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  • Trump lavishes praise on ‘fantastic’ and ‘highly respected’ Sharaa

    Trump lavishes praise on ‘fantastic’ and ‘highly respected’ Sharaa

    On the sidelines of the NATO summit held in Ankara, Turkey, Wednesday marked a historic milestone in U.S.-Syria relations: former U.S. President Donald Trump offered unusually glowing public praise to Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, branding him a fantastic and highly respected global leader following their closed-door meeting.

    This high-profile encounter represents another major breakthrough for al-Sharaa, whose rapid political ascent on the international stage has unfolded at breakneck speed over the past 18 months. Just over a year ago, he was first introduced to Trump during a gathering in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. By November of that same year, he had stepped into the Oval Office to exchange diplomatic gifts with the U.S. president — a moment no Syrian leader, particularly one once labeled a terrorist by Washington, had achieved in decades.

    Turkey has been the primary architect of al-Sharaa’s rise to power since December 2024, with Ankara pursuing a clear geopolitical goal: establishing a friendly Syrian government in its neighboring country that falls firmly within Turkey’s regional sphere of influence. Trump’s quick diplomatic embrace of al-Sharaa has already emerged as one of the most consequential and eye-catching foreign policy shifts of his current term.

    Speaking directly to reporters while seated beside al-Sharaa, Trump doubled down on his positive assessment of the Syrian leader. “He’s done a really fantastic job as president. He’s unified the country in a very short period of time, I’d say like a year and a half, about a year and a half, and right from the beginning it was a real mess, very disjointed place, and he’s brought it together,” Trump said. He added, “He’s a strong person. He’s a great leader. He’s respected by everybody, including me, and we’re proud to have him.”

    Notably, Trump’s warm remarks toward al-Sharaa stand in sharp contrast to his consistently harsh rhetoric toward many of America’s long-standing traditional allies, most of whom are core members of the NATO alliance hosting this very summit. Trump has repeatedly scolded the leaders of major European powers including the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Spain, accusing them of weak leadership on defense policy and immigration. He has also launched public attacks on Denmark over the country’s claim of sovereignty over Greenland, and is currently engaged in a very public, escalating feud with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. Since March, he has further ramped up critical rhetoric targeting any nations that have refused to join his hardline campaign against Iran.

    Just 14 months ago, al-Sharaa — who once had a $10 million U.S. bounty placed on his head over his former extremist ties — saw Trump announce the historic lifting of crippling economic sanctions on Syria. That landmark policy shift was largely orchestrated by Saudi Arabia, with Gulf states now committing the bulk of funding needed to rebuild Syria’s war-ravaged infrastructure and institutions.

    For al-Sharaa, the top remaining diplomatic priority is securing two key wins: removing Syria from the U.S. State Sponsors of Terrorism (SST) blacklist and opening the door to broad international investment in the country. When asked about this goal Wednesday, Trump turned to U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio before signaling his clear support for the move, saying “I think we should. Yeah. We’re proud of the job he’s doing. Syria has become very stable.”

    The meeting also touched on Trump’s controversial proposal from last month that suggested Syria could take the lead on disarming the Iran-aligned militant group Hezbollah in neighboring Lebanon. Asked about the plan Wednesday, Trump told reporters, “They could help. We’ll find out. I think we’re making a lot of progress.”

    While al-Sharaa had previously publicly stated that the proposal was not a feasible option, his foreign minister Asaad al-Shaibani made a high-profile visit to Lebanon last week to meet with Nabih Berri, parliament speaker and leader of the Amal Movement — Hezbollah’s closest political ally. A senior Lebanese official who participated in talks during al-Shaibani’s visit told Middle East Eye that the trip was coordinated with Lebanese authorities to send a deliberate, calming message about Syria’s regional intentions. The official noted, “The visit was very much needed to reassure Lebanon and ease concerns about the possibility of a military intervention pushed by the United States.”

