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  • US-Germany spat over Iran intensifies as Hegseth orders troop removal

    US-Germany spat over Iran intensifies as Hegseth orders troop removal

    Diplomatic tensions between the United States and Germany have escalated sharply in recent days, driven by stark public disagreements over Washington’s war on Iran that culminated in the Trump administration’s formal announcement of a 5,000-troop withdrawal from U.S. military bases across Germany.

    The public clash between the two NATO allies began earlier this month when German Chancellor Friedrich Merz launched a series of sharp critiques of U.S. strategy in Iran. Merz argued that the United States has been outmaneuvered by Tehran’s leadership at negotiating tables, going so far as to say that Washington is facing humiliation on the global stage over its handling of the conflict. The chancellor doubled down on his criticism, faulting the U.S. for entering the war without a clear exit strategy – a mistake, he noted, that echoed disastrous past interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq that dragged on for decades.

    “The problem with conflicts like these is always the same: it’s not just about getting in; you also have to get out. We saw that all too painfully in Afghanistan, for 20 years. We saw it in Iraq,” Merz stated publicly last week.

    Merz’s unvarnished criticism drew an immediate furious response from U.S. President Donald Trump, who took to social media to lash out at the German leader earlier this week. “The Chancellor of Germany, Friedrich Merz, thinks it’s OK for Iran to have a Nuclear Weapon. He doesn’t know what he’s talking about!” Trump wrote. Following the verbal rebuke, the president followed through on a previous threat to pull American forces from German territory in retaliation.

    In response to the order issued Friday by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius struck a measured but firm tone Saturday, emphasizing that European nations must now step up to own full responsibility for their own security. Pistorius added that the partial drawdown had long been anticipated by Berlin, noting that Germany already has a roadmap in place to strengthen its own military capabilities.

    For decades, Germany has hosted the largest contingent of U.S. troops deployed in Europe, with current estimates placing the total active-duty force between 35,000 and 40,000. The New York Times, citing unnamed senior U.S. defense officials, underscored the outsize strategic importance of these German bases to U.S. military operations spanning three continents. Key installations including the massive Ramstein Air Base and the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center have played a central logistical and support role for the current war on Iran, as well as previous conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. This means the drawdown could impact Washington’s ability to project power across the Middle East in the coming months.

    Pistorius pushed back against any suggestion that the withdrawal leaves Germany vulnerable, arguing that Berlin is already on the right path to bolster its own defense. Germany currently has plans to expand its active-duty army from 185,000 to 260,000 personnel, accelerate military procurement processes, and upgrade critical defense infrastructure – though even these targets have drawn criticism from observers who say more drastic action is needed to counter perceived growing security threats from Russia.

    The troop withdrawal announcement aligns with Trump’s longstanding position that U.S. allies have taken advantage of American security guarantees for decades. Long before entering politics, as a real estate developer in 1987, Trump spent nearly $100,000 on full-page newspaper advertisements critiquing U.S. foreign policy. At the time, he argued that wealthy U.S. allies such as Japan were failing to compensate the U.S. for the billions of dollars and American lives spent protecting their strategic interests in the Persian Gulf, a region he framed as only marginally important to U.S. oil supplies at the time.

    While all NATO member states have formally pledged to take on greater responsibility for their own territorial defense in recent years, persistent budget constraints and widespread gaps in military capability mean that European allies will likely require years of investment before they can fully meet their own security needs without heavy U.S. support.

  • Old and new Gulf faultlines exposed by Iran war

    Old and new Gulf faultlines exposed by Iran war

    On April 28, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) made a landmark announcement that it would withdraw from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), a move that lays bare how ongoing Middle East conflict has not only deepened hostilities between Iran and its Gulf neighbors, but also fractured unity within the Gulf Cooperation Council itself.

    Founded in 1960, OPEC stands out as one of the few enduringly successful multilateral bodies in the Middle East. For decades, its coordinated pricing and production policies enabled Gulf oil-producing states to accumulate the capital needed to renationalize their energy resources and fund the rapid, transformative development that turned small desert nations into global economic players. The bloc has weathered nearly every regional upheaval, revolution and war in its 65-year history, even after Qatar departed in 2019 amid a regional blockade led by its Gulf neighbors.

    For years, tension has simmered between the UAE and Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest producer and de facto leader, which holds outsized influence over the bloc’s policy decisions. The UAE has long pushed to raise its own production quota, leveraging its untapped spare oil capacity, but repeated attempts have failed to yield changes that align with its economic goals. Yet industry friction alone does not explain the UAE’s decision to exit the organization entirely.

    Though the two Gulf powers maintained close alignment through the mid-2010s, the UAE and Saudi Arabia have drifted steadily apart in recent years, driven by sharp divergences on key regional priorities. Their strategies for ongoing conflicts in Yemen and Sudan differ dramatically, as do their approaches to normalization with Israel: the UAE established full formal relations with Israel in 2020, while Saudi Arabia has pledged it will only normalize ties once an independent Palestinian state is established. Beyond geopolitics, the two nations have emerged as fierce economic competitors, and the ongoing regional war connected to Iran has only accelerated their rivalry.

