Mar 22(Jowhar)-Madaxweyna maamulka Koofur Gakbeed ayaa gorodhow Magacyada Guddiga Madaxa Bannaan re Xuduudaha iyo Doorashooyinka Dowlad Goboleedka Koonfr Galbeed Soomaaliya.
Saudi Arabia calls Israeli attacks on Syria an act of aggression
Under the Same Sky: Shells, Sovereignty, and the Quiet Lives of Sweida
When the first booms split the pre-dawn silence over Sweida, residents thought a pipe had burst, or a truck had overturned on a narrow mountain road. By mid-morning, they were counting broken windows and friends who hadn’t answered their phones. By late afternoon, the sound of fighter jets had threaded through the town’s olive trees and vineyards — and a reluctant region once again found itself on edge.
The strikes, which Israel says were aimed at military positions in southern Syria, quickly ballooned into a wider diplomatic row. Riyadh called the attacks “a blatant violation” of Syrian sovereignty. Ankara warned of a dangerous escalation. Damascus called the strikes an “outrageous assault.” And beyond the official statements, there were those who live here — Druze elders, farmers, shopkeepers — trying to make sense of why their lives keep intersecting with the geopolitics of others.
What happened — the short version
According to Israeli military briefings, the operation targeted sites in southern Syria in apparent retaliation for attacks against the Druze community in Sweida province. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) later reported clashes with government forces that left at least four Druze fighters dead, and said that Israeli shelling hit residential neighborhoods in Sweida city.
For context, this flare-up comes amid a broader, more dangerous chapter in the region. After US and Israeli strikes on Iran on 28 February — an escalation that has rippled across borders — much of the Middle East has felt the tremors. Syria, which has so far largely avoided direct entanglement in that confrontation, was nonetheless not immune to the violence and the politics that follow.
Voices from the ground
“You learn the rhythm here,” said Nadir, a 46-year-old olive farmer whose family has tended terraces on the slopes outside Sweida for three generations. “Sundown is prayer and soup. Now it is the sound of planes. How do you teach your children that the sky belongs to them when it keeps being taken away?”
Inside Sweida’s narrow market lanes, a seamstress named Laila sat amid bolts of fabric and made a small, bitter joke: “The new fashion is to wear your heart like armor.” Her hands trembled as she measured cloth; her mother, a veteran of old conflicts, kept recalculating the number of chronic illnesses they could afford to treat should access be cut.
An unnamed Syrian foreign ministry official, responding to reports of the strikes, called the Israeli pretexts “flimsy” and said Damascus would not accept attacks that violated its territorial integrity. A Saudi foreign ministry statement condemned the strikes as aggression and urged the international community to intervene. Turkey’s foreign ministry called the operation “a dangerous escalation.”
“We are caught between airstrikes and diplomacy,” said Dr. Miriam Haddad, a Beirut-based analyst who studies minority communities in the Levant. “The Druze have long navigated precarious relationships with the states that surround them. But being a minority does not grant immunity from state and non-state violence — it often increases your vulnerability.”
Local color: Sweida’s heartbeat
Sweida province — part of the lava-scoured hills known locally as Jabal al-Druze — is a place of sharp basalt ridges, verdant terraces, and a community that prizes secrecy and solidarity. Weddings are loud and joyous; funerals are long and communal. The local souk sells roasted chickpeas, sumac, embroidered sashes and, tucked between stalls, whispers about which cousin is leaving for Europe.
The Druze community, with its distinct religious traditions and a strong sense of local autonomy, has historically been both a protector and a pariah in Syrian politics. That complex identity makes the signals from outside more fraught: protections announced by foreign militaries, however well-intended, can be read as invitations for further intervention.
Why regional reactions matter
Reactions from Saudi Arabia and Turkey are more than statements for the record. Riyadh’s condemnation frames the strikes within the language of international law — sovereignty, territorial integrity — and signals concern about precedent. Ankara’s warning about escalation is a reminder that neighboring states are watching for any sparks that could set the entire region alight.
“When states invoke international law selectively, it erodes norms rather than reinforcing them,” said Professor Elias Matar, an international relations scholar in Beirut. “If the international community is serious about upholding sovereign boundaries, then such incidents need coordinated responses — not only words.”
