博客

  • Trump says Iran talks in ‘final stages’ to end war, as Tehran weighs proposal

    Trump says Iran talks in ‘final stages’ to end war, as Tehran weighs proposal

    A new push for a diplomatic resolution to ongoing conflict between the United States and Iran has entered its final phases, according to former U.S. President Donald Trump, even as hardening rhetoric and competing military moves in the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz keep regional tensions elevated. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Trump confirmed that negotiations between Washington and Tehran have advanced to the closing stages, warning that failure to reach a binding agreement could trigger harsh retaliatory measures from the U.S. “We’re in the final stages of Iran. We’ll see what happens. Either have a deal or we’re going to do some things that are a little bit nasty, but hopefully that won’t happen,” he told the press pool.

    Iranian officials have formally acknowledged receipt of a new U.S. peace proposal, confirming that Pakistan’s interior minister is currently in Tehran to serve as a neutral intermediary for communications between the two governments. Key regional U.S. partner Saudi Arabia has publicly welcomed Trump’s commitment to exploring diplomatic solutions, issuing a statement urging Iranian leadership to seize the opportunity to reach a negotiated settlement.

    In a reveal exclusive to Middle East Eye, Trump last week scrapped a pre-planned military strike on Iran after intense pushback from Gulf regional allies and senior members of his own national security team, who argued that launching an attack during the annual Hajj pilgrimage would carry unacceptable humanitarian and political risks. Trump later confirmed this account to reporters, noting that Gulf leaders had persuaded him to hold off on offensive action, and he would wait several additional days for a formal response from Tehran. The U.S. leader also held a diplomatic call with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan; a readout from Erdogan’s office confirmed the Turkish leader backed the extended ceasefire and expressed confidence that a mutually acceptable negotiated solution to the conflict could be achieved.

    Trump’s public posture toward Iran has remained inconsistent in recent weeks, shifting sharply between optimistic claims that a breakthrough settlement is imminent and blunt threats to resume large-scale military hostilities. Iranian hardline leaders have pushed back against U.S. overtures, with parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf issuing a stark warning that any renewed U.S. war effort would be met with a forceful Iranian response. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has additionally cautioned that any new conflict would quickly spread far beyond the boundaries of the Middle East. In an audio message carried by multiple Iranian state media outlets, Ghalibaf said, “The enemy’s movements, both overt and clandestine, show that despite economic and political pressure, it has not abandoned its military objectives and is seeking to start a new war.”

    Beyond diplomatic posturing, tangible shifts have been observed in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow strategic waterway through which roughly 20% of global oil trade passes. The waterway has become the central point of contention in ongoing peace talks, as Iran and the U.S. have enforced competing blockades in a bid to assert dominance over the route. On Wednesday, three large supertankers carrying a combined 6 million barrels of crude oil from Kuwait and Iraq bound for Asian markets transited the strait. Two of the vessels have reported ties to China, while the third is linked to South Korea.

    Data from global shipping intelligence firm Windward confirms the three vessels sailed along the northern corridor of the strait, the route Iran has designated for commercial traffic to allow for cargo inspections and the collection of transit tolls. The resumption of regular commercial transits alongside positive diplomatic developments pushed U.S. crude prices down 6% on Wednesday, settling at roughly $98 per barrel.

    Tehran has outlined its core demands for any final peace deal, with Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei confirming Wednesday that Iran is pushing to establish a joint security mechanism with Oman to guarantee long-term stability in the strait. Iran has long demanded international recognition of its authority over the waterway, including the right to collect transit tolls from commercial shipping.

    Despite the progress in talks, the U.S. has continued its long-running campaign of intercepting and seizing Iranian-flagged commercial vessels in international waters. The U.S. military confirmed Wednesday that U.S. Marine forces boarded an Iranian-flagged oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman this week. “American forces released the vessel after searching and directing the ship’s crew to alter course,” U.S. Central Command, the military command that oversees U.S. operations in the Middle East, wrote in a post on X.

    Baghaei responded that any permanent peace deal would require the U.S. to immediately end what Iran describes as state-sponsored piracy against its commercial shipping. “Despite the negative record of the other side over the past year-and-a-half, Iran is pursuing the path of negotiations with seriousness and good faith, but it has strong and reasonable suspicion over America’s performance,” he added.

  • Some shipping industry professionals eye leaving Dubai for Greece

    Some shipping industry professionals eye leaving Dubai for Greece

    Escalating geopolitical tensions stemming from the US-Israeli conflict on Iran have driven a wave of western maritime industry professionals based in Dubai to explore relocation options outside the United Arab Emirates, multiple industry insiders including one ship owner have confirmed to Middle East Eye.

    Industry sources note that Athens, Greece and Cyprus have emerged as top relocation candidates, drawing expats with their long-standing global leadership in shipping and competitive pro-industry tax frameworks that match the financial benefits Dubai has long offered. This push for new bases reflects a widespread expectation among mobile western expats that the Gulf region will not return to its pre-conflict stability and operational reliability in the near term.