    After Iran responded to U.S.-Israeli attacks in February with strikes across Gulf states and a blockade of the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the conflict has laid bare the flaws in existing regional strategies. For Saudi Arabia, the war has exposed the limits of its gradual outreach to Iran and its reliance on the U.S., which is firmly aligned with Israel. In response, Riyadh has deepened defense cooperation with nuclear-armed Pakistan, a shift that has caused significant friction with the UAE, which maintains close strategic ties with Pakistan’s regional rival India. The UAE has publicly pushed Pakistan to issue a stronger condemnation of Iran during the current conflict, a demand Islamabad cannot meet due to its role as a neutral mediator in regional peace talks. Frustrated by Pakistan’s position, the UAE recently demanded Islamabad repay a $3.5 billion loan, only for Saudi Arabia to immediately step in with emergency financial support for Pakistan.

    Notably, the UAE’s OPEC withdrawal announcement was timed to coincide with a Gulf Cooperation Council summit in Riyadh, where leaders gathered to try to find common ground on the ongoing Iran conflict. The timing was widely interpreted as a deliberate public snub to Saudi leadership.

    The regional war has reignited a host of long-simmering disputes across the Gulf, including the decades-long sovereignty conflict between the UAE and Iran over three strategic islands: Abu Musa, Greater Tunb, and Lesser Tunb. Iran seized control of the islands in 1971, the same year the UAE gained independence from Britain, and the islands give Iran unrivaled strategic control over Gulf shipping lanes. The UAE has never relinquished its claim to the territory, while Iran maintains the islands have always been part of its sovereign territory. Historians believe the handover of the islands was part of a secret deal between Britain and the Shah of Iran in the early 1970s, in which the Shah agreed to abandon Iran’s long-held claim to Bahrain in exchange for control of the three islands. Access to historical records of these negotiations remains restricted, with multiple freedom of information requests for 1960s-era UK Foreign Office documents denied on national security grounds.

    Beyond the UAE-Saudi and UAE-Iran rifts, the conflict has hit other Gulf states hard. Kuwait, a small northern Gulf state, has faced repeated attacks from Iran-aligned Shia militias based in Iraq, a wave of violence that has revived traumatic memories of Iran-linked political unrest in the 1980s and Saddam Hussein’s 1990 invasion that left much of the country, including coastal Failaka Island, damaged and abandoned.

    Economically, the war has hit Gulf states unevenly. Nations that lack alternative shipping routes to bypass the blockaded Strait of Hormuz – including Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar – have suffered the worst economic damage. Bahrain, which already runs persistent budget deficits, relies on aid from wealthier Gulf neighbors to keep its economy afloat. By contrast, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Oman all have geographic access to alternative shipping routes that allow them to bypass Hormuz entirely. In fact, Oman, which controls one bank of the strait, could emerge as a long-term beneficiary of the disruption: it could earn revenue by charging tolls for alternative shipping routes under a new agreement with Iran, or see its Arabian Sea ports grow in global significance, potentially reviving its historical status as a major regional trading power. That outcome, however, is unwelcome to both the UAE and Saudi Arabia, which prefer to maintain their dominance of Gulf energy shipping.

    In sum, the U.S.-Israeli strike on Iran that triggered the current crisis has reactivated long-buried fault lines across the Gulf and created new divisions between regional states. It has also undermined the few remaining channels for multilateral regional cooperation, turning an already fragmented and volatile region even more unstable. This analysis is by Toby Matthiesen, Senior Lecturer in Global Religious Studies at the University of Bristol, republished with permission from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

  • Donroe Doctrine is becoming everything China feared

    Donroe Doctrine is becoming everything China feared

    On April 28, the U.S. State Department released a joint statement purporting to stand “in solidarity with Panama” after an alleged increase in detentions of Panama-flagged ships at Chinese ports. The statement frames these detentions as a “blatant attempt to politicize maritime trade” — a framing that collapses under scrutiny when examined against the backdrop of recent U.S. and Panamanian actions targeting Chinese-controlled logistics infrastructure across the region. This diplomatic move is just the latest step in a broader, coordinated U.S. geostrategic push that includes blockades of the Strait of Hormuz, new defense partnerships with Indonesia, and aggressive rhetoric targeting China-backed infrastructure projects like Peru’s Port of Chancay.

    Five Latin American and Caribbean nations joined the U.S. as co-signatories: Costa Rica, Bolivia, Paraguay, Guyana, and Trinidad and Tobago. A closer look at this group reveals a deliberate alignment with longstanding U.S. economic and security priorities in the Western Hemisphere, rather than a random collection of like-minded states.

    The irony of the U.S.’s sudden stance on Panama is difficult to overstate. Just a few months prior, Washington executed a coordinated two-pronged campaign to oust Chinese operators from key Panamanian ports: diplomatic coercion through high-stakes bilateral security dialogues, and a politicized legal campaign targeting Chinese concession agreements near the Panama Canal. This effort culminated in a widely expected Panamanian Supreme Court ruling that forced Hong Kong-based port operator CK Hutchinson to exit its operations at the Balboa and Cristobal terminals. The contract was subsequently awarded to a subsidiary of Danish logistics giant Maersk. This history of interference undermines the State Department’s claims of defending neutral maritime trade: even as far back as the Trump administration, U.S. negotiators openly threatened to retake the Panama Canal by force if Washington’s demands were not met, turning hollow the rhetoric about defending Panamanian sovereignty and opposing politicization of trade.

