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Iranian military dismisses Trump’s calls for negotiations with the United States

Israel strikes Iran, Trump says US negotiating to end war
First aid responders arrive to the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese coastal city of Tyre

Smoke, Sirens and Negotiation Rhetoric: A Region at the Edge

Morning in Tehran smelled of dust and diesel. By evening, it smelled of smoke. In Tel Aviv, a neighbor who had gone out for coffee returned to find his stoop cordoned off and a crater where his car once stood. For the fourth week running, the sky over the Middle East read like a bad chapter of history: tracer streaks, radar pings, and the distant booms of airstrikes that have become the region’s new, grim metronome.

The war — now stretching into weeks rather than days — has killed thousands, shuttered supply lines and toppled the fragile assumptions that once held global energy markets together. Amid the violence, a dizzying political conversation has unfolded: whispers that Washington sent a 15‑point proposal to Tehran, hopeful market reactions, and an equally loud rebuke from Iran’s military leadership.

On the ground: damage, displacement, and ordinary people

In a narrow alley of eastern Tehran, families carried what little they could salvage from a collapsed apartment block. “It felt like the walls were breathing,” said Leyla, 42, balancing a box of faded photographs. “We’re used to elections and sanctions, not this. My mother keeps asking: when will the world stop hitting us?”

Across the frontlines, emergency crews in Tel Aviv sifted through rubble after overnight strikes. An Israeli paramedic, who asked not to be named, described the scene: “You don’t get used to this. You memorize routes, you memorize sirens. You still feel each life lost.”

Kuwait reported a drone strike that ignited a fuel tank at its international airport but, by official accounts, caused no casualties — a narrow escape that still disrupted flights and stoked anxiety. Saudi officials likewise said they had repelled drone attacks, without publicly naming an origin. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards claimed fresh waves of missiles and drones had targeted Tel Aviv, Kiryat Shmona, and U.S. bases in Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain.

Everyday life, frayed

Shopkeepers near the port of Bandar Abbas spoke of ships shifting course and prices climbing. “We are used to small shocks,” said Reza, who runs a spice stall. “This is not small. Flour, sugar — everything is jumping. People ask if the kids will eat tomorrow.”

The diplomatic relay: a 15‑point paper and denials

On the diplomatic front, reports circulated that the United States had sent a 15‑point plan to Tehran, including proposals on Iran’s nuclear program, cutting support for proxy groups such as Hezbollah, and restoring navigation through the Strait of Hormuz. U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters that Washington was in “negotiations with the right people” and that Iran “wanted to reach a deal very badly.” Markets reacted: stocks ticked up and oil prices eased on hopes of a month‑long ceasefire and resumed Gulf flows.

But Tehran’s unified military command, dominated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, publicly rejected the notion that it would negotiate with Washington. Ebrahim Zolfaqari, the top spokesperson for the joint command, told state television: “Has the level of your inner struggle reached the stage of you negotiating with yourself? People like us can never get along with people like you.”

“As we have always said,” Zolfaqari continued, “no one like us will make a deal with you. Not now. Not ever.” The line is not just diplomatic posturing; it is freighted with past grievances — Tehran points to previous rounds of talks that were followed by military strikes as proof that negotiations do not stick.

How the war is shredding energy systems and markets

The physical blockade of trade routes has a tangible, arithmetic cruelty. The Strait of Hormuz — through which about one‑fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas normally flows — has been effectively shut down for commercial traffic unless vessels coordinate with Iranian authorities, according to a note Iran sent to the United Nations and the International Maritime Organization.

Asia, which purchases more than 80% of the crude transiting the strait, has been hit first and hardest. Governments have scrambled to conserve fuel, revive pandemic‑era measures such as enforced work‑from‑home, and even declare public holidays to soften the blow. Airlines paused routes. Freight schedules were rewritten. For many countries, fuel shortages meant schools closed and industries eased operations.

The International Energy Agency agreed to an unprecedented coordinated release of about 400 million barrels from strategic reserves to try to calm markets. “We haven’t seen anything like this in modern times,” said Mira Chen, an energy analyst in Singapore. “It’s not just supply that’s at risk; it’s confidence — the confidence of buyers, insurers, and shipping lines.”

Numbers that matter

  • Estimated deaths: thousands since the conflict intensified.
  • Strait of Hormuz: roughly 20% of global oil and gas transit disrupted.
  • IEA coordinated release: ~400 million barrels from strategic stocks.
  • U.S. military posture: approximately 50,000 troops already in the region; reports of additional deployments, including elements of the 82nd Airborne Division.

Military escalation and the specter of a wider war

Since the U.S. launched what it called “Operation Epic Fury,” Tehran has struck back at countries hosting U.S. bases and critical Gulf energy infrastructure. In late February, U.S. and Israeli strikes hit targets inside Iran; in June 2025 the U.S. reportedly struck Iranian nuclear facilities. The tit‑for‑tat continues, and the region feels like a pressure cooker on a slow, dangerous boil.

The Pentagon’s anticipated redeployment of thousands more soldiers will add to roughly 50,000 U.S. personnel already in theater — a buildup that, in the words of one defense correspondent, “creates the optics of escalation even if the stated mission is deterrence.”

Diplomacy’s long shadow and uncertain pathways

Yet amid the missiles and rhetoric, some capitals are pushing for talks. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif publicly offered to host negotiations, a reminder that regional actors are not content to be mere spectators. Oman, which has long been a discreet intermediary, told reporters it had seen “significant progress” in earlier shuttle diplomacy.

“The region needs forums beyond bilateral brinkmanship,” said Dr. Amina Rahman, a professor of Middle East studies in London. “These are pathways of de‑escalation, but they require trust and guarantees — none of which are in plentiful supply right now.”