    The conflict has already roiled regional waterways: an estimated 2,000 commercial vessels remain stranded in the Gulf amid overlapping blockades imposed by the US and Iran. Paradoxically, the global shipping industry as a whole is experiencing an unprecedented boom, as vessel congestion has tightened global supply and triggered skyrocketing freight rates while global energy trade routes are redrawn amid the conflict. US oil and gas exports have climbed to all-time record highs as a result of the shifted demand, though longer transit routes from the US Gulf Coast to Asian markets add significant costs compared to traditional voyages from the Arabian Gulf.

    The industry-wide upswing is highlighted by the performance of the Breakwave Tanker Shipping ETF, which tracks crude oil tanker rate pricing; the fund has surged 240% since the conflict in Iran began. This global prosperity stands in sharp contrast to the severe downturn hitting the UAE’s core maritime sector, which has borne the brunt of the regional blockade.

    For decades, the UAE built itself into the undisputed leading logistics hub connecting the Middle East, Asia, and Africa. Its Jebel Ali Port ranks among the world’s largest container terminals and is a critical transshipment node for global trade moving between continents. Today, however, the sector is reeling: Iran’s control of the Strait of Hormuz has cut the UAE’s top export, crude oil, by more than half.

    For many expats, the core issue is not just slowing business activity, but the eroded reputation of Dubai as a stable, reliable operational hub. “It’s not so much the slowdown in business, but the unreliability of Dubai as a hub. Can you count on a flight back to London or Paris for your family during war?” the anonymous ship owner told Middle East Eye.

    Dubai’s golden age of rapid growth, which followed the Covid-19 pandemic, was unprecedented: the emirate capitalized on soaring global asset prices, the cryptocurrency boom, and the rise of remote work to attract global talent and capital. Its business-friendly policy framework — featuring low corporate tax rates, no personal income tax or capital gains tax, and streamlined bureaucracy — turned it into a magnet for international finance professionals from London and New York. Its financial ecosystem has also drawn capital from a wide range of sources, from Sudanese militia gold traders to Russian and Ukrainian expats fleeing conflict in Eastern Europe.

    While most industry analysts still stop short of writing off Dubai’s long-term status as a regional business hub, thanks in large part to the UAE’s substantial sovereign financial reserves, the conflict has clearly brought an end to the emirate’s years of breakneck expansion. The ripple effects are already spreading beyond the shipping sector to Dubai’s key real estate market.

    Arabian Business reported this week that thousands of Dubai real estate agencies could shut their doors in the coming months as a direct result of the conflict-driven uncertainty. A leading property search platform estimates that up to 30% of active agencies on its site could cease operations within five to six months. Similar to the trend among western shipping expats, the agencies most at risk are small operators and firms focused on highly speculative market segments such as off-plan property sales.

    Lewis Allsopp, chairman and co-founder of leading Dubai real estate consultancy Allsopp & Allsopp, told Arabian Business that Dubai’s broker-to-resident ratio is drastically inflated compared to mature global property markets, standing at nearly 1,000 brokers per 100,000 residents. For context, London — one of the world’s busiest property markets — only counts roughly 176 brokers per 100,000 residents. This oversaturation, paired with new geopolitical risk, has set the stage for a widespread market correction.

  • Trump administration charges Cuba’s Raul Castro with murder

    Trump administration charges Cuba’s Raul Castro with murder

    In a sharp escalation of long-running U.S. pressure on Cuba, the Trump administration has unsealed a sweeping criminal indictment against 94-year-old former Cuban President Raúl Castro, levying charges of conspiracy to murder U.S. citizens, aircraft destruction, and four counts of homicide stemming from the 1996 Cuban air force shootdown of two civilian aircraft operated by a U.S.-based anti-Castro aid group. The indictment also names five additional Cuban defendants: Lorenzo Alberto Perez-Perez, Emilio Jose Palacio Blanco, Jose Fidel Gual Barzaga, Raul Simanca Cardenas, and Luis Raul Gonzalez-Pardo Rodriguez.

    The legal action opens the door for potential U.S. efforts to extradite or forcibly bring Castro to American soil for trial, with senior officials hinting at the same type of extraordinary law enforcement operation that the Trump administration deployed to seize former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in January 2026. President Trump has repeatedly touted that 2026 capture mission as a landmark political win for his administration, even as independent legal experts have widely questioned the operation’s compliance with international law. Trump has also openly acknowledged that the successful extraction of Maduro gave him the confidence to launch the joint U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran that began February 28.

