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Sirens Signal Threat of Strike, Irish Expat Reports from Kuwait

Sirens herald strike threat, says Irish man in Kuwait
Jake McAllister was away for mid-term with his wife and daughter in Egypt

Night Sirens Over the Gulf: Expatriates, Schools and the Sound of Uncertainty

When Jake McAllister and his family stepped off the plane in Kuwait after a week in Egypt, the city felt like the same humming organism he had lived inside for seven years — the soft rush of traffic along the corniche, the late-night shawarma stalls, the polite nods exchanged in the school parking lot. By sunrise the next day, all of that had been rearranged by sound: distant booms, the high keening wail of air-raid sirens and a chorus of WhatsApp messages that turned his neighbourly suburb into a small, connected hive of alarm.

“I’ve made my life here,” Jake told me, lowering his voice as if the memory still echoed. “Portstewart is home, but Kuwait has been home too — the school, the colleagues, the friends. I have to admit, I’ve always felt safe here. That changed, not because the city felt different, but because the noise did. You don’t realise how much your sense of safety depends on the quiet until the quiet’s gone.”

From Classroom Calm to Clouded Skies

Jake is the principal of an international school, a figure accustomed to choreographing the daily rhythms of teachers, children and parents. He talked about his eight-month-old daughter Elena, about the ritual of morning drop-offs and assemblies. The week after their holiday, those rituals were interrupted: sirens at three in the morning, what sounded like explosions, the occasional plop of debris landing in nearby streets.

“There was a really loud bang and then everyone in our neighbourhood started messaging,” Jake remembered. “What’s that? Did you hear that? Are you okay?”

The sound, he said, has been the primary experience — the scare of it, the way even people who understand the technicalities of modern air defence systems feel an instinctive, primitive alarm when the sky seems to be fighting back.

“We’ve seen small pieces of debris fall a couple of times,” his wife, Marlene, added. “Nothing dramatic to look at, but enough to remind you that whatever is happening above isn’t contained to the clouds. It lands in your street, on your balcony, in the empty park you jog in.”

A Neighborhood of Check-Ins and Makeshift Safety

What surprised Jake most was not the noise, but the immediate bloom of neighbourliness. Families who barely exchanged more than a smile were suddenly checking on each other. WhatsApp groups — the unofficial arteries of expat life — filled with voice notes, photos and offers: ‘Need a place to sleep? I’ve got cushions.’ ‘I’ve got baby formula.’ ‘Can you look after my cat if we have to leave?’

“It became practical kindness,” Jake said. “Children sleeping over, cars offered, someone with a generator. People dropped their usual reticence and started being very, very human.”

That same community reflex extended into the region’s schools. International schools in Kuwait and Bahrain scrambled to shift to remote learning, not because they had fully assessed every risk, but because the priority became keeping lessons going and children shielded from a world that suddenly felt loud and unsafe.

Pivoting to Online: A Rapid, Messy, Human Response

Teachers started uploading video lessons from living rooms and hotel rooms. Schedules were compressed and pick-up points rethought. “We had to switch on a dime,” Jake said. “One day we’re planning plays and assemblies, the next we’re recording phonics videos in my office while my wife reels off bedtime stories in the background.”

Those adjustments mirror a global trend: when crisis arrives, education systems often default to continuity — the belief that keeping learning alive is a form of psychological shelter. But the pivot is uneven. Students with reliable internet and quiet homes have a different experience from those sharing cramped flats or working off tethered mobile data.

Voices from Across the Gulf: ‘We’re Keeping Our Eyes Open’

Not far away in Bahrain, Dr Paul O’Farrell, a biochemistry lecturer who moved to the islands two decades ago, described a similar oscillation between calm and caution. He lives with his family and says their neighbourhood is “relatively removed” from major military installations, yet the night noises have been undeniable.

“Most of what we’ve been told are interceptions, Patriot missiles or other systems being launched to deflect incoming threats,” Dr O’Farrell said. “You’re told it’s interceptions, which should be reassuring, but you still hear it. You still wake up.”

He and his wife have not packed a bag to leave in the middle of the night, but they have started to make plans. His 17-year-old daughter now logs into class from home. The university where he teaches has moved lectures online for the time being.

“We’re keeping our eyes open and adjusting to the vagaries of what’s happening,” he said. “If anything, it reminds you of the fragility of everyday life. The routines you take for granted — the commute, the coffee with a colleague, a lecture — can change in a moment.”

Local Color: Tea, Majlis and Midnight Streets

Walk down certain lanes and you can feel the cultural cushions that make Gulf expatriate life resilient. There’s the majlis — a low-slung room where families gather over qahwa (Arabic coffee) and dates — and the small shops that stay open late, trading in cigarettes and cold water. Neighbours exchange trays of samosas, elders check on children, a shopkeeper called Fatima stood on her stoop handing out thermos flasks of hot tea to those waiting out the sirens.

“We are used to being hospitable,” she said with a smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes. “When everyone is a little frightened, it makes us do what we always do — look after one another.”

Why This Matters Beyond Borders

This is not just a Gulf story. The experience of these families — the sudden need to become adaptable, the anxiety that ripples out from a single night of noise, the way education systems and communities pivot under stress — is a template we’ve seen in conflicts and crises around the world.

Consider a few broader facts:

  • Millions of expatriates live across the Gulf states, contributing to education, health care and commerce. In many cities, expatriate communities outnumber local citizens in daily life.

  • Schools and universities increasingly have contingency plans for remote learning after years of pandemic-driven innovation, but equity gaps remain: access to devices and stable internet is uneven.

  • Psychological impact is slow-burning. Research consistently shows that even non-direct exposure to conflict — hearing sirens, briefings over messaging apps, flashes across the sky — can erode a community’s sense of security over time.

Small Practices, Big Impact

For families living through this, practical measures matter: having a basic emergency kit, agreed meeting points, contacts who can offer temporary shelter. But equally important are the less tangible things — a neighbour’s voice checking in, the school principal who posts a recorded pep talk for worried students, a teacher who records a bedtime story.

“We can’t control geopolitics,” Jake said. “What we can control is whether Elena grows up knowing her community rallied when things were scary. That, to me, is the story I’d like my daughter to inherit.”

Questions to Carry With You

How do we build systems — educational, social, civic — that can hold people when the sky itself seems unstable?

