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  • Iran threatens to attack US warships that enter Strait of Hormuz

    Iran threatens to attack US warships that enter Strait of Hormuz

    Escalating cross-border tensions have thrown the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz back into the global spotlight, after Iran’s top military commander issued a stark warning that any United States naval vessel entering the waterway will face immediate armed attack. The new threat comes just days after former US President Donald Trump launched what he calls “Project Freedom”, framed as a humanitarian mission to extract commercial ships stranded in the strait amid ongoing restrictions from Tehran.

    The warning, first reported by Reuters early Monday, came from Ali Abdollahi, commander of Iran’s unified military command. “We warn that any foreign armed forces, especially the aggressive US army, will be attacked if they intend to approach and enter the Strait of Hormuz,” Abdollahi stated, marking the second time in days that Iranian military officials have explicitly targeted the US with this threat.

    Trump, who had previously ordered a full blockade on Iranian ports and avoided deploying US naval assets into the strait over fears of retaliation, launched the new initiative Sunday. He has already issued a counter-warning to Iran, stating that any interference with the US mission will prompt a direct military response from American forces.

    Stretching between Iran and Oman, the Strait of Hormuz is widely considered the world’s most vital energy chokepoint. Roughly 20% of the globe’s daily crude oil output and a fifth of global liquefied natural gas shipments pass through the narrow waterway, according to International Energy Agency data. When the strait was closed amid recent conflict, the IEA recorded the largest single supply disruption in global energy history: output fell by more than 10 million barrels of oil per day, while global LNG supplies dropped by 20%.

    The sharp exchange of threats comes against a fragile backdrop of diplomatic efforts to end the ongoing US-Iran conflict, with Pakistan serving as the neutral mediator between the two sides. A ceasefire has been in place since April 8, but Iranian leadership has openly questioned the sincerity of US commitment to a lasting peace deal.
    Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei slammed Washington on Monday for dragging out negotiations, saying US demands throughout the talks have been “excessive”. “The other side must resolve to adopt a reasonable approach and abandon excessive demands regarding Iran,” Baghaei told reporters. He also added that all nations that have participated in the conflict, both directly and indirectly, bear collective responsibility for the ongoing crisis.

    Many Iranian political observers, including academic Mohammad Maraandi — who is widely viewed as aligned with senior Iranian government officials — share the widespread skepticism over US intentions. Maraandi has publicly argued that the US is using diplomatic talks as a cover to rebuild its military positioning in the region ahead of a new wave of attacks on Iran.

    According to reporting from Al Jazeera, Iran recently submitted a formal three-phase peace proposal to the US via Pakistani mediators, with the goal of turning the current fragile ceasefire into a permanent end to hostilities within 30 days. The core of the proposal centers on a binding regional non-aggression pact, which would require commitments from all regional actors including Israel to avoid future conflict and cement stability across the Middle East.

    Under the first phase of the proposal, the Strait of Hormuz would be gradually reopened to commercial traffic in tandem with the US lifting its blockade and trade restrictions on Iranian ports. Tehran has also offered to take full responsibility for clearing sea mines from the waterway to restore safe navigation for global shipping.

  • UAE-Israel ties useful but nowhere near a Middle East reset

    UAE-Israel ties useful but nowhere near a Middle East reset

    Five and a half years have passed since the Abraham Accords were signed in a ceremony on the White House South Lawn, where celebratory triumphalism overshadowed a far more sober underlying reality. While the normalization agreement between Israel and the United Arab Emirates marked a meaningful breakthrough in regional relations, it never delivered the long-promised “dawn of a new Middle East” that U.S. diplomats touted that day. A cascade of escalating regional crises – from the October 7 attacks, the devastating Gaza war, an Israeli targeted strike on Hamas leaders in Doha, and most recently the 12-day cross-border conflict with Iran that brought an Israeli Iron Dome battery to Emirati soil – has rendered the original optimistic Washington narrative increasingly unsustainable.

    Today, policy analysts and Israeli strategists are consumed by one core question: Can the UAE-Israel partnership reorient the entire Middle East’s balance of power? This analysis argues that question itself is rooted in the same flawed assumption that has undermined U.S. Middle East policy dating back to the Carter administration: the belief that a bilateral alignment between two U.S.-aligned states can replace the hard, messy work of building a durable regional order, and that carefully choreographed diplomatic publicity can override the underlying realities of power distribution across the region.