    Speaking at a Wednesday press briefing in Miami, Florida — a hub for the Cuban exile community — acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche, who previously served as Trump’s personal defense lawyer, rejected claims that the indictment is a hollow political stunt. “We indict men outside of this country all the time, and there are all kinds of different ways that we get them here,” Blanche told reporters. “The reason why we indict somebody is because we want them here to face justice with a jury of their peers. How we go about doing that obviously depends on the circumstances in the case, and I’m not going to go beyond that, but… this isn’t a show indictment. This is an indictment because we expect that there is a warrant issued for his arrest, so that he will appear here by his own will, or by another way.” Blanche added a clear message of remembrance for the victims: “The United States and President Trump does not and will not forget its citizens.”

    Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel immediately pushed back against the charges in a post on X, framing the indictment as evidence of U.S. hostility toward the Cuban Revolution. He called the action “a political maneuver, devoid of any legal foundation, aimed solely at padding the fabricated dossier they use to justify the folly of a military aggression.”

    The indictment is the latest in a series of aggressive moves by the second Trump administration to force Cuba’s government into concessions, a priority shaped heavily by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a long-time critic of the Cuban regime whose parents emigrated from the island. Just this week, Rubio announced a new round of economic sanctions on Havana, building on decades of U.S. trade and financial restrictions that have been in place since the 1960s. Those long-running sanctions have already gutted Cuba’s financial system and strained its already fragile energy infrastructure. In January 2026, Trump issued an executive order reclassifying Cuba as “an unusual and extraordinary threat” to U.S. national security, and imposed secondary tariffs on any third country that sells goods or oil to the island. The president has previously made blunt remarks about his ambitions for Cuba, saying “Whether I free it, take it, I think I can do anything I want with it… They’re a very weakened nation right now.”

    The charges trace back to the February 24, 1996, incident that claimed four American lives. On that date, Cuban military jets intercepted and shot down two small Cessna aircraft owned by Brothers to the Rescue, a Miami-based organization founded by anti-Castro Cuban exiles that conducted search-and-rescue missions for Cubans attempting to flee the island by boat. The four men killed in the attack were Carlos Costa, Armando Alejandre, Jr, Mario de la Pena, and Pablo Morales.

    The U.S. Department of Justice’s Wednesday statement claims that Cuban intelligence agents infiltrated Brothers to the Rescue years before the shootdown, and passed detailed intelligence on the group’s flight plans and operational schedules back to senior Cuban leadership, including Raúl Castro, who served as defense minister at the time of the incident. While successive U.S. administrations have consistently denied any official connection between the group and American intelligence agencies, the Cuban government has long maintained that Brothers to the Rescue’s core mission was to destabilize the communist regime.

    If convicted on the conspiracy and murder charges, all defendants face a maximum possible sentence of either the death penalty or life imprisonment. Raúl Castro additionally faces up to five years of prison time for each count of aircraft destruction. Any final sentencing would be determined by a presiding U.S. judge, if the accused are ultimately brought into custody.

  • Stylish Aston Villa win Europa League to end 30-year trophy drought

    Stylish Aston Villa win Europa League to end 30-year trophy drought

    On a historic night under the lights of Istanbul’s Besiktas Stadium, Unai Emery’s Aston Villa delivered a dominant 3-0 defeat of Germany’s Freiburg to lift the Europa League trophy, snapping a 30-year wait for major silverware and etching a new iconic chapter into the 152-year-old club’s history.

    The match played out like a script written for legend. Wearing the same white kit they donned for their famous 1982 European Cup upset of Bayern Munich — and with 1982 heroes Peter Withe and Dennis Mortimer watching from the stands — Villa turned clinical finishing into a masterclass that left first-time European finalists Freiburg outclassed from start to finish.

    The deadlock broke in the 41st minute, when Morgan Rogers teed up Youri Tielemans with a pinpoint cross from a clever short corner routine. The Belgian midfielder timed his run perfectly to hammer a thunderous volley past Freiburg goalkeeper Noah Atubolu from just inside the 18-yard box, a strike that shattered any resistance the German side had mustered to that point. Before the first half could even wrap up, Emiliano Buendia doubled Villa’s advantage with a sublime curled effort from the edge of the area, beating Atubolu into the far top corner after Freiburg failed to close him down. Rogers put the result beyond all doubt in the 58th minute, sliding to turn Buendia’s cross into the back of the net to seal the victory.

    For Aston Villa, the win is far more than just a trophy: it is the culmination of a stunning transformation that started when Emery took charge in October 2022. At the time, Villa languished just three points above the Premier League relegation zone, and the club had endured decades of heartbreak after their 1982 European triumph: relegations to the second tier in 1987 and 2016, and defeats in four consecutive domestic finals before this 2024 final run. Even this season got off to a disastrous start, with Villa opening their campaign with six winless matches, scoring just two goals in that dismal opening stretch. But a turnaround began with their first Europa League win of the season against Bologna, and the club rattled off 13 wins from 15 matches in the competition to reach the final.

