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  • Iran attacking Israel seeks to shape the region on its own terms

    Iran attacking Israel seeks to shape the region on its own terms

    On June 7, 2026, Iran launched a large-scale barrage of missile strikes against Israel, marking its first direct attack on Israeli territory in two months. The immediate catalyst for this assault came hours earlier, when Israeli forces carried out a targeted strike on a Hezbollah position in Beirut, Lebanon’s capital – an operation that former U.S. President Donald Trump had explicitly urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to avoid just days prior.

    Within hours of Iran’s initial missile volley, the Israeli military launched retaliatory air strikes against military and infrastructure targets across western and central Iran, once again ignoring the Trump administration’s repeated calls for regional de-escalation and restraint. In response, Iran quickly organized a second wave of missile attacks, before official Iranian military spokesperson announced the conclusion of Tehran’s offensive operations. In an official public statement, Tehran issued a stark warning: if Israel continues its military campaign against Hezbollah positions in Lebanon, Iran will launch a far more severe military response in the future.

    What sets this round of cross-border escalation apart from prior confrontations is the distinct geopolitical context in which it unfolds. Over the course of the ongoing regional conflict, Iran has moved steadily to establish a new regional order structured around revised rules of engagement that it dictates – and a growing body of evidence suggests Tehran is on track to successfully implement this new framework.

    The first defining feature of this emerging order is Iran’s growing willingness and ability to dictate acceptable military action to both Israel and the United States. Critically, Iran initiated this latest round of fighting not in response to an attack on its own sovereign territory, but to push back against Israeli military operations in Lebanon, aiming to set clear limits on what Israel can do in its own neighboring border region. Just six months ago, Israel was able to conduct unrestricted military operations across Lebanon without fear of direct Iranian retaliation. Today, shifted regional dynamics brought on by months of open conflict have left Tehran sufficiently emboldened to impose explicit constraints on Israeli military activity.

    This same dynamic of Iranian assertiveness has played out more gradually over the past month in the Strait of Hormuz, the vital global energy chokepoint through which nearly 20% of the world’s oil supplies pass daily. Shortly after the full-scale regional war began in late February, Iran established de facto control over movement through the waterway, and has shown no indication that it plans to relinquish this leverage. This control, too, is a core component of Iran’s new regional order: Tehran is sending a clear message to its rivals that compliance with its demands is required, or it will tighten its chokehold on the global energy economy. So far, U.S. policy has reflected a clear willingness to accept this new status quo rather than risk the consequences of military confrontation to reverse it.

    The second key element of this new order is Iran’s expanding toolkit of coercive options to pressure its opponents into accepting the new rules, all while avoiding meaningful punitive consequences. Tehran has now proven it can launch large-scale missile barrages into Israel, strike critical infrastructure across U.S.-aligned Gulf Arab states, target American military personnel operating in the region, and disrupt global energy supplies – all without triggering the large-scale regime-change intervention that long deterred such actions. Iran still retains a wide range of unplayed leverage as well: it can expand targeting of energy and water desalination infrastructure across the Gulf, or reactivate its Houthi allies in Yemen to disrupt global shipping through the Red Sea. Already, following the latest escalation, the Houthis have announced a full ban on all Israeli-flagged commercial shipping transiting the Red Sea.

    While the U.S. has issued repeated public threats to retaliate against Iran – including strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure, a seizure of Iran’s critical Kharg Island oil export terminal, or the deployment of naval convoys to enforce free passage through the Strait of Hormuz – Washington has backed down from every planned action, driven by fear of the catastrophic regional escalation that would follow.

    The third defining feature of Iran’s emerging order is the growing rift in longstanding coordinated policy between the U.S. and Israel, a development that has long been a core strategic goal for Tehran. In response to Iran’s initial missile strikes against Israel, Trump emphasized that his top priority was preventing Israel from launching a major retaliatory campaign. “I am going to call Bibi right now and tell him not to retaliate,” Trump stated publicly immediately after the first Iranian assault. The current situation, in which a sitting Republican U.S. president is urging Israel not to respond to direct Iranian missile attacks targeting civilian populations, would have been considered nearly unimaginable just six months ago, a testament to how dramatically regional dynamics have shifted.

    While Trump has not yet threatened to withhold American missile interceptor defense supplies from Israel over its resumption of hostilities, even with continued U.S. defensive support, sustaining a major new conflict with Iran poses significant challenges for Jerusalem. For example, large-scale ground operations to target Iranian missile launchers would stretch Israeli air power thin, particularly without active U.S. assistance in targeting enemy positions, and the ongoing active front against Hezbollah in the north would draw down already strained Israeli military resources even further.

    Looking ahead, a critical open question remains: how long will the U.S. be willing to deplete its own domestic stocks of missile interceptors to defend Israel, in a conflict that the U.S. president explicitly urged Israel not to initiate? In the short term, this arrangement may hold, but over the long run, it is not sustainable for the U.S. to dedicate a large share of its national missile defense inventory to protect Israel in an ongoing open conflict.

    The fourth and final feature of the new regional order is that a lasting regional peace settlement appears increasingly out of reach. Netanyahu cannot politically accept an Iranian veto over Israeli military action in Lebanon, nor can he afford to erode longheld Israeli deterrence by allowing unpunished Iranian missile attacks on Israeli territory. At the same time, Trump cannot advance his stated goal of negotiating a new peace deal with Iran while Israel continues its military campaign in Lebanon. For its part, Iran has every incentive to keep increasing pressure on its opponents, inflicting steadily rising costs with little fear of meaningful consequences under the new regional order it has built.

    Ultimately, this shifting dangerous landscape is the outcome of a poorly considered war of choice that will go down as one of the most ill-conceived military engagements in modern American history.

    This analysis is contributed by Andrew Gawthorpe, a lecturer in history and international studies at Leiden University, republished under a Creative Commons license from The Conversation.

