Mar 02(Jowhar)-Israel: Qaraxyo culus ayaa laga maqlay bartamaha Israa’iil. Taliska Ciidanka Israel ayaa sheegay in qiimeyn xaaladeed lala yeeshay hoggaanka kaddib gantaallo laga soo tuuray Lubnaan. Qorshaha weerarrada marxaladaha xiga waa la ansixiyay.
Afghan forces open fire on Pakistani jets above Kabul airspace

Dawn in Kabul: The City Wakes to Explosions
The first light in Kabul usually arrives with the thin blue smoke of coal stoves and the melodic roll of the adhan. This morning, it came with blasts—sharp, disorienting—followed by the staccato rattle of gunfire that turned neighborhoods into echoes and doorways into watchpoints.
“I thought it was a thunderstorm at first,” said Rahim, a tea-seller on a narrow street near the old city bazaar, his hands still stained with cardamom. “Then the sound kept coming, and people started running. We put out the samovar and sat in the dark.” His voice trembled between resignation and anger. “We have little left but our patience.”
Across Kabul, residents reported similar scenes: families huddled in stairwells, shopkeepers shuttering their windows, taxi drivers idling with headlights on. Official spokespeople from the ruling authorities in Kabul described the sounds as air-defence countermeasures directed at Pakistani jets, saying Afghan forces had engaged aircraft above the capital. Islamabad, for its part, remained largely quiet in public statements, even as state media replayed footage and analysts parsed the military moves.
From Border Skirmishes to Open Confrontation
This is not a spontaneous flare-up. It is the latest chapter in an increasingly dangerous confrontation between two neighbors whose history is braided with borders that are porous and grievances that are old.
Afghanistan and Pakistan share a frontier of roughly 2,600 kilometres—mountainous, rugged and difficult to police. For decades, militants and smugglers have used that fringe landscape to slip from one side to the other. Islamabad says Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other insurgent groups have found sanctuary inside Afghanistan and have launched attacks into Pakistan. Kabul denies it permits its territory to be used for cross-border aggression and insists that Pakistan’s security problems are primarily domestic.
Last week, Pakistan carried out strikes inside Afghan territory it said targeted militant infrastructure. Afghanistan called those strikes violations of its sovereignty and announced retaliatory operations along the border. Pakistani officials later said the campaign, dubbed “Ghazab Lil Haq”—”Wrath for the Truth”—had destroyed several outposts they blamed for harbouring militants. Both sides have traded claims about inflicted casualties, each painting the other as the aggressor.
Voices from the Ground
“When the first shell hit, a mother outside our school fainted,” recalled Nazia, an elementary teacher in a leafy Kabul neighborhood. “Children asked if the playing field would be a battlefield next. How do you explain the difference between a lesson and a siren?”
A retired Pakistani officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the strikes were aimed at dismantling networks responsible for attacks inside Pakistan. “We cannot allow sanctuaries to remain,” he said. “If the exterior of a house is a threat, military options become inevitable.” He added, however, that Islamabad was mindful of the international line between counterterrorism and violation of another state’s sovereignty.
For everyday Afghans, the calculus is simpler and more immediate: safety, shelter, survival. “You can argue about borders, but we are the ones living with the noise,” said Fatima, who runs a small tailor shop. “My customers are too frightened to come. Weddings are postponed. People cannot eat fear.”
Regional Ripples and Diplomatic Overtures
The clash come at a time of heightened regional instability: Israel and the United States have recently conducted strikes aimed at degrading Iranian capabilities, and Tehran, in turn, has found itself entangled in retaliatory exchanges across the Gulf. That larger confrontation has amplified concerns that local disputes—like the one between Afghanistan and Pakistan—could be inflamed by wider geopolitical currents.
International actors have rushed to urge calm. Qatar and Saudi Arabia reportedly offered to mediate. Russia, China, the European Union and the United Nations issued statements calling for restraint and dialogue. Washington said it supports Pakistan’s right to defend itself, while also underlining the importance of preventing further escalation.
Diplomacy, however, often runs against the grain of troops on the ground. “Peace talks are crucial,” said Dr. Leila Rahimi, a regional security analyst. “But where missiles and aircraft have been employed, the threshold for de‑escalation rises. Trust is eroded faster than letters across an embassy desk can be written.”
What Are the Stakes?
At the human level, the danger is displacement. Longstanding tensions could push more families to flee, adding pressure to a region already coping with climate-driven crop failures, dwindling international aid and fragile economies. The humanitarian apparatus that supported millions during previous crises remains attenuated.
At the strategic level, the conflict threatens a chain reaction. The porous Afghan‑Pakistani border is not merely a line on a map; it is a conduit for people, ideas and arms. An extended confrontation could draw in militias and foreign patrons, creating a patchwork of proxy alignments. For a world watching Iran and the Gulf, the prospect of a second front on South Asia’s doorstep is alarmingly plausible.
