proposal would construct housing for thousands of pre-screened Palestinians in areas of Gaza already occupied by Israeli troops behind the so-called “yellow line” buffer zone. Other leaked plans have proposed transforming Gaza into a specialized artificial intelligence technology hub and a sprawling megaproject city – proposals that critics have decried as a deliberate effort to force ethnic cleansing of the original Palestinian population from the territory.

    The current situation on the ground in Gaza remains catastrophic more than two years after Israel launched its large-scale offensive in response to the Hamas-led 7 October 2023 attacks on southern Israel. Official counts put the Palestinian death toll from the conflict at over 72,500, the vast majority of whom are women and children, and the United Nations, dozens of leading human rights experts, and dozens of world leaders have formally categorized Israel’s military campaign as a genocide.

    The recent escalation of cross-border conflict between Israel and Iran has shifted global media attention away from Gaza, even as Israeli military operations continue. Despite a U.S.-brokered ceasefire agreement reached in October 2025, Israeli attacks have killed more than 850 Palestinians in the enclave, with ceasefire violations occurring on an almost daily basis. Meanwhile, violent acts by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank have grown increasingly frequent and severe. Israel has also maintained near-total restrictions on the entry of humanitarian aid and reconstruction materials into Gaza, where 90 percent of all civilian infrastructure has been destroyed in the offensive.

    In early February, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates collectively pledged more than $4 billion to support the Board of Peace, which Trump established shortly after the 2025 ceasefire. To date, the UAE – Israel’s closest Arab partner – has already begun disbursing its pledged funds, including a $100 million contribution for a U.S. and Israeli-backed Palestinian police force operating in Gaza. But Saudi Arabia and other major Arab donors have remained hesitant to follow through on their commitments, leaving the initiative with a massive funding shortfall.

    Reuters recently confirmed that the gap between total pledges and actual disbursements has become a critical crisis for the body. The Board of Peace reported total pledges of $17 billion during its February launch, and in a 15 May report to the United Nations Security Council obtained by Reuters, the board warned that “the gap between commitment (to the Board of Peace) and disbursement must be closed with urgency”.

    While Trump serves as the formal chair of the Board of Peace, day-to-day operations are managed by executive director Nickolay Mladenov, a former United Nations envoy to the Middle East who was serving as a senior academic at the UAE’s Anwar Gargash Diplomatic Academy before being appointed to the role.

  • US: Anti-Aipac congressman unseated in most expensive House primary ever

    US: Anti-Aipac congressman unseated in most expensive House primary ever

    On Tuesday, a political earthquake shook Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District as incumbent Republican Representative Thomas Massie, who had spent years challenging the influence of pro-Israel lobbying groups and opposing massive foreign aid packages, fell to challenger Ed Gallrein in a competitive Republican primary. What made this race stand out on the national stage was its record-breaking price tag: outside groups, overwhelmingly led by pro-Israel political action committees, poured more than $10 million into negative advertising aimed at removing Massie from Capitol Hill, making it the costliest U.S. House primary contest in American history.

    Shortly after the race was called by the Associated Press less than an hour after polls closed, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), one of the most influential pro-Israel lobbying groups in the country, publicly celebrated Gallrein’s win in a post on X. “Congratulations to US Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein for defeating anti-Israel incumbent Thomas Massie!” the group wrote. “Pro-Israel Americans are proud to back candidates who support a strong [US-Israel] alliance and help defeat those who work to undermine it. Being pro-Israel is good policy and good politics!”

    Gallrein, a 68-year-old political novice and former Navy SEAL who had never held public office before, secured former President Donald Trump’s endorsement after pledging personal loyalty to the 2024 Republican presidential frontrunner. In a striking rebuke of the incumbent Massie just one day before the primary, Trump called Massie “the worst congressman in the long and storied history of the Republican party.” The break between the two figures, despite Massie voting in line with Trump’s policy agenda more than 90 percent of the time and aligning with the president on core conservative priorities such as restrictive immigration policies and abortion bans, is widely traced back to Massie’s long-running push for the full public release of all classified documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case — a move that political analysts say could have posed political risk to Trump.

