Apr 05(Jowhar)-Xildhibaano ka tirsan Baarlamaanka Soomaaliya oo ka soo jeeda Koonfur Galbeed ayaa soo saaray baaq deg-deg ah oo ay ugu yeerayaan hay’adaha samafalka inay si dhaqso ah u gaarsiiyaan gargaar bini’aadannimo deegaannadaas.
Artemis crew snaps stunning photo of Earth while traveling to the Moon

Moonbound: Riding the Quiet, Thunderous Pulse of Artemis II
There are moments when a single sentence can feel like a rope thrown across centuries. “The Moon is definitely getting bigger,” one of the Artemis II astronauts reported — and in those words you can hear more than a trajectory: you can hear wonder, a small human voice against the great hush of space, pushing a story forward that began long before any of us were born.
A simple observation that carries weight
On day three of a ten-day voyage, as the Orion capsule slips farther from the familiar blue and nearer to the pale living thing that has watched over sailors and poets for millennia, the crew announced they had passed the halfway mark between Earth and the Moon.
It sounds technical — a waypoint in a celestial dance — but imagine it: a four-person crew, strapped inside a ship that has never carried humans before, peering out at a planet that is shrinking into a memory and a Moon that swells with each heartbeat. NASA shared the view: a full portrait of Earth, deep ocean blues and drifting clouds, captured from inside Orion. The images were, in the words of a NASA official, “amazing.”
Who is on board — and why it matters
Artemis II is not only a mission of hardware and math. The crew — commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen — represents a deliberate widening of possibility.
This flight is a string of firsts and reopenings: the first crewed mission to the Moon since 1972, the inaugural crewed flight of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS), and a lineup whose diversity is itself a statement about who gets to belong in the sky. “We continue to learn all about our spacecraft as we operate it in deep space with crew for the first time,” Lakiesha Hawkins, a NASA official, said during a recent briefing. “It’s important to remind ourselves of that as we learn a little bit more day by day.”
The small miracles inside a small capsule
Space travel is glamour on the outside and a stubborn, patient apprenticeship on the inside. In the early hours the crew checked systems, resolved a communications hiccup and fixed a balky toilet — the tiny domestic dramas that remind you astronauts are people, too, who must live well enough in a capsule for exploration to be possible.
They fired Orion’s engine in a burn that lasted just under six minutes, the precise shove that nudged them out of Earth orbit and onto a three-day transfer to the Moon. The burn was routine in the calculus of rocketry and miraculous in human terms: a manufactured moment when velocity, timing and trust must align.
Scenes from inside and outside
Senior mission pilot Victor Glover described the growing clarity of lunar features as they drew nearer. “We took some pictures earlier today,” he said, “and after putting them on the computer to look closer, we found a feature — the Orientale Basin — and we were able to see the entire thing. And yes, the Earth is quite small and the Moon is definitely getting bigger.”
Jeremy Hansen, the Canadian crew member, offered a line that captures the surreal sensation of these trajectories: “It felt like we were falling out of the sky back to Earth. I said to Reid, ‘It feels like we’re gonna hit it.’ It’s amazing that we’re actually going to go around and miss this thing.”
From the launchpad to the public gaze
At Kennedy Space Center in Florida the day of the launch, the orange-and-white SLS rose through morning haze in a thunderous plume. Spectators along Cocoa Beach and Cape Canaveral still talk about the smell — a sting of ozone and hot propellant — and about the way the sky trembled as if remembering past Apollos. “My grandfather watched the Apollo launches,” said Maria Ortiz, a beachside resident. “We watched this one together on a screen, and I felt like we were making history again.”
Why this mission is more than a joyride
Artemis II is a stepping-stone: a ten-day mission designed to test systems and procedures that will underpin a planned crewed landing in 2028. If all goes according to plan, these astronauts will set a new human-distance record — traveling farther from Earth than anybody has before, more than 402,000 kilometres — and bring back data and imagery that scientists will use to refine future landings.