And somewhere between declarations and diplomacy, there are practical consequences. In 2019–2023, international monitoring showed a steady rise in cross-border strikes and air incursions into Syria by multiple parties — a pattern that has hollowed out any clean distinctions between battlefronts and civilian life. The post-2024 landscape, after the ousting of President Bashar al-Assad, has seen Israeli forces occupy areas of the demilitarized zone along the Golan Heights and carry out repeated operations inside Syria, according to regional reporting.
What this means for the bigger picture
At its core, this is about three connected dynamics: the protection of minorities, the limits of power projection, and the erosion of legal norms that once kept interstate conflict partially in check. Who protects a minority group when the protector is also a regional power with strategic interests? When does “defense” become domination? And when do interventions intended to deter violence end up amplifying it?
Consider the numbers: while precise counts shift with the fog of conflict, the Syrian civil war displaced millions and created humanitarian needs across the Levant. The Golan Heights — seized by Israel in 1967 and internationally regarded as occupied Syrian territory after its annexation by Israel in 1981 — remains a flashpoint. Every strike that crosses that line is another test of the international order that emerged in the aftermath of World War II.
It’s easy to read the headlines and assume this is just another military skirmish. But for people like Nadir and Laila, for children who swap schoolbags for gas masks, it is the daily calculus of survival. For diplomats, each exchange raises the question of proportionality and legality. For analysts, it is another data point in a pattern of regional realignment — one in which local communities become proxies, bargaining chips, and collateral.
What comes next?
Will the international community move beyond statements? Will humanitarian corridors be established, or will political posturing take precedence? The answers are not written in the sky over Sweida, but in the backrooms of capitals and in the courage of local leaders who can still keep people fed and medicine arriving.
“We ask for nothing but to be left in peace,” Laila said, folding a length of blue cloth. “Is that too much?”
As you read this, consider the fragility of peace in a world where borders can be punctured by a single decision and where the lives of ordinary people hinge on the choices of faraway capitals. What responsibility do distant nations have when their actions ripple into the lives of strangers? And what responsibility do we — readers, citizens, watchers — have to hold power to account?
ICE agents dispatched to U.S. airports amid federal budget standoff
Ice at the Gate: When Border Agents Replace Screeners and Airports Become a Political Front
At dawn on a gray weekday, a string of clear-eyed travelers snapped photos of a line that crawled like a tired river through Terminal B. Children grew restless. A businessman checked his watch and sighed. A grandmother, wrapped in a shawl, smiled and tried to keep the mood light: “We have time for coffee and people-watching,” she joked, but her eyes told another story.
Then, as if from a different playbook, a social media post from the White House landed and the narrative changed. President Donald Trump announced that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers would be redeployed to U.S. airports beginning the next day, a move designed to relieve crushing security-screening congestion that has built up amid a weeks-long budget standoff.
It was a decision equal parts improvisation and political theater. Within hours, officials were scrambling to draft orders and draw lines about what ICE would—and would not—do in airports. Tom Homan, a senior border aide, went on television to shore up expectations: ICE agents would “help where we can provide extra security,” he said, but “I don’t see an ICE agent looking at an x-ray machine, because you’re not trained in that.” His message was clear: they would monitor exits and bolster visible presence, not perform technical TSA duties.
The human center of a budget fight
What looks like a personnel shuffle on paper has a very human center: thousands of TSA screeners have been working without pay since the Department of Homeland Security’s funding lapsed on February 14. Long hours, unpaid labor and the strain of a politicized standoff have taken a toll.
“We’re exhausted. We’re showing up because we love this job, but you can only do that for so long,” said a TSA officer at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson who asked to remain anonymous. “Some colleagues have quit. Some are taking second jobs. Others are living off food pantries at the airport.”
The Department of Homeland Security reports that more than 300 TSA employees have resigned since the shutdown began, and unscheduled absences have reportedly doubled at some airports. Lines have stretched into hours at major hubs; travelers have missed flights they could ill afford to lose.
Union representatives and regular officers have described makeshift responses: airports collecting gift cards, stocking break-room shelves with donated food, managers reassigning staff on the fly. In one small, telling moment, a group of volunteers started handing out coffee to exhausted screeners. “It’s a village trying to keep the village running,” a local volunteer said quietly.