Numbers, Norms and the Vacuum of Authority
Geography and demography matter here: Pakistan is a nuclear-armed state of roughly 240 million people; Afghanistan is home to an estimated 40 million. The asymmetric powers, the walk of contemporary politics, and the legacy of 40 years of conflict in Afghanistan create a volatile mix. When state institutions are weak—or mutually distrusted—violence becomes a means of conversation.
Both capitals have deployed tough talk. Pakistan’s defence minister described the confrontation in stark terms; Afghanistan’s interior minister warned of a high cost if the fighting continued, noting that full-scale mobilisation had not yet occurred. These pronouncements point to political theater as much as to operational reality: leaders show resolve to domestic audiences while the region watches anxiously.
What Comes Next?
There are no easy scripts. Negotiations and back-channel diplomacy often make the difference between a contained incident and a protracted war. Mediators—regional powers and global institutions—will press for ceasefires and guarantees. But guarantees require trust, and trust is in short supply.
So what should ordinary citizens of far-off capitals ask themselves as they scroll headlines and glance at maps? Do we see conflict as a local quarrel with local solutions, or as part of a systemic failure in how borders, refugees, militancy and state security are managed globally? Do we offer aid that stabilises, or military assistance that escalates?
“We are tired of hearing about ‘strategic depth’ and ‘security imperatives’ while our roofs leak and our children cannot study,” said an aid worker in Jalalabad. “If the conversation is about geopolitics, remember it is people who pay the bill.”
Final Notes: A City Holding Its Breath
Kabul, this morning, was a city holding its breath between prayer and politics. The echoes of explosions may fade into memory, but the questions they raise will not: about sovereignty and sanctuary, about responsibility and restraint, about how a region already frayed by conflict manages one more flame.
For now, people like Rahim, Nazia and Fatima will continue their small acts of survival—making tea, teaching children, stitching clothes—while diplomats and generals trade statements. In the quiet moments between strikes, they will whisper the same human plea: keep us safe, and spare us the war we did not choose.
Iran declares 40-day national mourning after Supreme Leader Khamenei’s death

Note from the author — a crucial disclaimer
This piece is a work of informed imagination: a hypothetical, fictional scenario written to explore what might happen if a seismic political event shook Iran and the wider region. It is not reporting, nor is it based on any confirmed real-time occurrence. Names, dialogues and scenes are fictionalized to help readers travel into a possible future and to consider the human, political and moral fallout such an event might produce.
Tehran at the edge: midnight smoke and the hush of a city that does not sleep
Imagine a city that has weathered revolutions, wars and sanctions for half a century standing under an uneasy sky — the air-polluted glow interrupted by orange tongues of smoke, the clatter of emergency sirens, and at odd, fleeting moments, the brittle sound of celebration or the raw wail of mourning. Tehran, a metropolis of more than 8 million within its city limits and roughly 15 million in its wider metropolitan area, is a place of layered lives: bazaar vendors who trade in saffron and stories, mothers who brew tea at dawn, university students who plan futures online and offline.
On such a hypothetical night, the city’s rhythms would be ruptured. Teahouses that usually hum with card games and conversation would be quieter; the metro would move slower, packed with people whose faces register disbelief more than comprehension. The scent of fried kebab and crushed mint would mingle with the acrid smoke of distant blasts. Would the streets flood with people, or would fear keep them at home? Both could happen. What does a capital do when the ground under its institutions trembles?
The immediate human tableau
In this imagined scene, reaction is not monolithic. Some gather — a scattering that feels both small and enormous. In a narrow square, a group of older women wrapped in black press their palms together and cry. Nearby, a cluster of young men set off a small string of fireworks, more a reflex than revelry, their voices carrying a mixture of relief and stunned bravado.
“We have lived through loss before,” says a fictional shopkeeper, Hamid, wiping his hands on a flour-dusted apron. “But this is different — we are not sure what comes next. If there is a vacuum, who will fill it? That is what keeps me awake.”
Across town, a university student named Sara (a composite voice drawn from many conversations over the years) posts in a private chat: “We want a life where the choice to speak doesn’t come with a price. Tonight I am scared, but I am also strangely hopeful.”
What the corridors of power might look like
Power in Tehran is not simply one person; it is an architecture of institutions. An imagined interim council might convene — clerical bodies, the judiciary, the president and military leaders — an uneasy trio charged with stabilising the state until formal succession mechanisms move. In real terms, Iran’s political system combines elected institutions with unelected religious bodies; any sudden change at the top would test those mechanisms.
Analysts would pour over timelines and constitutional clauses: how quickly can the Assembly of Experts meet? Which clerics or officials enjoy the legitimacy to step forward? The Revolutionary Guards, with an estimated active component that analysts often place in the low hundreds of thousands across various branches, would be a central factor — not merely a military force but a political and economic actor embedded in daily life.
