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  • Supreme Court keeps birthright citizenship, overruling Trump order

    Supreme Court keeps birthright citizenship, overruling Trump order

    On a Tuesday in Washington D.C., the U.S. Supreme Court delivered a landmark rejection of former President Donald Trump’s controversial effort to rewrite the longstanding interpretation of birthright citizenship enshrined in U.S. constitutional law. The 6-3 vote delivered a decisive victory for established constitutional interpretation, with a majority of justices reaffirming the century-old principle of automatic citizenship for anyone born on U.S. soil, no matter the immigration status of the newborn’s parents.

    Writing the majority opinion for the court, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. made clear that Trump’s executive order directly contravened the text and intent of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. “Arguments for limiting birthright citizenship to those domiciled in the United States fail,” Roberts wrote in his opinion. “Children born in the United States to parents unlawfully or temporarily present are ‘subject to the jurisdiction’ of the United States and are citizens at birth under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause. Under the Constitution, they are citizens at birth.”

    This policy push originated on the first day of Trump’s second presidential term, when he signed the executive order aimed at stripping automatic birthright citizenship from children born in the U.S. to parents without permanent legal status, including those holding temporary visas or living in the country without formal authorization. Legal analysts and policy experts had repeatedly warned that allowing the order to stand would create a large new class of stateless people, triggering widespread administrative chaos for U.S. hospitals and local government agencies tasked with recording births and issuing key documentation.

    In a break from typical presidential precedent, Trump made the rare move of attending oral arguments for the case in person ahead of the ruling. Ahead of the decision, Trump acknowledged he would abide by the court’s final call, while still making his preference clear: “It’s up to them, but in terms of for the good of the country, it’d be great if they … didn’t allow it,” he told reporters from the Oval Office. The White House had not issued an immediate formal response to the ruling when contacted by States Newsroom shortly after the decision was announced.

    The ruling marks a significant setback for Trump, who positioned the redefinition of birthright citizenship as a core plank of his broader hardline immigration policy agenda, which seeks to restrict entry and reshape who qualifies as a U.S. citizen. Notably, the defeat comes on the heels of two recent high court rulings that expanded presidential authority over immigration policy: one that curbed asylum seeker claims at the U.S. Southern border, and another that removed deportation protections for approximately 350,000 Haitian migrants and 6,000 Syrian migrants living in the U.S.

  • Gaza emerges as a defining issue for Gen Z voters in New York Democratic primaries

    Gaza emerges as a defining issue for Gen Z voters in New York Democratic primaries

    For a large share of young New York City voters, the 2026 Democratic primary elections were not defined by the usual bread-and-butter local issues of housing affordability, public safety, or neighborhood services. Instead, a single, urgent moral and political question overshadowed all other policy debates: candidates’ public stances on Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Gaza, which progressive contenders openly labeled a genocide. Driven by this anger and moral conviction, Generation Z voters rallied behind left-wing challengers, delivering shock primary upsets to three establishment-backed incumbents, all of whom were endorsed by New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani.\n\nNew York City Comptroller Brad Lander defeated centrist incumbent Dan Goldman, community organizer Darializa Avila Chevalier (widely known as DAC) ousted five-term Congressman Adriano Espaillat, and New York State Assemblymember Claire Valdez beat an opponent backed by nearly the entire city Democratic Party infrastructure. All three winning candidates are members of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), a left-wing faction whose policy and foreign policy platforms would have been considered far outside the Democratic Party’s mainstream just 10 years ago.\n\nMultiple young Democratic voters told Middle East Eye that the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza made it impossible to support any candidate who refused to take a clear, uncompromising stance against Israel’s military action. Voters specifically rejected candidates who avoided labeling Israel’s actions as genocide, continued to support U.S. military funding for Israel, or hid behind the cautious, equivocal language that has characterized the national Democratic Party’s official response to the war.\n\n“The genocide in Gaza is the biggest moral issue of my lifetime,” said Eleanor Babaev, a 28-year-old event planner from Sunnyside, Queens. “I have attended protests against the genocide in Gaza with Claire Valdez, so I knew I could trust her. That was the single central reason I voted for her.” Babaev, whose mother is an Ashkenazi Jew from the former Soviet Union, added that her own family background reinforced her commitment to opposing the violence in Gaza.\n\nAdnan Bukhari, a veteran political organizer with more than a decade of experience working for Democratic candidates and a DSA member who campaigned for both Chevalier and Valdez, said the unifying thread across all three winning campaigns was not just a broad progressive platform, but a willingness to openly and consistently call Israel’s actions in Gaza genocide. “If you dissect the entire campaign, from day one, all these candidates stood fast and called it a genocide,” Bukhari explained. “They never backed away from that statement, from campaign rallies to phone banking to one-on-one voter conversations. I would say Gaza was 100 percent the main deciding factor in this election.” Bukhari added that this conclusion came directly from thousands of conversations with voters: “If we made 10,000 calls, this was the main discussion point in 7,000 of them.”\n\nProgressive organizers say the Gaza war has become a political tipping point for younger Democratic voters, because it ties opposition to U.S. military intervention abroad directly to domestic concerns over economic inequality and strained public spending at home. “I think the left has done a very good job of connecting what’s happening in our own neighborhoods to foreign policy,” said Bilal Tahir, field director for Chevalier’s campaign and a senior Democratic Party organizer. “If we attack Iran at Israel’s urging, that’s connected to Gaza: we’re pouring billions of dollars, weapons and resources into destroying societies overseas, while we still don’t have affordable universal healthcare, fully funded public education, or accessible housing for working people here at home.”\n\nTahir noted that many younger voters frame the war in Gaza through the lens of the U.S.’s decades-long costly wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, building on a long-simmering generational backlash against endless U.S. military intervention. “This is a broad, cross-constituency anti-war movement, and that’s how the left has positioned itself to voters,” he said.\n\nThese anti-war, pro-justice themes were not unique to the congressional primaries: they were also a core pillar of Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s own 2025 mayoral campaign, where opposition to Israel’s war in Gaza was woven into a broader critique of corporate power, economic inequality, and the unaccountable Democratic Party establishment. Gabriel Tennen, an assistant professor of history at Baruch College, noted that Mamdani has retained remarkable political popularity even halfway through his first term in office, and his endorsement carried significant weight with young progressive voters.\n\nTennen added that the primary results upend two long-held assumptions about U.S. politics. First, they show that “socialism” is no longer a toxic label in U.S. electoral politics, especially among younger Democratic voters. Second, the iconic political adage that “all politics is local” is no longer entirely true: a global foreign policy issue can overshadow all local concerns to drive election results. Most importantly, Tennen argued, the upsets reflect a broad generational political realignment, not a divide along ethnic or religious lines. Brad Lander, for example, won his primary in one of New York’s largest Jewish-majority districts, despite his outspoken criticism of Israel’s actions in Gaza.\n\nTuesday’s results highlight shifting attitudes among New York’s Jewish voters, a constituency long considered a core pillar of pro-Israel politics in one of the most politically influential pro-Israel centers in the United States. New York is home to roughly 1.3 million Jewish residents, the largest Jewish population of any city outside of Israel. Yet both Valdez and Lander won their races in districts with large Jewish electorates, despite their unapologetic criticism of Israel’s war in Gaza.\n\n“The genocide is the most important issue of our time,” said Sam Leviton, a 23-year-old recent Columbia University public health graduate and Harlem resident who voted for Chevalier. “I’ve been a Jewish New Yorker my whole life, and the core lesson I was raised with is that every person, no matter their race, religion, creed, or color, deserves a life of dignity. The idea that my tax dollars are going to destroy homes and lives overseas is absolutely contrary to everything I was taught and everything I believe.”\n\nRecent polling confirms that these shifting attitudes are part of a broader trend across the electorate. A March 2026 survey conducted by The Mellman Group found that while most Jewish voters still identify as Democrats, a majority opposed recent U.S. military strikes on Iran and said the president should have obtained formal congressional approval before launching military action. The poll also found that just 39 percent of respondents held a favorable view of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac), the powerful pro-Israel lobbying group, indicating that the organization no longer commands overwhelming support among Jewish voters.\n\nAipac emerged as a major flashpoint during the primary campaigns, with Mayor Mamdani repeatedly accusing the group of spending millions of dollars in unregulated “dark money” to defend establishment Democratic incumbents. The issue resonated deeply with progressive supporters on election night: at Valdez’s election watch party, supporters chanted against Aipac as Dan Goldman delivered his concession speech on live television.\n\n“Aipac is clearly on the side of whoever holds existing power, and it uses big money and front groups to manipulate election outcomes, which takes away a fair shot from voters trying to elect representatives who actually represent their views,” said Michael Kranz, an Ashkenazi Jewish software engineer from Park Slope, Brooklyn. Kranz pointed to Goldman’s vote alongside far-right Republicans to censure the International Criminal Court as a clear example of Aipac’s undue influence on elected officials. “An interest group that acts on behalf of a foreign government has no place shaping the politics of New York’s 10th Congressional District,” he added.\n\nGoldman himself later acknowledged that the war in Gaza played an “outsized role” in his election defeat.\n\nFor many young progressive activists, the primary results are more than just a handful of local election wins. They represent concrete evidence that the mass anti-war movement, which has mobilized hundreds of thousands of protesters across the U.S. over the Gaza war, is beginning to translate street protest into lasting, institutional political change through the electoral process.\n\n“America has needed a serious anti-war movement my entire life,” said Joe Whitcomb, a 24-year-old law student who voted for Valdez, referencing the decades-long U.S. war on terror. “You can get millions of people out in the streets, and nothing changes. So we’ve started building strategies to make political interventions that actually deliver tangible results.”’

