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  • Trump vows ‘death, fire, fury’ as Iran civilian Infrastructure hit

    Trump vows ‘death, fire, fury’ as Iran civilian Infrastructure hit

    A renewed military offensive by United States and Israeli forces struck multiple targets across Iran late Monday and early Tuesday, with reports indicating significant civilian infrastructure damage including residential buildings, educational facilities, and power grids. The escalation coincides with former President Donald Trump’s explicit threat targeting Iran’s entire population through his Truth Social platform.

    Trump declared that US forces would “take out easily destroyable targets that will make it virtually impossible for Iran to ever be built back, as a Nation, again” if Iranian authorities interfere with oil tanker navigation through the Strait of Hormuz. Maritime traffic through this critical choke point has dramatically decreased since the initiation of joint US-Israeli operations.

    Eyewitness accounts from Tehran describe catastrophic scenes at strike locations, with one resident reporting “a huge disaster” and the recovery of numerous civilian casualties, including children, from bombed residential complexes. Iranian media additionally confirmed damage to a school and surrounding homes in Khomeyn city, following what evidence suggests was a US-orchestrated attack on a girls’ elementary school in Minab last month that killed over 160 people, predominantly young students.

    Dylan Williams of the Center for International Policy characterized the campaign as “a war against the people of Iran,” noting that AIPAC, the pro-Israel lobbying organization, amplified Trump’s threatening social media post. Iranian officials responded with defiance, with Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf vowing to “strike the aggressor in the mouth” to prevent further aggression.

    Diplomatic prospects appear increasingly remote according to Kamal Kharazi, foreign policy adviser to Iran’s supreme leader, who told CNN that Trump’s pattern of deception had eliminated opportunities for negotiation. Kharazi indicated conflict resolution would require sufficient international economic pressure to guarantee cessation of hostilities.

    With oil prices surging and creating administration concerns, an anonymous senior Iranian source warned that Tehran controls “the screw of the global oil price” and would continue fighting until Trump acknowledges defeat, suggesting prolonged energy market instability.

  • Shots fired at US consulate in Canada’s Toronto, no injuries reported

    Shots fired at US consulate in Canada’s Toronto, no injuries reported

    Toronto law enforcement authorities have launched a comprehensive investigation into a shooting incident targeting the United States consulate in Canada’s largest metropolis. The attack occurred in the early hours of Tuesday morning, marking a significant security breach in the heart of downtown Toronto.

    According to official police reports, authorities received emergency calls at precisely 5:29 AM local time on March 10, 2026, alerting them to gunfire directed at the diplomatic facility. Responding units arriving at the scene documented clear evidence of firearm discharge, though no casualties or injuries were reported in connection with the incident. Investigators currently lack identifying information about potential suspects involved in the attack.

    The shooting has prompted strong condemnations from multiple levels of Canadian leadership. Federal Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree characterized the incident as ‘absolutely unacceptable,’ emphasizing that Canada maintains zero tolerance for acts of intimidation or violence against diplomatic missions.

    Ontario Premier Doug Ford echoed these sentiments, denouncing what he described as an ‘absolutely unacceptable act of violence and intimidation.’ Premier Ford assured the public that provincial authorities would collaborate with law enforcement agencies to ensure those responsible face full legal consequences.

    Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow contextualized the consulate attack within broader security concerns, noting that this incident follows multiple shootings targeting Toronto-area synagogues earlier in March. Mayor Chow confirmed that security has been significantly enhanced around both US and Israeli diplomatic facilities throughout the city as precautionary measures.

    The investigation remains active with multiple law enforcement agencies coordinating to determine motives and identify potential suspects behind the attack on American diplomatic property.

  • Trump reportedly wants to seize Iran’s Kharg Island. He floated the idea 40 years ago

    Trump reportedly wants to seize Iran’s Kharg Island. He floated the idea 40 years ago

    A recently resurfaced 1988 interview with then-businessman Donald Trump reveals his early consideration of military action against Iran’s critical Kharg Island oil terminal. Speaking to The Guardian, Trump articulated a confrontational approach toward Iran, stating he would “be harsh on Iran” and proposing to “go in and take” Kharg Island in response to any provocation against US assets.