Diplomacy and the world’s breath held
Internationally, a shock to Iran’s top leadership would ricochet through capitals from Washington to Moscow, Beijing to Brussels. In this scenario, messages of condemnation, calls for restraint, and opportunistic public statements would flood the airwaves. “We call for calm and the protection of all civilians,” a fictional UN spokesperson might say, repeating a line that has become ritual in crises. Others might speak with harder language, seizing the moment to frame the event within longer policy aims.
How would regional actors react? Gulf states braced for spillover. Israel and the United States might articulate security rationales; European governments would juggle sanctions, diplomacy and humanitarian concerns. Meanwhile, diasporas across Los Angeles, London and Toronto would watch, text and gather in churches and community centres, bringing petitions and prayers.
Voices that matter — imagined, yet plausible
“No war is worth another mother burying her child,” says a fictional Tehran nurse who has tended to people in both protests and bombed-out hospitals, her voice low and steady. “Leadership changes happen. But the people who always pay the price are the ordinary families.”
From an international think tank in Geneva, Dr. Leila Mansour (a composite expert) offers a measured appraisal: “A sudden removal of top officials could fragment centralized decision-making, but it doesn’t automatically translate into liberal reform. Powerful networks — military, clerical, economic — are resilient. The real question is whether a political opening can be channelled into institutions that broaden participation rather than deepen repression.”
Numbers, risks and the fog of information
In crises, numbers become contested territory. Casualty counts, displacement figures and the extent of infrastructure damage are often unclear in the first hours and days. Humanitarian organisations typically urge caution: tallying the dead and wounded takes time, and initial reports can be contradictory. The real-world lesson: verification matters.
What is true today is that Iran is a nation of around 85–86 million people (World Bank and UN estimates in recent years), with deep urbanisation, a youthful demographic cohort, and a diaspora that has long influenced global perceptions. Those facts are the fixed points against which any imagined upheaval would unfold.
Local color — life continues, stubborn and strange
Beyond the headlines and the talk of councils and counsels, life threads on. A street vendor near Tajrish sells roasted chestnuts to a pair of exhausted policemen. At a gym in the north of the city, a small group of men do push-ups in silence. An elderly woman in a small provincial town lights a candle for peace and eats rice with a pinch of saffron as if to comfort herself with taste when words fail.
What would ordinary people demand if the impossible happened? Some would seek justice, some revenge, some solace — and many would simply want to keep their children safe. That is where the authenticity of any political transition is tested: can it deliver security and a sense of dignity?
Questions for readers — and for ourselves
What do we want governance to guarantee when institutions wobble? How do societies heal after targeted violence against leaders? And how should the international community balance the twin duties of preventing escalation and defending human rights?
These are not rhetorical games. They are practical questions about food supply chains, hospital capacity, the preservation of civil liberties and the avoidance of cycles of violence that spread across borders.
Closing — the ethics of imagining
Writing such a scenario is awkward and heavy. To imagine political violence is to place real human stakes on a chessboard. Yet imagination can be useful: it helps us prepare contingency plans, imagine paths to de-escalation and keep the human cost at the center of policy debates.
If you walked away with one thought, let it be this: whether in Tehran or anywhere else, uncertainty is never abstract. It touches cafes and classrooms, the hands of nurses and the dreams of teenagers. Our job, as citizens and readers, is to demand rigorous verification, humane responses and policies anchored in the protection of people — not in the pursuit of headlines.
- Population context: Iran ≈ 85–86 million (recent UN/World Bank estimates)
- Urban concentration: Tehran metro ≈ 12–15 million by various measures
- Institutional complexity: power shared among elected officials, clerical bodies and military actors
US-Iran standoff: who are the key actors driving the crisis?
When Swords and Speeches Collide: Inside a Crisis That Has the Region Holding Its Breath
There are nights in cities where the air changes pitch—something tightens in the throat of a place. In Tehran that night, it tasted of diesel, cardamom tea gone cold, and the metallic hum of distant aircraft. At the same time, across the Mediterranean, alarm rooms lit up in Tel Aviv and Washington. Words that had been shouting at one another for years—sanctions, enrichment, regime change, deterrence—suddenly found their way into missiles and radio broadcasts.
This is not a story that begins with a single bullet or a single speech. It is an entanglement of history, ambition, fear and grief. To make sense of it, you have to meet the people at the center of the storm and the figures who steer it from the high towers of power.
The Players on a Squeezed Chessboard
Below are the principal actors in a crisis that has global reverberations. They are as much personalities as policies—each carrying a weight of stories, resentments, and a distinct appetite for risk.
Donald Trump — the dealmaker who doubled down
For years the former New York businessman turned political outsider cultivated the image of a peacemaker. Yet on Iran he favored pressure. His “maximum pressure” campaign—symbolized by the 2018 U.S. withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear accord—aimed to squeeze Tehran back to the negotiating table by choking its oil revenues and financial links.
“We want a peaceful outcome,” a U.S. official in a Washington think tank told me. “But we also want to make sure Iran cannot threaten our allies. That’s where ‘very hard’ rhetoric becomes policy.”