    Breaking down the co-signatories further exposes the strategic logic behind the joint statement. Guyana, one of the world’s fastest-growing producers of high-quality sweet light crude, has attracted major new downstream investment as a result of U.S. blockades of Persian Gulf oil exports. Trinidad and Tobago is a leading regional producer of critical petrochemicals including urea and ammonia. Costa Rica has long been a dependable U.S. ally and hosts the Caribbean’s most technologically advanced commercial port. Paraguay, meanwhile, remains the only South American nation that recognizes Taiwan, a longtime point of alignment with U.S. foreign policy goals.

    The most surprising co-signatory is Bolivia, a landlocked Andean nation that would seem to have no direct stake in Caribbean maritime security. This move makes strategic sense, however, when viewed through the lens of global green energy competition: Bolivia holds the world’s largest proven lithium reserves, a critical mineral for manufacturing electric vehicle batteries and large-scale grid energy storage. Extraction of Bolivian lithium, however, faces major barriers: the country’s brine deposits have an unusually high magnesium-to-lithium ratio, requiring costly, largely unproven extraction technology. There is also the massive logistical challenge of moving extracted lithium hundreds of kilometers over rugged terrain to Pacific ports in neighboring Chile, before shipments travel north through the Panama Canal to reach major consumer markets. These constraints push up the cost of every ton of exported Bolivian lithium dramatically.

    Bolivia’s new President Rodrigo Paz has signaled a clear shift away from the previous socialist government’s partnerships with China and Russia. His recent decision to replace the leadership of state-owned lithium producer Yacimientos de Litio Bolivianos indicates a willingness to scrap existing deals in favor of new agreements with Western capital, provided Western markets offer guaranteed access for Bolivian lithium exports. For Paz’s administration, signing onto the U.S.-led statement framing Panama as a “pillar of our maritime trading system” is a low-cost, transactional diplomatic gesture to curry favor with Washington.

    As a landlocked nation, Bolivia’s ability to become a major lithium export powerhouse depends entirely on access to ports through Chile, its longstanding historical rival that borders the Pacific. Chile already has a thriving, profitable lithium sector of its own, and was the source of Bolivia’s loss of coastline in the 19th century War of the Pacific. By aligning with the U.S. against China’s trade and infrastructure presence in the region, Bolivia is signaling to Chile, Panama, and other Latin American states that it will abide by Washington’s rules of the game in exchange for access to their critical maritime logistics networks.

    This coordinated U.S. diplomatic push in Panama and Bolivia cannot be separated from broader global geostrategic shifts. In the Persian Gulf, the U.S. military has enforced a blockade that blocks most crude oil exports from reaching key Asian markets. At the same time, the State Department has worked aggressively across the Caribbean and Latin America to oust Chinese-owned logistics assets through a mix of diplomatic pressure and politicized legal campaigns. This pattern of activity makes clear that the modern iteration of U.S. dominance in the Western Hemisphere, sometimes called the “Donroe Doctrine” (a updated take on the 19th century Monroe Doctrine), does not aim to benevolently integrate the U.S. and Latin American economies. Instead, its core goal is to redirect global commodity supply chains away from West Asia and back into the Western Hemisphere by establishing U.S.-controlled maritime trade routes.

    While it remains too early to tell whether Washington’s gambit will succeed, the pattern is deliberate: the State Department has actively built a new U.S.-aligned maritime consensus with Latin American countries that produce critical energy, agricultural, logistics, and green mineral inputs, many of which have already rejected recent Chinese investment offers. Any framing of the U.S. as a neutral guardian of free global maritime trade ignores clear, on-the-ground reality: the U.S. military is seizing commercial ships in West Asia to enforce its blockade, while the State Department simultaneously demands that China adhere to Washington’s rules for trade in Central and South America. When the Trump administration abandoned the longstanding Carter Doctrine commitment to secure free trade through the Persian Gulf, the myth of a neutral, free global maritime commons died.

    In the long term, this power play is likely to work to the advantage of China and other coastal emerging economies seeking a more multipolar global order. But in the short term, it has created unprecedented instability in the global maritime trading system — instability that the U.S. State Department is actively exploiting to advance American energy, agricultural, and mining interests across the Western Hemisphere.