    The triumph also cements Emery’s legacy as the undisputed master of the Europa League. Wednesday’s win marks his fifth title in the competition, adding to previous crowns he earned with Sevilla (2014, 2015, 2016) and Villarreal (2021). The result also completes an incredible six days for the club: just a week before the final, Villa secured qualification to next season’s Champions League with a vital win over Liverpool.

    The celebration stretched far beyond the pitch, with famous Villa fans including Prince William — who attended the match alongside 20,000 ecstatic Villa supporters — and Hollywood A-lister Tom Hanks, who sent a pre-match good luck message to the squad. For a generation of Villa fans who have never seen their club lift a major trophy, the unforgettable night on the banks of the Bosphorus banished decades of misery, and the current crop of Villa stars have now taken their place alongside the iconic 1982 side that defined the club’s greatest era for 42 years.

  • Sally Rooney confirms ‘Intermezzo’ to be published in Hebrew, sparking online backlash

    Sally Rooney confirms ‘Intermezzo’ to be published in Hebrew, sparking online backlash

    Renowned Irish author Sally Rooney, a long-standing high-profile supporter of the Palestinian cause and the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, has sparked intense global controversy after confirming her latest novel *Intermezzo* will be released in a Hebrew translation, a decision that has split opinion across social media and activist circles.

    Rooney first drew international attention to her pro-Palestine stance in 2021, when she rejected a translation offer from Israeli publisher Modan for her third book, adhering to BDS’ call for a cultural boycott of complicit Israeli institutions. That decision cemented her reputation as one of the most prominent literary figures backing Palestinian rights, and she would later sign a 2024 pledge from the Palestine Festival of Literature alongside more than 1,000 other authors, committing to avoid working with Israeli cultural institutions that remain silent on the oppression of the Palestinian people.

    On Tuesday, +972 Magazine announced that after five years of negotiations with Rooney to align the project with boycott principles and Palestinian demands for freedom, equality and justice, the Hebrew translation would be published in partnership with small Israeli publishing house November Books and activist group Local Call. The translation will be distributed across both Israel and Palestine.

    In a Guardian interview timed to the announcement, Rooney clarified that her 2021 boycott was never targeted at the Hebrew language itself, only at institutions complicit in Israeli violations of Palestinian rights. “Though my refusal to work with complicit Israeli publishing houses made the contractual side of things more complex, I was, of course, never boycotting the Hebrew language or any language. I’m very pleased that *Intermezzo* will soon be available in Hebrew with November Books,” she said.

    Rooney went on to outline why November Books meets BDS compliance criteria: the independent press does not operate in illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, accepts no Israeli state funding, and explicitly endorses the international legal rights of the Palestinian people, including the right of return. She also confirmed that she remained in regular consultation with the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI), a founding BDS coalition member, throughout the process to ensure the project upheld both the letter and spirit of the institutional boycott. +972 Magazine executive director Haggai Matar later reaffirmed this consultation on social media, noting that PACBI guidelines explicitly state mere affiliation of individual Israeli cultural workers to an Israeli institution does not automatically trigger a boycott. After reviewing 98 different Israeli publishing houses, the project partners concluded November Books was the only publisher that did not meet the boycott criteria of being complicit in violating Palestinian rights.

    Despite these justifications, the decision has drawn sharp criticism from prominent Palestinian writers, activists and scholars, who have raised a range of objections. Prominent Palestinian writer and activist Mohammed El-Kurd condemned the move as “creating loopholes to bypass sanctions”, arguing that the core purpose of cultural sanctions is to pressure Israeli society to push for policy change from their leadership. He also pushed back against the framing of the project as an effort to counter claims that BDS is antisemitic, writing: “We are years into a genocide and it is as if we have learned nothing.”

    Palestinian-American author and activist Susan Abulhawa echoed this criticism, noting that Rooney’s work does not center Palestinian liberation or anti-colonial themes, and arguing that the five-year effort to secure a Hebrew translation is inconsistent with BDS mission. She also highlighted the double standard at play, pointing out that her own work, which centers Palestinian experiences, has never received the same level of interest for Hebrew translation. Other critics have argued that even if the project technically complies with BDS guidelines, it undermines the broader goal of cultural isolation of Israel, and that framing the collaboration with a small dissident Israeli publisher acts to normalize the status of Israeli occupation. Middle East scholar Khaldoun Khelil dismissed the move as a “meaningless gesture” that delivers no material benefit to Palestinians, while other social media users have gone as far as labeling the decision a “disgusting, insulting betrayal” of the Palestinian cause.

    Defenders of the project, however, have pushed back against these criticisms. Matar emphasized in a statement to Middle East Eye that every step of the project was carried out in full alignment with BDS guidelines, pointing to Rooney’s Guardian interview and +972’s public explanation for the collaboration. A small number of social media users also expressed support, describing +972 Magazine as one of the most courageous independent media outlets working across the Israel-Palestine region, and calling the union of a high-profile literary figure with an independent, pro-Palestine Israeli press a positive development.