  • Trump says ceasefire is over and calls Iran leaders ‘scum’, as both sides launch attacks

    Trump says ceasefire is over and calls Iran leaders ‘scum’, as both sides launch attacks

    A month-old ceasefire memorandum between the United States and Iran has collapsed into open hostilities, after a series of tit-for-tat strikes across the Persian Gulf region prompted US President Donald Trump to announce Wednesday that the truce is definitively “over.”

    Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a NATO leaders meeting, Trump made the declaration just hours after the US launched more than 80 pre-planned airstrikes targeting Iranian military assets across the region. Washington framed the strikes as a direct response to a series of Iranian attacks on commercial shipping vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz carried out Tuesday.

    According to a formal statement from US defense officials, the overnight American strikes targeted a wide range of Iranian military infrastructure: Iran’s air defense networks, command and control communications hubs, coastal radar stations, anti-ship missile stockpiles, and more than 60 small fast attack boats operated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Iran’s elite revolutionary military force. US officials said the operation was designed to permanently degrade Tehran’s capacity to target commercial shipping in the strategic waterway.

    The Iranian attacks that preceded the US strikes targeted three commercial tankers near Omani waters, including a Qatari-owned liquefied natural gas carrier named the Al Rekayyat. UK Maritime Trade Operations, a UK-based security body that monitors global shipping activity, confirmed the LNG carrier was struck while it was en route to the Gulf of Oman.

    Within hours of the US strikes, Tehran launched a massive retaliatory attack, sending waves of missiles and drones targeting US military installations stationed in Bahrain and Kuwait early Wednesday. The IRGC confirmed it struck exactly 85 separate targets across the two Gulf nations. Local military and security officials confirmed the attacks: Kuwait’s armed forces activated their national air defense systems to intercept incoming projectiles, while Bahrain’s interior ministry triggered public air raid sirens and urged residents to seek emergency shelter.

    In unusually harsh remarks Wednesday, Trump launched a blistering verbal attack on Iran’s political leadership, calling the ruling faction “scum” and dismissing any further negotiations as a waste of time. “They’re scum. They’re sick people. They’re led by sick people, and they’re vicious, violent people,” Trump told reporters. “Far as I’m concerned, it’s just a waste of time dealing with them. They’re liars… there’s something wrong with them. They’re cuckoo. As far as I’m concerned, it’s over.” The president added that while he would allow US negotiating teams to continue talks if they wish, he sees no path to a successful diplomatic outcome. “They can talk, but I think they’re wasting their time. They’re a bunch of lying guys,” he said. “They’re bad people, and frankly, I don’t want to waste my time with them. Now, I’ll let our wonderful negotiators keep talking if they want, but I don’t see it.”

    Qatar, which has served as a key neutral mediator between Washington and Tehran throughout the ceasefire talks, issued a sharp condemnation of Tuesday’s shipping attacks. Majed al-Ansari, spokesperson for Qatar’s foreign ministry, called the strikes on commercial vessels a “serious and explicit violation” of international law, and said Tehran would be held responsible for the act of aggression.

    Tensions over shipping routes in the Strait of Hormuz have been building for weeks. Oman has recently pushed a proposal to reroute international commercial shipping along a new corridor closer to its own coastline, a plan Iran has repeatedly rejected. Tehran has also threatened to impose a navigation toll on all commercial vessels accessing the waterway, and claims US efforts to advance the new shipping route already violate the terms of last month’s ceasefire memorandum.

    Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, speaker of Iran’s parliament, accused Washington of multiple “major” violations of the truce even before this week’s hostilities, citing US opposition to Tehran’s position on the Strait of Hormuz, unapproved Israeli military aggression in Lebanon, and the recent US move to reimpose full oil sanctions on Iran. In a post on the social platform X Wednesday, Ghalibaf pushed back against US pressure, writing: “The era of bullying and extortion is over. It leads nowhere. We don’t fold.”

    Hours after Tuesday’s shipping attacks, the US formally revoked a temporary sanctions waiver that had allowed limited Iranian oil exports, another step that escalates the bilateral conflict. The original ceasefire memorandum signed last month launched a 60-day window for negotiations to reach a permanent truce and resolve longstanding international disagreements over Iran’s nuclear program. This week’s open hostilities bring that negotiating process to the brink of total collapse.

