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  • Dozens of artists bring new life to a gigantic former ironworks on UNESCO’s world heritage list

    Dozens of artists bring new life to a gigantic former ironworks on UNESCO’s world heritage list

    In the southwestern German town of Völklingen, sitting just kilometers from the French border, a one-of-a-kind artistic collaboration has kicked off against a backdrop of industrial history. Dozens of urban creatives from 17 nations have gathered at Völklingen Ironworks — a decommissioned 19th-to-20th century iron production facility preserved as one of Europe’s most extraordinary industrial heritage sites — to launch the 2026 Urban Art Biennale, an event that continues a 15-year tradition of pairing contemporary street and graffiti art with the ironworks’ sprawling, atmospheric abandoned spaces.

    As a UNESCO World Heritage Site inscribed in 1994, Völklingen Hütte holds unique global significance: it is the only fully intact integrated ironworks from the 19th and 20th centuries remaining intact across Western Europe and North America. Industrial iron production halted here in 1986, and the entire site has been preserved exactly as it stood when operations shut down, with no major new constructions added after the mid-1930s. Today, the 6-hectare (nearly 15-acre) site operates as a public museum, where visitors still navigate a maze of cold furnaces, towering chimneys, and original warning signs marking hazards like crushing risks that once faced workers.

    For event organizers and participating artists, the ironworks is far more than a novel exhibition space — it is the foundational origin of street and urban art itself. “This location is at the core of street art and graffiti art,” explained Ralf Beil, general director of the Völklingen Hütte museum. “It all began in industrial places like this. Artists love this place and they do works for the Völklinger Hütte, in the Völklinger Hütte, with the Völklinger Hütte.”

    This year’s biennale features 50 commissioned site-specific works, each tailored to the ironworks’ unique industrial character, with a deliberate rejection of commercialized art to prioritize pure, place-driven creation. Standout works range from provocative installations to large-scale interventions that play off the site’s layers of history. France-based artist Tomas Lacque has created an installation featuring a small van, a mound of tires, children’s toys, and debris coated entirely in a layer of paint. Placed in a cavernous hall that once housed active iron furnaces, the piece evokes the imagery of fossil fuel-powered transportation frozen and covered in ash, echoing the way ancient Roman Pompeii was preserved after volcanic eruption.

    Spanish artist Ampparito has intervened directly into the site’s architecture, painting the phrase “no hay nada de valor” — translated as “There is nothing of value here” — in massive white lettering across the roof of one of the ironworks’ huge industrial sheds. The work is designed to be viewed from a 148-foot (45-meter) high viewing platform, turning a structural element of the former factory into a large-scale conceptual statement.

    Other contributors include Dutch artist Boris Tellegen, better known by his artistic moniker Delta, who installed a massive black-and-green wooden sculpture that anchors and illuminates one of the ironworks’ interior halls. The France-based collective Vortex-X, which specializes in upcycling salvaged industrial materials, stretched sweeping arcs of white industrial fabric across an entire hall for their work titled *Memory in transit*, creating a dynamic installation that evokes movement and the passage of time at the dormant site.

    Participating artists have emphasized the unique tension and beauty of creating contemporary work in a space that retains the grit and memory of its working past. British artist Remi Rough, who contributed small, sharply clean and clinical paintings that intentionally contrast with the site’s weathered texture, noted the unexpected aesthetic appeal of the abandoned facility: “It’s so dusty and it’s so old, but it’s beautiful, you know, there’s beauty in decay. I think what I’ve done makes you kind of just perceive it in a bit of a different way.”

    Danish artist Anders Reventlov echoed the respect many creators hold for the site’s working history, saying he felt humbled by the opportunity to create work in a space that was once a brutal workplace. “As somebody told me … it was hell to work here. Now it’s not hell. It’s like a nice place, people walking around, there are bees, there are beautiful flowers, but yeah, we still remember the history and that’s super important.”

    Beil emphasized that the biennale’s commitment to site-specificity rules out pre-made commercial works, keeping the focus entirely on art that responds to this one-of-a-kind location. “This is an installation for the space,” he said. “This is pure art.”

    The 2026 Urban Art Biennale opens to the public on Saturday and will run through November 15, welcoming visitors to explore the intersection of contemporary urban art and 20th-century industrial heritage.

  • Chaos marks the Venice Biennale after the jury quits over Israeli and Russian participation

    Chaos marks the Venice Biennale after the jury quits over Israeli and Russian participation

    The world’s most prestigious contemporary art event, the Venice Biennale, opens its 2025 edition this Saturday, marking one of the most politically charged and chaotic iterations in the exhibition’s decades-long history. What was meant to be a celebration of global artistic vision has been upended by geopolitical conflict after the awards jury stepped down en masse to protest the inclusion of Israeli and Russian national pavilions, leaving no Golden Lion awards granted by official adjudicators. Compounding the friction, large-scale public demonstrations have been staged outside the two contested pavilions, amplifying tensions that have split the global arts community.

    While the jury framed its protest around its stance that only nations facing International Criminal Court investigations for alleged human rights violations should be excluded from awards consideration, the move has drawn further debate, with many critics arguing the United States should have been held to the same standard. Renowned British-Indian sculptor Anish Kapoor, one of the most high-profile voices in the protest, summed up the widespread frustration driving the unrest: “We are pushing back against the politics of hate and war that have plagued our world for far too long.”

    In a sudden shift to an open, audience-driven selection process, visitors will now step into the jury’s role, casting votes for two top honors: best national pavilion from the 100 participating countries, and best participant in the Biennale’s central curated exhibition, titled *In Minor Keys*. Modeled after the fan-voted Eurovision Song Contest, the results will remain under wraps until the exhibition’s closing day on November 22.

    Amid the political upheaval, the 2025 Biennale carries a historic legacy: it is the first major central exhibition curated by an African woman, the late Cameroonian curator Koyo Kouoh, who passed away one year ago before the show could be completed. Five collaborating curators stepped in to bring Kouoh’s vision to life, a vision centered on amplifying underrepresented minority perspectives from across the globe. The exhibition greets visitors with a towering, red feather-sculpted costume embroidered with glass beads, rooted in the Black Masking carnival culture of New Orleans, a tradition born from cultural practices brought to the Americas by enslaved Africans. In total, Kouoh selected 110 artists and collectives to participate, staying true to her core mission of carving out space for creators who are often sidelined by mainstream arts institutions. “She dedicated her practice to making space for every voice to shine, and that ethos runs through every corner of this exhibition,” explained co-curator Marie Helene Pereira.