    To evaluate the Accords fairly, one must start by separating tangible progress from overstated hype. The economic and security ties forged between the two states are not empty rhetoric. In 2024, bilateral trade hit $3.2 billion and continues an upward trajectory. Israeli tech firms have established permanent headquarters at Abu Dhabi Global Market, while Emirati sovereign capital has become a major investor in Israel’s high-tech sector. Defense cooperation has also moved well beyond symbolic gestures: when UAE’s defense conglomerate Edge Group acquired Elbit Systems’ Hermes 900 drones, it marked the first substantive industrial defense partnership between the two nations, rather than just an exchange of friendly press statements. Most notably, during the 2026 conflict with Iran, Israeli military personnel operating an Iron Dome defense system from Emirati territory represented a genuinely unprecedented development: an Israeli forward defensive posture in the Persian Gulf, made possible only by the strategic opening created by the Accords.

    These are meaningful tactical achievements, but they do not add up to a strategic transformation of the region. To claim otherwise is to ignore both the fundamental constraints shaping Emirati foreign policy and the structural regional realities that no single bilateral partnership can erase.

    First, the UAE itself is a small federation of seven emirates with a population majority made up of expatriate workers, whose long-term security still ultimately relies on U.S. extended deterrence. For more than a decade, Emirati leaders have judged Washington to be an increasingly unreliable security patron, so they have systematically pursued hedging strategies across major global powers – building closer ties with Beijing, Moscow, New Delhi, and most consequentially, pursuing quiet tactical reconciliation with Iran. The decision to normalize relations with Israel was always a pragmatic calculation: it gave Abu Dhabi a useful counterweight to Iranian regional expansion while unlocking significant economic benefits. It was never, despite optimistic rhetoric in press releases and Negev Forum communiques, a decision to subordinate Emirati grand strategy to Israeli interests. When Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed traveled to Doha just hours after Israel’s strike on Hamas leaders there, he was not betraying the Accords. He was simply demonstrating that the Accords were never meant to be the sole organizing principle of UAE foreign policy – and no rational Gulf leadership would ever allow them to become so.

    This leads to the second structural reality: Arab Gulf states have never sought, and do not want, to be junior partners in an Israeli-led regional order. The ideological project of an “Abraham Alliance,” championed by former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and embraced by American neoconservatives eager to anoint any new regional alignment as transformative, assumes a level of Emirati deference to Israeli strategic priorities that Abu Dhabi has never accepted. The UAE swiftly and clearly condemned the October 7 attacks, but it has also maintained an open humanitarian corridor for Gaza, publicly denounced what it calls Israeli violations of international law, pulled Israeli participation from the Dubai Airshow, and warned that any Israeli annexation of the West Bank would cross a permanent red line. These are not the actions of a satellite state. They are the measured moves of a small state carefully hedging its bets in an unstable neighborhood, exactly as small states have always done.

    Third, the future of the Accords is inextricably tied to Saudi Arabia, the most powerful Arab Gulf state. Without Riyadh joining the Abraham framework, the agreement remains a useful but limited diplomatic win. With Saudi participation, it would amount to a genuine regional reordering. But Saudi Arabia’s core condition for normalization – that Israel must create a credible path to an independent Palestinian state – has only hardened in the wake of the Gaza war. Israel’s current ruling coalition relies on far-right political partners who openly and proudly advocate for permanent annexation of the West Bank, making it impossible to deliver the political commitments Saudi Arabia demands. This is not a problem that can be fixed with clever diplomatic maneuvering, nor is it merely a question of personality – though Netanyahu’s personal credibility across the Gulf is widely reported to be severely diminished. It is a fundamental clash of incompatible strategic objectives, one that a potential second Trump administration, for all its focus on dealmaking, will find far more intractable than the first Trump administration did.

    Finally, the broader regional environment has not shifted in the direction the Accords’ original architects predicted. While Iran has been weakened by the collapse of its Axis of Resistance and U.S. strikes on its nuclear program, it remains a major regional power that cannot be simply dismissed from the regional order. Turkey has expanded its influence across post-Assad Syria, while Qatar – whose ties to Hamas Israeli leaders have long sought to punish – has emerged from the Gaza war with its diplomatic standing strengthened, not diminished. Qatar now hosts key U.S.-brokered ceasefire negotiations and summits that have repeatedly set the terms for potential conflict resolution. The much-hyped regional realignment promised by the Accords has actually produced a more crowded, more complex regional system, not a simpler, more pro-Western order.

    So what can the UAE-Israel partnership actually achieve? Quite a lot, when judged by realistic, modest standards. It can act as a platform for cross-border technology transfer, intelligence sharing, and joint commercial development. It has given Israel a level of regional integration that would have seemed unthinkable just 20 years ago. It helps the UAE diversify its non-oil economy and modernize its defense industrial base. It provides a mutual hedge against Iranian assertiveness without forcing either side into a formal alliance that neither can afford to accept. These are not small achievements. For two pragmatic states navigating a volatile neighborhood, they represent real, tangible gains.