  • Ireland passes bill banning goods from Israel-occupied settlements in West Bank and Jerusalem

    Ireland passes bill banning goods from Israel-occupied settlements in West Bank and Jerusalem

    On Tuesday, Ireland’s national parliament passed a historic piece of legislation that bans the import of all goods produced in Israeli settlements located in the occupied Palestinian territories of the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

    Officially titled the Israeli Settlements (Prohibition of Importation of Goods) Bill, the new law targets goods originating from Israeli settlements that fall outside of Israel’s 1967 armistice lines, which are not recognized as part of Israel under international law. The legislation explicitly frames its actions as compliance with Ireland’s binding international legal obligations, as outlined in the landmark advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on July 19, 2024.

    That ICJ ruling, which was formally upheld by the United Nations General Assembly, determined that Israel’s long-term occupation of Palestinian territories beyond the 1967 borders is unlawful under international law, and requires all UN member states to take active steps to avoid complicity in maintaining the illegal occupation. Aligning with this global mandate, the coalition government that backed the Irish bill says the measure is intended to cut off trade ties that enable the perpetuation of the illegal status quo Israel has established in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

    Ireland has emerged as one of the most vocal critics of Israeli policy toward Palestinians among European nations in recent years. The country formally recognized Palestinian statehood in May 2024, and became the first government in the European Union to officially characterize Israel’s military campaign in Gaza as an act of genocide. This string of pro-Palestine actions has triggered sharp diplomatic backlash from Israel: Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar has already responded to the new import ban by ordering the permanent closure of Israel’s embassy in Dublin.

    The import ban vote is only the latest in a series of escalatory steps taken by Dublin against Israel over the past year. Just last month, Ireland imposed entry bans on two far-right Israeli cabinet ministers, Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, who had already been sanctioned in June for repeated public incitement to violence against Palestinian communities. Alongside Spain, Ireland has also taken a leading role in pushing the European Union to conduct a full formal review of the 1995 EU-Israel Association Agreement, the foundational trade and cooperation pact that governs bilateral relations between the bloc and Israel. Most recently, Ireland joined Spain at an emergency international summit co-hosted by Colombia and South Africa in July 2025, where attendees coordinated collective concrete measures to hold Israel accountable for its alleged violations of international law.

    Public opinion in Ireland reflects the government’s hardening stance, with opinion polls consistently showing among the highest levels of popular support for Palestinians in Europe. Current polling data finds that 86 percent of the Irish public agrees with the assessment that Israel is carrying out genocide in Gaza, while 62 percent of respondents — a clear majority — support the EU imposing harsh economic sanctions on Israel, mirroring the restrictive measures imposed on Russia following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The country’s recently elected president, Catherine Connolly, who won an overwhelming landslide victory in the October 2025 presidential election, has long been one of the most prominent Western political voices in support of Palestinian rights. Connolly recently spoke publicly about her pride in her sister, Dr. Margaret Connolly, who was one of six Irish citizens detained by Israeli forces in April while participating in the Global Sumud Flotilla, an effort to deliver humanitarian aid to blockaded Gaza.

    Despite this widespread public and political support for Palestinian statehood and accountability for Israel, the new import ban marks a notable shift from Ireland’s prior largely symbolic actions toward concrete policy change. While Ireland is the first EU member state to formally pass this type of settlement goods ban, Spain already implemented its own ban on settlement imports along with a full arms embargo against Israel back in September 2025.

    Still, policy analysts have raised questions about the real-world impact of Ireland’s legislation, noting that watered-down compromises made to secure passage may leave the measure with little tangible effect. The bill retains provisions that allow pre-existing trade contracts to continue uninterrupted and includes broad exemptions for certain types of goods, softening the policy’s potential impact.

    The push for a ban on Israeli settlement goods first emerged in Irish politics nearly a decade ago, with the original version of the Occupied Territories Bill first introduced in 2018. At that time, the sitting Irish government blocked the bill from ever taking effect. The current centre-right coalition government has approved a heavily revised version of the original proposal that only bans physical goods from settlements, and entirely excludes trade in services — a sector that makes up roughly 70 percent of all bilateral trade between Ireland and Israel.