  • China’s HQ-16F primed for Taiwan war far beyond the Strait

    China’s HQ-16F primed for Taiwan war far beyond the Strait

    As cross-strait military dynamics evolve rapidly, China’s deployment of an advanced new medium-range air defense system opposite Taiwan signals a critical shift in Beijing’s strategic thinking: growing recognition that any future conflict over the island will not be limited to the Taiwan Strait, but will likely extend deep into mainland Chinese territory.

    According to reporting from the South China Morning Post this month, Beijing has deployed the cutting-edge HQ-16F surface-to-air missile (SAM) system to frontline People’s Liberation Army units positioned directly across the strait from Taiwan. Just weeks after the deployment was first reported, China’s state broadcaster CCTV released footage on June 5 showing the 73rd Group Army — a strategic PLA unit headquartered in Fujian’s Xiamen, just across the strait from Taiwan — completing its first live-fire exercises and operational evaluation of the new system.

    During the drills, the unit traveled thousands of kilometers to testing grounds in the Gobi Desert of northwest China, where a mobile-launched HQ-16F successfully intercepted an incoming target at a range of 50 kilometers. Designed specifically to boost the defensive capabilities of the PLA’s Eastern Theater Command, which oversees all operations related to Taiwan, the HQ-16F is an advanced wingless missile that incorporates four tail fins, an integrated propulsion motor, and cutting-edge thrust vectoring technology. These design features allow it to engage highly maneuverable threats, including low-altitude infiltrators and supersonic incoming projectiles.

    While full technical specifications for the domestic variant remain classified, military analysts note that the HQ-16F’s capabilities meet or outperform those of its export counterpart, the HQ-16FE. The export model is equipped with an active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar that can track targets at distances exceeding 250 kilometers. This latest upgrade significantly narrows the technological gap between Chinese air defense systems and the U.S.-made Patriot PAC-2 and PAC-3 systems that form the core of Taiwan’s current air defense network, while the addition of a directional fragmentation warhead improves its ability to counter existing cross-strait defense infrastructure.

    Analysts widely believe the HQ-16F program was accelerated and the system deployed in response to the rapid development of Taiwan’s precision strike capabilities, which can now reach potential invasion staging areas on the mainland. In a February 2026 analysis published by the U.S. Army 75th Reserve Innovation Command, researchers Brennan Deveraux and Kyle Marcrum argued that U.S.-supplied Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) platforms give Taiwan the ability to strike targets across a 300-kilometer ring extending from the island into mainland China. This capability, they note, has forced Beijing to position advanced air defense assets like the HQ-16F near key invasion embarkation points and command-and-control facilities within that strike range.

    The ATACMS threat poses a particularly difficult challenge for Chinese air defense planners, Deveraux and Marcrum added. At just 180 kilometers across at its narrowest point, the Taiwan Strait places most of China’s coastal military infrastructure well within ATACMS range, and Taiwan has dispersed a large arsenal of the missiles across multiple hidden sites across the island. Additionally, ATACMS missiles travel at Mach 3 during their terminal approach, giving traditional air and missile defense systems only seconds to detect and react to an incoming threat, making interception extremely difficult.

    ATACMS is not the only threat driving China’s air defense upgrades. Taiwan has also developed and fielded an arsenal of domestic long-range cruise missiles, most notably the Hsiung Feng IIE. Data from Missile Threat shows that extended-range variants of the Hsiung Feng IIE have a maximum range of 1,200 kilometers — a distance that allows them to strike targets deep inside the Chinese mainland when launched from Taiwan.

    Like the U.S. Tomahawk cruise missile, the Hsiung Feng IIE is designed to evade enemy air defenses through low-altitude flight. It can be routed around known radar coverage gaps, follow indirect, unpredictable flight paths instead of the easily detectable ballistic trajectories used by traditional ballistic missiles, fly at high subsonic speeds below radar detection thresholds, and use terrain masking to avoid being picked up by defensive systems — all tactics that drastically reduce the chance of interception.

    China’s vast landmass, long considered a key strategic advantage that provides depth for defensive operations, has become a liability in the era of long-range precision strikes, much as it has for Russia in its ongoing invasion of Ukraine. Russia’s experience has shown that defending an enormous territory comprehensively is functionally impossible, allowing attackers to target critical military, industrial, and energy infrastructure far from the front lines.

    China faces the same dilemma: its size makes nationwide air defense coverage impractical, forcing military planners to concentrate limited defensive assets around key military, political, and strategic sites rather than protecting the entire country. Taiwan’s long-range missile arsenal, led by ATACMS and the Hsiung Feng IIE, can exploit these gaps in China’s air defense network to target invasion staging areas and critical assets deep in the Chinese mainland. These strikes could inflict major economic damage, undermine public confidence in Beijing’s leadership, and impose significant psychological costs on the Chinese government. While such attacks could theoretically erode public support for a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, they could also harden Chinese public sentiment against the self-governing island and push Beijing to escalate military operations.

    Beijing’s security concerns extend beyond Taiwan’s growing strike capabilities to include the threat of advanced conventional strike power from the United States, which can also target strategic sites deep inside the Chinese mainland. Beyond countering Taiwan’s missile arsenal, military analysts believe the HQ-16F will also be used to defend China’s nuclear arsenal and core leadership facilities against potential U.S. intervention in a Taiwan conflict. The June 2025 U.S. airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities underscored this risk, proving that U.S. long-range strike capabilities could be used against Chinese strategic assets in the event of a cross-strait conflict. In those strikes, seven U.S. B-2 stealth bombers dropped 14 13,600-kilogram Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) bombs on three key underground Iranian nuclear sites: Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan. While it remains unclear whether the strikes completely destroyed Iran’s nuclear program, they inflicted severe damage on underground centrifuge facilities, collapsed critical tunnel networks, and likely cut off Iran’s access to its fissile material stockpiles and enrichment infrastructure.

    In line with this strategic shift, the HQ-16F is expected to be deployed to defend key strategic sites including the Hami nuclear silo field in northwest China. A May 2026 Reuters report found that the Hami facilities are already protected by camouflaged defensive positions carved into the desert, which are widely believed to house air defense batteries. Beyond nuclear sites, the system will also be used to defend critical leadership and command-and-control facilities, such as the massive underground Beijing Military City complex, which was built to house China’s top leadership and serve as a wartime command center during a large-scale conflict.