    As of publication, Middle East Eye has reached out to both Rooney’s representative and the BDS national movement for additional comment, and the article has been updated to include Matar’s full statement.

  • US charges Cuba’s Raúl Castro with murder over 1996 downing of two planes

    US charges Cuba’s Raúl Castro with murder over 1996 downing of two planes

    In a sharp escalation of long-running U.S. pressure on Cuba’s communist government, the U.S. Department of Justice has unsealed long-dormant charges against 94-year-old former Cuban leader Raúl Castro, accusing him of conspiracy to murder U.S. nationals, destruction of civilian aircraft, and four counts of murder linked to the 1996 shooting down of two planes operated by Cuban-exile group Brothers to the Rescue that killed four people, three of them U.S. citizens.

    Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche made the announcement official during a press event Wednesday at Miami’s Freedom Tower, a site deeply symbolic for the Cuban-American exile community. Standing in front of photos of the four victims — Armando Alejandre Jr., Carlos Alberto Costa, Mario Manuel de la Peña, and Pablo Morales — Blanche confirmed that an arrest warrant for Castro has been issued, adding pointedly: “We expect he will show up here, by his own will or another way.” He emphasized that the U.S. and the Trump administration would never forget the lives of the four citizens lost in the incident.

    The charges, originally filed under seal in 2003, are being brought at a moment when the Trump administration has ramped up economic and diplomatic pressure on Cuba, aiming to force the country’s one-party government to adopt sweeping political and economic reforms. The move also coincides with Cuba’s Independence Day, when Secretary of State Marco Rubio released a pre-recorded message to the Cuban people framing the Trump administration as an advocate for change on the island. Rubio blamed GAESA, the Cuban military-controlled economic conglomerate that dominates major sectors from ports and energy to hospitality, for the widespread blackouts and acute food shortages that have gripped the country amid a decades-long U.S. trade embargo and recent targeted oil sanctions.

    Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel has rejected the charges outright, dismissing them as a baseless political maneuver designed to justify potential military aggression against Cuba. He reiterated the Cuban government’s long-held position that the 1996 interception of the planes was an act of legitimate self-defense carried out within Cuba’s territorial waters. Díaz-Canel also accused the U.S. of distorting historical facts and imposing collective punishment on the Cuban people through its sanctions policy. Cuban state media has echoed this condemnation, labeling the accusations false, and the government has signaled it will harden its long-held “no surrender, no concessions” stance against U.S. pressure, dimming prospects for the quiet exploratory talks between U.S. and Cuban representatives that have taken place in recent months.

    Now 94, Castro stepped down from formal leadership roles in 2018 after a decade serving as Cuba’s president, but he remains a revered, influential figure as the last surviving leader of the 1959 Cuban Revolution. During his tenure, he oversaw a brief historic thaw in bilateral relations with the U.S. under former President Barack Obama, a detente that has since been fully reversed by the Trump administration’s hardline policy.

    The announcement drew enthusiastic support from Cuban-American exiles who gathered in Miami for the event, many of whom have opposed the Cuban government for decades. Isela Fiterre, a member of the exile community, called the long-delayed action long overdue, saying: “Raúl Castro did not merely kill four individuals. Over the course of many years, he has killed countless people.” Fellow attendee Mercedes Puid-Soto echoed the sentiment, saying “Justice has been served” and noting the charges would help the victims’ families and the broader Cuban exile community find closure.

    Regional policy experts warn the charges carry significant geopolitical risks, drawing parallels to the January 2025 U.S. military operation to detain indicted Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. “Still looming over Blanche’s announcement was the answer to whether the Trump administration will use this indictment in a similar way that it used the indictment against Maduro, as a justification to carry out a military operation under the cover of a law enforcement action,” said Roxanna Vigil, an international affairs fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. Vigil added that the Cuban government is unlikely to comply with U.S. demands, and any attempt to negotiate with Havana would face fierce pushback from the politically influential Cuban-American diaspora in the U.S.

    William LeoGrand, a Latin American politics specialist at American University, framed the move as part of a deliberate incremental pressure strategy. “The strategy is to increase the pressure gradually to the point where the Cuban government will give in and surrender at the bargaining table,” he explained. U.S. President Donald Trump framed the action around humanitarian goals when asked about its political motivations, noting his longstanding close ties to the Cuban-American community and saying “On a humanitarian basis, we’re here to help.”

  • Iran adapts as Gulf economies and Asia bear cost of Strait of Hormuz blockade

    Iran adapts as Gulf economies and Asia bear cost of Strait of Hormuz blockade

    In late April 2026, former U.S. President Donald Trump made a bold prediction: Iran’s critical oil fields and energy infrastructure would “explode” within days, a collapse he credited entirely to Washington’s newly imposed naval blockade of Iranian ports. Framing the blockade as a flawless, genius strategy, Trump told reporters that Tehran would soon be forced to surrender, saying “They have to cry uncle; that’s all they have to do. Just say, ‘We give up.’”

