Thursday, December 11, 2025
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Israel Conducts Airstrikes on Hezbollah Targets in Lebanon’s South

Israel launches strikes on Hezbollah targets in Lebanon
Smoke billows from the area following Israeli attacks on the town of Tayr Dibba in the southern Lebanese province of Tyre, Lebanon

Smoke Over the Olive Groves: How a Single Evacuation Order Reopened Old Wounds in South Lebanon

On a hot afternoon in southern Lebanon, a message on a smartphone changed everything. A map. Three red dots. A command to leave. By the time the smoke began to curl into the cerulean sky, families had already begun folding mattresses, stuffing small suitcases with bread and photos, and shepherding children and the elderly down narrow lanes toward the safety of the main road.

The Israeli military posted evacuation notices on the social platform X at 3pm local time, identifying three buildings in Aita al-Jabal, Al-Tayyiba and Tayr Debba and ordering residents to stay at least 500 metres away. An hour later, aircraft struck. Thick, black plumes rose above the villages; the smell of burned wood and diesel drifted through the air. Lebanon’s civil defence poured into the lanes, helping people onto buses and into cars. Health authorities had not yet tallied the full toll by evening; the ministry had earlier confirmed that separate strikes that day killed one person.

On the Ground: Small Actions, Big Fear

“I grabbed my mother’s scarf and my son’s shoes,” said Fadi, a shopkeeper from Tayr Debba, standing where his grocery was once painted blue. “We left everything else. You can rebuild a shop, but not a body.” His voice was flat; the kind that comes when someone has rehearsed shock until it becomes routine.

A volunteer with the civil defence, Amal, described the evacuation as efficient but wrenching. “We moved entire households in less than an hour,” she said. “Old women, toddlers, the dog. People thanked us, but I saw a man return to pick up his grandfather’s cane and cry like a child.” Her hands were still smudged with soot.

Residents here speak of a repeated humiliation: to be told to flee, to watch dust fill the air where their olive trees had stood for generations, then to return home to count what’s left. The villages named in the notification sit along the contours of the Blue Line—the United Nations-drawn boundary that has long been a seam of tension—and their terraces and citrus groves breathe a different kind of life and fear into the landscape.

Voices from the Capital and the Border

In Jerusalem, government spokesperson Shosh Bedrosian told reporters that Israel would “continue to defend all of its borders” and pressed for strict enforcement of the ceasefire agreed a year earlier. “We will not allow Hezbollah to rearm and rebuild the capabilities that were reduced in 2023–24,” she said, summarising the security rationale driving these limited yet dramatic strikes.

Hezbollah, for its part, reiterated its public commitment to the ceasefire while cautioning that it retains a “legitimate right” to resist. Since the truce came into force roughly a year ago, the group has largely refrained from cross-border fire, even as the Lebanese army has spent months conducting operations to clear suspected arms depots from the south—a process that Lebanon’s cabinet was reviewing the same afternoon an army commander, Rodolphe Haykal, updated ministers on the progress.

“We are trying to restore state authority in areas where non-state holdings were found,” a Lebanese official said anonymously. “It’s messy. You cannot untie a knot without pulling at threads that go far up the political rope.”

Why the Evacuation—Why Now?

Why did Israel single out these buildings with an evacuation flag before striking? Officials argue the warnings are an effort to reduce civilian casualties while hitting military targets. Avichay Adraee, who frequently posts operational notices, shared maps and guidance to the public, underscoring that these were specific, calibrated actions, not the indiscriminate bombardments of past years.

But context is everything. The ceasefire that stilled a more than yearlong round of fighting in 2023–24 left deep wounds: human losses measured in the thousands—the death toll in Lebanon’s recent cross-border violence and wartime scores passed an estimated 4,000 people—and landscapes disrupted, economies drained, and lines of political authority blurred. New strikes, even when limited, risk undoing fragile gains. They also test how much trust remains in the mechanisms meant to enforce the truce—UNIFIL patrols, bilateral understandings, and the Lebanese army’s own efforts to assert control.

At the Edge of Escalation

Observers say these kinds of operations live in an uncomfortable middle ground: precise enough to send a message, ambiguous enough to invite miscalculation. “What we see is a contest over thresholds,” explained Dr. Lina Hashim, a Beirut-based analyst who studies militias and state capacity. “Israel wants to prevent rearmament. Hezbollah wants to preserve deterrence. The Lebanese state is trying, often precariously, to exercise authority. Each action rests on assumptions about how the other side will respond.”

Those assumptions matter. In conflicts marked by asymmetry—state militaries versus well-armed non-state actors—operations that aim to be targeted can still collide with civilian life. Evacuations mitigate harm, yes, but they also underscore the tenuous line between securing a border and perpetuating displacement.

What This Means for People—and for the Region

For the towns along the southern strip, life is a series of contingency plans: when to close a shop, where to store elder family members, how to secure documents and livestock. For fishermen in Tyre, whose boats skim the same Mediterranean that has fed families for generations, each flare of conflict shrinks a workspace that was never abundant to begin with.

“We are tired of being part of someone else’s argument,” said Layla, a schoolteacher who fled for a second time this month. “There are children in my classroom who ask me if the sky will fall. How do you tell a child the world is safe when the sky keeps sending messages otherwise?”

Beyond the borders of Lebanon and Israel, the incident reverberates through regional diplomacy. Iran’s influence over Hezbollah, the United States’ security commitments to Israel, and the European Union’s interest in Mediterranean stability all converge when calm frays. The international community’s ability to enforce ceasefires, fund reconstruction, and back political solutions is being tested anew.

Paths Forward: Enforcement, Empathy, and the Hard Work of Rebuilding Trust

No easy fix exists. Greater transparency around military targets, stronger mechanisms for civilian protection, and sustained diplomatic pressure to keep channels open could lower the temperature. So could a bolder approach to the southern border—one that supports the Lebanese state in exercising legitimate, accountable control while shielding civilians from the ripple effects of security operations.