    Leading the slate of nationally curated pavilions, Britain’s representative, Turner Prize-winner Lubaina Himid, brings a deeply personal exploration of immigration, belonging and what it means to build a home in an adopted country. Titled *Predicting History: Testing Translation*, the presentation features vivid, brightly colored canvases that depict couples navigating the everyday dilemmas of being a newcomer. Himid, who was born in Zanzibar and has lived in Britain for more than 70 years, broke down the core tension of one standout work: “We have two architects debating where to build. One argues that building a permanent structure would prove they have contributed to the nation’s culture. The other says no – we need to build something we can escape from if we have to leave tomorrow.”

    Off the main exhibition grounds, the Vatican has stepped in to offer visitors a quiet spiritual escape from the surrounding chaos with its pavilion, the *Mystic Garden*, installed on the grounds of the Discalced Carmelite order adjacent to Venice’s central train station. Guests wander through working vineyards, past a fruiting pomegranate tree and beds of fragrant herbs, wearing headphones that deliver a curated soundscape: reimagined compositions by 12th-century abbess, mystic and composer St. Hildegard of Bingen, reworked by contemporary artists including Brian Eno and Patti Smith. “Music helps us turn inward and connect with what Hildegard called the symphony that God placed within every life,” explained Father Ermanno Barucco, prior of the Carmelite order overseeing the installation.

    Austria’s pavilion has become one of the most talked-about presentations on the Giardini grounds thanks to its unflinching, provocative performance art, which uses unorthodox materials to critique overtourism and the commercialization of Venice. Outside the pavilion, a naked female performer hangs from a giant brass bell, acting as a human clapper that rings the instrument with every movement. Inside, another nude performer rides a Jet ski in circles inside a large water tank, a visual metaphor for Venice’s transformation into nothing more than a crowded amusement park for international tourists. In one of the exhibition’s most controversial pieces, a third nude performer breathes through a scuba regulator while submerged in a tank of filtered toilet water pulled from nearby facilities, for a project titled *Seaworld Venice*.

    Against the backdrop of calls for boycott, Israeli pavilion artist Belu-Simion Fainaru, a Romanian-born Israeli, has centered his installation on the tension between love and war, rooted in Jewish mysticism. Water drips slowly from suspended glass tubes into a central pool, pausing every cycle for exactly 42 seconds – a reference to the 42-day divine creation of the world in Jewish mystical tradition. Locks of love, similar to those placed by romantic couples on European bridges, hang across the pavilion walls, engraved with the commandment “Love thy neighbor as thyself” in Hebrew and the hopeful phrase “This too shall pass.” Fainaru pushed back against calls to exclude Israel, framing his own participation as a political act in favor of dialogue: “I oppose boycotts, and I stand for open conversation. That is my political statement. The jury’s move to exclude Israel from awards is nothing less than discrimination.”

    Closing out the slate of standout national presentations, the Estonian pavilion centers the unrecognized labor of women through a durational, living artwork. Artist Merike Estna is working on-site throughout the entire six-month run of the Biennale to complete a large-scale wall painting inside a converted former church that now operates as a community gymnasium. The layered history of the space mirrors Estna’s artistic practice, which builds deeply textured surfaces through repeated, spontaneous applications of paint over time. The daily act of painting is intentional, meant to draw attention to the underappreciated everyday work that sustains communities and the planet. Curator Natalia Sielewicz described the project as “the everyday feminism of sustaining life, of sustaining our planet.”

  • Magyar to become Hungary’s ‘regime change’ PM

    Magyar to become Hungary’s ‘regime change’ PM

    After 16 years of nationalist leadership under Viktor Orban, Hungary is on the cusp of a historic political shift this Saturday, as pro-European conservative Peter Magyar prepares to be sworn in as the country’s new prime minister, fulfilling his campaign promise of widespread “regime change”.

    Magyar, a 45-year-old former insider of Orban’s government who rose to prominence as a fierce critic of the long-serving leader, secured a landslide victory in the April 12 parliamentary election. His Tisza Party captured 141 of the 199 seats in Hungary’s national legislature, granting the party a commanding two-thirds majority — a threshold large enough to rewrite the country’s constitution and push through the sweeping anti-corruption and institutional reforms Magyar campaigned on.

    A core pillar of Magyar’s policy agenda is rolling back the structural changes Orban implemented over his tenure to consolidate state control over key independent sectors, including the judiciary, mainstream media, and academia. Orban, a 62-year-old leader who built close political ties with both former U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, centered his rule on building what he called an “illiberal democracy” that rolled back many liberal democratic rights in the Central European nation of 9.5 million people. Following his election defeat, Orban announced last month that he would step back from legislative politics — leaving the parliamentary seat he won vacant, a break from his continuous participation in parliament since Hungary’s 1990 democratic transition. He has stated he will now focus on reorganizing his conservative nationalist political camp.

    Top of Magyar’s immediate policy priorities is unlocking billions of euros in European Union cohesion funds that Brussels has frozen over longstanding concerns about rule of law erosion under Orban’s government. Last week, ahead of his inauguration, Magyar held high-stakes talks with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels to move the process forward.

    The inauguration proceedings will kick off at 10 a.m. local time (8 a.m. GMT) during the new parliament’s opening inaugural session, with the ceremony live-streamed on large public screens installed around the Budapest parliamentary building. Lawmakers will hold a formal vote to confirm Magyar as prime minister in the afternoon, after which he is expected to deliver remarks to assembled supporters gathered outside the legislature.

    Magyar’s new administration has already signaled a clear break from Orban’s government in terms of representation. Lawmakers are set to confirm hotelier Agnes Forsthoffer as the new parliament speaker, one of dozens of women tapped by Tisza for senior leadership roles. Other historic nominations include Vilmos Katai-Nemeth, a lawyer set to serve as social and family affairs minister — Hungary’s first ever visually impaired cabinet member — and Krisztian Koszegi, a Roma history teacher nominated for deputy parliament speaker. Saturday’s inauguration ceremonies, both inside and outside parliament, are intentionally crafted to carry strong symbolic meaning: the event features branding and music that honors Hungary’s EU membership, the country’s large Roma minority community, and ethnic Hungarian populations living in neighboring nations.