  • Stranded whale ‘Timmy’ released into North Sea in dramatic rescue

    Stranded whale ‘Timmy’ released into North Sea in dramatic rescue

    After weeks of a high-stakes, publicly followed ordeal that captured widespread public attention across Germany, a stranded humpback whale affectionately named Timmy has been successfully released into the North Sea off Denmark’s coast, capping a dramatic privately funded rescue operation that defied early skepticism. The massive marine mammal, which first got trapped on a sandbank near Germany’s Baltic coastal city of Luebeck on March 23, was transported to its release site aboard a specially adapted barge. Once the gates of the vessel opened, Timmy pushed out a burst of air through its blowhole before slipping into open water and swimming away under its own power — and early observations confirm the whale is heading in the correct direction toward its natural migratory route. “It has some small injuries, probably from being transported in rough seas, but they are superficial,” explained Karin Walter-Mommert, the horse racing millionaire who co-funded the project alongside another wealthy entrepreneur. “It should now swim up the Norwegian coast toward the Arctic.” The rescue effort was not originally planned as a private initiative: after multiple official attempts to free the whale failed repeatedly, German authorities announced they would abandon the mission, citing low chances of success. That decision prompted Walter-Mommert and her partner to step forward with an ambitious, widely dismissed long-shot plan: guide the exhausted whale into a water-filled hold on a custom-fitted barge, then tow it to deep open waters aligned with the species’ natural migration path. The plan did not go off without controversy, however. A number of marine wildlife experts publicly criticized the privately funded operation, arguing that the stress of capture and transport would do more harm than good, potentially worsening the whale’s already fragile condition. Still, organizers obtained official approval after veterinary specialists confirmed Timmy was healthy enough to survive the journey. Getting the massive whale onto the barge required an extraordinary on-shore engineering effort: rescuers dug a custom channel through the sand to the vessel, then used heavy straps to carefully pull the animal toward the hold, with teams of swimmers guiding it alongside as it moved. The moment Timmy slid into the barge’s water-filled hold drew loud cheers from hundreds of onlookers who had gathered on the shore to follow the days-long operation. This successful release marks the second attempt by the two entrepreneurs to save Timmy — an earlier effort using inflatable cushions and pontoons failed to move the whale, forcing the team to pivot to the barge strategy. For weeks, Timmy’s struggle dominated headlines across Germany, earning non-stop coverage from national television networks, online news outlets and social media creators, turning the stranded whale into a national viral sensation. But the high-profile saga has also been marked by division: it has sparked heated public spats over rescue strategy and spawned a wave of unsubstantiated conspiracy theories about how the young humpback ended up off course in the Baltic Sea in the first place. As of Saturday afternoon, the rescue team reported Timmy was continuing to swim steadily north, in what is being widely celebrated as an unexpected success for the risky, volunteer-led effort.

  • Ex-F1 driver turned Paralympic champion Zanardi dies

    Ex-F1 driver turned Paralympic champion Zanardi dies

    Italian sporting icon Alex Zanardi, whose remarkable career transitioned from Formula One racing to Paralympic gold-medal success after a life-altering accident, has passed away at the age of 59, his family confirmed in an official statement Saturday.

    Widely regarded as one of Italy’s most beloved and influential athletes, Zanardi died on Friday evening. In the announcement shared via Obiettivo3, the non-profit organization he founded, his family shared that he died suddenly, yet peacefully, while surrounded by loved ones.

    Zanardi’s extraordinary life was marked by repeated battles against adversity. His first catastrophic crash came in 2001 during a CART race at Germany’s Lausitzring circuit. After a spin left his car stalled on the track, another vehicle traveling at over 300 kilometers per hour collided with him, resulting in the amputation of both of his legs. Rather than ending his athletic career, the accident paved the way for a second chapter that would inspire millions around the globe.

    Prior to that 2001 incident, Zanardi had already built an impressive motorsports resume. He competed in Formula One for teams including Jordan, Minardi and Lotus in the early 1990s before moving to the United States to race in the CART championship, where he claimed back-to-back series titles in 1997 and 1998. He returned to F1 with Williams in 1999 before going back to North America to continue his CART career.

    Following his amputation, Zanardi rebuilt his life as a Paralympic athlete, earning four Paralympic gold medals: two in cycling at the 2012 London Games, and two more at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games. Beyond his competitive success, he was widely credited with shifting public perception of disability across Italy, breaking down stigma and showing what disabled athletes could achieve.

    Six years before his death, in June 2020, Zanardi suffered a second devastating crash when his handbike collided with an oncoming truck during a road race in Tuscany. He sustained severe traumatic brain injuries in the accident and spent 18 months in care before returning to his home.

    Tributes have poured in from across the global sporting and political community following news of his death. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni praised Zanardi as a great champion and an extraordinary human being, noting he turned every life challenge into a lesson in courage, strength and human dignity. Cordiano Dagnoni, president of the Italian Cycling Federation, added that Zanardi transformed the country’s cultural understanding of disability, bringing joy to those who met him and hope to countless people across Italy and the world. A minute of silence will be held at all Italian cycling races this weekend to honor his legacy.

    Born in Bologna in October 1966, Zanardi is survived by his wife Daniela and his son Niccolo.

  • Humpback whale stranded in Germany released into North Sea: media

    Humpback whale stranded in Germany released into North Sea: media

    A humpback whale that captured public attention after repeated strandings near Germany’s northern coast has been successfully released into the North Sea off the Danish coastline following a last-ditch, privately funded rescue mission, a member of the operation has confirmed to AFP.

    Named ‘Timmy’ by German media outlets, the large marine mammal first drew rescuers’ eyes on March 23, when it was found trapped on a shallow sandbank close to the Baltic coastal city of Luebeck. After briefly freeing itself from the sandbar, the whale became stranded again multiple times in the following weeks, leaving rescue teams scrambling to find a viable solution.