    But they are not a transformation of the regional balance of power. Instead, they are a pragmatic adaptation by two states to a new multipolar Middle East, where American hegemony has receded, core disputes over Palestinian self-determination remain unresolved, and regional actors increasingly take responsibility for managing their own security and order. These adaptations are important, and they should be welcomed. But they should never be confused with the grand strategic reordering they have so often been described as.

    As realist geopolitical thought has long held, history does not easily bend to the press conferences of great powers. The Middle East’s fundamental fault lines – the unresolved Palestinian question, Iran’s regional role, decades of Sunni-Shia division, the stalled progress on Saudi-Israeli normalization, and the gradual rebalancing of U.S. regional commitments – will shape the future regional order far more than any single bilateral partnership, however valuable that partnership may be. To expect anything more is to mistake the choreography of diplomatic spectacle for the hard substance of geopolitics. It is a mistake Washington has made many times before. There is no clear reason for it to make the same mistake again.

  • US vs China: two armies, two theories of the body

    US vs China: two armies, two theories of the body

    In the first week of May 2026, as China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) carried forward its long-standing annual routine of large-scale immunization drills with little public fanfare, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth made a landmark policy announcement: American service members would no longer face a mandatory requirement to receive the seasonal influenza vaccine. This shift ends a policy that had remained almost continuously in place across the U.S. military since 1945.

    On the surface, this change appears to be nothing more than a narrow adjustment to military administrative rules. But when contrasted with the PLA’s consistent approach to force health protection, the decision reveals a far deeper ideological split over the boundary between an individual service member’s personal autonomy and the collective requirements of national military power.

    Formally signed into effect on April 21, the new U.S. policy reclassifies seasonal flu vaccination as a voluntary choice for all active-duty personnel, reserve troops, and civilian employees working for the Department of Defense. Mandatory vaccine requirements remain in place for other illnesses including measles, mumps, and polio. The Biden administration’s official justifications for the change center on expanding individual medical autonomy and upholding religious freedom for service members.

    In sharp contrast, the PLA frames routine universal immunization as a standard, unremarkable component of force readiness protection. For Chinese military planners, immunization follows the same logic as mandatory physical fitness testing: it is a core operational requirement, not a personal medical decision left to individual preference.

    This contrast is not a simple case of a democratic vs. authoritarian divide, as the original analysis points out. Multiple Western-aligned militaries around the world, from the Singapore Armed Forces to the Israel Defense Forces and the British Armed Forces, maintain non-negotiable mandatory vaccine schedules without being labeled illiberal or anti-democratic.

    What makes the new U.S. stance unprecedented among modern great power defense policies is its core framing: it treats a service member’s immune system as, by default, an individual’s private sphere, separate from military operational requirements.

    Setting aside the ideological debate, all military institutions must confront one unavoidable practical question: can a contagious respiratory virus, which spreads rapidly in the close-quarters environments shared barracks, berthing areas on warships, and military training camps, be effectively managed if prevention is left to individual personal choice?

    History offers an unforgiving answer to this question. During World War I, approximately 45,000 U.S. military personnel died from influenza complications. For the vast majority of modern military history, infectious disease has killed more service members than direct combat engagement. Among new military recruits, who live in extremely dense group quarters, flu hospitalization rates are roughly 10 times higher than rates among the broader military population. A flu outbreak on a submarine deployed at sea or at a remote forward operating base is far more than a personal inconvenience: it is a direct threat to the unit’s ability to complete its assigned mission.

    Chinese military planners, whose force is increasingly oriented toward expeditionary operations and long-duration naval deployments far from home ports, have fully internalized this historical lesson with no ambivalence. The United States, which originally helped develop the modern global playbook for military force health protection, is now conducting a live, real-world experiment to test whether voluntary vaccine uptake can achieve the same high levels of coverage that mandatory mandates have long delivered.

    Public health researchers have long warned that mandatory requirements are the most reliable tool to reach the herd immunity thresholds needed to stop outbreaks in closed, congregate populations like military bases. If voluntary uptake leads to a meaningful drop in flu vaccination rates among U.S. service members, the PLA will gain a small but measurable advantage in operational readiness during peak respiratory virus seasons — an advantage gained without any military confrontation or public diplomatic statement.