  • Lebanon’s Israel framework deal draws broad opposition but little appetite for confrontation

    Lebanon’s Israel framework deal draws broad opposition but little appetite for confrontation

    On June 26, a US-mediated framework agreement between Lebanon and Israel signed in Washington has ignited a firestorm of political pushback across Lebanon, with critics raising urgent questions over national sovereignty, governmental accountability, and the lopsided distribution of obligations between the two neighboring states. The backlash grew sharper after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu framed the deal as a clear victory for Israel, reinforcing critics’ claims that Beirut made sweeping concessions without securing either an immediate ceasefire or a binding timeline for a full Israeli military withdrawal from Lebanese territory.

    Under the terms of the agreed framework, the Lebanese military will take control of specially designated “pilot zones” along the border, dismantle military infrastructure belonging to non-state armed groups, and verify their disarmament before Israeli forces carry out a gradual redeployment from occupied areas. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam have publicly defended the agreement, positioning it as the opening step of a process that will ultimately restore full Lebanese state sovereignty and compel a complete Israeli exit.

    Despite this official framing, the political reaction has laid bare a stark divide between the government’s narrative and the interpretations held by most of Lebanon’s major political factions. Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem denounced the deal as “a humiliation, a disgrace and a surrender of sovereignty,” declaring it effectively invalid from Lebanon’s perspective. The Higher Islamic Shia Council labeled it an “agreement of submission” forced through under American pressure, drawing parallels to the failed 1983 May 17 agreement with Israel and warning it would deepen intractable internal divisions.

    Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who also leads the Amal movement, described the framework as fundamentally unbalanced, saying it cementes status quos that benefit Israel at Lebanon’s expense. He warned the deal carries severe risks to Lebanese politics and national sovereignty, and cannot serve as a foundation for a just agreement that upholds Lebanese rights and state institutions.

    Former Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt criticized the negotiating team for sidelining Lebanon’s 1949 armistice agreement with Israel, a document that has been referenced in the 1989 Taif Agreement, President Aoun’s inaugural address, and the current government’s ministerial statement. The Free Patriotic Movement, Lebanon’s largest Christian political party, said it supports a comprehensive, lasting peace but argued such an outcome cannot be achieved by surrendering to Israeli demands or sacrificing Lebanese national rights. The party reaffirmed its support for placing all weapons and authority over war and peace exclusively in the hands of the Lebanese state, while warning against pursuing this goal through internal conflict. The left-wing pan-Arab Popular Nasserist Organisation also rejected the agreement, saying it threatens Lebanese sovereignty and imposes unfair conditions that undermine what the party calls the right of resistance.

    What makes this opposition particularly politically significant is its breadth: it stretches far beyond Hezbollah and its traditional ally Amal to include Jumblatt, the Free Patriotic Movement, and other factions that do not regularly align with Hezbollah. To date, support for the agreement remains limited to a small bloc of parties largely within the Christian right, including the Lebanese Forces, Kataeb Party, National Liberal Party, and a handful of independent members of parliament.

    This widespread dissent makes it impossible for the Lebanese presidency and government to dismiss all criticism as simply an Iranian-backed campaign against the Lebanese state, a framing the presidency has previously leaned on. The deal also faces a major hurdle in domestic ratification, as it will eventually require approval from either parliament or the sitting government.