    By early April, German government wildlife officials had formally abandoned official rescue efforts, concluding that the whale’s condition made survival impossible and that intervention would do more harm than good. That decision, however, sparked immediate public outcry across the country, putting pressure on authorities to reverse course. Ultimately, officials granted approval for an unconventional rescue plan put forward by two wealthy German entrepreneurs, who agreed to cover all costs of the operation themselves.

    The team’s first attempt to re-float Timmy, which relied on inflatable cushions and floating pontoons to lift the whale off the sandbank, failed to produce the desired result. That setback led rescuers to pivot to a new strategy: transporting the animal on a specialized covered barge from its stranding site near Wismar Bay on Germany’s Baltic coast to open waters in the North Sea.

    According to Karin Walter-Mommert, a spokesperson for the rescue initiative, Timmy exited the barge at approximately 8:45 a.m. local time (0645 GMT) on Saturday. In an update after the release, she confirmed the whale is now swimming independently in open water, and is heading in the correct direction toward deeper migratory routes, at least in the immediate aftermath of the release.

    The high-stakes rescue effort was controversial from its inception. Many marine biologists and wildlife experts criticized the plan, arguing that the long transport and intervention would only subject the already weakened animal to additional unnecessary stress, and called the effort a low-probability long shot.

    Timmy’s weeks-long ordeal has turned the stranded whale into a national media sensation in Germany and across much of Northern Europe. Major television networks have run non-stop live coverage of the stranding and rescue efforts, digital news outlets have published constant updates, and social media influencers have shared content tracking the whale’s status with millions of followers. The intense public interest has also come with conflict: it has sparked heated public arguments between supporters of the rescue and critical experts, and given rise to a wave of unfounded conspiracy theories about the incident and the motivations behind the private operation.

  • Spirit Airlines shutting down after rescue talks collapse

    Spirit Airlines shutting down after rescue talks collapse

    Ultra-low-cost carrier Spirit Airlines has permanently ceased operations after negotiations for a $500 million emergency bailout from the Trump administration collapsed, ending months of frantic efforts to stave off bankruptcy. The carrier announced on its official website Saturday that it was initiating an immediate, orderly wind-down of all business activities, a decision it described as being made with “great disappointment.”

    The airline’s collapse comes after years of financial instability, marking its second trip through bankruptcy protection in less than a decade. Spirit had just begun restructuring under its most recent insolvency proceedings, cutting route capacity and shrinking its fleet, when the outbreak of U.S.-Israeli military strikes in Iran sent global jet fuel prices skyrocketing. Industry analysts note that fuel costs typically account for up to 40% of a commercial airline’s total operating expenses, and prices have doubled since strikes began in late February. This sudden, dramatic cost increase pushed the already teetering carrier over the edge.

    All future Spirit flights have been canceled immediately, and the airline confirmed it will not issue direct refunds to customers holding unused tickets. Passengers seeking compensation are advised to file claims through their credit card issuers instead. The carrier has also suspended all customer service operations effective Saturday.

    Savanthi Syth, senior airline analyst at investment bank Raymond James, called the Iran-driven fuel price surge the “final nail in the coffin” for Spirit. Speaking to the BBC, Syth explained that the airline failed to implement the deep, transformative restructuring it needed during its 2024 bankruptcy process. Even before the conflict escalated in the Middle East, Syth noted, Spirit’s long-term viability was already in doubt. She added, “If it wasn’t for the fuel scenario, they would have been okay through the summer, beyond the summer I would have said it was still precarious.”

    Spirit’s leadership expressed confidence as recently as late April that a government rescue deal would be finalized imminently. But the proposed plan, which would have given the U.S. government an effective 90% ownership stake in the airline, faced fierce pushback from multiple fronts: Wall Street investors, Congressional lawmakers, and even a member of Trump’s own cabinet. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy told Reuters that a bailout would amount to throwing “good money after bad.”

    After negotiations fell apart, Trump told CBS, a BBC partner, on Friday that the airline had been extended a “final proposal” to remain operational. Spirit’s collapse comes amid a broader crisis rocking the global aviation industry, as carriers across the world scramble to adapt to spiking fuel costs. Many have responded by cutting route capacity or raising ticket fares to offset higher expenses. The crisis has also sparked broader supply chain fears: the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA) has warned that Europe could face a total jet fuel shortage in as little as six weeks if current conditions hold.

  • Ukraine is hitting oil facilities deep inside Russia. Soaring fuel prices could blunt the impact

    Ukraine is hitting oil facilities deep inside Russia. Soaring fuel prices could blunt the impact

