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  • Israel ‘sent advanced laser defence system to UAE’ during Iran war

    Israel ‘sent advanced laser defence system to UAE’ during Iran war

    Against the backdrop of open conflict between the US-Israeli bloc and Iran that has roiled the Persian Gulf since February, new details have emerged of deepening military cooperation between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, the Financial Times revealed in a report published Thursday. Two anonymous sources familiar with the deployment confirmed to the outlet that Israel has transferred a modified variant of its domestically developed Iron Beam laser defense system to Abu Dhabi, as the UAE braces for continued drone and missile attacks from Iranian forces.

    Iron Beam, which entered operational service with the Israeli military only in December 2025, is engineered to intercept low-altitude, short-range threats including rockets and unmanned aerial vehicles — exactly the type of projectiles that have formed the bulk of Iran’s cross-region retaliatory attacks. Alongside the high-powered laser system, the FT report adds that Israel also supplied the UAE with Spectro, a compact advanced surveillance platform capable of detecting incoming unmanned aerial threats from distances of up to 20 kilometers.

    This latest weapons transfer builds on a previous deployment reported last month by Axios, which revealed that Israel had already sent a complete Iron Dome air defense battery to the Gulf nation, accompanied by dozens of trained Israeli personnel to operate the system. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu personally authorized the deployment of the battery, which includes both interceptor missiles and specialized support staff. One insider told the FT that the number of Israeli troops deployed on the ground in the UAE is “not small”, confirming a substantial and ongoing Israeli military presence in the country. Beyond weapons systems, the report notes that Israel has also maintained continuous real-time intelligence sharing with Emirati authorities for the full duration of the conflict, helping the UAE anticipate and respond to incoming attacks.

    Iranian officials have previously stated to Middle East Eye that they view the UAE as an active participant in the US-Israeli war campaign against Tehran, a claim that aligns with the scope of military cooperation now coming to light. The two countries first normalized diplomatic relations in 2020 under the US-brokered Abraham Accords, and have steadily expanded their strategic, economic and defense ties in the years since that agreement. That partnership has grown exponentially since the United States and Israel launched a major bombing campaign against Iranian targets in February. In response, Tehran launched a wave of retaliatory strikes targeting US, Israeli and allied assets across the Middle East, with the UAE emerging as one of the most heavily targeted nations in the region.

    Emirati officials confirm Iran has fired approximately 550 ballistic and cruise missiles, plus more than 2,200 drones at targets across the UAE. While the vast majority of these incoming projectiles have been intercepted, falling debris from failed attacks has caused significant damage across major population and economic centers including Abu Dhabi, Dubai, the Burj Al Arab luxury hotel, the Palm Jumeirah development, Dubai International Airport and the Fujairah oil industrial hub.

    Israeli and Emirati officials have publicly acknowledged that the two countries have coordinated closely on both military and political strategy since the outbreak of hostilities. Beyond supplying defense systems, the Israeli Air Force has also conducted pre-emptive strikes against short-range missile launch sites in southern Iran to prevent projectiles from being fired at the UAE and other neighboring Gulf states. Tensions escalated further in mid-March when Iran’s critical South Pars gas field, a cornerstone of the country’s energy infrastructure, was hit by airstrikes. Tehran responded with another wave of strikes across the Gulf, targeting hotels, airports, data centers, ports and US diplomatic missions across the region.

    A temporary ceasefire between the United States and Iran went into effect last month, halting large-scale offensive hostilities and reopening diplomatic negotiations. As of the latest reports, those talks have not yet yielded any major breakthrough toward a lasting peace deal, leaving the region in a fragile state of heightened alert.

  • What alternatives do Gulf states have to the Strait of Hormuz?

    What alternatives do Gulf states have to the Strait of Hormuz?

    Two months have passed since the outbreak of conflict between Iran and other regional actors, and the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most critical energy trade chokepoint, remains largely closed to commercial vessel traffic. Shipping volumes have plummeted to a tiny fraction of pre-war levels, and a chaotic sequence of temporary ceasefires, shifting blockades and repeated re-closures since February 28 have done nothing to restore confidence among commercial tanker crews and shipping operators.

    For decades, global energy analysts and policymakers have recognized the strait as a linchpin of international commodity trade. On a typical day before the conflict, it accommodated around 20 million barrels of crude oil and refined petroleum products, alongside roughly 20% of the world’s total liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports. It also carries one-third of global helium supplies and a comparable share of urea, the key input for global agricultural fertilizer production.

    Plans to diversify trade routes away from the strait have been in development for decades, but the ongoing conflict has put these alternative bypass systems under unprecedented stress. Currently, the existing alternative infrastructure is delivering between 3.5 million and 5.5 million barrels of crude oil per day, matching the rough performance projections that planners outlined decades ago. Even so, this output falls drastically short of compensating for the lost capacity from the closed strait.