    Despite the intensity of the opposition, the dispute has so far remained limited to public statements and political positioning, with no escalation into open conflict. A Lebanese presidential source told Middle East Eye that communication has been ongoing with deal opponents to prevent the crisis from escalating into internal confrontation. Even with the sharp rejectionist stances from many factions, “there is an understanding with all the objecting parties not to blow up the situation internally,” the source confirmed.

    According to the source, an influential Arab regional actor has intervened to de-escalate tensions, and received a positive response from all major parties, particularly Amal, Hezbollah’s closest political partner. “There is work under way to control the post-agreement phase internally,” the source added.

    This deliberate restraint reflects a cross-faction understanding that any open confrontation over the status of Hezbollah’s weapons would worsen Lebanon’s existing sectarian and political fragmentation, creating conditions that work solely to Israel’s benefit. The Lebanese presidency has framed the Washington negotiations as an assertion of Lebanese independence from Iranian influence, a core strategic goal for the new administration.

    As the presidential source explained, one of the central objectives of the agreement was to demonstrate that Lebanon is not merely a bargaining chip in Tehran’s negotiations with Washington. “The Lebanese state wanted to say that it is not a card in Iran’s hands, that it has a different path, and that we are the decision-makers, not Iran,” the source said. The source added that this outcome was also sought by friendly Arab states and the United States. Even so, the framework creates a core contradiction in the sovereignty narrative advanced by the presidency: Lebanon’s obligations around disarmament, security control, and dismantling non-state military infrastructure are explicit and measurable, while Israel’s withdrawal remains vague, gradual, and conditional on Lebanese compliance.

    The presidential source noted that Lebanon received American guarantees that implementation in the pilot zones will be supervised directly by Washington, eliminating the need for direct coordination between the Lebanese and Israeli militaries. They added that the recent visit of the head of US Central Command to Beirut was intended to strengthen this oversight mechanism, and the pilot zone model could be expanded to more areas if the initial rollout succeeds.

    According to the source, Lebanon requested that the security annex of the agreement remain confidential; after the US State Department asked both sides to weigh in on secrecy, both Lebanon and Israel agreed to keep the document out of public view. Another controversial provision requires both Lebanon and Israel to halt all hostile or adverse activity against one another in international political and legal forums.

    Critics argue this clause could strip Lebanon of its ability to pursue accountability for alleged Israeli violations of international law, and prevent the state from supporting Lebanese civilian victims of Israeli strikes seeking justice through global institutions. Thousands of Lebanese civilians have been killed in Israeli strikes since March, as well as in earlier phases of the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hezbollah. The presidential source defended the negotiating team’s position on this point, arguing that Israel would actually benefit more from international litigation because Hezbollah initiated the current conflict by firing the first rockets. The clause would not block private individuals, non-governmental organizations, or unofficial associations from pursuing independent legal action against Israel, the source added.

    Opponents push back on this justification, arguing that civilian victims and independent NGOs cannot replace the legal authority, access to evidence, and diplomatic weight that only the Lebanese state can bring to these claims.

    For the moment, Lebanon has entered a period of contained political confrontation: widespread rejection of the agreement is paired with a shared cross-faction reluctance to allow the dispute to escalate into violence. Part of this restraint stems from de-escalation efforts by Arab and American mediators, but it also reflects a widespread belief that the Washington framework will never be implemented in its current form. The ultimate fate of the deal may depend far less on the text signed in Washington than on parallel negotiations between Iran and the United States happening in Switzerland, where the Lebanese war, a permanent ceasefire, and an Israeli withdrawal are all tied to a broader regional settlement.

    Lebanon is now navigating an deeply sensitive political crisis, but major political factions appear unified in their commitment to containing tensions while they wait to see whether the agreement will be implemented, renegotiated, or overtaken by developments on the US-Iran negotiation track.

  • Israel always knew southern Lebanon Shia villages ‘had to disappear’, minister says

    Israel always knew southern Lebanon Shia villages ‘had to disappear’, minister says

    In a startling admission that lays bare Israel’s military strategy in southern Lebanon, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed Monday that the widespread destruction of Shiite border communities was an intentional, pre-planned outcome of the country’s ongoing invasion. Speaking during an off-the-record briefing with military correspondents, Katz stated explicitly that “it was clear during Operation Silver Plow that the Shia villages along the contact line had to disappear.”

    Katz’s remarks confirm longstanding allegations that Israel’s campaign extends far beyond targeting Hezbollah militants, outlining a deliberate plan to fully clear all populated border communities along the so-called “Yellow Line”—the UN-monitored buffer zone stretching south of the Litani River. The ultimate goal of creating this deep depopulated buffer, Katz explained, is the full demilitarization of Hezbollah, adding that the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) “will not retreat an inch” from occupied Lebanese territory until that demand is met.

    The defense minister also provided on-the-record figures quantifying the scale of destruction his forces have inflicted. According to Katz, the IDF has achieved nearly 100 percent destruction of contact-line villages in southern Lebanon’s western and central sectors, while 73 percent of border communities in the eastern sector have been razed. “Seizing territory and dismantling all infrastructure within it is the heaviest blow possible for jihadist organisations,” Katz said, justifying the campaign targeting residential areas.

    The operation, launched in April, has already displaced hundreds of thousands of Lebanese civilians, the vast majority of whom come from the region’s Shiite population. Katz made clear that none of these displaced residents would be allowed to return to the Yellow Line zone, which he insisted “must remain free of population.”

    This admission is not the first time Israeli officials have confirmed that their objectives in southern Lebanon extend beyond removing Hezbollah fighters from the border. As early as May, Israeli outlet Haaretz published an investigative report citing unnamed IDF commanders and soldiers confirming that the campaign deliberately targets non-military infrastructure. Commanders admitted that residential homes, schools, and government buildings near the border were being systematically demolished to “clear the area.” One unnamed soldier told Haaretz that the IDF does not limit its attacks to “terrorist infrastructure” as Israeli authorities publicly claim, instead “they destroy everything.” The soldier added that unit commanders are required to submit daily reports detailing how many homes their units have destroyed. Analysis of satellite imagery conducted by The New York Times has since corroborated the accounts of systematic, widespread destruction of civilian areas.