What are the long-term costs of living with intermittent alarms, even when physical harm is limited?

And what can the rest of the world learn from communities that stitch themselves together on the fly, turning WhatsApp into a lifeline and suburban streets into temporary networks of care?

There are no easy answers, only the small, human acts we can witness and replicate: neighbours offering mattresses, teachers recording lessons in hotel rooms, families making evacuation plans while hoping they never need them. These are the quiet measures of resilience.

As you read this, perhaps from a cafe half a world away or from a kitchen table much like those in Kuwait and Bahrain, ask yourself: what would I do if the night sounded different? What would I take with me? Who would I call?

For Jake and Paul and hundreds of others across the Gulf, the sirens have not erased life. They’ve rearranged it — louder, stranger, more communal. The hope now is that, in time, the sound of the sky will become ordinary again, and that the kindness that rose in the first days will remain long after the alarms have gone quiet.

Video shows compiled evidence of alleged war crimes in Ukraine

Watch: Evidence of alleged war crimes gathered in Ukraine
Watch: Evidence of alleged war crimes gathered in Ukraine

In the shadow of Kharkiv: cataloguing a war, one ruined missile at a time

There is a place on the outskirts of Kharkiv that looks like a graveyard for the modern age: twisted fragments of drones and missiles lie scattered across a field, as if some industrial apocalypse had breathed and spat them out. Locals have nicknamed it the “drone cemetery.” Walking among the wreckage you can hear the city — distant horns, an air siren every so often — and beneath it the collective hum of painstaking work: cameras, notebooks, gloved hands lifting shrapnel into evidence bags.

“It’s only a small part of all the missiles which fall on Ukraine every day, every hour,” says Olexander Kobylev, the regional war crimes investigator for Kharkiv, standing beside a row of blackened fuselages. “What I can say for sure is that each missile has caused harm.” His voice is steady. His eyes are not.

That harm is what Ukrainian investigators are trying to make speak. For four years, teams of prosecutors, forensic scientists, open-source researchers and volunteers have been collecting photographs, witness statements, satellite clips and the metal remains of weapons. Their goal is not merely to tally damage: it is to stitch individual incidents into a legal narrative strong enough to carry to an international courtroom — to a special tribunal in The Hague that many here imagine as the ultimate ledger of accountability.

What collecting war looks like

Evidence gathering here is intimate and relentless. A forensic analyst will crouch on a kitchen floor where a missile pierced the ceiling, cataloguing the pattern of splinter marks while a neighbor brings tea and recounts the sound of the blast. Elsewhere, volunteers comb through social media posts, geolocating video clips to prove where a strike happened and when.

“We started with rubble and names,” says Elena, a forensic photographer who has spent months documenting strike sites. “Now we have a map of violence — not just dots on a screen, but lives connected to each other through the way they were targeted.”

The scale is sobering: Ukrainian authorities report that more than 500 indictments have been transferred to the national public prosecutor’s office, and over 100 Russian officers have already been tried in absentia. These filings cover crimes that range from mass killing of civilians to looting, and from the destruction of cultural sites to the meticulous cataloguing of damage caused by individual missiles.

  • Evidence types: debris, medical records, witness testimony, intercepted communications, satellite imagery, open-source videos.
  • Case status: hundreds of indictments filed domestically, with many intended for an international tribunal.
  • Challenges: chain-of-custody, proving command responsibility, securing international cooperation.

From street-level grief to international law

“Translating grief into a legal standard is a painfully technical thing,” says Dr. Anna Petrov, an international law scholar at a university in Kyiv. “You need more than anger. You need a documented sequence: who ordered, who executed, who benefited. Every shred of evidence becomes part of a mosaic.”

That mosaic requires extraordinary care. Chain-of-custody protocols dictate that every piece of debris must be tracked from the moment it is photographed until it might someday be presented in a courtroom. That means refrigerated storage of ballistic fragments, secure servers for video, and meticulous timestamps on witness statements. In a country still under threat, maintaining that chain is both logistically daunting and emotionally draining.

“I remember a family who lost their home,” recalls Pavlo, a prosecutor who has spent nights transcribing testimony under a dim lamp. “The mother insisted on telling us every day what she saw, how she cradled her child’s jacket. These details matter. They humanize what could otherwise be only numbers.”

Local color: Kharkiv between resilience and routine

Kharkiv is a city of stubborn rhythms. On certain streets, the bakeries still open before dawn, flour dusting the air like a stubborn snowfall. In the metro stations, commuters — some with backpacks, some carrying wooden crates of preserved fruit — have perfected the choreography of living in a city that can be safe and unsafe within the same hour. Windows are boarded and flowers still bloom in patched gardens. A café owner named Halyna jokes about the resilience of her espresso machine — “it survived air raids and worse” — and then adds, quietly, that every cup now tastes like a promise.

These small acts of normalcy are more than routine. They are evidence of a civilian life that refuses to be entirely consumed by wartime statistics. They are also, paradoxically, a challenge to investigators: how to transform everyday testimony into admissible, persuasive proof?

The people who remember

“We are not historians here,” says Myroslava, a volunteer who organizes witness interviews. “We are not just collecting stories to archive memory. We are building cases so that future generations understand there was accountability.” She hands me a notebook full of names and short, jagged sentences that read like pieces of a broken life.

One of those entries is a short account from an elderly man who describes the sky as a “blue sheet burned through in a place.” Another is a teenager’s voice message recorded the morning after a strike: trembling, punctuated with laughter that sometimes cuts through grief. These are the textures that make a legal case legible to a judge who will never stand in this field of metal and mud.

Why this matters beyond Kharkiv

What happens here matters to the global conversation about war, justice and the rules that govern armed conflict. The effort to institute a special tribunal in The Hague represents a broader yearning: that there should be mechanisms to hold individuals, not just states, responsible when violence crosses certain lines.

Globally, the project raises hard questions. Can international justice be timely enough to matter? Can the evidence collected under fire survive political winds? And perhaps most importantly: will convictions, if they come, actually deter future crimes?

“We all hope the answer is yes,” says Kobylev, looking across the field at the scattered ruins. “But justice is not only about punishment. It’s about recognition. It’s about telling people that their loss was seen, recorded, and judged.”