    The single most critical bypass pipeline in operation today is Saudi Arabia’s East-West Pipeline, also widely known as Petroline. Originally constructed in the 1980s during the original Tanker War, when Iran and Iraq targeted commercial shipping across the Persian Gulf amid their broader armed conflict, the pipeline was upgraded in 2019 to an emergency maximum capacity of 7 million barrels per day. However, the oil loading terminals at Yanbu, Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coastal hub, were never engineered to handle such high volumes at speed, and independent analysts tracking tanker movements report that current throughput is far below the theoretical maximum capacity.

    From Yanbu, most crude bound for European markets must then pass through Egypt’s Sumed Pipeline, which has a total capacity of just 2.5 million barrels per day. While flows through Sumed have surged 150% since the conflict began, its limited size remains a hard cap on additional energy supplies reaching Europe.

    Iran has been acutely aware of Petroline’s geostrategic importance to global energy markets, and has targeted the infrastructure accordingly. In April, an Iranian drone strike on one of the pipeline’s key pumping stations took 700,000 barrels per day of capacity offline. State-owned operator Saudi Aramco managed to restore full operations within three days, a timeline that has reassured markets, but the attack itself underscores the persistent vulnerability of even the most robust bypass infrastructure.

    The second major component of the Gulf’s bypass network runs through the United Arab Emirates: the Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline (Adcop), which connects the Habshan oil fields to Fujairah on the UAE’s Gulf of Oman coast, making it the only major bypass route that exits the Persian Gulf directly into the Indian Ocean. Adcop has a maximum capacity of just under 2 million barrels per day, but it has faced the same security threats as Petroline. Iranian drone strikes targeting Fujairah on March 3, 14 and 16 ignited storage tank fires and forced a full suspension of loading operations. While Adcop does offer limited route diversification for UAE oil exports, it does not resolve the core vulnerability of bypass infrastructure to targeted attacks.

    For other major Gulf energy producers, the situation is far more bleak. Before the conflict, Iraq exported 3.4 million barrels of crude per day, almost all of which moved through the southern port of Basra and across the Strait of Hormuz. Iraq’s only alternative route is a northern pipeline connecting the Kirkuk oil fields to the Turkish Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. The pipeline was only reopened in September 2025 following a two-and-a-half-year shutdown, and flows were only ramped up to 250,000 barrels per day this March – a volume that is negligible compared to the export capacity Iraq has lost since the strait closed.

    Kuwait faces an even more critical crisis. Pre-war crude exports hit roughly 2 million barrels per day, and every barrel transited the Strait of Hormuz. The country has no operational pipeline alternative. State-owned Kuwait Petroleum Corporation declared force majeure in March, a legal move that allows it to suspend contractual delivery obligations, and extended that declaration on April 20. The company has confirmed it cannot meet delivery commitments even if the strait reopens immediately, noting that restoring damaged production infrastructure and ramping output back up will take months of work.

    Qatar’s vulnerability follows a different pattern. The country’s pre-war crude exports were far smaller than its Gulf neighbors, at around 600,000 barrels per day, all of which transited the strait. But Qatar’s global importance lies in natural gas: its 77 million tonne per year LNG export complex at Ras Laffan is the largest in the world, accounting for roughly 19% of global LNG trade. There is no alternative route for this LNG, which must all pass through the Strait of Hormuz to reach global markets.

    Even Iran itself has been unable to effectively use its own purpose-built Hormuz bypass. The country completed a 1,000-kilometer pipeline from Goreh at the top of the Persian Gulf to a new export terminal at Jask on the Gulf of Oman, designed to carry 1 million barrels per day. But years of international sanctions and unfinished terminal construction have left actual throughput at a tiny fraction of design capacity. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimated that in summer 2024, less than 70,000 barrels per day were flowing through the pipeline, and all loadings stopped that September. Data from global shipping analytics firm Kpler shows only one tanker has loaded crude at Jask since the conflict began, carrying roughly 2 million barrels of oil total.

    Calls for new pipeline construction to bypass Hormuz, which have grown louder since the conflict began, are understandable on their face. But building new infrastructure is not a viable near-term solution. Replacing the strait’s capacity with a new network of pipelines would cost hundreds of billions of dollars and require at least a decade of construction. Even once complete, any new pipelines and terminals built at Yanbu, Fujairah or other locations would face the exact same vulnerability to drone strikes that existing bypass infrastructure faces today.

