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  • France top arms exporter to Israel in 2024, according to EU data

    France top arms exporter to Israel in 2024, according to EU data

    Against a backdrop of escalating diplomatic friction between Paris and Tel Aviv, newly released European Union data confirms that France retained its position as the largest supplier of military export licenses to Israel in 2024, even after Israel officially announced it would cut off future weapons procurement from the European nation.

    The official EU statistics, published Wednesday, detail that France approved a total of €362 million (equivalent to $424 million) in arms export licenses for Israel last year. Germany ranked second on the list with $198 million in approved licenses, while Greece followed in third place with $133 million, per the dataset.

    Reporting from EUobserver breaks down the composition of France’s 2024 export approvals: most licenses covered military components and defense software, but the shipment totals also include €122 million ($143 million) worth of ammunition and an additional €18 million ($21 million) for explosive ordnance, ranging from bombs and torpedoes to rockets and guided missiles.

    This continued high volume of arms exports comes despite a sharp shift in Israel’s official procurement policy toward France. Back in March 2024, the Israeli government announced it would end future state security procurement from France, citing what it described as Paris’ “hostile” policy stance toward the country. Israeli public media incorrectly linked the decision to French support for a United Nations resolution calling for an arms embargo on Israel – a vote that France ultimately abstained from – as well as new restrictions on Israeli defense entities participating in French military trade shows.

    According to reporting from The Jerusalem Post, the policy shift does not invalidate existing, previously signed contracts, and private sector firms from both sides remain permitted to finalize new commercial agreements.

    Tensions around defense exhibition access boiled over in June 2025, when French event organizers initially barred five Israeli arms manufacturers that specialized in offensive weapons from entering the Paris Air Show. The exclusion prompted immediate pushback from Israeli officials, who levied accusations of antisemitism against French authorities. After extensive diplomatic negotiations, four of the five Israeli companies were ultimately allowed to set up exhibition booths at the event. By November of the same year, all Israeli arms manufacturers were granted full permission to participate in Milipol, France’s major internal security and defense trade show.

    The unaligned dynamic – Paris continuing to approve hundreds of millions in arms exports even as Israel publicly cuts procurement ties – highlights the complex, often contradictory nature of EU-Israeli defense relations amid ongoing regional conflict and shifting diplomatic priorities across the bloc.

  • UK terror watchdog urges ‘moratorium’ on pro-Palestine marches

    UK terror watchdog urges ‘moratorium’ on pro-Palestine marches

    A shocking antisemitic stabbing attack in a heavily Jewish London neighborhood has ignited a fierce national debate over the future of pro-Palestine protests in the United Kingdom, after the country’s top independent reviewer of terrorism legislation called for an immediate halt to such demonstrations.

    The incident unfolded Wednesday afternoon in Golders Green, north London, where two Jewish men — aged 34 and 76 — were stabbed by a suspect wielding a large blade. A 45-year-old Somali-born British national was taken into custody shortly after the attack, and both victims are projected to make a full recovery. The Metropolitan Police confirmed the suspect has an established record of serious violence and documented mental health conditions, and was first referred to the UK’s Prevent counter-extremism program back in 2020. Investigators also noted the attack appears to be linked to a separate altercation that took place in southeast London several hours earlier.

    In the wake of the violence, Jonathan Hall, the independent reviewer of UK terrorism legislation, publicly called for a moratorium on all ongoing pro-Palestine marches during an interview with Times Radio. Hall argued that the current climate has created conditions where these demonstrations inevitably foster antisemitic rhetoric and demonization of Jewish communities. He pushed back against what he described as insufficient government action, saying that offering only statements of solidarity and supporting police investigations is no longer adequate.

    “It pains me to say this, but I think we may have reached a point where we need to have a moratorium on the sorts of marches that have been happening,” Hall said, adding that the government must be willing to take bolder action to address rising antisemitism across the country.

    Hall’s remarks drew immediate and sharp pushback from the Stop the War coalition, a prominent group that has supported ongoing pro-Palestine demonstrations. The organization condemned the Golders Green attack and all forms of antisemitism and racism unequivocally, but rejected attempts to tie the violence to peaceful pro-Palestine protests. The coalition noted that many Jewish people have participated in the marches themselves, framing the demonstrations as legitimate displays of solidarity with Palestinian civilians caught in the Israel-Hamas conflict, not the “hate marches” labeled by right-wing political figures.

    Attempts to criminalize the protests, which reflect majority public opinion on the conflict in the UK, or falsely link them to racist attacks targeting Jewish communities, are scurrilous and must be rejected, the group added.