For lunar geologists, even photographs from an orbital flyby can be gold. “Seeing the Orientale Basin — it’s one of the most pristine multi-ring impact basins in the solar system,” said Dr. Maya Singh, a lunar scientist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute. “High-resolution imagery from crewed missions helps us calibrate orbital maps, ground-truth remote sensing data and plan potential landing sites.”
Costs, politics and the push of commerce
The mission also sits atop a tangle of budgets, schedules and geopolitics. SLS has endured years of delays and billions of dollars in cost overruns, and this mission’s timing has been amplified by a mix of national ambition and international rivalry. Contemporary coverage has framed Artemis as a response to other nations’ lunar ambitions, and U.S. political pressure has pushed timetables as policymakers and presidents emphasize symbolic milestones.
At the same time, NASA’s strategy increasingly mixes public will with private capability: contractors and commercial partners are central to the agency’s hope of putting humans back on the Moon and, eventually, sustaining a presence there. That partnership model raises questions about responsibility, access and who will benefit from a return to the lunar surface.
What this voyage asks of us
So where does this leave us, watching from a small blue planet? Do we look up and recall how fragile our orbiting shell is, or do we see the Moon as a new frontier where resources and power will be contested? Perhaps both.
Artemis II asks us to sit with complexity: to feel the simple awe of a circle that grows in your window and to hold the political and economic realities that trail in that awe’s wake. It asks us to consider who gets to write the next chapter of space exploration — and whether our look back at Earth while orbiting the Moon will change how we treat it.
In the quiet hours between mission updates, when the capsule cruises and the Earth becomes a pale blue coin, you can almost hear the future taking shape. The astronauts’ voices come through short transmissions and brief, human sentences: wonder, logistics, an occasional joke. “Lock in, we’re Moonbound,” NASA wrote on its social feed, and for the tens of millions watching, that felt like an invitation.
Are you in?
Can Europe stay sidelined during an extended Iran conflict?
When the pumps hiss: Europe feels the Strait of Hormuz in its veins
On a wet morning in Mulhouse, a man in a fluorescent jacket watches a single bead of petrol fall from a nozzle and thinks of Tehran, not the weather.
Across Europe, small, ordinary moments—filling a tank, switching on a heater, signing for a bag of feed—have begun to carry the weight of geopolitics. The wars and policy rows playing out more than 6,000 kilometres away in the Gulf are arriving in the form of higher bills, anxious supply charts, and a new, unfamiliar economy of caution.
“We used to complain about price hikes in winter,” says Anna Byrne, a dairy farmer outside Kildare, Ireland, wiping soil from her palms. “Now I check the shipping news before I decide how much fertilizer to order. It’s strange to have the fate of my fields tied to battles I’ll never see.”
Energy shock: the numbers that are reshaping choices
What’s actually changing
For 30 days of open conflict, the ledger is blunt: roughly €14 billion extra added to the European Union’s fossil fuel import bill, according to Brussels estimates. Traders and ministers say oil has surged around 60% and gas roughly 70% in price swings that have little respect for national boundaries.
Europe’s energy map is complicated by one simple fact: oil is priced globally and gas increasingly behaves like an auction. Even when most EU oil and gas come from non-Gulf suppliers, a dwindling world supply and a frenzied global bidding war push prices up for everyone.
“It’s the market’s cruel arithmetic,” says Marco Santini, an energy strategist in Milan. “A tanker diverted to the highest bidder leaves a hole where a contract once was. And that hole is felt on household meters and in factory orders.”
Things are uneven. Spain’s push into renewables—solar fields blooming across Andalusia and wind turbines carving silhouettes off the Atlantic coast—has rewarded it with projected wholesale electric prices that experts say could average around €66 per megawatt-hour for 2026, roughly half what Italy might expect. Italy, more dependent on imported gas for electricity, sits on a more exposed ledge.
Why Europe cannot simply shrug
There are structural vulnerabilities. Liquefied natural gas (LNG) is mobile: tankers can start, stop, and steer toward the highest offer. The EU sources only a small fraction of its gas from Qatar—about 4% overall and 8% of LNG—but with that producer’s shipments curtailed, the margins for diversifying shrink.