    Hungary faces steep structural challenges entering the new era, including years of stagnant economic growth and declining quality of core public services that analysts say will require long-term overhauls. Expectations among Hungarian voters are exceptionally high, with broad public goodwill toward the new government matched by pressure to deliver tangible changes quickly. “There is a lot of patience and goodwill toward the new government, but the expectations are through the roof and need to be met in the short-term as well,” Andrea Virag, strategy director at the Budapest-based liberal think tank Republikon Institute, told Agence France-Presse.

    As part of his “regime change” agenda, Magyar has already called on Orban-aligned President and other senior allies of the former leader to resign from their posts. He has also urged Hungarian authorities to block Orban’s close associates from moving financial assets abroad ahead of the leadership transition.

    Virag noted that the inclusive framing of the inauguration is intentional: it underscores Magyar’s mission of national unity and reconciliation after years of polarizing, divisive politics under Orban. “Magyar seeks to show that he represents a form of national unity and reconciliation after Orban’s politics of division,” Virag said. “With the festivities he also wants to show that it was not a mere change of government, but a start of a new era.”

    Notably, the new parliament will mark the first time since 1990 that left-of-center and liberal opposition parties will have no representation in the legislature, following the election results.

  • Vatican sending new signals of openness but limitations in outreach to LGBTQ+ Catholics

    Vatican sending new signals of openness but limitations in outreach to LGBTQ+ Catholics

    Twelve years of Pope Francis’ pontificate brought unprecedented shifts in how the Catholic Church approaches LGBTQ+ believers, and now, under Pope Leo XIV, the Vatican is sending mixed, carefully calibrated signals about the future of pastoral outreach to this community, pairing new openness to listening with firm limits on doctrinal change.

    This week, LGBTQ+ Catholic advocates celebrated a milestone: an official Vatican working group report released as part of post-Francis synodal reform efforts included first-person testimonies from two openly gay, married Catholics detailing their experiences of faith, harm from the church’s longstanding negative teachings on homosexuality, and self-acceptance. The report, a non-binding synthesis of expert deliberations on contentious post-reform issues, marks the first time an official Vatican document has centered such detailed personal narratives from LGBTQ+ Catholics.

    One man, a Portuguese native, shared his journey of coming to terms with his sexuality, marrying his husband, and the ongoing harm he faced at the hands of church leaders — including insensitive comments from a spiritual director and pressure to undergo conversion therapy, the thoroughly discredited practice that claims to change sexual orientation. The second witness, an American man, criticized mandatory counseling he received from Courage International, a Catholic pastoral group that urges people with same-sex attraction to practice celibacy. “My sexuality isn’t a perversion, disorder, or cross; it’s a gift from God,” he wrote in his testimony.

    In response to the critical depiction of its work, Courage issued a statement Friday pushing back against what it called a false portrayal, denying it has ever participated in reparative therapy. “Courage has suffered calumny and detraction before, but usually from secular outlets,” the group said. “It is a great sadness and an additional wound to our members to have this false and unjust depiction in a Vatican document.”

    For leading American Jesuit advocate Father James Martin, who has spent decades pushing for greater church outreach to LGBTQ+ people, the development reflects strong continuity with Pope Francis’ agenda. “If the Catholic Church has begun to listen to LGBTQ Catholics as part of its methodology, the church has already moved forward in a significant way,” Martin noted, adding that the publication of the testimonies alone represents a major step forward in mending the rift between the church and the LGBTQ+ community.

    But the shift has already drawn fierce pushback from conservative Catholic leaders. Bishop Joseph Strickland, the former bishop of Tyler, Texas who was removed from his post by Francis, called the report “deeply alarming,” arguing it directly contradicts unchanging church teaching that defines homosexual activity as “intrinsically disordered.” In an online post titled “An Emergency in the Church,” Strickland argued that church teaching on homosexuality comes not from human prejudice, but from divine revelation. “To suggest that the sin does not consist in the same-sex relationship itself is not merely confusing language. It is a direct assault upon Catholic moral doctrine and upon the words of Scripture itself,” he wrote.

    The most contentious flashpoint in this new era remains the question of blessings for same-sex couples, an issue that has already split the global church and put the Vatican at odds with progressive regional bishops, most notably in Germany. In 2023, under Francis, the Vatican’s doctrinal office issued the declaration *Fiducia Supplicans*, which allowed priests to offer spontaneous, non-liturgical blessings to individual same-sex people, while clarifying such blessings cannot be confused with sacramental marriage, which the church defines as a lifelong union between one man and one woman. The declaration triggered widespread conservative backlash, including coordinated dissent from a bloc of African bishops, forcing the Vatican to clarify that blessings must be brief, around 10 to 15 seconds, and cannot be interpreted as approval of a same-sex union itself.

    Earlier this year, Germany’s Catholic bishops and a prominent lay organization issued their own national guidelines for implementing *Fiducia Supplicans* that go beyond the Vatican’s parameters. While the guidelines acknowledge the requirement for non-liturgical, spontaneous blessings, they frame the blessings as being for the couple’s relationship rather than just the individual people, and outline formal criteria for celebrations including liturgical readings, pre-event preparation, and congregational acclamation, prayer and song.

    During a return flight from a recent visit to Africa, Pope Leo made clear the Holy See disagrees with the German framework, and this week a 2024 letter articulating that position was published publicly. Signed by Vatican doctrine chief Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernández, the letter argues that the German guidelines’ inclusion of acclamation mirrors the structure of formal marriage rites, and “in this sense effectively legitimizes the status of these couples, contrary to what is stated” in the 2023 *Fiducia Supplicans* declaration. Fernández also noted that the guidelines’ focus on ceremony details like location, aesthetic design and music effectively creates a liturgical event that contradicts the Vatican’s limits. The letter stops short of an outright veto, offering only formal observations rather than punitive action.

    Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin recently noted that talk of sanctions against German priests who adopt the national guidelines is “premature,” adding that ongoing dialogue between Rome and the German bishops is the preferred path. “The hope is never to have to resort to sanctions, that problems can be resolved peacefully, as should be the case in the church,” Parolin said. Pope Leo met this week with German Cardinal Reinhard Marx, who has encouraged priests in his archdiocese to use the national guidelines for pastoral care.