    Beyond operational readiness, the policy shift carries a less obvious cultural cost for the U.S. military. When top Pentagon leadership frames a decades-old preventive public health measure as “overly broad and not rational,” it signals to the entire force that readiness-focused medical policy is open to negotiation and shaped by ideological conflict. This ripple effect will not stay limited to influenza vaccination. Commanders preparing for potential exposure to anthrax, new pandemic virus variants, or engineered biological weapons will now operate in a changed environment, where troops can reasonably question why one vaccine is mandatory when a different routine vaccine was made voluntary just a year earlier. Adversaries that invest in biological warfare capabilities closely track these kinds of cultural shifts in military policy.

    The PLA’s approach faces its own set of tradeoffs, the analysis notes. Its culture of rigid compliance guarantees high vaccination coverage, but it gives up the legitimacy dividend that comes from persuading service members of the value of immunization, rather than simply ordering it. Troops who accept vaccination because they understand how it protects both themselves and their unit are more resilient partners during long-term campaigns than troops who only comply because refusal is not permitted. A military that cannot distinguish between informed consent and blind obedience will struggle to improvise during high-stress operations, particularly in joint missions with allied forces that expect troops to participate with full, informed understanding of operational requirements.

    Neither the U.S. nor the Chinese model is clearly optimal, the author argues. Instead of caricaturing one another’s approaches, defense establishments on both sides could gain useful insights from each other’s frameworks. A more effective, mission-aligned vaccine doctrine would start with one single question for every immunization requirement: does this vaccine directly protect operational deployability and reduce preventable disruption to military missions?

    If the answer is yes, the policy should be defended as a core readiness measure, not pulled into broader cultural and ideological political battles. Under this targeted doctrine, influenza vaccination would remain mandatory in settings where the operational case for it is strongest: recruit training camps, warships, submarines, aviation units, military medical facilities, rapid-deployment response forces, and troops assigned to overseas missions. In lower-risk settings, vaccination could be strongly encouraged without being universally mandated. Medical exemptions would still be available, but they would be tied to operational risk assessments rather than ideological or identity-based claims.

    This balanced approach would preserve the PLA’s strength in operational discipline while integrating the Western insight that institutional legitimacy itself acts as a force multiplier for military readiness. It would also pull the U.S. policy debate out of the unproductive binary choice between universal mandatory mandates and unrestricted individual opt-outs modeled on consumer choice.

    A single flu shot is a routine, low-stakes medical procedure. But the policy that governs it carries profound meaning. It encodes how a nation-state understands the fundamental relationship between the individual service member and the collective military mission, between personal conscience and unit cohesion, between individual freedom and the requirements of national defense.

    Today, China and the United States are conducting parallel, contrasting experiments on how to balance these core priorities. The results of these experiments will not show up in official press releases or diplomatic statements. They will appear in sick call rosters, delayed deployment timelines, and the quiet, unpublicized metrics that measure military readiness. Military planners have relearned the same lesson in every generation since the 1918 influenza pandemic: infectious disease does not stop being an operational threat just because policy chooses to frame it as a personal matter. Whichever military remembers this lesson most clearly, and translates it into a doctrine that its own troops actually believe in, will gain a strategic advantage that no amount of defense procurement spending can buy.

  • Ukrainian drone hits upmarket Moscow high-rise ahead of Victory Day celebrations

    Ukrainian drone hits upmarket Moscow high-rise ahead of Victory Day celebrations

    In the early hours of Monday, a Ukrainian drone struck a luxury residential high-rise in southwestern Moscow, leaving visible structural damage to an upper floor’s facade but causing no reported casualties, according to local officials. The incident marked the third straight night of drone attacks targeting the Russian capital, coming just days before Moscow hosts a significantly reduced 9 May parade honoring the Soviet Union’s defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.

    Unverified footage circulating across social media platforms captured first responders entering a heavily damaged apartment, where broken windows, scattered dust and piles of rubble filled the space. A second clip showed pieces of downed drone debris spread across the street at the base of the building. Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin confirmed that two other drones targeting the city were successfully intercepted by Russian air defenses, and the capital’s two major international hubs, Vnukovo and Domodedovo, temporarily paused all flight operations overnight as a security precaution.

    Across multiple Russian regions between Sunday and Monday, Russian defense officials reported that a total of 117 Ukrainian drones were shot down. Sixty of those drones were directed at the St. Petersburg region, in what regional governor Aleksandr Drodzhenko described as a large-scale coordinated attack.

    The damaged residential building sits in one of Moscow’s most exclusive neighborhoods, located less than 10 kilometers from the Kremlin and Red Square, where the scaled-back 9 May victory parade will be held this Saturday. Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Ukrainian drone strikes on Moscow have become a recurring occurrence. While drone warnings frequently force temporary airport shutdowns on the capital’s outskirts and disrupt commercial air traffic, most of central Moscow is shielded by Russia’s Pantsir-S surface-to-air missile systems, making successful strikes this close to the city center a relatively rare event.