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the Golders Green attack “utterly appalling”, and the UK government announced Thursday it would allocate an additional £25 million to boost security for Jewish communities across the country. This announcement comes amid a documented surge in antisemitic incidents across the UK in recent months: Metropolitan Police has recorded dozens of antisemitic hate crimes, including multiple arson attacks, over the past 30 days alone.

    Hall’s call for a moratorium also comes amid ongoing controversy over the government’s sweeping crackdown on pro-Palestine activism. In December, both the Metropolitan Police and Greater Manchester Police announced they would arrest demonstrators for chanting the phrase “globalise the intifada” or displaying it on protest placards; three protesters were formally charged on related offences in January. Pro-Palestine activists have repeatedly denied that the term, which translates from Arabic to “uprising”, is inherently antisemitic or a call for violence, and many British Jews have been visible, prominent participants in pro-Palestine marches across the country.

    The debate also overlaps with a separate ongoing legal battle over the government’s designation of direct action group Palestine Action as an illegal terrorist organization. The High Court recently ruled the government’s ban unlawful, and the administration is now appealing that ruling. In his newly released annual report, Hall himself raised significant red flags about the ban, noting it exposed “real uncertainty” over whether non-violent property damage alone should be classified as a terrorist offence.

    Hall warned that the broad wording of current UK terrorism law, without clearer legal guardrails, risks drawing legitimate protest activity into terrorism policing — even in cases where there is no intent to harm human life. “There is no legal authority on what ‘serious damage to property’ means,” Hall wrote, noting the vague definition could stretch to encompass minor cases of criminal damage depending on how courts interpret the legal threshold. While Hall argued it would be unthinkable to remove property damage from the terrorism statute entirely, he recommended that lawmakers narrow the legal test, for example by requiring proof of risk to life, a proven connection to national security threats, or explicit exemptions for non-violent protest activity.

  • Nun assaulted in Jerusalem amid ‘pattern’ of anti-Christian attacks by Israelis

    Nun assaulted in Jerusalem amid ‘pattern’ of anti-Christian attacks by Israelis

    A violent assault on a 48-year-old nun and researcher at Jerusalem’s French School of Biblical and Archaeological Research has sparked renewed international alarm over escalating hostility targeting Christian communities across Israel and occupied East Jerusalem. The attack unfolded on Tuesday at the Cenacle, a sacred Mount Zion site revered by both Christian and Jewish faith traditions, according to detailed accounts from institutional leaders.

    Father Olivier Poquillon, director of the Dominican-managed institute that employs the nun, described the unprovoked attack to Agence France-Presse. He confirmed that an unidentified assailant approached the researcher from behind, hurled her with full force onto a nearby rock, and continued to repeatedly kick her while she lay incapacitated on the ground. Photographs circulating widely on social media have documented visible facial bruising from the beating; the victim has since received outpatient medical care for her injuries.

    Following the incident, both Poquillon and the French Consulate General in Jerusalem issued public condemnations of the “gratuitous assault” via social media platform X, and jointly demanded immediate law enforcement action to apprehend and prosecute the attacker. Israeli police announced Wednesday that they had taken a 36-year-old suspect into custody, but declined to release any further identifying information about the individual. Local Israeli journalist Yossi Eli of Channel 13 later reported that the arrest only came after the incident gained widespread viral media attention, prompting public pressure on law enforcement.

    In an official statement, Israeli police asserted that they “treat any attack on members of the clergy and religious communities with the utmost seriousness and apply a policy of zero tolerance to all acts of violence,” adding that the force remains “committed to protecting all communities and ensuring those responsible for violence are held accountable.” Israel’s Foreign Ministry also released a condemnation, noting that the attack “stands in direct contradiction to the values of respect, coexistence and religious freedom upon which Israel is founded,” and reaffirming the country’s stated commitment to safeguarding worship access for all faith groups.

    But local and institutional leaders have pushed back against these official assurances, framing the assault as part of a sustained, growing pattern of anti-Christian aggression. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, which maintains an affiliation with the nun’s research center, released a statement calling the incident “not an isolated incident, but part of a troubling pattern of rising hostility toward the Christian community and its symbols.” The university added that the attack represents a direct violation of Jerusalem’s core founding values of religious pluralism and safe interfaith dialogue.