    In the same airborne press conference that addressed the German dispute, Leo laid out his broader approach to the issue, making clear that he views core church teachings on social justice, equality and religious freedom as far more important than doctrines around sexual morality, signaling he does not intend to prioritize debates over LGBTQ+ issues during his pontificate. On the question of same-sex blessings, however, Leo confirmed he will not go beyond the limits set by Francis, reaffirming the Vatican’s opposition to regional efforts that deviate from the Holy See’s existing stance.

    For many LGBTQ+ Catholic advocates, Leo’s measured approach is still a welcome change. Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, a group that advocates for LGBTQ+ inclusion in the Catholic Church, praised Leo’s framing of priority issues. “It is good to hear from the pope that he is making a decisive turn away from the church’s obsession with sexual matters,” DeBernardo said. He added that Leo’s non-confrontational response to the German guidelines — declining to condemn church leaders, framing disagreement as not a cause for schism — marks a positive shift. “Both the new moral emphasis on social issues instead of sexuality, and the fostering of a more collegial church are good news for LGBTQ+ Catholics,” DeBernardo said.

    Martin echoed that balance, arguing there is no contradiction between the Vatican’s retention of existing limits on same-sex blessings and the synod’s new call to listen to LGBTQ+ Catholics. “Both ‘Fiducia’ and the synod report are steps forward in the church’s ministry to LGBTQ people,” he told the Associated Press.

  • Moscow is set to mark Victory Day with a Red Square parade under tight security

    Moscow is set to mark Victory Day with a Red Square parade under tight security

    MOSCOW — Tens of thousands of security personnel fanned out across central Moscow on Saturday as the city prepared to host one of the most unusual Victory Day parades in modern Russian history, a stripped-down commemoration of the 1945 defeat of Nazi Germany held against the backdrop of a newly agreed three-day ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine brokered by the United States.

    Victory Day, marking the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in World War II, holds unmatched cultural and political weight in Russia as the nation’s most sacred secular holiday. The conflict, known domestically as the Great Patriotic War, claimed an estimated 27 million Soviet lives, a collective sacrifice that has shaped Russian national identity and remained one of the few unifying cultural touchstones across decades of political upheaval. For more than 25 years, President Vladimir Putin has leveraged this national reverence to showcase Russia’s military power, rally public support for his government, and galvanize backing for the ongoing military campaign in Ukraine, now in its fifth year.

    This year’s event breaks with two decades of tradition: for the first time since 2008, no heavy military hardware — including tanks, armored vehicles, and intercontinental ballistic missiles — will roll across Red Square’s cobblestones. The only traditional military display will be a flyover of Russian combat jets. Regional parades across the country have also been scaled back or canceled outright, a decision Russian officials openly tie to the threat of Ukrainian long-range strikes.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed that authorities have implemented sweeping additional security measures to protect the event, framing the format shift as a necessary response to the “current operational situation.” Ahead of the parade, Moscow authorities imposed widespread restrictions on mobile internet access and text messaging services across the capital, a security move that comes as the Russian government has steadily tightened online censorship and control over digital activities, sparking rare, muted public discontent in recent months.

    The new U.S.-brokered ceasefire, which runs from Saturday through Monday, has lowered immediate fears that Ukraine would attempt to disrupt the parade with drone or missile attacks. This truce marks the third attempted ceasefire in as many weeks: previous unilateral truces declared by Russia and Ukraine failed to hold, with both sides trading blame for continued offensive operations along the 1,000-kilometer front line. U.S. President Donald Trump announced the deal Friday, alongside an agreement for a prisoner exchange, calling the pause in fighting the potential “beginning of the end” of the war.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy responded to the ceasefire announcement with biting sarcasm, issuing a decree that mockingly granted Russia permission to hold its Victory Day celebrations and declared Red Square a temporarily no-strike zone for the day. Peskov dismissed the gesture as a “silly joke” Saturday, telling reporters, “We don’t need anyone’s permission to be proud of our Victory Day.”

    In the lead-up to the event, Russian authorities issued a stark threat in response to any potential disruption: if Ukraine attempts to attack the Red Square festivities, Russia will launch a massive missile strike on central Kyiv. The Russian Defense Ministry also urged civilian residents and foreign diplomatic staff to evacuate the Ukrainian capital immediately. The European Union rejected the warning, announcing that its diplomatic mission would remain in Kyiv despite the threat.

    The front line has seen incremental but steady Russian gains in recent months, as Russia’s larger, better-supplied military pushes forward across eastern and southern Ukraine. Ukraine, however, has expanded its long-range strike capabilities dramatically since 2022, developing domestic drones that can hit targets more than 1,000 kilometers inside Russian territory — far beyond the country’s previous strike range. Ukrainian forces have regularly targeted Russian energy infrastructure, military depots, and manufacturing facilities in deep strikes in recent months.

    A small cohort of foreign leaders traveled to Moscow for the festivities, including Malaysia’s King Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar, Laos President Thongloun Sisoulith, Kazakhstan’s President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, Uzbekistan’s President Shavkat Mirziyoyev, and Belarus’ authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko. In a notable break, Slovakia Prime Minister Robert Fico — the leader of an EU member state — planned to meet Putin and lay flowers at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier outside the Kremlin walls but opted not to attend the Red Square parade itself.

  • ‘Ideology, family and history’: The UAE-Saudi Arabia feud explained

    ‘Ideology, family and history’: The UAE-Saudi Arabia feud explained

    The festering rivalry between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates that is now reshaping regional and global politics has roots stretching back to a 1950s border conflict, a power struggle rooted in historical distrust and modern ambitions for regional dominance. Late veteran journalist David Holden first chronicled the 1950s Buraimi dispute in his 1966 work *Farewell Arabia*, recounting how Saudi Arabia attempted to bribe Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan—then the “Lord of Buraimi” and later the founding father of the UAE—from the ruling al-Nahyan family to hand over control of the oil-rich Buraimi oasis. When Zayed rejected the bribe, Saudi Arabia launched an invasion that ultimately failed, setting a template for decades of tension between the two Gulf monarchies.

    Today, that historical rivalry has reignited between Zayed’s son, current UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed (known widely as MBZ), and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS). The two nations are now at odds across nearly every major sphere of influence in the Middle East and beyond, from the battlefields of North Africa to global energy markets, and analysts widely agree that the outcome of their feud will define the future of the entire region—especially as American engagement in the Gulf faces growing uncertainty amid the Israel-Iran conflict. The spillover of their rift will even reach household budgets in Europe, Asia, and North America, through shifts in global energy pricing.