    Massie’s break with powerful pro-Interest lobbying groups had been building for years. For more than a decade, he refused to accept campaign donations from organizations centered on advancing Israeli policy goals, and he publicly opposed all major U.S. foreign aid packages, including those for Israel, Egypt, Ukraine, and Syria. During a Monday interview with CBS News, Massie made his position clear: “Pro-Israel groups have tried to buy my vote for 14 years, and it was never for sale. No country is special, and no country deserves my constituents’ taxpayer dollars. So I have never voted for foreign aid to Egypt, to Syria, to Israel, or to Ukraine – but the ones in Israel, since they’re the biggest recipients of it, that makes them a little bit mad.” When asked twice by reporter Ed O’Keefe if he was an antisemite, Massie flatly rejected the label, responding “Oh hell no.” He argued that anti-Zionism is not equivalent to antisemitism, saying that equating the two does a major disservice to Jewish Americans.

    In a conversation with Tucker Carlson earlier in May, Massie laid out the full scope of the outside spending against him, estimating that at least 95 percent of his opponent’s campaign funding originated from pro-Israel lobbying groups and allied billionaires with no ties to Kentucky. He specifically named AIPAC, the Republican Jewish Coalition, and Christians United for Israel, along with three high-profile billionaires — Miriam Adelson, Paul Singer, and John Paulson — who have become major players in shaping U.S. election outcomes. Massie noted that these groups uniformly back a more interventionist foreign policy, increased military spending, and unrestricted foreign aid, all positions he has consistently opposed during his time in Congress.

    “[The money] didn’t come from regular people. It’s come from billionaires, and 95 percent of it – at least 95 percent – has come from the Israeli lobby,” Massie told Carlson. “Their position is more war, it’s more strife, it’s more bombs, it’s more foreign aid, and those are the things that I’ve been voting against. So the real reason that this race is a serious race, and I may lose, is because a foreign lobby has fully funded to the extent that they’ve never done in any Republican race ever before.”

    While Massie raised roughly $5 million for his own campaign, pro-Israel groups spent double that on attack ads, including a controversial AI-generated deepfake that falsely depicted Massie meeting with members of “The Squad,” the high-profile bloc of progressive congressional Democrats, at a hotel. When Carlson asked why out-of-state pro-Israel groups would invest so heavily in a small Republican primary in Kentucky, Massie framed himself as a rare whistleblower within Congress: “If I lose on May 19, I’ll be out of Congress on January 3 next year, and nobody’s gonna follow my Twitter, nobody’s gonna go to my Facebook page to see what’s going on. I won’t be invited down into the secret SCIFs to read the secret interpretations of the laws that the executive branch is using to spy on you. The one whistleblower, if you will, in Congress, will be gone.”

    A rare bipartisan figure in an deeply polarized Congress, Massie had partnered with progressive Democratic Representative Ro Khanna of California on two high-profile initiatives: pushing for the release of the full Epstein files and limiting the president’s unilateral war powers. This is not the first time pro-Israel lobbying groups have successfully defeated sitting members of Congress; the groups previously ousted progressive incumbents Cory Bush of Missouri and Jamaal Bowman of New York in 2022 primaries.

    Following the announcement of the results, some critics of the outside spending praised Massie for retaining his principles. Joe Kent, a former director of the National Counterterrorism Center who resigned in March over his refusal to back potential U.S. military action against Iran at Israel’s behest, wrote on X that “God bless Thomas Massie. He walks out of this with his honor intact. He’s a patriot & kept his integrity. As long as the voters give their votes to whoever can run the most ads we will have politicians who are purchased by foreign governments & corporate interests.”

    Gallrein will now advance to November’s general election as the Republican nominee for the safe Republican district, setting the stage for the general election campaign this fall.

  • New Turkish ICBM signals nuclear deterrence ambitions beyond NATO

    New Turkish ICBM signals nuclear deterrence ambitions beyond NATO

    At Istanbul’s SAHA 2026 defense exhibition this month, Turkey pulled back the curtain on its highly anticipated Yildirimhan intercontinental ballistic missile, a flashy reveal that has sparked far more debate about Ankara’s long-term strategic ambitions than the technical capabilities of the weapon itself. What the public saw at the event was only a mock-up of the system, and to date, no fully operational prototype has completed the rigorous full-scale testing required to deploy the missile, leaving major questions about its actual existence as a functional weapons system.

    According to statements from Turkish officials, the 18-meter Yildirimhan is designed to carry a 3,000-kilogram warhead across 6,000 kilometers at hypersonic speeds reaching Mach 25. If these specifications are fully realized, Turkey would join an extremely small group of nations capable of fielding ICBM-class weapons that can strike targets across Europe, Africa, and Asia from Turkish territory. However, Western defense analysts and independent missile experts have cast significant doubt on the project, framing it as overly ambitious and far beyond the technological and industrial capabilities Turkey has publicly demonstrated to date.