A final thought

As you read this, consider the small, ordinary things that signal home — a steaming bowl on a cold day, a photograph pinned to a wall, a name on a list. Imagine those things are at stake. Imagine the patient, sometimes tedious work of transforming them into proof that the world can hold onto. That is what investigators here are doing: collecting the shards of what was lost, arranging them so that they might one day form a case, a verdict, and a statement about the bounds of human behavior.

Will it be enough? Time will tell. But for now, in Kharkiv’s drone cemetery and in kitchens and courtrooms, people are doing the labor of memory, law, and, ultimately, hope.

Trump warns of prolonged Iran war after attacks strike Riyadh, Beirut

Trump warns of longer Iran war as Riyadh and Beirut hit
Vehicles drive along a street near the diplomatic quarter in Riyadh, following drone strikes that hit the US embassy compound

On the Brink: A Region Rewired by Fire and Sound

Night fell heavy over Tehran like a held breath, then shattered. Windows rattled, streetlights flickered, and a sour tang of smoke rolled through alleys where children should have been playing. Fighter jets traced bright, cruel arcs above the city while residents counted the seconds between blasts. For many, the sirens were not just warnings — they were a new atlas of fear.

This is not a small scrape between distant capitals. It’s a widening collision that has already touched embassies, ports, and the soft underbelly of everyday life across the Gulf. From Riyadh to Beirut, the map of normality is being redrawn in ash and diplomatic cables.

Embassies Under Threat, Citizens on the Move

Early this week, alarms rang out in Riyadh when two drones struck near the U.S. embassy compound, leaving a small fire and shattered calm in their wake. Within hours, warnings went out from Washington: non-essential staff in several Middle Eastern posts were asked to leave, and American citizens were told to consider exiting the region.

“We haven’t slept properly in three days,” said a diplomat’s spouse sheltering in place in Jeddah. “You pack and unpack the same bag until the packing itself becomes the only thing you can control.”

Officials in Washington spoke of a campaign that could be measured in weeks, not days, while also acknowledging the capacity for it to stretch longer. Behind the terse public statements were frantic assurances, maps and contingency plans. A U.S. official who asked not to be named said simply: “We are braced for a protracted phase. Our forces are postured accordingly.”

Across the Sky: Tehran’s Night and the Rising Toll

Journalists on the ground reported repeated heavy explosions in Tehran as jets circled overhead; streets normally humming with bazaars and cafes lay uncharacteristically quiet. Some residents were packing to leave, suitcases lined up in hallways like silent sentries. Others stared from windows, trying to make sense of a life interrupted.

“I grew up with mortar drills,” said a woman in her twenties whose family huddled in an apartment above a shuttered shop. “But this is different. This feels like the world ended in the middle of a Tuesday.”

Casualty figures are contested and grim. U.S. Central Command reported military fatalities among its personnel; Iranian outlets and local activist groups have reported hundreds of deaths and scores of injured civilians, some in schools and markets. International human-rights monitors warned that in rapidly evolving conflicts, accurate counts are slow to emerge — but the human stories are immediate and raw.

At Sea: A Chokepoint Turned Flashpoint

One of the starkest threats has been the rhetoric — and actions — directed at the Strait of Hormuz, the maritime choke point through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil moves. The prospect of harassment or interdiction there sends tremors through global energy markets and brings a tangible, everyday cost to consumers far from the Gulf’s shores.

An unnamed commander from a regional military body warned bluntly that any ship attempting passage without consent would face severe consequences. The words themselves — as much a weapon as any missile — forced shipping companies and insurers to reassess routes and risk premiums.

How this matters to you

  • About 20% of the world’s seaborne oil passes through Hormuz — any disruption can ripple into fuel prices worldwide.
  • Qatar, a major liquefied natural gas supplier, reported production interruptions after attacks in the region — a reminder of how fragile supply chains are.
  • Global markets tend to react swiftly to geopolitical shocks; higher transport and insurance costs often translate into broader economic repercussions.

Neighbors, Proxies and the Domino Effect

This is not a two-player game. Israel carried out strikes in Lebanon, targeting positions tied to armed groups aligned with Tehran. Hezbollah, in turn, launched rockets and drones towards Israel, and both sides reported damages and fatalities. Across the region, countries are testing alliances, defending borders and recalibrating age-old enmities.

“We are seeing a cascade — tactical moves that become strategic posture,” said an international security analyst in London. “When one actor uses force, allied networks tend to respond in kind, and that can escalate faster than planners anticipate.”

Diplomacy tried to keep pace. Some Gulf states, long accustomed to operating in a tense equilibrium, suddenly found themselves making difficult choices: intercepting aircraft from a neighbor, sheltering foreign diplomats, or standing down. Ordinary people watched as decisions made in control rooms and parliaments played out on their rooftops.

The Human Cost: Home, Work, and the Unseen Wounds

Walk the streets of Beirut or southern Lebanon after a strike and you see more than broken concrete — you see the texture of fear: the grocery store owner with a ledger stained by dust, the mother cataloguing the day’s sounds for her children (“If you hear two booms, go to the cellar”). You see a generation learning the geography of sirens before the alphabet.

“My son asked if the rockets are angry,” said a teacher in a suburb outside Beirut. “How do you explain politics to a six-year-old who just knows that the ceiling can fall at any moment?”

Displacement follows. Already, airlines and consulates have reported increased bookings; regional charities are collecting sleeping bags and baby formula. Long after the last report fades from the evening news, these communities will be rebuilding — or leaving.

Wider Ripples: Energy, Refugees and the Rules-Based Order

Beyond the immediate horror — lives lost, homes damaged — this conflict raises bigger questions. Who will guarantee the freedom of navigation if a chokepoint becomes contested? How resilient are global energy supplies to fast-moving geopolitical shocks? And perhaps most importantly: what happens when a local conflict pulls in global powers with different priorities?

“We are watching the erosion of restraint,” said a professor of international law. “In such moments, norms — like civilian immunity and limits on targeting — are tested. The long-term damage may be institutional as much as human.”

In the quiet moments, when the sky is momentarily clear and markets briefly steady, the question remains: what world do we want after these headlines fade? Do we return to the brittle status quo, or does this become an inflection point for new diplomacy, for tighter protections of civilians, and for investment in conflict prevention?

How to Watch — and Where to Hope

Follow reliable sources, support verified humanitarian organizations if you can, and ask your leaders what plans are in place to protect civilians and de-escalate. Above all, listen to the people in the affected places: their stories are not abstract geopolitical footnotes; they are the sound and scent of a region trying to survive a winter of fire.