    The most high-profile public split came this month, when Abu Dhabi ended its 60-year membership in the Saudi-led Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), vowing to increase daily oil production by millions of barrels. Energy analysts note that the surface-level disagreement centers on long-term strategy: the UAE prioritizes maximizing immediate profits by ramping up output, while Saudi Arabia prefers managing global supply to sustain higher long-term oil prices.

    But this policy rift is merely a symptom of a far deeper power struggle. For decades, OPEC has operated as a bloc of major oil-exporting Muslim-majority nations led by Saudi Arabia, which holds more than twice the UAE’s proven oil reserves, is home to Islam’s two holiest sites (Mecca and Medina), and has a population of 36 million—more than triple the UAE’s total population of 10 million, just one million of whom are native Emirati citizens. “Saudi Arabia wants to project its power through OPEC and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Because of its size and resources, it sees itself as the natural leader of the Gulf,” explained Rob Geist Pinfold, an international security expert at King’s College London. “The UAE is small, but it has undergone a remarkable transformation to become a larger-than-life global brand. The UAE feels deferring to the Saudis prevents it from exercising power on the world stage.”

    Historical context reinforces this distrust: the coastal trading communities that formed the modern UAE have long been squeezed between Persian influence to the east and the expansionist Saudi royal family, originating from the central Arabian region of Najd, to the west. Analysts argue that MBZ’s contemporary foreign policy is a modern iteration of this ancient rivalry, supercharged by decades of oil wealth and cutting-edge digital and military technology. “The Emiratis have always viewed the Saudis as a predatory neighbour who want to make them their vassals,” noted Patrick Theros, a former U.S. Ambassador to Qatar who first arrived in the Middle East when the Buraimi dispute was still a raw, unresolved issue. “They have also, traditionally, been wary of the Persians asserting their own zone of influence in the Gulf. MBZ finally decided that it’s possible for a small Gulf country to stand up to the Saudis and the Persians.”

    Today, the UAE has emerged as one of the most vocal Gulf supporters of U.S. and Israeli military action against Iran, and has received Israeli air defense systems to fend off Iranian drone and missile attacks. To offset its small size and geographic limitations, the UAE has also built alliances with local factions across strategically important states west of the Arabian Peninsula—a strategy that has repeatedly clashed with Saudi interests.

    The two Gulf powers back opposing factions in Sudan’s ongoing civil war: the UAE supports the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary, while Saudi Arabia backs the established Sudanese government. Middle East Eye first revealed that Saudi Arabia even lobbied Washington to impose sanctions on the UAE for its RSF support, exposing how deeply bilateral ties have been strained in that theater. In Yemen, just before the 2025 Israel-Iran war escalated, Saudi Arabia launched strikes against UAE-aligned secessionist groups in eastern Yemen, even partnering with Oman to block an Emirati power grab in the region.

    For the UAE, control or allied influence in these regions delivers critical strategic depth that its small domestic territory cannot provide. A RSF victory in Sudan would give the UAE an allied partner on the Red Sea coast directly opposite Saudi Arabia, while the UAE-aligned Southern Transitional Council seeks to split from Yemen to control oil-rich territory bordering the strategic Bab el-Mandeb Strait. The UAE has also recognized the breakaway Republic of Somaliland, a move backed by Israel, further expanding its influence along key global shipping lanes. Amid ongoing Iranian threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, the primary chokepoint for Gulf oil exports, control of alternative Red Sea shipping routes has become a critical geopolitical priority for both nations.

    Beyond territorial competition, the two nations hold fundamentally different approaches to post-Arab Spring regional order. After the 2011 uprisings that collapsed multiple long-standing Arab regimes, the UAE has backed secessionist and anti-Islamist factions across conflict zones including Yemen, Libya, and Sudan, while Saudi Arabia has prioritized backing unified national governments and preserving existing state institutions. “Our Saudi approach is based on supporting the nation state: preserving its unity, strengthening its institutions and sovereignty, and contributing to its reconstruction rather than its fragmentation,” explained Hesham Alghannam, a scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “Conversely, the other side’s regional engagement has often been characterised by an obsessive, narrow strategic emphasis on combating Islamists or political rivals. This has weakened state institutions, empowered militias, and created parallel forces that challenge legitimate authority. We clearly support combating extremism and terrorism, but through national institutions operating within the framework of the state and the rule of law. This should not be done through arming non-state actors or entrenching internal divisions.”

    It is important to note that the current rift was not inevitable: for a decade after the 2011 Arab Spring, the two monarchies shared common interests that temporarily aligned their policies. The 2012 electoral victory of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt spooked both royal houses, which viewed Islamist political movements as an existential threat to their rule. Both also saw the rise of the Houthi movement in Yemen as an Iranian-aligned threat, and jointly led the three-and-a-half-year blockade of Qatar, accusing Doha of supporting groups hostile to Gulf monarchies. Experts note this cooperation was partially rooted in personal ties: when MBS rose to power in 2015, MBZ mentored the younger crown prince, and was instrumental in convincing MBS to launch the Qatar boycott. “You can absolutely see in those early days when MBS was coming to prominence, the close working relationship. It was basically MBZ that convinced MBS to boycott Qatar,” said Neil Quilliam, a Gulf expert and associate fellow at Chatham House.

    But analysts emphasize this period of cooperation was an aberration, not the norm. Long before the Arab Spring, the two nations fell out over plans for deeper Gulf integration. In 2009, the UAE withdrew from the GCC monetary union project, which aimed to create a single shared currency for Gulf states, after Abu Dhabi was angered by the decision to site the union’s headquarters in Riyadh. “It would be like France and Germany having spat over the EU and one withdrawing,” noted Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, a Middle East fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute. “Before the Arab Spring, it looked like the break was going to be between the UAE and Saudi Arabia, not Qatar. The Arab Spring temporarily brought them together, but if you take a long-term view, pre-2010 and post-2020, they were at loggerheads.”

    The two nations have also diverged sharply on reconciliation with Qatar after the 2021 al-Ula agreement that formally ended the blockade. While Saudi Arabia moved quickly to repair ties with Doha, the UAE has maintained a cool, suspicious relationship with Qatar years after the official end of hostilities.