Brussels has started to speak like an emergency room doctor: rationing questions are being asked. Ideas floated by international agencies—work from home advisories, fewer flights, driving restrictions by license plate rotation—sound like a throwback to pandemic life. They are not yet policy, but they are on the table.
Fields under pressure: fertilizer, food, and farmers’ calendars
There are more than energy worries; the farming season has its own ticking clock. One-third of global ammonia and urea—two chemicals central to artificial fertilizer—transits the Strait of Hormuz. When gas is scarce or expensive, fertilizer follows, in both price and availability.
“We bought forward last autumn because Brussels’ new carbon rules were coming on stream,” says Eoin Gallagher, an Irish import manager, referring to the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM). “Now those same pre-buys are a mixed blessing: neat for stock levels, but no protection against a supply shock.”
Irish officials estimate their fertilizer stocks bought ahead of the CBAM transition will meet roughly 60% of farmers’ needs by mid-sowing season. That gap looms for growers whose planting calendars cannot be delayed.
Brussels faces a dilemma. Suspending environmental levies would ease prices in the short term, but it risks undermining long-term investments in cleaner production—the very changes that the EU wants industry to make.
Brussels’ balancing act: immediate relief vs. long-term resilience
European Commission officials speak in two registers: short-term triage and long-term strategy. In practice, those registers are shouting at each other.
Commission proposals this week focused on tactical tools—releasing oil from strategic reserves, legally curbing abusive pricing at forecourts, and placing unused carbon permits into a reserve to be unleashed if carbon prices spike. They stopped short of sweeping suspensions of emissions rules or the CBAM.
“We must ensure fairness now, but not by erasing the incentives that got us to cleaner industry,” one senior EU diplomat told me quietly. “Otherwise we are trading away tomorrow’s independence for today’s relief.”
Allies and adversaries: the diplomatic tightrope
There is another theatre: defence and diplomacy. The United States, eyeing domestic politics and global credibility, has urged allies to help keep the Strait of Hormuz open. European capitals, led by a mix of caution and principle, have been skittish.
Spain closed its airspace to certain military flights. Italy denied access to a Sicilian airbase for non-logistical raids. Austria—grounded by its neutrality—barred overflights. These gestures are at once political signals and practical refusals.
“Europeans don’t want to be dragged into a war that was not of their choosing,” says Liana Fix, a senior fellow at a European think tank. “But energy disruption and refugee flows are not abstract risks. If you sit out, you forfeit influence.”
Local voices: on the street and by the quay
At a small port near Fujairah, a stevedore named Hassan watches vessels queue like anxious commuters. “Insurance goes up, captains delay, cargo waits,” he says. “We measure time in containers now.” The UN has logged dozens of attacks and thousands of ships affected in the recent flare-ups—statistics that become human when you walk the docks and see the idle cranes.
In Sofia, a taxi driver complains about longer shifts to cover rising fuel costs, and in Marseille a fishmonger worries about increased freight charges that will squeeze his margins. The war’s arithmetic is personal: higher diesel, more expensive feed, pricier bread.
So what should Europe do?
Faced with a geopolitical squeeze, Europeans are being asked to choose between short relief and strategic change. There is no single answer, but options worth serious consideration include:
- Accelerating domestic renewables and grid upgrades to blunt gas dependencies;
- Deepening strategic petroleum and gas reservoirs with coherent EU-wide coordination;
- Supporting farmers with targeted subsidies or temporary CBAM adjustments that do not blunt long-term decarbonisation;
- Building diplomatic channels with regional players, including Iran, that keep lines open for de-escalation.
What would you choose if you were sitting at a national cabinet table—protecting today or reshaping tomorrow? It’s a real, hard choice facing millions of Europeans who prefer policy decisions to be invisible and predictable.
The bigger picture: a lesson about dependence
If the pandemic taught Europe painful lessons about supply chains and competition for scarce goods, the Gulf crisis is reinforcing an older truth: strategic vulnerability is expensive. Dependence on fossil fuels from distant and unstable chokepoints makes policy reactive. Investing in resilience—whether in renewable energy, diversified supply chains, or diplomatic muscle—costs now but could spare the continent far greater expense later.