But technical solutions aren’t enough. People here want dignity: jobs, schools that don’t shutter with every siren, and the ability to harvest olives without fear. They want their leaders to prove that the state can protect them without turning their towns into battlefields by proxy.

As night settled on the villages, small generators hummed in living rooms turned into temporary shelters. Children colored in the margins of hastily distributed notebooks. Neighbours shared nuts and tea. Against a backdrop of geopolitical chess, ordinary lives quietly insisted on moving forward.

What would you do if a map told you to leave your home for an hour, a day, or forever? In moments like these, the question is not only tactical. It is moral. And until the region addresses both the ammunition and the anxieties that fuel it, the smoke will keep returning to the same sky.

Israel Designates Egypt Border Region as Restricted Military Zone

Israel declares Egypt border area a closed military zone
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said the move is being made to combat weapons smuggling via drones

At the border and at the grave: how drones and a returned body expose the human and strategic toll of a drawn-out conflict

The desert air along Israel’s southern frontier had a different texture this week — not only the hot, dusty stillness of Sinai-adjacent terrain, but the taut, watchful quiet that comes when a line on a map becomes a flashpoint.

In a terse public notice, Israel’s defence minister announced that the strip of land abutting the border with Egypt would be designated a closed military zone. The stated reason: to clamp down on an increasingly dangerous trend — the use of remotely piloted aircraft to ferry weapons and other materiel toward Gaza.

“We cannot allow the sky to be another front,” said one senior defence official I spoke with on condition of anonymity. “Drones change the geometry of smuggling; they skirt barriers and sanctions. You either adapt, or you leave a gap that will be exploited.”

This is more than a tactical adjustment. It is a small, sharp ripple in a much larger pattern: modern conflicts are being reshaped by technology that can be bought online, piloted from a nearby ridge, or launched from a road under cover of night. Border closures and tighter rules of engagement are familiar refrains — but the mood here has a new edge. Farmers who have raised crops and livestock along this corridor for generations now watch the horizon with binoculars and the knowledge that a buzzing shadow could mean weapon components three meters long, bound for someone else’s fight.

One returned body, many stories

Meanwhile, amid the strategic chess moves and the sterile language of defence communiqués, there was a moment that could not be reduced to policy — the return of remains. The body of a young man, far from home in life and in death, was repatriated. His name: Joshua Loitu Mollel, a 21‑year‑old Tanzanian student who had come to Israel on an agricultural internship program and was killed in the violence of 7 October 2023.

Grief needs a place to land. For Joshua’s family in Tanzania, for friends in the kibbutzim and host communities where he worked the land, and for a broader circle of people tracking the long human ledger of this war, the return of his remains was both a merciful closure and a renewed puncture of pain.

“They told us he was found,” a family friend told me over the phone, voice breaking with a mixture of relief and sorrow. “We cannot dig him up again. But we need to bury him, to speak his name in the right place.”

According to statements from Israeli authorities, Joshua’s remains were one of 22 sets returned since a ceasefire took effect in early October — a truce that, at the outset, left 48 people unaccounted for as hostages: 20 alive and 28 deceased, officials say.

The returned bodies include citizens of multiple nationalities: 19 Israeli, one Thai, one Nepali, and Joshua himself. Small details — a jacket button, a shard of a wristwatch — become the somber tokens of identification work that is both forensic and deeply human. “Following identification processes, the ministry informed the family,” the Prime Minister’s office said in a formal notice, underlining both the bureaucratic and intimate sides of what such returns entail.

The human ledger

Numbers matter — they are how governments plan and negotiate — but they cannot fully capture the texture of loss. The Hostages and Missing Families Forum, an advocacy group that has been a constant presence at family briefings and at public protests, said Joshua’s return “offers some comfort” to relatives who have lived with unbearable uncertainty for more than two years.

“Comfort is not the same as healing,” said Dr. Miriam Halawi, a psychologist who works with families of missing persons. “What families want — and deserve — is truth: how, why, and by whom. Without that, grief can calcify into anger that never really leaves.”

Walking through a cemetery outside Jerusalem last week, I watched a line of mourners — some in long coats, some in sandals sun-darkened from fieldwork — follow a simple casket to the ground. People spoke about Joshua as if filling in a life: the way he laughed while harvesting olives, his plans to send money home to support younger siblings, a joke about the stubbornness of Israeli goats. Small, quotidian recollections make the absence almost unbearably real.

From tunnels to propellers: how smuggling is evolving

For years, the archetype of illicit supply into Gaza was subterranean: tunnels, burrowed under the border, complex networks that drew global attention and military responses. Today, the sky is another artery.

“Drones are cheaper and faster than tunnels,” said Avi Ben-Zion, a security analyst who studies non-state actors’ procurement methods. “You can launch a quadcopter, fly it 10–20 kilometers, drop a payload and be gone. That means a lot of small-scale deliveries, less predictable than the bulk shipments that tunnels used to provide.”

That unpredictability fuels policy shifts. Declaring a closed military zone is practical: it gives forces latitude to engage, to intercept, and to police movements. But it also affects ordinary lives. Traders, shepherds, day laborers find their movements restricted; checkpoints move; farmers can’t reach fields during critical harvest moments. The ripple effects of a security measure are always social as well as strategic.

What does this tell us about the wider war?

If there is a through-line running from the drone incidents to Joshua’s burial, it’s this: modern conflict continually complicates the boundary between civilians and combatants. Young foreign interns gathering in agricultural greenhouses can become collateral in a broader geopolitical maelstrom. The tools of war — drones, tunnels, rockets — evolve; the human consequences do not.