    The starkest example of their modern policy divergence comes in their approaches to Israel and the Palestinian conflict. In 2020, the UAE broke ranks with the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, a plan crafted by Saudi Arabia and endorsed by the entire Arab League that requires the creation of an independent Palestinian state on pre-1967 borders before any Arab state normalizes relations with Israel. While Saudi Arabia had been in talks with the Biden administration to normalize relations with Israel in 2023, Israel’s full-scale military campaign in Gaza ended any prospect of a deal. The UN and multiple independent human rights bodies have classified Israel’s military operation in Gaza as genocide, which has killed more than 72,600 Palestinians to date, and public opinion in Saudi Arabia is overwhelmingly opposed to normalization; a 2023 poll by The Washington Institute for Near East Policy found 96 percent of Saudis support cutting all ties with Israel over the war. MBS has publicly echoed this widespread public sentiment. “Politics in Saudi Arabia is heading back towards the more consensual model that it was based on,” Quilliam explained. “There is a diversity of views on Israel in the UAE, but MBZ feels he doesn’t need to worry about that. MBS came to see some of MBZ’s adventurous positions as a liability and has developed a better understanding of the Arab street.”

    The ongoing 2025 war between Israel and Iran has only widened this rift, pushing the two nations to build competing blocs within the U.S. alliance network. While both nations remain deeply dependent on Washington for security and economic cooperation, the UAE has deepened its strategic partnership with Israel, while Saudi Arabia has built a broader coalition with Turkey, Egypt, and Pakistan. “Neither the UAE or Saudi Arabia can give up the U.S. But those new alliances are going to grow,” Theros said. As the rivalry plays out across energy markets, battlefields, and diplomatic circles, its outcome will not only reshape the Middle East but send ripple effects across the global economy and international order.

  • A China move now on Taiwan would be an enormous gamble

    A China move now on Taiwan would be an enormous gamble

    In debates over U.S. military engagement in Iran, a core argument from critics has gained widespread traction: that the ongoing conflict erodes American deterrence in the Indo-Pacific, undermines the confidence of U.S. allies and partners, and drastically increases the risk of a violent confrontation between the United States and China over Taiwan.

    There is no question that this premise rests on tangible, observable facts. The U.S. military, particularly its naval branch, is already smaller than strategic analysts argue it needs to meet global defense demands, and a large share of Washington’s available combat power is currently tied down in the Middle East amid the Iran campaign. Currently, no deployable U.S. aircraft carrier is positioned in the Western Pacific, and the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit — the only forward-deployed Marine amphibious task force in the region — has been reallocated to support operations related to Iran.

    Equally concerning for defense planners is the pace at which the Iran conflict is depleting U.S. weapons stockpiles, especially long-range precision strike missiles and air defense ordnance. While the full severity of the stockpile shortfall remains unconfirmed, it is widely assessed that the U.S. currently does not maintain the reserve of munitions that defense leaders would deem sufficient for a major conflict with China. U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (USINDOPACOM) Commander Admiral Samuel Paparo recently alluded to this very gap in public remarks, lending official weight to these concerns.

    Against this backdrop, a critical question has emerged: does this moment create a tempting window for Chinese leader Xi Jinping to launch aggressive action against Taiwan, or against other U.S. partners in the region including the Philippines and Japan?

    On paper, the opportunity seems clear. China has carried out the largest and fastest military expansion since World War II, building a modern, capable force focused heavily on its primary near-term objective: seizing control of Taiwan. For more than 50 years, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has planned and trained for this mission. Today, it has the naval and air power to establish a full blockade around the island, and its combined amphibious and airborne lift capacity is sufficient to move a large invasion force across the Taiwan Strait. Beijing’s massive rocket force can strike key targets across Taiwan, and years of subversion and cognitive warfare have cultivated pro-unification fifth column elements within Taiwan’s population to support an invasion.

    For Xi, the math could seem compelling — particularly if he believes any conflict over Taiwan could be contained to the Taiwan Strait and concluded quickly, within a matter of weeks. But a successful seizure of Taiwan is far from a guaranteed outcome, even with U.S. forces tied down in the Middle East, and Xi faces a host of major strategic risks that could give him serious pause.

    First, the U.S. retains significant latent military capability in the Indo-Pacific even amid the Iran deployment, and can quickly reinforce regional positions from other global command areas. Beyond force numbers, the U.S. has demonstrated its operational proficiency in recent conflicts in Venezuela and Iran, as well as in ongoing efforts to intercept Houthi missiles and drones in the Red Sea. Notably, Chinese-made air defense systems and missiles supplied to Iranian and other proxies have performed poorly against U.S. and allied systems, a reality that cannot be lost on Chinese military planners.

    Another key factor: the PLA has not fought a major conventional conflict in more than 50 years, leaving it untested in large-scale, high-intensity combat against a modern adversary. If the conflict expands beyond a short, contained operation, China has openly acknowledged that its military is not prepared to protect China’s global interests. The PLA lacks the capability to operate far from Chinese shores or project power more than 1,000 miles beyond the mainland, even as its longer-range missiles can hit targets much farther out.

    A prolonged conflict would also bring catastrophic economic consequences for Beijing. China’s international trade would almost certainly come to a complete halt, along with its imports of critical energy and food supplies. Chinese manufacturers would be cut off from access to Western components and technology, and finished Chinese goods would lose access to major global markets. Losing export revenue denominated in hard currency, primarily U.S. dollars, and being cut off from the global dollar-based financial system would create an unprecedented economic crisis. While Beijing could attempt to rely on its own currency, the renminbi is not freely convertible, and it is not widely held or desired by global trading partners — making it nearly impossible to purchase critical imports from Australia, the Middle East, and other suppliers that require hard currency payment.

    Domestically, a prolonged, costly conflict could also erode Xi’s domestic standing. For years, Xi has urged Chinese citizens to “eat bitterness” and prepare for hardship, but more than 600 million Chinese people live on $5 or less per day. If thousands of young Chinese soldiers are killed in an invasion that becomes bogged down, public anger could build, even after an initial wave of nationalist sentiment. Xi’s existing political opponents would almost certainly capitalize on public discontent to challenge his rule.