    The ongoing campaign in southern Lebanon has become a major stumbling block in fragile regional ceasefire negotiations, which have been dominated by the fallout from Israeli incursions across Gaza, Syria, and Lebanon. Iran has repeatedly stressed that any comprehensive ceasefire agreement with the United States must include an end to hostilities on the Lebanese front, and a draft Memorandum of Understanding circulated by Islamabad calls for de-escalation across all regional fronts, including Lebanon.

    While the Trump administration has publicly called for Israel to withdraw its forces from Lebanese territory, the Israeli government has refused to pull back until Hezbollah fully disarms. For its part, Hezbollah refuses to lay down its weapons until Israel completes a full withdrawal from Lebanese territory, noting that linking a withdrawal to demands for disarmament crosses the group’s core “red lines.”

    Analysts warn that this deadlocked cycle of demands ultimately works in Israel’s favor, buying the country additional time to continue its campaign of depopulation and destruction while delaying any negotiated withdrawal. Katz reinforced this position in his latest briefing, confirming that Israel plans to maintain a “long-term” military presence in southern Lebanon. “The equation stands – rocket fire on Israeli communities (by Iran) means an immediate assault on the Dahieh,” he said, threatening further strikes on Hezbollah’s stronghold in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

    Official data from Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health puts the total Lebanese death toll from Israeli attacks since March 2 at more than 4,200, a figure that continues to climb as military operations proceed.

  • UK journalists and NGOs risk terrorism prosecutions under new security bill

    UK journalists and NGOs risk terrorism prosecutions under new security bill

    As the United Kingdom’s controversial National Security (State Threats) Bill races toward final parliamentary approval this week, independent security and legal experts have issued stark warnings that the sweeping legislation could inadvertently criminalize foreign correspondents and non-governmental organization (NGO) workers who interact with state-backed groups designated as threats under the new law.

    The bill grants UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood broad authority to label any state-backed organization that is judged to harm the UK’s national safety and core interests as an official threat. Under its provisions, anyone found to “support, assist, or obtain material benefits” — including information — from a designated proscribed group commits a criminal offense, carrying a maximum penalty of 14 years in prison. Most notably, the legislation explicitly rules out a “reasonable excuse” defense for these offenses, a provision that critics say creates dangerous gaps in protection for legitimate public-facing work.

    Former independent reviewer of UK terrorism legislation David Anderson has emerged as one of the most prominent critics of the bill, arguing that the proposed legislation contains effectively no safeguards for reporters working in conflict zones and sensitive international beats. Writing for The Guardian, Anderson noted that promised protections for both journalists and NGO workers are largely missing from the final draft of the bill. He added: “Foreign correspondents could also be affected. Indeed on the face of it, they would be at risk of prosecution if they were to have contact of any kind with sources within designated bodies or their agents.”

    In an attempt to address growing criticism, cabinet ministers have argued that only information “which possesses an inherent value that enriches the recipient” is banned under the legislation. But Anderson pushed back against this claim, pointing out that the bill’s formal definition of “material benefit” explicitly categorizes information as a separate category from financial gain, meaning even routine reporting that relies on sourcing from designated groups could fall afoul of the law. The UK government also rejected a formal recommendation from current independent terrorism legislation reviewer Jonathan Hall, who called for the “reasonable excuse” defense to be expanded to cover cases involving information gathering for journalistic work.

    UK Home Office officials have pushed back against critics, insisting that the bill does not target the work of professional journalists. A spokesperson for the department said: “This bill does nothing to undermine the vital work journalists do, and any suggestion otherwise is absolutely false. Legitimate activity including journalistic freedoms are protected under the bill, as well as diplomatic and humanitarian engagement. We have a proud tradition in this country of upholding the freedom of the press. Indeed, it is our obligation to ensure journalists are empowered to carry out their work.”

    But beyond the risks to press freedom, critics warn that the bill’s vague language around key terms including “foreign power threat activity” and “expressing support” creates the opening for authorities to weaponize the legislation to restrict peaceful protest rights. Many critics have also highlighted the unusually fast pace of the bill’s passage through parliament as a major red flag, arguing that the rushed process prevents robust scrutiny of its far-reaching implications.

    Former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn amplified these concerns in a formal statement released on June 17, describing the bill as “an alarming expansion of state power, and an escalation of the government’s chilling assault on the right to protest.” Corbyn argued that the legislation’s deliberately vague and open-ended wording allows the home secretary to unilaterally criminalize political campaigns that the government of the day opposes. He pointed to recent mass arrests of activists under existing terrorism legislation as evidence of the risk of overreach: more than 3,000 people have been arrested under the Terrorism Act for expressing support for proscribed Palestinian advocacy group Palestine Action, after the group was banned in July 2025. Earlier this month, five senior judges overturned an earlier February High Court ruling that had found the proscription of Palestine Action to be unlawful, a decision that has added to fears of expanded crackdowns on protest under the new national security law.

  • How the UAE continued supporting Sudan’s RSF through Haftar and Libya

    How the UAE continued supporting Sudan’s RSF through Haftar and Libya

    A landmark collaborative investigation by three independent journalistic and monitoring groups has uncovered a sustained, covert network of military support that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) maintains for Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) through territory in eastern Libya, even after regional pressure targeted the group’s weapons supply lines. The probe, carried out by Lighthouse Reports, Sudan War Monitor and Evident, confirmed on Monday that RSF fighters receive weapons, logistical backing and specialized weapons training at multiple dedicated camps across Libya, contradicting repeated public denials from Abu Dhabi, the Libyan Arab Armed Forces (LAAF) led by Khalifa Haftar, and the RSF itself.

    Interviews with seven RSF defectors who have passed through the Libyan training infrastructure, plus current and former LAAF insiders, have corroborated the findings. One defector, identified only as Ahmed, offered on-the-record testimony detailing the full supply chain. According to Ahmed, all military equipment sent to the RSF is Emirati-made. “Emirates is the one supporting the RSF. They would bring it from their country by a plane to here and from here we would receive them and deliver it to Sudan,” he explained. Ahmed added that he personally saw an armored vehicle marked “Made in Emirates” at one camp, even as most supplies are shipped without visible branding to cover the UAE’s involvement. He also emphasized the critical nature of Abu Dhabi’s backing, stating, “If the RSF lost UAE support, if UAE stopped supporting them, the RSF won’t be able to fight in the field anymore, it will break apart.”