Consider these questions: How should the international community balance pressure for security with the rights and livelihoods of border communities? How do families obtain answers when the fog of war obscures both motive and method? And how do we, as observers and citizens of a crowded planet, keep compassion at the center of discussions that otherwise default to numbers and strategies?

These are not just policy debates. They are weekly, daily realities for people like Joshua’s family, for the farmers whose fields now fall within a closed military zone, and for soldiers who must make split-second decisions that will shape other people’s lives forever.

After the return

In the small Tanzanian village where Joshua grew up, neighbors have already begun to plant a tree in his memory — a ritual older than modern borders. Back in Israel, those who knew him walk a little more carefully through places that once held laughter. The official announcements and tactical briefs will continue, as they must. The funerals will end. But the traces of a life, and the questions about how it was cut short, persist.

If you are reading this from hundreds or thousands of miles away, take a moment to imagine a name and a neighborhood and a single returned body — and ask what it reveals about the strange new contours of conflict in the 21st century. We talk a lot about deterrence and capability. Maybe we should talk a little more about dignity, closure, and the small rituals that stitch human beings back together after violence tears them apart.

  • Key figures: 22 sets of remains returned since the ceasefire took effect in October; 48 hostages held at the truce’s start — 20 alive, 28 deceased.
  • Nationalities among returned bodies include Israeli, Thai, Nepali and Tanzanian.
  • Policy response: a closed military zone declared along the Israel-Egypt border to combat drone-borne smuggling.

What would you prioritize if you were making policy in this moment — security, humanitarian access, transparent investigations, or community livelihoods? The answer, of course, is not simple. But the real work of peace and accountability begins when we refuse to let numbers eclipse names.

Golaha Amaanka oo cunaqabateyntii ka qaaday madaxweynaha Syria

Nov 06(Jowhar)-Golaha Ammaanka ee Qaramada Midoobay ayaa caawa ka saaray liiska argagixisada, sidoo kalena cunaqabateyntii ka qaaday madaxweynaha Suuriya , Axmed Sharac.

Pelosi, first woman to lead House as Speaker, announces retirement

Pelosi, first woman to serve as House speaker, to retire
Nancy Pelosi's announcement ends a four-decade career, she was first elected in 1987

The Last Stiletto: Nancy Pelosi Steps Back and Leaves a Shifting Capitol

There are images that lodge in a city’s bones—Ghirardelli chocolate windows on a foggy afternoon, the strollered sweep of Pacific Heights, the steady clack of heels through the marble corridors of power. For nearly four decades, Nancy Pelosi carried those images between two worlds: the neighborhoods of San Francisco and the mazelike halls of the United States Capitol. Today, she announced she will not run for re-election in 2026, and with that a long, incandescent chapter of American politics begins to close.

The announcement feels like the end of a long, complicated novel. Not because Pelosi was ever predictable—she was not—but because she became a living repository of modern congressional history: a voice for progressive causes, an unflinching tactician at the dais, a target for ferocious partisan anger. “She’s the personification of a certain kind of American political life: relentless, fiercely loyal to institutions, and utterly aware that power can be used to protect vulnerable people,” said a longtime Washington correspondent who has covered Congress for three decades.

From Neighborhood Meetings to National Stage

Pelosi’s political career began in local Democratic circles in San Francisco. She won her first congressional seat in 1987 and, in doing so, began a trajectory that would make her the first woman to serve as Speaker of the House. Over 20 terms—an era spanning Orleans-length fights over budgets, wars, social policy, and the very character of American democracy—she became synonymous with a particular brand of pragmatic liberalism and institutional mastery.

Her tenure included two stints as Speaker, from 2007 to 2011 and again from 2019 to 2023. She shepherded major legislation across the finish line, most notably the Affordable Care Act in 2010—an achievement she has often described as the proudest of her career. “Healthcare became our big issue and that will be the biggest thing that I’ve ever done in Congress,” she said in a 2022 reflection that captured how legislation and moral purpose were intertwined for her.

Icon of Strategy, Flirtation with Infamy

Pelosi’s time in power was never without its theatrical moments. Many will remember the 2020 State of the Union scene—an icy handshake withheld by then-President Donald Trump, followed by Pelosi dramatically tearing up a printed copy of his speech. “Every page contained a lie,” she later said, and the image became a shorthand for a country arguing over truth, leadership, and mutual contempt.

She used the gavel to take on Trump directly, overseeing two House impeachments—one in 2019 and another after the January 6, 2021, Capitol attack. Both efforts underscored Pelosi’s belief that the House held a duty to test presidential power against the law. Senate acquittals frustrated Democrats, but they did not dim Pelosi’s conviction that institutions mattered and must be defended, even at political cost.

San Francisco’s Daughter: Personal Stories and Local Color

Walk around Pelosi’s San Francisco and you’ll hear as many hearty recollections as pointed critiques. “She’s our matriarch,” said a woman selling steamed crab near Fisherman’s Wharf. “She remembers people’s kids. She loves her city, and she never pretended it was anything but messy.” Another neighbor in Pacific Heights laughed while recounting Pelosi’s famously idiosyncratic diet—hot dogs for lunch, a streak of Ghirardelli chocolate, an ice-cream-topped breakfast. “She’s human,” the neighbor said. “And for a long time, she made Washington feel human, too.”

The personal stakes of politics brushed her household with violence in 2022, when an intruder attacked her husband, Paul Pelosi, in their home. The assault—motivated by a right-wing conspiracy theory—left a family reeling and the nation asking how political vitriol can spill into the streets and living rooms of its leaders.

Generational Tensions and the Democratic Family

Pelosi’s departure arrives amid a generational tug-of-war inside the Democratic Party. Younger lawmakers have long chafed at what they see as an aging leadership slow to pivot to new priorities and new faces. That dissatisfaction boiled into public moments of frustration—most starkly during the fraught 2024 campaign season when an elder president faltered on the national stage and those elders were pressed to make room for the future.