“We are not statistics to be traded on a market,” a Tehran shopkeeper said as his shutters came up slightly one morning between strikes. “We are fathers, mothers, people who want to eat and sleep without counting blasts.”

So read, reflect, and ask — how will the world answer their plea for a life less interrupted?

Sarkaal NISA ka tirsan oo lagu qarxiyay magaalada Muqdisho

Mar 03(Jowhar)-Qarax xooggan oo jugtiisa si weyn looga maqlay inta badan magaalada Muqdisho ayaa maanta ka dhacay xaafadda Buula-xubeey ee degmada Wadajir.

Melania Trump presides over UN session on children in conflict zones

Melania Trump chairs UN meeting on children in conflict
It was the first time a spouse of any serving world leader has chaired a meeting of the 15-member Security Council

A First Lady in the Security Council: When Symbolism Meets a Smoky Chamber

It is not every day that the heavy doors of the United Nations Security Council swing open to a first lady. On a chilly New York morning, Melania Trump stepped into a room built for stern diplomacy and wartime calculus—rows of nameplates, towering flags, the hush that comes when 15 nations listen—and took the chair for a meeting about children, technology and education in conflict.

There was a surreal edge to the scene. The meeting had been scheduled before a fresh wave of violence upended the region; it unfolded just days after the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran that have focused the world’s attention—and its anxieties—on civilian safety. For many observers, the setting felt like a collision of worlds: the ceremonial and the catastrophic, the symbolic and the immediate.

Historic, for better or worse

This was historic: the first time the spouse of a serving head of state presided over a Security Council meeting. Protocol sheets quietly ruffled. Diplomats exchanged glances. Some saw a well-meaning outreach to an issue that cries out for more attention; others saw the personalization of policy, an image of governance refracted through family and allies.

“The US stands with all of the children throughout the world. I hope soon peace will be yours,” Melania Trump told the council in a short, measured statement that sought to place education as the hinge upon which tolerance and peace could swing.

“It shows the importance that the United States feels towards the Security Council and the subject at hand,” UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said this week, framing the appearance as Washington’s signal to the world about where it wants to put the spotlight.

Voices from the ground: grief, accusation, and the question of credibility

As the polished language of diplomacy filled that chamber in New York, the town of Minab in southern Iran became an urgent, raw counterpoint in the global conversation. Iran’s UN envoy, Amir Saeid Iravani, accused the United States and Israel of responsibility for a strike on a girls’ primary school in Minab that he said killed 165 schoolgirls. “It is deeply shameful and hypocritical,” he said, pointing to the jarring optics of a Security Council meeting on protecting children at the very moment parents were allegedly mourning their children.

Reuters could not independently verify the casualty figures, and that gap—between raw grief and corroborated fact—was one of the most painful features of the day. In moments like this, every headline is freighted with the risk of amplifying tragedy and the duty to seek verification.

On the streets of Minab, people spoke with a cadence that mixed fear and a fierce need to be believed. “We heard the blast at the edge of the schoolyard; then there was dust and smoke,” said a woman who identified herself as the parent of a student at the school and who asked not to be named. “My son is safe, but so many families are waiting to know. We need answers.”

What the child protection community says

UNICEF, alarmed by reports from the region, warned that the military escalation marks a dangerous moment for millions of children. The organization urged de-escalation and cited the lifesaving role of education in conflict zones. China’s UN ambassador, Fu Cong, echoed a familiar refrain from child-protection doctrine: attacks on schools are one of the grave violations against children, and the international community must respond with robust investigations and accountability.

Experts who work on the ground say those calls are more than rhetoric. “When classrooms become targets, you’re not just destroying a building—you’re fracturing a community’s future,” said an independent child protection specialist who has worked for years in the region and asked to speak anonymously for safety reasons. “It’s a tactical blow with generational consequences.”

  • The United Nations identifies six grave violations against children in conflict: killing and maiming, recruitment and use, attacks on schools or hospitals, sexual violence, abduction, and denial of humanitarian access.
  • The Security Council has 15 members; the UN General Assembly counts 193 member states.
  • UN agencies have repeatedly warned that large numbers of children—millions across multiple regions—live under the shadow of conflict and face interruptions to education, displacement, malnutrition and psychological trauma.

Politics, perception, and the role of symbolism

There is a broader conversation embedded in this single act of chairing a council session: who gets to speak for peace, and how does the messenger shape the message? The United States is in the midst of a foreign policy era in which personal relationships and family members have been unusually visible. The presence of a president’s spouse at the helm of the Council underlines this personalized approach.

A seasoned diplomat in New York, who asked not to be identified, noted that diplomacy lives on precedent and practice. “You can vary the choreography—but the credibility of those installations depends on the consistency between words and actions,” they said. “When a state convenes a meeting to protect children and is simultaneously involved in strikes reported to hit civilian areas, the Council’s moral authority comes under strain.”

Behind the rhetoric is another, less glamorous reality: Washington is behind on billions of dollars in UN contributions, and those arrears affect programs and peace operations that are often first responders when schools and hospitals are put at risk.

Education as protection—and as a contested battleground

There is no shortage of research showing that education protects children, reduces vulnerability to recruitment and exploitation, and provides psychosocial support that resilience hinges on. But when conflict seeps into the schoolyard, those stabilizing effects vanish. Schools are increasingly used as shelters, supply depots, or worse—becoming targets themselves.

“You cannot have rebuilding without education,” said a teacher who now works with a regional NGO, traveling between makeshift classrooms and refugee centers. “Kids need routine, learning, and a place where they are not told every day that the world is collapsing.”

Questions for the reader

What does it mean when gestures of concern are staged in the same week as deadly allegations? How should the international community hold itself—and those it accuses—accountable without becoming yet another platform for propaganda? And how do we protect children whose voices are almost never heard in the corridors where decisions are made?

These are not questions with tidy answers. They invite us to look beyond soundbites and into the messy work of verification, humanitarian access, and political will. They also demand that we remember the human faces behind the statistics: parents waiting for confirmation, teachers marking attendance sheets now full of empty names, children who will carry the memory of a destroyed classroom for the rest of their lives.

