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  • UAE paid Iran billions of dollars to halt strikes: Report

    UAE paid Iran billions of dollars to halt strikes: Report

    In a dramatic reversal of its long-held hardline stance toward Iran, the United Arab Emirates has reached a landmark agreement that includes billions of dollars in payments to Tehran in exchange for a permanent halt to Iranian attacks on Emirati territory, multiple international news outlets have reported. The development marks one of the most significant geopolitical realignments in the Persian Gulf in recent years, reshaping long-standing regional power dynamics in the wake of the US-led conflict against Iran.

    Details of the agreement remain fragmented across multiple anonymous sources, but the core framework has been confirmed by reporting from Reuters, Bloomberg, and Middle East Eye. According to two regional insiders cited by Reuters, the UAE has already transferred $3 billion to Iran as an initial installment, with the total value of the deal projected to reach as high as $10 billion. Two other anonymous sources, however, put the eventual total payout at $20 billion. It remains unclear whether the funds were drawn from frozen Iranian assets held in Emirati financial institutions or from the UAE’s own sovereign wealth funds, a question Reuters did not pursue in its initial reporting.

    The shift comes after years of the UAE positioning itself as one of Iran’s most vocal critics in the Gulf. Abu Dhabi once led regional lobbying efforts in Washington to push for continued aggressive US policy toward the Islamic Republic, and joined the US and Israel in launching dozens of strikes against Iranian targets during the recent regional war. It even took punitive measures against Pakistan when Islamabad hosted mediation talks aimed at ending the conflict, calling in outstanding debt obligations that forced Saudi Arabia to step in with a new emergency loan to stabilize Pakistan’s economy.

    In recent weeks, however, the rapid reversal of this policy has been impossible to ignore. Just days after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a high-profile wartime visit to Abu Dhabi that resulted in a new joint defense acquisition deal between the two countries, the UAE’s powerful national security adviser and Abu Dhabi Deputy Ruler Sheikh Tahnoun bin Zayed al-Nahyan hosted senior officials from Iran’s US-sanctioned Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps at his private guest house. This meeting was followed by a new round of face-to-face diplomatic talks between Emirati envoys and senior Iranian leaders this week, held to further de-escalate cross-border tensions, Bloomberg confirmed. A Gulf diplomat told Middle East Eye that the discussions were aimed explicitly at securing guarantees that the UAE would not be targeted in Iranian retaliatory attacks.

    The new arrangement has already played out in regional security dynamics: as Iran has launched retaliatory strikes against smaller Gulf states including Bahrain, Kuwait, and Jordan in recent weeks amid a fragile US-Iran ceasefire, the UAE has faced no attacks, and has refrained from joining new strikes against Iran. Analysts say the deal signals that Iran has emerged from the recent conflict in a strengthened regional position, despite coordinated pressure from the US, Israel, and Gulf allies.

    For decades, the UAE has served as a key financial and trade hub for Iran, with deep economic ties that have often outlasted periods of geopolitical tension. Iranians hold major stakes in the UAE’s lucrative real estate sector, and even after the outbreak of the US-Israeli war on Iran, when Abu Dhabi publicly considered freezing billions of dollars in Iranian-linked assets, it never followed through with a public implementation of that threat. Esfandyar Batmanghelidj, chief executive of the Bourse & Bazaar Foundation, noted on social media platform X that the agreement is likely the first step toward revitalizing these cross-border economic bonds. “Everyone needs to remember that the UAE is Iran’s most important trading partner. By ‘releasing’ funds to Iran, the UAE ensures those funds will be spent in the Emirates,” Batmanghelidj wrote. “Both countries will double down on economic interdependence and the multiplier effects of bilateral trade.”

    The deal also carries implications for US diplomacy in the region. One source told Reuters that the arrangement allows Iran to secure the financial concessions it demanded for a ceasefire, while enabling the Trump administration to publicly claim it did not directly pay Iran for the agreement. A former US intelligence official told Middle East Eye that it is nearly impossible that Washington was unaware of the IRGC meeting hosted by Sheikh Tahnoun, given the extensive US intelligence footprint in the Gulf. The shift in UAE-Iran ties comes as the US and Iran are on the verge of finalizing a 60-day memorandum of understanding to negotiate over security in the Strait of Hormuz and Iran’s nuclear program.