    The investigation identified five active RSF camps in Libyan territory controlled by Haftar’s LAAF, four of which were newly mapped: Seweidiya near the key southeastern LAAF base of al-Kufra, Sabha, al-Jufra, and Camp 17 near the eastern coastal city of Benghazi. Ahmed confirmed the logistics chain: RSF fighters are transported to the remote Chad-Libya-Sudan border triangle, moved to al-Kufra, then relocated to Benghazi and finally to Camp 17, which serves as the primary storage hub for all supplies bound for Sudan. Training at the camps includes hands-on instruction for operating heavy weaponry, such as DShk heavy machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) and multiple rocket launch systems. Investigators also confirmed the presence of Colombian mercenaries at the sites, matching a May 2025 Human Rights Watch report that identified these fighters as contracted by a UAE-based security firm with direct ties to the Emirati government.

    This is not the first time foreign support networks for the RSF have been exposed: Middle East Eye, which first broke extensive coverage of LAAF-RSF collaboration, previously revealed a separate RSF training camp operated in Ethiopia. Longstanding ties bind the UAE to RSF leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, widely known as Hemedti: for decades, gold extracted from Darfur mines controlled by the Dagalo family has been exported to commercial markets in Dubai, and RSF fighters previously deployed as mercenaries to support the Saudi-UAE coalition in the Yemen war.

    Despite regional pressure that included Egyptian and Turkish airstrikes on RSF weapons convoys departing from LAAF-held territory starting in November 2025, the investigation finds that the UAE has not scaled back its support – it has merely rerouted it. Egypt backs the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), the RSF’s opponent in Sudan’s ongoing civil war, putting Cairo in direct conflict with the UAE and Haftar’s alliance. After airstrikes forced the temporary closure of al-Kufra air base, the UAE shifted its main supply hub to Amdjarass airport in eastern Chad, according to senior Egyptian military and intelligence sources speaking to Middle East Eye. Flight tracking data confirms a sharp uptick in flights from the UAE and Libya to Amdjarass following the closure of al-Kufra, proving the route shift was a tactical adjustment, not an end to operations. “The flights didn’t stop,” a senior Egyptian military source noted. “They were simply redirected – from Libya to Chad, and specifically to Amdjarass.”

    Egyptian security surveillance has documented large-scale, ongoing expansion of Emirati infrastructure at Amdjarass, including a fully operational Emirati military coordination room, new drone hangars, and upgraded facilities capable of accommodating large Ilyushin cargo aircraft, one of the world’s largest military transport planes. “Emirati companies carried out extensive construction and expansion work at the airport that wasn’t limited or symbolic development,” an Egyptian commander explained. “What happened was large-scale expansion and the construction of new facilities.” The UAE has claimed its activities at Amdjarass are purely humanitarian, a claim that contradicts the documented military infrastructure observed by Egyptian intelligence.

    A new secondary weapons corridor has also been established, running from the Gate 17 border crossing between Libya and Chad through central-eastern Chad to the Sudanese border town of Adre, before entering Darfur – the vast western Sudanese region almost entirely controlled by the RSF. Adre currently hosts hundreds of thousands of refugees who have fled Sudan’s civil war, which has been classified as the world’s worst ongoing humanitarian crisis, with an estimated 200,000 people killed since fighting broke out between the RSF and SAF in April 2023. The RSF has faced widespread international accusations of committing genocide against non-Arab communities in Darfur.

    Jalel Harchaoui, a leading analyst specializing in Libyan political economy, told Middle East Eye that recent developments had incorrectly suggested the UAE was winding down its involvement. “Far from receding, Emirati interference is returning with full force: the UAE is aggressively re-escalating its support for the RSF via eastern Libya,” he said. To date, the UAE’s ongoing support for the RSF has faced no significant pushback from major Western powers, including the United States and the United Kingdom.

    All parties involved have continued to deny any wrongdoing: the UAE’s foreign ministry issued a statement asserting “The UAE has not provided and is not providing military or financial support to any warring party in Sudan,” while the RSF has also denied receiving Emirati backing.

  • How six months in Israeli jail changed this Palestinian journalist’s life forever

    How six months in Israeli jail changed this Palestinian journalist’s life forever

    When Mujahid Bani Mufleh saw his own before-and-after photographs following six months of uncharged detention in Israeli custody, the transformation shocked even him. Today, five months after his release, the 36-year-old father of three and veteran Palestinian journalist from Beita, a town in the occupied West Bank near Nablus, remains hospitalized, fighting a long, uphill recovery that grew dire just days after he walked free.

    Arrested at his family home on June 28, 2025, Bani Mufleh was held under Israel’s controversial administrative detention policy: a practice that allows authorities to imprison Palestinians indefinitely without charge or trial, relying on secret evidence that neither detainees nor their legal representatives are permitted to review. Before his arrest, he had only a pre-existing diagnosis of diabetes and was otherwise in good health. But what he encountered behind bars – systematic torture, repeated physical abuse, and deliberate medical neglect – shattered his health permanently.

    Two days after his release on January 12, 2026, Bani Mufleh was rushed to the hospital with a severe brain hemorrhage that triggered a stroke, a medical crisis he attributes directly to the abuse he endured in custody. Surgeons performed emergency life-saving surgery, removing a portion of his skull to reduce dangerous pressure on his brain, and he spent two months in a coma. When he awoke, he emerged gaunt, frail, with hollowed features and sunken eyes, appearing years older than the man taken from his home half a year earlier.

    “It hurts to look at photographs of the person I used to be,” Bani Mufleh shared from his hospital bed at Jenin’s Ibn Sina Hospital. “My defences collapsed under the weight of torture and humiliation. They wanted you to forget who you were.”

    For his entire adult life, Bani Mufleh has worked as a journalist, and throughout his detention, he clung to one unshakable goal: once free, he would share the untold stories of the fellow prisoners trapped alongside him. Today, the torture and subsequent stroke have robbed him of the ability to report as he once did, turning him from a storyteller into the story itself. “I never forgot that I was a journalist,” he said. “Throughout my detention, I kept thinking that one day I would tell the stories of those who could no longer speak for themselves. But time never gave me that chance. Before I could write about the tortured, I suffered a stroke. And instead of writing their stories, I became the story.”

    Even as he relearns basic skills – his speech is slow, punctuated by long pauses as he searches for forgotten words – Bani Mufleh has not abandoned that promise. The deaths of two detainees he was held with remain seared into his memory, and he is determined to honor them by sharing their fates. The first was Samir al-Rifai, a 50-year-old prisoner who could not survive the abuse he endured. After the pair were tortured together, prison guards stormed their cell and pepper-sprayed the entire space, leading al-Rifai to collapse. He was carried out and never returned; Bani Mufleh later learned he had died in custody.