    This latest assault comes against a backdrop of escalating tensions that have raised concern among Christian communities across the region over the past two months. In March 2025, Israeli police initially blocked Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa and other senior clergy from accessing the Church of the Holy Sepulchre to lead the annual Palm Sunday Mass. Access was only partially restored after widespread international pushback. In a recent pastoral letter, Pizzaballa warned that holy sites meant for prayer have increasingly become identity-focused battlegrounds, noting that “sacred texts are invoked to justify violence, occupation, and terrorism,” and calling the abuse of religious belief to legitimize harm “the gravest sin of our time.”

    Earlier in April, video footage emerged showing an Israeli soldier destroying a statue of Jesus in southern Lebanon, triggering global public outrage. The Israeli military ultimately removed the soldier from combat duty and issued a 30-day sentence for the incident. In the occupied West Bank, Israeli settlers have stepped up repeated attacks on Taybeh, one of the only remaining majority-Christian towns in the territory, in recent weeks.

    A April 2025 report from the Rossing Centre for Education and Dialogue, a Jerusalem-based interfaith advocacy organization, documented what it calls a “continued and expanding pattern of intimidation and aggression” targeting Christian communities, with clergy and church properties bearing the brunt of attacks. The organization recorded 155 separate incidents of anti-Christian hostility in 2025 alone: 61 physical assaults, 52 attacks on church-owned property, 28 cases of harassment, and 14 incidents of vandalized religious signage. Researchers stressed that the recorded incidents are almost certainly just the “tip of the iceberg,” as many cases go unreported.

    The report links the rising violence to a shifting “sociopolitical climate increasingly intolerant of diversity and more assertive in exclusivist national-religious claims,” noting that Palestinian Christian communities are disproportionately impacted by the hostility. Separate from physical attacks, Christian educational institutions in Jerusalem now face an existential threat: the Israeli Education Ministry has recently banned teachers holding Palestinian-issued teaching permits from working in Israeli-jurisdictional schools, putting more than 200 Christian teachers out of work and pushing dozens of schools toward potential permanent closure.

  • Israeli forces kill Palestinian teen in West Bank raid

    Israeli forces kill Palestinian teen in West Bank raid

    A fresh wave of Israeli military operations in the occupied West Bank has left two Palestinians dead, including a 16-year-old teenager, amid a documented sharp escalation in civilian casualties and forced displacement that has reached levels not seen since the 1967 occupation, United Nations data confirms.

    The most recent fatal incident unfolded Wednesday evening in the al-Hawooz neighborhood of Hebron, where Israeli forces launched a large-scale raid into the densely populated urban area. Medical sources confirm 16-year-old Ibrahim al-Khayyat sustained a critical gunshot wound to the abdomen during the operation, which saw Israeli troops deploy dozens of military vehicles, block major thoroughfares, and order local shop owners to close their businesses mid-day.

    During the incursion, troops opened live fire and launched tear gas canisters directly at local residents, leaving two people injured. Both casualties were transported to the local Red Crescent hospital for emergency care, where al-Khayyat was pronounced dead shortly after arrival. In addition to the fatality, Israeli forces took at least one Palestinian into custody during the raid, which also targeted the headquarters of a local charitable association.

    The Hebron killing came hours after a separate Israeli incursion in Silwad, a town located northeast of Ramallah, that left another Palestinian, Abd el-Halim Hammad, dead. These two deaths are part of a consistent, daily pattern of Israeli search-and-arraid operations across the occupied West Bank that regularly involve the use of live ammunition against Palestinian civilians.

    UN data compiled on the ongoing crisis shows that Palestinian fatalities at the hands of Israeli forces in the West Bank have spiked dramatically since October 2023. Since that time, at least 1,080 Palestinians have been killed, with at least 35 additional deaths recorded already this year. Thousands more have sustained injuries from military activity in the region.

    Parallel to the increase in military operations, UN officials also record a significant surge in violence carried out by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities. The data shows an average of 140 settler attacks per month, nearly twice the frequency recorded before October 2023. These attacks have grown increasingly organized, with a clear goal of forcing Palestinian communities out of Area C — a section of the West Bank that makes up roughly 60% of the total territory, and remains under full Israeli military and administrative control.

    According to latest UN displacement figures, approximately 40,000 Palestinians have been forcibly removed from their homes in the West Bank since January 2023. More than 3,000 of these displacements are directly tied to targeted attacks by settlers. UN officials note that the current scale of forced displacement is the worst it has been since Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967.