    Even with the deployment of the advanced HQ-16F system, China cannot fully eliminate its vulnerability to long-range precision strikes against its strategic rear. While the new system strengthens China’s defenses against evolving long-range strike threats, its deployment also highlights a stark new reality: Beijing now openly expects that any conflict over Taiwan will extend far beyond the Taiwan Strait and into core mainland Chinese territory.

    For regional and global powers, this shifting strategic landscape creates a new defining challenge: how to maintain deterrence without crossing China’s explicit nuclear red lines in any future Taiwan crisis.

  • Palestinians in Chile push back over new president’s pivot toward Israel

    Palestinians in Chile push back over new president’s pivot toward Israel

    Across Latin America, a growing wave of conservative right-wing leadership is reshaping decades of regional foreign policy, abandoning the longstanding pro-Palestine solidarity that defined the so-called “pink tide” of left-wing governance to deepen strategic and diplomatic ties with Israel. Nowhere is this policy reversal more striking than in Chile, home to the largest Palestinian diaspora community outside the Arab world and North Africa.

    Chile’s new president, Jose Antonio Kast, took office in December 2023 after a campaign focused on curbing immigration, strengthening national security, and slashing public spending. A self-professed admirer of Chile’s former authoritarian dictator Augusto Pinochet, Kast’s populist, hardline rhetoric aligns closely with other rising right-wing leaders across the hemisphere: Argentina’s austerity-focused Javier Milei, El Salvador’s authoritarian leader Nayib Bukele, and former U.S. President Donald Trump, whose approach to cementing U.S. influence in the Americas has been dubbed the “Donroe Doctrine” by political observers.

    Kast is far from alone in this regional shift: newly elected leaders in Bolivia, Costa Rica, and Honduras have also rushed to reset diplomatic relations with Israel, even amid widespread international condemnation of Israel’s military campaign in the occupied Gaza Strip, which has killed more than 73,000 Palestinians since October 2023. For Chile’s 400,000-strong Palestinian community, this policy reversal represents a direct break with decades of national tradition, and a deep threat to their longstanding advocacy for Palestinian statehood.

    Ricardo Marzuca, a Chilean-Palestinian historian at the University of Chile’s Center for Arab Studies, notes that the shift marks an unprecedented break: “And that, indeed, is a problem for the Palestinian community in Chile.”

    Under Kast’s predecessor, former left-wing President Gabriel Boric, Chile emerged as one of the most outspoken global critics of Israel’s military operations in Gaza. Boric’s government recalled Chile’s ambassador to Tel Aviv, withdrew the country’s military and defense attachés from Israel, and joined South Africa’s landmark case accusing Israel of genocide at the International Court of Justice. Shortly before leaving office in March 2024, Boric co-sponsored four United Nations resolutions condemning Israel’s war crimes in occupied Palestine and the Syrian Golan Heights. He also introduced legislation to ban imports of goods from Israeli-occupied territories and supported Spain’s push for a full regional arms embargo on Israel. However, Boric’s proposed import ban never passed the Chilean legislature, and Chile never followed Spain’s lead in codifying a full arms embargo into law.

    Stephanie Elias Musalem, executive director of the Palestine Information Centre in Santiago, argues that Boric’s tenure marked the strongest political and symbolic support for Palestine from any Chilean president in modern history. “Yet most of his measures lacked long-term institutional safeguards, making them vulnerable to reversal,” she explained.

    Kast has wasted no time undoing Boric’s legacy, having previously described Boric’s pro-Palestine policy as “irresponsible and markedly ideological.” Within weeks of taking office, he authorized Israeli weapons manufacturers to participate in FIDAE, Chile’s premier international military and aerospace trade fair, reversing a ban on Israeli defense firms implemented by the Boric administration. In early May, during a bilateral meeting with Israeli President Isaac Herzog held in Costa Rica, Kast confirmed plans to return Chile’s ambassador to Tel Aviv within a matter of weeks. The two leaders also discussed expanding bilateral cooperation across key sectors, including agriculture, public health, artificial intelligence, and advanced technology.

    The meeting drew immediate and fierce condemnation from the Palestinian Community of Chile. Elias points out that even past center-right Chilean leaders embraced the Palestinian cause: former President Sebastian Piñera formally recognized the State of Palestine in 2011, becoming the first Chilean head of state to make an official visit to Ramallah.

    At the same time, Elias notes that Chile has maintained deep, underreported material ties with Israel dating back to the 1970s. After the United States imposed restrictions on military aid and arms sales to Pinochet’s military junta over widespread human rights abuses in 1976, Israel stepped in to become one of Chile’s primary suppliers of military equipment and defense technology. Decades later, despite rhetorical commitments to a “real, secure and permanent peace” between Israel and Palestine, Piñera expanded economic, technological, and defense cooperation with Israel, pushing bilateral trade to $281 million by 2018. This dual track policy – rhetorical support for Palestine paired with deepening material ties to Israel – has long been “a core contradiction” at the heart of Chile’s foreign policy, Elias said.

    Kast’s close alignment with Israel is further reflected in the senior advisors he has appointed to his administration. Eitan Bloch, a 32-year-old Argentine international advisor with deep ties to global Zionist networks, holds a senior position on the second floor of La Moneda, Chile’s presidential palace. Bloch previously worked at the Israeli embassy in Santiago, and in December 2023, he joined a delegation of Chilean senators on an official trip to Israel led by the Jewish Community of Chile (CJCH), where the group met with Herzog and leading Israeli experts in artificial intelligence and cybersecurity.

    Elias explains that Bloch’s proximity to the president gives him outsize influence: “The second floor is made up of the president’s most trusted people. As such, Bloch is considered one of the key architects behind the administration for foreign policy.”