Closing scene: a fragile hope

Back in the Security Council chamber, as flags fluttered and cameras clicked, the agenda moved on. Few people would claim that symbolism alone will change the calculus on the ground in Minab or elsewhere. But the meeting did place an urgent subject on the international docket—a reminder that in war, some institutions still attempt to stand between power and its most vulnerable victims.

“Peace is spoken of as a lofty ideal,” one relief worker said quietly, “but it is born again in the mundane—the bell that calls children to class, the teacher who shows up, the parent who trusts. Those small acts need protection as much as any ceasefire.”

How we protect those small acts—through diplomacy, investigation, accountability, and funding—may determine whether a generation of children grows up to lead or to inherit scars. The Security Council meeting was a start. Whether it becomes a turning point depends on what comes next: the facts we confirm, the voices we listen to, and the promises the international community keeps. Will we rise to that responsibility?

Iran oo weeratay safaarada Mareykanka ee Riyadh iyo Trump oo si carro leh uga hadlay

Mar 03(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha Mareykanka Donald Trump ayaa sheegay in dowladda Mareykanka ay si dhakhso ah uga jawaabi doonto weerarka lagu qaaday safaaradda Mareykanka ee magaalada Riyadh.

UN Secretary-General urges Israel to reopen Gaza crossings for humanitarian access

UN chief calls for Israel to re-open Gaza crossings
Charity workers delivering essential food aid in Gaza today, amid renewed shortages following Israel's blockade on essential supplies (Image courtesy of Red Cresent)

When the Gates Close: Gaza on the Brink as Rafah Shuts Again

The air tasted like dust and diesel. In Gaza City, a generator hummed its lonely, frantic rhythm beneath a sky that seemed to hold its breath. Then, as if someone had reached a hand across the border and turned a valve, the hum stuttered.

On a recent Saturday, Israeli authorities closed all border crossings into Gaza — including Rafah, the strip’s only gateway to the outside world that does not pass through Israel. For the more than two million people who live in the territory, already battered by years of conflict and displacement, the shutters going down are not an abstract diplomatic event. They are a sinking-in of dread: will hospitals run out of fuel? Will clean water stop? Will food supplies hold long enough for the next convoy?

A plea from the United Nations

From New York, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has urged an urgent reversal. “All crossings must be reopened as soon as possible,” UN spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said, puncturing the silence with a blunt warning that fuel and humanitarian resources have been rationed to stretch dwindling reserves. “When the doors are shut, we obviously stretch whatever we have to make it last longer.”

Rafah’s closure is especially painful because it is the crossing that links Gaza directly to Egypt — the narrow thread through which people, commercial goods, and lifesaving aid can move without transiting Israeli-controlled territory. It had only reopened to movement of people on 2 February, nearly two years after Israeli forces took effective control of the crossing amid earlier fighting with Hamas. Its latest closure followed air strikes that Israel said it carried out, with U.S. participation, against targets in Iran — an escalation that has reverberated through the region and into Gaza’s already fragile supply chains.

Counting down the hours

Inside Gaza, the arithmetic of scarcity is alarmingly simple. “I expect we have maybe a couple of days’ running time,” Karuna Herrmann, who heads fuel distribution operations for the UN in Gaza, told reporters. Other aid coordinators paint a slightly brighter — but no less urgent — picture: Amjad Al-Shawa, who coordinates between charities and the UN, estimated fuel might last three to four days and cautioned that stocks of vegetables, flour, and other staples could soon dwindle if crossings remain closed.

“It’s not numbers on a page,” said a young surgical nurse at a central Gaza hospital, asking not to be named for safety reasons. “It’s mothers holding babies while we count the minutes left on our oxygen tanks. It’s the dialysis patient who depends on a machine and the diesel that keeps that machine alive. We are not being dramatic — we are stating a timetable.”

What’s at stake — in practical terms

Gaza’s infrastructure is porous and precarious. The territory is overwhelmingly dependent on fuel delivered by truck through border crossings from Israel and Egypt. Without a steady inflow, hospitals rely on generators whose consumption can spike during emergencies; water and sanitation systems falter when pumps and treatment plants lose power; bakeries slow to a halt and supermarkets thin their shelves.

Local officials say most Palestinians in Gaza are internally displaced, living in scraps of shelter within the enclave. In the markets and alleyways — the places where daily life reasserts itself against war — people are acutely aware of the stakes. “When the trucks stop, the soup runs out,” said Mahmoud, a shopkeeper in Jabalia. “You can survive a day or two without much. But children cannot last without milk and warmth.”

Official responses and competing narratives

Israel’s COGAT agency, which oversees movement into Gaza, has sought to reassure the international community. COGAT said that since the start of an October truce there had been enough food delivered to meet needs, saying “existing stock is expected to suffice for an extended period” — without providing details or addressing fuel shortages.

That truce — brokered with U.S. support — included provisions to reopen Rafah, scale up aid flows and begin rebuilding. Now, with crossings closed, the truce’s promise feels fragile. The disconnect between stockpiles and distribution, between what is said and what is seen on the ground, leaves humanitarian workers scrambling to prioritize life-saving operations.

Scenes at the closed crossing

At Rafah itself, memories of long lines and makeshift shelters cling to the air like heat. Elders recall the day in February when Rafah began accepting people again, the relief that swept through families reunited with relatives or able to seek medical care abroad. Now, with the stamping of a seal and the tightening of borders, that relief has been interrupted.

“Why is it our fault?” asked Hamada Abu Laila, a displaced Palestinian who fled his home months ago and now lives in a crowded school converted into temporary housing. “We are here because there is war. Regional wars are not our business to pay for. But it is our bodies, our kids, who suffer the consequences.”

Beyond the headlines: what this means globally

How should the world measure the closure of a crossing? As a side effect of escalating regional tensions, or as a direct humanitarian emergency? Both answers are correct, and together they expose a painful truth: civilians often pay the price when geopolitical strategies are deployed. When borders close, when fuel is withheld, the impact is not abstract. It is visible in the faces of children waiting for treatment, in the stalling pumps that empty a cistern, in the bakeries that cannot bake.

Consider these realities:

  • Gaza is home to roughly 2.2–2.4 million people, a densely packed population with high dependency on aid and cross-border supplies.
  • Most essential services — health care, water, sanitation — rely on imported fuel to operate at even a minimal level.
  • Humanitarian actors can stockpile to an extent, but perishable food, medical oxygen, and fuel have limits; when crossings close, those limits arrive quickly.