    Beyond the missile’s technical details, the unveiling exposes a major shift in Turkish strategic thinking, shaped by a cascade of regional and global shifts: the ongoing U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, rising instability across the Middle East, and growing skepticism in Ankara about the reliability of NATO security guarantees. The ICBM project is also deeply intertwined with Turkey’s rapidly expanding domestic defense industrial base, its growing homegrown missile development ecosystem, and its parallel ambitions to develop an independent civilian space launch capability. For Ankara, the symbolic power of announcing an indigenous ICBM program matters just as much, if not more, than building and fielding an operational weapon.

    Scholars have long traced the evolution of Turkey’s missile program, which originated during the Cold War as Ankara relied entirely on NATO and U.S. nuclear security guarantees. In an April 2026 report for the International Institute of Strategic Studies (IISS), researchers Sıtkı Egeli and Arda Mevlütoğlu note that the program has transformed into a fully indigenous effort, driven by growing regional missile threats, lessons learned from the 1991 Gulf War, and a decades-long push for full defense industrial autonomy.

    The ongoing conflict with Iran has emerged as the most immediate rationale for Ankara’s push to develop a long-range deterrent like Yildirimhan. Writing for War on the Rocks in February 2026, analyst Nima Gerami points out that while U.S. and Israeli airstrikes have inflicted heavy damage on Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities, Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium (HEU) remains largely intact. Gerami cites a recent International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report confirming Iran still holds 440 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60% purity—enough material to produce up to 10 functional nuclear weapons if enriched further. These stockpiles are stored in underground tunnel complexes that have remained structurally intact through multiple waves of strikes, and Gerami notes that repeated military campaigns have actually made the stockpiles harder to locate, rather than easier, allowing Iran’s nuclear program to survive through concealment, dispersal, and gradual rebuilding.

    The threat to Turkey from Iran’s capabilities became concrete in the early days of the war, when Iran launched ballistic missile strikes on Turkish territory, targeting the Incirlik Air Base, a critical joint NATO and Turkish facility that hosts between 20 and 50 U.S. B-61 nuclear bombs. As Sinan Ciddi of The National Interest reports in a March 2026 analysis, any successful strike on Turkish soil would force Ankara to retaliate with force, creating an urgent need for long-range deterrent capabilities.

    In a February 2026 interview with CNN, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan explicitly tied Ankara’s long-range missile efforts to potential nuclear proliferation in the region, stating that Turkey would be forced to develop its own nuclear weapons if Iran moves forward with acquiring a nuclear arsenal. This push is reinforced by growing uncertainty over the reliability of long-standing U.S. security guarantees. Writing for the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) this month, analyst Liana Fix argues that the Trump administration’s decision to withdraw 5,000 U.S. troops from Germany has severely undermined the credibility of American deterrence across Europe. On top of that, depletions to U.S. weapons stockpiles caused by the Iran War have created delays in missile and interceptor deliveries to NATO allies, further eroding confidence in alliance security commitments.

    Russia’s recent use of the Oreshnik conventional intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) against Ukraine has also shaped Turkey’s approach to long-range weapons development, offering a potential template for how conventionally armed long-range systems can function as a deterrent. In an August 2025 peer-reviewed article for the Vojno Delo journal, researchers led by Nenad Miloradović argue that conventionally armed long-range missiles can provide a credible non-nuclear deterrent, capable of penetrating adversary air defenses and striking high-value targets deep inside enemy territory.

    However, other analysts have pushed back on the military utility of conventional ICBMs. In a December 2024 analysis for the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), Sidharth Kaushal and Matthew Savill note that while conventionally armed ICBMs and IRBMs are far harder to intercept than shorter-range systems, they generally lack the precision required to reliably strike tactical military targets with conventional warheads. For point targets like individual buildings, the pair argue, cruise missiles or drones are far more effective, though large ICBM payloads can still be used against area targets like clusters of buildings despite their inaccuracy. Even so, deploying an expensive ICBM to deliver a conventional warhead makes little military or economic sense, leading many analysts to conclude that Turkey’s Yildirimhan reveal is less about conventional deterrence and more about signaling that Ankara has the capacity to deliver nuclear warheads if it chooses to pursue a nuclear weapons program.

    Skeptics of overt Turkish nuclear ambitions argue that significant constraints would block any open push for a nuclear arsenal. Writing for New Eastern Outlook (NEO) in February 2026, Alexandr Svaranc notes that as a NATO member, Turkey cannot develop nuclear weapons without formal coordination with the U.S. and United Kingdom. Svaranc adds that strong opposition from Israel and heavy diplomatic pressure from the U.S. would almost certainly block any overt Turkish nuclear program, and that a public push for nuclear weapons could even put Turkey at risk of a pre-emptive Israeli military strike. He also notes that Turkish nuclear ambitions would alarm both Russia and China, given Turkey’s NATO membership and its regional Pan-Turkic policy near Russian and Chinese borders.