  • Israel to pour $730m into propaganda as Gaza genocide, Iran war turns it into pariah

    Israel to pour $730m into propaganda as Gaza genocide, Iran war turns it into pariah

    Against a backdrop of mounting international fury over its military campaign in Gaza and expanding hostilities across Western Asia, Israel has greenlit a near three-quarters-of-a-billion-dollar surge in state-funded propaganda spending, a dramatic bid to reverse its rapidly collapsing global standing. The allocation, approved by Israeli lawmakers as part of the 2026 national budget in March, sets aside $730 million for hasbara – the official term for Israel’s state-directed public diplomacy and influence operations. This marks an extraordinary five-fold jump from the previous year’s $150 million allocation, which itself was already 20 times higher than pre-2023 spending levels.

    The scale of the budget increase, first revealed by the *Jerusalem Post* earlier this week, lays bare the urgency of Israel’s push to contain growing global condemnation and its rapid slide toward pariah status in international affairs. The PR overhaul comes as Israel grapples with a cascading series of crises that extend far beyond the Gaza conflict: rising global recognition of its apartheid regime in the occupied West Bank, intensifying scrutiny over long-rumored links between Israeli intelligence agency Mossad and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, and widespread anger over allegations that Israel pushed the United States into a confrontation with Iran that has triggered global economic instability and humanitarian ripple effects far beyond the Middle East.

    Israel currently faces diplomatic and public opinion isolation at depths unmatched since the country’s founding, according to a recent analysis from Tel Aviv’s Institute for National Security Studies (INSS). This worsening isolation comes as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is the subject of an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court, charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity stemming from operations in Gaza, while the state of Israel is defending itself against formal genocide accusations at the International Court of Justice.

    A core target of the new propaganda push is shifting public sentiment in the United States, Israel’s most critical long-standing ally, where polling shows support for the country is eroding rapidly across demographic and political lines. A Pew Research Center survey released in April found that 60 percent of Americans now hold unfavorable views of Israel – a sharp uptick over just 12 months – while positive approval has dropped to 37 percent. This shift cuts across every major demographic: a majority of Republicans under 50 now view Israel negatively, while support has fallen among Black Protestants, Catholics, religiously unaffiliated Americans, and even among American Jewish communities, where backing has slipped below two-thirds.

    To implement the expanded influence campaign, Israel’s Foreign Ministry has dramatically expanded its messaging infrastructure. Under Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar, a new dedicated unit has been created specifically to shape global narratives about Israel’s actions. The government has earmarked tens of millions of dollars for targeted digital outreach, including a $50 million push for social media advertising across major global platforms, and roughly $40 million to host hundreds of foreign delegations ranging from sitting politicians and religious leaders to social media influencers and university presidents. A centralized “media war room” now monitors coverage from hundreds of international news outlets and tracks thousands of daily mentions of Israel across global media and social platforms.

    The campaign also extends to political consulting and AI-driven targeted outreach: the Foreign Ministry signed a $1.5 million per month contract with a firm linked to former Donald Trump campaign strategist Brad Parscale to deploy artificial intelligence tools to shape online discourse. Additional funds have been directed to evangelical Christian networks and influencer campaigns managed through private public relations firms.

    The surge in hasbara spending aligns with growing alarm within Israel’s national security and policy establishment over the country’s deepening international isolation. The recent INSS paper warns that Israel is facing diplomatic and public opinion isolation “not seen since its establishment”, highlighting the emergence of a “creeping economic boycott” as businesses and academic institutions around the world increasingly cut formal ties with Israeli partners. To counter this trend, INSS researchers have called on the Israeli government to ramp up engagement with diaspora Jewish communities and Christian Zionist networks. Proposals put forward include expanding youth travel programs to bring tens of thousands of young Jews and Christians to Israel annually, and a renewed push to build influence within global higher education. The report also recommends creating a $100 million fund to support Israeli research and launching a program to invite leaders of top global universities to visit Israel, with the goal of shoring up institutional partnerships.

  • An angry crowd riots outside Australian hospital treating suspect in 5-year-old girl’s death

    An angry crowd riots outside Australian hospital treating suspect in 5-year-old girl’s death

    In the remote Australian Outback, a shocking wave of public anger has boiled over into violent unrest outside a major regional hospital, triggered by the brutal murder of a young Indigenous child. The incident unfolded over four days starting on a weekend in the area surrounding Alice Springs, a remote hub in central Australia’s Northern Territory.

    Authorities allege that Jefferson Lewis, the 55-year-old primary suspect, abducted the 5-year-old child from her home in a nearby Indigenous community. Per cultural customs of the local First Nations people, a strict ban prohibits publicly naming deceased community members, so the young victim has been identified publicly only as Kumanjayi Little Baby. Her body was discovered by search teams on Thursday, four days after she was reported missing, sparking immediate, raw outrage across the local Indigenous community.