    Kast has also appointed Gabriel Zaliasnik, a self-identified Zionist and former president of the CJCH – an organization dedicated to entrenching close diplomatic ties between Chile and Israel – as Chile’s new ambassador to Israel. “I cannot conceive of a Jew not being one,” Zaliasnik said in a 2020 interview. He has repeatedly criticized Boric and the Chilean left, falsely claiming that progressive pro-Palestine advocacy “embraces Islamic jihadism,” and has defended Israel’s military campaign in Gaza as “any democracy defending itself against terrorism.”

    The appointment has drawn sharp criticism from Chile’s Palestinian community, which calls it “a very serious decision, contrary to the national interest, incoherent with Chile’s history of defending international law, and deeply offensive to the hundreds of thousands of Chileans of Palestinian origin.”

    Kast’s pro-Israel policy also creates unexpected internal friction within his own conservative base: it alienates right-wing members of Chile’s Palestinian community, who have long supported the Palestinian cause regardless of their partisan alignment. The first wave of Palestinian migration to Chile began decades before the 1948 Nakba, when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forcibly expelled from their homeland by Zionist militias. Predominantly Christian migrants fleeing economic collapse and forced conscription under Ottoman rule built successful businesses, entered Chilean politics, and established a lasting cultural legacy that remains central to national life today.

    Marzuca emphasizes that Chile’s Palestinian community is ideologically diverse, spanning the full political spectrum from former communist presidential candidate Daniel Jadue on the left to Francisco Chahuán, Chile’s current right-wing ambassador to Mexico. “The point that unites them all is a commitment to the Palestinian cause,” Marzuca told Middle East Eye. While left-wing Chilean Palestinians frame their support for Palestine through an internationalist lens rooted in human rights and anti-imperialism, right-wing members reject framing the Palestinian struggle alongside Indigenous liberation movements in Latin America, and hold a more narrow focus on establishing an independent Palestinian state. Even so, the community has built a cross-party parliamentary bloc that unites left and right lawmakers in solidarity with Palestine, meaning Kast’s policy creates a contradiction for even conservative Palestinian Chileans.

    The tension over Kast’s policy has been thrown into sharp relief by the recent interception of the Global Sumud Flotilla, an activist mission seeking to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza. On May 18, four Chilean activists were illegally intercepted and abducted by Israeli forces in international waters. Nelson Hadad, a Chilean-Palestinian lawyer representing the activists, says his legal team will file a complaint with the International Criminal Court accusing Israel of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

    “An illegal detention has been committed in international waters… this cannot go unpunished,” Hadad said. He added that the four activists were “subjected to torture, interrogated with physical violence, beatings and sexual violence” at a detention facility in the Israeli city of Ashdod.

    The Kast administration issued a mild statement of displeasure to Israel’s ambassador, and called for the immediate release of the detainees, and Hadad confirmed that Chilean consular officials in Tel Aviv and Ankara provided limited assistance to the activists. But Macarena Chahuan, a Chilean-Palestinian journalist and activist who was aboard the flotilla during an earlier interception on April 30, says the government provided no support whatsoever for her, and her safe return was coordinated entirely by the flotilla’s local Chilean delegation.

    Maurice Khamis Massu, president of the Palestinian Community of Chile, has publicly condemned the administration’s response as ambiguous and insufficient. “The government cannot remain silent when Chilean citizens are deprived of their liberties in international waters,” he said. “This is about the obligation of the state to protect its citizens. What we defend is not an ideology, but the pillars of our international coexistence: unrestricted respect for international law, international humanitarian law, and human rights.” For Chile, he argues, support for Palestinian self-determination is not a partisan issue – it is a longstanding, cross-party state policy that has remained firm for more than 50 years.

  • Iranian strikes surprise Israel and raise concern of strategic setback

    Iranian strikes surprise Israel and raise concern of strategic setback

    The sudden escalation of cross-border hostilities between Iran and Israel has triggered fierce, divided debate across Israeli political and media circles, exposing deep rifts over Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s strategic leadership and the country’s next steps in an increasingly volatile regional crisis.

    The sequence of violence unfolded on a Sunday, when Israeli forces carried out a strike on a building in southern Beirut that killed two Lebanese civilians. Iran condemned the attack as a clear violation of an existing ceasefire agreement, with Israeli military correspondent Alon Ben David of Channel 13 News later describing the strike as little more than a symbolic gesture. That same evening, Iran launched a retaliatory attack that caught Israeli defense and intelligence establishments completely off guard. Ben David noted that prior to the strike, both Israeli and U.S. officials had assessed Iran would never dare launch direct fire at Israel, a prediction that proved drastically wrong.

    In the hours after Iran’s rocket and missile assault, Israel launched retaliatory air strikes across Tehran and other Iranian cities, while cross-fire exchanges continued into Monday. From the start of the crisis, much of the domestic debate has centered on the public intervention of U.S. President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly urged Netanyahu to avoid further full-scale attacks on Iran and called for an immediate ceasefire from both sides.

    Critics across the Israeli political spectrum have slammed what they see as Netanyahu’s willingness to cede control of core national security decisions to Washington. Veteran Israeli journalist Ben Caspit, writing in *Ma’ariv*, went so far as to argue that Israeli national security has effectively been “privatized” and handed over to Trump, requiring all major military decisions to win approval from the White House. Right-wing voices within both the governing coalition and opposition have been particularly vocal in rejecting U.S. pressure to stand down. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich was expected to push for a harsh response at a Monday cabinet meeting, reportedly calling for Israel to raze dozens of buildings in southern Beirut’s suburbs for every Iranian missile fired into Israeli territory. National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir declared bluntly that “Tehran must burn,” while Culture Minister Miki Zohar urged Netanyahu to continue strikes, arguing that regional actors only respect overwhelming military power. Even opposition figures from the right wing echoed this call: former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett framed the moment as a test of Israeli sovereignty, demanding immediate action to strike Iran’s strategic infrastructure, while former Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Benny Gantz called the April ceasefire a strategic mistake that must be corrected with a forceful response.