Operational friction and legal questions
Bringing ICE into airports raises immediate logistical and legal questions. ICE agents’ duties center on immigration enforcement, detentions and removals—not the technicalities of screener training. Homan was explicit about that distinction, and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy echoed concerns about the widening problem: “As it gets worse, I think that puts pressure on the Congress to come to a resolution,” he said, warning that wait times could deteriorate further.
Legal experts say the move also blurs lines of authority inside the Department of Homeland Security. ICE operates under a different mission than the Transportation Security Administration, and mixing roles could create confusion about authority, chain of command and passengers’ civil rights.
“You can’t solve a personnel shortage by moving bodies around without considering training, scope of duty and potential liability,” said an aviation security analyst who has worked in DHS in the past. “Visible presence can reassure travelers, but the moment you cross into enforcement activities without clear protocols, you risk intimidation and legal exposure.”
Voices on the ground
At a checkpoint in Chicago, a young mother wrangled a stroller and quizzed the officer about whether ICE would be checking IDs at the gate. “We don’t want to be separated from our kids,” she said, her voice trembling. “This is where we should feel safe.”
A retired Delta pilot passing through muttered, “I don’t like politics in my cockpit.” He tapped his boarding pass and added, “The real problem is Congress. This is a symptom, not the disease.”
Meanwhile, an ICE supervisor preparing for redeployment emphasized restraint. “We’re here to assist, not to intimidate,” he told a reporter, declining to give his name. “Our instructions are clear: help reduce bottlenecks, monitor exits, be a calming presence.”
What the lawmakers want—and what they demand
The backdrop to this operational reshuffle is a fierce political impasse in Congress. Democrats have pressed for changes to immigration enforcement practices—calling for curtailed patrols, limits on face-coverings for enforcement agents, and a requirement that ICE obtain judicial warrants before entering private property. They argue these reforms are necessary to protect civil liberties and ensure accountability.
- Democrats’ demands include curtailed ICE patrols.
- They have pushed for a ban on face masks for agents in certain circumstances.
- They seek a requirement that ICE obtain judicial warrants to enter private property.
Proponents of the redeployment say the measure is temporary and focused on meeting immediate security needs. Opponents warn that it risks turning airports into another theater for immigration enforcement, intimidating travelers and conflating public-safety jobs with immigration control.
Why this matters beyond the terminal
Look up from the passport scanner and you’ll see bigger trends: the politicization of public safety, the fragility of essential services when budget deadlines are missed, and the human cost borne by low-paid public-sector workers. Around the world, governments are grappling with similar problems—how to fund, staff and sustain services that citizens depend on daily.
In many ways, airports are a crossroads not only of people but of policy choices. Do we treat immigration enforcement and passenger screening as distinct public goods, each requiring specialized training and a steady budget? Or do we accept ad hoc fixes that might work in the short term but leave long-term problems unfixed?
“This is a test of our institutions,” said a civil liberties lawyer watching the situation. “If essential services waver at the first sign of political gridlock, people lose faith—and that has ripple effects for democracy.”
What travelers and workers can expect next
Officials say plans will be finalized quickly and executed as soon as the following day. In the meantime, passengers are urged to arrive early and pack patience. Airport officials are racing to stabilize staffing and preserve the quiet order that makes flying possible.
But speed is not a cure for the core problem. If a government can’t keep its people paid or its agencies properly resourced, patchwork solutions will recur. The question for lawmakers, then, is not merely how to clear lines at security checkpoints today but how to fortify the systems that serve the traveling public for the long haul.
What would you do if you were in charge of an airport facing this mix of politics and personnel shortages? Would you welcome a stronger uniformed presence, even if it’s from an agency with a different mission? Or would you insist that trained screeners be the ones to manage passenger flow? How we answer reflects not only our preferences for convenience, but our values about safety, privacy and what we expect from public institutions.
For now, travelers shuffle forward. Phones record, volunteers share coffee, and workers—paid or not—carry the weight of an unfolding political drama. The gates remain open, but the debate over who should stand watch is only just beginning.