    Before law enforcement could take Lewis into custody, a large group of community members tracked the suspect down and beat him until he lost consciousness, in an act of vigilante justice. When police arrived at the scene to intervene, they extracted the unconscious suspect and rushed him to Alice Springs Hospital for emergency medical treatment.

    That evening, hundreds of angry local residents gathered outside the hospital’s entrance to protest his presence there. Many in the crowd pushed for Lewis to be subjected to “payback,” a traditional form of customary Indigenous justice that can include corporal punishment such as beating or spearing. As the crowd refused to disperse and tensions escalated into rioting, law enforcement deployed less-lethal crowd control measures: officers fired rubber bullets and released tear gas to push the crowd back. In the chaos of the unrest, multiple police vehicles were damaged by members of the crowd.

    To de-escalate the situation and protect Lewis from further harm, hospital staff cleared him for transport into police custody shortly after the riot broke out. Authorities immediately arranged an air transfer 1,500 kilometers (more than 900 miles) north to Darwin, the capital of the Northern Territory, where Lewis will remain in pre-charge detention. Prosecutors confirm that formal charges against the suspect are expected to be filed on Friday.

    The incident has thrown a harsh spotlight on the deep tensions between formal Australian state law and traditional Indigenous customary justice in remote central Australian communities, where many First Nations residents continue to prioritize traditional governance systems for addressing serious harm.

  • US imposes sanctions on DR Congo ex-President Kabila alleging rebel support

    US imposes sanctions on DR Congo ex-President Kabila alleging rebel support

    The United States has announced wide-ranging sanctions against former Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) President Joseph Kabila, leveling serious accusations that the long-time former leader has provided direct support to the M23 rebel group active in eastern DRC.

    According to U.S. officials, Kabila has delivered critical financial backing to the insurgent group, encouraged defections from the official Congolese national army, and even plotted to launch coordinated attacks against Congolese military forces from his base outside the country. The 54-year-old ex-president, who held the DRC’s highest office for 18 years starting in 2001, has not issued any public response after the BBC reached out for comment on the new sanctions. Kabila’s current location remains unconfirmed publicly, though he entered self-imposed exile in South Africa in 2023; he was last spotted publicly one year ago in Goma, a major eastern DRC city that is currently controlled by M23 forces.

    This latest punitive action by Washington is framed as a key component of its broader efforts to uphold the 2024 peace deal between DRC and neighboring Rwanda that the U.S. helped broker. The U.S. has long alleged that Rwanda provides military and logistical support to M23, a claim that Kigali has repeatedly denied despite overwhelming independent evidence to the contrary. Rwandan officials maintain that any military presence they have in the border region is strictly a defensive measure to counter cross-border security threats from armed groups based in eastern DRC. Washington previously sanctioned top Rwandan army commanders over their ties to M23 back in March 2025.

    In its official statement announcing the sanctions, the U.S. Treasury Department claims Kabila’s ultimate goal is to destabilize the current DRC government based in Kinshasa, clearing the way for an allied opposition candidate to seize power and restore his political control over the country. Under the newly imposed measures, all assets owned by Kabila that fall under U.S. jurisdiction are immediately frozen, and any U.S. citizen or registered company is prohibited from conducting financial or commercial activity with the former president. Global financial institutions and foreign business partners have also received formal warnings against engaging in even indirect transactions with Kabila, with violations carrying severe civil and criminal penalties. U.S. officials note the sanctions serve both as a punitive measure and a tool to force a change in Kabila’s behavior, sending a clear signal that Washington is prepared to target even former heads of state accused of fueling deadly conflict in central Africa.

    Eastern DRC has been plagued by persistent armed conflict for decades, with dozens of competing armed groups vying for control of the region’s resource-rich territory. M23 launched major offensive operations in early 2025, seizing large swathes of land and multiple major population centers in the area. Beyond advancing regional peace and security goals, the U.S. says the new sanctions against Kabila will also strengthen a recent regional economic agreement focused on improving transparency in global critical mineral supply chains. Last December, the U.S. and DRC formalized a bilateral partnership to expand U.S. access to DRC’s massive reserves of strategically critical minerals, including cobalt, coltan, and copper, all of which are core inputs for global clean energy and electronics manufacturing.

    The punitive actions against Kabila are not limited to international sanctions: last September, a Congolese military court sentenced the former leader to death in absentia after convicting him of war crimes and treason tied to his alleged support for M23. Kabila rejected the charges as politically motivated and arbitrary, and refused to appear in court to mount a defense against the accusations.

  • Vonn still in ‘survival mode’ after Olympic crash

    Vonn still in ‘survival mode’ after Olympic crash

    One of the most decorated alpine skiers in history, American downhill legend Lindsey Vonn is not ready to call time on her competitive career just yet – but she also refuses to rule out permanent retirement, three weeks after a devastating crash at the 2026 Cortina Winter Olympics left her on the brink of leg amputation.