Questions to carry with you

As you read this from wherever you are, ask yourself: what does it mean when diplomacy is measured against the rhythms of a nursery ward or a dialysis machine? How do international actors balance security concerns with the immediate needs of civilians? And how do communities — those living at the seams of these geopolitical decisions — survive when the lifelines used to do so are severed?

For families in Gaza, answers are not abstract policy debates. They are how long a baby can be fed, how long a hospital can keep its lights on. For the rest of the world, the moment calls for clarity, pressure, and — above all — compassion. “Open the crossings,” Mr. Guterres urged. It is a plea that reaches beyond borders and into the small, urgent things that sustain life.

What happens next will be decided in corridors of power and by the hum of generators in basements. For those who live where the gates have closed, each hour counts. For those of us watching, each hour is a test of conscience.

Oil soars as Iran conflict disrupts crude supply routes

Oil prices surge as Iran conflict disrupts flows
Oil prices surged by as much as 13% earlier today

When the Strait Tightens: How a Week of Strikes Sent Energy Markets Reeling

The morning opened with a jolt: oil tickers flashing crimson as traders absorbed news of strikes and counterstrikes across the Middle East. By midday, a string of disruptions — from a drone attack that silenced one of Saudi Arabia’s largest refineries to the suspension of Qatari liquefied natural gas flows — had rippled through markets and into everyday life in places that never thought they’d feel the heat of geopolitical volatility so directly.

Brent crude spiked to as high as $82.37 a barrel — a rise of roughly 13% at one point — before settling back to trade near $77.79, still up about 6.8% on the day. West Texas Intermediate climbed in parallel, touching the mid-$70s intraday and finishing the session near $70.89, up nearly 6%. Meanwhile natural gas benchmarks lurch ed higher: Europe’s TTF front-month leapt more than 40% to around €45/MWh, and Asia’s JKM benchmark surged almost 39% to about $15/ mmBtu.

The triggers: strikes, retaliation and a shipping lane under siege

What started as targeted military action became a chain reaction. Iranian retaliation, followed by US and Israeli strikes, set off a cascade of security measures. Tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow throat through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil passes — snarled. Anchored ships multiplied into a grisly necklace of tankers waiting for word.

“We now have hundreds of vessels idling or diverting, and each detour adds days — and costs — to shipments,” said Captain Omar Haddad, a veteran Marseilles-based shipbroker who has spent decades charting those currents. “For the crews, for the ports, for the economies downrange — it’s immediate and it’s visible.”

In Gulf ports, the anxiety was palpable. An Iranian container worker in Bandar Abbas told me over a tin of tea that the usual morning hum felt “muted, like a city holding its breath.” Across the water, in the port city of Fujairah, a fuel tanker owner said insurers were already tightening coverage terms, meaning operators would soon face higher premiums or be forced into longer, costlier routes around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope.

Supply shocks in the short term, more questions for the long term

Some of the market’s fire was blunted by the knowledge that global production has room to breathe. Producers from the United States to Guyana and several OPEC+ members had added supply in recent months, and analysts note that stocks remain near long-run averages. “This is a geopolitical shock, not a systemic, structural crisis — at least for now,” Priyanka Sachdeva, a senior analyst at Phillip Nova, told me. “But shocks have a habit of becoming the new normal if they persist.”

OPEC+ agreed over the weekend to increase output by about 206,000 barrels per day in April, a move designed to ease tightness. Yet the calculus on the ground is different: when a chokepoint like Hormuz is compromised, overland pipelines and alternative export routes simply cannot absorb the shortfall. Morningstar analysts pointed out that while some oil can move by road or pipeline, those volumes are a fraction of what slips through the Strait on any given day.

Financial houses are parsing scenarios. Citigroup analysts placed near-term Brent between $80 and $90 a barrel while JPMorgan warned that a multi-week squeeze in Strait traffic could push Brent north of $100 — a level with profound consequences for consumers and policymakers worldwide.

Local stories, global implications

Ask a commuter in Mumbai filling a scooter tank or a farmer in rural Texas buying diesel for a tractor, and the connection between a geopolitical flare-up and the price at the pump becomes intimate. If prices keep climbing, higher energy costs feed inflation, erode household budgets and complicate the political math for leaders gearing up for elections.

“When petrol jumps two or three cents a liter in a week, people notice — and they vote with that in mind,” said Miriam Alvarez, an economics professor who studies energy politics. “For administrations facing close midterm contests, a persistent rise in gasoline prices can be an electoral hazard.”

That’s not abstract: US retail gasoline prices are tied directly to crude benchmarks, and spikes during an election year have real political consequences. Domestic pressures could prompt emergency releases from strategic reserves, talks with producers, or diplomatic pushes to de-escalate — all short-term fixes that leave deeper vulnerabilities untouched.

Where LNG fits into the picture

Natural gas adds another layer of vulnerability. Europe depends on timely LNG cargoes to see it through winter and into spring. With TTF surging more than 40% and Asian markers jumping nearly 39%, buyers are scrambling to secure shipments. QatarEnergy’s move to halt production and declare force majeure on some shipments amplified the scramble, triggering not just price moves, but logistics headaches.

“LNG is not just about commodity markets — it’s about cold homes in Poland, factories in Korea, and power plants in South Africa,” observed Dr. Fatima Noor, an energy policy expert. “When suppliers pause flows, the human consequences ripple quickly.”

Beyond the next headline: what to watch

The markets are volatile, but volatility does not equal inevitability. Here are the threads I’ll be following in the days ahead:

  • Ship movements through the Strait of Hormuz and any military escalations that could extend port disruptions.
  • Statements and actions by major producers: output adjustments, emergency stock releases and insurance market responses.
  • Retail fuel price movements in key economies and any policy steps — from subsidies to strategic reserve taps — that governments take.
  • Whether the current disruption creates a sustained “risk premium” that keeps prices elevated even after flows normalize.

We live in a world where local conflicts ripple into global markets with dizzying speed. The latest episode is a reminder that energy is as much about geopolitics and shipping lanes as it is about wells and rigs. It’s also a test of resilience — from the microeconomics of a household budget to the macroeconomics of inflation targeting and growth forecasts.