What now? Questions for readers — and for leaders

Are we on the cusp of a negotiated pause or an open‑ended spiral? Can a 15‑point paper, even if real, bridge decades of mistrust when each rocket seems to erase good faith? For markets and families, time is not neutral; it is a tax. For the millions who buy oil, fly planes, and feed children, every day of disruption is another bill to pay.

Imagine you are the captain of a bulk carrier rerouting around Africa, adding weeks and millions in costs to a voyage. Imagine you are a mother in Basra, queuing for diesel at dawn. What would you ask your leaders: peace at any price, or a settlement that leaves future tinder smoldering?

Whatever the next move — a ceasefire, a broader offensive, or a slow, managed de‑escalation — it will ripple far beyond the region. This is not only a Middle Eastern story; it is a global one about how interconnected markets, migratory flows, and human lives are when the sea lanes that fuel modern life are threatened.

For now, the headlines deliver a simple binary: strikes and denials, plans and rejections. The deeper story is messier. It is the laughter of a child in a Tehran courtyard muffled by distant explosions. It is the briefing room in Washington where diplomats sketch the outlines of a peace plan on a whiteboard. It is the empty seat at a Tel Aviv café where a young activist once argued for compromise and got a missile instead.

As readers, ask yourself: when the dust settles — and it will settle eventually — what will we be happy to have defended, and what will we wish we had protected better?

Taliyihii ciidanka Milatariga ee ka howlgala Diinsoor oo xilkii laga qaaday

Mar 25(Jowhar)-Taliyaha Ciidanka Xoogga Dalka ayaa Xilkii ka qaaday taliyihii ururka 154-aad ee Guutada 8,aad Qaybta 60,aad ee Ciidanka Xoogga Aadan Mohamed Nuur Afeey.

Israel Strikes Iran; Trump Says U.S. Negotiating to End Hostilities

Israel strikes Iran, Trump says US negotiating to end war
First aid responders arrive to the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese coastal city of Tyre

A City Awakes to Sirens: Tehran, Tel Aviv and the Fragile Breaths Between War and Peace

It was not the ordinary clatter of Tehran traffic nor the soft bargaining in the neighborhood bazaar that woke people before dawn. It was a horizon lit by explosions and the distant, jagged sound of missiles cleaving the cold morning air.

On one side of that stretch of sky, Israeli forces announced a series of strikes across Iran’s capital. On the other, Iranian media described rescuers picking through the rubble of a residential neighborhood, the air thick with dust and the unmistakable, human sound of people calling for those they love.

“I grabbed my daughter and we hid in the stairwell,” said a woman in north Tehran who identified herself only as Leila. “The windows shook. We don’t know if our neighbors are alive yet. I can taste metal in my mouth.”

When cities become battlefields, the smallest human details — a scorched curtain, a child’s toy in dust — become the most eloquent testimony to what is being lost.

The Latest Blows and Counterblows

The Israeli Defense Forces posted on social media that it had struck infrastructure targets across Tehran. Iran’s semi-official SNN agency reported that the strikes hit a residential area, with emergency crews searching for survivors amid collapsed concrete and twisted metal.

Kuwait and Saudi Arabia both reported repelling fresh drone attacks, though they stopped short of publicly identifying the attackers. In Kuwait, drones struck a fuel tank at the international airport, igniting a blaze. Kuwait’s Civil Aviation Authority said there were no casualties, but the incident shuttered operations and set off fears about the safety of civilian hubs in wartime.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had launched strikes targeting Israeli cities — including Tel Aviv and the northern town of Kiryat Shmona — and also struck U.S. bases in Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain, according to state media. In Tel Aviv, emergency services were pictured at the site of an Iranian missile strike, smoke curling above a scarred skyline.

“You feel like you’re in the middle of a nightmare,” said Amir, an ambulance driver who had been at scenes in Tel Aviv. “We’re trained for emergencies, but this is different: people are not just hurt, they’re shattered.”

Small Devices, Big Consequences

Drones — relatively low-cost but increasingly weaponized — have amplified the theater of conflict. Analysts say their use has made borders more porous, enabling attacks on infrastructure far from front lines. “Drones change the calculus,” said Dr. Helena Rivers, a defense analyst who studies unmanned systems. “They’re cheap, deniable and disruptive. We’re seeing a rapid evolution in asymmetrical warfare.”

Talks Between Bombs: A 15-Point Plan and Fragile Diplomacy

In the midst of these strikes, President Donald Trump told reporters the United States was making progress in outreach aimed at ending the war, and that “the right people” in Iran were engaged in talks. Media reports — notably the New York Times and Israeli Channel 12 — said Washington had sent Tehran a 15-point proposal that could include a temporary, month-long ceasefire.

According to these reports, the plan reportedly touches on the dismantling of Iran’s nuclear program, halting support for proxy groups such as Hezbollah, and reopening the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping. A White House aide, speaking on background, said the proposal was intended to be a starting point for negotiation rather than a final blueprint.

But in Tehran, hardliners signaled skepticism. Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, speaker of Iran’s parliament, dismissed parts of the reporting as “fake news,” underscoring the political complexity of turning a paper plan into a durable accord.

Intermediaries, Offers and the Risk of Misstep

Pakistan’s prime minister publicly offered to host talks, and Oman — which has quietly served as a conduit for months — said progress had been made in earlier mediation. Yet even as diplomats hustle, the Pentagon reportedly prepares to send more troops to the region, including elements possibly drawn from the storied 82nd Airborne Division. If it goes ahead, that reinforcement would add to roughly 50,000 U.S. forces already reported in the area.