    This historical perspective gains contemporary significance as recent reports from Axios indicate that US and Israeli officials have recently discussed the possibility of seizing this strategic facility, which handles approximately 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports. The parallel between Trump’s 1988 comments and current deliberations highlights remarkable consistency in his strategic thinking regarding Iran.

    The context of Trump’s original remarks was the brutal Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), which resulted in approximately 500,000 casualties. During this period, the US Navy was actively escorting vessels through the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz and conducting operations against Iranian oil infrastructure and naval mines.

    Trump’s adversarial stance toward Iran appears rooted in the 1979 Iranian Revolution, which overthrew US-backed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and established the Islamic Republic. The subsequent 444-day hostage crisis, where 52 American diplomats were held captive in Tehran, profoundly shaped the perceptions of many Americans of Trump’s generation.

    Despite this confrontational posture, historical records reveal a more complex US-Iran relationship. During the Iran-Iraq War, the United States and Israel actually sold weapons to Iran, perceiving Saddam Hussein’s secular Iraqi government as a greater threat than the Islamic Republic. Some of these transactions became part of the controversial Iran-Contra affair, where proceeds were illegally diverted to support anti-communist rebels in Nicaragua.

    The potential closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which approximately 20% of global oil and natural gas supplies transit, represents a significant threat to energy markets. Recent reports indicate that Iran continued loading operations at Kharg Island even after the initiation of US-Israeli military actions, though current operational status remains unclear.

  • Iran’s MEK plots a US-backed path to power from exile in Albania

    Iran’s MEK plots a US-backed path to power from exile in Albania

    Amidst escalating military actions against Iran initiated by Israel and the United States on February 28th, the Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) – an opposition group long marginalized in exile – has launched a strategic maneuver to position itself as a viable alternative to Tehran’s Islamic Republic.

    The organization’s 72-year-old leader, Maryam Rajavi, proclaimed the establishment of a provisional government tasked with overseeing the transition to a democratic republic under her leadership. This declaration comes as the group, which maintains approximately 3,000 members in a fortified Albanian compound near Tirana, seeks relevance in a conflict that has suddenly created political opportunities.

    Originally founded as an Islamist-Marxist student militia during the 1960s, the MEK has undergone significant ideological transformation. The group relocated to Albania’s Manze village in 2013 following a Washington-brokered agreement that resettled members previously based in Iraq. Despite its current marginalization, the MEK played a substantial role in the 1979 revolution before being suppressed by Ayatollah Khomeini’s regime.

    The organization’s relationship with Western powers has been complex and controversial. Designated as a terrorist organization by the U.S. in 1997, the MEK successfully lobbied for removal from the list in 2012. The group gained international attention in 2002 when it exposed Iran’s previously concealed uranium-enrichment program, demonstrating its intelligence capabilities.

    Analysts remain skeptical about the MEK’s domestic appeal. Professor Thomas Juneau of the University of Ottawa characterizes the group as “a thuggish and corrupt cult that is unpopular inside Iran.” Similarly, Iran expert Sajjad Safaei notes that the MEK’s utility to foreign powers stems precisely from its lack of political future within Iran, making it an ideal instrument for external interests.

    The organization maintains sophisticated infrastructure in Albania, including media rooms and communication centers that monitor Iranian developments and distribute content online. This operational capacity, combined with an extensive lobbying network in Washington, has enabled the MEK to cultivate support among prominent Western politicians. Financial disclosures reveal substantial speaking fees paid to figures including Mike Pence ($190,000), John Bolton ($40,000), and numerous other former officials from the U.S. and Europe.

    As speculation about regime change intensifies, tensions have emerged within the exiled Iranian opposition community. Rudy Giuliani, a prominent MEK ally, recently attacked Reza Pahlavi on social media, highlighting the fractious nature of the opposition movement. Despite these developments, Washington has maintained caution regarding official endorsement, recognizing the potential consequences of supporting groups with limited domestic legitimacy.