    Diplomatic and economic pressure from the United States political establishment was a key factor driving the decision to weaken the legislation, according to political sources. In October 2025, Democratic Congressman Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey published an open letter to Irish Taoiseach Micheal Martin, warning that passing a full ban on settlement goods would cause significant long-term damage to Ireland’s economic credibility and its commercial partnerships with U.S. businesses.

  • Businesses report blocked payments from Saudi Arabia to the UAE, raising fears of worsening ties

    Businesses report blocked payments from Saudi Arabia to the UAE, raising fears of worsening ties

    Rumors of delayed or frozen cross-border money transfers from Saudi Arabia to United Arab Emirates-based accounts have sparked growing alarm that long-simmering political tensions between the two wealthy Gulf neighbors are finally spilling over into their critical bilateral commercial relationship. Multiple anonymous sources speaking to the *Financial Times* confirmed that starting in May, payments routed through Saudi banks to UAE accounts held by Dubai-based companies and individual clients have been repeatedly held up or returned, in most cases with no formal explanation provided for the hold. One Western executive working for a Dubai-headquartered healthcare firm told the outlet that since mid-May, Saudi financial institutions have blocked and reversed multiple payments coming from a long-standing Saudi customer of the company.

    In an official response to inquiries from the *Financial Times*, Saudi Arabia’s central bank issued a denial, stating it had not put in place any “direct restrictions on specific countries” as part of its routine financial oversight.

    The reported disruptions have hit one of the most economically significant bilateral partnerships in the Gulf region. Though the two nations have long been framed as formal allies, their relationship has been fraying for years over a growing list of regional policy disagreements. Most notably, the UAE has built a close strategic alliance with Israel, a step Riyadh has refused to take, as the Saudi government still does not formally recognize Israeli statehood. Saudi policymakers also have publicly opposed the UAE’s support for separatist political movements active in both Somalia and Yemen.

    As the two largest economies in the Arab world, their commercial ties carry massive regional weight: Saudi Arabia boasts a gross domestic product of roughly $1.2 trillion, while the UAE’s economy totals around $550 billion, and annual bilateral trade between the two already tops $20 billion. For decades, international and regional companies have used Dubai’s business-friendly ecosystem as a regional hub to access the Saudi market, but in recent years Riyadh has pushed aggressively to encourage firms to relocate their regional operations to the kingdom as part of its Vision 2030 economic diversification plan, which aims to retain more domestic business, job opportunities and foreign investment within Saudi borders.

    Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, a Middle East fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute, noted that strategic and economic competition between the two powers is nothing new, and past periods of tension have not resulted in a permanent breakdown of ties. “There has always been economic competition between the two sides and this is not the first time that such measures have reportedly been deployed to raise the stakes, and the relationship survived previous bouts of tension in the late 2000s and in 2021 as well,” Ulrichsen told *Middle East Eye*. The most severe recent escalation of tensions dates back to last December, when Riyadh accused Abu Dhabi of backing a secessionist Yemeni faction that launched an offensive against military forces aligned with Saudi Arabia. The confrontation eventually forced the UAE to withdraw its own military personnel from Yemen, after Saudi forces launched targeted attacks on UAE-backed Yemeni groups. At the time, Saudi Arabia stated that the UAE, once its core partner in the Saudi-led coalition that entered Yemen’s civil war in 2015 to fight the Houthi movement, had threatened Saudi national security by supporting the secessionist offensive. The years-long Yemeni conflict has failed to defeat the Houthis and has already claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Yemeni civilians and combatants.

    That December dispute triggered the worst diplomatic rupture between the two Gulf states in decades, and brought long-simmering rivalries over trade strategy, oil policy and regional influence out into the open. Tensions were temporarily sidelined after the United States and Israel launched their campaign against Iran, as Gulf states moved to present a unified front following Iranian strikes on regional targets in retaliation. Ulrichsen explained that the underlying disagreements never truly resolved themselves, only faded from immediate focus. “It’s likely that the tensions never really went away but the immediacy and urgency of the Iranian attacks on the Gulf meant that they faded into the background during the war,” he said.