    The 41-year-old 2010 Olympic downhill champion has undergone eight invasive surgeries since the high-speed accident on February 8, where she crashed just 13 seconds into her downhill run after striking a gate, rupturing ligaments in her left knee and sustaining a complex tibia fracture. What makes this injury far more severe than any she has dealt with over her decades-long career, Vonn says, is that multiple medical procedures were required to save her leg from amputation.

    In an interview with the Associated Press, Vonn acknowledged she is still navigating the acute recovery phase, describing her current mindset as being in “survival mode” that leaves her emotionally unready to commit to a final decision about her career. “I just don’t want to jump to any conclusions or even speculate on what I might do,” she explained. “I may retire. I may never race again and that would be completely fine, but I’m not in a position emotionally to make that decision at this point.”

    Vonn’s recovery road stretches far into the future, with one more major procedure already scheduled: the upcoming surgery will remove existing metal hardware from her injury site and perform a replacement for her torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). After that operation, she faces another six months of structured rehabilitation, meaning she will need at least 18 months of progressive recovery before she could return to full fitness even for off-slope gym training, let alone competitive racing.

    This is not Vonn’s first run with career-threatening injury: the skier, who holds 82 World Cup race wins – the second-most all time among female alpine skiers, trailing only fellow American Mikaela Shiffrin – initially retired from professional competition in 2019 after a string of serious leg injuries. She stunned the skiing world with a comeback announcement in 2024, after recovering from a partial right knee replacement, and entered her fifth Olympic Games as a medal contender, even competing through an ACL injury she sustained in the final pre-Olympic World Cup race in Switzerland.

    That pre-Games injury, she says, pales in comparison to the damage sustained in Cortina. “It’s much different than any injury I’ve ever had, in terms of the severity of the injury and understanding that I could have lost my leg and how bad things were,” Vonn said. “I can deal with a lot of pain, but this was so extreme. It’s not even been in the universe of pain as what I’ve had before.”

    Vonn, who returned to her home in the United States in mid-February after initial treatment in Italy, has continued to post incremental progress updates after each round of surgery. For now, her priority is pushing through the grueling initial recovery phase, rather than locking in a career choice. “I’m still in survival mode. I just want to get through this phase and be able to assess where I am in my life,” she said. “I don’t want to make a decision now because I think that would be rash and probably too emotional and I don’t want to make a mistake.”

  • Pickleball and protests: How a Trump visit is roiling the world’s largest retirement community

    Pickleball and protests: How a Trump visit is roiling the world’s largest retirement community

    Nestled across 30,000 acres of sun-drenched central Florida, spanning three counties and four zip codes, the Villages is widely known as the world’s largest retirement community. Often nicknamed “Disney without the rollercoasters,” this meticulously landscaped, age-restricted haven for adults over 55 draws transplants from across the country with its endless recreational opportunities, vibrant social scene, and leisurely resort-style lifestyle.

    Residents themselves gush about the community’s one-of-a-kind appeal. “It’s like being at a resort on a full-time basis,” says 79-year-old Betty Brock, who relocated from North Carolina. “If you get bored here, it’s not the Villages’ fault—it’s yours.” Sixty-two-year-old Terri Emery puts it even more simply: “The bottom line is, it’s kind of like utopia.” On any given day, residents can be found dancing to live cover music at one of the community’s five public squares, cruising the sprawling network of paths in colorful, customized golf carts—the neighborhood’s preferred mode of transport—or gathering for meals at local restaurants. “You move here to be young; you don’t move here to die and become old,” Emery explains.

    But even this seemingly perfect retirement paradise is not immune to the deep political divides roiling the United States. Following Donald Trump’s return to the presidency last year, political tensions have simmered across the community, and the former president-turned-commander-in-chief’s upcoming rally speech this Friday, part of his midterm election push to promote his economic policies to voters, has thrown those rifts into sharp relief.

    While Trump’s supporters in the Villages have scrambled to secure tickets and celebrate the presidential visit, local Democrats and Trump critics have organized counter-protests. What unites both sides, however, is a widespread unwritten agreement: discussing politics across party lines is best avoided.

    “Everybody does still try to get along,” says 63-year-old Maddy Bacher, a Democrat who moved to the Villages from Connecticut. “You want to at least be able to say good morning and how are you and how’s the dog. But… I find you don’t socialize as much, and it’s kind of difficult, because everything you do move to talk about might have a political consequence.” Brock echoes that sentiment, noting that while politics occasionally comes up in casual conversation, “not as much as you think, because you don’t ever know where that line is.”