  • Shanghai and Jiangsu integration boosts sports-tourism development

    Shanghai and Jiangsu integration boosts sports-tourism development

    The strategic integration between Shanghai and Jiangsu provinces is catalyzing a new era of sports-tourism development, marked by the unveiling of two major cross-regional athletic events. The collaboration centers on the 2026 Chinese Athletics Association 10KM Elite Series in Shanghai Jing’an and the 2026 Suzhou Taihu Lake Digital Half Marathon, representing a significant advancement in regional cooperation through sports infrastructure.

    Scheduled for March 22 at Daning Park in Jing’an district, the Shanghai 10K event holds distinction as a premier CAA Class A1 road race and Shanghai’s first national 10K series event. The competition has generated substantial international interest, with registration numbers reaching 38,021 participants from 25 countries despite an entry cap of 4,800 runners. The allocation includes 4,500 spots for the 10K category and 300 for the family run segment.

    Geographical analysis of participant demographics reveals strong cross-provincial engagement, with Jiangsu-based athletes constituting 15% of out-of-town participants—the largest provincial representation. International participation features significant contingents from Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the United States, and Germany, underscoring the event’s global appeal.

    Liu Mingming, Director of Jing’an District Sports Bureau, emphasized the strategic importance: “Hosting China’s highest-standard 10K elite race in Jing’an demonstrates the CAA’s confidence in our capabilities while advancing the integration of culture, sports, business, and tourism to empower high-quality urban development.”

    The initiative represents a concrete implementation of the Yangtze River Delta integration strategy, creating a replicable model for cross-regional collaboration that leverages athletic events to stimulate tourism, economic activity, and cultural exchange between neighboring provinces.

  • China Eastern Airlines restores direct flights between Shanghai and Stockholm

    China Eastern Airlines restores direct flights between Shanghai and Stockholm

    China Eastern Airlines has officially announced the reinstatement of its direct flight service between Shanghai and Stockholm, set to recommence operations on June 22. This strategic restoration reestablishes a vital air corridor that had been suspended since 2020 due to global pandemic restrictions.

    The Shanghai-based carrier will operate flights three times weekly on Mondays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. Aircraft will depart from Shanghai Pudong International Airport at 15:00 local time, with return services from Stockholm scheduled for the same calendar day, facilitating efficient round-trip travel arrangements.

    This route revival represents a significant enhancement to China Eastern’s European network strategy, particularly strengthening its presence across Nordic markets. Stockholm serves as Sweden’s political, economic, and cultural epicenter, making it a crucial gateway for Scandinavian connectivity.

    Industry analysts note this reconnection will substantially benefit bilateral economic relations, tourism exchange, and cultural dialogue between China and Sweden. The resumption signals growing normalization in international air travel demand and reflects China Eastern’s confidence in transcontinental market recovery.

    Tickets for the Shanghai-Stockholm route are presently available for booking through China Eastern’s official digital platforms, including their website and mobile application.

    The airline currently maintains an extensive European network with 28 separate routes connecting Chinese cities to destinations across the continent, with this Stockholm service representing a key component of their continued European expansion strategy.

  • From Suez to Hormuz: parallels in imperial overreach

    From Suez to Hormuz: parallels in imperial overreach

    Seven decades after the Suez Crisis exposed the erosion of British and French imperial power, a strikingly parallel confrontation is unfolding at another critical maritime choke point—the Strait of Hormuz. Both historical episodes reveal how military interventions intended to secure energy arteries ultimately accelerate geopolitical decline through political humiliation and strategic miscalculation.

    The 1956 Suez operation saw Britain and France, in collaboration with Israel, launch Operation Musketeer to reclaim the canal after Egyptian President Nasser’s nationalization. While militarily successful, the campaign collapsed under American financial pressure, revealing Britain’s inability to sustain great-power status without Washington’s support. The humiliation marked the effective end of the British Empire and exposed the fragility of Western hegemony.