“Diplomacy and military posture are running on two parallel tracks,” observed Farah Mahmoud, a former UN arms inspector. “That’s normal — and dangerous. Each move in one lane affects the other. Misreading intentions here is very easy and very costly.”

How the World Feels the Shock

Beyond the immediate fear and grief, the war has sent tremors through global markets. The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow maritime nerve through which roughly 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas normally flows — has already produced what some analysts call the worst energy supply shock in modern history.

Reports that the U.S. had sent a ceasefire proposal gave markets a moment of hope: stocks ticked up and oil prices eased on the possibility that Gulf exports could resume. But hope is brittle in wartime; a single new attack can snap it in two.

Supply chains feel it, airlines feel it, consumers feel it. Fuel shortages and price volatility ripple from global shipping to the corner store. “This is not a regional problem,” said Sarah Klein, an energy economist. “It’s a global vulnerability. A disruption here means higher bills and rationed supplies thousands of miles away.”

On the Ground: Voices, Loss and the Ordinary Lives Interrupted

Scenes in the West Bank, where residents inspected the remains of an intercepted Iranian missile, and in neighborhoods of Tehran and Tel Aviv, shared an unsettling sameness: broken glass, smoke-streaked facades, quiet people who had been forced to become witnesses. A shopkeeper in Ramallah ran his hand along a charred shutter and told me, “We don’t want to be part of this war. We just want our children to sleep at night.”

Emergency workers on all sides speak of exhaustion and a strange camaraderie. “We don’t choose sides when we pull someone from the rubble,” said an Israeli medic. “We choose life.”

Questions to Carry Forward

What would peace look like after such a fracture? Can a 15-point plan — negotiated amid explosions and political theater — deliver the structural changes some demand: limits on nuclear development, an end to proxy warfare, and guarantees for freedom of navigation?

Perhaps the more urgent question is for readers far from this region: how quickly can global systems — markets, humanitarian aid networks, diplomatic institutions — move from crisis mode into constructive action? And at what human cost will the answers be found?

As the smoke settles tonight in parts of Tehran and Tel Aviv, and as diplomats and generals both weigh their next steps, remember the quiet facts behind the headlines: lives disrupted, fields of commerce shaken, and a fragile pact between nations hanging by a thread. The world watches not merely to see who wins or loses, but to ensure that ordinary people — mothers, shopkeepers, ambulance drivers — do not become permanent collateral in a conflict that could have been resolved at a table, not on a map of rubble.

Denmark’s Mette Frederiksen faces major setback in national election

Denmark's Mette Frederiksen bruised in election
Ms Frederiksen had campaigned on a promise that her tough and tested leadership skills would help the Nordic nation navigate a complex relationship with US President Donald Trump

A crossroads in Copenhagen: Denmark’s election, welfare anxieties and the Arctic at the center

On an overcast evening in Copenhagen, a woman in a thick red scarf pointed to a worn poster of Mette Frederiksen and laughed, not unkindly. “She kept telling us she’d steer the ship,” she said, stirring her coffee. “But this winter our ship felt like it was leaking.”

That image — small, human, a little weary — captures the mood that hung over Denmark as votes trickled in: a country proud of its cradle-to-grave welfare model, rattled by rising costs and cultural friction, and newly conscious of its Arctic backyard as global great powers angle for influence.

Numbers that sting

Early projections suggested a sharp contraction for Ms Frederiksen’s Social Democrats. Where they once held around 50 seats, preliminary tallies pointed to roughly 38 in the 179-seat Folketing — a loss that, if confirmed, would be the party’s worst result in more than a century.

The left bloc, while still narrowly ahead of the right, looked unlikely to command an outright majority. That means weeks of negotiation — of backroom haggling and fragile coalitions — before a stable government could emerge. For a leader who promised steady hands during tumultuous international moments, the domestic picture was suddenly much less assured.

“She is between a rock and a hard place because the numbers are bad for her,” said Andreas Thyrring, a partner at Ulveman & Borsting public affairs advisory firm. “Voters respected her on defence and foreign policy, but the day-to-day economic pinch and immigration debates have cut into that goodwill.”

More than a political swing — a society under pressure

Walk through a market in Aarhus or a ferry terminal on the islands, and the themes are the same: energy bills, grocery prices, and a sense that the economy — even in one of the world’s richest welfare states — must be defended in new ways.

Denmark is not alone. Across Europe, inflation and higher energy costs in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have strained household budgets. But in Denmark, where social cohesion and generous public services are central to national identity, the anxieties have political bite.

“People aren’t just worried about their electricity bill,” said Katrine Madsen, who runs a small bakery near Kongens Nytorv. “They’re worried that the system that looked out for their parents and grandparents won’t have the same muscle for them. They ask: who will be left behind?”

  • Folketing total seats: 179 (including representatives from Greenland and the Faroe Islands)

  • Social Democrats projected seats: ~38 (down from ~50 four years prior)

  • Danish People’s Party surge: approximately 9.1% support in early counts — up nearly 7 percentage points

The migration debate that cut across the spectrum

Immigration, always a flashpoint in Danish politics, did something unusual this cycle: it simultaneously pushed some voters away from the center-left and pulled others toward populist promises on the right.

A slice of the Social Democrats’ base — often sympathetic to inclusive welfare principles — felt alienated by policies they considered too harsh. On the other hand, moderate and economically anxious voters questioned whether the government had their backs.

“You can’t please everyone when prices rise and people feel the strain,” said Tobias Engberg, an economics teacher from Odense. “The vote reflects frustration with policies and messaging more than ideology alone.”

The Arctic as bargaining chip: Greenland in the mix

It’s tempting to think of this as a purely domestic story. But the election also unfolded under the long shadow of Arctic geopolitics.