    But not all opposition figures back further escalation. Centrist and left-leaning opposition leaders have accused Netanyahu of deliberately stoking regional unrest to distract from domestic political pressure and avoid early national elections. Yair Golan, leader of the Democrats party, argued that “our enemies recognize what everyone can see: Netanyahu is weak,” adding that the current government has no mandate to drag the country into another full-scale war. Fellow Democrat lawmaker Gilad Kariv added that Netanyahu has failed in his core duty to protect Israeli citizens, and that the coalition’s policies are putting every Israeli at risk.

    Security analysts have largely framed the current escalation as proof of the strategic failure of the joint Israeli-U.S. military campaign against Iran launched earlier this year. Danny Citrinowicz, an Iranian affairs expert at Israel’s prestigious Institute for National Security Studies (INSS), noted that the campaign failed to achieve its core goal of toppling the Iranian government, leaving Israel in a far weaker strategic position. “Israel finds itself with less freedom of action, Iran with greater self-confidence, and the U.S. with a growing desire to resolve the crisis through a diplomatic settlement,” Citrinowicz wrote in a post on X. He added that Netanyahu now faces a fateful dilemma: launch a full-scale attack and risk a direct public clash with the U.S. president, or hold back and face restrictions on Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Lebanon. Haaretz military analyst Amos Harel echoed this assessment, pointing out that Netanyahu has pushed consistently to resume full-scale war against Iran since the April ceasefire, and the current escalation lays bare the growing rift between the Israeli prime minister and Trump.

    In response to the crisis, Israeli authorities have implemented a series of emergency measures across the country. All school classes and public events have been canceled, public transportation and hospital operations are running at reduced capacity, and military officials have ordered strict limits on passenger arrivals at Ben Gurion Airport. The Israeli military has also begun mobilizing reservists, with Channel 12 News reporting that top army commanders are preparing for a multi-day conflict, and view the current escalation as an opportunity to finish the work left undone by the earlier joint campaign against Iran. As of Monday, Netanyahu himself has not issued any public comment on the escalation, leaving the fractious debate within Israeli politics and media to continue unabated.

  • Don’t bomb Iran, Trump tells Netanyahu, but Israel strikes anyway

    Don’t bomb Iran, Trump tells Netanyahu, but Israel strikes anyway

    A dramatic escalation of tensions across the Middle East unfolded this week after Israeli Defense Forces carried out an airstrike on Iran on Monday, just hours after former U.S. President Donald Trump publicly urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to hold off on any retaliatory action. The strike came in direct response to a major Iranian missile barrage against Israeli targets a day earlier, which Tehran launched as payback for an earlier Israeli bombing operation in Beirut.

    Trump made his call for de-escalation in comments to Axios on Sunday, shortly after Iran’s strikes landed. He noted that the Iranian barrage had not resulted in any reported casualties, arguing that both sides had already carried out their reciprocal actions. “Each of them had their fun. Israel had its strike, and Iran had its strike. We don’t need another one,” Trump told reporters, adding that he would contact Netanyahu immediately to pressure him into standing down.

    Iran’s Sunday missile attack marked the first major cross-border strike against Israel since a fragile ceasefire agreement went into effect in early April, and the back-and-forth exchange has stoked widespread fears that the region could quickly slide back into a full-scale open conflict. Tehran defended its action as a legitimate defensive measure, saying it was responding both to the Israeli bombing of southern Beirut and repeated Israeli violations of the April ceasefire. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei pointed specifically to recent joint attacks carried out by Israel and the U.S. military against Iranian commercial vessels and targets in southern Iran over the preceding two weeks as proof of ongoing aggression.

    Baghaei rejected Trump’s framing of the conflict during a Monday press conference, arguing that no regional observer believes Israel would launch attacks against neighbors like Lebanon and Iran without prior coordination and backing from the United States. As a signatory to the April 8 ceasefire understanding, Washington bears full responsibility for all violations, Baghaei said. “Whether the US itself violates the ceasefire by attacking Iranian commercial ships or targeting southern parts of the country, or whether violations are carried out through the Zionist regime in Lebanon with US complicity, the direct responsibility of the United States is clear, and the consequences of any escalation will also fall on Washington,” he added.

    Speaking to the Financial Times after Iran’s missile strike, Trump maintained that the exchange would not derail ongoing diplomatic efforts to reach a broader negotiated agreement with Tehran. The U.S. president also asserted his authority over Israeli policy, saying that Netanyahu would have no option but to accept any deal his administration reaches with Iran. “I call the shots. I call all the shots. [Netanyahu] doesn’t call the shots,” Trump said.

    But critics of the February joint U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran say Netanyahu’s swift decision to defy Trump’s call for restraint lays bare the deep problems and unintended consequences of the conflict for U.S. influence in the region. U.S. Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut, framed the incident as a major humiliation for both Trump and U.S. global standing. “This war has been humiliating for Trump and American power generally,” Murphy wrote on social media. “And when Trump announces he is going to call Netanyahu and tell him not to retaliate, and within hours Netanyahu retaliates, the humiliation just compounds.”

    Analysis from foreign policy experts echoes this critique, highlighting a fundamental mismatch in Trump’s approach to regional diplomacy that risks further escalation. Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, noted that Trump has only shown willingness to publicly pressure Netanyahu, rather than expending real political capital to rein in Israeli military action, unless a diplomatic deal with Iran is already finalized. “From Trump’s perspective, it is only worth doing if an agreement with Iran is already secured. In short, Trump is willing to restrain Israel to preserve a deal, but not to obtain one. Iran, however, wants evidence that Trump can restrain Israel before agreeing to a deal,” Parsi explained in a post-strike blog post. “As a result, the most likely scenario is another round of Iranian and Israeli strikes, with Trump declining to meaningfully constrain Israel.”

    The National Iranian American Council has warned that Iranian leadership has already threatened to launch a broader, more destructive military campaign if Israeli attacks continue. The group noted that the next 24 to 72 hours will be a critical window to determine whether the current crisis can be contained, or if it will mark the start of a new, more dangerous phase of the long-running regional conflict. Even as diplomatic efforts remain stalled, observers across the globe are watching closely for any further moves that could push the entire Middle East into open war.