    Nearly a month on, however, Trump’s forecast has proven drastically overstated, with Iran’s long history of navigating energy crises allowing it to adapt rather than collapse. Decades of institutional experience coping with output cuts stretch back to the 1980s Iran-Iraq War, when Tehran slashed production from more than 5 million barrels per day to under 1.5 million to withstand pressure. More recently, during the first Trump administration’s 2018–2020 “maximum pressure” sanctions campaign, Iran cut output by another 2 million barrels per day without systemic energy collapse. Drawing on that hard-won expertise, Iran has already adjusted to the 2026 blockade, cutting current output by an estimated 400,000 barrels per day without widespread infrastructure failure. “We have enough expertise and experience,” said Hamid Hosseini, spokesman for the Iranian Oil, Gas and Petrochemical Products Exporters’ Association. “We’re not worried.”

    Instead of collapsing Iran, the crisis has shifted pressure outward, hitting U.S. closest regional Gulf allies after Iran retaliated by closing a key segment of the Strait of Hormuz — the waterway through which roughly one-fifth of global oil production transits. The disruption has already choked off exports for vulnerable Gulf producers: shipping monitor TankerTrackers.com recorded zero crude oil exports from Kuwait in April 2026, the first time that has happened since the 1991 Gulf War. Unlike wealthier neighbors Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Kuwait has no alternative routes to reroute exports, forcing it to divert all production to domestic storage and refining.

    Unlike Iran, which has honed strategies for surviving external pressure for decades, Gulf economies have no comparable experience navigating prolonged blockades and export disruptions. What is more, their growth models rely heavily on stable conditions to retain large migrant workforces, which are likely to depart if economic conditions worsen sharply. “The dual blockade is damaging Iran, but it is also attacking the foundations of the Gulf economic model,” explained Andreas Krieg, associate professor of security studies at King’s College London, in an interview with Middle East Eye. “It means Gulf producers cannot simply watch Iran suffer from a safe distance. Their own exports, logistics, insurance costs, food imports, aviation routes, LNG deliveries and investor confidence are all hit.” While Gulf states accumulated large financial reserves during decades of high oil prices, the current crisis has eroded long-held confidence in the region as a stable, low-friction hub for global energy, trade, capital and aviation, Krieg added.

    The strain has already exposed deep vulnerabilities in the UAE’s geopolitical gambit: Abu Dhabi’s bet on an alliance with Israel to project regional power has backfired spectacularly, according to analysis from Moody’s Analytics. Before the conflict erupted in March, the UAE had claimed its non-oil sectors, particularly tourism, were robust enough to absorb regional shocks. That assumption has collapsed: Moody’s now projects hotel occupancy in the second half of 2026 will plummet to just 10 percent, down from 80 percent pre-conflict, amounting to an effective shutdown of large swathes of the country’s hospitality sector. Thousands of tourism workers have already been laid off, furloughed, or forced to take unpaid leave, with many businesses delaying salary payments amid collapsing revenue.

    The ripple effects of the crisis extend far beyond the Middle East. South Asian economies that rely heavily on remittances and capital inflows from the Gulf have already been hit hard. When cash-strapped Pakistan attempted to mediate between Washington and Tehran to de-escalate the conflict, the UAE — angered by Islamabad’s mediation efforts and facing its own cash shortages — demanded immediate repayment of a $3.5 billion loan. The UAE has also entered talks with the Trump administration to secure a large international financial bailout, similar to the emergency rescue package extended to Argentina in 2025. Further afield, Egypt, Lebanon and Syria, all heavily dependent on Gulf investment, remittances, aid and political stability, are already bracing for deep cuts to external funding as Gulf states pare back spending to conserve reserves. “When Gulf states face revenue losses, they tend to become more selective, more conditional and more strategic,” Krieg noted.

    In Southeast Asia, where major economies are overwhelmingly dependent on Middle Eastern energy imports, the crisis has triggered immediate austerity measures and pushed food insecurity to alarming levels. The Philippines imports 95 to 96 percent of its oil from the Gulf, while Vietnam imports 85 to 87 percent, and Thailand relies on Gulf supplies for roughly 60 percent of its crude needs. The disruption to gas supplies has hit global fertilizer production, driving prices up 80 percent in just over a month; Svein Tore Holsether, CEO of global fertilizer giant Yara International, warned that reduced fertilizer supplies could cut global crop yields by as much as 50 percent. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization reported that global food prices hit their highest level since 2023 in April, with the Middle East conflict cited as a primary driver. To conserve fuel, the Philippines and Thailand have already introduced four-day workweeks and expanded work-from-home policies, while retail fuel prices have doubled across much of the region. In many countries, government fuel subsidies are the only thing preventing public unrest, but the cost of those subsidies has exploded, making the policy unsustainable long-term, according to Kuala Lumpur-based geopolitical analyst Arnaud Bertrand.