    The second was 20-year-old Ahmad Taza’zah, whose health rapidly declined after he was attacked during torture. “During torture, they unleashed a dog on him that tore into his face,” Bani Mufleh recalled. “The wounds became infected, and all he needed was a course of antibiotics. Instead, they left him suffering for days. He began vomiting constantly. Later, they took him into the prison yard. He never returned alive.”

    Bani Mufleh’s experience is far from an isolated case. Since October 2023, Israeli forces have arrested more than 20,000 Palestinians across the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Independent human rights organizations and international media investigations have documented widespread, systematic abuse of Palestinian detainees, including routine torture, deliberate starvation, denial of medical care, and sexual violence. At least 84 confirmed Palestinian detainees, including one child, have died in Israeli custody under these conditions, and rights groups warn the actual death toll is almost certainly higher.

    Throughout his detention, Bani Mufleh clung to one memory from the outside world to get through the violence and loss: the face of his young son, Arab, the day of his arrest. “In prison, I kept trying to remember my son Arab’s face so I wouldn’t be consumed by the faces of those who died behind bars. But I could remember only one image of him – crying as Israeli soldiers arrested me in our home,” he said. “After they beat and tortured me, I looked at him while I lay on the floor. He was crying. That became the last image of him that stayed with me.”

    For Bani Mufleh’s wife, Nuha al-Shurfa, and their three children, rebuilding life after his release has meant adapting to permanent change and celebrating small signs of progress. When Bani Mufleh came home, he had lost 25 kilograms during his detention, and received no meaningful treatment for his diabetes behind bars. “When Mujahed came home, it felt as though our family had come back to life,” al-Shurfa told Middle East Eye. “He returned severely weakened… Throughout his time in prison, despite being diabetic, he received no proper medical care. Seeing him improve, even little by little, gives us hope and the strength to keep going.”

    Al-Shurfa added that her husband’s condition remains fragile five months after release. He still struggles to consume most fluids, even water, over fears it will worsen his condition and damage his lungs. “We know his recovery is far from over and that he still faces many challenges every day,” she said. “But having him with us again is something we are deeply grateful for, and we will stand by his side every step of the way.” For the family, recovery is measured in quiet, small victories: a few clear words spoken without effort, an unassisted step, a day with less pain than the last.

    For Bani Mufleh, the harrowing experience of detention and recovery has reshaped his understanding of what matters most in daily life. “During my detention, I learned what real hunger feels like – waiting for meals that never felt enough, going to sleep with an aching stomach, and waking up with the same feeling,” he said. “I learned how a simple loaf of bread can become a dream, and how a sip of cold water can feel like a blessing from heaven.”

    Recovery has taught him an equally humbling lesson, he added: “Throughout my recovery, I learned the meaning of helplessness – when getting out of bed becomes a battle, taking a single step feels like an achievement, breathing without pain becomes a wish, and a peaceful night’s sleep turns into a distant luxury. Those months taught me that life’s greatest blessings are not the big things we once imagined. They are the small, everyday moments we used to live without ever noticing.”

    Even as physical challenges keep him from returning to full-time reporting, Bani Mufleh says sharing the stories of his fallen cellmates is now a core part of his own recovery – and he has no intention of breaking the promise he made behind bars.

  • Assassination of Al-Arabiya journalist highlights tensions in southern Yemen

    Assassination of Al-Arabiya journalist highlights tensions in southern Yemen

    On the evening of June 24, a deadly attack unfolded in central Mukalla, the capital of Yemen’s eastern Hadramaut governorate, that cut short the life of a seasoned regional journalist and pulled back the curtain on deep unresolved political and security fractures in southern Yemen. Forty-year-old Mohammed Aydah, a freelance photographer and correspondent for Saudi state-owned outlet Al Arabiya, had just dropped his family at their residence and was preparing to drive to meet a friend when an improvised explosive device hidden beneath his driver’s seat detonated. The blast engulfed his vehicle in flames on Sitteen Street, close to the city’s Pakistani School, and killed Aydah instantly.

    Local security sources confirm Aydah was explicitly warned of threats to his life roughly one month before the attack, with authorities urging him to take strict safety precautions. Since 2019, Aydah had covered political, security, and development beats across eastern Yemen, and his reporting on demonstrations organized by the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council (STC) – along with his on-the-ground documentation of the group’s governance activities – had made him targets of hostile actors, sources close to the journalist confirm.

    As of this report, no faction among Yemen’s deeply fragmented political landscape has claimed responsibility for the killing. The Saudi-backed Presidential Leadership Council (PLC), which is based in Aden, has issued a formal condemnation of the attack. Salem Ahmed Al-Khanbashi, Hadramaut’s governor and the general who led the military operation that retook the region from STC control in early January, has ordered a full official investigation into the incident. Prime Minister Shaya Mohsen al-Zindani has also directed Yemen’s Interior Ministry and all relevant security agencies to prioritize identifying and apprehending those responsible for the assassination.

    Political finger-pointing began almost immediately after the attack, with STC representatives quickly shifting blame to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and other independent armed groups. However, this accusation has been widely challenged by regional analysts, who note that AQAP’s established modus operandi centers on sudden, unclaimed large-scale violence rather than forewarned targeted assassinations of specific individuals. Many observers also frame the STC’s statement as political opportunism: by attributing the killing to extremist “terrorist” groups, the organization implicitly argues that such violence was contained during its period of administrative control over southern Yemen.

    An anonymous STC National Assembly member rejected all claims of the group’s involvement in an interview with Middle East Eye. “It is true that we consider Saudi Arabia a major enemy, as it has been damaging the south, but that doesn’t mean we will assassinate or welcome the assassination of a civilian journalist,” he said. “We are a project of peace, not death. If we were going to create chaos, we would target Saudi-backed officials, not a journalist.” He also pushed blame onto the Saudi-backed Aden-based government and Hadramaut’s governor, arguing their administration had failed to uphold security, noting that multiple assassinations have rocked southern Yemen in the six months since the STC lost territorial control.

    The Houthi movement, which controls Yemen’s capital Sanaa and has fought the Saudi-led coalition for more than a decade, condemned the assassination via its Al Masirah media outlet without assigning blame, while using the incident to emphasize chronic instability in PLC-held territory.