WHO warns Middle East war entering a perilous, escalating phase
When a Narrow Waterway Becomes the World’s Pulse: A Deadline, a Strait, and the Weight of Oil
There is a line on the world map that looks innocuous—just a thin choke where the Persian Gulf kisses the Gulf of Oman—but that narrow, sun-scorched ribbon of water is the heartbeat of global energy and geopolitics. The Strait of Hormuz is where fortunes are made and fragile peace is tested. This week, that heartbeat found itself under a deadline.
In a terse statement that landed like a pebble thrown into a very large pond, the White House gave Tehran an ultimatum: reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic or face unspecified consequences. The demand, framed as a matter of “freedom of navigation,” set off ripples across markets, naval decks, and dinghies bobbing off the Iranian coast.
On the decks, in the bazaars
In Bandar Abbas, a port city that feels both ancient and militarized, sailors and stevedores moved with the practiced indifference of people who have weathered fogs of uncertainty before. “We tied up the morning’s tanker and then everyone started watching the satellite channels,” said Hossein Rahimi, a crane operator in his late 40s. “You learn at the port: if the sea is quiet, the money keeps coming. If the sea is not quiet—then nobody eats as well.”
On a fishing boat two miles west, an old man named Ali adjusted a weathered cap and squinted at a horizon bright with sunlight and anxiety. “We want peace,” he said softly. “We fish. My grandson studies in Shiraz. This is not the first time we worry about the Navy passing by.”
Why this strait really matters
Here are the hard numbers that explain the hubbub: roughly one-fifth of the world’s petroleum liquids—about 17 to 21 million barrels per day at historic peaks—pass through the Strait of Hormuz. Much of that oil supplies Asian giants like China, Japan, and South Korea. Even a small interruption can jolt global oil prices, strain refining operations and send tremors through economies already juggling inflation, renewable transitions and fragile supply chains.
“The strait is not just a local road—it’s a global artery,” says Dr. Naomi Feldman, a maritime security analyst at an international think tank. “When you threaten that artery, you are effectively pressing on the whole body of global commerce. The symbolism is huge; the practical consequences even bigger.”
Naval chess and legal shoals
For decades, the waters have been patrolled by a rotating cast of players: the U.S. Fifth Fleet stationed in Bahrain, a contingent of British frigates, European maritime patrols and the increasingly assertive navies of the Gulf states. Iran, for its part, operates a dense constellation of small fast boats, coastal missiles and patrols that make the Strait’s narrow passages especially tense.
“This is maritime deterrence meeting maritime coercion,” said Commander Laura Gibbs, a retired naval officer who now consults on shipping security. “The legal framework is clear—innocent passage is protected under international law—but enforcement is the hard part, especially when regional actors feel existentially threatened.”
The deadline and its human fallout
Deadlines are dramatic devices. They force decisions, or they reveal the unwillingness to make them. In practical terms, a demand to “open the strait” can mean everything from the removal of minefields and an end to boarding of commercial vessels, to an assurance that Iranian forces will not interfere with traffic. But the rhetoric does more than that: it sends merchants backing away from booking cargos, insurers hiking premiums, shipowners diverting thousands of miles around Africa to avoid the risk.
“We’ve already received two calls from clients wanting their cargo rerouted,” said Maria Tan, operations manager at a Singapore-based tanker firm. “Rerouting adds days and hundreds of thousands of dollars—sometimes millions—per voyage. For smaller companies, there’s simply no margin for that.”
On the floor of international commodity exchanges, the news translated into immediate volatility: benchmark crude spiked in early trading, then eased as traders weighed likelihoods. Markets hate uncertainty; they price it, and then they try—often imperfectly—to hedge against it.
Local economies and global politics
In Dubai’s shipping offices and in the pottery stalls of Muscat, conversations turned to tariffs, cargo manifests and the weathered wooden dhows that have plied these waters for centuries. “History is here,” said Leila Hassan, a historian in Muscat. “This is where empires met and merchants bargained. When modern states wield the sea the way they do, they are simply scaling up an old dance.”
It’s also a pinch point for the region’s younger generations, many of whom want jobs, travel, and a life not defined by missile ranges or embargoes. “We are tired of being headlines,” said 25-year-old university student Fatima R., whose family runs a small logistics firm in Bandar Abbas. “We want to study, to build, to watch our country sell carpets and pistachios instead of being in a standoff.”