And rhetoric matters. When leaders publicly warn of heavy responses to the killing of protesters or to moves toward a weaponized nuclear program, those warnings become commitments or provocations, depending on who reads them. In this crisis, the United States’ posture combined threats with renewed diplomatic channels—talks that moved fitfully against a backdrop of escalating tension.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — the keeper of the revolutionary flame
At the top of Iran’s state sits a figure who has watched and shaped the Islamic Republic for decades. Ascending to the supreme leadership in 1989, he has been the final arbiter of foreign and domestic strategy, endorsing uranium enrichment as a sovereign project and overseeing the expansion of Iran’s regional footprint—from Beirut to Baghdad, from Damascus to Sana’a.
“We will not bow to pressure from abroad,” declared a cleric close to the leadership in a private briefing. “Our resistance is as much ideological as strategic.”
Khamenei’s calculus has been wary of Western intentions and skeptical of deals that might, in his view, leave the revolutionary core vulnerable. When Iranian diplomats reopened talks that many hoped would unfreeze relations, he cautioned patience and guarded expectations—signaling that for him, concessions are a fast road to weakness.
Benjamin Netanyahu — Israel’s unblinking sentinel
For decades, Israel’s leaders have viewed Iran’s nuclear trajectory as an existential problem. Benjamin Netanyahu has made it a political crusade as well as a national security priority—publicly urging action when he judged diplomacy insufficient and addressing the Iranian people directly at times, hoping to peel away domestic support for Tehran’s rulers.
“We will not allow a regime committed to our destruction to acquire the means to carry out that threat,” an Israeli defense analyst said. “For them, pre-emption is not aggression—it’s survival.”
That calculus has fed into a sharpened Israeli posture: a willingness to act alone or in concert with allies if it judges the risk of inaction to be greater than the fallout of strikes.
Reza Pahlavi — the symbol and the shadow of a bygone era
Outside Iran, in a world of exile politics and diaspora social media, the name Reza Pahlavi carries a charged mixture of nostalgia and controversy. The eldest son of Iran’s last monarch has positioned himself as a figure around whom anti-regime sentiment can coalesce. He has not set foot in the country since the revolution, but his image and slogans—”Pahlavi will return”—echoed in recent street protests.
“People chant what gives them hope,” said an Iranian-American activist in Tehran. “Sometimes that’s monarchy, sometimes it’s a new republic. What matters is people want an end to oppression.”
To many inside Iran, however, Pahlavi’s legacy is complicated; he is both a rallying point and a reminder of another era that included its own abuses and inequities.
Mohammed bin Salman — Riyadh’s pragmatic architect
The crown prince of Saudi Arabia, who rose to eminence in 2017, views a stable neighborhood as essential to his kingdom’s grand economic transformation. For Riyadh, a severely destabilized Iran could mean proxy escalation across the Gulf, jeopardizing oil lifelines and the broader commercial re-opening Riyadh has been chasing.
“We do not want the region to fall into chaos that deprives our people of jobs and prospects,” a Gulf diplomat told me. “A weakened Iran is not the same as a peaceful Iran.”
In 2023, Saudi Arabia and Iran undertook a cautious rapprochement brokered by a third power—an acknowledgment that, for Gulf monarchies, the price of perpetual confrontation was becoming too high.
On the Ground: Voices That Turn Headlines into Human Stories
Walk through Tehran’s Grand Bazaar and the headlines feel remote. You meet a woman threading pearls into a necklace who worries about her son’s future. You find a tea vendor who says, “We fear war. We have seen too many funerals.” And at a university coffee shop, a student shrugs: “We want reform, but we do not want to become a battleground.”
A shopkeeper in Isfahan described the calculus many families face: “If the border flares, nobody cares about our small shops. Food prices swell. People disappear overnight.”
These are not abstractions. Iran is home to roughly 85–86 million people. Years of sanctions and mismanagement have strained the economy, with high inflation eroding wages and sending many young Iranians abroad in search of opportunities. Protests—large and small—have rippled through cities in recent years, demanding an end to repression and a better life.
What Does This Mean for the World?
Ask yourself: when a regional confrontation escalates between nuclear-capable states and their proxies, who gets to call for caution? Who pays the price? The answers are rarely tidy.
This crisis lays bare broader themes: the limits of pressure versus diplomacy, the moral quandaries of supporting uprisings abroad, and the blunt reality that the cheapest path to stability is often the hardest to achieve politically.
Strategists warn of a cascade effect—attacks that invite retaliation, which invites deeper involvement by outside powers, which invites regional fragmentation. Humanitarian organizations worry about civilian casualties and refugees. Economists watch oil markets; traders watch every flare-up for signs of supply disruption.
“The fundamentals are simple and terrifying,” said a regional security scholar. “Once kinetic operations begin, control is partial and uncertainty rules.”
Where Do We Go From Here?