    Growing security anxiety ahead of the annual celebrations prompted the Kremlin to announce last week that it would scale back the traditional large-scale military parade on Red Square, citing an ongoing “terrorist threat” from Ukraine. This year will mark the first time since 2008 that no armored vehicles or long-range missile systems will be featured in the event. Separately, Russian state media reported Monday that multiple local mobile network providers have announced restrictions on mobile internet access across most of Moscow for the coming week, a measure framed as necessary for national security.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky openly acknowledged the increasing drone pressure, commenting that the Kremlin’s decision to downsize the parade reveals Moscow’s fear that drones could reach Red Square itself. “This is telling… We need to keep up the pressure,” Zelensky said.

    Over the course of the full-scale war, Ukraine has rapidly expanded its domestic production of long-range drones, which are now capable of striking targets hundreds of kilometers inside Russian territory. These unmanned systems regularly target Russian energy infrastructure and oil refineries across the country, with the strategic goal of cutting into Russia’s total oil output and reducing critical export revenue that funds Moscow’s war effort.

    A day before the Moscow strike, Zelensky announced that Ukrainian forces had hit three Russian oil tankers, a cruise missile-carrying warship and a patrol boat in separate attacks on two Russian Black Sea ports. Zelensky noted that the targeted tankers were part of Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet” of vessels that Moscow uses to evade Western oil sanctions imposed after the 2022 full-scale invasion.

    Despite the increasing Ukrainian drone strikes deep inside Russia, Moscow continues its daily campaign of deadly aerial attacks against Ukrainian population centers. On Monday, Ukrainian emergency officials confirmed that a Russian missile strike near the northeastern city of Kharkiv, located just kilometers from the Russian border, killed four civilians and left 18 others injured.

  • One injured after plane hits truck while landing in Newark

    One injured after plane hits truck while landing in Newark

    A low-altitude collision between an incoming commercial airliner and a ground vehicle left one person with minor injuries at one of the busiest airports on the U.S. East Coast over the weekend, but all passengers and crew escaped without harm. On Sunday, a Boeing 767 operated by United Airlines, which was completing an international journey from Venice, Italy to Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey, collided with a streetlight pole and a nearby pickup truck as it approached for landing. While the aircraft sustained visible damage from the collision, its flight crew successfully guided the plane to a safe landing, bringing all 231 passengers and crew members on board to the gate without a single injury report. The truck’s driver, however, did not leave the incident unhurt. According to the driver’s employer, speaking to CBS News – U.S. news partner of the BBC – one of the plane’s tires crashed through the truck’s side window and front windscreen in the collision. Dash camera footage captured from inside the truck records the moment of impact: the audio picks up the roar of the low-flying jet seconds before impact, and footage shows shattered glass spraying through the vehicle’s cabin after the collision. The driver received medical treatment for minor lacerations to the arm and hand caused by flying broken glass. In an official statement released after the incident, United Airlines confirmed the details of the collision and outlined next steps. The carrier said it will launch a comprehensive, rigorous investigation into the flight safety incident, and as a standard procedural step for ongoing investigations, the flight crew operating the trip has been temporarily removed from active service. The airline also added that its in-house maintenance engineering team is currently conducting a full assessment of the damage sustained by the aircraft during the collision. New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill released a statement reacting to the incident, saying she was deeply grateful that the aircraft was able to land without catastrophic incident, and that all people on board the plane emerged unharmed. U.S. federal aviation investigators have already launched a formal probe into the event. The National Transportation Safety Board, the U.S. government agency responsible for investigating civil aviation accidents, confirmed that it has dispatched a lead investigator to the scene to examine evidence and interview relevant parties. The agency has also formally ordered United Airlines to turn over the plane’s cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, two critical pieces of evidence that will help investigators piece together what caused the aircraft to strike the truck and pole during approach. As of the latest updates, no further details on the timeline of the investigation or potential contributing factors have been released to the public.

  • Australian Jews tell antisemitism inquiry of surge in hate before Bondi Hanukkah massacre

    Australian Jews tell antisemitism inquiry of surge in hate before Bondi Hanukkah massacre

    SYDNEY, Australia — One month after a father-son terrorist attack left 15 Jewish worshipers dead at a Hanukkah gathering on Sydney’s iconic Bondi Beach, Australia’s highest-level formal inquiry into growing antisemitism and social cohesion has convened its first public hearings, kicking off a two-week examination of how hate targeting Jewish communities has spread across Australian institutions and broader society. The massacre, which authorities confirmed was inspired by the Islamic State group, marked the deadliest antisemitic attack in modern Australian history and came amid an unprecedented nationwide surge in hate crimes against Jewish people that has shaken a community long unaccustomed to such widespread levels of threat.