Possible paths forward
What happens next depends on whether the deadline is a genuine attempt to coerce compliance or a negotiation posture—that is, a tactic to win concessions without crossing the threshold into open conflict. A handful of likely outcomes:
- A de-escalatory face-saving measure: limited assurances and increased international monitoring to protect commercial passage.
- Economic countermeasures: sanctions, insurance scrambles and supply-chain reconfiguration that hurt global markets more than military options.
- Skirmishes at sea: harassment, accidental collisions, or small-scale seizures that spiral into broader confrontations.
- Diplomatic bridging: third-party mediation led by regional actors or international bodies to create durable confidence-building measures.
Beyond the deadline: the larger story
Ask yourself: what does a single strait reveal about the world? It reveals energy dependency, the fragility of globalized supply chains, and the uneven distribution of power. It exposes the paradox of renewable commitments on one hand and continued fossil-fuel dependence on the other. And it underscores a geopolitical truth: local disputes, in a tightly knit global system, are rarely local for long.
“We need to treat this as an opportunity for a longer conversation about energy security and regional integration,” suggested Dr. Feldman. “Short-term fixes matter, but what stops countries from repeatedly threatening the same choke points is durable economic interdependence and credible regional institutions.”
What you should watch for
Keep an eye on a few indicators in the coming days: statements from Tehran and Washington, movements of naval task forces, insurance premium announcements from the major P&I clubs and rerouting notices from major shipping lines. Each one tells a different chapter of the unfolding story.
And remember the people in the ports and the fishermen on the boats. In an era of headlines and hot takes, what often gets lost is the quiet arithmetic of everyday life—how a delayed tanker can mean an unpaid loan, a missed university term, or the loss of a market for a small exporter.
So when you see a map with a thin blue line labeled “Strait of Hormuz,” don’t imagine it as abstract geography. Imagine instead the cranes and cafes of Bandar Abbas, the scratch of a captain’s logbook, the hum of a refinery in South Korea, and the gas pump where someone in Europe pays a few cents more. That narrow passage carries not just oil, but the interconnectedness of a global community. And when a deadline comes for such a place, it forces us to ask: how do we want an interconnected world to behave when threatened—through force, through law, or through the patient work of diplomacy?
How Trump’s confrontation with Iran has affected Ukraine’s security and alliances
Between Two Fires: Ukraine’s Quiet Pivot as the Middle East Burns
There is an odd kind of hush that falls over Kyiv at dusk now: not silence, exactly, but the kind of concentrated noise that feels like a city holding its breath. Street vendors still sell hot dumplings on the main drag; a grandmother feeds pigeons in Maidan; a mural of a sunflower peels in the rain. Yet deeper in the city’s defence neighbourhoods, the conversation has shifted. The war that began on the eastern horizon four years ago has found a new, distant theatre to intersect with — and Kyiv’s diplomats and drone pilots have been quietly stepping onto it.
When reports emerged late last month of a dramatic strike on Tehran — the reported death of Iran’s supreme leader and the immediate US-Israeli military response that followed — the reverberations were felt far beyond the Gulf. They reached the crumbling façades of eastern Ukraine, the grain terminals of Odesa, the command rooms where men and women in camouflage calibrate interceptors against cheap, lethal drones.
Why a Gulf War Matters in Eastern Europe
At first glance the link is logistical: oil prices, shipping routes, and a sudden scramble for alternatives. But the entanglement runs deeper. Iran had supplied Russia with thousands of Shahed “kamikaze” drones over the past four years — weapons that have killed and maimed Ukrainian civilians and forced entire communities to live on edge. Those same weapons are now a key instrument in the new Gulf hostilities.
“For us, these devices are familiar. They are a language of war we have been forced to learn,” says Kateryna, a former engineer turned drone-defence specialist who now runs a small training unit outside Kyiv. “When Gulf states call for help, they are not asking about theory. They ask how to listen to the sky.”
Ukraine’s response has been swift and pragmatic. President Volodymyr Zelensky, negotiating on multiple fronts, has authorized the deployment of over 200 drone experts to the Gulf — teams sent to the UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Jordan, according to Ukraine’s defence minister. These are technicians with battlefield-tested experience in intercepting Shaheds and their Russian cousins; they know the jittery signature of a loitering munition and the art of turning a $20,000 drone into a problem you can solve.