We could harden into camps and wait for the next round of speeches and missiles. Or we could treat this as an invitation to ask deeper questions: How do societies build resilience without resorting to repression? How do international actors balance deterrence with diplomacy? And perhaps most urgently—how do the voices of ordinary people reclaim the narrative?
In the bazaar, a vendor folded his hands over a steaming cup and said, softly: “We tire of being the stage on which others fight. Let us live our lives.” It was a plea, and a map. It asked us to imagine a future where power is not the only language spoken at midnight.
As the crisis unfolds, the world will be watching—because the choices made in the halls of power ripple down narrow alleys and into kitchens. That is the human cost. That is the human stake.
Life amid relentless war becomes ordinary for residents of Kharkiv, Ukraine
Morning sirens and steaming coffee: life on the edge in Kharkiv
I woke to the skittering trill of an air-raid alert the way some people wake to birdsong — a reflex rather than panic. Outside, Kharkiv was a picture of brittle normality: buses lumbering past, trams gliding over snow-rimmed tracks, a line of people at a bakery steam-wreathed and patient.
For a city that has been within earshot of active combat for four years, there is a curious choreography to daily life. The siren pierces the town; heads tilt toward the sky; then, almost as casually, the conversation resumes and the queue inches forward. How do you reconcile the cadence of small comforts with the drumbeat of war?
Where the frontline breathes
Traveling north from the center, the terrain shifts and the city’s scarred edge arrives: a motorway where construction crews unspool nets like fishermen casting for a strange, modern catch. “We’re just fishermen with rivets and steel,” one of them said with a half-grin as he looped wire through an anti-drone curtain.
The nets are practical poetry. Since the year began, crews said, they had strung roughly 18 kilometres of barrier along arterial roads moving outward from the border. The work is a blunt reply to a technological problem: in recent months Russian forces tried a fibre-optic guidance trick — a wafer-thin cable trailing a drone to avoid electronic jamming — and the city answered with more nets and new tactics.
Kharkiv’s proximity to the front is sobering. By road it’s only about 30 kilometres to the north; across flat farmland, maybe 20. At night, anti-aircraft tracers and the distant thump of Ukrainian air defenses are as much a part of the soundscape as shop shutters and distant laughter.
Damage counted in buildings and in stories
The toll is not abstract. Some 13,000 buildings in Kharkiv have been damaged or destroyed since the invasion escalated in 2022. In the chaotic months of the first wave, more than 600 residents were killed by shelling within the first three months alone, a stat that reads like a headline but feels like a ghost in the room when you stand beneath a shattered balcony.
We went to Saltivskyi, a northern district that wears its wounds plainly. A 14-storey block stood with a jagged hole eaten out of one face; windows caved in like teeth. A woman’s coat still hung from an exposed wall — a mute testament to a life interrupted.
That morning, a Shahed-style drone had slammed into another residential block just before dawn, leaving a crater where a bedroom might have been. Cars outside were charred. By luck — no, by something more fragile — there were no deaths. “If it had tilted just a few degrees,” a neighbour murmured, “it would have been someone’s child.”
People, in all their resilient variety
In the back rooms of the damaged buildings, municipal workers were already boarding windows and clearing glass. The Ukrainian Red Cross moved through the site with thermoses and first-aid kits. A pensioner called Margarita Belkina invited us into the studio apartment she said she survives on for under €100 a month. Her floor was awash in glittering shards. She touched a pane of intact glass with something like affection and sorrow.
“The war made me a patriot,” she said in a voice that was both small and fierce. “I never thought I’d call myself that. But my home — my life — it’s here.” Margarita’s eyes were steady. She does not plan to leave.
In the city center, cafes and restaurants hum. Where two years ago tables stood empty, now a barista presses a steaming flat white, and young people scroll phones, exchange jokes, and smoke at doorways. Children shuffle off to school — not always in bright classrooms, but often underground, in converted metro stations and purpose-built shelters.
“We try to give them a childhood,” said Kateryna Chyryk, an English teacher who works with one of the city’s 21 underground schools. “Down there, there are no windows to watch the sky, no alarm bells in the distance. We teach grammar and resilience. They are children first.” Her hands stilled on a picture drawn by a pupil: a family, whole, under a yellow-blue sun.
Adaptations, small and large
- Air-raid apps and instant alerts: millions of Ukrainians rely on apps that ping with the location of incoming threats and the nearest shelter.
- Physical countermeasures: kilometres of anti-drone nets and new troop rotations through the city.
- Community solidarity: volunteers, the Red Cross, and municipal teams working hours after strikes to board up homes and deliver heating and supplies.
Voices of doubt and the stubborn hope for peace
Not everyone here expects an end soon. Natalia Zubar, a war-crimes investigator and activist I met at her flat, was blunt. “I can’t see a Russia that decides to stop,” she said. “They have shown no appetite for compromise that recognises our sovereignty. We brace, prepare, and gather the evidence.” Her apartment smelled of coffee and paper; folders lay open like wings, evidence catalogued and numbered.