Almost three years ago, former U.S. President Donald Trump famously suggested buying Greenland — a diplomatic oddity that provoked a fierce response from Copenhagen. That episode, and subsequent attention on the island for its strategic importance, has infused Danish politics with questions about sovereignty, climate change, and who gets a say over the Arctic’s future.

Greenland’s influence is outsized relative to its population. Many voters there saw the Danish contest as a chance to stake new claims: greater fiscal autonomy, better local infrastructure, and leverage in dealing with foreign powers who have been flattered by Greenland’s strategic position.

“We’re not a chess piece,” one Greenlandic fisherman told a local journalist. “We’re people who want our voice heard about our destiny.”

A surge on the right — and what it means

Support for the Danish People’s Party jumped dramatically in early returns, rising to about 9.1% with more than 90% of votes counted, the public broadcaster DR reported. That represented a near-tripling of its presence compared to the last election and underscored how migration and tax promises resonated with a subset of voters.

Its leader, Morten Messerschmidt, was unequivocal in his post-exit poll remarks: “The fact that the Danish People’s Party has now tripled its support clearly shows that Danes are fed up with this and that there are a great many people who want a different direction for Denmark.”

Messerschmidt’s platform — pledges to ensure zero net migration of Muslims and to abolish petrol taxes to ease living costs — encapsulated a blend of cultural conservatism and cost-of-living appeal that seems to be working at the ballot box.

Leadership, reputation and the art of governing in a fractured age

Ms Frederiksen retains allies in Brussels and among NATO partners. Her straightforward stance during the Greenland episode and her push to modernize Denmark’s defence commitments after Russia’s war were widely respected abroad. But leadership that plays well on the world stage does not always soothe domestic anxieties.

“She was decisive in foreign policy, but decisions have to translate into tangible domestic relief,” said Dr. Emil Nørgaard, a political scientist in Copenhagen. “When voters’ daily needs are not met, they vote with their feet.”

And yet: Danish politics are never static. Coalitions are the art form of the North. The next government — whether a renewed left-leaning alliance patched together through compromise, or a new right-leaning coalition — will have to wrestle with the same fundamental questions: how to protect an ambitious welfare state in a world of rising prices and climate shocks, and how to manage national identity without tearing at social fabric.

Questions for readers

What should governments prioritize when stability abroad collides with instability at home? How do small countries protect their strategic interests when larger powers circle their resources? And what trade-offs are we willing to make to preserve social safety nets in lean times?

Voting is a blunt instrument, but it speaks. For Denmark, the language of the polls has been clear: voters demand both security and compassion, and they will punish leaders who appear to give them only one. The weeks ahead will be about whether those demands can be translated into policy — and whether the next government can stitch a frayed social fabric back together.

In the end, the election was not merely a tally; it was an argument about who Denmark is and who it aspires to be. That conversation, rich in history and acutely local details, will continue in living rooms, cafés, and municipal halls across the country. And for anyone watching from abroad, it offers a vivid lesson: even in a small, prosperous nation, the pressures of our era — migration, economic strain, climate and geopolitics — converge in ways that test the old contracts between state and citizen.

Israel reports Trump believes a deal with Iran is possible

Recap: Israel says Trump sees chance of deal with Iran
Recap: Israel says Trump sees chance of deal with Iran

When the World Holds Its Breath: A Look at the Tense Triangle Between Israel, the US, and Iran

There is a particular hush that settles over a city when the threat of conflict is not distant, but immediate. In Tel Aviv, it’s the whisper of footsteps beneath sirens. In Tehran, it’s the raised voices at tea houses arguing over what comes next. And in capitals from Washington to Brussels, it is the quiet hum of encrypted calls and night-time strategy sessions. The recent flurry of statements — including an Israeli claim that former US President Donald Trump sees a chance for a deal with Iran — has sent ripples through this charged atmosphere. But what do these ripples really mean for people living on the ground, for energy markets, and for the fragile architecture of international diplomacy?

Snapshots from the streets

“You learn to measure life in minutes here,” says Miriam, a nursery school teacher in southern Israel who asked that her full name not be used. “Yesterday we had a drill, today it was a real alert. The political talk in the market is not abstract — it’s about whether your neighbor will be home in time for dinner.”

Across the border of rhetoric and reality, in a narrow bazaar in Tehran, a carpet seller named Reza shakes his head when asked how people are coping. “People want normal things,” he says, fingers tracing a faded pattern. “They want schools open, weddings, the smell of bread from the bakery in the morning. But we watch the news and we count the sanctions, the shortages, the prices of eggs and oil.”

These are the human units of a geopolitical equation too often reduced to maps and headlines. They are living reminders that even the highest-level negotiations — whether framed as a renewed diplomatic opening or as a hardened standoff — land first in kitchens and clinics, in the markets and in the commute.

What leaders are saying — and what they might mean

At the center of recent commentary is a claim attributed to Israeli officials: that Donald Trump, the man who took the United States out of the 2015 nuclear accord (the JCPOA) in 2018, now sees an opening for a deal with Tehran. Taken at face value, such a statement is jarring; the politics around the Iran nuclear file have always been volatile, and the positioning of former and current US administrations ripples through regional alliances.

Consider what such a stance would imply. For Israel, wary of Iran’s regional ambitions and its enrichment activities, the prospect of any deal is measured not just in legal text but in the durability of verification measures and the perceived credibility of enforcement. “A deal is only as good as your ability to detect cheating and to punish it,” says Hannah Levine, a non-proliferation expert in Jerusalem. “That is the lens through which Israeli security officials evaluate diplomacy.”

For Tehran, the calculus centers on relief from sanctions and a return to economic breathing room. For Washington, the arithmetic is more complex — domestic politics, regional alliances, and the credibility of US commitments all factor in.