    Despite these constraints, there is evidence that Turkey is laying quiet, deliberate groundwork for a potential future nuclear program. Writing for the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) in February 2025, Ciddi points to a 2024 uranium mining agreement between Turkey and Niger, which could help Ankara secure long-term uranium supplies and eventually develop an independent domestic nuclear fuel cycle. Turkey’s expanding civilian nuclear energy program, Ciddi adds, also provides critical infrastructure, technical expertise, and personnel training that could support a future nuclear weapons effort. Ultimately, Turkey’s core goal is achieving full strategic autonomy, and it seeks an independent deterrent to offset Iran’s growing nuclear capabilities in the short term.

    Beyond the Yildirimhan ICBM, Turkey already has a suite of potential nuclear delivery systems, including the Cenk medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM), the SOM air-launched cruise missile (ALCM), and Reis-class submarines modified for land-attack missions.

    For analysts, whether the Yildirimhan ever becomes a fully operational deployed weapon is ultimately less important than what the project reveals about Turkey’s long-term trajectory. Across an increasingly unstable Middle East, where the regional nuclear balance is shifting rapidly, Ankara is steadily building the industrial, technological, and political foundations for an independent national deterrent—one that will reshape regional security dynamics for decades to come.

  • Trump brags his ballroom to be topped by ‘greatest drone empire’

    Trump brags his ballroom to be topped by ‘greatest drone empire’

    Facing sagging approval ratings that have dropped to the lowest point of his second term in recent public polling, former and current U.S. President Donald Trump used a Tuesday press briefing outside the White House to pivot public attention to the ongoing construction of a luxury ballroom on White House grounds, where he highlighted its unexpected integrated military defense features.

    During the exchange with reporters, Trump opened with praise for the planned venue, claiming it will stand as one of the most impressive facilities of its kind once completed. He then centered his remarks on the ballroom’s defensive capabilities, focusing particularly on rooftop drone infrastructure. “On top of the roof, we’re gonna have the greatest drone empire that you’ve ever seen,” Trump told reporters, adding that the system will serve a protective role for the entire city of Washington, D.C.

    When pressed by a reporter to offer more detail on the venue’s hidden security features, Trump expanded on the underground components of the construction project. He described the sub-surface sections as far more technically complex than the above-ground ballroom, noting that unseen lower levels house critically important facilities that the U.S. military seized the rare opportunity to develop. “Because what you don’t see are the floors that are beneath here. And they have very, very important rooms down there, very, the most important. This was the one opportunity for the military to do something,” Trump said.

    Trump added that construction is progressing ahead of the original timeline, and confirmed the venue will feature a fully sealed, drone-proof roof that doubles as a drone port capable of accommodating an unlimited number of unmanned aerial vehicles, a technology he emphasized is increasingly central to modern security operations.

    Beyond the ballroom announcement, Trump doubled down on dismissing widespread public concern over the economic fallout of his unauthorized military conflict with Iran, which has driven U.S. gasoline prices to a national average of $4.53 per gallon as of Tuesday and pushed overall inflation to its highest level since 2023. Framing the higher energy costs as a minor trade-off, Trump told reporters, “This is peanuts… And I appreciate everybody putting up with it for a little while, it won’t be much longer… But I don’t even think about that. What I think about is you can’t let Iran have a nuclear weapon, and they won’t have a nuclear weapon.”

    Notably, there is no verified evidence to support Trump’s claim that Iran was close to developing a nuclear weapon when he launched military operations against the country in late February without the required congressional authorization for war. Just one month prior, U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard testified under oath before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence that Iran’s nuclear weapons program had already been completely destroyed in U.S.-led airstrikes the previous year, and that no efforts to rebuild the country’s uranium enrichment capability had been detected in the time since.

    Trump’s showcase of new defense-related infrastructure also comes just days after an anonymous White House official leaked an unsubstantiated claim to media outlets that Cuba was preparing to launch a drone attack on the U.S. — an allegation that was widely mocked and dismissed by both the Cuban government and independent policy analysts as absurd.