    The attack was carried out by Sajid and Naveed Akram, a father and son who were legally licensed to own the firearms they used – a striking detail in a country that has kept some of the world’s strictest gun control regulations for nearly 30 years, following the 1996 Port Arthur massacre. Sajid Akram was killed by responding police at the scene, while Naveed Akram survived his wounds and has been charged with terrorism, 15 counts of murder, and 40 counts of attempted murder; he has not entered any pleas to the charges.

    In opening remarks at Monday’s first sitting, commission head Virginia Bell connected the sharp rise in Australian antisemitism to parallel surges across Western nations, noting the clear tie between escalating tensions and the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in October 2023. “It’s important that people understand how quickly those events can prompt ugly displays of hostility toward Jewish Australians simply because they’re Jews,” Bell said. Additional hearings on targeted topics will be held throughout the year, with the commission’s final binding report and policy recommendations due for publication in December.

    All witnesses who appeared before the commission on opening day were Jewish Australians, many of whom requested to testify under pseudonyms to protect their personal safety from further harassment. For community members, the hearing was a chance to lay bare the daily fear that has reshaped life for Australia’s small Jewish population after a year of mounting attacks. Sheina Gutnick, the daughter of 62-year-old victim Reuven Morrison – who died after charging one of the gunmen with a brick to stop the attack – recounted a harassment incident she experienced a year before the massacre: while walking through a Sydney shopping mall carrying her infant child, a stranger verbally abused her after spotting her Star of David necklace, with no bystanders stepping in to intervene. “I felt shocked, exposed and unsafe,” Gutnick told the commission. She added that she now avoids large public family gatherings and hesitates to travel to certain neighborhoods across Sydney.

    Data presented to the inquiry underscores the scale of the surge: in the 12 months following the October 2023 start of the Israel-Hamas war, more than 2,000 antisemitic incidents were reported to the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, which tracks hate crime against Australian Jewish communities. That figure represents a more than fourfold increase from the previous annual record of just under 500 incidents recorded the year before the war. While similar increases have been documented in the United Kingdom and other Western countries, witnesses told the commission the speed and severity of the shift has been particularly jarring for Australia’s tight-knit Jewish community, which had never before faced such a volume of serious, violent threats.

    Toby Raphael, vice president of Sydney’s Newtown Synagogue, which was defaced with swastikas during a 2025 wave of antisemitic attacks, told the commission that constant fear has become the new normal for Australian Jews. “Now everyone is scared all the time,” Raphael said. He recalled that just a few years ago, he had reassured synagogue congregants that no security was needed for weekly services; today, the synagogue is guarded, and Raphael serves on a parent-led security team at his son’s Jewish day school, which is also protected by armed professional security guards. “Why do kids have to go to school like that? This is the world that the Jews of Australia live in now and it needs to change,” he said.

    The rise in high-profile antisemitic attacks predated the Bondi Beach massacre: last August, the Australian government cut diplomatic ties with Iran after concluding the Iranian state had orchestrated at least two separate antisemitic attacks on Australian soil. Many witnesses told the commission the ongoing escalation has pushed them to consider leaving Australia entirely to seek safety for their families elsewhere. Alex Ryvchin, a leader of a major Australian Jewish organization whose home was targeted in an arson attack in early 2025, told the commission he had warned for months that the unaddressed rise in antisemitism would lead to mass casualties. “This was January, and by December there was a horrific massacre which has transformed us permanently,” Ryvchin told the hearing. He added that he now believes Australia is “on a path to catastrophe” if urgent action is not taken.

    The Bondi Beach massacre has also reignited national debate over gun regulation in Australia, a policy area that has remained largely settled since the 1996 Port Arthur shooting that led to the country’s strict current laws. The Royal Commission released an interim report in April that examined gaps in law enforcement and security response to antisemitic crime, and recommended that Australian policymakers prioritize passing nationally consistent gun laws and implementing a new national weapons buyback program. Federal and state governments are currently reviewing the proposal and considering further regulatory changes.