From Hands-On Combat to Quiet Diplomacy
It’s a subtle diplomatic gambit: move from being a perpetual recipient of aid to being a provider of critical expertise. “Our people understood early on that to stay relevant, Ukraine must be useful in more ways than one,” Oleksandr Kraeiv, a Kyiv-based foreign policy analyst, told me. “We’re offering capabilities, not just asking for them.”
In the Gulf, where statecraft is often practical and transactional, that move has value. An Emirati security analyst I spoke with — a man who has spent three decades watching Tehran and Moscow jockey for influence across a chessboard of pipelines and ports — described Kyiv’s teams as “precise and humble. They teach, they leave, and we sleep easier.”
Silence from Moscow, Noise on the Market
Yet the calculus is complicated by bigger players and bigger money. While Russia expressed public sorrow over the Tehran strike, it has so far avoided a rupture with the United States. Part of the reason is tactical, part of it cynical: Vladimir Putin and his government are careful not to push Washington into tougher positions that might favour Kyiv at the negotiating table.
Meanwhile, market forces have become a war of their own. The Gulf strikes and infrastructure disruptions sent Brent crude climbing from roughly $65 a barrel before the crisis to near $100 at the height of panic; it has since settled around $90. Buyers, hungry for reliable supply, dialled Russia. The Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) estimates Russia enjoyed some €625 million in additional oil export revenues in the two weeks after the initial strikes on Iran.
“Money is oxygen in this conflict,” a European diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Every dollar Russia gains from higher oil prices funds its battlefield operations. That’s the blunt arithmetic of war.”
These market shifts also influenced policy. On 10 March, Washington announced a temporary easing of sanctions on Russian oil exports for one month — a move intended to tame surging prices but one that, predictably, fed a narrative in Kyiv that the world’s priorities had shifted away from ending Russia’s war in Europe to stabilizing global fuel markets.
The Thin Thread of Negotiations
It bears repeating: diplomacy did not grind to a complete halt. Trilateral talks among Ukrainian, Russian and US representatives — a format revived with cautious optimism earlier this year — had been pencilled in for Abu Dhabi at the start of March. They didn’t happen. The last sitting took place in Geneva on 18 February. The Gulf strikes wrecked the timetable.
“These talks were already fragile,” a senior EU official told me. “They were in the danger zone. Pulling them back together will require space that right now does not exist.”
Small steps continue. Kyiv and Washington met in Florida recently for follow-up discussions that negotiators say will continue behind closed doors. But the consensus among analysts in Kyiv is bleakly pragmatic: until the horizon in the Middle East stabilizes, a formal resumption of the trilateral peace track for Ukraine looks unlikely.
Local Cost, Global Consequence
On the ground in Ukraine, people measure these geopolitical shifts in minutes and in prices. A farmer outside Mykolaiv told me that the shipping delays and higher fuel prices have pushed fertilizer costs through the roof. A nurse in Odesa worries about a new generation of patients with limb injuries from drone attacks. A young father in Lviv, who recently returned from helping fit anti-drone nets on a Gulf oil platform, says he sleeps better knowing the work he did might keep merchant vessels safer.
These are not abstract variables on a graph. They are livelihoods, classrooms, gardens, and funerals. And they underscore a damning question: when the world’s attention splinters between theatres of war, which conflicts become priorities, and which are consigned to slow attrition?
Where Do We Go From Here?
Ukraine is attempting something both old and new: to convert its trauma and expertise into diplomatic capital. By exporting knowledge instead of only pleading for materiel, it hopes to remain indispensable to a shifting coalition of partners. Yet there is no guarantee that relevance will translate into the arms and backing Kyiv needs for the long haul.
So here is what I find myself asking you, the reader: What responsibility does a global community have when its crises intersect? When an oil spike in the Gulf buys time for an aggressor in Europe, who pays the moral price? And how do small nations — those bearing the brunt of violence — ensure their stories and needs do not get swallowed by the chatter of great powers?