So I’ll ask you, reader: how do we build systems — political, economic and technological — that are less brittle in the face of such shocks? Is the answer more storage, smarter diplomacy, diversified supply chains, faster transitions to renewables, or some combination of all of these? There are no simple answers, but one thing is clear: in an interconnected world, the cost of standing still keeps rising.

For now, markets will watch the Strait, ships will wait at anchor, and politicians will count the pennies at the pump. The rest of us will watch and wonder how the next ripple will reach our daily lives.

Deposition videos of Clinton and Epstein made public this week

Videos of Clinton Epstein depositions released
Hillary Clinton told the panel that she did not know Epstein and Bill Clinton said he broke ties with him before the financier's sex crimes came to light in 2008 (File image)

In the Quiet of Chappaqua, a Storm of Testimony: What the Clintons’ Epstein Depositions Reveal—and What They Don’t

There is a particular hush that falls over affluent suburbs when national drama comes knocking. In Chappaqua, New York—where clipped hedges meet flagstone walkways and the mailboxes are often more polished than a politician’s talking points—that hush was punctured last week by the staccato of news vans, the muffled footsteps of staff, and the hum of a story that refuses to fade.

The event was both ordinary and seismic: closed-door depositions by Bill and Hillary Clinton, recorded and then released by a congressional committee probing the ties between powerful people and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The footage is hardly a courtroom blockbuster; no shocking revelations leap off the screen. Instead, what we get is a study in how two of the most scrutinized public figures of the last half-century manage reputation, memory, and the relentless appetite of partisan politics.

Scenes from the Deposition

“I did not know him,” Hillary Clinton tells the panel in a measured tone, refusing to let the conversation be pulled into gossip. Bill Clinton, for his part, insists he “broke ties” with Epstein well before the financier’s 2008 conviction and says, plainly, “I did nothing wrong.”

In quieter moments, Bill Clinton acknowledges what is indisputable in the public record: he flew on Epstein’s private plane several times in the early 2000s for work related to the Clinton Foundation. “We went on humanitarian trips,” he says. “I did not visit Epstein’s island.”

Hillary’s response carries an edge of strategy as well as invitation. She urged the committee to depose President Donald Trump—another name that threads through the Epstein narrative—saying the panel should ask him “directly under oath about the tens of thousands of times he shows up in the Epstein files.” It is a pointed reminder that in American politics, power invites scrutiny in all directions.

What the Record Shows — and What It Does Not

Facts anchor this spectacle. Epstein was convicted in 2008 of soliciting sex from minors. He died in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting federal sex-trafficking charges; his death was ruled a suicide. The Department of Justice and other agencies have released large troves of documents—flight logs, financial records, and interviews—that link Epstein to an array of prominent people. But being named in those documents does not equate to criminal culpability.

“There’s a difference between presence in a document and provable wrongdoing,” says Dr. Laila Karim, a professor of law and ethics who studies high-profile investigations. “Documents open doors for questions, but they rarely provide airtight answers by themselves. Depositions like these are part of the slow work of tracing networks, not the quick thrill of a headline.”

Neighbors, Newsrooms, and the Weight of History

On the street outside the Clinton compound, local shopkeepers and residents watched with the peculiar mixture of distance and ownership common in small-town America. “You feel it here,” says Maria Lopez, who runs a bakery three blocks away and has lived in Chappaqua for 17 years. “People come into my shop and they’re whispering. It’s like our town is on the front page again. But really, this is about much more than our sidewalks—this is about how power gets around people who can’t protect themselves.”

A retired teacher, Tom Bertram, shrugged when asked what he thought of the depositions. “I’ve seen a lot in my day,” he said, folding his hands over his cane. “It’s a reminder that institutions are supposed to hold the powerful to account. Whether they’re doing it or using the moment for scoring points—that’s the question.”

The Broader Frame

These depositions arrive at a fraught moment in American public life, where congressional oversight is often accused of being either a grave necessity or a partisan sword. Democrats, including some allies of the Clintons, have argued the inquiry is being weaponized to wound political opponents rather than to pursue genuine oversight. Republicans argue the investigation is about accountability and transparency.

“Oversight means nothing if it’s selective,” says Monica Reid, director of a victims’ advocacy group. “Survivors deserve a system that is relentless and impartial—where allegations are investigated thoroughly regardless of the names involved. But survivor advocacy is too often caught in the crossfire of politics, and that hurts everyone.”

Small Data, Big Questions

When documents in high-profile cases are released, readers scan for patterns: flights logged between islands and cities, names that recur, the faint spoor of a network. But these fragments provoke as much speculation as clarity. The public appetite for closure collides with the slow churn of legal process and the murk of incomplete records.

Consider the flight logs that make frequent cameos in discussions of Epstein. They show a series of trips, some tied to humanitarian work, others not. They raise useful questions: Who was on these flights? What was discussed? What brought these people together in the first place? But they do not answer the central, searing question: who is responsible for the crimes alleged against victims?

  • Epstein’s 2008 conviction was for soliciting sex from a minor; the case resulted in a controversial non-prosecution agreement in Florida.
  • Epstein died in 2019 in federal custody while awaiting federal charges; his death was ruled suicide.
  • Documentation released in subsequent years has included thousands of pages and records, but inclusion in files does not imply guilt.

Where Do We Go From Here?

As the video files circulate and pundits parse the faces and phrases, one question keeps returning: what do we want our systems of accountability to do? Do we want them to be swift and theatrical or slow and methodical? Is the point to extract confessions, or to build cases that can withstand scrutiny in neutral institutions?

“The spectacle of testimony can be satisfying,” Dr. Karim says, “but justice and truth often require patient, unglamorous work. That includes supporting survivors, preserving evidence properly, and ensuring that investigations aren’t derailed by political score-settling.”

For onlookers around the world, the Clintons’ depositions are more than a local soap opera. They are a mirror. They ask us to consider how societies handle power, privilege, and abuse. They force us to ask difficult questions: Do our institutions protect the vulnerable? Do we allow partisan interests to eclipse the pursuit of truth? And perhaps most importantly—how do we prevent the harm that seeds cases like Epstein’s from taking root again?

As the cameras pack up and Chappaqua’s sidewalks return to their genteel quiet, the questions remain. The videos are a piece of a sprawling puzzle, not its conclusion. For survivors seeking justice, for neighbors seeking answers, and for citizens trying to make sense of power in an age of relentless exposure, the work continues—away from the headlines, in courtrooms, archives, and the patient labor of law and policy reform.