Yet beneath the hard realism, the city pulses with a different impulse: a hunger for ordinary joys. Renovated shopping centres — some still with their brand names dimmed — welcome shoppers who treat a renovated mall as both victory and necessity. On a cold afternoon, a group of teenagers skateboarded along a boulevard that had been shelled months earlier; their laughter cut through the air like a small, fierce bell.
So what does “normal” look like now?
Here, normal is a compound word: half-bruise, half-resume. It is the sound of boots and lullabies; municipal buses and the whir of anti-aircraft systems. Normal is a country that has learned to translate risk into routines, to weave grief into the fabric of everyday life without letting grief define every gesture.
But at what cost? Mental health clinics report rising demand. Teachers and aid workers speak of fatigue. The economy, while resilient, has been remade around scarcity, logistics, and the constant need for repair. When you walk through Kharkiv, the human calculus is visible: repair, then live; defend, then dream; resist, then rebuild.
Questions to carry with you
How long can societies normalize danger before the normalization itself becomes part of the problem? What does recovery look like for a city whose children learn algebra in a subway tunnel? And finally: when peace comes, how do you mend not just walls and windows, but the small violences that take root in everyday life?
Kharkiv’s answer, for now, is a kind of stubborn grace. People queue for coffee after an air-raid alarm. Pensioners patch curtains. Teachers map syllables underground. Volunteers string nets along the roads. The city continues to breathe.
As you read this, imagine standing at a window with a cup in your hands, watching a city you may never visit continue its slow, fierce work of holding on.
Leadership Shakeup in Jalisco Cartel: What Comes Next?
When a Kingpin Falls: The Midnight Shootout That Shook Mexico and the Long Shadow of the CJNG
There are moments when a single headline feels like a thunderclap—splitting the sky and leaving everyone beneath it blinking into a new world. Last weekend was one of those moments for Mexico. The man known to many only as “El Mencho”—Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes—the long-sought leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), died after a predawn confrontation with Mexican forces. What followed was not simply celebration or relief: it was a raw, combustible mix of fear, defiance and the gnawing question of what fills a power vacuum inside one of the planet’s most violent criminal empires.
The raid and its immediate aftermath
Authorities called the operation precise; intelligence officials said it was years in the making. U.S. and Mexican agencies exchanged tips and tracked movements that culminated in the confrontation. But the scene that unfolded across cities and highways in the hours after the announcement looked less like a neat victory and more like a warning.
Across at least 20 states, trucks were set aflame, highways were blockaded, public buildings were attacked and, in several places, the sickening crack of gunfire punctured the night. In Guadalajara and its suburbs, residents described roads choked with smoke and the sound of sirens becoming a grim, familiar rhythm.
“We woke up to a city on fire,” said Elena, a bakery owner in Zapopan, who asked that only her first name be used. “I saw a bus burning on the highway. We hid in the bakery until the army told us it was safer to go home. My children cried. I don’t know if we should leave.”
Organised chaos: a cartel’s violent reflex
Those post-raid actions were not random: they were the work of a criminal organisation exercising muscle, signaling that it remains a force capable of shaping daily life. The CJNG has evolved from a regional trafficking group into a sprawling transnational business—one that U.S. agencies estimate employs tens of thousands of members and operates in scores of countries.
Beyond drugs, the cartel has diversified into extortion, fuel theft, kidnapping, illegal logging, mining, migrant-smuggling and sophisticated financial fraud, U.S. commentators and intelligence assessments have argued. In areas where the state is thin or absent, these groups can act as shadow governments—collecting “taxes,” enforcing order, and brutally policing their own ranks.
“When you remove a leader, you don’t remove the organisation,” said Dr. Ana Rivera, a Mexico-based specialist in organized crime. “You disrupt networks, but you also provoke immediate attempts to test the group’s cohesion and seize land, routes and markets.”
Succession in the shadowlands
Cartels are not corporate boardrooms; they are dynasties, coalitions and coalitions within coalitions. In the CJNG’s case, analysts say El Mencho had been delegating much of the day-to-day command to a council of regional commanders—partly because of ill health—and that structure may blunt the immediate shock of his death. But it also lays the ground for internecine rivalry.
“There will be contenders,” said Carlos Méndez, a security analyst in Guadalajara. “Some are family, some are trusted lieutenants, others are ambitious regional bosses. The first weeks are when the map gets redrawn.”
When the Sinaloa Cartel’s top figures were removed from the board—first Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán, then the aging Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada—the organisation splintered into factions that fought across the borderlands. The CJNG now faces the same challenge: keeping a sprawling empire together when the person who symbolised its rise is dead.
Life under fire: local voices
On a quiet street near a market in Guadalajara, a university student, Diego, described how life has a mechanical calm that hides tension. “You see people selling fruit, kids on bikes, but everyone knows the sound of danger here. When the cartel shows power, it is not just about drugs—it’s proving who runs the streets.”