    Early this year, the UAE surprised neighboring Gulf states with its announcement that it would withdraw from OPEC, the oil exporting cartel that is effectively led by Saudi Arabia. While Abu Dhabi framed the decision as a reflection of its independent “economic vision and evolving energy profile,” the move was widely interpreted as a major strategic snub to Riyadh. Despite mounting diplomatic friction, Saudi officials have repeatedly maintained that political tensions with the UAE will not damage bilateral trade and economic ties.

  • Five crew remain missing after plane wreckage found in Pakistan

    Five crew remain missing after plane wreckage found in Pakistan

    A multiagency air and sea search operation has located the wreckage of a missing private cargo plane off Pakistan’s Arabian Sea coast, 12 hours after the Boeing 737 lost contact with air traffic controllers mid-flight, national aviation officials confirmed. All five crew members on board the aircraft, which was operated by Pakistani carrier K2 Airways, remain missing as rescue efforts enter a new phase.

    The cargo jet departed Karachi, Pakistan’s southern coastal commercial hub, on Tuesday bound for Sharjah, United Arab Emirates. According to official statements from the Pakistan Airports Authority, the plane suffered a sudden, rapid descent and cut off communication with ground control at 21:21 local time (16:21 GMT). Only minutes before the unexpected descent, the flight crew had reported a critical failure in the aircraft’s navigation systems, authorities added.

    Search teams pulled the wreckage from waters 53 nautical miles south of Ormara, a small port town situated roughly 223 miles west of Karachi, the plane’s departure point. The 12-hour search operation deployed both maritime and aerial assets to scan the remote stretch of Arabian Sea before debris was located.

    The incident marks the first major aviation accident in Pakistani airspace in nearly six years. The last major tragedy occurred in 2020, when a Pakistan International Airlines domestic passenger flight crashed on approach to Karachi’s main airport. Out of the 99 people on board that flight, only two survived the crash.

    Authorities have not yet released details on potential causes of the 2024 incident, nor an updated timeline for the ongoing search for the missing five crew members. Rescue teams are continuing to comb the crash site in hopes of recovering additional debris and locating the crew.

  • With Le Pen sentencing, France’s presidential election veers into the extraordinary

    With Le Pen sentencing, France’s presidential election veers into the extraordinary

    PARIS – France’s 2025 presidential election, already one of the most consequential political contests in the European Union this cycle, has taken an unprecedented turn after far-right leader Marine Le Pen confirmed she will stand for the nation’s highest office for the fourth consecutive time – a bid that became possible only after a Paris appeals court revised a prior conviction that threatened to end her political ambitions.

  • World Cup quarterfinals: It’s Messi, Morocco, and 6 teams from Europe. And that’s not unusual

    World Cup quarterfinals: It’s Messi, Morocco, and 6 teams from Europe. And that’s not unusual

    MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — The expanded 48-team 2026 FIFA World Cup has reached its final eight teams, and the competition’s historic power dynamic remains largely intact. Six of the eight remaining quarterfinalists call Europe home, with just one spot filled by a South American side and one by an African representative. Unless Morocco can pull off two consecutive upset wins to claim the trophy, the world championship will once again go to a nation from either Europe or South America — a trend that has held for nearly 100 years of World Cup history.

    Since the first tournament kicked off in 1930, 22 editions of the World Cup have concluded. All 22 championships have been split exclusively between European and South American teams: 12 titles have gone to European sides, while 10 have been claimed by South American squads. No nation from any other confederation has ever reached the top of the podium. This year’s quarterfinal lineup, with only two non-European/South American teams in the field, does little to upend that long-standing status quo.