What do you think? When powerful people are accused or connected to wrongdoing, how should societies balance transparency, due process, and the needs of survivors? The conversation matters, because the answers shape how we, collectively, live with power.

Trump Leaves Door Open to Deploying U.S. Troops to Iran

Trump doesn't rule out sending US troops into Iran
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegset sais the war is not an effort to build democracy in Iran

The sky as a scoreboard: how an aerial campaign reshaped a region overnight

There are moments when the world tilts, when the map feels smaller and the air carries a different kind of weight. In those hours, headlines are not enough. You want to know what it smells like on the ground, what people whisper over church and mosque, what the air force’s flight paths look like from a child’s rooftop.

That is where we are now: a conflict that began with an orchestration of missiles and bombs that Washington describes as surgical and swift, and that Tehran calls an apocalyptic insult. President Donald Trump has framed the operation in blunt, unmistakable terms—threatening a new “big wave” of attacks and refusing to categorically rule out the age-old, politically freighted option of putting boots on the ground.

“I don’t have the yips with respect to boots on the ground,” Mr. Trump told reporters in comments that felt equal parts admission and warning. “Every president says, ‘There will be no boots on the ground.’ I don’t say it.”

A war of missiles and messages

So far, the fighting has been fought from the sky. U.S. and allied forces—cooperating closely with Israel, Washington says—have struck “hundreds” of targets inside Iran, hitting missile stocks, naval installations and command-and-control nodes that military briefings say were legitimate military objectives.

The human toll is already visible. Four U.S. service members have been announced killed, and three U.S. fighter jets were lost—officials say to tragic friendly fire. Iran has answered with missile salvos at Israel, U.S. facilities across the region, and, in a move that surprised many, strikes that reached into Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

“We haven’t even started hitting them hard. The big wave hasn’t even happened,” Mr. Trump told CNN, adding, with characteristic theatricality, “The big one is coming soon.” Whether that means more aerial bombardments, expanded targets, or the stepped-up involvement of proxy forces remains the subject of fevered debate among analysts and diplomats alike.

The White House calculus

Within the West Wing there seems to be a two-part framing: military action as necessity, and a limit to political ambition. “This was our last, best chance to strike… and eliminate the intolerable threats,” Mr. Trump said, invoking a sense of grim finality. Yet he also echoed a timetable that has floated in briefings—four to five weeks—a window that suggests a contained campaign rather than an open-ended occupation.

That timetable is partly salesmanship and partly a hedge. “We’re already substantially ahead of our time projections,” the president said, allowing for the possibility that the campaign could last “far longer than that.” For a White House that campaigned on ending costly entanglements, the balancing act is political as well as military.

From the Pentagon podium

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has been explicit about the administration’s strategic boundaries: “No stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire,” he said, aiming to reassure a domestic audience tired of long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. “We fight to win and we don’t waste time or lives.”

General Dan Caine, the U.S. military’s top officer at recent briefings, declared that air superiority has been established over Iran, a claim meant to underscore control of the battlespace and to reassure U.S. forces and allies.

Voices from the neighborhoods and bazaars

If strategy is a chessboard, everyday lives are the pieces most easily knocked off. In Tehran, a carpet merchant named Amir stood outside his shuttered shop midmorning, hands stained with yarn and disbelief. “My daughter asked me if the sky was angry,” he said. “I told her the sky is always the mirror of those who have the power to break it.”

On the southern coast, down where fishermen mend nets and coffee is brewed dark and sweet, a woman named Fatemeh spoke in quieter terms. “We came to the roof when we heard the noise,” she recalled. “Neighbors lit candles because the power cut out. You think of the children. You think of the old men. War is not numbers on a briefing—it is someone’s grandson.”

Across the Gulf, in a dusty suburb outside Manama, a Bahraini taxi driver named Hassan complained about the ripple effects. “Petrol prices go up, flights get delayed, our peace of mind gets taxed,” he said. “We do not want to be a battlefield for others.”

What the logistics say—and what they don’t

Analysts have raised practical questions that strain past platitudes about military supremacy. Can even the world’s most powerful military sustain a high-tempo aerial campaign for months? Where will the ammunition come from? How many precision munitions can be expended before pressure builds at home and fractures appear among allies?

One defense analyst, who asked not to be named to speak candidly, told me, “It’s not just about having planes. It’s about missiles, sensors, spares, fuel, and the political will to accept collateral damage. Air campaigns are hungry beasts.”

These logistical questions are not academic. In the last two decades, shortages and stretched supply chains have forced militaries to ration capabilities or change tactics mid-campaign. If the U.S. intends to “go far longer,” as the president suggested, those realities will quickly come into focus.

Regional and global fault lines

Beyond tanks or pilots sits a wider terrain: the contest between great-power influence, regional security architectures, and the long shadow of nuclear proliferation. Iran’s missile programme and suspected nuclear ambitions have been at the center of international concern for years; this confrontation risks accelerating paths toward escalation, whether through proxy groups in Lebanon and Yemen or through miscalculation at sea.

Moreover, the spectacle of a U.S. president—who campaigned on withdrawing from “dumb” nation-building wars—now promising a potentially extended campaign raises questions about the political logic that drives modern interventions. Is the threshold for engagement shifting? Are domestic political incentives reshaping foreign policy in ways that make restraint harder to sustain?

Questions we should all be asking

This is not a time for easy certainties. It is a time to ask hard questions: What is the endgame? How will civilians be protected? What mechanisms are in place to de-escalate—diplomatic backchannels, third-party mediators, humanitarian corridors? And, perhaps most important for global citizens, how will this reshape regional alliances and the norms of state behavior?

War writes itself into the fabric of ordinary life. It changes a child’s play, a market’s rhythm, the way voters count costs. We should be listening to the negotiators and watching the strategists, yes—but also hearing the voices from kitchen tables, roof terraces, and coffee stalls.

There will be official briefings and expert analyses in abundance. There will be maps and timelines and statistics. But if you want to feel what this moment truly is, look and listen where people live: in shadowed alleys, in lit living rooms, in the hush that settles after a siren fades.

What would you do if the sound of the sky changed where you live? How close is the line between security and escalation? The answers we find may shape not just a campaign’s duration, but the kind of world we leave to the next generation.

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