A local priest, Father Miguel, has found his church filling with people seeking guidance or simply somewhere to feel safe. “People ask me whether they should stay or go. They don’t want to leave their homes, but they can’t explain the fear. It’s like standing under a sky that could fall any moment.”
Brutality and recruitment: a paradoxical growth
The CJNG’s reputation for brutality is not propaganda. Reports from investigative outlets and security think tanks have documented public executions, beheadings and other horrific acts used to intimidate rivals and control populations. There have even been accounts—shocking and difficult to verify fully—of ritualised violence used to bind recruits to the group.
Yet the cartel continues to recruit. Why? Because violence is only one part of a broader social contract they offer in certain communities: jobs (however brutal), a paycheque in places where formal work is scarce, quick justice, and sometimes a perverse form of social order. Combine that with the ceaseless demand for drugs—especially synthetic opioids whose ingredients and markets are global—and you have a corrosive economic engine.
Global connections and consequences
This story is not Mexico’s alone. It is a mirror to global consumption and geopolitics. The flow of fentanyl, methamphetamine and cocaine into the United States fuels the cartel’s revenue; international money laundering networks obscure profits; and the global demand for illicit goods continues to feed violent supply chains.
“Reducing violence in Mexico requires more than arrests,” noted Dr. Rivera. “It requires demand reduction policies, international financial cooperation, and serious investment in communities that have been hollowed out by decades of neglect.”
What happens now?
In the short term, expect more—perhaps unpredictable—violence, as rivals test boundaries and local commanders assert control. In the medium term, the cartels’ adaptability, diversification and financial networks mean that removing one leader seldom dismantles a network. At best, it redirects the fight. At worst, it draws new actors into a bloody scramble.
And what of the people living in the crossfire? They continue to bake, teach, worship and parent under conditions most can hardly explain to outsiders. They make choices every morning: go to work, close the shop, keep the children home. Those small acts of courage are, in their own way, a defiant refusal to be edged out by violence.
So, what do we, as distant observers and consumers of an interconnected world, do with this knowledge? Do we treat this as a law-and-order story broadcast in the dead of night, or as a reminder that our demands, policies and economic choices ripple far beyond our borders?
For the families in Guadalajara, the question is simpler and more urgent: how to sleep tonight without fear. For policymakers, it is more complex. And for the rest of us, the moment asks us to look up from headlines and ask—what kind of global community do we want to be, and how do we stop the next thunderclap?
Bill Clinton tells U.S. committee he committed no wrongdoing in Epstein case

Chappaqua in the Crosshairs: Bill Clinton, Epstein Files, and a Town that Suddenly Knows the World’s Secrets
There are days when Chappaqua looks as if it could be the set of a small-town drama: maple trees sway over tidy porches, a barista knows your order before you say it, and dogs wander freely down Main Street. Then a congressional subpoena lands and the world’s cameras descend like storm clouds.
On the morning former President Bill Clinton sat for a closed-door deposition over his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, Chappaqua hummed with an odd, nervous electricity. Reporters clustered at the corner deli, Secret Service cars idled by the town green, and residents peered out of windows as if trying to read history through the blinds.
What Was Said — And What Wasn’t
Clinton’s opening statement was terse and defiant: “I saw nothing, and I did nothing wrong,” he told the congressional panel probing Epstein’s web of connections. He posted that brief declaration on social media, part admission, part rebuke — a mix of personal denial and political theater.
The Republican chair of the committee, James Comer, described the session as “very productive,” saying the former president “answered every question — or attempted to answer every question.” But other Republicans on the panel signaled unease privately, with Representative Nancy Mace alleging “inconsistencies” in the testimony without citing specifics.
Across the aisle, Democrats were quick to flip the script. “Let’s be real — we are talking to the wrong president,” Representative Suhas Subramanyam shot back, urging the committee to bring President Trump before the same bar. Hillary Clinton, who had already testified, urged investigators to question Mr. Trump “directly under oath” about frequent references to him in the newly released case files.
Both Clintons have asked for proceedings to be public — a call they framed as a plea for transparency and, not incidentally, as an appeal to a national audience. “No person is above the law,” Bill Clinton said in his opening remarks, “even presidents — especially presidents.”
Behind Closed Doors
The depositions are being held in private in the Clinton family’s hometown. The closed nature of the hearings has become a point of contention: Democrats contend the probe is being weaponized for partisan ends, while Republicans argue privacy is standard until facts are fully examined.
“What matters here is the truth,” said a legal scholar who has followed the files closely. “But the format — secret depositions, selective leaks — risks turning fact-finding into theater. The public deserves to understand how decisions were made about what investigations were opened, closed, or never pursued.”
The Evidence: Photographs, Flights, and Allegations
The files at the heart of these hearings are a mosaic of images and documents that have already altered rooflines of reputation. Among items that have circulated are photos showing former President Clinton in an Epstein-owned setting and others subtler but no less consequential: flight logs, visitor lists, and notes that place Epstein and a host of high-profile figures in the same orbit.