    Even for Europe, this tournament has delivered stronger-than-expected results, according to some of the continent’s top stars. Erling Haaland, the talismanic Norwegian striker, notched a brace to lead his nation past Brazil and secure Norway’s first-ever World Cup quarterfinal berth — a result he called surprising. “I thought it was not possible to do some things,” Haaland said. “I guess I’m wrong.” Haaland’s unexpected success stands in sharp contrast to the disappointment suffered by this year’s joint tournament hosts, the United States, Mexico, and Canada, all from the North American, Central American and Caribbean Football Confederation (CONCACAF).

    Expanded to 48 teams for the first time, this World Cup gave North America three chances to break the European-South American stranglehold on the late stages of the tournament. All three hosts navigated the group stage and the newly introduced round of 32 with impressive form, posting a combined 9 wins, 2 draws, and 1 loss across those early matches while outscoring their opponents by a 20-goal margin. Early optimism quickly evaporated when the round of 16 kicked off, however.

    England eliminated Mexico 3-2, Belgium rolled to a lopsided 4-1 win over the U.S., and Morocco cruised to a 3-0 shutout of Canada. All three hosts exited the tournament in that round, finishing with a combined 0-3 record and being outscored by seven goals across their three knockout matches. The result extended a long drought for CONCACAF: no North American side has reached the World Cup quarterfinals since Costa Rica’s 2014 run, and the region’s most recent deep run before that was the U.S.’s historic third-place finish in 1930, followed by a quarterfinal appearance in 2002. Canada has never advanced past the round of 16, while Mexico has reached that stage eight times in its last nine World Cup appearances — and never moved further.

    “We need to get over that next hurdle,” U.S. star Christian Pulisic said in a post-elimination televised interview. “Trying to compete and beat the world’s best, that’s our next step … There’s still another step that we have to take.” Mexico midfielder Erik Lira echoed that sentiment, saying “Everyone gave everything. But, in the end, it wasn’t enough.”

    That refrain has become a familiar one for every region outside of Europe and South America. Only once in the last two decades has the quarterfinal field featured broad representation from across the globe: the 2002 tournament saw five different confederations — Europe, South America, Asia, Africa, and North America — all claim spots in the final eight. That tournament remains a rare outlier: across the six World Cups held since 2002, Europe has claimed 30 of 48 total quarterfinal spots, South America has taken 14, Africa has earned three, and North America has secured just one.

    This year, Africa entered the knockout stage poised for a potential breakthrough, sending 10 teams to the expanded tournament with nine advancing to the round of 32. Morocco is the only African side that remains, after most other African nations were eliminated by late, devastating goals. Ivory Coast, South Africa, and Congo all conceded match-deciding goals in the 86th minute or later to bow out of the competition. Cape Verde’s surprising run ended with an own goal against defending champion Argentina in extra time. Senegal and Egypt suffered particularly heartbreaking exits: both held 2-0 leads late in the second half, only to collapse to 3-2 defeats at the hands of Belgium and Argentina, respectively.

    Egypt’s coaching staff has alleged that biased officiating cost their team the win. “Perhaps they wanted to keep the world champion in the competition,” Egypt coach Hossam Hassan said. “Perhaps they wanted Messi to stay in the competition.” For Argentina and Messi, the comeback win simply延续了 the consistent success that elite powerhouses have enjoyed at the World Cup. Messi’s side has reached the quarterfinals in five of the last six tournaments, a reminder that some hierarchies remain hard to shift.

    “It wasn’t easy to come back from a 2-0 deficit in a World Cup knockout match — especially given how games are going these days, where no one gives you anything for free,” Messi said after the match. “But thank God, we did it once again.” As the tournament enters its final two weeks, all eyes will be on Morocco to see if it can finally rewrite the World Cup’s long-standing narrative.