    Finally, any unprovoked invasion of Taiwan would accelerate a global shift toward balancing against Chinese aggression, uniting more countries in cooperation with the United States to counter Beijing. This shift is already underway, driven by Xi’s increasingly aggressive foreign policy. Japan, which resisted major defense expansion for decades under successive U.S. administrations, has now significantly bolstered its military capabilities in response to Chinese threats. The Philippines, Indonesia, and even New Zealand have grown increasingly alarmed by Beijing’s expansionism and deepened security cooperation with the U.S. In Washington, the U.S. government and military now openly recognize the severity of the Chinese threat, a marked shift from a decade ago when public warnings about China were effectively banned in policy and military circles.

    Even Europe, long hesitant to confront China, has begun to recognize the importance of strengthening defense, spurred by Russian aggression in Ukraine and a more tough-minded U.S. approach under the Trump administration. In the Global South, public backlash against Chinese aggression would grow if the PLA launched deadly attacks on Taiwan, and Chinese investment and influence in the region would collapse. Even Russia would likely only offer symbolic pro-Beijing statements rather than concrete support, happy to let China and the U.S. exhaust one another.

    If China attacked U.S. military bases in Guam, the Northern Marianas, Hawaii, or anywhere on U.S. territory, it would kill American citizens — uniting even deeply divided U.S. public opinion against Beijing, and eliminating any chance that pro-China leftist groups in the U.S. could soften Washington’s response. Even the traditional pro-engagement business community on Wall Street, which has long prioritized economic ties with Beijing, would likely rethink its support for the People’s Republic of China (PRC) after an invasion.

    Ultimately, only Xi Jinping knows what decision he will make. It remains possible that he will judge the current moment, with U.S. forces occupied in Iran, as too good an opportunity to pass. But any decision to launch an invasion of Taiwan would be one of the largest gambles in modern military history. For all their ambitions, Xi and other senior CCP leaders are not suicidal — a fact underscored by their long pattern of moving personal wealth and family members overseas to safety ahead of any potential crisis. Retired U.S. Marine Colonel Grant Newsham, author of *When China Attacks: A Warning to America*, contributed this analysis.

  • Trump’s deal making with Xi next week may determine Hong Kong jailed activist Jimmy Lai’s fate

    Trump’s deal making with Xi next week may determine Hong Kong jailed activist Jimmy Lai’s fate

    As former U.S. President Donald Trump prepares for a high-stakes upcoming summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, a pressing humanitarian and geopolitical plea has taken center stage: the family of imprisoned Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai is urgently calling on Trump to leverage the meeting to secure Lai’s release, warning that the 78-year-old’s declining health leaves little time for delayed action.

    Lai, once a prominent media tycoon and vocal critic of Beijing’s governance in Hong Kong, founded the now-shuttered pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily. The outlet was forced to close during the sweeping crackdown that followed Hong Kong’s 2019 large-scale anti-government protests. Last year, Lai was sentenced to a total of 20 years in prison under the controversial national security law that Beijing imposed on Hong Kong in 2020 — a law that Lai had once hoped a U.S. president would intervene to stop.

    In an exclusive interview with the Associated Press, Lai’s 31-year-old son Sebastien Lai, who is based in London, laid out the family’s last-ditch hopes for diplomatic intervention. Sebastien, who has maintained contact with his father through letters during his five years in custody, warned that his father’s pre-existing health conditions — including heart palpitations and diabetes — put his life at grave risk if he remains behind bars. “My father will die in prison if he’s not freed,” Sebastien said, adding that an in-custody death would create a lose-lose outcome for all parties, turning Lai into a martyr and deepening international distrust of Beijing. If released, Sebastien added, his father only desires to live out the rest of his years in quiet seclusion.

    Trump has already signaled he plans to raise Lai’s case during the Beijing talks, alongside other core agenda items including trade relations, the ongoing Iran war and cross-strait tensions over Taiwan. Speaking to conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt, Trump noted he holds “a little bitterness” over Lai’s continued detention. This is not the first time the former president has raised the issue: he first brought up Lai’s case during an October 2024 meeting with Xi, and has twice instructed senior administration officials to raise the demand in bilateral talks with Chinese counterparts, according to Mark Clifford, president of the Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation, which advocates for Lai’s release.

    Clifford, citing sources briefed on previous diplomatic engagements, said Chinese officials have acknowledged U.S. calls for Lai’s release without aggressive pushback in private discussions, a shift he calls a positive sign that the door for negotiation remains open. The U.S. Treasury Department declined to comment on the diplomatic outreach, while the White House has not responded to questions about how aggressively it will press for Lai’s release during the upcoming summit. More than 100 bipartisan U.S. lawmakers have already signed a public letter urging the Trump administration to prioritize Lai’s release at the Beijing talks.

    Publicly, however, Beijing has maintained a firm stance that Lai’s case falls entirely under China’s internal affairs, barring any foreign interference. Chinese foreign ministry officials have labeled Lai the mastermind of the 2019 Hong Kong riots, while the Hong Kong government has rejected claims that his conviction threatens press freedom, emphasizing that Lai received a fair and open public trial. Authorities are also currently moving to seize all of Lai’s assets on national security grounds, a step Sebastien calls a continued retaliatory attack against his father. Lai, a British citizen whom Beijing insists is Chinese, has chosen not to appeal his conviction and sentence.

    Analysts and activists are divided over the likelihood of a diplomatic breakthrough, amid shifting patterns in Sino-U.S. prisoner exchanges. While Washington secured the release of U.S. pastor David Lin and other detainees in a 2024 diplomatic swap, rights advocates note Beijing has grown far less willing to release high-profile political detainees under President Xi Jinping than it was under previous leaders. Human rights lawyer Jared Genser, who represented late Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo, who died in Chinese custody in 2017 despite international calls for his medical release, said Xi’s administration prioritizes framing its actions as resistance to foreign interference over protecting its international reputation. Unlike under Hu Jintao’s leadership, when China was more open to concessions to maintain smooth economic relations, Genser said, “China knows that most countries will only raise these cases privately, and that self-censorship makes it far harder to secure the release of political prisoners today.”