“We need institutional memory, but we also need room for fresh voices,” said a young progressive organizer in Sacramento. “Pelosi made space in ways she could, but there will always be a tension when power accumulates.”

Hakeem Jeffries has stepped into Pelosi’s former leadership role in the House, and the party’s gaze is increasingly fixed on a roster of younger figures. The House has 435 seats; each will be fought for in a climate polarized by gerrymandering, redistricting, and razor-thin margins. In California, a recent ballot measure—Proposition 50—sought to redraw lines with the aim of flipping several seats back to Democrats, a move framed by state leaders as a response to aggressive redistricting elsewhere, particularly in Texas.

Numbers That Matter

Some facts ground the theater of politics: the House remains 435 members, the Speaker stands second in the presidential line of succession, and money matters—Pelosi was known as a prodigious fundraiser. “I had to raise like a million dollars a day,” she once quipped, and at many moments she did, banking committee seats and campaign war chests that kept the Democratic apparatus running.

What Her Exit Means—Locally and Globally

Pelosi’s retirement is not merely a domestic reshuffling; it resonates globally. She was a frequent interlocutor with foreign leaders, a staunch defender of human rights, and a high-profile critic of authoritarian figures. Her voice anchored U.S. congressional diplomacy at a time when allies and rivals alike calculated how American political flux would affect trade, security, and democratic norms.

“When Nancy spoke, foreign leaders listened,” said a former diplomat who worked closely with congressional delegations. “She embodied continuity in an era of discontinuity.”

But the world is evolving. Populist movements, the fragility of democratic institutions, and the accelerating pace of media and technology mean that the next leaders will likely have a different temperament—less reverence for process, perhaps, and more appetite for speed and spectacle.

Looking Ahead

As she walks away from the Capitol, the question is not only who will replace Nancy Pelosi in San Francisco’s seat or in the House leadership—but what kind of party and what kind of country her departure will help produce. Will Democrats use this moment to renew, to invest in mentorship and generational succession? Or will the churn accelerate fragmentation, as factions compete for the soul of a movement?

“She taught generations how to play the long game,” said a veteran labor organizer. “Now it’s up to the next generation to decide whether they will play long, too.”

Readers might ask themselves: what do we want our institutions to look like when seasoned hands step down? How do we balance reverence for experience with hunger for renewal? Pelosi’s exit is an invitation to that civic conversation, and for as long as the Capitol bells toll, the answers will shape more than just leadership charts—they will shape the country’s future.

  • Key facts: Pelosi first elected 1987; served as Speaker 2007–2011 and 2019–2023; House has 435 members; Speaker is second in line to the presidency.
  • Local color: San Francisco staples—Ghirardelli chocolate, Pacific Heights lanes, hot-dog lunches—thread her public persona.
  • Wider stakes: generational turnover, partisan polarization, and the international reverberations of U.S. congressional leadership.

Pelosi’s story is not simply one of power accrued and relinquished. It is a study in how politics wears on people, how institutions end up bearing both scars and lamps, and how a single figure can be loved, loathed, feared, and relied upon—often all at once. As the city fog rolls in and the stiletto clicks grow quieter, a nation watches the slow, messy work of renewal begin.

Ra’iisul Wasaare Xamsa oo Daahfuray Mashruuc lagu dhiirigelinayo Dumarka

Nov 06(Jowhar)-Ra’iisul Wasaaraha Xukuumadda Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya, Mudane Xamsa Cabdi Barre, ayaa daahfuray Mashruuca “Rajo Kaaba”, oo ah barnaamij deeq waxbarasho oo loogu talagalay haweenka Soomaaliyeed ee doonaya in ay sii wataan waxbarashada heerka labaad (Master’s Degree), si kor loogu qaado ka-qaybgalka haweenka ee tacliinta sare, horumarinta xirfadaha iyo awooddooda hoggaamineed.

Putin Weighs Restarting Nuclear Tests After Trump’s Recent Remarks

Putin mulls resuming nuclear tests after Trump comments
Russia has not conducted a nuclear test since 1990, the year before the collapse of the USSR

When the Arctic Holds Its Breath: A Return of Nuclear Testing to the World’s Coldest Stage?

There is a strange poetry to Novaya Zemlya in winter: a string of islands at the top of the globe where the sky and sea meet in a long, bone-white horizon, and where the wind sounds like memory. For decades, the archipelago’s frozen plateau has been a silent witness to the worst of human invention — the thunder of explosions that once reshaped geopolitics and scarred the land. Now, after a volley of words on social media and a Kremlin security meeting, the specter of nuclear testing has slipped back into international conversation.

Last week, a terse message from Washington set off alarms in Moscow. Reported comments from the US president urging the Pentagon to “start testing our Nuclear Weapons on an equal basis” with other powers triggered an immediate response: Russian President Vladimir Putin convened a security council session and ordered defence and foreign officials, along with security services, to collect information and draft plans “on the possible start of preparation works for nuclear weapons tests.”

Not quite thunder — yet

To be clear: neither Moscow nor Washington has announced an intention to detonate a nuclear device tomorrow on some windswept island. But in international affairs, talk is rarely idle. Words can prod machinery into motion — procurement, test-prep, a policy shift — and each step nudges the equilibrium of fear and restraint.

“We have not seen a public move to resume explosions,” said a retired arms-control official who served in negotiations with Moscow during the 1990s. “But when a leader says ‘prepare,’ it sends a message down the chain of command: look at capabilities, plan contingencies, dust off dormant sites.”

History’s footprint on the tundra

Novaya Zemlya is not a random suggestion. It was the site of some of the Soviet Union’s most infamous tests, including weapons that left behind a complicated legacy: resettled indigenous communities, long-term environmental contamination, and an archive of technical know-how. Russia’s last nuclear test, by most accounts, was in 1990 — the year before the USSR dissolved. The United States’ last full-scale underground test dates to the early 1990s as well. Aside from North Korea’s series of detonations in the 21st century, no state has conducted an atomic bomb explosion since then.