    Over the course of the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict, Ukraine has dramatically expanded its deep-strike capabilities, launching a sustained campaign of long-range drone attacks against key Russian oil infrastructure hundreds and even thousands of kilometers behind the front lines. The explicit strategic goal of these strikes is to cut off Moscow’s primary source of war funding: global oil exports, a linchpin that has sustained Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    Recent months have seen a sharp uptick in these attacks, targeting critical energy hubs across vast swathes of Russian territory. In just over two weeks, the Black Sea coastal town of Tuapse, located 280 miles from the Ukrainian front lines, has endured four separate drone assaults on its major oil refinery and export terminal. Each strike has ignited massive infernos that forced local evacuations, sending plumes of smoke large enough to be visible from outer space. After the third attack on April 18, local emergency officials confirmed that superheated oil products spilled onto residential streets, damaging dozens of civilian vehicles. Further inland, Ukraine confirmed it carried out back-to-back strikes on an oil pumping station in Russia’s Perm region, nearly 900 miles from Ukrainian borders – a distance that underscores the rapid advancement of Ukraine’s domestic drone program. Russian officials have only acknowledged that unspecified industrial facilities were hit, declining to share further details. These attacks are not isolated: in late March, Ust-Luga, one of Russia’s largest Baltic Sea oil and gas export terminals situated more than 500 miles from Ukraine, was struck three times in a single week. In the wake of that assault, regional governor Alexander Drozdenko made the unprecedented admission that the area surrounding St. Petersburg, Russia’s second-largest city, now qualifies as a “front-line region” due to constant aerial threats.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has framed these strikes as a parallel effort to international sanctions targeting Russia’s war economy. He argues the campaign has grown even more urgent amid the global energy market upheaval triggered by the Iran conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which has generated massive windfall profits for Russian oil exporters. Zelenskyy estimates that Russia has suffered direct losses of at least $7 billion from oil infrastructure attacks since the start of 2024, noting that exports from key terminals including Ust-Luga and Primorsk have already dropped. Independent experts add that alongside disrupting export routes, the strikes have eroded Russia’s domestic oil refining capacity – a problem compounded by existing international sanctions that make it nearly impossible for Moscow to source replacement parts for damaged infrastructure.

    Yet the full economic impact of the campaign remains uncertain, as global market shifts have worked in Russia’s favor. Data from the International Energy Agency shows that Russian crude and oil product exports rose by 320,000 barrels per day month-over-month in March 2024, hitting a total of 7.1 million barrels daily. Soaring global oil prices pushed export revenues nearly double between February and March, jumping from $9.7 billion to $19 billion. It remains unclear whether the more recent April strikes will alter this upward trajectory. Chris Weafer, CEO of the international consultancy Macro-Advisory Ltd, notes that geopolitical tensions around Iran have unexpectedly propped up Russia’s energy sector and federal budget, pulling it back from a financial crisis that was emerging in late February. Weafer also adds that the visible damage from strikes is often less severe than the dramatic footage suggests: attacks on partially filled oil storage tanks produce spectacular fires from ignited vapors, but typically only delay deliveries by a few days, rather than destroying critical pumping or loading infrastructure that is far better protected than above-ground storage tanks.

    Militarily, the strikes have demonstrated just how far Ukraine’s domestic drone program has advanced since the start of the full-scale invasion in 2022. Ukraine’s Defense Ministry confirms the country has more than doubled the range of its deep-strike capabilities over the past two years, allowing drones to approach targets from multiple directions and significantly complicate Russian air defense efforts. Marcel Plichta, a security researcher at the University of St. Andrews, notes that this level of long-range domestic strike capability simply did not exist for Ukraine just four years ago. “Drone attacks have so far been a very successful case of leveraging simple, domestically assembled technology to attack Russia in places that, at the start of the war, they just would have never expected to be attacked,” Plichta explained.

    Beyond military and economic outcomes, the strikes have already brought severe, lasting environmental damage that is forcing ordinary Russians far from the front lines to confront the realities of the war. In Tuapse, a popular Black Sea tourist destination, officials confirmed dangerous levels of the carcinogen benzene were detected in the air during active fires, urging residents to stay indoors. Local residents have widely reported so-called “black rain” – oily, toxic droplets that stain skin, clothing and infrastructure. Local media has shared graphic footage of stray animals with fur stained gray by oil residue, while oil spills along the coastline have coated marine life, and photos of oil-covered beached dolphins have circulated widely across Russian social media.

    Vladimir Slivyak, co-chair of Russian environmental NGO Ecodefense, warned that the damage will have decades-long consequences for both human health and the regional ecosystem. “There is a lot of oil in the sea,” Slivyak said. “In the next few years, every storm will be bringing more oil pollution onto the coast.”

    So far, widespread public backlash against the war has not emerged, as Russian authorities continue a sweeping crackdown on anti-war dissent. But Slivyak argues that the visible, personal impact of these strikes is eroding trust in official government messaging. “I think a lot of people understand that there is a very big difference between what Putin says and what regional authorities are saying, and what’s really going on,” he noted.

  • Africa’s cellphone towers turn to solar as diesel costs surge

    Africa’s cellphone towers turn to solar as diesel costs surge

    Global market volatility triggered by the Iran conflict has sent diesel prices soaring across Africa, creating new urgency for an already unfolding transition in the continent’s telecommunications sector: moving hundreds of thousands of cellphone towers from fossil fuel-powered generators to solar energy systems.

    At present, roughly 500,000 telecommunications towers across Africa depend on diesel to stay operational. In recent weeks, global fuel supplies have tightened dramatically following the outbreak of conflict in the Middle East, leaving many import-dependent African nations grappling with steep price hikes and intermittent supply shortages. These disruptions have forced both national governments and private telecom operators to reevaluate long-held energy strategies.