    While the immediate crisis has forced governments to focus on short-term survival, business leaders in the region note the conflict is likely to accelerate a permanent shift toward renewable energy. “The war is likely to accelerate the move towards solar and wind and geothermal and hydro power across the region,” said Chris Humphrey of the EU-ASEAN Business Council in a CNBC interview. “All the governments in Southeast Asia are absolutely committed to that as a strategy going forward.”

    Beyond the immediate economic damage, analysts warn the crisis has inflicted lasting damage to the credibility of U.S. power in the Indo-Pacific and beyond. Even prominent U.S. foreign policy hawks have warned that Washington is facing a major strategic defeat. Robert Kagan, one of the most influential neoconservative voices and a long-time pro-Israel hardliner, wrote in an essay for *The Atlantic* earlier this month that Washington is heading toward “total defeat” in its campaign against Iran, and that the damage “can neither be repaired nor ignored. There will be no return to the status quo ante, no ultimate American triumph that will undo or overcome the harm done.” Former senior U.S. diplomat Tom Pickering, who served as U.S. ambassador to Israel and under secretary of state for political affairs, wrote in *Foreign Affairs* that Washington’s insistence that it can force Iran into total surrender is contradicted by months of on-the-ground evidence, and that the U.S. may ultimately have to accept a compromise arrangement that aligns with core Iranian demands for a transit surcharge on ships passing through the strait.

    The failed U.S. “Project Freedom” initiative, launched in early May to escort stranded ships through the Strait of Hormuz and break Iran’s blockade, underscored the gap between Trump’s rhetoric and results. The operation, which Trump claimed was launched at the request of countries with trapped vessels, ultimately succeeded in escorting just two U.S.-flagged ships through the waterway. “This war has shattered the idea that U.S. power, whatever its flaws, at least worked towards open sea lanes and at least helped protect you if you were an ‘ally’,” Bertrand noted. Even long-time U.S. partners in the region are shifting their approach: Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., once one of Washington’s closest Indo-Pacific allies, has recently made overtures to Beijing as U.S. policy fails to resolve the energy crisis.

    This report was originally published by Middle East Eye, an independent outlet covering the Middle East, North Africa and global affairs.

  • Moment Cybertruck driver intentionally drives into Texas lake

    Moment Cybertruck driver intentionally drives into Texas lake

    A bizarre incident unfolded at a Texas lake over the weekend when a Tesla Cybertruck driver deliberately steered their electric pickup into the water, prompting a swift emergency response and leading to the driver’s arrest. Local law enforcement confirmed that the driver was attempting to test the vehicle’s advertised “wade mode”—a feature designed to allow the truck to traverse shallow flooded or waterlogged terrain—when they made the decision to enter the open lake. First responder teams, including local rescue divers and water recovery crews, were dispatched to the scene near the shoreline, where they successfully pulled the partially submerged electric vehicle from the water hours after the incident. No injuries were reported in the event, but the reckless act has raised new questions about how owners interpret and test the off-road capabilities of modern electric pickup trucks. Police have not yet released details on potential charges the driver will face, but they confirmed the suspect was taken into custody immediately following the recovery operation. Local park officials also noted that the incident caused minor disruption to public recreation access to the shoreline for several hours while recovery work was underway.

  • Austrian ex-intelligence officer found guilty of Russia spying charges

    Austrian ex-intelligence officer found guilty of Russia spying charges

    One of the most high-profile espionage trials in recent European history has concluded in Vienna, where a 63-year-old former senior Austrian intelligence official, Egisto Ott, has been found guilty on multiple charges including spying for Russia. The verdict delivered by a local jury has reignited widespread concern that Austria continues to act as a major hub for Russian intelligence activity in Western Europe.

    Over the course of the proceedings, the court detailed nearly five years of illegal activity carried out by Ott between 2015 and 2020. Prosecutors laid out evidence that Ott abused his official position to pull classified information and large volumes of personal data from restricted Austrian police databases, all to support Russian intelligence operations at the expense of Austria’s national security. He passed this sensitive material to both Russian intelligence agents and Jan Marsalek, a fugitive former top executive at the collapsed German payments giant Wirecard, in exchange for undisclosed financial payments, the court confirmed.

    Among the most damaging acts outlined in the trial was Ott’s procurement of a specialized laptop holding encrypted secure communication hardware used by European Union member states. Prosecutors confirmed the device was ultimately handed over directly to Russian intelligence services. In a separate incident, Ott also obtained the work phones of senior Austrian interior ministry officials after the devices were accidentally lost in the Danube River during an official ministry boating trip. He copied all data from the devices and passed the information to Marsalek and Russian intelligence handlers based in Moscow.