    The Reuters report follows a similar recent development reported by the Washington Post, which claimed Qatar agreed to shut down its Ras Laffan refinery in exchange for Iran halting attacks on Qatari territory. Qatar has since denied any such coordination with Tehran.

  • Watch: Peru police dress up as World Cup mascots during drug raid

    Watch: Peru police dress up as World Cup mascots during drug raid

    In a clever and unconventional sting operation that has caught global attention, law enforcement agents in Peru pulled off a high-stakes drug raid with a surprising twist: officers disguised themselves as official mascots for the upcoming 2026 FIFA World Cup to gain entry to the residence of a suspected drug trafficker. What made the operation even more notable is that the target of the raid is an avowed football fan, a detail that law enforcement leveraged to lower his guard and pull off the surprise entry. The brazen, creative approach to police work has been shared widely across social media, with footage of the disguised officers showing them leaning into the full mascot costumes to avoid tipping off the suspect before they could execute the search warrant. While unusual tactics, the disguise proved to be a successful strategic choice, allowing officers to enter the property without immediate suspicion before moving in to apprehend the suspect and seize any contraband on site.

  • US kills leader of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang in airstrike, Trump says

    US kills leader of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang in airstrike, Trump says

    In a Wednesday announcement made via his Truth Social platform, former and current U.S. President Donald Trump confirmed that U.S. military forces have eliminated Héctor Rusthenford Guerrero Flores — widely known as Niño Guerrero, the long-serving leader of Latin America’s most feared transnational criminal syndicate Tren de Aragua — in a targeted airstrike.

    “At my direction, the United States Southern Command delivered a swift and lethal kinetic strike to successfully execute Niño Guerrero,” Trump wrote in his social media post. Accompanying the announcement was video footage appearing to capture the strike itself, which shows a green two-story building and an adjacent outbuilding erupting in a massive explosion, with debris hurled into the air in the immediate aftermath of the blast. Trump added that the operation was “coordinated closely with our friends in Venezuela, with whom we are working very well” following January’s raid that removed former Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro from power.

    For years, Niño Guerrero has topped U.S. law enforcement’s most wanted lists, with the State Department offering a multi-million dollar reward for any information leading to his capture. Under his decades-long leadership, what began as a small prison gang inside Venezuela’s Tocorón Prison evolved into a sprawling transnational criminal organization that the Trump administration formally designated as a foreign terrorist group earlier this term, placing it in the same classification as the Islamic State. Trump has repeatedly accused the syndicate of waging what he calls “irregular warfare” against the United States.

    A career criminal who cycled in and out of Venezuelan custody for decades, Niño Guerrero first catapulted to notoriety in 2012, when he bribed a prison guard to escape custody, only to be recaptured a year later. Upon his return to Tocorón Prison, located in Venezuela’s northern Aragua state, he transformed the overcrowded, under-governed facility into a self-contained criminal compound equipped with a private zoo, full-service restaurants, a public nightclub, a betting parlor and a swimming pool. It was not until September 2023, when then-president Maduro deployed 11,000 soldiers to retake control of the prison, that Niño Guerrero escaped once again, going off-grid while continuing to direct his sprawling criminal network.

    Under Niño Guerrero’s leadership, Tren de Aragua expanded far beyond Venezuela’s borders, establishing operational nodes in eight countries across the Americas including Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, and the United States. The syndicate diversified its criminal revenue streams away from its origins extorting vulnerable migrants moving through Venezuela, expanding into sex trafficking, contract killing, kidnapping, illicit gold mining, and international drug trafficking. The group seized control of unregulated gold mines in Venezuela’s southern Bolívar state, key drug trafficking corridors along the country’s Caribbean coast, and unpatrolled clandestine border crossings between Venezuela and Colombia, often partnering with established local criminal groups to expand its reach. In Ecuador, the gang has been linked to factions aligned with Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel, while in Colombia, reports have tied it to fighters from the left-wing National Liberation Army (ELN) guerrilla group.