That pause has not erased the instruments of power. Strategic arsenals have been modernised rather than rested — new delivery systems, more accurate warheads, and renewed investments in command-and-control. The treaty architecture that once constrained tests has frayed: the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) was opened for signature in 1996 but never entered into force, leaving a legal vacuum that politicians can exploit.

Voices from the edges

On the edge of the Arctic, the story is not abstract. “When the ground shook here, we lost reindeer and seasons for years,” said an elder from a northern community who remembered tales passed down of old blasts and forced relocations. “The sky would turn yellow. You are young and thinking about power — we remember the cost.”

A scientist who has studied Arctic contamination described the lingering traces with quiet urgency. “Cesium and strontium don’t vanish overnight,” she said. “Even if tests are underground, the human, social, and ecological aftermath echoes for generations.”

And in Moscow, a defence analyst offered a different register: “This is about bargaining power. Russia cannot be seen to unilaterally disarm its options if other states are signaling renewed testing. It’s posture, not immediate precipitation.”

What the numbers and treaties tell us

More than a thousand tests were carried out globally during the Cold War, leaving behind a calculus of deterrence that many strategists still cite. Modern arsenals, while numerically smaller than at the Cold War’s peak, are often more precise and, in some cases, more survivable. New START — the last major bilateral arms control treaty between Washington and Moscow — remains one of the few formal checks, with its current verification tools and limits on deployed strategic warheads lasting into the mid-2020s.

But treaties cannot bear all the weight. The CTBT, despite broad international support in principle, has not entered into force because a handful of states have not ratified it. That institutional gap means that the legal and normative cost of resuming tests is uncertain—some states would decry it, others would frame it as parity, and still others would seize the moment to expand their influence.

Why should anyone outside Moscow or Washington care?

Because the impulse to test is more than technical. It is a rehearsal of power that changes political incentives everywhere. If one nuclear-armed state resumes testing, others face a painful choice: follow, accept decreased deterrent margins, or step back diplomatically while relying on extended deterrence. Allies feel tremors too. NATO members watch for ripples that could alter their security assurances. Asian states weigh whether a renewed testing era will accelerate regional arms races.

“If testing returns to the lexicon of policy, we risk opening a door to arms competition at a time when global resources are being stretched by climate, pandemics, and economic strain,” said an international-relations scholar. “This is not simply an old feud being replayed; it’s a choice about priorities in a fragile world.”

Between fear and foresight

So what does restraint look like? For some leaders, it is the steady work of diplomacy and verification: investing in monitoring networks, renewing dialogue, and strengthening treaties. For others, it is the quiet maintenance of conventional and nuclear arsenals, hedging against worst-case scenarios. The danger arrives when rhetoric outpaces reality and rhetoric becomes policy.

“Words can be a test too,” an expert on strategic communications observed. “If a leader signals capacity and intent, adversaries respond — sometimes with missiles, sometimes with treaties, sometimes with words of their own. The best outcome is a cooling-off and credible steps back towards arms control. The worst is a scramble that normalizes explosions as policy tools.”

What I left the Arctic thinking

Walking along a ridge of black rock in the late light, I felt the weight of the past and the uncertainty of the present. The land remembers in ways governments do not. If the world edges back towards testing, it won’t just be numbers in a ledger or a shift in budgets; it will be a change in how nations choose to speak — and to resist speaking — to each other.

So I ask you: if the oldest, loudest instruments of power come back into play, what do we lose besides quiet? What wills and institutions must be strengthened now so that testing remains an idea, not a policy? The choices made in the corridors of power will ripple all the way to the white horizon of the Arctic, where people still remember the thunder and the nights the sky turned strange. History isn’t a script to be repeated; it’s a ledger of consequences. How much are we willing to write on it?

Israel confirms recovered hostage remains belong to a soldier

Israel says returned hostage remains are those of soldier
Itay Chen was killed during the 7 October 2023 attacks on Israel and his body was brought to Gaza

The Return: A Son Comes Home from a War That Never Should Have Been

They brought him back in the quiet hours between dusk and dawn, when the world’s distant roar softens and the weight of grief becomes almost audible. For the Chen family, a new kind of silence descended — one that carried the contours of a life lost and the relief of finally having something to bury.

On a cool evening, Israeli authorities confirmed what the family had been bracing for: the remains handed over the day before by Hamas belonged to Staff Sergeant Itay Chen, a dual Israeli-American soldier seized during the October 7, 2023 attacks that ignited the Gaza war. The 19‑year‑old was a combat soldier in the 77th Battalion of the 7th Brigade, posted at the border when militants attacked. He was one of dozens of hostages whose fates have haunted both sides for years.

A Family’s Long Vigil

“We feel the support of the entire nation, the people are behind us and want to see all the hostages returned,” said Ruby Chen, Itay’s father, in the days before the handover. “I hope the prime minister and the chief of staff understand this too — seize the opportunity to finish this mission.”

His mother, Hagit, captured the same unbearable mix of pain and purpose: “I will not be able to take a single step forward in my life without Itay’s return,” she had told reporters. “Even when we break down, which happens every day, I remind myself that we have not finished our mission.”

These words are raw and ordinary — the language of parents who have lived with the impossible for more than two years. Their son’s last sign of life came on the day the attack began, a final contact that became a talisman for them. The Israeli military announced in March 2024 that Itay had died in combat and that his body had been taken into Gaza; the formal identification this week transformed a painful possibility into a confirmed loss.

Numbers That Tell a Story

Behind the headline — one more young life returned — is a tableau of slow, bureaucratic and bloody arithmetic. Since a ceasefire came into effect on 10 October (as reported during the truce negotiations), Hamas has handed over the remains of 21 deceased hostages to Israel.