    This historical precedent finds eerie resonance in today’s Hormuz crisis. Following US-Israeli strikes on Iranian facilities in February 2026—including the killing of Supreme Leader Khamenei under Operation Epic Fury—Tehran retaliated by effectively closing the Strait to commercial shipping. The resulting disruption exceeds Suez in scale: approximately 20% of global oil supplies have been interrupted, with traffic declining 70-90% according to maritime reports.

    The current situation differs critically in one aspect: the absence of spare capacity buffers that mitigated the 1956 crisis. Today’s tightly balanced markets must absorb supply shocks through demand destruction—skyrocketing prices that transmit economic pain globally. Asian nations bear the heaviest burden, with Japan (73% oil imports via Hormuz), South Korea (60%), India (50%), and China (40%) facing severe energy security challenges.

    America faces contradictions reminiscent of Britain’s Suez dilemma. Despite becoming a major oil producer, the US remains vulnerable to global price spikes that immediately impact domestic gasoline costs and reignite inflation. Militarily, the extensive network of 19 Gulf bases—including the critical Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar—creates vulnerability rather than strength. These fixed installations present pre-mapped targets for Iranian precision missiles and drone swarms, transforming assets designed for deterrence into liabilities.

    Gulf monarchies now confront their own post-Suez reckoning. Despite hosting US forces, they publicly refuse permission for American operations against Iran from their territories. This distancing reflects calculated risk assessment: the September 2025 Israeli strike on Doha, which went unanswered by nearby US forces, demonstrated that American protection prioritizes Washington’s interests over host-nation security.

    The emerging Eastern pivot underscores the strategic shift. Saudi Arabia and the UAE joined BRICS+ alongside Iran in 2023, creating a coalition that unites major energy producers with the world’s largest consumers. This realignment offers Gulf states commercial relationships without the political conditionality increasingly associated with American engagement.

    The deepest parallel between 1956 and 2026 lies in unintended consequences. The 1953 coup against Iran’s Mossadegh—orchestrated by Britain and the US to secure oil access—ultimately generated the antagonism that now threatens Hormuz. Similarly, current interventions intended to demonstrate American dominance may instead accelerate regional realignment and the erosion of Western influence. As Gulf states absorb historical lessons, they increasingly diversify security partnerships beyond Washington, potentially reshaping the global balance of power for decades to come.

  • China’s draft law on ethnic unity aims to serve as global model, political adviser

    China’s draft law on ethnic unity aims to serve as global model, political adviser

    China’s legislative body is currently deliberating a groundbreaking draft law on ethnic unity advancement that political advisors characterize as a potential international paradigm for managing interethnic relations. The proposed legislation, presented during the fourth session of the 14th National People’s Congress running through March 12, 2026, represents China’s comprehensive approach to fostering national cohesion while preserving cultural diversity.

    Chen Xiaoyan, a National Committee member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference and official with the All-China Federation of Taiwan Compatriots, emphasized the draft law’s dual significance. “This legislative framework demonstrates China’s institutional confidence in its governance model and developmental trajectory,” Chen stated during the ongoing Two Sessions political gatherings. “At a time when ethnic tensions continue to trigger global conflicts and humanitarian crises, this initiative establishes foundational principles for unity and collective wellbeing among China’s diverse ethnic communities.”

    The proposed legislation specifically addresses cultural preservation mandates, ensuring the protection of unique linguistic, educational, and traditional practices across ethnic groups while synchronizing these protections with national unity objectives. Chen highlighted the draft’s particular relevance to cross-strait relations, noting that ethnic communities from Taiwan have expressed admiration for mainland China’s ethnic policies and support systems.

    Chen further projected that the law’s implementation would extend comparable rights and benefits to Taiwan’s ethnic populations, facilitating their integration within the broader Chinese national community. The legislation emerges as a structured response to global ethnic challenges, positioning China’s approach as both domestically beneficial and internationally instructive for nations navigating complex multicultural dynamics.