  • Israel kills Gaza elder tasked with broadcasting Egypt-Argentina game

    Israel kills Gaza elder tasked with broadcasting Egypt-Argentina game

    A deadly Israeli airstrike in central Gaza City has killed a senior Egyptian aid official and two other civilians, including a child, drawing sharp diplomatic pushback from Cairo amid ongoing ceasefire negotiations hosted by the Egyptian capital. The Tuesday attack targeted a civilian vehicle traveling through the al-Sabra neighborhood of Gaza City, claiming the life of Mohamed Fawaz al-Wahidi, who held dual leadership roles as public relations director for the Egyptian Relief Committee (ERC) and head of the committee’s Office of Mukhtars and Community Elders at its Gaza City headquarters, according to multiple regional news outlets including the Palestinian Information Center and Arabi Post. Two additional passengers in the vehicle — one a minor — also died in the strike, and several bystanders sustained injuries. Wounds
    The timing of the attack carried unusual resonance: it unfolded mere hours before the ERC was set to host a free public screening of the World Cup match between Egypt and Argentina, a popular community event the aid organization had organized across multiple Gaza locations. Prior to the strike, Wahidi had just wrapped up work at a local neighborhood reconciliation meeting, a role he was widely recognized for across the Gaza Strip. ERC spokespeople described Wahidi as a deeply respected community figure who dedicated his career to mediating local disputes and supporting Palestinian families in need. The al-Sabra strike pushed the total death toll from Israeli strikes across all of Gaza on that Tuesday to at least seven people, with an additional 20 people injured, according to casualty tallies from local medical sources. Additional drone strikes were confirmed Tuesday in the southern city of Khan Younis and across northern Gaza, local sources told Israeli outlet Haaretz and medical teams at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza. Founded under the direction of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, the ERC is a key humanitarian actor in blockaded Gaza, coordinating a broad range of critical aid operations that include food distribution, rubble clearance after airstrikes, and management of displacement camps for Palestinians displaced by repeated rounds of conflict. The attack comes at a sensitive diplomatic moment: Cairo is currently hosting high-level talks aimed at securing a second phase of a regional ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. Following the strike, Egyptian authorities delivered a strongly worded formal protest to Israel, demanding a full explanation for the killing of the Egyptian-affiliated aid worker, Haaretz reported. This strike is far from an isolated incident: Israel has sustained a regular campaign of airstrikes and ground operations in Gaza even after a US-brokered ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas took effect last October. In the eight months following the ceasefire’s implementation, at least 1,072 Palestinians have been killed and more than 3,460 injured in Israeli actions across the Gaza Strip, according to aggregated casualty data. This report draws on verified on-the-ground sourcing from multiple independent regional and international news outlets covering the ongoing conflict in Gaza.

  • Bowen: For all his bluster, Trump has no better option than talks with Iran

    Bowen: For all his bluster, Trump has no better option than talks with Iran

    At the NATO summit held in Turkey, U.S. President Donald Trump delivered an unusually harsh verbal attack against Iran, issuing a stark new threat of expanded military action that has sent fresh shockwaves through already tense Middle Eastern geopolitics. In unvarnished remarks, Trump dismissed Iran’s leadership as “scum” and “sick, vicious people,” claiming the regime would immediately use a nuclear weapon if it acquired one, and declaring that diplomatic efforts to resolve the standoff were effectively finished. “It’s over,” he told reporters, before doubling down on the threat of new attacks hours later: “We will probably hit them harder again tonight. I gave them a little warning. We’re going to hit them hard again tonight.”

    Trump’s shifting rhetoric on the conflict has been well-documented: he has alternated between declaring victory over Iran, threatening the complete destruction of Iranian civilization, and signaling openness to negotiated settlement. Even in his latest bellicose remarks, however, the president left the door open for ongoing talks. When asked whether the recent escalation of strikes between U.S. forces and Iran had ended negotiations, Trump noted that his chief negotiators Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner could continue discussions if they chose, adding “I don’t care, they can talk. But I think they’re wasting their time,” and labeling Iranian leaders “a bunch of lying guys.”

    This mixed messaging underscores a core reality: despite months of joint military operations by the U.S. and Israel, the two countries have failed to topple the Islamic regime in Tehran, leaving diplomacy as the only viable path forward for Washington. The current crisis comes amid a period of national mourning in Iran, which this week held funeral rites for former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in a U.S.-Israeli airstrike on the first day of the war on February 28. Negotiations had already been paused to accommodate the funeral period, and the new round of threats has dealt a significant blow to already fragile diplomatic efforts.