  • Trump calls on Iran and Israel to ‘stop shooting immediately’

    Trump calls on Iran and Israel to ‘stop shooting immediately’

    A fragile regional ceasefire between Iran and Israel has collapsed into open tit-for-tat missile exchanges, prompting outgoing U.S. President Donald Trump to issue urgent public and private calls for an immediate end to hostilities amid growing global alarm over wider conflict.

    In a public post to his Truth Social platform over the weekend, Trump stressed that the two nations “must immediately stop ‘shooting’”, as cross-border attacks reignited long-simmered tensions that a fragile April ceasefire had temporarily paused. The escalation comes even as the Trump administration has pursued behind-the-scenes diplomatic efforts to lock in a new peace deal, with the president directly pressuring Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to hold off on retaliatory strikes, according to senior U.S. administration sources.

    The current cycle of violence was triggered Saturday when Israeli warplanes struck Beirut’s southern suburbs, killing at least two people and wounding 20 more. In a deliberate, proportional response, Iran launched a barrage of missile strikes toward northern Israel on Sunday, fulfilling long-stated pledges to retaliate for attacks on Iranian interests and allied assets. Despite Trump’s last-minute phone call urging Netanyahu to stand down to save faltering peace negotiations, Israel launched its own wave of counter-strikes against targets inside Iran.

    A senior anonymous U.S. official outlined that Trump told Netanyahu during the Sunday call that Washington was “close to doing something good in terms of a deal”. The official added that Netanyahu initially pushed back against the request before offering a tentative, non-binding agreement to hold fire, and confirmed the Trump administration never issued “the green light” for Israel’s strike on the Lebanese capital. Ahead of the call, Trump had already publicly expressed dissatisfaction with the Beirut attack, telling Fox News he was “not happy” about the strike on Lebanon’s capital. In separate comments to the Financial Times, Trump also claimed Netanyahu would have “no choice” but to accept a negotiated deal with Iran, asserting that “I call the shots” on regional diplomacy.

    The failed diplomatic push has drawn sharp criticism from political opponents in Washington. U.S. Democratic Senator Chris Murphy argued that the new wave of cross-border attacks compounds what he called Trump’s diplomatic “humiliation”, marking a clear failure of the administration’s efforts to constrain Israeli military action.

    Iran has meanwhile formally pinned responsibility for the escalation on the United States, in comments carried by the country’s state-run Tasnim news agency. Foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei noted that Washington is a signatory to the April 8 ceasefire agreement, saying “Whatever happens in the region… the direct responsibility of the United States is established, and it will also bear responsibility for the consequences of any escalation.” He added that the original negotiation framework was intended to end broader hostilities against Iran and resolve the ongoing conflict in Lebanon as core components of the ceasefire deal.

    On Monday, multiple reports from Iran’s official IRNA news agency confirmed widespread “powerful explosions” were heard across key Iranian cities including Tehran, Isfahan, and Tabriz. Israeli military officials confirmed they had targeted military sites across western and central Iran, including a strike on a major petrochemical facility in the port city of Mahshahr. To date, neither side has released official casualty figures from the latest exchange of strikes, though emergency management and hospital systems in both countries have activated full response protocols to prepare for the risk of prolonged open hostilities.

    In response to Israel’s strikes, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched a coordinated retaliatory operation codenamed “Operation Nasr”. The IRGC announced its aerospace division fired precision missiles at two key Israeli air bases: Nevatim Air Base and Tel Nof Air Base, saying the operation was launched in response to earlier Israeli strikes on Iranian radar installations across multiple locations. This marked the first major direct Iranian attack on Israeli territory since the April ceasefire came into force. Israeli air defense systems reported intercepting roughly 10 incoming missiles bound for northern Israel, with no casualties reported on the Israeli side as of Monday morning.

    In an official statement, the IRGC noted the operation was the first phase of a broader retaliatory campaign, added that the strike was dedicated to fallen Iranian service members killed during the previous year’s 12-day war, and carried out under the alternate code name “Ya Heydar Karrar”. The group stressed all of its combat units remain at full operational readiness to respond to any further escalation, warning that additional strikes will follow if Israel continues its military campaign across the region.

  • Britain set to announce new sanctions against Israel over ‘E1’ settlement expansion

    Britain set to announce new sanctions against Israel over ‘E1’ settlement expansion

    The United Kingdom is preparing to roll out a new package of sanctions targeting Israel’s controversial E1 settlement project this week, joining a coalition of Western nations pushing back against a development plan that critics say will permanently fragment the occupied West Bank and eliminate any path to a contiguous, sovereign Palestinian state.

    Multiple media and insider reports have laid out the expected scope of the upcoming measures. The Guardian cited diplomatic sources indicating the Foreign Office will formally penalize UK-based companies that enter into any commercial or construction involvement with the E1 project, alongside targeted sanctions against entities documented as supporting violent Israeli settler activity against Palestinian communities in the occupied territory.

    Last week, Middle East Eye first reported that the UK government was actively considering a full import ban on all goods produced in illegal Israeli settlements across the West Bank, though it remains uncertain whether this week’s announcement will go as far as implementing that full ban.

    First proposed in the 1990s, the E1 development zone plan has been delayed for decades by sustained international pushback. The project’s geographic location east of Jerusalem would cut off the northern and southern portions of the West Bank from one another, destroying any possibility of a geographically unified Palestinian state. Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who also supervises settlement expansion and civilian governance in the occupied West Bank, has openly acknowledged the project’s impact, stating publicly that it “effectively kills the Palestinian state.”

    International pressure to block the project has mounted sharply in recent months. In late May, nine nations including the UK, France and Australia issued a joint formal warning that no businesses should participate in any E1-related activity. A growing number of European governments have already moved to restrict trade with illegal settlements: Spain has implemented a full import ban, while Ireland, the Netherlands and Belgium are currently advancing similar legislation through their domestic processes.

    The push for action has also gained significant traction within UK domestic politics. Over the weekend, more than 140 members of parliament signed an open letter organized by Labour MP Melanie Ward, urging Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper to immediately end all trade with illegal Israeli settlements. The letter carries unusual political weight: it was signed by the Labour chair of every parliamentary select committee, including senior party figures like former Health Secretary Wes Streeting, a prominent potential candidate for future prime minister.