  • Starting point: 48 hostages in Gaza at the ceasefire’s outset — 20 were alive and 28 were believed deceased.
  • Survivors: Over the course of the truce, all surviving captives were released.
  • Deceased returned: 21 bodies repatriated — 19 Israelis, one Thai national and one Nepali.

These are more than statistics. Each number brackets a family, a neighborhood, a set of rites and remembrances now disrupted by war. They also expose the slow machinery of diplomatic exchanges, where bodies and bargaining chips get entangled with politics and pain.

Where the Remains Came From

Hamas’s armed wing said Itay’s remains were recovered in Shujaiya, a battered neighborhood east of Gaza City, during excavation and search operations inside the so-called “yellow line” — the boundary marking Israeli military positions within Gaza. The group has repeatedly explained that many of the deceased are difficult to recover because bodies lie beneath rubble from intense urban fighting.

“We are working to complete the entire exchange process as soon as possible,” a Hamas spokesman said, stressing the logistical hurdles and the need for equipment and personnel to carry out recovery operations. The group has appealed to mediators and humanitarian organizations — including the Red Cross — for assistance.

On the Ground: Voices from Both Sides

In Khan Younis, where Nasser Hospital has been receiving casualties for months, hospital staff say they have been handling the exchange’s logistical realities alongside a steady stream of patients and the daily dangers of shortages. “We receive bodies, we receive wounded, and we try to provide dignity for everyone,” a medic at Nasser Hospital told a visiting journalist on condition of anonymity. “There are no winners in this for us, only the obligation to treat the living and honor the dead.”

In Israel, the identification process was carried out by the Israel Defense Forces and civil authorities before informing the Chen family. “Following the completion of the identification process, IDF representatives informed the family of the fallen hostage that their loved one has been returned to Israel and positively identified,” said an official bulletin from the prime minister’s office.

Across small towns and the big cities, neighbors and synagogue congregations have gathered to offer condolences, a mosaic of communal rituals — prayers, candle lighting, visits known in Hebrew as “shivah” — that will now be reshaped around Itay’s return. “We always said we would do everything for the families,” said one community member. “But that doesn’t stop your heart from breaking when a child does not come home.”

What This Exchange Reveals

Beyond the immediate tragedy, the repatriation raises broader questions about how modern conflicts handle human remains, hostage diplomacy and the slow, bureaucratic art of closure. In the age of drones, satellite imagery, and relentless news cycles, the most intimate act — a family burying a child — remains stubbornly analog and painfully personal.

Consider the practical obstacles: rubble-filled neighborhoods, ongoing military operations, the negotiation of safe corridors, and the imperative for forensic verification before returns can occur. These are the grim building blocks of so many modern wars, where recovery and reconciliation stretch out long after ceasefires are declared.

And there are political dimensions too. Israel has accused Hamas of delaying returns; Hamas points to operational difficulty and requests for assistance. Mediation by third parties — some diplomatic, some humanitarian — has been essential. In this case, the deal was brokered by the United States, according to official accounts, highlighting the continuing international role in a conflict that touches far beyond a single border.

Questions That Stay with Us

What price is paid by families who live for years without certainty? How does a society reconcile the need for security with the rituals of mourning that require time and tenderness? And in a world where conflicts are increasingly urban and protracted, how can international institutions better support the retrieval of the dead — and the return of the living?

These are questions that outlast any single exchange. For the Chen family, the practicalities now turn to mourning and burial rites — to a fistful of moments where the public recedes and grief becomes private once more.

“We miss him; the pain is unbearable,” Hagit Chen said simply. Those words, unadorned and true, are a reminder that beneath the headlines are families tasked with giving names back to bodies and stories back to lives.

After the Burial

When the funeral concludes, when the last guest has left the house and the shivah candles burn low, the larger tableau of this war will still be there — the negotiations, the rubble, the families waiting for closure. But for a moment, a family will have one point of certainty in a world of ambiguity: a son who came home at last.

And as you read this, elsewhere in Gaza, in an overburdened hospital, or around another kitchen table broken by loss, similar stories unfold. How do we, as a global community, carry them — not only in headlines but in policy, in aid, and in the quiet work of restoring dignity to the dead and care to the living?

Irish prime minister to address COP30 leaders’ summit in Brazil

Taoiseach to address COP30 leaders summit in Brazil
The Taoiseach will confirm that Ireland will achieve its target of a €225m contribution to international climate finance

Belém at Dawn: Where the Heat of the Amazon Meets the Heat of Diplomacy

Morning in Belém arrives not with a whisper but with a chorus: the trawl of market vendors, the hum of diesel boats on the Guajará Bay, the rasp of banners being unfurled along Avenida Presidente Vargas. The air is thick with humidity and the scent of smoke from barbecues selling tacacá and grilled tambaqui. On every corner, blue-and-green COP30 logos flutter against a sky the colour of river silt.

Into that humidity stepped Ireland’s Taoiseach, Micheál Martin, for a two-day official visit to the heart of the Amazon. His mission is plain yet vast in ambition: to speak in the opening plenary, deliver Ireland’s national statement, meet fellow leaders and, with some ceremony and some grit, endorse a plan meant to do what politicians have long promised and rarely delivered—turn large-scale finance into a bulwark for tropical forests.

What’s at Stake in the Shadow of the Canopy

Belém is a fitting stage. The city is the gateway to the Amazon, a place where the global logic of carbon markets, development aid and geopolitics bumps up against indigenous rights, riverside communities and a landscape that has been under relentless pressure for years.

At the centre of COP30’s early days is an idea being championed by Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva: the Tropical Forests Forever Facility. The proposal is simple to state and fiendishly hard to implement. Create a finance vehicle big enough to reward nations that keep rainforests standing and to invest in enforcement, community stewardship, and incentives that make conservation more valuable than conversion to agriculture or mining.