    The president’s Tuesday press briefing followed a major announcement he made Monday on his Truth Social platform, where he revealed he had agreed to delay a planned large-scale military attack on Iran at the formal request of three top Gulf Cooperation Council leaders. In his post, Trump wrote that he had been asked by Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud, and United Arab Emirates President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan to call off the strike, which had been scheduled for Tuesday, to allow for ongoing diplomatic negotiations to move forward. The leaders have expressed confidence that a negotiated agreement acceptable to both the U.S. and all regional and global stakeholders can be reached, Trump added.

    Highlighting the core non-proliferation demand of the U.S., Trump emphasized in his post that any final deal will include a critical provision barring Iran from ever developing nuclear weapons. He went on to confirm that out of respect for the allied leaders, he has directed Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Daniel Caine, and the entire U.S. military to stand down from the scheduled attack. However, he added that U.S. forces remain on high alert and ready to launch a full-scale offensive against Iran at a moment’s notice if negotiations fail to produce an acceptable agreement.

    Reacting to Trump’s announcement on X (formerly Twitter), Trita Parsi, co-founder and executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, offered a measured assessment of the development. Parsi concluded that “once again, Trump has realized that escalation will end up badly for the U.S. That does not necessarily mean, though, that the necessary realism, discipline and creativity will be mustered for the talks.”

  • Somaliland recognises Jerusalem as capital of Israel, will open embassy

    Somaliland recognises Jerusalem as capital of Israel, will open embassy

    In a move that is reshaping geopolitical dynamics across the Horn of Africa and the Middle East, the unrecognised autonomous state of Somaliland and Israel have unveiled plans to open reciprocal embassies, with Somaliland locating its diplomatic mission in Jerusalem — a highly contentious decision under international law.

    Mohamed Hagi, Somaliland’s ambassador to Israel, confirmed the development in a Tuesday statement, noting that the reciprocal embassy openings reflect deepening ties built on growing friendship, mutual respect, and strategic cooperation between the two polities. Israel’s embassy will be hosted in Hargeisa, Somaliland’s de facto capital. The announcement comes just months after Israel made history in December 2025 as the first United Nations member state to formally recognise Somaliland’s 34-year claim to independence from Somalia.

    Somaliland first unilaterally declared independence from Somalia in 1991 following the collapse of the Siad Barre regime, and has functioned as a de facto autonomous state ever since, though it has not secured formal recognition from any UN member state prior to Israel’s decision. The territory holds enormous strategic significance: it sits just 30 kilometers south of the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, the critical narrow waterway linking the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden that carries roughly 10 percent of global maritime trade each year.

    As part of the agreement for Israeli recognition, Somaliland has committed to joining the Abraham Accords, the 2020-2021 US-brokered framework that normalized diplomatic relations between Israel and four Arab states: the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan. Sudan’s normalization agreement remains stalled and unratified amid the country’s ongoing civil conflict.

    The diplomatic breakthrough has already triggered fierce pushback from across the Arab and Muslim world, where leaders have long opposed any expansion of Israeli influence in the strategically vital Horn of Africa, particularly through engagement with an unrecognised secessionist entity. Jerusalem’s status remains one of the most contentious issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: under international law, East Jerusalem is classified as occupied Palestinian territory, seized by Israel from Jordan during the 1967 Six-Day War. Prior to this announcement, Kosovo was the only Muslim-majority state to locate its embassy in Jerusalem, a move that mirrors Somaliland’s own status as a disputed secessionist entity — Kosovo’s 2008 independence declaration from Serbia is recognised by the US but rejected by China and Russia.

    Beyond formal diplomatic ties, reports indicate that senior Somaliland officials have held discussions about hosting an Israeli military base on Somaliland territory, a plan that would dramatically expand Israel’s regional military footprint. This development was previously denied by Somaliland’s foreign ministry, but talks have resumed following Israeli recognition. A military presence in Somaliland would place Israeli forces within striking distance of Yemen’s Houthi movement, which has launched repeated attacks on Red Sea shipping in recent months, framing the actions as retaliation for Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

    The new partnership between Israel and Somaliland also aligns with Israel’s already deepening security cooperation with the United Arab Emirates, a long-time backer of Somaliland that maintains its own military base at the strategic Somaliland port of Berbera. In recent months, Israel deployed Iron Dome air defense batteries to the UAE amid escalating Iranian missile and drone attacks on Gulf targets, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed he visited the UAE during the Gaza war. Middle East Eye reported Monday that the two countries have also agreed to establish a joint fund for coordinated defense acquisitions. Unlike many other Gulf states, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar, the UAE has refused to join regional condemnations of Israel’s recognition of Somaliland.