Hard numbers, soft borders

Some figures help make sense of what’s at stake.

  • Global energy flows: Roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil passes through the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, making any regional instability immediately relevant to global markets.
  • Sanctions and economy: US and international sanctions since 2018 dramatically reduced Iran’s crude exports at times, contributing to inflation and economic hardship for ordinary Iranians.
  • Military spending: While precise numbers vary, regional military expenditures have steadily risen in the last decade, fueling a security dilemma: each country’s efforts to feel safer raise the sense of threat of its neighbors.

These are not abstract statistics. They are a ledger of vulnerability: of ships waiting offshore for insurance rates to fall, of families deciding whether to send a son into the army or abroad for university, of governments weighing flight bans and evacuation plans.

The proxy chessboard and its local costs

One of the shadow realities of the wider Iran-Israel-US dynamics is how often conflicts are fought through proxies: militias, cyber operations, and clandestine strikes rather than overt conventional invasion. This mosaic of low-intensity conflicts complicates both diplomacy and public understanding.

“When you can’t solve something on the table, you try to win it through other means,” explains Amir Hosseini, a Middle East analyst based in Istanbul. “But proxy competition tends to entrench cycles of retribution. The more diffuse the battlefield, the harder it is to achieve lasting agreements.”

On the ground, the result is tangible. Border towns face regular disruptions to daily life. Humanitarian organizations track spikes in displaced families. Trade corridors stutter, and local economies, already burdened by sanctions or instability, stutter further.

What a deal would have to deliver

If diplomacy is to move beyond talk, any credible accord would need certain elements:

  1. Robust verification and monitoring mechanisms with unfettered access to suspected sites.
  2. Clear, phased sanctions relief tied to verifiable benchmarks, to restore Iranian economic activity without rewarding non-compliance.
  3. An architecture for regional security that includes not just the nuclear file but constraints on missile programs and proxy activities.

All of this will require trust — a scarce currency. “Trust doesn’t materialize overnight,” notes Levine. “It is rationed by history.”

Beyond the headlines: the questions we should be asking

As readers, as citizens of an interconnected world, we should ask uncomfortable, practical questions. What will happen to refugees and civilians if a diplomatic window closes? How will oil markets react to a new round of tensions? How do domestic politics in Israel, Iran, and the United States shape the options available to negotiators?

And perhaps most importantly: can a region wear a security architecture that balances real deterrence with the space for diplomacy? Or will cycles of escalation keep resolving the wrong kinds of uncertainty — gradually remaking the map of alliances and enmities?

Closing sights

In a cafe in Haifa, an elderly man sips coffee and folds the day’s newspaper with a calm that belies the pulse in the headlines. “We have had wars and we have had peace,” he says. “What I want is to make sure my grandchildren go to school without hiding under a table.”

Across the water, in a small apartment in Tehran, a young teacher pins up a lesson plan about geography. “I want to teach my students about the world, not about how to be afraid of it,” she says. “If leaders can find a way to stop playing with our lives, maybe we can start to think about gardens again.”

Those are the stakes: ordinary lives, silently bargaining with the decisions of far-off halls of power. A potential deal — whether it comes under the auspices of a former or current leader, through back-channels or open talks — is not merely a diplomatic trophy. It is a fragile promise that must deliver measurable, verifiable changes so that the people on the streets can stop measuring their days in sirens and start measuring them in seasons.

So ask yourself: when diplomats speak of chances, do you hear opportunity — or a prelude to disappointment? What kind of diplomacy would persuade you that peace is preferable to perpetual crisis? The answers are, in large part, what will determine whether the region moves toward calm or further into the fog.

— If you want to stay informed, follow developments from multiple sources, listen to voices on the ground, and remember that behind every policy line on a map there are kitchens, classrooms, and markets where real people await the outcome.

Russia launches nearly 1,000 drones at Ukraine in 24 hours

Russia fires nearly 1,000 drones at Ukraine in 24 hours
People look at smoke rising from a burning building following a Russian drone attack in Lviv

Daylight on the Hunt: Nearly 1,000 Drones Turn Ukraine’s Skies into a New Front

On a bright spring day in western Ukraine, the ordinary textures of city life — cafes filling with students, pensioners sweeping stoops, church bells chasing pigeons from rooftops — were ripped open by an unusual, terrifying sound: the whine of hundreds of tiny engines. Sirens blared. People ran for basements and metro platforms. For many, daylight no longer felt safe.

Ukraine’s air force said the scale was staggering: “Taking into account the night attack … the enemy used almost 1,000 strike drones,” it reported, describing the broad geography of the strikes that reached far from the front lines into western regions. In a single daytime salvo, Kyiv’s forces said 556 drones were launched and 541 were shot down — but the tally since the night before reached a record 948. The numbers are cold; the scenes on the ground are not.

Scenes from Lviv and Ivano-Frankivsk: A City Centre on Fire, a Maternity Hospital Damaged

In Lviv, the historic centre — a UNESCO-listed tapestry of baroque facades and cobbled lanes — filled with smoke. Local officials reported a strike against a residential building and a nearby 17th-century church within the old quarter, and the city’s mayor posted images of flames licking through upper floors. Two people were wounded, according to municipal sources.

“We were sitting in the kitchen, and suddenly the whole window rattled,” said Olena, a teacher who lives a few blocks from the old town. “People were shouting ‘to the basement’ as if the city had been turned into a battlefield overnight. My neighbour didn’t want to leave his cat; he carried it like a child.”

Farther east, in Ivano-Frankivsk, the head of the region reported a worse toll: two people killed and several wounded, including a six-year-old, after strikes hit the city centre. Officials said about ten residential buildings and a maternity hospital sustained damage.