    Mediators working to broker a negotiated settlement described the recent escalation as “a setback for sure,” noting the atmosphere between the two sides is “very tense.” The deep lack of trust between Washington and Tehran means even minor escalations can derail progress, as neither side believes the other will uphold the terms of any final agreement. No one disputes that the U.S. retains overwhelming military capacity to inflict massive damage on Iranian targets, but successive strikes have failed to break the Iranian regime’s resolve to defend its core strategic demands, chief among them full Iranian control over the Strait of Hormuz.

    The strait remains the central sticking point in all negotiations. Roughly one-fifth of the world’s global oil and gas supplies pass through its waters, giving Iran unparalleled leverage over the global economy – a far more practical strategic asset than an unbuilt nuclear program. Tehran has made clear it will not surrender authority over the strait, even if that means walking away from a proposed memorandum of understanding (MOU) that includes significant economic incentives for Iran, such as the unfreezing of billions in overseas assets and the lifting of restrictions on Iranian oil exports. The regime has been emboldened by the failure of U.S. and Israeli forces to eliminate it, and Khamenei’s well-attended funeral demonstrated that the Islamic government retains a strong base of domestic support. While domestic opposition to the regime still exists, a brutal crackdown on mass protests in January that killed thousands of demonstrators has forced opposition groups into hiding, eliminating any immediate domestic challenge to Tehran’s leadership.

    The framework for a potential final agreement has already been outlined by mediators. In exchange for international recognition of Iran’s authority over the Strait of Hormuz, the unfreezing of overseas assets, and the normalization of Iranian oil exports, Tehran would agree to new limits on uranium enrichment, allow the return of United Nations nuclear inspectors, and account for existing stockpiles of highly enriched uranium – which Trump has labeled “nuclear dust.” Even as the broad outlines of a deal remain on the table, however, the past 24 hours of escalation have underscored how difficult it will be to bridge the gap between the two sides and reach a lasting, stable resolution to the conflict.

  • Teenager arrested after two girls, 13, seriously injured in German school attack

    Teenager arrested after two girls, 13, seriously injured in German school attack

    A violent attack at a German secondary school has left two young teenagers seriously injured and sparked a large-scale emergency response in the small town of Schongau, Upper Bavaria. Law enforcement authorities have confirmed that a 16-year-old suspect has been taken into custody following the Wednesday incident at Welfen-Gymnasium, a local public secondary school with deep community roots stretching back to its founding in 1887.

    According to official statements from German police, responding officers found the suspect in possession of both a knife and a firearm when they arrived at the scene. Investigators currently believe the suspect acted alone in carrying out the attack, though many details about the incident remain under active investigation as of Wednesday afternoon.

    The two victims, both 13-year-old female students at the school, suffered severe wounds in the attack. Police confirmed that while their injuries are serious, they are not currently considered life-threatening. However, authorities have noted that they are still working to confirm whether additional people were hurt, and are still assessing the full scope of harm from the incident.

    Early in the response, a police spokesperson told AFP that the type of weapon used had not yet been confirmed, and declined to confirm initial reports of a stabbing. Bavaria’s Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann later told local public broadcaster Bayerischer Rundfunk that he believed the two girls had been stabbed, though this detail has not yet been formally confirmed by law enforcement.

    Multiple key details about the suspect remain unconfirmed, including their full identity and their connection to the school. Herrmann told reporters that the suspect had received prior psychiatric treatment, and there are unconfirmed reports that the individual is a former student of Welfen-Gymnasium. Police have publicly classified the incident as a “rampage” as their investigation continues.

    Local authorities have moved quickly to support affected families and community members in the wake of the violence. A dedicated support and contact point for parents, relatives of students, and witnesses has been set up at the town’s local fire station to provide information and mental health resources.

    Founded more than 135 years ago, Welfen-Gymnasium began as an almost entirely all-girls school before shifting to a co-educational model roughly 40 years ago, according to information posted on the school’s official website. The incident has shocked the quiet small town community, with a large police operation still ongoing in the area surrounding the school as investigators collect evidence and piece together the full sequence of events.