In the end, the scene at the petrol pump or the quiet of a fertilizer warehouse on a cold morning are reminders that geopolitics is not a gallery for distant viewing. It’s a living, breathing force that shapes kitchens, farms, factories, and the temperature in our homes. Europe’s task is to decide how much of its fate it will cede to faraway straits—and how much it will take back, day by day, policy by policy.
Pope Leo’s First Easter as Pontiff Overshadowed by War

When Bells Sound in a Time of War: Easter Under a Shadow
On a crisp spring morning, St Peter’s Square should have felt like an embrace: a sea of faces craned toward the white silhouette of a pontiff, the air thick with incense, the vibration of ancient bells carrying a single, stubborn message—Christ is risen. Instead there is a hush threaded with headlines. This Easter, the world’s Catholics gathered beneath a new flag: Pope Leo XIV’s first celebration of the feast as pontiff, watched by millions around the globe, but watched through a lens clouded by conflict in the Middle East.
At 9:30am Irish time the pope celebrated Mass on the Vatican’s open stage before several thousand faithful. At 11am he pronounced the Urbi et Orbi blessing—the traditional “to the city and the world” invocation—an appeal that normally lands soft and hopeful on the ears of many. This year, it felt more like a summons: not only to faith, but to conscience and to the uneasy work of peacemaking.
“We came for the resurrection, and we found a question,” said Maria Fernandes, a volunteer from Lisbon who had traveled with a parish group. “We are used to joy here—laughter and children running under the colonnades. Today people kept glancing at their phones, at the screens. You could see the war in the way they held their hands.”
Prayer Amid Proximity to Violence
Pope Leo has been unusually direct about the conflict. In the days leading up to Easter he called repeatedly for an end to the violence in the Middle East and even urged world leaders to seek an “off-ramp” from escalation—an appeal directed, publicly and pointedly, at the U.S. administration. His Easter Vigil homily pressed the imagery of heavy stones: “Even today, there are tombs to be opened,” he said in a message shared widely on the Vatican’s social channels, inviting the faithful to consider the heavy burdens of mistrust, fear and resentment that lock societies in cycles of suffering.
Those words landed differently in different places. In the Vatican they echoed like an ethical challenge; in Jerusalem they felt, heartbreakingly, literal.
Closed Doors at the Holy Sepulchre
In the winding alleys of Jerusalem’s Old City, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre—sites of worship and pilgrimage for centuries—stood largely shuttered. For the first time in living memory, some services were held behind closed doors; pilgrims were kept away from the tomb regarded as the heart of Easter belief. Israel announced restrictions on large gatherings in response to ongoing security threats after the onset of strikes between the United States, Israel and Iran that began on February 28.
“The sepulchre is empty, not because of miracle, but because of a curfew,” said Jack, a 52-year-old resident of the Old City, who asked that his surname not be used. “It’s a strange grief. You come here to touch the stones that tell a story of new life. Now the stones are just stones.”
Latin Patriarch Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, who has long been a pastoral voice in the region, noted poignantly in his Easter Vigil homily that silence has a weight of its own in this wounded land. Authorities prevented him from celebrating Mass in the church on a prior occasion—a decision that drew international criticism. “The silence here is not a peaceful one,” he told congregants. “It is broken by the distant sounds of a war that sows fear and tears.”
The Village That Kept Its Candle Burning
South of the borderlands, the Lebanese village of Debel—an area with a Christian majority—sat in an uneasy ring of sound: the steady thrum of artillery and the sharp staccato of mortar rounds. Homes were cut off, supply lines frayed, and families huddled in the thin safety of shared rooms. Yet the village prepared, as villages do, for its rites.
“We will have bread and we will bless it. We will light a candle at dawn,” said Joseph Attieh, a town elder, speaking by phone amid the roar of nearby bombardment. “We are terrified. We have not slept. But we put our trust in God—that is the only light we keep.”
It is a small, human image—loaves, a candle, a prayer—that binds the global to the intimate. While presidents and generals argue over strategy on screens, families in places like Debel carry on the rituals that make life bearable: breaking bread, naming the dead, refusing to give up on hope.