    Political friction during the COVID-19 pandemic pushed divisions to a breaking point for many residents, prompting Bacher to launch a Democratic-only pickleball team. Her husband followed suit, starting a separate golf group for liberal residents after many reported feeling uncomfortable with the right-leaning views common on the community’s public greens. The Villages is home to more than 3,000 niche hobby clubs catering to every interest from female fly fishing to parrot ownership, and Bacher recalls one member quitting a local clay arts club entirely over clashing views on COVID-19 booster shots.

    Long a reliable Republican stronghold that backed Trump in all three of his presidential campaigns, the Villages has seen a surge in Democratic organizing in recent years. Last month, nearly 7,000 local residents turned out for two simultaneous “No Kings” protests against Trump—a turnout that stunned even long-time liberal activists. “Nothing turns out Democrats like Trump,” says Bill Knudson, president of the Villages Democratic Club, who moved to the community with his wife four years ago. Knudson says he was “kinda stunned” at how many new members showed up to a club meeting held just weeks after Trump’s inauguration, with many going out of their way to seek out the group to get involved.

    As of this week, Knudson and other Democratic organizers have been busy crafting protest signs and finalizing plans for Friday’s demonstration. Traffic gridlock and safety concerns have kept some partisans on both sides at home: the community is so large that Knudson says it would take him an hour of driving 20 miles per hour in his golf cart just to reach the rally site.

    Even with the rising tensions, many cross-party friendships persist. Retired lawyer Dorothy Duncan, a Democrat who participated in the “No Kings” protest and is preparing to join this week’s demonstration, still meets regularly for coffee with staunch Trump supporter Tom Samson. The 81-year-old Pittsburgh native and retired pest control business owner says what draws him to Trump is his unfiltered style: “He doesn’t have a filter and says whatever’s on his mind, and he’s not a politician.”

    Duncan and Samson’s friendly, civil cross-aisle chat is far from the norm, residents agree. Bob Carberry, who moved to the Villages 14 years ago, recalls the community was once almost entirely apolitical—until Trump entered national politics. “The emotional level of politics is something that’s emerged probably more so in the last five years with Trump,” he says.

    For Trump’s backers, Friday’s rally is the most anticipated community event of the year. “He’s a man that does do what he says he’s going to do, and he may not be diplomatic, and he may not be charming, may not be politically correct, but he’s doing what every president before him has promised to do when they’re out there campaigning but have never done,” says Sharlene, a supporter who declined to share her last name. Though she will miss the speech due to work, local Republicans have organized watch parties and are discussing golf cart parades for shut-out supporters.

    Seventy-nine-year-old Phil Montalvo, a retired lawyer who launched a second Republican club in the Villages three years ago to cut down on commute times for conservatives on opposite ends of the sprawling community, says nearly all local GOP members are “jazzed” for Trump’s visit. Montalvo notes that Trump’s “America First” message has resonated deeply with the Villages’ conservative majority, with Trump serving as a unifying figure for local Republicans. Citing voter registration numbers from Sumter County—one of the three counties that host the Villages—Montalvo points out that out of all registered voters, there are just 23,000 Democrats compared to 77,000 Republicans. While he acknowledges that Democratic visibility has grown, he says conservatives are not intimidated: “It’s great that they express themselves. We think they have the wrong message, but that’s their prerogative.”

    Some Trump supporters are less welcoming of opposing views. Emery, who has secured a ticket to Friday’s rally, calls the anti-Trump protests “absolutely disgusting,” going so far as to label protesters communists. “The only king is the Lord. Trump is not a king. He’s our president, and if you like him or not, he’s still your president at the end of the day.” She recounts a recent story of a local Trump supporter who called police after a neighbor took down his pro-Trump flag—one of dozens of small, bitter conflicts that have become more common since 2016, when Trump was first elected.

    Democratic golfer Thomas Bacher says that even casual neighborhood traditions have fallen victim to polarization. “We’d have a block party and things like that, and then… some of the people started putting up Trump flags. And that just caused a big rift. We didn’t have block parties anymore. People wouldn’t talk to each other anymore.”

    Longtime resident Roy Irwin, who moved to the Villages in 2012, says the community has become a perfect microcosm of the entire country’s political divide. “I try to talk gently with everybody, no matter what their belief—respect their opinion,” he says. “It’s just like anywhere else—there’s people feeling very strongly on both sides.”