    This targeted killing of Niño Guerrero is the latest escalation in a series of aggressive U.S. counter-criminal operations launched by the Trump administration against Tren de Aragua and other drug trafficking groups. Since September, U.S. forces have launched dozens of airstrikes against maritime vessels the administration claims are smuggling drug shipments bound for the United States, many of which are linked to the Venezuelan syndicate. U.S. media reports estimate that more than 200 people have been killed in these maritime strikes to date.

    The campaign has sparked significant controversy and legal scrutiny, however. The U.S. military has yet to release public evidence confirming that the targeted boats were actually carrying drugs or affiliated with drug smuggling operations, leading critics to question the legality and ethics of the ongoing campaign. Multiple international law experts have argued that the strikes violate fundamental norms of international law, as they target individuals — including potentially civilian bystanders — without affording them basic due process protections. The Trump administration has pushed back against these criticisms, asserting that all operations are legally justified. In a formal statement to Congress last year, the White House confirmed that President Trump had formally determined the U.S. is in a state of armed conflict with transnational drug cartels, meaning that crew members of suspected smuggling vessels are classified as enemy combatants, legalizing targeted lethal force against them.

  • Turkey captain Hakan Calhanoglu says his ‘more talented’ team will ‘dominate’ Australia in World Cup

    Turkey captain Hakan Calhanoglu says his ‘more talented’ team will ‘dominate’ Australia in World Cup

    VANCOUVER, British Columbia — A tense pre-match war of words has emerged ahead of Turkey’s long-awaited return to the FIFA World Cup, as captain Hakan Calhanoglu has declared his side will dominate their opening Group clash against Australia this Saturday at BC Place. For Turkey, this tournament marks their first appearance on the world’s biggest football stage in 22 years, having failed to qualify for the previous five editions of the competition despite consistent strong performances at the continental level through much of the 21st century. The 32-year-old Inter Milan midfielder, who lifted the Serie A title with the Italian giants just this past season, doubled down on his confidence in comments made Friday. “I think we will dominate Saturday’s game, because we have more qualities and a more talented team,” Calhanoglu said. “So we will see what happens this weekend.”

    Australia, by contrast, heads into this match as a seasoned World Cup competitor, appearing in their sixth consecutive finals tournament after advancing to the knockout round at the 2022 Qatar World Cup. The Socceroos were quick to respond to Calhanoglu’s bold claim, with midfield star Aiden O’Neill saying the Turkish captain was entitled to his perspective while emphasizing his own side’s competitive strength. “He’s allowed to have his own opinion,” O’Neill said Friday. “We’ve got quality players on our team, too, so we’re ready.”

    Not all interactions between the two camps have been tense, however. Turkish manager Vincenzo Montella, who previously managed top-flight clubs across Europe, offered a complimentary nod to Australia’s playing style, noting that he found the Socceroos’ tactical approaches compelling. “I would like to use some of their techniques because I think they are interesting techniques,” Montella said.

    This opening match is set to be a test of two teams with contrasting recent World Cup trajectories: a Turkey side hungry to prove it belongs back among the world’s elite after two decades away, and an Australia side looking to build on their impressive 2022 run and silence their opponent’s pre-match bravado.

  • Iran and US confirm they are on cusp of new ceasefire, as they fight to frame terms

    Iran and US confirm they are on cusp of new ceasefire, as they fight to frame terms

    After months of indirect negotiations mediated by Pakistan, the United States and Iran have moved to the brink of signing a landmark memorandum of understanding (MOU) that could reshape geopolitics across the Middle East, though stark public disagreements over the agreement’s core terms have cast uncertainty over its final shape.

    On Friday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi offered the clearest confirmation yet that a final deal is imminent, writing on social media that the so-called Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding is closer than ever. He urged media outlets to avoid unfounded speculation ahead of the text’s formal finalization. US President Donald Trump quickly shared Araghchi’s statement, but hours later launched a scathing rebuke of Iranian claims about the MOU’s content.