    John Kamm, founder of the Dui Hua Foundation which advocates for political prisoners, noted that China has historically made concessions on detainee cases when it seeks specific diplomatic or economic gains — such as when it agreed to goodwill gestures ahead of hosting the Olympic Games. But Kamm argued that the Trump administration has shown little sustained focus on political prisoners in China, with Trump’s priorities for the summit firmly fixed on trade, investment and the Iran war. Still, other analysts see room for a mutually beneficial deal. Thomas Kellogg, executive director of the Georgetown Center for Asian Law, said releasing Lai could serve both sides: it would allow Beijing to signal it is ready to move past the post-2019 crackdown era in Hong Kong, while delivering a much-needed diplomatic win for the Trump administration after a string of recent political challenges. A deal on Lai would even earn Trump praise from his domestic critics, Kellogg added.

    Wilson Chan, co-founder of the Pagoda Institute think tank, offered a more pessimistic outlook, arguing that the chances of a diplomatic solution are slim. Chan noted that Beijing has deliberately chosen to use Lai’s case to send a message to both domestic and international audiences, and continued international pressure on the issue only reinforces Beijing’s view that Lai remains a persistent national security threat. Without sustained, high-profile public pressure, Chan added, Beijing faces no incentive to compromise. For Sebastien Lai and his family, however, there is no alternative to pushing for diplomatic action: with every passing month, the clock ticks closer to what they fear is an inevitable, tragic outcome if intervention does not come soon.

  • China says exports jump 14.1% from a year ago ahead of Trump-Xi summit

    China says exports jump 14.1% from a year ago ahead of Trump-Xi summit

    HONG KONG – Newly released government data shows China’s outbound shipments recorded a stronger-than-forecast 14.1% year-on-year jump in April, defying headwinds from the ongoing conflict in Iran and the lingering drag of elevated U.S. tariffs. The stronger-than-expected growth figures land just five days before a high-stakes scheduled meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, a gathering that will bring a host of contentious bilateral and global issues to the negotiating table.

  • The UFO community has been waiting for answers. Has the Pentagon delivered?

    The UFO community has been waiting for answers. Has the Pentagon delivered?

    On a historic Friday marked by decades of speculation and demand for transparency, the U.S. government made its first public release of a collection of previously classified documents centered on unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP), commonly known as UFOs. The 162-document trove, which includes firsthand witness reports, declassified military memos dating back decades, and documentation from the Apollo Moon missions, drew intense attention from long-time UFO enthusiasts and casual observers alike, all waiting for answers about what may lie beyond Earth’s atmosphere.

    The release was quickly celebrated by former President Donald J. Trump, who framed the move as a break from decades of government secrecy. Writing on his Truth Social platform following the public launch of the document portal, Trump noted that prior administrations had failed to deliver transparency on the topic, adding, “the people can decide for themselves, ‘WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON?’ Have Fun and Enjoy!”

    The U.S. Department of War launched a dedicated public website to host the declassified files, taking an unusual approach that offers raw material without official analysis or conclusions. In a statement posted alongside the archive, the department acknowledged the massive scope of the declassification effort, announcing that additional materials would be released in periodic tranches every few weeks as they are processed and cleared for public release. The website explicitly notes that all documents posted are unresolved cases, meaning the government has not reached a definitive conclusion on the origin or nature of the reported phenomena. It also called on private sector researchers and experts to contribute their own analysis and information to help unpack the materials.

    For people across the U.S. who have spent decades following UAP research and chasing answers to personal and family connections to sightings, the release marked a long-awaited milestone, even if it delivered no earth-shattering revelations. Elaine Loperena, a 69-year-old grandmother from Clovis, California, has waited for answers since she was a child, when her mother spotted a UFO hovering above while hanging laundry to dry. As an administrator of a large UAP-focused Facebook group, Loperena has seen public interest surge dramatically in recent years: when she joined the group three years ago, it had roughly 40,000 members, and it has now grown to nearly 100,000, with most of the growth coming in just the last few months.

    Loperena called the release a major step forward in the push for full disclosure, crediting Trump for moving the process forward after years of inaction from previous White House administrations. She noted that growing numbers of former military personnel and insiders have come forward with firsthand accounts, even on their deathbeds, making it impossible for the government to continue hiding information indefinitely. “The snowball is getting bigger,” she said, expressing hope that Friday’s release is just the first of many. She also emphasized that any full final disclosure should be bipartisan to overcome U.S. political divides and build public trust in the information released.

    Similar cautious optimism was shared by figures in Texas’s active UFO research community. John Erik Ege, a Texas-based therapist who has been a UAP “experiencer” since childhood and serves as regional director for the Texas chapter of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON), called the release “a move in the right direction.” While he noted that most of the material released has been widely known among UFO enthusiasts for years, with no new bombshells or concrete evidence of extraterrestrial bodies or contact, he remains hopeful that future releases will bring more clarity. “I don’t think they’re trying to hide anything,” Ege said, adding that he believes Trump is unique among modern presidents in being willing to push forward with disclosure despite potential pushback.

    Daniel Jones, a 36-year-old Texas musician and fellow administrator of the Texas UFO Network’s 25,000-member Facebook page, who got engaged last year at a UFO festival, echoed that sentiment. He said he never expected the first batch of files to contain major revelations, but welcomed the release as a step toward greater government accountability and transparency for the general public, not just the existing UAP research community. “This first batch of files wasn’t, more than likely, going to contain anything extremely substantial,” Jones said, “but I’m hopeful to see more definition on the part of the government” in upcoming releases.

    Not all reactions to the release were positive, however. A small but vocal segment of the UAP community remains skeptical of the government’s motives. Ege noted that roughly 20 percent of active community members believe the release is a false flag effort designed to distract from other issues, stemming from a deep lack of trust in official institutions. Some skeptics within the community went further, criticizing the quality of the materials released. One prominent contributor to a major UAP discussion group noted that many of the released images are heavily compressed, distorted, or lack critical context or scale to identify what is being shown, with some images being reconstructed overlays based on witness testimony rather than original raw imagery of unknown objects. “That is not the same thing as releasing compelling evidence,” the contributor wrote, adding that the release “feels more like theater than disclosure.”

    Even with the mixed reactions, Loperena and other long-time enthusiasts remain optimistic that full disclosure is coming, and that more definitive evidence of extraterrestrial life will eventually be made public. They acknowledge that even with full official disclosure, there will always be naysayers who demand direct, personal proof. “You’re always going to have the naysayers,” Loperena said. “Some of those, it’s going to take an ET to show up and, you know, ask for dinner.” For now, the UAP community is waiting eagerly for the next tranche of declassified files, expected in the coming weeks.