  • Man who murdered teen TikTok star in Pakistan gets death sentence

    Man who murdered teen TikTok star in Pakistan gets death sentence

    A shocking case of gender-based violence that roiled Pakistani public discourse has reached a landmark verdict, with an Islamabad court handing down a death sentence to 23-year-old Umar Hayat for the brutal murder of 17-year-old TikTok star Sana Yousaf. The killing, which took place in June of the previous year, followed a pattern of predatory behavior that ended in a devastating act of violence after Yousaf repeatedly rejected Hayat’s romantic advances.

    Investigative accounts from local Pakistani media outline how Hayat, who confessed to the killing in July, developed an unhealthy, one-sided obsession with Yousaf following casual online interactions. Days before the attack, he traveled to Islamabad, where Yousaf lived with her family, to greet her on her birthday. When Yousaf refused to meet him, Hayat forced his way into her family home. A confrontation between the two quickly escalated, ending with Hayat shooting Yousaf dead.

    At the time of her death, Yousaf had built a massive online following: more than one million followers on TikTok and an additional half a million on Instagram. Fans adored her approachable, light-hearted content, which ranged from testing viral fashion trends and lip-syncing to popular songs to candid clips of her spending time with friends.

    Following the verdict, Yousaf’s father, Syed Yousaf Hassan, told local media that the court’s ruling serves as “a lesson for all such criminals in society”. In addition to the death sentence, the court ordered Hayat to pay 2.5 million Pakistani rupees, equivalent to roughly $9,000, in compensation to Yousaf’s grieving family.

    The investigation into Yousaf’s murder was a wide-ranging effort: law enforcement officers carried out raids across Islamabad and the neighboring province of Punjab, reviewing footage from a total of 113 CCTV cameras to piece together the timeline of the attack.

    While the murder sparked widespread national outrage, it also exposed deep-seated misogyny within segments of Pakistani society. A small but vocal group of mostly male internet users launched a backlash against Yousaf, attacking her work as a social media influencer on religious grounds. Some even demanded that her family remove all of her existing content from TikTok and Instagram, claiming the posts amounted to “sinful” behavior.

    Digital rights and women’s rights advocates have pushed back against this dangerous narrative. Usama Khilji, director of digital rights organization Bolo Bhi, noted that the unfair criticism of Yousaf reflects entrenched bias against women creating content online. Prominent human rights activist Farzana Bari labeled the reaction to Yousaf’s murder explicitly misogynistic and patriarchal, pointing out that Yousaf was targeted simply for exercising her right to self-expression. Bari emphasized that the case serves as a stark reminder that social media has become an increasingly dangerous space for female content creators in Pakistan, where systemic gender-based violence continues to threaten women’s safety and autonomy.

    Activists also emphasize that Yousaf’s killing is not an isolated incident, but part of a long-standing, widespread pattern of violence against women across Pakistan that demands systemic policy and cultural change.

  • Liberals going back to basics with ‘Stand with Small’ business pledge

    Liberals going back to basics with ‘Stand with Small’ business pledge

    Australia’s Liberal-National Coalition is launching a bold, pro-small-business policy agenda centered on a landmark Small Business Act, set to be announced Wednesday by Shadow Treasurer Tim Wilson at Canberra’s National Press Club. The proposal, a core pillar of the Coalition’s push to refocus on grassroots economic priorities, aims to resolve longstanding fragmented regulations and amplifies the voices of small and independent business owners that opposition leaders argue have been sidelined by the current Labor government.

    At the heart of the policy is the creation of a single, standardized legal definition of a small business across all Commonwealth legislation, replacing the inconsistent, overlapping definitions that currently create unnecessary administrative burden for operators. The Act also mandates two key new protections: a formal “right to be paid”, which will enshrine legal maximum payment terms for small businesses working with both government agencies and large corporate clients, addressing the pervasive problem of late payments that cripples cash flow for thousands of small operations nationwide.

    Additional provisions embedded in the proposed legislation require that every new federal regulation be accompanied by a dedicated small business regulatory impact statement, creating a formal feedback pathway for small business owners to contribute to policy design before it becomes law. This consultation requirement will extend to all major federal regulators, including the Reserve Bank of Australia, Australian Securities and Investments Commission, Australian Taxation Office, and Fair Work Commission, ensuring small business perspectives are incorporated into key regulatory and monetary decisions that impact their operations. The policy also expands mandatory government procurement quotas, requiring a larger share of federal government contracts to be awarded exclusively to small businesses.