    The dispute broke into public view after Iran’s Mehr News Agency reported the draft agreement would unlock $24 billion in Iranian assets frozen by international sanctions, codify Iran’s long-held control over the Strait of Hormuz, and include a full ceasefire across regional hotspots including Lebanon. A senior Iranian source later confirmed that account to Reuters, adding the deal would also lift restrictions on Iranian oil exports and require an end to hostilities on all regional fronts. Multiple Iranian officials have long maintained that any ceasefire agreement must include an end to Israel’s ongoing military campaign in southern Lebanon, where Israeli forces have expanded ground operations in recent weeks.

    The Trump administration has pushed back forcefully against Iran’s version of events. In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump dismissed Iranian leaks of the deal’s terms as entirely disconnected from the written agreement under negotiation. “Very dishonorable people to deal with,” he wrote. “They better get their act together, and FAST!”

    A senior anonymous Trump administration official outlined a far different set of agreed terms to reporters, saying Tehran has committed to five core pillars, including the destruction and permanent removal of all its enriched nuclear material from Iranian territory. The official confirmed that some Iranian assets are tied to the agreement, but stressed no funds will be released until Tehran fully meets all its performance-based obligations. The administration’s version also states the MOU will require the Strait of Hormuz—a critical global energy chokepoint through which 25% of the world’s oil supplies pass—to be kept open to all international shipping, and bars Iran from providing military funding to regional proxies including Lebanon’s Hezbollah. US Vice President JD Vance echoed that pushback in a post on X, emphasizing that no Iranian funds will be released immediately upon signing the MOU, calling widespread reports to the contrary “fake information.”

    Despite the conflicting public narratives from the two negotiating parties, Pakistan—the key third-party mediator facilitating the indirect talks—has confirmed that both sides have reached a final agreed text. “We can confirm that a final, agreed upon text of the peace deal has been reached,” Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif wrote on X Friday. “Pakistan is now working closely with both sides to finalize the next steps. Peace has never been this close as it is now.”

    International markets reacted swiftly to the news of progress: global oil prices dropped sharply, while equity markets surged, as investors priced in the possibility of a broader breakthrough that could ease geopolitical tensions and open up new Iranian oil supplies to global markets. The possibility of a diplomatic breakthrough also gained further cred Friday when Switzerland’s foreign ministry confirmed it had been in contact with both parties and offered to host the signing ceremony if both sides agree to the venue.

    Senior US officials have struck a cautiously optimistic tone, saying a formal signing could come as early as the next several days, with Trump floating the possibility of a ceremony in Europe. One senior US official told reporters on a background call that the likelihood of a final agreement had climbed throughout the day, from an estimated 75% that morning to between 80% and 85% by Friday afternoon, stopping short of declaring a done deal. It is not the first time Trump has announced a near-completed agreement with Iran; past announcements of impending deals have ultimately collapsed before reaching a final signing.

  • Woman suffers horrific injuries in Coogee Beach shark attack

    Woman suffers horrific injuries in Coogee Beach shark attack

    A series of deadly shark encounters in Australian waters has taken another alarming turn, with a woman in her 30s sustaining catastrophic injuries in an attack at one of Sydney’s most frequented coastal stretches on Saturday morning.

    The incident unfolded just after 11 a.m. local time, when the victim was swimming approximately 30 meters from shore — right within the patrolled swimming area marked by beach safety flags — when a shark bit her, multiple official and witness accounts confirm.

    Witness Sharni Gotterson told local outlet The Daily Telegraph that she initially dismissed screams coming from the water as playful noise from beachgoers, before spotting urgent signals from a woman on a nearby paddleboard. When Gotterson looked closer, she saw a large pool of blood spreading across the surface of the near-shore water.

    Other bystanders reported spotting a shark fin cutting through the water, before a lifeguard issued the universal danger signal by raising his arms into an X shape and triggering the official beach shark alarm.