  • Man rushed to hospital with serious injuries after alleged horror attack on busy Melbourne CBD street

    Man rushed to hospital with serious injuries after alleged horror attack on busy Melbourne CBD street

    A violent midday incident on one of Melbourne’s most crowded commercial thoroughfares has left a local man hospitalized with life-threatening upper body trauma, prompting an active police investigation into the circumstances of the attack. Emergency response teams were dispatched to the intersection of Collins Street and Elizabeth Street, a bustling hub in Melbourne’s central business district, shortly after 2:10 p.m. on Wednesday following reports of an injured individual at the scene. The victim, identified only as a 37-year-old resident of the Melbourne suburb of Mill Park, was urgently transported to the Royal Melbourne Hospital after first responders assessed his condition. As of Wednesday afternoon, the victim remains in serious but stable condition, according to initial updates from emergency services. A spokesperson for Victoria Police confirmed Wednesday that investigators have not yet established how the man sustained his injuries, noting that the case remains open and active. Police have not yet released any information about potential suspects or motives for the incident, and additional details are expected to be released as the investigation progresses. Local witnesses reported a heavy emergency services presence at the downtown intersection in the minutes after the incident, though traffic and pedestrian activity in the area had returned to near-normal levels by late Wednesday afternoon.

  • Cruise ship operator says Dutch to repatriate two ill passengers

    Cruise ship operator says Dutch to repatriate two ill passengers

    A serious public health incident is unfolding on a cruise ship anchored off the coast of Cape Verde, where three people have already died amid a suspected hantavirus outbreak, and Dutch authorities are set to lead a coordinated mission to repatriate two acutely ill passengers still on board, the vessel’s operator has confirmed.

    In its first official public statement addressing the crisis, Netherlands-based Oceanwide Expeditions, which operates the expedition cruise ship MV Hondius, acknowledged the unfolding “serious medical situation” on the vessel. The ship was mid-voyage, traveling north from Ushuaia, Argentina toward Cape Verde when the outbreak began.

    The operator has verified three fatalities connected to the incident: two deaths occurred on board the ship, while a third victim died after disembarking earlier for emergency care. One passenger is already receiving intensive care treatment in a Johannesburg hospital, where hantavirus has been confirmed in their case. Two remaining symptomatic passengers on the MV Hondius now require urgent, advanced medical intervention that cannot be adequately provided on the vessel.

    Oceanwide Expeditions confirmed that Dutch authorities have committed to leading a joint international effort to medically evacuate and repatriate the two symptomatic people from the ship’s current position off Cape Verde to medical facilities in the Netherlands. The evacuation and repatriation effort remains contingent on multiple key approvals, most notably formal authorization from local Cape Verdean authorities, which has not yet been granted. While local medical practitioners have already boarded the vessel to evaluate the health status of the two passengers, permission to move them to onshore medical facilities in Cape Verde is still pending.

    A spokesperson for the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed to Agence France-Presse that the department is actively assessing all logistical and regulatory options to carry out the medical evacuation of the affected passengers. “If this can take place, the ministry of foreign affairs will coordinate it,” the spokesperson said.

    Oceanwide Expeditions added that it remains in constant close communication with Cape Verdean health authorities to coordinate plans for full disembarkation and universal medical screening of all passengers and crew once local approval is secured.

    Though hantavirus has been confirmed in the Johannesburg patient, operators emphasize that it has not yet been definitively linked to the three recorded deaths, and neither has hantavirus been confirmed in the two symptomatic patients still on the ship. “The exact cause and any possible connection are under investigation,” the company said.

    The World Health Organization released an update on the incident Sunday, confirming one laboratory-positive case of hantavirus and five additional suspected cases. The U.N. health agency noted that while hantavirus infections in humans are rare, human-to-human transmission is possible, and the pathogen can cause life-threatening severe respiratory illness that requires constant specialized monitoring and supportive care.

    Hantavirus is most commonly transmitted to humans from contact with rodent excreta, according to global public health data.

  • Three dead after monster truck crashes into crowd

    Three dead after monster truck crashes into crowd

    A tragic accident at a monster truck exhibition in southern Colombia has left three people dead and at least 38 others injured after the vehicle lost control and crashed into a gathered crowd on Sunday. The incident unfolded in Popayán, the capital city of Colombia’s Cauca province, when the truck’s braking system reportedly failed mid-show, according to initial law enforcement assessments.

    Graphic footage circulating from the event captures the moment the out-of-control truck smashed through a protective barrier separating the vehicle from spectators. After barreling into the standing crowd, the truck only came to a halt after colliding with a nearby electricity pole, leaving panicked attendees scrambling for safety.

    Local official reports, shared by Colombian newspaper El Espectador, confirm that a 10-year-old girl was among those killed at the scene of the crash. Popayán’s police commander Colonel Julián Castañeda told local outlet El Tiempo that preliminary investigations point to a mechanical failure as the root cause of the disaster. “The vehicle accelerated, it couldn’t brake, and the driver is in stable condition,” Castañeda confirmed in his statement to press.