    Wilson will use his address to accuse the Albanese-led Labor government of waging an implicit war on Australia’s entrepreneurs and self-starting small business owners, a critique that comes amid ongoing pushback from small business groups over recent changes to capital gains tax discounts. In prepared remarks, Wilson will emphasize that the Coalition is positioning itself as the definitive political ally for small and independent operators, noting that for decades, Australian economic regulation has been shaped by deep-pocketed lobbyists with access to the highest levels of government, while small business voices were locked out of the process.

    “For too long Australia’s laws have been designed around the influence of those that can hire lobbyists to walk the Prime Minister’s corridor,” Wilson will say. “In generations past, young Australians got ahead by buying property. Young Australians know that to get ahead you need to invest, and build a small business, side hustle, equity or start-up.”

    Wilson will also frame the policy as a response to a fundamentally outdated economic framework, arguing that 12 months of widespread conversations with small business operators across the country have convinced him incremental, marginal tweaks to Australia’s 20th-century regulatory system are no longer enough to solve small business struggles.

    The new Small Business Act announcement builds on earlier pro-small-business commitments the Coalition unveiled earlier this month in Opposition Leader Angus Taylor’s budget reply speech. Those prior pledges include an instant $50,000 asset write-off for businesses with annual turnover below $1 million, and a policy to index the two lowest personal income tax brackets to inflation to curb bracket creep.

    Ahead of Wilson’s National Press Club address, Taylor doubled down on the Coalition’s critique, arguing the current Albanese government is ideologically opposed to small business and actively seeks to replace independent operations with expanded big government. “What they’re planning to do now is going to do exactly that, replace small business with big government,” Taylor said. “Only this government could be so arrogant and so could so badly misunderstand this country as to think that that’s a good idea.”

  • Iran has mapped out US flight patterns for air defence: Report

    Iran has mapped out US flight patterns for air defence: Report

    New intelligence assessments from anonymous U.S. officials have cast significant doubt on the Trump administration’s public claims that Iran’s military capabilities have been completely destroyed after weeks of open conflict, revealing that Iranian commanders have likely tracked and mapped consistent flight patterns of American fighter jets and bombers operating over Iranian airspace. This development substantially increases the operational risks to U.S. military personnel if President Donald Trump follows through on his recent threat to resume large-scale offensive attacks against the Islamic Republic.

    The current state of Iran’s integrated air defense network has emerged as a core factor driving Trump’s ongoing deliberations over whether to restart offensive operations. In comments to reporters earlier this week, Trump confirmed he had approved plans for a major new attack on Iran set to launch just one day after his initial announcement, only to call off the strike at the eleventh hour following lobbying from three key U.S. partners in the Gulf region: Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates. “We were getting ready to do a very major attack tomorrow, and I put it off for a little while, hopefully maybe forever, but possibly for a little while, because we’ve had very big discussions with Iran, and we’ll see what they amount to,” Trump told reporters.

    Both Trump and his Secretary of War Pete Hegseth have repeatedly asserted that Iran’s military is crippled and lacks functional air defense capabilities. While U.S. aircraft have generally been able to carry out sorties over Iranian territory without sustained interference, U.S. intelligence confirms American forces do not hold total, unchallenged dominance of Iranian airspace.

    Just days before the two sides reached a fragile ceasefire following the June 2025 conflict, Iranian air defenses successfully shot down a U.S. F-15E Strike Eagle, triggering a large-scale joint operation to recover the downed aircraft’s pilots. Military analysts note that if Iranian forces had captured the surviving pilots alive, Tehran would have gained substantial diplomatic leverage to pressure Washington into concessions. A senior U.S. official told The New York Times the successful downing of the F-15E serves as clear evidence that Iranian forces have learned to identify and predict recurring U.S. flight routes. As the six-week conflict progressed, Iranian defenses grew increasingly adept at targeting and downing U.S. military aircraft.

    Tensions around this capability were already rising earlier this year: multiple defense outlets reported that an F-35 stealth fighter jet suffered damage from Iranian anti-aircraft fire in March, and CBS News confirmed that U.S. forces have lost at least 16 MQ-9 Reaper surveillance and combat drones operating over Iranian territory since the start of hostilities.

    The New York Times also cites U.S. intelligence suggesting Russia may have provided critical assistance to Iran in mapping U.S. flight patterns, allowing Tehran to reposition its air defense assets for more effective interception. This collaboration aligns with a long-standing security partnership between Moscow and Tehran. Multiple independent U.S. media outlets have previously confirmed that Russia has shared valuable satellite intelligence with Iran, including detailed imagery of U.S. warship deployments and military personnel positions in the region.