    More than a dozen members of the public sprang into action immediately, pulling the injured woman from the ocean and starting life-saving first aid before emergency responders arrived. NSW Police officers who arrived on scene also administered additional first aid to the victim, who suffered severe lacerations to both her arm and leg, ahead of NSW Ambulance paramedics taking over care.

    As a critical safety precaution following the attack, local authorities closed Coogee Beach along with two adjacent popular beaches, Clovelly and Bronte, to prevent further risk to the public. As of the latest updates, the woman remains in critical condition.

    This attack marks the fourth reported shark encounter in Australian waters in just four weeks, and the third that has resulted in a fatality. Just seven days before the Coogee incident, 35-year-old Daniel Turpin was killed in a shark attack off the coast of Albany, Western Australia. Earlier in May, two other men lost their lives to shark attacks while spearfishing: 38-year-old Steven Mattaboni off Rottnest Island on May 16, and 39-year-old Michael Jensz in waters near Cairns on May 24.

  • US officials say Hormuz oil flows reaching half of pre-war levels

    US officials say Hormuz oil flows reaching half of pre-war levels

    In a series of public remarks delivered Friday, senior United States government officials have confirmed that the US Navy is carrying out nightly escort missions for dozens of commercial tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz, moving millions of barrels of crude oil through the critical chokepoint amid an ongoing regional conflict that has disrupted global energy supplies.

    US Energy Secretary Chris Wright told the Bloomberg Energy Security Executive Briefing held in Houston, Texas on Friday that tankers under American protection currently carry approximately seven million barrels of oil through the Strait of Hormuz each day. That volume accounts for roughly half of the total daily traffic that passed through the waterway before the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran began on February 28. Wright noted that current shipping volumes are continuing to climb, closing the gap left by the post-conflict blockade.

    “Flows today are approaching half of the gap, and they’re rising,” Wright told attendees at the briefing.

    Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum echoed Wright’s confirmation in an interview with CNBC Friday, adding that the operation escorts up to 20 vessels through the strait each night, with some nights seeing more than 20 commercial ships pass through under US protection. Burgum emphasized that the operations have already moved large volumes of crude out of the Gulf, and that global energy markets have already priced in this recovery ahead of mainstream media coverage.

    “Some nights, more than 20 ships [are] coming out,” Burgum said. “Substantial amounts of oil have come out of the strait. I think the markets figured that out before some of the tabloid press did, because you’re starting to see a softening of oil prices.”

    The confirmation comes after US President Donald Trump earlier this week claimed that the US had been carrying out secret escort operations for commercial vessels leaving the Gulf. Trump claimed that the operations have already allowed more than 200 commercial ships and 100 million barrels of oil to bypass Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

    As ceasefire negotiations between Washington and Tehran continue, it remains unclear whether Iran has implicitly approved the ongoing escort operations. Earlier this week, an American Apache attack helicopter operating in the waterway was shot down, according to US media, which linked the aircraft to the escort mission. Iranian officials have downplayed the severity of the incident, offering few details on the encounter.

    Global oil markets saw extreme volatility after the US and Israel launched their military campaign against Iran, with international benchmark Brent crude spiking to $112 per barrel in the immediate weeks after the conflict began. Energy analysts have long noted that public exchange prices have not fully reflected the actual premiums paid for physical crude cargoes, particularly in Asia, a region that relies heavily on crude exports from Gulf producing states.

    Many market analysts predicted even steeper price spikes after Iran seized control of the Strait of Hormuz and imposed a blockade on energy shipments from neighboring Gulf states. In response, the US implemented its own counter-blockade that removed Iranian crude barrels already under international sanctions from global markets.

    Global oil markets stabilized after a series of policy interventions: Western nations released 400 million barrels of crude from their strategic emergency reserves, while China made an unprecedented cut to its crude import volumes to reduce demand. China’s May crude imports fell roughly three million barrels per day compared to year-ago levels, according to trade data.

    Neither Burgum nor Wright offered a clear timeline for how long the nightly escort operations will continue. But the operations have already coincided with a steady downward trend in global oil prices this month. Brent crude, the global benchmark, has fallen roughly 20 percent over the past 30 days. On Friday, the benchmark traded 3.5 percent lower at $87.17 per barrel, as both Iran and the US publicly signaled that a new ceasefire agreement is within reach.