    While the move toward renewable energy for telecom infrastructure predates the latest price shocks, driven by years of steady cost pressures and global climate action commitments, industry leaders confirm the Iran conflict has drastically speed up the transition timeline. “Diesel has always been a major cost, but recent global events have made it even more volatile,” explained Lande Abudu, senior Africa energy specialist at GSMA, the global industry body representing mobile network operators. “That strengthens the case for solar and hybrid solutions immeasurably.”

    Across the continent, operators are rapidly rolling out hybrid energy systems that pair solar panels with large-scale battery storage, retaining only small diesel generators for rare, extended periods of low sunlight. Many providers have set long-term targets to transition all their rural and off-grid tower sites — where extending national power infrastructure is prohibitively expensive — to full solar operation.

    Unlike most developed markets, where the vast majority of telecom towers are connected to centralized national electricity grids (with diesel only reserved as backup for outages), Africa’s underdeveloped grid infrastructure has left the sector almost entirely dependent on standalone diesel generators for decades. These large industrial units require regular manual refueling, exposing operators to logistical challenges, theft, and maintenance costs. Similar diesel-reliant transitions are now underway in parts of Southeast Asia such as Indonesia, but Africa’s shift stands out for its scale and potential transformative impact.

    Recent major industry investments underscore the accelerating momentum. Last month, U.S.-owned Atlas Tower Kenya announced a $52.5 million investment to build 300 new purpose-built solar-powered telecom towers, serving leading regional operators including Safaricom, Airtel and Telkom Kenya. Currently, 82% of the firm’s existing 500 towers already run on solar, a benchmark many industry peers are now working to match.

    The economic case for transitioning has become increasingly compelling in recent years, even before the latest global price shock. For off-grid tower sites, energy costs can account for as much as 60% of total operating expenses, and diesel’s long-term price trend has consistently trended upward, compounded by local challenges from poor transport infrastructure to fuel theft.

    Vodacom Africa, which operates across six African nations and holds subsidiary stakes in Kenya and Ethiopia through Safaricom, reported a 5% year-over-year rise in total energy costs to $300 million in 2025, driven by higher fuel and electricity tariffs. In response, Safaricom raised $153.6 million in green bonds last year specifically to fund its tower transition to solar. In Nigeria, where government removed long-standing fuel subsidies in 2023, diesel prices have already jumped as much as 200% in a single year, leaving operators paying $400 million annually just to keep diesel-powered towers online. The latest price increases tied to the Iran conflict have added even more pressure to move quickly.

    Telecom firms across the continent are responding by scaling up clean energy deployment at an unprecedented rate. Local firm iSAT Africa is rolling out solar-powered towers supported by innovative green financing models, while regional giants including Orange, Vodacom, MTN Group and Airtel Africa are expanding solar and hybrid systems across their entire network footprints. “By replacing diesel-powered telecom towers with fully solar-powered infrastructure, we expect to reduce the carbon emissions associated with mobile network operations,” iSAT Africa CEO Rakesh Kukreja said in March while announcing new funding for the projects.

    Early data from completed transitions already shows significant cost and operational gains. MTN’s operations in South Africa have cut total fuel spending by roughly 30% after switching to solar, while Airtel Africa, in partnership with ENGIE Energy Access, has reduced diesel consumption by more than 50% at its tower sites in Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. For Vodacom Africa, connecting towers to national grids where possible and expanding solar and battery storage sits at the core of its 2025 sustainability and operational strategy, company documents show.

    Beyond cost savings, the transition delivers major improvements to network reliability, a critical benefit for underserved rural communities. Solar-powered systems are far less vulnerable to the fuel shortages and generator breakdowns that have long plagued diesel-reliant networks. Even before the latest conflict, regular outages tied to fuel shortages in parts of northern Nigeria and Congo disrupted everything from mobile money transactions to life-saving emergency communications.

    GSMA data estimates that the shift to solar could help close Africa’s persistent digital connectivity gap, where roughly 65% of people who could access life-changing mobile internet remain unconnected. “Renewable energy systems enable faster and more cost-effective expansion into underserved areas,” Abudu noted.

    On the ground in rural off-grid communities in northern Kenya, residents are already seeing tangible improvements. “Before this telecommunication mast was installed, we struggled to process mobile money payment or even call for help during medical emergencies,” said Martin Imwatok, a local teacher. “When these towers go off, business and life stop.”

    Africa’s uniquely high reliance on diesel, driven by underdeveloped grid infrastructure, makes the transition more complex than in other regions — but also means it carries far greater transformative potential. Regulators across the continent are now exploring ways to amplify the benefits of the shift; in Nigeria, the national telecom regulator has encouraged operators to integrate solar-powered towers into local solar minigrids that can supply electricity to nearby communities as well.

    “These telecom towers can act as anchor clients for solar minigrids, supplying electricity not only to the towers but also to nearby homes, businesses and public services,” explained Aminu Maida, head of the Nigerian Communications Commission.

    With global fuel prices set to remain volatile amid ongoing Middle East tensions, industry experts say the case for renewable energy for Africa’s telecom sector will only grow stronger. “This is no longer just about climate,” Abudu said. “It’s about resilience, cost and keeping Africa connected.”