  • Saudi Arabia to pull investment from LIV Golf tour

    Saudi Arabia to pull investment from LIV Golf tour

    British media outlets have reported that Saudi Arabia plans to end its massive multibillion-dollar backing of the LIV Golf breakaway tour by the close of the 2025 season, a move that fits into a wider pattern of scaling back high-profile international and domestic ventures amid shifting economic pressures tied to regional conflict.

    Anonymous sources familiar with the tour’s plans told the BBC that LIV Golf will publicly unveil a revised “new strategic framework” this Thursday, with leadership actively pursuing new outside private investors to take over Saudi Arabia’s stake. Multiple reports from Sky Sports News add that Yasir al-Rumayyan, the current chairman of LIV Golf and governor of Saudi Arabia’s $1 trillion Public Investment Fund (PIF), the sovereign wealth vehicle that has bankrolled the tour since its 2021 launch, is expected to step down from his role as part of the restructuring.

    Since LIV Golf launched as a direct competitor to the long-established PGA Tour, PIF has injected more than $5 billion into the breakaway circuit, which lured top golf stars including Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau, Phil Mickelson and Cameron Smith away from traditional tours with unprecedented eight-figure signing bonuses. The investment was part of a broader Saudi strategy to expand the kingdom’s global footprint in sports and entertainment, a core pillar of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030 initiative to diversify Saudi Arabia’s oil-dependent economy. However, the venture has proven far less financially viable than initial projections: official filings show LIV Golf has accumulated losses exceeding $1.1 billion outside the United States, with estimated losses in the hundreds of millions to billions more in the U.S. market.

    The LIV Golf pullback is not an isolated adjustment. Long before the outbreak of the U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran, Saudi officials had already begun reassessing dozens of high-cost, high-ambition projects across sectors. In December 2024, Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan publicly noted the kingdom had “no ego” standing in the way of deprioritizing non-essential ventures to reallocate capital. Earlier this year, construction was suspended on the Mukaab, a 400-meter-tall cube-shaped megaproject planned for central Riyadh. Officials also shelved plans for a luxury desert ski resort and a large-scale dam for an artificial recreational lake, all part of the kingdom’s urban development push.

    The scaling back has extended to other international sports ventures as well. Earlier this week, the World Snooker Tour announced that the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters, which had only run two editions after a 10-year hosting agreement was signed, would be permanently canceled. The joint statement from the Saudi Billiard and Snooker Federation and event promoter Matchroom confirmed the decision to scrap future editions of both the snooker masters and the hosted World Pool Championship was reached by mutual agreement.

    Last week, The New York Times reported that Saudi Arabia had also pulled out of a $200 million sponsorship deal to support New York City’s Metropolitan Opera House. Met General Manager Peter Gelb told the outlet Saudi officials framed the decision as a direct response to economic damage stemming from the war in Iran and the disruption to oil transit through the Strait of Hormuz. “They are only doing the projects that are essential,” Gelb recounted of his conversation with Saudi representatives, noting the Met financing “falls outside what is essential.”

    Speaking to Al Arabiya Business on Wednesday, Rumayyan acknowledged that the conflict around Iran has directly shifted PIF’s investment priorities, confirming that “the war would add more pressure to reposition some priorities.” He made history Wednesday by publicly confirming for the first time that The Line, the iconic 170-kilometer car-free linear city at the heart of the $500 billion Neom futuristic development project, is no longer a core near-term priority for the kingdom. “Everyone thinks The Line is Neom, but The Line is one project in Neom,” Rumayyan explained. “Is it necessary to have The Line by 2030? I think no. It’s good to have, but not a must-have.”

    The decision to exit LIV Golf aligns with a broader strategic shift for PIF, which now aims to redirect a larger share of its capital to domestic projects rather than international high-profile investments. Rumayyan confirmed the fund’s new target allocation: 80 percent of investments will go to domestic initiatives, while just 20 percent will be deployed abroad, down from a recent peak of 30 percent allocated to international ventures.

  • Telegraph and Politico owner says journalists must support Israel or resign

    Telegraph and Politico owner says journalists must support Israel or resign

    A fierce debate over journalistic independence has erupted across global media properties owned by German media giant Axel Springer, after CEO Mathias Dopfner explicitly told staffers that unwavering support for Israel is a non-negotiable core condition of employment at the company’s outlets, including Politico and the newly acquired Telegraph. The confrontation has thrown a harsh spotlight on the ideological direction of Axel Springer’s expanding international media empire, raising urgent questions about whether top-down political demands will skew impartial news coverage of the ongoing Israel-Gaza conflict.