Faith, Diplomacy, and the Global Gaze
There are roughly 1.4 billion Catholics worldwide, a demographic fact that underscores how much weight a papal voice can carry on days like this. Yet influence is different from power. Diplomats and analysts say spiritual leaders can nudge public sentiment, inspire humanitarian responses, and shame or bless policies—rarely do they order ceasefires.
“Religious leadership has moral authority, not military leverage,” explained Dr. Amina Khalil, a Middle East analyst based in Geneva. “But moral authority shapes narratives. When a widely followed religious figure highlights the human cost of war, it can mobilize international pressure in surprisingly concrete ways—funding for relief, diplomatic mediation, even shifts in public opinion that force politicians to reassess options.”
The Vatican’s language this Easter was unmistakable in its urgency. The pope’s public entreaties, his use of social media, and the visual of a pontiff standing before an anxious square all played into a larger strategy: keeping the human impact of conflict in view so the world does not get used to it.
What Are We Willing to Lose—or Save?
As you read this, you may be several time zones away from a basilica or a battlefield. You might be sipping coffee and glancing at headlines, or standing in a packed church. I invite you to imagine the two scenes overlapping: a child lighting a candle while a town elder names the dead by the faintest light of a phone screen; a crowded nave where a woman checks messages from a son in uniform.
Who do we save first? What do we preserve as sacred? These are not merely theological questions; they are political and practical, ethical and immediate. The choices made in war rooms ripple into pews and kitchens. They determine whether a father in Debel wakes tomorrow.
Hope, Not as Naïveté but as Practice
There is no tidy resolution at the end of this Easter morning. Yet in every closed church, every family preparing a humble feast, and every leader who uses their pulpit to plead for ceasefire, there is evidence of a stubborn human refusal to normalize violence. Pope Leo XIV’s blessing will be played back on television screens and in living rooms; for some it will be a comfort, for others a call to action.
“Hope is not a passive thing,” said Sister Ana, a missionary who has worked in refugee camps along Lebanon’s border. “Hope makes plans. It asks for help. It feeds the neighbor. This is a season to practice hope as if it were a muscle—we must exercise it so it does not atrophy.”
So what will you do with today’s message? Offer a prayer, make a call to your representative, donate to relief efforts, or simply listen to someone who is carrying weight you cannot imagine. In a world where the drumbeat of geopolitics often drowns out the quiet work of mercy, perhaps the real miracle is collective attention: choosing, together, to turn toward the places where doors have been shut—and to try, humbly and persistently, to open them again.
Trump oo markale hanjabaad kulul ka soo saaray dagaalka Iran

Apr 04(Jowhar) Madaxweynaha Mareykanka Donald Trump ayaa markale ugu hanjabay Iran inay la kulmi doonto cawaaqib xun haddii aysan 48 saacadood aysan heshiis la gaarin amaba ay dib u furin Marinka Hormuz.
Guddiga Doorashooyinka oo Shaqo Joojin ku Sameeyay Mas’uul Sare
Apr 04(Jowhar)-Guddiga Madaxabannaan ee Doorashooyinka Qaranka ayaa shaqo joojin ku sameeyay Madaxii Xafiiskooda Koofur Galbeed, Cabdifitaax Cabdullaahi Maxamed.
Second Turkish-owned vessel passes through the Strait of Hormuz
Another Turkish-owned vessel has successfully passed through the strategically significant Strait of Hormuz, marking the second such passage in recent weeks. The vessel, carrying a cargo of goods, navigated through the narrow waterway without incident, highlighting Turkey’s commitment to ensuring the safe passage of its vessels through key global trade routes.
MP warns Israeli occupation in southern Lebanon has become ‘very dire’

In Southern Lebanon, Homes Become Frontlines — Voices from a Region Holding Its Breath
The sky over southern Lebanon has settled into a kind of exhausted gray, the kind that comes after an explosion and stays: dust that doesn’t blow away, a sun that peers through a haze, and the steady, tense hum of people listening for the next strike. Life here has been reduced to a series of decisions with no good options—stay and risk being caught in the crossfire, or leave and watch everything you own disappear.