    This reporting from The Associated Press on climate and environment receives financial support from multiple private foundations, with AP retaining full editorial control over all content.

  • ‘This tree was planted by my ancestor hundreds of years ago and my family settled here’

    ‘This tree was planted by my ancestor hundreds of years ago and my family settled here’

    On the windswept Atlantic coast of Ghana, in the quiet fishing town of Apam, an unassuming tree rises from rust-red clay, anchoring a story of migration, resilience, and intergenerational memory that stretches back further than most written records of the region. Tucked between two defining monuments of Ghana’s layered colonial and post-colonial history, the tree — called Santseo, meaning “Under” in the local Fanti language, for the shade it has offered communities for centuries — is barely noticed by daily passersby. But for one extended Ghanaian family, it is far more than a feature of the landscape: it is the living anchor of their identity.

    Oral tradition passed down through the Wilberforce family traces Santseo’s planting to the 13th century, when a small group of travelers led by Nana Asumbia, a royal spiritual leader from the Akwamu Kingdom’s historic capital of Akwamufie, set out on a westward journey along the coast. Though the exact cause of the group’s departure from Akwamufie has been lost to time, family accounts passed from generation to generation preserve the unique ritual Asumbia followed to choose the group’s new home: the travelers carried a sapling with them, and planted it wherever they paused. If the young tree took root and survived after several days, they knew they had found their permanent settlement. If it died, they continued onward.

    The tree species Asumbia chose was no accident. Today identified as *Piliostigma thonningii* — commonly called camel’s foot or monkey bread tree — it is a hardy, drought-resistant species native to much of sub-Saharan Africa, valued across the continent for its medicinal leaves and bark, its wide cooling canopy, and its ability to thrive in poor, harsh conditions where other species fail. For a nomadic community searching for a place to put down roots, the species’ legendary resilience made it the perfect symbol of their own journey.

    The group’s first stop after leaving Akwamufie was in what is now central Accra’s Otublohum neighborhood, around the site of the modern General Post Office. The sapling they planted there survived, and descendants of that first group still live in the area today. But the journey continued west, and the travelers next paused near Gomoa Buduburam along the Accra-Winneba highway, where they planted a second sapling. This time, the young tree did not survive. The group took this as a sign they had not yet reached their destination, and moved on once again.

    Their final stop came after a chance encounter in the coastal forest, according to oral history. A royal hunter named Inhune Akubuha from Gomoa Asin had wounded an elephant, which fled into the bush before collapsing. When he tracked the dead animal to its final resting place in what is now Apam, he called the traveling group to the spot. It was here that Asumbia planted her third sapling. Days later, when the tree sprouted new growth and took root in the red coastal soil, the group settled. Centuries later, the tree still stands, and the family built their home directly around it, naming the property Santsiwadzi in Santseo’s honor.

    Today, Santseo occupies a unique space between two eras of Ghana’s documented history: on one side sits Fort Patience, a Dutch trading fort completed in 1697 during the transatlantic gold and slave trade, when the region was known as the Gold Coast; on the other stands Apam’s Methodist Church, a monument to the spread of Christianity across Ghana’s coast in the centuries after European arrival. Yet according to family tradition, Santseo predates both structures by hundreds of years, making it a rare living marker of pre-colonial African history that outlasted the arrival of European powers and the transformation of local belief systems.

    As Christianity spread across Apam, the family that cares for Santseo donated the land on which the Methodist Church now stands. Over time, the tree’s traditional spiritual significance faded, as community members avoided being labeled idolaters for maintaining the old traditions. What remains is not a shrine, but a living memory: a connection to the ancestors who founded the community. Even so, tensions persist around preserving the tree: any extra care or maintenance is often misinterpreted as a return to old ritual practices, leaving the family to walk a careful line between honoring their history and adapting to modern beliefs.

    Roughly 40 years ago, members of the extended family reconnected with their ancestral roots in Akwamufie, making the journey east back to the kingdom their ancestors left centuries earlier. Oral tradition in Akwamufie had preserved the story of the traveling group for generations, with a repeated prophecy that they would one day return. The reunion was an emotional occasion, and a family member was installed as Nana Asumbia II, the new Queen Mother, mending the centuries-long divide between the two communities.

    Today, Apam’s rhythm is still shaped by the Atlantic Ocean that frames its coast. Fishermen haul nets to shore before dawn, children walk past Santseo on their way home from school along paths their grandparents and great-grandparents used, and every Tuesday, the town observes a long-held sacred tradition: no fishing boats leave the shore, and a gentle stillness falls over the coast, broken only by the quiet roll of the Atlantic.

    Santseo still stands through it all, its branches gnarled and shaped by centuries of salt wind and coastal storm, still rooted in the same red clay where Asumbia planted it so long ago. It has survived the rise and fall of kingdoms, the arrival of colonial powers, the transformation of local beliefs, and the slow passage of centuries. A guide for a displaced community, a source of shade and medicine, and a living archive of unwritten African history, the question Nana Asumbia asked when she planted the sapling all those years ago — will this tree take root? — still has the same clear answer, centuries later: yes.