    Local and regional leaders have moved quickly to respond to the tragedy, announcing a full, transparent probe into the incident to determine what led to the crash and hold any responsible parties accountable. “These events, which should never have happened, will be clarified with total responsibility and transparency,” said Juan Carlos Muñoz Bravo, mayor of Popayán, in an official address following the accident.

    Regional governor Octavio Guzmán also extended public condolences to grieving families and the community of Popayán. “We express our solidarity with the families of those affected by this tragic accident, as well as with our capital city, Popayán,” Guzmán said. As of the latest updates, authorities have not released additional details on the condition of the injured, and the formal investigation remains ongoing.

  • Iran warns will attack US forces in Hormuz after Trump announces escort plan

    Iran warns will attack US forces in Hormuz after Trump announces escort plan

    Tensions between the United States and Iran have spiked dramatically in the strategic Strait of Hormuz, after former U.S. President Donald Trump announced a new U.S. military escort mission for commercial shipping through the waterway, prompting Tehran to issue an explicit threat to attack any American forces that enter the strait.

    The current standoff stems from a months-long conflict that has deadlocked diplomatic negotiations since a ceasefire between the U.S.-Israeli coalition and Iran went into effect on April 8. At the heart of the dispute is Iran’s decision to block access to the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global chokepoint that carries a third of the world’s seaborne oil and natural gas exports, along with key supplies of agricultural fertilizer. Iran’s blockade has choked off global energy and commodity flows, while the U.S. has retaliated with its own counter-blockade of Iranian ports.

    On Sunday, Trump took to his social platform Truth Social to unveil the new maritime escort operation, which he branded “Project Freedom”. He framed the mission as a humanitarian intervention, designed to assist hundreds of commercial ships and crews trapped in the Gulf region, many of which are facing dwindling supplies of food and essential provisions. “We will use best efforts to get their Ships and Crews safely out of the Strait. In all cases, they said they will not be returning until the area becomes safe for navigation,” Trump wrote, confirming the operation would get underway on Monday.

    The U.S. leader also noted that his diplomatic representatives were holding constructive talks with Iranian officials, adding that ongoing discussions could yield a mutually beneficial agreement for both sides. Notably, however, he made no public reference to the 14-point peace proposal that Tehran says it submitted last week to end the conflict, which includes a one-month deadline for negotiations to reopen the strait, lift the U.S. blockade, and formally end hostilities, according to U.S. news outlet Axios, which cited two anonymous sources briefed on the Iranian plan.

    Within hours of Trump’s announcement, Iran’s military central command issued a firm rebuke. In a statement carried by Iranian state broadcaster IRIB, Major General Ali Abdollahi emphasized that all safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz must be coordinated with Iranian forces under any circumstances. “We warn that any foreign armed force — especially the aggressive US military — if they intend to approach or enter the Strait of Hormuz, will be targeted and attacked,” Abdollahi said. The Iranian Revolutionary Guards doubled down on the warning Sunday, framing Trump’s choice as a binary one: “an impossible operation or a bad deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

    U.S. Central Command has assembled a large-scale force for the Hormuz mission, including guided-missile destroyers, more than 100 land and sea-based aircraft, advanced multi-domain unmanned surveillance and strike platforms, and 15,000 active-duty service members. As of April 29, maritime intelligence firm AXSMarine recorded more than 900 commercial vessels stuck in the Gulf region amid the ongoing blockade.

    The escalating standoff has sparked deep concern among U.S. European allies, who face major economic damage from prolonged closure of the strait. German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul publicly called for the immediate reopening of the waterway, and in a call with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, Wadephul stressed that Germany supported a negotiated settlement, but insisted “Iran must completely and verifiably renounce nuclear weapons and immediately open the Strait of Hormuz.”

    French President Emmanuel Macron, who has led efforts to organize an international coalition to secure the strait alongside Britain and other partners, said the only viable path forward is “a coordinated reopening by the United States and Iran.”

    Global energy markets have already been roiled by the blockade: current oil prices sit roughly 50 percent higher than pre-conflict levels, driven almost entirely by supply chain disruptions through the strait.

    Trump, who spent the weekend at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, declined to specify what actions would prompt new U.S. military strikes against Iran, but warned that any interference with the humanitarian escort mission would be met with force. “If in any way, this Humanitarian (ship-guiding) process is interfered with, that interference will, unfortunately, have to be dealt with forcefully,” he wrote.

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent doubled down on Washington’s pressure campaign, telling Fox News that the U.S. naval blockade is part of a sweeping economic embargo designed to cripple the Iranian government. “We are suffocating the regime, and they are not able to pay their soldiers,” Bessent said. “This is a real economic blockade, and it is in all parts of government.”