In the weeks ahead, listen for the quiet dispatches — the Ukrainian teams teaching Gulf technicians to patch a radar array; the diplomats in muted conference rooms trying to stitch a fragile ceasefire; the families recalibrating their budgets because fuel is no longer a background fact but a household decision. These are the human moves of geopolitics. They are granular. They are poignant. And they will shape the map of tomorrow.
Further reading and context
- Shahed drones and their proliferation: an overview of shadowborne loitering munitions and their battlefield impact.
- Oil markets 101: why disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz send global prices surging and who benefits.
- Trilateral diplomacy: the fragile architecture of talks involving Ukraine, Russia and the United States.
Koofur Galbeed oo sheegtay in hubkii Masar ay siisay Soomaaliya lagu soo weeraray deegaanadooda
Mar 22(Jowhar)-Dr. Ali Faqi oo ah gudoomiyaha baarlamaanka Koonfur Galbeed ayaa sheegay in Saanad milateri oo ay hore u siisay dowladda Masar Soomaaliya looguna talagalay difaaca qaranka iyo la dagaallanka Argagixisada, hadda loo adeegsanayo khilaafka Koonfur Galbeed iyo duminta maamulka, iyadoo lagu hubeynayo ciidamo lays kugu geeyey Burhakaba, taas oo uu sheegay in ay halis tahay.
Madaxweyne Xasan oo safar deg deg ah ugu ambabaxay dalla Itoobiya
Mar 22(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Soomaaliya Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud ayaa maanta u safray magaalada Addis-ababa ee dalka Itoobiya.
Tech titans clash in first major AI conflict
When war learns to think faster than we do
Three weeks into a conflict that began like a thunderclap and has since sounded like an endless barrage, the numbers keep arriving like bodies at the gate: stark, immovable, impossible to ignore.
- More than 2,000 people dead and roughly 10,000 wounded.
- Over 4 million people uprooted across the region — about 1 million now sheltering in Lebanon.
- Global oil hovering above $100 a barrel, markets jittery and governments scrambling.
- Some 45 million people are teetering on the brink of acute hunger as food, fuel and shipping costs surge.
- At least 56 cultural heritage sites in Iran have been reported damaged or destroyed; more are endangered in neighbouring countries.
Those figures are one way to measure a war. Another is the cadence of the strikes: the air, the ground, the systems behind the targeting. In the first 24 hours of the campaign, the U.S. military reportedly struck roughly 1,000 targets — a pace many analysts say is roughly twice the tempo of the “Shock and Awe” campaign against Iraq in 2003.
That difference isn’t merely about munitions or muscle. It’s about code.
The new engine of speed
Military planners like to speak in chains and loops: sense, decide, act. In plain English it’s how a target is found, vetted and hit. Today, that chain is being tightened by software — artificial intelligence that crunches satellite feeds, drone video, communications intercepts and mountains of open-source data and pushes recommended actions to human operators.
“We can wade through terabytes in a few heartbeats now,” said a U.S. defense analyst who asked not to be named. “A human used to take hours or days to corroborate, cross-reference and vet. AI compresses that into seconds. That compression is the decisive advantage.”
Admiral Brad Cooper, the commander of U.S. Central Command, framed it similarly in a recent video message: the tools help sift through “vast amounts of data” so leaders can “cut through the noise” and make decisions faster than adversaries. He emphasized that humans retain the final say on whether to fire.
Speed with consequences
Speed sounds like a virtue until it becomes a liability. The faster the system recommends a strike, the less time there is for context, for second-guessing, for noticing a school bus where a weapons convoy was expected.
In the opening hours of the campaign, a missile struck a girls’ school in Minab in southern Iran, killing more than 170 people, most of them children, independent analysts say. The munition has been identified in outside analysis as a Tomahawk — a cruise missile commonly used by the U.S. Navy — and the Pentagon has opened an inquiry into how the targeting error occurred, whether it relied on outdated intelligence, and whether machine recommendations played any part.
“If an algorithm mounts the scaffolding for a decision, who is accountable for an error?” asked Dr. Noah Sylvia, a scholar of emerging military technologies. “We can’t outsource moral responsibility to lines of code. Accountability must be explicit and enforceable.”