“We are used to alarms at night. Daylight is different — it takes something else from you,” said Hanna, a volunteer nurse who helped evacuate patients. “I helped a woman in her sixties down three flights of stairs. Her hands were still shaking when we got her to the shelter.”

Numbers, Responses, and the Machinery of War

The Ukrainian air force’s interception rate — shooting down 541 out of 556 daytime drones — is remarkable and underscores both the effectiveness of air defences and the relentless pressure on them. Yet even when interceptors prevail, the debris, the psychological toll, and the few that get through carry consequences for civilians.

A senior defence analyst in Kyiv, who asked to remain unnamed for security reasons, offered a blunt assessment: “Drones have changed the cost calculus. They’re cheap, expendable, and can be launched in swarms to saturate defences. Shooting them down is possible—but it taxes systems and people. The next wave might hit where they least expect it.”

  • Reported drones used by Russia since the night before: ~948
  • Daytime drones launched (reported): 556
  • Daytime drones shot down: 541
  • Confirmed deaths in reported daytime attacks: at least 3

Heritage at Risk: Old Stones, New Weapons

Something else is at stake beyond lives and buildings: memory. Lviv’s historic centre is more than pretty architecture. It is a living archive of centuries — churches, coffeehouses, and markets that have survived empires. When shells or drones strike in the shadow of a UNESCO plaque, the loss is cultural as well as human.

“My grandmother used to bring me here when I was small,” said Artem, who works at a nearby bakery. “To see smoke rising from the roofs made me feel like a thief stealing my own past.”

Moscow’s Domestic Shifts: Arming Private Guards and Fortifying Refineries

As Kyiv reels from drone attacks, Moscow is tightening its own security measures. The Russian government has enacted a law permitting private security firms to carry firearms — including assault rifles such as Kalashnikovs — to defend critical energy facilities. The change takes effect immediately and comes after a series of strikes on Russian refineries and key export infrastructure that have disrupted fuel supplies and stirred panic in some regions.

In parts of the Urals, refinery operators have started installing anti-drone nets and other physical countermeasures. A refinery worker in Bashkortostan told a local journalist: “We wake up to new instructions every morning. Last month it was ‘report suspicious drones.’ This month it’s ‘build a net.’ It’s surreal.”

Diplomacy under Pressure: Security Guarantees and a Complicated Geopolitical Canvas

At the same time, Kyiv and Washington continue to haggle over the shape of security guarantees Ukraine seeks post-war. President Volodymyr Zelensky has insisted for months that a binding security pact is crucial — a promise from allies that would deter future aggression once active hostilities end. Kyiv’s negotiating team met with American counterparts in Florida to push for final details; Zelensky later said more work remained to be done.

“The most important task is to develop security guarantees in a way that brings us closer to ending the war,” he said in a social media update after the talks. But the geopolitical map is shifting: the broader Middle East conflict and Iran’s entanglements have, officials warn, emboldened Moscow.

What This Means Beyond Borders

These events are not merely a regional tragedy. They are a reminder that modern war is messy and multipolar. Drones—sometimes supplied by third parties—lower the barrier to aggression. Private security with military-grade weapons blurs the line between public defence and privatized force. And diplomatic promises, once inked, must be credible enough to deter the next round of attacks.

Ask yourself: what does deterrence look like in a world where a handful of motors can terrorize a city in daylight? How should international law adapt when cultural heritage, civilian hospitals, and playgrounds become contested spaces?

Faces in the Rubble: How People Are Living Through It

Amid the political chess, the human rhythms persist. Volunteers ferry food to shelters. Metro stations become impromptu clinics. Priests ring church bells for the missing and the dead. A young father in Ivano-Frankivsk, pushing his toddler in a stroller, summed it up simply: “We talk about normal life like it’s a future tense. Today, we are surviving.”

Ukraine’s resilience is not mythic; it is everyday: neighbours sharing warm bowls of stew, students teaching children who missed school, an elderly woman knitting by candlelight in a basement shelter. Those small acts are the glue, fragile and fierce.

As the world watches the statistics climb and the diplomatic language thicken, these personal moments remind us what is actually at stake: ordinary lives, ordinary joys, and the fragile scaffolding of community that keeps them aloft. Will global powers step up with guarantees that can hold? Will new defensive technologies outpace the threat? For now, people in Lviv, Ivano-Frankivsk and beyond are answering with the most human of responses—courage, kindness, and the stubborn refusal to be broken.

Car arson in Antwerp’s Jewish quarter prompts terror probe

Terror probe over car-burning in Antwerp Jewish quarter
Members of the Jewish community walk past Belgian military personnel armed with assault rifles standing guard in central Antwerp

Night Smoke Over the Diamond Quarter: What a Burned Car Reveals About a Tense Europe

Shortly after 11:30 p.m. in Antwerp’s diamond quarter — a maze of narrow streets, Hebrew signage and storefronts shuttered against the night — a parked car went up in flames. The glow licked the windows of nearby kosher bakeries and bounced off the polished stones of diamond merchants’ displays. Within 15 minutes, police had detained two minors from the city; within hours, prosecutors described an investigation that may now reach into the murkier territory of “terrorist” activity.

For anyone who walks those streets on an ordinary day, the scene felt unreal. Men in black coats and fedoras cycle past, children with tzitzit dashing after each other, and in the small squares outside synagogues, elders negotiate the price of rough diamonds with practiced, conspiratorial gestures. The diamond district is intimate, familiar — a place where ritual and commerce interlace. To see smoke and the acrid smell of burned upholstery there is jarring in a way that makes you take stock of what has changed.

Quick arrests, complicated motives

The public prosecutor in Antwerp said two minors were arrested on suspicion of arson and “participation in the activities of a terrorist group,” and that a video circulating online had been added to the case file. Investigators were careful to note that motives were still being probed, and they did not confirm whether the Jewish community was the deliberate target.