“It’s not charity,” said Dr. Liam O’Connor, a climate finance specialist at Trinity College Dublin. “It’s a re-alignment of global finance so that protecting a rainforest becomes a predictable, bankable outcome. But you can’t have a payout mechanism without ironclad safeguards—indigenous land rights, independent verification, and clear clauses to prevent perverse outcomes.”

Money, Trust, and the Long Slog of Negotiation

The Facility will be a headline: leaders will pose for photographs and sign declarations. The hard work, though, will be in the negotiations—who controls the money, who audits it, how quickly funds flow to local communities, and how to ensure that conservation doesn’t become a cover for displacement or elite capture.

“We need a mechanism that works for small communities who have been protecting these forests for generations,” said Maria Silva, a fisherwoman from a riverside community near Santarém who travelled to Belém to join a civil-society delegation. “If the money goes only to capitals or big corporations, nothing changes on the banks where we live.”

Ireland’s Voice—and Its Complex Record

Taoiseach Martin’s speech will strike a familiar but necessary chord: climate change is not a future risk, it is a present reality. He’s expected to highlight domestic storms—the aftermath of Storm Éowyn is a recent, visceral example—and to remind listeners that extreme weather is now a global rhythm. He will underscore an important point Ireland has made in recent years: the country has cut greenhouse gas emissions even as population rose roughly 50% since the 1990 baseline.

At the same time, Martin will admit the work is unfinished. “There is more to do,” he said ahead of the trip. “The government needs to help citizens make the transition.” He will reiterate a commitment first made at COP26 when Ireland pledged to double its international climate finance contribution to €225 million by 2025—a target the government expects to meet this year.

For a small country, those numbers matter. But they will also be weighed against a larger grievance on the global stage: the $100 billion annual climate finance pledge from rich countries to poorer ones remains a sore point. Developing nations argue that promised funds have been slow to materialise and too often tied up in loans rather than grants—fueling a persistent trust deficit.

People First: Refugees, Rivers and Real Lives

Beyond boardrooms and plenaries, the Taoiseach will visit the UN Refugee Agency’s office in Belém and meet groups supported by the agency. Ireland has provided more than €25.5 million to the agency so far in 2025, funds that help people forced from their homes by conflict, persecution—and increasingly, climate impacts.

“We see displacement in our communities,” said Ana Rodrigues, a coordinator with a local NGO working with riverine families. “Rains that used to come predictably now arrive like a surprise wave. Houses are flooded one year and parched the next. It’s not abstract.”

Those encounters are a reminder that COP30 is not just about national pledges and finance packages. It’s about livelihoods—about the artisan who loses customers when a river changes course, the farmer whose yields drop after a season of drought, the young person who relocates to a city and becomes part of an urban story of climate-driven migration.

Between Ceremony and Substance: The Hard Questions

How will the Tropical Forests Forever Facility be governed? Whose voices will count in decisions? How will payments be measured, and who will verify that forest conservation is happening on the ground and not just on paper? These are the questions negotiators will wrestle with in Belém.

“You need accountability at every step,” said Dr. Sofia Mendes, a Brazilian environmental lawyer. “Without community oversight and legally binding protections for Indigenous territories, money flows can just replicate old patterns of extraction cloaked in green language.”

There’s also the geopolitical angle. COP30 happens as the world’s major emitters navigate frayed relationships. Yet for nations like Ireland, the summit is an opportunity to build momentum: Martin reminded audiences that Ireland will lead EU negotiations at COP31 during its presidency. That is leverage—and responsibility.

Why You Should Care

Why does this matter to a reader in Dublin, Delhi or Dakar? Because what happens in Belém ripples outward. Tropical forests help regulate the global climate, sustain biodiversity, and support millions of livelihoods. Their fate is woven into food prices, migration patterns, and the frequency of extreme weather events.

Ask yourself: do we want conservation to be a moral sentiment or a functioning global strategy? Do we trust markets alone to protect fragile ecosystems, or do we demand systems that center communities, scientific evidence and legal safeguards?

Lessons for the Long Road

COP30 will generate headlines, photo ops and a handful of concrete announcements. But the real test will be whether those announcements turn into durable institutions and transparent flows of money that land where they are needed most.

“Finance is a tool, not a panacea,” Dr. O’Connor said. “If we design it well—mixing grants, incentives for conservation, technical assistance for sustainable livelihoods, and strict accountability—then we have a chance. If we rush, politicize, or privatize it without protections, we squander another decade.”

As the sun slants low over Belém and banners rip once more in the evening wind, the mood is both hopeful and impatient. There is hunger here—literally and politically—for solutions that respect the land and the people who live on it.

Will COP30 be the moment when words meet money in a way that truly protects the Amazon and other tropical forests? Or will it be another chapter in a story of missed opportunities? The answers will be written slowly—in boardrooms, in village councils, in the audit trails of funds—and the world will be watching, from the shade of the canopy to the concrete of capital cities.

Government shutdown forces 10% cut in flights at 40 US airports

10% of flights cut at 40 US airports over govt shutdown
The announcement sent airlines scrambling to make significant reductions in flights in just 36 hours

When the Skies Shrink: How a Political Standoff Began Closing American Air Travel

There are mornings at big airports when time itself seems to be measured in Tarmac and Ticket Gate numbers: departures board flickering, the hiss of coffee machines, the low, steady hum of voices trying to outrun schedules. On one such morning this week, the hiss felt thinner. Screens flashed cancellations. A woman clutched a sleeping child and stared at a departing gate she would no longer reach. Behind the scenes, controllers who keep that choreography smooth were quietly unraveling from exhaustion and uncertainty.