  • Trump says US military strike killed leader of Tren de Aragua gang with help from Venezuela

    Trump says US military strike killed leader of Tren de Aragua gang with help from Venezuela

    WASHINGTON – In a formal announcement made Friday, former U.S. President Donald Trump confirmed that a targeted, rapid and heavily lethal kinetic military operation carried out by American forces has eliminated Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores, the man the White House identifies as the top leader of the transnational criminal group Tren de Aragua.

    The violent criminal organization, which has expanded its operations across borders in recent years, has already received an official designation as a terrorist organization from the U.S. government. This designation opens the door to broader law enforcement and national security tools to counter the group’s activities.

    As far back as December, U.S. law enforcement authorities made public that Guerrero Flores had been indicted by a federal court in New York. The charges filed against him include racketeering conspiracy alongside a string of additional criminal offenses. Among these counts is the allegation that he provided material support to terrorist activities, with a criminal trajectory linked to these offenses extending back more than 10 years.

  • Teen fights for life after reported ‘train surfing’ stunt goes wrong

    Teen fights for life after reported ‘train surfing’ stunt goes wrong

    A dangerous reckless stunt has left a 16-year-old Australian teenager fighting for his life after he fell from the exterior of a moving commuter train in Sydney’s inner west over the weekend, prompting major service disruptions for thousands of rail passengers and renewing scrutiny of a long-unaddressed public safety crisis.

    The incident unfolded early Saturday between the St Peters and Sydenham stations, where emergency responders were alerted to the fall just minutes after it occurred. Initial investigations from New South Wales Police confirm the teen was participating in the illegal and extremely high-risk activity known as “train surfing” — a dangerous trend that sees thrill-seekers climb outside moving train carriages to ride for entertainment or social media content.

    After tumbling from the side of the moving Tangara-model T-set train onto the tracks below, the teenager suffered life-threatening injuries to his head and arm. NSW Ambulance paramedics administered urgent first aid at the scene before airlifting the patient to Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Camperdown, where he remains in critical but stable condition as of the latest update.

    Members of the Inner West Police Area Command launched a full investigation into the circumstances of the incident to confirm the details leading up to the fall, according to an official statement from NSW Police.

    Beyond the medical emergency, the incident caused widespread disruption to Sydney’s entire central rail network. Multiple suburban lines were suspended temporarily, and all services departing Central Station faced extended schedule delays that lasted for hours, impacting tens of thousands of morning commuters.

    Notably, the train involved in Saturday’s accident is the same model of double-decker T-set that the current Minns Labor government targeted for safety upgrades last year. Following repeated public safety alarms over rising train surfing incidents, the government pledged to install specialized anti-climbing safety devices across the entire T-set fleet by the end of 2026, a rollout that remains years from completion.

  • Niagara Falls: Is there a better spot to watch a World Cup game?

    Niagara Falls: Is there a better spot to watch a World Cup game?

    When it comes to finding a memorable setting to cheer on your national team during the FIFA World Cup, few locations can compete with the natural grandeur of Niagara Falls. As North America’s two biggest contenders kicked off their tournament campaigns, hundreds of passionate football supporters converged on the world-famous waterfall destination for a one-of-a-kind public watch party.

    The gathering brought together fans from both Canada and the United States, creating a festive atmosphere that blended cross-border friendly rivalry with shared love of the global sport. Against the backdrop of thundering cascades and misty panoramic views, attendees packed the designated viewing area, waving national flags, chanting team anthems, and reacting to every goal, tackle and close call on the large screen set up for the occasion.

    Organizers of the event crafted a unique experience that paired the excitement of the world’s biggest football tournament with the unmatched beauty of one of North America’s most iconic natural landmarks. For attendees, the opening matches of their respective national teams carried an extra layer of excitement, watched not from a cramped living room or standard sports bar, but with the roar of Niagara Falls as an unexpected, unforgettable soundtrack to the opening of World Cup action.