  • Shots fired at US consulate in Toronto, police say

    Shots fired at US consulate in Toronto, police say

    Toronto police confirmed an armed attack targeting the United States consulate in the early hours of Tuesday, marking the second assault on American diplomatic property within 48 hours across different continents.

    According to official statements released via social media platform X, law enforcement units responded to emergency calls reporting gunfire directed at the consular building approximately at 5:30 AM local time. Responding officers documented physical evidence confirming weapons discharge at the scene, though fortunately no casualties were reported among diplomatic staff or civilians.

    Television broadcast footage revealed at least two visible projectile impacts on the consulate’s reinforced glass entrance doors, with subsequent imagery circulating online showing considerable glass fragmentation around the main entry points. Toronto Police Service emphasized their ongoing investigation currently lacks definitive information regarding potential suspects or underlying motivations for the attack.

    This incident follows Sunday’s explosive device detonation outside the US Embassy in Oslo, Norway, where local authorities continue searching for an unidentified individual captured in surveillance footage. Norwegian police officials acknowledged they are investigating potential connections to geopolitical tensions, specifically referencing the ongoing US-Israeli military operations against Iranian interests as one possible motive.

    The consecutive attacks on American diplomatic installations across Western nations have raised concerns about coordinated targeting patterns, though authorities stress no formal connection has been established between the two incidents. Both investigations remain active with heightened security measures implemented at US diplomatic posts globally.

  • Half of UK news articles about Muslims are biased, landmark study finds

    Half of UK news articles about Muslims are biased, landmark study finds

    A landmark analysis of British media coverage has exposed systemic biases in the portrayal of Muslims, with nearly half of all published articles containing significant prejudice. The comprehensive study by the Centre for Media Monitoring (CfMM), which examined 40,000 articles across 30 major UK media outlets, found that 70% of coverage explicitly associated Islam or Muslims with negative behaviors and aspects while frequently omitting crucial contextual information.

    The report, published Monday, identifies a disturbing pattern where Muslim communities are consistently framed through lenses of conflict and controversy. According to the findings, 44% of articles failed to provide essential context, 17% contained sweeping generalizations about Muslims, and 13% featured outright misrepresentation of facts. The CfMM warns that this coverage pattern contributes to a ‘crisis of public understanding’ regarding British Muslim communities.

    The analysis reveals significant disparities in editorial standards across media organizations. Right-leaning publications demonstrated particularly problematic patterns, with The Spectator showing the highest proportion of ‘very biased’ coverage at 26%, followed by GB News at 15.6% and The Telegraph at 12.3%. The report specifically accuses GB News of embedding ‘a systematic pattern of hostile coverage towards Islam and Muslims as a core feature of its editorial identity.’

    In contrast, the BBC consistently recorded the lowest rates of biased coverage across all metrics examined. The CfMM emphasizes that harmful coverage cannot be attributed to industry-wide tendencies alone but represents deliberate editorial decisions. The report highlights specific egregious examples, including a GB News article headlined ‘Let me be impolite: Muslims are racist against Jews’ which attributed antisemitism to Muslims as a collective group.

    Another case involved The Sun newspaper publishing a headline linking an honor killing to Islam without evidence. Following a complaint from CfMM, the publication amended the headline to remove the religious reference. CfMM Director Rizwana Hamid stated that the report presents ‘deeply concerning evidence of structural bias’ that inevitably shapes public attitudes and political debate.

    The research emerges against a troubling backdrop of rising anti-Muslim incidents, with think tank Equi documenting a 43% increase between 2023 and 2024. However, Equi’s parallel research revealed that public attitudes toward British Muslims are significantly more positive than media discourse suggests, with most Britons holding favorable or neutral views that improve when exposed to examples of Muslim contributions to society.

    The report’s release coincided with the government unveiling a new non-statutory definition of anti-Muslim hostility, which Communities Secretary Steve Reed connected to record levels of religious hate crimes targeting Muslim communities. The official definition now includes criminal acts directed at Muslims because of their religion, prejudicial stereotyping, and unlawful discrimination intended to disadvantage Muslims in public and economic life.