    The controversy came to a head this week during a charged internal company meeting, convened after a group of Politico journalists submitted an open letter to incoming editor-in-chief Jonathan Greenberger. In the letter, the journalists accused Dopfner — a media magnate long nicknamed “Germany’s Rupert Murdoch” for his outsized political influence and consolidated media holdings — of leveraging the publication to advance his personal partisan political agenda. The letter noted that Dopfner’s recent public opinion pieces have already put Politico’s hard-won reputation as an impartial, trusted political news outlet at serious risk, according to reporting from Jewish Insider.

    Axel Springer first acquired Politico, the leading U.S. and European political news platform, in a 2021 deal, and only secured regulatory approval to purchase the iconic UK title The Daily Telegraph earlier this month. That acquisition has amplified industry and newsroom concerns that the ideological mandates set by company leadership will reshape editorial standards and coverage lines across all of Axel Springer’s properties, particularly its coverage of Israel. Israel is currently facing allegations of genocide at the International Court of Justice, stemming from its military campaign in Gaza that has killed at least 72,599 people and injured more than 172,410 others to date.

    During the meeting, Dopfner doubled down on his stance, framing loyalty to Israel as a central component of the company’s five publicly stated core values, which it calls the “essentials”: freedom, free markets, individual autonomy, freedom of speech, and explicit support for Israel. He placed support for Israel immediately after the four foundational principles, and made clear that anyone who questions this mandate is not aligned with the company’s identity. “If that is something that somebody wants to question, then we are really reaching the very fundamental principles of our values,” Dopfner told assembled staff. “And that then may lead simply to the decision that, because we are very transparent about it, it is then an individual decision whether Axel Springer and somebody who has so fundamentally different beliefs is really a good fit.”

    This mandate is far from an out-of-character statement for Dopfner: it follows a years-long pattern of provocative pro-Israel rhetoric that has sparked controversy. Last year, a leaked internal email published by German outlet Die Zeit ended with the line: “Zionism uber alles. Israel my country.” The phrase “Zionism uber alles” carries uniquely toxic baggage in Germany, as the identical wording opened the national anthem during the Nazi era, and became a symbol of ideological supremacism. The remark drew widespread condemnation across German political and media circles when it was leaked.
    The controversy has also drawn attention to Dopfner’s close ties to the Israeli government: in October 2023, Israeli President Isaac Herzog awarded Dopfner the Israeli Presidential Medal of Honor, alongside Miriam Adelson, a prominent casino billionaire, major pro-Israel political donor, and owner of the NHL’s Dallas Stars.

    During the internal meeting, journalists pushed back directly against Dopfner’s pattern of editorial intervention, calling for stricter fact-checking and evidentiary standards for opinion pieces written by the CEO himself. In one specific exchange, staffers criticized Dopfner for an opinion piece that referred to Iran as an aggressor systematically pursuing nuclear weapons, arguing the claim was misleading and required additional context and clarification. Iran has consistently and repeatedly denied any plans to develop a nuclear weapon, a fact that went unmentioned in Dopfner’s piece. Notably, while Dopfner described the claim that America is the world’s largest democracy as a self-evident fact that requires no proof, global demographic rankings widely recognize India, with a population of 1.4 billion, as the world’s largest democracy.

    Dopfner rejected the criticism entirely, arguing that his claims about Iran were beyond debate. “I think you have to qualify or prove arguments or points if they are new or if they are debatable – but for me at least, these two facts – that the Iranians are working on the nuclear bomb and that they are aggressors for decades – are so obvious, so proven for many times, they are almost – it’s like saying America is the biggest democracy in the world,” he said. “I don’t have to prove that.” He closed by confirming that he plans to expand his opinion writing, not scale it back, telling staff he intends to “write more in the future, not less.”

    The ongoing confrontation has intensified broader scrutiny of media consolidation and top-down ideological control in global news, as newsroom advocates warn that mandatory loyalty oaths for journalists set a dangerous precedent that undermines the public’s trust in independent news coverage.

  • Will UAE’s exit spell the end of OPEC?

    Will UAE’s exit spell the end of OPEC?

    After nearly six decades as a core member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the United Arab Emirates’ decision to withdraw from the oil cartel is far more than a symbolic rupture. This unprecedented move lays bare a widening rift between major producing nations over how to adapt to a rapidly shifting global energy landscape, and it will fundamentally erode the bloc’s ability to regulate international crude supplies.