    Not all residents fit neatly into one political camp, though these ideologically flexible voters are rare. Seventy-seven-year-old lawyer Edward Hannan, who describes himself as “not fixated ideologically,” says he will skip Friday’s rally mostly to avoid hours of waiting and strict security screenings. Hannan says he disagrees with Trump on many issues but admires his organizational skill, a trait he says has been lacking in many previous U.S. presidents—though he criticizes Trump’s aggressive style. “You should not denigrate people who disagree with you; you should reason with them,” he says. Hannan laments that open political dialogue has all but disappeared in the Villages, with most residents either avoiding politics entirely or only discussing it with like-minded friends. “So that’s a negative, because getting diverse ideas in a small group is difficult.” When asked if his moderate views make him an anomaly in the community, he answers immediately: “Yes.”

    Home to more than 150,000 residents over the age of 55, the Villages’ growing political rifts offer a clear window into how national partisan divides are reshaping even the most insulated, leisure-focused American communities.

  • Trump to remove whisky tariffs after King’s visit

    Trump to remove whisky tariffs after King’s visit

    A surprise policy announcement has upended transatlantic spirits trade relations, as US President Donald Trump has confirmed he will eliminate all existing tariffs and trade restrictions on whisky imports into the United States, a decision timed explicitly to honor King Charles III and Queen Camilla’s recent four-day state visit to the US. The move clears the way for restored full collaboration between Scottish whisky producers and Kentucky’s bourbon industry, a cross-border partnership that has been constrained by trade barriers for years, and the policy change extends to all imported whiskies, including Irish whiskey, UK government officials have confirmed.

    King Charles and Queen Camilla wrapped up their state visit on Thursday, which included stops in Washington D.C., New York, and Virginia, and ended with a warm handshake between the British monarch and the US president ahead of the royal party’s departure. In comments to reporters following the visit, Trump framed the tariff elimination as an unexpected outcome of the royal trip, noting, “The Royal visit got me to do something that nobody else was able to do, without hardly even asking.”

    In a public post to his Truth Social platform, Trump expanded on the decision, writing that the action was taken “in honour of the King and Queen of the United Kingdom, who have just left the White House, soon headed back to their wonderful country.” He highlighted the deep historic and economic ties between the Scottish whisky and Kentucky bourbon sectors, particularly the longstanding trade of used bourbon barrels. Today, the Scottish whisky industry is the single largest buyer of Kentucky’s used bourbon barrels, importing approximately £200 million worth of the casks annually, a flow of goods that has been disrupted by existing trade restrictions.

    Buckingham Palace confirmed the King’s response to the announcement in a statement, saying the monarch extended his “sincere gratitude” to President Trump and added that he “will be raising a dram to the President’s thoughtfulness.”

    Political leaders across the United Kingdom have widely praised the decision. Scotland’s First Minister John Swinney called the development “tremendous news for Scotland,” crediting King Charles with playing a pivotal role in pushing the agreement across the finish line. Swinney noted that the tariffs had inflicted severe ongoing damage on Scotland’s economy, saying “Millions of pounds were being lost every month from the Scottish economy.”

    UK Business and Trade Secretary Peter Kyle echoed that enthusiasm, noting that Scotch whisky exports to the US are valued at nearly £1 billion annually and support tens of thousands of jobs across the United Kingdom. The 10% across-the-board tariff on whisky imports was first introduced by the Trump administration during an earlier trade dispute, and the levy hit the US market — which is the largest export market for Scotch whisky by value — particularly hard. Compounding that pressure, a suspended 25% tariff on premium single malt Scotch, which had been put on hold four years ago, was scheduled to go back into effect this spring. A last-minute deal with the Trump administration had been the only way to avoid the additional cost that would have crippled premium single malt sales in the key US market.

    Industry leaders say the elimination of all tariffs comes as a massive relief to a sector that has been operating under sustained financial pressure for years. Graeme Littlejohn, strategy director for the Scotch Whisky Association, told reporters that his organization was “delighted” by the announcement. “The industry’s been losing around £4m a week in lost exports to the United States – £150m over the course of the last year while tariffs have been in place,” Littlejohn explained. “This is a real boost for the industry and distillers will breathe a sigh of relief now that these tariffs are off.”

    Littlejohn credited years of high-level diplomatic negotiation for laying the groundwork for the deal, but acknowledged that the royal state visit provided the critical catalyst to finalize the agreement. “Perhaps the state visit has been the catalyst for getting this over the line and the King’s added that little bit of royal sparkle to make the deal work,” he said. Industry representatives across the UK and Ireland have noted that the elimination of tariffs will allow distillers of all sizes to operate with far more stability amid a period of ongoing global economic pressure on consumer goods sectors.

  • ASX 200 snaps losing streak as mining giants and Coles sales surge

    ASX 200 snaps losing streak as mining giants and Coles sales surge

    After eight consecutive days of declines — its longest losing stretch since 2018 — Australia’s benchmark ASX 200 notched a welcome rebound on Friday, driven by sharp gains across major mining stocks and a robust sales update from national supermarket chain Coles. The leading index climbed 64 points, or 0.74%, to close at 8729.80, while the wider All Ordinaries index followed suit, rising 67 points (0.75%) to settle at 8954.60.