    The letter directly criticizes the current government for what it calls an “unacceptable” failure to take sufficient action to curb settlement expansion, and explicitly calls for a formal import ban on settlement goods. Signatories point to a 2024 advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) that ruled Israel’s 58-year occupation of Palestinian territory is illegal under international law, and requires third-party states to avoid any trade dealings that would legitimize or support the occupation and settlement activity.

    Insider accounts confirm that Middle East Minister Hamish Falconer privately told Labour MPs late last year that an import ban is a desirable policy step, but the final authority for any major policy shift rests with 10 Downing Street.

    Emily Thornberry, senior Labour MP and chair of the parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee, who was among the letter’s signatories, told Middle East Eye that “the situation in Palestine is intolerable, and yet we tolerate it.” She argued that the UK must use economic leverage to change Israeli policy, saying “we have to make it so economically painful for Israel that settlement expansion becomes untenable.”

    Internal party polling released Wednesday underscores the depth of support for the policy among UK Labour’s base: a staggering 87 percent of Labour members back a ban on trade with Israeli settlements, with only 6 percent opposed.

    Parliamentary pressure is set to intensify further in the coming weeks: Labour MP Abtisam Mohamed, a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee, has secured a formal parliamentary debate on the proposed settlement goods ban. While a date for the debate has not yet been finalized, it will add additional public and political pressure on the government to adopt the full ban. Mohamed noted that the ICJ’s landmark ruling requiring states not to aid or assist in Israel’s illegal occupation is now two years old, and said the UK “is falling behind our allies” in meeting its international legal obligations.

    On-the-ground data confirms a sharp rise in settler violence and displacement since the October 7 2023 Hamas attacks. Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem reports that Israel has forcibly displaced 59 Palestinian communities comprising more than 4,000 people from the West Bank since October 2023. United Nations data recorded nearly 2,000 separate settler attacks against Palestinian communities in 2025, averaging roughly five attacks per day.

    The current Labour government has already taken incremental steps on the issue: in May 2024, it sanctioned several high-profile extremist Israeli settlers in the West Bank, including long-time settler activist Daniella Weiss, head of the hardline Nachala settlement movement. The following June, the UK joined a coalition of allied nations to sanction two far-right Israeli cabinet ministers, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, over their repeated open incitement of violence against Palestinian communities in Gaza and the West Bank.

  • Kenya’s ex-chief justice arrested at protest against building on national park

    Kenya’s ex-chief justice arrested at protest against building on national park

    A high-profile protest against proposed development inside one of Africa’s most iconic urban wildlife reserves has landed Kenya’s former Chief Justice David Maraga in police custody, igniting widespread condemnation from human rights and environmental organizations over the treatment of peaceful activists. On Monday, Maraga — who leads the opposition United Green Movement and is a widely speculated 2027 Kenyan presidential candidate — joined nine fellow demonstrators for a march along a highway bordering Nairobi National Park, a 117-square-kilometer protected conservation area and major tourist attraction located directly within Kenya’s capital. The demonstration was organized to oppose plans that activists claim would turn a portion of the park’s protected land into a 1,300-vehicle public car park, part of a broader development deal tied to a neighboring convention center.

    The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), the government agency that manages the park, has publicly pushed back against the activists’ allegations, defending its approved projects within the reserve. While KWS has not directly addressed the car park claims, it confirmed plans to construct a new, expanded animal orphanage on an 89-acre plot — just 0.31% of the park’s total area, according to a KWS official quoted by local outlet *The Star*. KWS argues the relocated orphanage will deliver meaningful benefits: enhanced care for rescued wildlife, improved veterinary training opportunities for local conservationists, and a more accessible, engaging experience for the millions of visitors who visit the park each year. The agency also notes that public consultation was held for the orphanage project prior to approval.

    Footage shared on social media captured the chaotic end to Monday’s demonstration, showing Kenyan police moving in to disperse the crowd of protesters, who had staged a sit-in on the two-lane highway. Video clips show the 72-year-old former top judge, wearing his party’s signature green attire, being assisted into the back of a police transport truck as surrounding demonstrators chanted “Long live the park” in protest. Maraga and the nine other detained activists were taken into police custody following the dispersal. Though Maraga was granted release shortly after his arrest, he refused to exit the police station until all other detained protesters were freed, a demonstration of solidarity with his fellow activists.

    Following his detention, Maraga took to social media platform X to outline the motivations for the protest, writing that he and the other detainees were “fellow patriotic Kenyans” demanding that the country’s “national heritage and environment must be safeguarded from greed and unnecessary destruction without public participation.” So far, Kenyan police have not issued any official public statement regarding the circumstances of the arrests or the reasons for detention.

    The arrests have drawn sharp criticism from a coalition of leading global and local rights and environmental groups. In a joint statement, Amnesty International, Greenpeace Africa, Friends of Nairobi National Park, and The Green Belt Movement strongly condemned what they called a violent dispersal of peaceful demonstrators. The groups emphasized that the use of force against Kenyan citizens exercising their constitutionally protected rights to peaceful assembly, free expression, and public participation in environmental decision-making is completely unacceptable. The incident has reignited national debate in Kenya over the balance between infrastructure development and the protection of critical natural heritage, particularly as political actors gear up for the 2027 general election.

  • Retired Supreme Court justice becomes Canada’s Governor General, the representative of King Charles

    Retired Supreme Court justice becomes Canada’s Governor General, the representative of King Charles

    TORONTO – In a formal ceremonial event held Monday, retired Canadian Supreme Court Justice Louise Arbour officially took office as Canada’s 29th Governor General, the personal representative of King Charles III, Canada’s constitutional head of state. The 79-year-old trailblazing legal figure succeeds Mary Simon, who made history in 2021 as Canada’s first Indigenous Governor General, stepping into a role that carries formal constitutional obligations but functions largely as a symbolic and ceremonial position within the country’s parliamentary system.