“We seized the moment,” a prosecutor — speaking to reporters with the cautious cadence of someone threading a legal needle — said. “The facts are being established. We have material that suggests coordination; whether that points to a terror motive or something else is for the investigation to determine.”

At the scene, the car’s owner, who gave her first name as Fatia, told Flemish media that valuables had been removed from the vehicle before it was set alight. “I woke up to the sirens,” she said. “My heart is still pounding. They didn’t just burn my car; they burned my sense of safety.”

Not an isolated spark: a pattern across Europe

The Antwerp incident did not occur in a vacuum. In recent weeks Europe’s Jewish communities have reported a wave of incidents — from an explosive device outside a synagogue in Liège on March 9, to the mysterious nighttime arsons that destroyed four Jewish community ambulances in London’s Golders Green. Authorities in multiple countries are now cross-referencing videos, social media accounts and message boards for common threads.

Security monitors such as SITE Intelligence Group reported that a recently formed group calling itself Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamiya (HAYI) — translated as The Islamic Movement of the People of the Right Hand — has claimed responsibility for several of these attacks in online videos. The International Centre for Counter-Terrorism in The Hague noted that at least some of the online activity surrounding the London claims circulated on accounts linked to pro-Iranian Shia militias.

“We are seeing something increasingly familiar: proxy conflicts and ideological battles overseas spilling into European streets,” said Dr. Laila Hassan, a security analyst at a Brussels think-tank. “Whether it’s an organized militia or opportunistic actors inspired by online propaganda, the end result is the same — minority communities feeling their everyday lives have become politicized battlegrounds.”

What’s at stake in Antwerp’s diamond quarter

Antwerp’s Jewish population — one of the largest in Europe — is concentrated around diamond trading, religion and education. Estimates put the community at roughly 20,000 people, a substantial portion of whom are Orthodox and maintain tightly knit social networks. That density makes the area both resilient and vulnerable: resilience through community support; vulnerability because concentrated targets can feel easier to single out.

“This neighborhood has always been loud with life — the chatter of the bakers, the call for morning prayers,” said Miriam Cohen, who runs a small kosher deli near the site of the fire. “Now you look at the street and wonder if someone is watching. It’s not just about a burned car. It’s about whether we can go about our lives without being watched for the wrong reasons.”

Security stepped up — but at what cost?

Belgian authorities have already reacted: soldiers were deployed to reinforce police around synagogues, schools and daycare centres in Antwerp and Brussels, adding a visible layer of protection. Measures like these are familiar across European capitals whenever threats spike — a rapid response intended to deter and reassure.

  • Increased patrols around Jewish institutions
  • Surveillance of online claim videos and social accounts
  • Coordination between national security services and local police

“Soldiers on the street make some people feel safer,” said Pieter Van den Broeck, a local councilor, “but they also remind you that fear has entered daily life. That’s damaging too.”

Digital echoes and the spread of fear

One complicating factor is the way extremist groups use the internet. Claim videos, posted and reposted across platforms, can magnify an incident’s psychological reach far beyond the immediate damage. SITE’s detailing of HAYI’s online claims has been crucial to investigators trying to determine links between attacks in different countries.

“Digital bravado can fuel copycat acts,” said Dr. Anna Petrov, who studies online radicalization. “An incendiary post can inspire someone with no prior record to act. That’s what makes online monitoring as important as boots on the ground.”

Questions for the reader — and for society

When a car burns in a neighborhood, it is easy to write it off as vandalism, theft or juvenile delinquency. When arrest reports mention terror laws and social media claim videos, the story grows knotty and urgent. Where does one draw the line between criminality and politically motivated violence? How much surveillance and security is acceptable before normal life feels militarized?

These are not just policing questions. They are civic ones. They ask how democracies protect vulnerable communities while preserving the freedoms that define them.

“We must respond with clarity and imagination,” Dr. Hassan said. “Protect the people, investigate expediently, and do not let fear hollow out community life. Otherwise, the attackers — whoever they are — have already won.”

Closing scene: a neighborhood on edge, and the long view

In the days after the fire, the diamond quarter returned to its rhythms — shop shutters rolling up, the drone of prayer services, the chatter in Yiddish and Flemish. But there is a thinness now to the laughter, a slight caution in the way people close their doors. The immediate danger may recede as arrests are processed and cameras analysed. The deeper work is slower: examining what allowed such violence to spread, confronting the online ecosystems that amplify it, and rebuilding a sense of normalcy without surrendering to suspicion.

As you read this from wherever you are, consider the ordinary routines that sustain your community. Would a burned car — or a shouted slur, or a viral video — change them? And if so, what would you want your leaders to do about it?

Djibouti Launches $480 Million ‘Salaam City’ Mega Housing Project

Mar 24(Jowhar)-Djibouti President Ismaïl Omar Guelleh has officially launched “Salaam City,” a major urban housing development valued at $480 million, marking one of the largest privately-led residential projects in Djibouti.

Iranian media report strikes on vital energy infrastructure

Iran media says energy infrastructure attacked
Iran media says energy infrastructure attacked

Smoke Over the Grid: Iran Says Its Energy Infrastructure Has Been Attacked

When the first alarms shrieked through a sleepy industrial town outside Shiraz, workers thought a transformer had blown. By midmorning, state media carried a terse bulletin: energy infrastructure had been attacked. Satellite-daylight found scorched earth and a network of interrupted lines. By dusk, the streets hummed with rumor and the scent of diesel. For a country whose economy and daily life are knotted to oil, gas and electricity, the sight of damaged pylons and blackened valves felt, to many, like a direct hit to the national nerve.