Ten thousand anchored in place
“They are burning the land,” Najat Saliba, a Lebanese member of parliament, told Morning Ireland this week, a simple sentence carrying the weight of a lived catastrophe. “Israel is invading, and when they come to a village, they actually destroy all houses. At the same time, we have almost 10,000 people, or probably a little more, who are stranded in the south.” Saliba’s words echo through the narrow alleys and orchard tracks of towns that have long been both strategic and sentimental: places where grandparents buried olives, where children learnt to fish in the dawn mists.
These are not fighters on a map; these are schoolteachers, grocers, olive growers, and seamstresses. “They are very peaceful,” Saliba said. “They decided not to leave their homes so that their land is not burned.” That stubbornness—love braided with defiance—is a recurrent thread through the region’s response.
The human arithmetic of war
Numbers alone cannot carry the weight of loss, but they help us sketch the scale. Lebanon’s health ministry reported more than 1,345 people killed and 4,040 wounded since the most recent wave of strikes began—figures that include 1,129 men, 91 women, and 125 children, as well as 53 healthcare workers. More than a million people have been displaced across the country since the attacks escalated.
On the other side, Israeli military statements say they have struck over 3,500 targets in Lebanon and claim roughly 1,000 militants neutralized in the month of intensive operations. Whether those figures will stand up to independent verification is, for now, beside the point for families counting the dead and the pots they no longer have to cook in.
On the ground: stories you might not see on the evening news
Walk through the outskirts of a village in the south and you hear the small, precise details that stitch a community together: the creak of a courtyard gate that no longer opens, the smoky tang of a hearth snuffed too soon, a faded photograph propped in a window invaded by ash. “My father planted these olive trees forty years ago,” says Amal, a 37-year-old mother whose voice finds its calm in the middle of chaos. “If I leave, they will cut them, someone will burn them. We are not soldiers—we are the keepers of our land.”
At a makeshift clinic near the road, a nurse in scrubs that have seen better days—arms bandaged from lifting stretchers—says, “We know every scar on each baby here. When ambulances slowed, people started carrying their own. That is how close the danger is.” There is a weary pride in her voice, the kind public systems carry when they are holding up the frayed edges of society.
Humanitarian lifelines under strain
Officials and aid workers are scrambling to keep a lifeline open. “We are negotiating corridors for supplies—food, medicine, fuel—so people can get what they need in time,” Saliba said, calling such access “of utmost importance.” UN agencies and local NGOs warn that the clock is ticking: winter grain stores are low, fuel is scarce, and hospitals are strained after repeated hits.
International figures remind us of the complexity: three Indonesian peacekeepers were killed recently while serving in southern Lebanon, a grim reminder that international efforts to de-escalate can come with a brutal cost. High-level visits are being postponed for security reasons; Ireland’s defence minister had to abandon a trip amid warnings from the Defence Forces.
The politics of arms and the threat of civil fracture
Underlying the immediate violence is a political and military puzzle with national consequences. Israel has justified its actions as necessary to shield its north from rocket fire by Hezbollah, and Israeli ministers have warned they intend to establish control over the Litani area and dismantle the militant group’s capabilities. Hezbollah, for its part, has said it would resist disarmament and has threatened to oppose the Lebanese armed forces if forced.
“They have threatened to turn their arms against the people and declare a civil war if the Lebanese armed forces try to take their arms by force,” Saliba warned. “They are using all kinds of tools so that they remain able to launch these strikes against Israel.” Such a scenario—armed actors turning on the state and on civilians—is the kind of specter that keeps families awake at night and diplomats awake at conference tables.
Voices from the street: a chorus of fear, anger, hope
A shopkeeper in Tyre told me, “I lock the door and sit in the back with my daughter. We wait for the calls from neighbors to tell us if it’s safe to run for the cellar.” A teacher in a shelter added, “We are teaching kids to draw, to write their names, because if you keep doing small things, you remember you are human.”
Experts watching the region urge caution and a broader lens. Dr. Rana Haddad, a political analyst who studies civilian resilience in conflict zones, says, “This is not just a military contest. It’s a struggle over the social fabric of Lebanon. Displacement at this scale—over a million people—can change demographics, economy, and politics for generations.”