    In addition to the espionage conviction, the jury found Ott guilty of misuse of public office, bribery, aggravated fraud, and breach of trust. He was handed a total prison sentence of four years and one month. Ott has consistently denied all charges against him, claiming he was not working for Russia but instead conducting a covert operation in partnership with a Western intelligence agency. His legal team has already filed an appeal against the verdict, extending the legal process for the high-profile case.

    The case has thrown renewed attention on Jan Marsalek, an Austrian citizen who is one of Europe’s most wanted fugitives. Marsalek fled Germany via Austria in 2020 amid the collapse of Wirecard, which collapsed after a massive multi-year accounting fraud that saw the company inflate its balance sheets and sales figures by billions of euros. He is currently believed to be hiding out in Moscow, and is the subject of an Interpol Red Notice, meaning he can be arrested immediately if he steps into the territory of any of Interpol’s 196 member countries. Beyond his Wirecard fraud charges, Marsalek is also suspected of being a covert Russian intelligence asset, and is alleged to have overseen a network of Bulgarian spies convicted of spying for Russia in London in 2025.

    When Ott was first taken into custody in 2024, then-Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer labeled the case a direct “threat to democracy and our country’s national security.” Today’s conviction has done little to ease those long-held concerns, with the scandal once again putting Austria under international scrutiny over its reputation as a hub for Russian espionage activity in Europe.

  • Hezbollah drones limiting 80 percent of Israeli troop assaults in Lebanon

    Hezbollah drones limiting 80 percent of Israeli troop assaults in Lebanon

    Israel’s public broadcaster Kan has released a bombshell assessment from military insiders confirming that Hezbollah’s expanding drone arsenal has crippled up to 80% of Israeli offensive operations targeting southern Lebanon, reshaping the dynamics of the ongoing cross-border conflict.

    According to Kan’s Monday reporting, Israeli military estimates make clear that Hezbollah’s unmanned aerial vehicles have dramatically constrained Israeli troop movements across southern Lebanon and have directly contributed to mounting Israeli battlefield casualties. A critical supply gap has worsened the problem: Israel’s anti-drone defense systems are only allocated to a small fraction of frontline troops, forcing commanders to scrap most planned daytime operations entirely to avoid devastating drone strikes.

    The growing threat posed by these drones has become a top priority crisis for Israel’s national government, prompting officials to assemble a dedicated cross-sector task force bringing together military commanders, defense industry specialists, and civilian technology experts to accelerate development of effective counter-drone systems.
    Israeli military intelligence sources told Kan that Hezbollah has also overhauled its operational model in the wake of Israeli assassinations of multiple high-ranking commanders from its elite Radwan Force. Moving away from a rigid centralized command-and-control structure, the group has shifted to decentralized, cell-based guerrilla warfare. Small autonomous Hezbollah units now move between southern Lebanese villages, carrying out opportunistic targeted attacks on Israeli forces with far greater operational flexibility than before.

    The advance of Hezbollah’s drone program is not a recent development: last month, Israeli outlet Ynet News first reported that the group had carried out major upgrades to its drone fleet, most notably the widespread adoption of fiber-optic tethered first-person view (FPV) drones for offensive operations against Israeli troops. Unlike larger, more expensive long-range missiles, these FPV drones are low-cost, easily assembled, and modified locally in southern Lebanese workshops. Local technicians add custom components including reinforced landing skids, high-resolution cameras, and lethal explosive payloads to convert the commercially derived platforms into effective weapons.
    The key fiber-optic upgrade has proven particularly devastating to Israeli defense efforts. Tethering the drone directly to its ground control station via a fiber-optic line eliminates the need for vulnerable radio signals to transmit control data and video feed. This not only makes the drones far harder for Israeli electronic warfare systems to detect, but also blocks Israeli jamming attempts that would otherwise disable the aircraft.

    In response to the escalating threat, Israel’s cabinet last week approved $700 million in emergency emergency defense funding earmarked exclusively for developing and deploying countermeasures against Hezbollah’s drones. The approved plan includes two core components: the installation of new fixed radar systems along Israel’s entire northern border to detect incoming small drones, and the procurement of five million specialized shotgun rounds engineered to shoot down low-altitude, short-range unmanned aircraft.

    The ongoing cross-border hostilities have already unleashed a catastrophic humanitarian crisis across Lebanon. Since Israeli large-scale operations began on March 2, more than 3,000 Lebanese people have been killed in Israeli strikes, and another 9,301 have been wounded. The violence has displaced at least 1.6 million people – roughly one-fifth of Lebanon’s total population. Though a ceasefire was first announced on April 16 and extended last week, Israeli forces have continued to conduct near-daily airstrikes across Lebanese territory.