    The swearing-in ceremony, hosted on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, featured musical performances by the Central Band of the Canadian Armed Forces, including the traditional rendition of “God Save the King,” alongside the official raising of the Governor General’s flag to mark the transfer of office. Prior to the ceremony, Arbour held a private audience with King Charles III at Buckingham Palace last week to mark her appointment.

    Unlike many holders of the role, Arbour brings a decades-long global career in law, human rights, and international justice to the viceregal post. Her judicial resume spans key positions across Canada’s legal system, including appointments to the Supreme Court of Ontario, the Ontario Court of Appeal, and ultimately the Supreme Court of Canada, where she served as a sitting justice before taking on landmark international roles. In 1996, the United Nations tapped Arbour to serve as Chief Prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. It was in this role that she led historic prosecutorial efforts that secured two major milestones in international law: the world’s first conviction for genocide after the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention was adopted, and the first-ever war crimes indictment issued against a sitting head of state. Later in her career, from 2017 to 2018, she also served as the United Nations Special Representative for International Migration.

    In her inaugural address to the nation as the King’s representative, Arbour emphasized that peaceful coexistence across differing perspectives and identities is the cornerstone of a functional, rules-based democratic society. She also turned her attention to one of the most pressing modern technological issues: the rapid expansion of artificial intelligence. Arbour issued a stark caution against growing overreliance on AI tools, noting that widespread instant access to massive volumes of information has created a dangerous temptation to overlook source credibility.

    “The lines between knowledge and belief, between truth and falsehood, between facts and assumptions are increasingly blurred,” Arbour told the assembled audience. “AI could be threatening not only the way we live and work, but also the control we exercise over our own destiny.”

    She also highlighted Canada’s unique global standing, noting that while the nation accounts for less than 0.5% of the world’s total population, it holds nearly 7% of global land area and 20% of the world’s total freshwater reserves. “The world looks at us with justifiable envy,” she said.

    As a former British colony and current member of the Commonwealth of Nations, Canada has retained its constitutional monarchy structure after gaining full sovereignty. Following the United States’ successful war of independence from Britain, Canada remained under British colonial rule until 1867, when it gained self-governance while retaining the British monarch as its formal head of state, a structure that remains in place today.

  • Lockdown in New York as Trump to attend NBA Finals

    Lockdown in New York as Trump to attend NBA Finals

    As the NBA Finals shifts to New York for its third matchup on Monday, Manhattan’s iconic Madison Square Garden is under unprecedented security restrictions, with law enforcement establishing a rigid protective perimeter around the arena ahead of President Donald Trump’s attendance at the game featuring his long-time favorite team, the hometown New York Knicks.

    Security officials have implemented sweeping restrictions that bar non-ticket holding fans from approaching within several city blocks of the venue, and have prohibited public watch parties immediately outside the Garden — a sharp shift from the first two games of the series, which drew large, celebratory crowds of Knicks supporters. Authorities are urging all ticket holders to plan ahead, arriving no less than two hours before the 8:30 p.m. tip-off (0030 GMT Tuesday) to clear rigorous, airport-style security screenings, and have enacted a full ban on all bags inside the arena.

    “The message is simple: celebrate the Knicks, but avoid the MSG area tonight if you do not have tickets for the game,” New York Police Department (NYPD) Commissioner Jessica Tisch stated during a pre-game press briefing.

    The enhanced security measures come on the heels of two recent events that have factored into planning: a late-night stabbing at Penn Station — the transit hub located directly beneath Madison Square Garden — that left six people injured Sunday, and three alleged assassination attempts targeting President Trump over the past 18 months. Law enforcement has emphasized that the stabbing suspect, a male offender described by U.S. media as emotionally disturbed, has no confirmed ties to terrorist organizations, and downplayed broader public safety risks connected to the incident.

    On Monday, an Agence France-Presse (AFP) reporter on the ground observed 10-foot-tall security fencing erected around portions of Madison Square Garden, alongside a heavy deployment of Secret Service personnel tasked with protecting the sitting U.S. president. Counter-drone technology will also be deployed as part of the Secret Service’s protective operation, a security official confirmed.

    For non-ticket holding Knicks faithful like 45-year-old Eric Velez, the restrictions mean adjusting long-held plans to gather near the arena to support the team. Velez told reporters he would instead watch the game at a Manhattan bar, acknowledging he could not get close to MSG due to the security cordon. Even with the change of plans, he remained optimistic about the team’s historic run: “It’s looking good so far. I’m nervous. Hopefully they do it this time,” Velez said ahead of tip-off.

    The Knicks enter Monday’s matchup holding a commanding 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven finals series against the San Antonio Spurs, with the next two games scheduled to take place on New York home turf. The franchise has not claimed an NBA championship since 1973, a 52-year drought that has sparked unprecedented frenzy among fans across the five boroughs of America’s largest city.

    While average ticket prices for Monday’s game far outpace the budget of most New Yorkers, Madison Square Garden — long billed as the “World’s Most Famous Arena” — is set to host a sold-out crowd, with a roster of high-profile celebrity fans expected to fill courtside seats. New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani is also among the attendees; he confirmed to reporters he paid roughly $1,000 for his ticket, and that he will not sit alongside Trump during the game.

    Trump, a self-identified lifelong Knicks fan, last visited Madison Square Garden in November 2024 to watch a UFC fight, shortly after his election victory. He previously held a high-profile campaign rally at the venue ahead of the 2024 vote.

    “We all know what tonight means to New Yorkers who have been waiting a long time for an opportunity like this,” Secret Service Special Agent Matt McCool told reporters ahead of the game. “The Secret Service’s focus is straightforward: to ensure everyone attending the game can enjoy the game and have a safe experience, while we carry out our responsibility to protect the President of the United States.”

    NYPD officials confirmed they would not be increasing the existing security deployment at Penn Station specifically in response to Sunday’s stabbing. NYPD Chief Michael LiPetri noted that hundreds of officers are already permanently assigned to the busy transit hub, and that existing staffing levels “will not change in light of the incident yesterday.”