What should the rest of the world feel—and do?
When you read these figures and quotes from afar, it’s easy to reduce everything to “another conflict.” But try to imagine a family deciding whether to leave the home their grandparents built, or a nurse choosing which patient to treat when the power flickers. Those daily moral choices are the true measure of harm, not just the tally of missiles and tanks.
So what can a global audience do? Pressure for humanitarian access, support reputable aid organizations working on the ground, and insist on independent investigations into civilian harm. Ask your representatives what they are doing to de-escalate and protect civilians. If nothing else, keep watch; in a world of short attention spans, sustained scrutiny is a rare form of solidarity.
Where does this leave Lebanon?
For now, southern Lebanon is a landscape of holding patterns—families holding their houses, aid groups holding fragile supply lines, and political actors holding their positions. The danger is not only the bombs: it’s the slow erosion of everyday life. Markets that no longer open, schools that no longer teach, communities that fray when young people depart or when the old stories that bind them are interrupted.
“We want to be seen as humans, not as part of someone’s strategy,” Amal says, staring at the line where her fields meet the road. “We wake up, we cook, we sing. The land remembers us; we must not let the land forget our names.”
War is often presented as an event—a series of attacks and counterattacks—but for the people of southern Lebanon it is a prolonged, intimate test of endurance. As the world watches, the question that lingers is not simply who will win or lose, but how the children of these towns will tell their stories when the sky finally clears.
Mareykanka oo ka walaacsan beegsiga Iran ee warshadaha aluminiumka ee dalalka Khaliijka
Apr 04(Jowhar)-Warbixin ay daabacday Jariirada Times of Israa’iil, ayaa muujinaysa Cawaaqibta ka dhalanaysa weerarada lala beegsaday warshadaha aluminiumka ee dalalka Khaliijka, kuwaas oo muhiim u ahaa Mareykanka, weerarada waxaa fulinaya Iran.
U.S. and Iran hunt for missing American pilot after warplane shot down
Skyfall: When the Night Became a Hunt — Two US Jets Downed, a Pilot Missing, and a Region Holding Its Breath
The Gulf night stank of diesel and salt, the kind of air that keeps the city awake even when power is out. Then the sky tore open. Two U.S. warplanes came down within hours of each other — one over southwestern Iran, the other falling into Kuwait — and suddenly a distant, abstract war became painfully intimate for families, soldiers, and civilians across three borders.
“We heard an explosion like thunder,” said Fatemeh Hosseini, a shopkeeper in a village near the reported crash site in Bushehr province. “Windows shook. People stood in the streets and cried.”
What happened — a quick, grim ledger
Officials from both Tehran and Washington described a chaotic, fast-moving set of events: a two-seat F-15E struck by Iranian fire and downed over southwest Iran; an A-10 Warthog damaged and crashing over Kuwaiti territory after being hit; and two Black Hawk helicopters that went into Iranian airspace during a rescue effort and returned with damage from hostile fire.
“One pilot was rescued, another ejected and is accounted for, and a third remains unlocated inside Iranian territory,” said a senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We are doing everything we can to find him.”
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said units were combing the crash area and that local authorities would reward anyone who captured or killed what they called “forces of the hostile enemy.” Iran’s state media released images of scorched wreckage and fragments they said belonged to a U.S. fighter jet. In Tehran’s halls of power, hardliners framed the downings as a humiliation for Washington and its allies.
“The war the U.S. and Israel thought would topple us has been reduced,” said Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, Iran’s parliamentary speaker, in a terse post on X. “Now they hunt for their pilots.”
The human cost and the wider toll
Numbers — always too small and too blunt for grief — began to circulate. U.S. Central Command said that 13 American service members had been killed in the conflict so far, with more than 300 wounded. Regional analysts estimate the death toll overall in the thousands, a number that grows like a dark tide each day.
“We are not only losing soldiers; we are losing the fabric of ordinary life,” said Leila Mansuri, a schoolteacher in southern Iran. “Children ask if dad will come back. Farmers wonder if the well will run. It is fear layered on fear.”