    Senior Yemeni and Gulf analyst Ibrahmi Jalal notes that both the Houthis and the STC – which announced its own dissolution in a controversial 2025-2026 political deal – had motive to target Aydah over his critical coverage. “When we look at the landscape and examine who might have access to sleeping cells and sabotage activities with the intent to disrupt and undermine the stability of government-held areas, there are two primary actors: the Houthis and the quote-unquote self-dissolved STC,” Jalal explained.

    Aydah’s killing is far from an isolated event. Since the STC’s military defeat and contested dissolution between late December 2025 and early January 2026, targeted political assassinations across southern Yemen have increased sharply. Just last month, Wesam Qaid, CEO of Yemen’s Social Fund for Development, was abducted and killed in Aden. In April, Abdulrahman Al Shaer, an educator and senior leader of the Islah political party, was assassinated. In January, a senior Salafi brigadier general, Hamdi Shukri, who now commands a large southern military region, survived an attempted assassination.

    Senior Yemeni political analyst Baraa Shiban notes that in the Al Shaer assassination case, authorities arrested members of a cell with ties to former counterterrorism units that previously operated under the STC’s umbrella. “The prosecution has started the process of making charges, but it will take time,” Shiban said. He added, “Whoever targeted Mohammed wanted to silence him, but it was also a threat to all other journalists.”

    Prior investigations by the BBC have already documented direct links between the UAE-backed STC and a string of earlier assassinations in Aden. Many commentators have drawn a key inference from the current trend: while targeted killings were relatively rare during the STC’s period of direct administrative control, their recent surge suggests that STC-affiliated armed networks still retain influence as a militia that no longer holds territory but retains the capacity to carry out coordinated attacks. One anonymous source familiar with Aden’s political climate noted that STC members publicly condemned Aydah’s killing but privately celebrated his death, given his consistent critical coverage of the group’s activities.

    Crucially, the STC’s formal dissolution did not result in the full dismantling of its security and military structures. Some units were redeployed to new posts, while others were nominally absorbed into official Yemeni Interim Regional Government institutions. Jalal explains that even integrated units still retain large numbers of personnel loyal to the STC, whose core political goals and loyalties remain unchanged. “It remains to be seen how well they would be absorbed and demonstrate a sense of belonging to an institution that protects the people above all,” he said.

    The STC’s exiled leader, Aidarous al-Zubaidi, fled to Abu Dhabi in January and continues to issue political statements from abroad. Regional analysts widely agree that the UAE does not view the STC’s recent territorial setback as a permanent defeat, and continues to back the group as a proxy in Yemen’s ongoing internal conflict.

    Aydah’s assassination comes at a particularly sensitive moment for Saudi Arabia’s engagement in Yemen. Just two weeks before the attack, Riyadh signed a $150 million agreement to supply petroleum derivatives to Yemeni power plants – the latest installment of more than $12.6 billion in Saudi development and humanitarian support for Yemen since 2012. A high-profile ceremony was even held in Mukalla itself to open a new 100 MW power plant, developed through a tripartite partnership between the Saudi Development and Reconstruction Programme for Yemen, Yemen’s Ministry of Electricity, and Gulf Power International.

    Yemeni President Rashad al-Alimi has publicly framed Saudi economic assistance as the critical foundation holding Yemeni government institutions together, and has asked Yemenis to exercise “more patience” to see the full benefits of these investments. For ordinary Yemenis across government-held territory, access to basic services like electricity and clean water remains the top priority, and many express support for whichever political faction can deliver these necessities.

    Murad Ali, a 60-year-old construction laborer from Aden supporting seven family members, says his only focus is securing food and basic needs for his household, but he still holds out hope the government can expand access to critical services. “Our government failed to provide us with electricity, healthcare, or any other basics, and it is Saudi Arabia that has been helping us since January 2026 to access basic services,” he told Middle East Eye.

    Yet public patience is wearing thin. In early June, as temperatures soared across southern Yemen and chronic power outages continued, hundreds of Aden residents took to the streets, sleeping outside on mattresses to protest the lack of consistent electricity. Local sources describe the protests as fundamentally apolitical, driven by anger at failing infrastructure rather than opposition to the PLC administration, and note that STC organizers attempted to co-opt the demonstration and ultimately failed. “When we took to the streets, we were calling on Saudi Arabia to help us because we know it is the only country that can. We cursed our government because it deserves it, but we didn’t call on them because we know they are unable to help,” Ali said.

    Jalal argues that the growing gap between Saudi-backed reconstruction rhetoric and on-the-ground security reality represents a major vulnerability for the PLC and its backers. “When we look at the profiles of those targeted – a journalist, a religious figure, teachers, a social development champion, military commanders – the picture indicates that most societal figures, regardless of their walk of life, are under a sustained elimination attempt,” he explained. “The motive is to instil fear, demonstrate instability, question trust in the government and its backer Saudi Arabia, and shake the image that is now enabling the government to seek increased support from international development institutions like the World Bank and the IMF.”

    Underpinning all current tensions is an unfinished national political process. Following the military recapture of southern territory from the STC, PLC President Rashad al Alimi called for a comprehensive Southern Dialogue Conference to be hosted by Saudi Arabia, but no date has yet been set for the talks. In February, STC-affiliated demonstrators stormed a government building in Ataq; security forces responded, killing five protesters and wounding 39 others.

    Saudi Arabia’s current strategy hinges on using infrastructure investment, an inclusive southern political process, and the unification of military command under the PLC to consolidate control over southern Yemen before turning its full attention back to the northern front against the Houthis. Jalal notes that meaningful stabilization will require a far more comprehensive multi-pronged approach than Riyadh has pursued to date.

    “Economically, the government needs more than emergency funding: it needs to improve domestic revenue collection and resume oil and gas exports, which have been hampered since 2015 and 2022 respectively,” he said. “On security, undoing a decade of fragmentation requires time, but also a more adaptive and proactive approach. The full cabinet leadership needs to return to the country, to be with the people, rebuild institutional trust, and pave the way for recovery.”

    Whether Aydah’s assassination is ultimately linked to STC remnants or another armed faction, the killing makes clear just how much of Yemen remains politically unsettled, even in territory formally controlled by the Saudi-backed PLC. Shiban struck a defiant note on the implications for press freedom in the country: “Whoever targeted Mohammed wanted to silence him, but it was also a threat to all other journalists. At the end of the day, they won’t be able to silence everyone if everyone is speaking up and everyone is active.”