On the ground: what people saw and felt

“It sounded like a thunderclap that came from the ground,” said Reza, a maintenance foreman who asked that his family name not be used. “We ran toward the plant and found gates bent, a pump house with holes in it. The night sky was full of orange.” His voice wavered between anger and fear: “This is a place where people work to keep lights on and water moving. When that stops, everything stops.”

Neighbors told similar stories: a sudden blackout in several districts, water pumps stalling in low-lying neighborhoods, and the anxious buzz of first responders trying to cordon off damaged areas. Hospitals reported emergency protocols but — according to official lines — no mass casualties had been confirmed in the immediate aftermath.

Official line and unanswered questions

Iranian state media, citing the energy ministry, described the incident as an “attack on energy infrastructure.” The ministry said technicians were assessing damage to several installations, including power substations and a gas pipeline pump station. Beyond that, details were sparse and evolving; there was no immediate claim of responsibility, and Tehran urged calm while pledging to restore services swiftly.

“We will repair and reinforce our networks,” an unnamed energy ministry official told a domestic broadcaster. “Those who attempt to disrupt the lives of our people will be met with resilience. Our technicians are already at the site.” That determination echoed in the streets where residents — used to coping with outages, sanctions and seasonal blackouts — organized neighborhood generators and shared water bottles.

Why this matters: energy as lifeline and lever

Iran is not just an exporter of hydrocarbons; it is a nation whose daily rhythms rely on a complex lattice of power plants, pipelines and refineries. The country sits on vast hydrocarbon reserves — among the largest on Earth — and its energy sector underpins government revenue, industrial output and household life. Damage to infrastructure, even localized, can ripple outward:

  • Domestic impact: Reduced electricity can strain hospitals, manufacturing and agriculture, especially during high-demand seasons.
  • Economic effect: Interruptions to oil and gas flows can complicate export logistics and state budgets already stretched by sanctions and pandemic-era pressures.
  • Strategic alarm: Attacks on energy sites raise concerns about escalation, attribution and the safety of infrastructure across a volatile region.

Energy experts point out that the physical network is one part of a larger vulnerability. “It’s not just pipes and wires,” said Leila Mansouri, a regional energy analyst based in Istanbul. “Maintenance backlogs, aging equipment, and restricted access to spare parts because of sanctions make repair harder and prolong outages.” She added, “When an infrastructure system is stressed, an attack can have outsized effects.”

Patterns and parallels

In recent years, the Middle East has seen a string of asymmetric attacks on energy and transport targets — from tanker seizures to sabotage at offshore platforms — that blur the line between warfare and clandestine operations. Analysts read this as part of a larger pattern where non-state actors and state proxies, and sometimes even states themselves, use infrastructure as leverage.

“Attacks on energy are designed to signal,” explained Dr. Amir Haddad, a security scholar who tracks critical infrastructure assaults. “They send a message without necessarily resorting to full-blown military campaigns. But they also risk miscalculation. Once a pipeline or a grid is damaged, the political temperature in a capital can spike overnight.”

Who benefits? Who pays?

Questions about motive and authorship matter, but so do the practical consequences. Local businesses face lost hours; farmers fear irrigation gaps; hospitals juggle backups. For the global market, even short-lived disruptions in a major producer can affect sentiment. Traders watch any hint of reduced supply; insurers reassess risks to shipping and logistics; regional allies and rivals recalibrate positions.

“Even if the immediate physical damage is contained, the psychological and economic effect can be magnified,” said Sofia Berman, an international risk consultant in London. “Markets price in risk, and policymakers feel pressure to respond decisively.”

Voices from the city: color, worry and small acts of solidarity

In teahouses and on neighborhood chat threads, life continued with an undertone of strain. A bakery owner in the city center propped open his doors to customers when the power cut interrupted his ovens, trading free bread for patience. A university student charged phones in a café generator and, in exchange, offered homework help to local children.

“The people here are used to adapting,” said Sahar, a schoolteacher who stayed up late to organize a roster for sharing generator use in her block. “We joke and complain, but when push comes to shove, we look out for each other. Still, it’s unsettling to see infrastructure become a target.”

Looking outward: the geopolitical cloud

Attacks on energy sites rarely remain local stories. They intersect with sanctions regimes, regional rivalries, and the global shift toward energy security and diversification. For European and Asian importers who follow developments in Tehran closely, the incident raises questions about supply reliability, insurance and the calculus of doing business with a country under multiple pressures.

It also prompts larger questions: In an age of climate change, cyber threats and tangled geopolitics, how do societies build resilient energy systems? How much should governments invest in hardening pipelines versus diversifying energy mixes? How do ordinary citizens reconcile the vulnerability of critical services with daily life?

What comes next

Officials say crews are working to restore service and that investigations are underway. Whether the episode proves to be an isolated act of sabotage or part of a sustained campaign will shape both local recovery and international reactions. But for the people who live near the scorched stations and in the shadow of flickering streetlamps, the immediate priority is more human: getting reliable power back on and reclaiming a sense of safety.

For now, the pylons stand like blackened sentinels against the skyline, witnesses to a moment when infrastructure became a stage for larger conflicts. The question that remains for readers everywhere is not only who did this, but how societies choose to protect the arteries of daily life in a dangerous world. Will we invest in redundancy, diplomacy and community resilience — or continue to hope that the next strike will be the last?

DFS oo maamul cusb u magacawday degmada Waajid ee gobolka Bakool

Mar 24(Jowhar)-Dawladda Faderaalka Soomaaliya ayaa shaacisay in ay gudoomiye degmo u magacowday degmada Waajid ee gobalka Bakool, xili ay sii xoogeysatay xiisadda dowladda iyo Koofur Galbeer.

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