The strikes that set this spiral in motion began months ago — culminating, according to U.S. and Israeli officials, in an operation that killed Iran’s Supreme Leader on February 28. Since then, Iran has sent volleys of drones and missiles into Israeli skies and struck at Gulf partners allied to Washington. The consequences are now global: energy markets have jolted, insurance premiums for shipping in the Gulf have spiked, and the price of Brent crude jumped sharply on the news.
“Oil markets are hypersensitive to any disruption in the Gulf,” said Dr. Marcus Ellison, an energy analyst at the International Institute for Strategic Studies. “When a major refinery or a shipping route is threatened, traders react immediately. We saw prices surge double digits after the most recent strikes.”
Gulf vulnerability: more than just oil
In the region, vulnerability is not only about barrels. Much of the Arabian Peninsula — Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, the UAE — depends heavily on desalination plants for drinking water. Hard strikes on electrical grids and water infrastructure can create humanitarian crises in days. Kuwait reported attacks on a power and water plant; a drone strike hit a Red Crescent warehouse near Bushehr, hampering relief supplies.
“When water stops, societies fray fast,” explained Nadia Al-Amin, a water-security expert based in Dubai. “Desalination is energy-intensive and centralized. Lose electricity, and whole cities can be without potable water in hours.”
On the ground: search, sorrow, and social media
Rescue crews moved like ghosts across the borderlands. Two U.S. Blackhawks involved in the hunt for the missing pilot were reported hit by Iranian fire but managed to exit Iranian airspace, U.S. officials told Reuters. The missing airman’s status remains a painful unknown, and his potential presence inside Iran has ratcheted up the political stakes for Washington.
Back in the capitals, the scene was perfunctory and relentless: the president receiving briefings in the White House; military commanders tracking telemetry and hospital reports; diplomats scrambling to salvage quiet channels of negotiation. A senior administration official said the president had been updated continuously on the search-and-rescue effort.
Meanwhile, social media — raw, merciless, celebratory for some, fearful for others — became a battlefield of its own. Iranians, who in recent weeks had endured U.S. strikes on their soil, posted messages celebrating the downings. In Beirut, the U.S. embassy warned that Iran and its allied groups might target universities, urging Americans to leave Lebanon while commercial flights were still available.
“There’s a dangerous blend of jubilation and revenge,” said Samir Haddad, a Lebanese journalist. “People cheer because they feel struck back at — but they also fear the escalation will drag their city into darker days.”
What this means going forward
We live in an era where local actions ricochet globally. A pilot missing in southwestern Iran becomes a foreign policy crisis, an energy shock, a humanitarian worry, and a line on someone’s social feed. The conflict has already forced neighboring states into defensive postures and pushed global markets into jittery trading.
Are we watching a new kind of warfare where infrastructure and civilian life are the primary theaters? When leaders talk about “targeting bridges and power plants,” they tinker, intentionally or not, with systems that keep children hydrated and hospitals lit. There is a human arithmetic here that a map cannot show.
“Military power can break things,” said Admiral (ret.) Jorge Alvarez, a former NATO strategist. “But it cannot rebuild trust, water plants, or the simple routines of daily life that hold societies together. That is the real cost.”
Questions that must be asked
- How long can Gulf states withstand sustained strikes on power and water infrastructure before the civilian cost becomes catastrophic?
- What mechanisms remain — if any — for quiet negotiation to retrieve a missing service member without widening the war?
- How do global markets and supply chains brace for persistent instability in a region that supplies a large share of the world’s oil and maritime traffic?
The answers are not simple, because the stakes are not only strategic but deeply human. Somewhere in a village near the crash site, a family waits for news. In a command center, analysts run scenarios. In markets, a trader looks at a price chart and thinks about rent. These are the small, sharp facts of war.
As night fell again over the Gulf, there was no choir of victory, only the slow work of counting — of the missing, the hurt, the supply lines threatened, and the fragile diplomacy hanging in the balance. The sky had been won and lost a dozen times in a single day; now the region waits to see whether the hunt for a single pilot becomes the spark for still greater conflagration, or the hinge upon which a fragile ceasefire might be negotiated.
Which future will leaders choose? Which will the world demand?