  • Almost 60,000 far-right extremists in Germany, intelligence agency says

    Almost 60,000 far-right extremists in Germany, intelligence agency says

    Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), has issued a stark warning in its 2025 annual report: right-wing extremism remains the single most severe threat to the country’s democratic foundations, and the number of identified right-wing extremists jumped dramatically year-over-year to 58,700.

    This marks an increase of more than 8,000 extremists compared to 2024, a shift BfV leadership attributes largely to the rapid expansion of the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), the country’s leading far-right political party. Of the total right-wing extremist population tracked by the agency, an estimated 5,600 are assessed to have an active propensity for violence.

    BfV President Sinan Selen emphasized that German democracy faces near-constant assault from both domestic and foreign actors. The report notes that hostile foreign intelligence operations targeting German interests originate primarily from three key states: Russia, China, and Iran.

    The AfD, which secured a historic second-place finish in 2025 federal elections, captured 20.8% of the national vote and 152 seats in the 630-seat Bundestag. Its total membership swelled to 70,000 by the end of last year, and the party is currently polling at approximately 40% ahead of September state elections in Saxony-Anhalt — a result that would give it an outright majority and allow it to form Germany’s first far-right state-level government. As the party prepares to host its national conference this weekend in the eastern city of Erfurt, German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt has publicly warned of potential violence linked to planned protests against the gathering, stressing that all demonstrations must remain strictly peaceful.

    Last year, the BfV formally designated the AfD as a confirmed right-wing extremist group. However, that classification was put on hold in February after the party filed a legal challenge to the ruling, and a final court decision is still pending. The agency currently retains the AfD on its list of suspected extremist organizations. In its latest report, the BfV concluded that “given the rising membership figures, it can be assumed that the pool of individuals with extremist leanings within the AfD has also expanded accordingly.” It added that the party and other right-wing groups regularly amplify well-known extremist and conspiracy narratives, including the racist “Great Replacement” theory, also referred to as “population exchange,” which has become a core talking point for far-right movements globally.

    Beyond the AfD, the report identifies roughly 26,000 extremists belonging to two separate far-right factions: the Reichsbürger (Reich Citizens) and Selbstverwalter (Self-Administrator) movements. Both groups reject the legitimacy of the modern Federal Republic of Germany, refuse to recognize the country’s constitution, legal system, and governing institutions, and routinely spread anti-Semitic rhetoric and conspiracy ideology, per the BfV’s analysis.

    The report also highlights growing extremism across other ideological factions. The number of tracked left-wing extremists rose by 4,200 year-over-year to hit 42,200, with a notable increase in violent attacks targeting suspected right-wing figures and German law enforcement officers. Additionally, the number of individuals linked to Islamist extremism and terrorism saw a small uptick, reaching 28,645.

    Far-right groups are also increasingly targeting vulnerable young people for recruitment, the BfV found, turning out large audiences at far-right music events — a recruitment channel that hit a record high attendance last year. The expansion of this youth outreach has contributed directly to the overall growth in extremist numbers, the agency noted.

    The 2024 classification of the AfD drew sharp international criticism from top U.S. officials at the time: U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio labeled the move “tyranny in disguise,” while Vice President JD Vance claimed Germany was “rebuilding the Berlin Wall” to exclude right-wing voices. German officials pushed back against the criticism at the time, defending the BfV’s intelligence assessment as a necessary step to protect democratic order.

  • Mexican fans blast horns outside Ecuador’s hotel, fueling a sleepless World Cup eve

    Mexican fans blast horns outside Ecuador’s hotel, fueling a sleepless World Cup eve

    MEXICO CITY — In a well-documented yet controversial display of pre-match psychological warfare, Mexican football fans launched an overnight disruption campaign targeting the Ecuador national squad ahead of their high-stakes World Cup round-of-32 matchup at Mexico City’s iconic stadium. Dozens of supporters assembled outside the Ecuadorian team’s accommodation at the Westin Hotel in Santa Fe, an upscale suburban district of the Mexican capital, starting at midnight and continuing into the early morning hours. They used blaring loudspeakers, honking car horns, and revving motorcycle engines to prevent visiting players from getting any meaningful rest before their crucial match.

    This kind of pre-match hotel protest, often nicknamed a “serenade” by local fans, is a deeply ingrained but fiercely divisive tradition across Latin American football. What started decades ago as a spontaneous, passionate expression of support for the home side has gradually morphed into a calculated tactic, intended to unsettle opponents and sabotage their on-field performance by depriving them of critical sleep ahead of kickoff. The disruption was coordinated entirely through social media platforms, amplifying its reach and turnout among local fans.

    The late-night ambush capped off a string of misfortunes that plagued Ecuador from the moment they began their journey to the Mexican capital. The squad had intentionally planned a last-minute arrival on Monday night, a strategic choice designed to minimize the physical impact of Mexico City’s high altitude. Sitting 2,200 meters (7,300 feet) above sea level, the thin mountain air can cause acute fatigue, shortness of breath, and reduced athletic performance in unacclimatized players.

    Sports scientists currently endorse two primary strategies to handle high-altitude matchups: one requires an extended acclimatization period of at least two weeks, allowing the body to adjust gradually to lower oxygen levels. The alternative is the so-called “fly-in, fly-out” approach, where teams arrive as close to kickoff as possible, before acute altitude symptoms can develop. This is the standard strategy used by most major North American professional sports teams when traveling to play matches in Mexico City, and Ecuador opted to follow this same approach.

    But even the best-laid plans unraveled quickly for the South American side. Their journey from Columbus, Ohio was derailed by delays from the start. Head coach Sebastián Beccacece confirmed that the team’s flight was held up for more than three hours, though he did not clarify whether he had accounted for the two-hour time difference between the departure city and Mexico City. “It turned into a nine-hour trip from when we left to when we arrived at the hotel, three hours longer than our original schedule,” Beccacece told reporters. “That said, the squad is in good spirits and ready for the match — we know we’re facing a strong opponent that put up great results in the group stage.”

    Problems only compounded after the team landed. They touched down at Felipe Ángeles International Airport (AIFA), which sits roughly 65 kilometers (41 miles) outside the city center, far from their Santa Fe hotel. The squad then had to endure a grueling trek through Mexico City’s famously congested rush-hour traffic, which was made even worse by a heavy downpour that hit on Monday night, slowing travel to a crawl. The overnight fan disruption was the final unwanted challenge for the Ecuador squad ahead of their make-or-break World Cup clash.