    In the immediate term, the practical impact of the UAE’s departure will remain muted. Global markets still crave every available barrel of oil, and the UAE accounts for just 3 to 4 percent of total worldwide output. But the underlying forces driving the decision carry far greater weight than the exit itself, shaped by a convergence of long-simmering economic tensions and shifting geopolitical priorities that have been accelerated by the ongoing war in Iran.

    For more than a decade, the UAE has poured roughly $150 billion into expanding its crude production capacity, pushing its maximum potential daily output to nearly 5 million barrels. Yet OPEC’s quota system, which is overwhelmingly shaped by de facto bloc leader Saudi Arabia, has barred the UAE from fully utilizing this expanded capacity. Restricted to a daily output of around 3.5 million barrels to keep global supplies tight and prices elevated, the country has been forced to leave more than 1.5 million barrels of daily production capacity idle.

    This mismatch between investment and output has created deep, unresolved tension within the cartel: why pour billions into expanding production if regulatory limits prevent you from selling the extra oil?

    Abu Dhabi’s approach to this question stems from its fundamentally different economic model compared to other major Gulf producers. Unlike Saudi Arabia, which requires an oil price of roughly $90 per barrel to balance its national budget, the UAE can balance its fiscal accounts at prices just below $50 per barrel. This lower break-even point removes much of the incentive for the UAE to support production caps. Instead, the country has centered its strategy on maximizing oil export volumes in the near term.

    This priority is also rooted in long-term projections for global energy demand. as major economies including China rapidly accelerate the transition to electric transportation, long-standing steady growth in oil demand is slowing and is projected to plateau in the coming decades. The UAE is also further along in its own energy transition planning than Saudi Arabia, with a net-zero emissions target for 2050 compared to Riyadh’s 2060 target. From Abu Dhabi’s perspective, the greatest long-term risk is not falling oil prices, but leaving valuable untapped crude in the ground that will never find a buyer as demand declines.

    The timing of the exit is not driven by economics alone. It also reflects a major shift in the UAE’s political and security calculations, particularly in the wake of sustained heavy attacks on the country’s energy infrastructure during the war in Iran. In Abu Dhabi, a growing consensus has emerged that key regional partnerships such as the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) offered very little tangible support to the country during this period of crisis.

    Anwar Gargash, a senior presidential adviser to the UAE government, framed this disillusionment publicly when speaking to reporters. “The GCC’s stance was the weakest historically, considering the nature of the attack and the threat it posed to everyone,” Gargash said, adding “I expected such a weak stance from the Arab League … But I don’t expect it from the GCC, and I am surprised by it.”

    This experience has reinforced the UAE’s push for a more independent foreign policy. Over recent years, the country has deepened security and economic ties with the United States and Israel, building on the 2020 Abraham Accords it signed alongside other Gulf states. Abu Dhabi views its relationship with Israel not only as a direct bilateral economic and security partnership, but also as a key channel for expanding its influence within U.S. political circles. At the same time, bilateral relations between the UAE and Saudi Arabia have grown increasingly strained, with public divisions emerging over both regional conflicts in Yemen and Somalia and conflicting national energy strategies. Against this backdrop, exiting OPEC serves both as an economic adjustment and a clear signal of the UAE’s growing geopolitical independence.

    The UAE’s departure also raises urgent questions about the future cohesion and relevance of OPEC itself. At the height of its power, the cartel controlled more than half of global crude production. Today, that share has fallen to no more than 35 percent, and internal disagreements over production quotas have grown far more pronounced. Quotas, which have long been the core of OPEC’s collective strategy, are increasingly viewed by smaller members as unfair, uneven constraints rather than shared commitments that benefit the entire bloc. Today, only Saudi Arabia holds significant spare production capacity, giving it disproportionate influence over the bloc’s decision-making. The result is an organization that still shapes global market sentiment, but is far less cohesive and unified than it was in previous decades.

    Contrary to some analysis, the UAE’s exit is not an unambiguous win for the United States. Many observers have framed the move as a victory for former U.S. President Donald Trump, who repeatedly criticized OPEC for keeping crude prices elevated. A weaker, more fragmented OPEC would likely lead to higher overall output and lower gasoline prices for U.S. consumers in the short term. However, sustained lower prices would also put significant pressure on higher-cost U.S. shale producers, which have emerged as one of OPEC’s most formidable competitors in recent years. U.S. producers actually benefited from the cartel’s production restraint, which kept prices high enough to support the high costs of shale extraction. What looks like a short-term geopolitical win could therefore turn into a major economic challenge for the U.S. oil sector over time.