    Iran’s current air defense architecture combines domestically manufactured systems with advanced hardware purchased from both Russia and China. Middle East Eye was the first outlet to confirm that China supplied integrated air defense batteries to Iran in the aftermath of the June 2025 war, which saw U.S. forces carry out targeted bombing runs on three Iranian nuclear sites.

    The Trump administration’s narrative that Iran’s military has been “decimated” directly contradicts a growing body of leaked U.S. intelligence assessments, which indicate the Islamic Republic’s armed forces retain far more operational capacity than senior White House officials have publicly acknowledged. Just last week, The New York Times reported that Iran still controls approximately 70 percent of its pre-war mobile missile launchers and holds roughly 70 percent of its original missile stockpile. U.S. offensive strikes targeted heavily fortified missile sites hidden deep in underground mountain caves, but the ceasefire has allowed Iranian crews to clear rubble from these facilities and return the undamaged weapons systems to operational status, the report found.

  • ‘Need to be there’: Blues stick solid as Origin champions seek 26-year first

    ‘Need to be there’: Blues stick solid as Origin champions seek 26-year first

    With the women’s State of Origin trophy already secured, New South Wales (NSW) Blues head coach John Strange faced a pivotal decision: hand valuable debut opportunities to rising young talents, or stick with the group that delivered the series win to chase an unprecedented milestone. In a call shaped by hard lessons from last year’s campaign, Strange has opted to keep his entire 20-player matchday squad intact for next week’s decisive third clash, as the Blues chase the first 3-0 clean sweep for a NSW side in 26 years.

    NSW locked in the series title earlier this month with a heart-stopping 14-10 come-from-behind win over Queensland at Brisbane’s Suncorp Stadium, wrapping up the overall trophy with one match still left to play. Instead of shaking up his lineup to give fringe prospects a taste of senior representative football, Strange said the painful memory of last year’s dead rubber defeat was the driving force behind his loyalty to the group that got the Blues across the line in Brisbane.

    Strange publicly confirmed the unchanged squad during a YouTube livestream on Wednesday morning, confirming the third game, scheduled for next Thursday, will be held on Queensland’s home turf on the Gold Coast. “The reason for that is that I feel like the girls that were selected for both games have done an awesome job,” Strange told reporters and fans during the stream. “We want to make sure they have the opportunity to go up there and win the third game. So it’s about respecting the players that have worn the jersey and deserve to wear the jersey, so there was no thought of changing the team this year. It was a case of going with the girls that need to be there.”

    The upcoming fixture will mark a personal milestone for veteran Blues forward Kezie Apps, who will earn her 20th state cap for NSW when she runs out next week.

    Strange’s decision is rooted in a humbling experience 12 months prior. In 2023, the Blues also claimed the first two matches of the series to secure the Origin trophy early, only to drop a tight third-match dead rubber in Newcastle to Queensland. That defeat, which came despite the Blues winning the first two contests by a combined 20 points, left a lasting impression on the entire program, and Strange is determined to avoid a repeat of that outcome this year.

    “We were in a similar situation last year after two games, and we went up to game three in Newcastle and didn’t get the job done,” he said. “Queensland were outstanding in that game and very desperate and wanted to make sure they got a win, so we fully understand that’s the attitude that they’re going to bring this time around.”

    Reflecting on last year’s misstep, Strange said the squad entered the third game with a celebratory mindset rather than the competitive intensity that carried them to the first two wins. That shift in focus ultimately cost them. “I felt like going into camp for game three last year that there was a lot of excitement from all the players, and so they should have been excited because they’d wrapped the series up,” he explained. “But we probably didn’t go in with the same intensity in game three that we did in games one and two, so that was a really good learning experience for all of us involved. If we were in the same position again that we would go in with a different mindset because we know Queensland don’t want to get beaten 3-0. We know the desperation they’re going to have, and we’re going to make sure we match that desperation and play good footy.”

    The full NSW squad will enter camp this Thursday before travelling to Kingscliff on Saturday to ramp up their final preparations for the history-making clash. The full unchanged 20-player squad is as follows: Abbi Church, Jaime Chapman, Jess Sergis, Isabelle Kelly, Jayme Fressard, Jocelyn Kelleher, Jesse Southwell, Millie Elliott, Olivia Higgins, Ellie Johnston, Kezie Apps, Yasmin Meakes, Olivia Kernick, Keeley Nizza, Kennedy Cherrington, Rima Butler, Teagan Berry, Quincy Dodd, Corban Baxter, and Hannah Southwell.