The tech behind the thunder
At the centre of this revolution are commercial tools married to military infrastructure. Palantir’s Maven Smart System — wired to Anthropic’s large language model, Claude — is among the suites reportedly used to analyze imagery, surface likely targets and manage the flow of information that reaches commanders.
That partnership did not happen in a vacuum. According to people familiar with the matter, there were intense negotiations between the Pentagon and Anthropic about guardrails: prohibitions against domestic mass surveillance and bans on autonomous lethal functions. Those conversations were interrupted, abruptly, by political intervention. The president directed federal agencies to remove ties with the company; the defense secretary labelled the firm a supply-chain risk and ordered a phaseout. Anthropic has vowed to challenge the decision in court.
Private tech firms, big and small, have been courted by the Pentagon for years — from the West Coast startups that once built wedding-image detectors to academic labs that model swarm behaviours. “Project Maven was an explicit attempt to drag the best commercial minds into national security,” said Katrina Manson, who has written about the Pentagon’s evolving ties to Silicon Valley. “The idea was to access innovation where it lives, not rely solely on legacy defence primes.”
The trade-off is not just technical. It’s cultural. “Tech bros are going to war,” one UK-based defence researcher told me with a half-smile and a twinge of alarm. “When the people who ship products for millions of users start thinking in terms of lethality metrics, things change fast.”
Moral fog and the question of blame
History offers precedents: Google employees protested Project Maven in 2018; the company declined to renew its contract. Yet the involvement of AI in war has only spread. OpenAI, Microsoft and cloud providers quietly or overtly supply infrastructure, models and hosting that can be repurposed for defence. CEOs have offered reassurances: technical safeguards, human oversight, lines in contracts that say “no to autonomous killing.”
But assurances are not substitutes for accountability. If a system recommends a strike using stale satellite data, or if biased training datasets repeatedly misclassify civilian infrastructure, who stands trial — the coder, the contractor, the officer who clicked “execute,” or the political leaders who set the policy?
“We need a juridical architecture that travels as fast as the algorithms,” said a former international humanitarian law officer. “Without it, accountability will be patchy, politicised and ultimately unsatisfying for victims and their families.”
Cultural heritage under a digital sky
Technology is changing how wars are fought, but it cannot shield what is fragile. In Tehran, photographs of the Golestan Palace showed blown-out windows, fractured mirrored ceilings and dust where chandeliers hung. In Isfahan, reports list damage to Chehel Sotoun Palace, the Masjed-e Jame mosque and the centuries-old Naqsh-e Jahan Square.
“You can repair concrete. You cannot easily repair a 1,000-year-old tile,” said Nader Tehrani, an Iranian-American architect who studies historic preservation. “The shock waves from a modern ordnance will devastate the very fabric of a 15th-century structure.” He summed it up with a phrase that might define the next war’s legacy: “We used to talk about the military-industrial complex. Now it’s the military-technology complex.”
What does the rest of the world see?
For citizens in capitals from Beirut to Berlin, the spectacle raises urgent questions. Do we accept a speed-obsessed warfare that claims fewer mistakes because there is more data, or do we demand slower, more deliberative processes that accept strategic risk to protect civilians?
For humanitarian agencies, the numbers — 45 million facing acute hunger, displaced families, damaged food-supply chains — translate into cold logistics and hot clinics. For markets, $100-per-barrel oil is not just a headline; it is a tax on the poor and a political pressure cooker for economies already near the boiling point.
And for technologists, ethicists and citizens alike the deeper inquiry lingers: how much of war do we want to delegate to systems that learn faster than we can grieve? If machines can find targets faster than humans can verify them, do we slow the machine or accelerate our institutions?
Questions to sit with tonight
Are we comfortable with warfare that prizes tempo over texture? Can legal systems be retooled to keep pace with silicon-enabled decisions? And finally, what safeguards must be non-negotiable — in code, law and policy — to protect civilians, cultural memory and the possibility of accountability?
These are not hypothetical. They are live moral debts being incurred now. As the dust settles over damaged palaces and displaced families, the debate will not be limited to war rooms. It will be argued in parliaments, in courtrooms and in the codebases of companies whose products now carry consequences that reach far beyond a user’s screen.
For readers across continents: ask yourself this — in a world where machines can point and commanders can press, what would you insist must never be automated?
