    For the moment, the UAE’s exit will not dramatically reshape global oil markets. Current demand is strong enough to absorb the extra supply the UAE can bring online, particularly as global markets rebuild inventories following the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz after the war in Iran. But the deeper significance of the decision lies in what it reveals about the coming transformation of global oil markets.

    Oil producers are no longer united around a single collective strategy. Some, led by Saudi Arabia, continue to prioritize managing scarcity to keep prices elevated. Others, like the UAE, are racing to monetize their existing reserves before demand peaks and their oil becomes stranded, unusable assets. This strategic divergence is only expected to deepen in the coming years, and it may ultimately prove more consequential for global energy markets than any single country’s departure from the OPEC cartel.

    This analysis is by Adi Imsirovic, a lecturer in energy systems at the University of Oxford, republished with permission under a Creative Commons license.

  • Oil strikes 4-year peak, stocks rise

    Oil strikes 4-year peak, stocks rise

    Global financial markets swung through volatile trading on Thursday, driven by dual forces: escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East that pushed crude oil prices to a four-year high, and mixed signals from central bank policy and quarterly corporate earnings that left major stock indexes split across regions.

    Crude prices surged more than 7% early in the session, lifting the international benchmark Brent crude to $126 per barrel—its highest level since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine—before retreating. By 1330 GMT, Brent had fallen 3.7% to $113.72 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude dropped 2.5% to $104.23 per barrel.

    The sharp run-up in energy prices stemmed from growing fears that Middle East hostilities will escalate and disrupt global oil supplies. Multiple sources confirmed to Axios that U.S. President Donald Trump is set to receive a briefing from U.S. Central Command head Admiral Brad Cooper on plans for potential new military strikes against Iran, while Trump has warned that an ongoing U.S. blockade of Iranian ports could extend for months. Negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program remain completely stalled, and Iran maintains full control over the Strait of Hormuz, the strategic waterway that carries roughly one-fifth of the world’s daily oil trade.

    “With no sign of any peace talks and fears mounting about an escalation, oil prices have continued their gains,” Jim Reid, Deutsche Bank managing director, noted ahead of the price peak. “Investors are pricing in a more protracted conflict,” he added.

    Beyond energy markets, investor attention remained fixed on major central bank decisions, one day after the U.S. Federal Reserve announced it would hold interest rates steady in the face of war-fueled elevated inflation. The European Central Bank and Bank of England followed the Fed’s lead on Thursday, also keeping rates unchanged. However, the ECB warned that risks to the eurozone’s growth and inflation outlooks have “intensified” due to Middle East tensions and energy supply disruptions, while the Bank of England downgraded its forecast for UK economic growth.

    Fresh economic data released Thursday reflected the growing ripple effects of the conflict. Eurozone first-quarter growth slowed to just 0.1%, while U.S. gross domestic product expanded at a 2% annual rate—slower than analysts had projected—as consumer spending cooled. The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge also rose 3.5% in March, driven largely by spiking energy costs. Even with the slowdown, Briefing.com analyst Patrick O’Hare said the U.S. data reinforced confidence in the economy’s resilience despite rising prices.

    On Wall Street, major U.S. stock indices opened higher and ended the day in positive territory, lifted by stronger-than-expected quarterly corporate earnings. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.5% to close at 49,108.93, the S&P 500 added 0.4% to 7,167.28, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.6% to 24,829.53. Big tech stocks delivered a mixed performance: Alphabet, Google’s parent company, saw shares jump more than 5% after investors praised the firm’s successful AI transition and strong revenue across core divisions, while Meta shares slumped more than 9% over concerns about its massive planned AI investment.

    Overall, quarterly results have beaten analyst expectations by a wide margin, pushing the estimated average earnings growth for large U.S. companies from 15% to 26%, O’Hare said. “That is just massive, and it is the trajectory that has had the stock market looking confident in the face of the Middle East tumult and rising oil prices,” he added.

    European markets were similarly split: London’s FTSE 100 rose 1.4% and Frankfurt’s DAX gained 0.8%, while Paris’s CAC 40 dipped less than 0.1%. Most Asian markets closed lower, with Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 falling 1.1% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index dropping 1.3%; only Shanghai’s Composite index eked out a 0.1% gain.

    In currency markets, the Japanese yen surged more than 2% against the U.S. dollar after Japan’s finance minister strongly signaled that Tokyo was prepared to intervene in currency markets to prop up the yen, which had fallen to its lowest level against the dollar since mid-2024. By the end of the trading window, the dollar fell to 156.69 yen from 160.23 yen on Wednesday.