    The Australian dollar edged slightly lower over the session, dipping 0.15% to trade at 71.89 US cents. Ten of the ASX 200’s 11 industry sectors finished the day in positive territory, with the materials sector leading the charge. Global oil prices pulled back from a recent four-year high of $US126 per barrel to $US111 per barrel, easing cost pressure on resource operations and lifting investor sentiment for major miners. BHP Group rose 2.27% to $54.94, Rio Tinto jumped 2.73% to $171.97, and Fortescue Metals closed up 1.83% at $20.01.

    Despite the near-term market bounce, AMP’s deputy chief economist Diana Mousina cautioned that geopolitical risks remain underpriced by markets, particularly in the global energy sector. While peace talks had previously showed tentative progress, negotiations have now stalled, leaving the region in a tense geopolitical standstill. “Markets clearly expect some sort of resolution will eventually be reached, especially as missile strikes have slowed in recent weeks,” Mousina explained. “However, we believe markets are underestimating the lingering risks, especially within the oil market.”

    The consumer staples sector also turned in a strong performance, almost entirely thanks to Coles’ upbeat trading update. The supermarket giant reported group sales revenue of $10.7 billion for the 12-week period ending March 29, sending its shares surging 3.66% to $22.92. Other consumer-facing stocks also posted gains: Endeavour Group climbed 2.09% to $3.42, while A2 Milk rose 2.68% to $7.27. Coles’ main rival Woolworths bucked the trend, however, slipping 0.70% to $34.15.

    Financials was the only sector to close the session in negative territory. ANZ Banking Group recorded a 9% half-year profit increase to $3.65 billion, but shares still slumped 2.84% to $35.61 after chief executive Nuno Matos warned that the ongoing geopolitical conflict would create greater economic headwinds for Australia. Matos noted that lower national growth, persistently high inflation, and ongoing interest rate hikes will create growing financial pressure for many Australian customers. “As Australia’s most international bank, we have a front-row seat to global developments,” Matos said. “Much of the potential impact of this crisis remains ahead of us, but the longer oil supplies remain constrained, the greater the chance the crisis shifts from primarily an inflation challenge to a much more serious supply and growth challenge.” Other major banks also posted small declines: Commonwealth Bank fell 0.36% to $173.04, Westpac dipped 0.13% to $38.45, and NAB slipped 0.13% to $39.83.

    In other corporate news, Qantas Airways gained 0.83% to $8.48 after announcing it would extend flight capacity cuts through to 2026-2027 in response to ongoing disruption from the Middle East conflict. Sleep and respiratory treatment manufacturer ResMed dropped 3.53% to $28.73 despite reporting an 11% year-over-year revenue increase to $US1.4 billion for its latest reporting period.

  • Six injured in Washington state school stabbing

    Six injured in Washington state school stabbing

    A midday stabbing incident tied to a pre-existing dispute left six people wounded at Foss High School in Tacoma, Washington, on Thursday, according to local law enforcement and emergency response officials. Five student victims and one adult security guard were rushed to area hospitals shortly after first responders arrived at the campus, with emergency medical crews confirming Friday morning that all injured parties are now in stable condition.

    The Tacoma Police Department confirmed that the suspect taken into custody is a current student at Foss High School, who also sustained minor injuries during the altercation. Shelbie Boyd, public information spokeswoman for the Tacoma Police, told reporters the suspect has been formally charged with five counts of first-degree assault. Multiple law enforcement agencies were already processing evidence at the scene by mid-afternoon, with Boyd noting that responding officers arrived within minutes of the initial 911 call placed at 13:35 local time.

    “Officers moved quickly to locate the suspect, secure the entire campus, and make sure no further harm came to students or staff,” Boyd said in a press briefing Thursday. Initial statements from the Tacoma Fire Department had reported four critical injuries shortly after the incident, but authorities updated that status just two and a half hours later, confirming all six patients had stabilized by 16:00 local time. Boyd added that the investigation will remain active through the night, and investigators are asking any members of the public who captured cell phone video of the incident to submit that footage to the Tacoma Police to help piece together a full timeline of events.

    In an official update posted to the school district’s website Thursday evening, district officials announced Foss High School will remain closed to all students and staff on Friday, with plans to reopen the campus on Monday, May 4. Licensed mental health counselors will be available on site beginning Monday to provide emotional support for students, faculty and staff affected by the violence. The incident marks the second high-profile violent attack on the Foss High School campus in nearly 20 years: in 2007, an 18-year-old student fatally shot 17-year-old Samnang Kok in a school hallway, before being convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 23 years imprisonment.