In a move that stunned passengers and airlines alike, U.S. aviation regulators announced cuts that will shrink scheduled flight capacity by as much as 10% at 40 of the nation’s busiest air traffic centers — a blunt instrument aimed at preventing a system stretched thin by the longest U.S. government shutdown in history from fraying entirely.

What the Cuts Mean — And Why They’re Coming

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, standing before reporters, did not mince words: “There is going to be a 10% reduction in capacity at 40 of our locations.” FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford echoed the urgency—”When we see pressures building in these 40 markets, we just can’t ignore it”—and said the agency wanted to act before safety margins eroded.

The reductions are being phased in: industry sources say airports will see a 4% cut tomorrow, rising to 5% on Saturday, 6% on Sunday, and reaching 10% next week. International flights would largely be spared from the initial restrictions, officials added.

Why now? The shutdown has left the Federal Aviation Administration woefully understaffed, a problem with real human consequences. Some 13,000 air traffic controllers and roughly 50,000 Transportation Security Administration agents have been working without pay; the FAA reports it is about 3,500 controllers short of target staffing. Many controllers have been working mandatory overtime and six-day weeks even before the shutdown.

Numbers That Tell a Story

Consider the arithmetic of delay: aviation analytics firm Cirium warned the cuts could remove as many as 1,800 flights and more than 268,000 airline seats from schedules in affected markets. Airlines have said at least 3.2 million travelers have already felt the impacts of air traffic control shortages since the shutdown began. On one recent day, more than 2,100 flights were delayed nationwide.

  • FAA staffing shortfall: roughly 3,500 controllers below target
  • Federal workers on the job without pay: ~63,000 (13,000 controllers + 50,000 TSA agents)
  • Passengers affected to date (industry estimate): ~3.2 million
  • Potential flights removed from schedules: up to 1,800 (Cirium)

Inside an Operations Room: The Human Edge of Safety

“We had a gut check of what our job is,” Duffy said, referencing a confidential safety assessment that raised concerns about controller performance under prolonged strain. “Our job is to make sure we make the hard decisions to continue to keep the airspace safe.”

That assessment has rippled through airline operations centers. Bryan Bedford framed the capacity caps as preventative medicine: taking action “today to prevent things from deteriorating so the system is extremely safe today, will be extremely safe tomorrow.”

On the floor, the human cost is visible. “I’ve been on six straight 12-hour shifts,” said one veteran controller who asked that their name be withheld. “We’re doing our job, but there’s a line between dedication and burnout. We’re not machines.”

Airlines, Workers and Passengers Caught in the Crossfire

Major carriers scrambled. United’s CEO Scott Kirby told staff that carriers would protect long-haul and hub-to-hub service while trimming regional and non-hub connections. “Any customer travelling during this period is eligible for a refund if they do not wish to fly — even if their flight isn’t impacted,” Kirby said, a nod to the uncertainty passengers now face.

American Airlines and Southwest described plans to minimize disruption, though Southwest admitted it was still assessing the damage. Market response was immediate: shares of large carriers dipped about 1% in extended trading.

Frontline workers spoke with anger and urgency. “This shutdown is a cruel attack on all Americans,” said Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, which represents 55,000 attendants. “The false narrative that this shutdown is a choice of either paying federal workers or protecting affordable healthcare is outrageous when both crises were manufactured by the exact people who can fix it.”

On the concourse, passengers expressed frustration and fear. “I’m supposed to be at my sister’s wedding in Denver tomorrow,” said Maria Alvarez, clutching a suitcase. “I don’t know if I should hold onto hope or start canceling hotels. We’re trapped in a political fight that has nothing to do with us.”

Politics at 35,000 Feet

The shutdown has become a weapon in a bitter standoff in Washington. Republicans, led by the White House, have tried to ramp up pressure on Democrats to reopen the government, even suggesting that significant aviation disruptions would force a political reckoning. Democrats counter that Republicans refused to negotiate over essential health insurance subsidies.

The impact reaches beyond moments of missed weddings and delayed meetings. The shutdown has furloughed roughly 750,000 federal employees, interrupted food assistance programs, and slowed crucial public services. For an economy and a society that move on schedules and timetables, the invisible work of civil servants is what keeps life — and commerce — aloft.

What This Moment Says About Infrastructure and Trust

There’s a larger story here about the fragility of systems we take for granted. Airports are vast ecosystems where private companies and government agencies must operate in delicate synchrony. When that trust frays — when controllers are stretched, when agencies can’t guarantee pay — the ripple effects reach far from the runway.

Globally, other nations have weathered strikes, storms and political crises that shuttered skies for days. The U.S. experience is a reminder that modern life depends on public infrastructure and the dignity of those who operate it. When you cut compensation or politicize essential services, the consequences are not theoretical: they are audible in the long sigh of a postponed flight.

Questions to Take Home

What kind of system do we want when safety is at stake? Whose voices count when the lights go out at a control tower? And how much patience should the public have for procedural brinkmanship when everyday lives are disrupted?

As travelers cancel, companies reschedule and politicians posture, the human work of keeping people safe in the sky continues. In the end, it will take more than spreadsheets and press conferences to rebuild confidence — it will take decisions that respect workers, prioritize safety, and preserve the public trust that makes modern aviation possible.

Where do you stand? Have you been affected by travel disruptions this week? Share your story below — because these are not abstract numbers, but moments that have landed in living rooms, at work desks, and on kitchen tables across the country.

Soomaaliya oo safiir u dirsatay dalka Ukraine oo dagaalo ay ka socdaan

Nov 06(Jowhar)-Madaxweynaha dalka Ukraine, Mudane Volodymyr Zelenskyy, ayaa ka guddoomay waraaqaha aqoonsiga Safiirka cusub ee Jamhuuriyadda Federaalka Soomaaliya ee dalka Ukraine, oo xaruntiisu tahay magaalada Belgrade-Serbia, Mudane Danjire Maxamed Cabdullaahi Axmed.

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