  • Massive sea lion makes rare appearance in San Francisco

    Massive sea lion makes rare appearance in San Francisco

    On a surprising day along the Northern California coast, wildlife enthusiasts and beachgoers in San Francisco were treated to an extraordinary, once-in-a-blue-moon encounter: a massive Steller sea lion, a species rarely spotted this far south of its typical range, made an unexpected appearance in local waters.

    Native to the frigid, nutrient-rich waters stretching from Alaska down through the Pacific Northwest, Steller sea lions rarely venture as far south as the San Francisco Bay Area. Their natural habitat centers on colder coastal ecosystems, where abundant fish populations support their large size—adult males can grow up to 11 feet long and weigh more than 2,500 pounds, making them one of the largest sea lion species on Earth.

    Local marine biologists note that while individual Steller sea lions have been recorded occasionally wandering south for extended foraging trips, confirmed sightings of large adults in the Bay Area remain incredibly uncommon. The unexpected visitor has drawn crowds of curious onlookers, who have kept a respectful distance per local wildlife guidelines to avoid disturbing the animal during its stay. For many residents and visitors alike, the rare sighting offers a unique reminder of the diverse marine life that inhabits California’s coastlines, even in more populated urban areas.

  • US first-quarter growth rebounds less than expected as inflation surges

    US first-quarter growth rebounds less than expected as inflation surges

    New government data released Thursday reveals that U.S. economic growth rebounded less than analysts projected in the first quarter of 2026, as soaring inflation driven by Middle East conflict-related energy price shocks cooled consumer spending and exposed deep divides in the country’s economic performance.

    The world’s largest economy saw gross domestic product expand at an annualized rate of 2.0% between January and March, according to the Commerce Department’s advance estimate. That marks a sharp improvement from the 0.5% growth recorded in the final quarter of 2025, but still underperforms the 2.2% expansion economists had predicted ahead of the report.

    The uptick in overall growth was primarily fueled by a jump in business investment and a rebound in federal government spending, which recovered after a disruptive government shutdown in the fourth quarter of 2025. White House spokesperson Kush Desai quickly framed the result as a win for the Trump administration’s policy agenda, crediting the president’s tax cuts and deregulation efforts for driving what he called an “astonishing surge in business investment.”

    Despite the headline growth number, economic observers warn that strengths in the economy are narrowly concentrated in the booming AI sector, while millions of ordinary households are already showing signs of financial fatigue from rising costs. The conflict-driven energy shock that began after U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, which prompted Tehran to block traffic through the strategic Strait of Hormuz – a critical global transit chokepoint for energy and fertilizer – has sent energy prices soaring worldwide. Data from the American Automobile Association shows the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline in the U.S. has already spiked to $4.30, eating into household budgets that were already stretched.

    Inflation data released alongside the GDP report confirms the sharp upward shift in prices: the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation metric, jumped to 3.5% year-over-year in March, up from 2.8% in February. Even when stripping out volatile food and energy prices, core inflation still rose 3.2% annually, far above the Fed’s long-term 2% target.

    Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union, described the current landscape as a “split-screen economy.” On one side, AI-focused companies and investors are thriving, driving the capital investment boom that lifted the headline GDP number. On the other, middle- and low-income households are grappling with persistent cost-of-living increases. Long noted that nearly half of larger annual tax refunds issued this year have already gone toward covering higher fuel costs for most families, and flagged the slowdown in consumer spending growth to just 1.6% in the first quarter as a “big warning sign” of deeper trouble ahead.

    Oliver Allen, senior U.S. economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, echoed this assessment, pointing out that underlying economic momentum is “anemic” outside of the AI investment surge. He added that multiple headwinds are already weighing on U.S. consumers: a cooling labor market, subdued consumer confidence, sluggish growth in real household income, and the depletion of excess savings accumulated during the COVID-19 pandemic have all combined to dampen spending.

    The combination of slowing consumption and rising inflation also carries significant political risks, as the Republican Party prepares to defend its majority in November’s midterm elections. Steeper everyday costs are likely to become a top campaign issue for voters, and could erode support for the incumbent administration.

    While some financial analysts, including Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Northlight Asset Management, believe the U.S. economy has enough resilience to absorb short-term global shocks, Zaccarelli cautioned that growing risks point to a much more challenging outlook for the global economy in the coming months, raising concerns about broader spillover effects from the Middle East energy crisis.