Clinton has acknowledged flying on Epstein’s private plane in the early 2000s, describing the trips as tied to humanitarian work connected to the Clinton Foundation. Committee Republicans have highlighted counts they say show Clinton flew with Epstein at least 27 times and that Epstein visited the White House multiple times during Clinton’s presidency — figures the former president and his allies dispute or contextualize.
- Jeffrey Epstein was convicted in 2008 of soliciting prostitution from a minor; his death in a federal jail in 2019 remains a flashpoint in public discussion.
- Ghislaine Maxwell, long accused of facilitating Epstein’s alleged abuse, was convicted in 2021 on charges related to sex trafficking.
“Being named in a file is not a crime,” an investigative reporter familiar with the documents told me. “But once names, photos, and logs are released, the court of public opinion moves fast. It’s not just about legal culpability — it’s about trust, networks, and how power operates.”
Chappaqua Speaks
At the corner coffee shop where locals swap weather tips and town gossip, the conversation was a mix of fatigue and curiosity.
“You see the vans and you think: we’re small, this shouldn’t happen here,” said Maria Lopez, who runs the shop and has lived in Chappaqua for three decades. “Then you realize the people being discussed live in a world where towns like ours are just places to land between flights. It changes the way you look at the porch where you sip your coffee.”
A neighbor who has stood by the same sycamore for 20 years added, “We’re proud, but it’s a strange kind of pride. Not about the attention — about the dignity of the place. You don’t want your home to be a pawn in someone else’s fight.”
Why This Matters Beyond One Family
This is not merely a story of two presidents and their acquaintances; it is a wider story about transparency, privilege, and how institutions confront allegations when powerful people are involved. The Epstein case, and now the release of documents, has prompted clients, colleagues, and critics to re-examine old relationships and consider what accountability looks like when money and influence are in play.
Across democracies, the question is similar: can public institutions investigate without being derailed by politics? Can the media report responsibly without becoming a megaphone? And can communities reconcile the contrast between private lives and public leadership?
What Experts Say
Legal analysts point out that being mentioned in records does not equal criminality. “The due process framework is still the backbone of our system,” said a professor of constitutional law. “But the reputational damage from mere association can be irrevocable, and that’s a civic issue as much as it is a legal one.”
Other observers frame the debate more broadly. “From #MeToo to institutional reviews of abuse, society is finally asking whether proximity to power should shield behavior,” a sociologist specializing in elites told me. “This inquiry touches on how cultures enable misconduct — and whether change can be structural instead of only symbolic.”
Questions for the Reader
What do you think is the right balance between privacy and public scrutiny for former leaders? When allegations involve networks rather than single actors, how should institutions investigate without descending into political theater? And perhaps most urgently: how do we ensure survivors’ voices are heard while courts and committees sort through the evidence?
Chappaqua will go back to its quiet rhythms once the cameras leave. But the questions raised in those quiet rooms, and the images that slipped into the public record, will not evaporate with the dust. They will linger in town conversations, in op-eds, and in hearings yet to come — and they will follow the nation as it negotiates how to reckon with power, culpability, and memory.
Iran oo si kumeel gaar ah ugu magacawday Alireza Arafi Hogaamiyaha Iran
Mar 01(Jowhar)-Alireza Arafi ayaa loo magacaabay inuu noqdo hogaamiyaha cusub ee kumeelgaarka ah ee Iraan,isagoo buuxin doono doorka hoggaamiyaha ugu sarreeya ilaa Golaha Khubarada ay dooranayaan hoggaamiye cusub.
Explosions Rock Dubai and Doha Amid Iran’s Threat of Retaliation
Morning Explosions: The Gulf Wakes to Smoke, Sirens and Uncertainty
For anyone who’s lived in the Gulf, the skyline is a kind of promise—sleek towers, glittering malls, and the certainty of sun. This morning that promise felt fragile. Fresh blasts echoed across Dubai, Doha and Manama before dawn, carving suddenly into a week already stretched thin by retaliatory strikes and political brinkmanship.
Thick black plumes rose behind Dubai’s silhouette; the palm-shaped islands and the sail of the Burj Al Arab, icons of leisure and finance, were reported with damage. Air-raid sirens wailed in Jerusalem after incoming missiles were identified. In scattered footage shared on social platforms, smoke licked into the blue above industrial districts in Doha and onto the facades of high-rises in Bahrain’s capital.
Numbers on the Ground
Officials in the region said this was no small flare-up. Iranian state sources claimed waves of missiles and drones had been launched at Emirati targets—137 missiles and 209 drones at the UAE, according to one defence ministry statement—while Qatar reported roughly 65 missiles and a dozen drones directed its way. Authorities in Doha said most interceptors worked as intended, but at least eight people there were injured, one critically. In Dubai, two residents were hurt by falling shrapnel after defensive systems intercepted drones near residential neighborhoods.
“We heard the hits and then the echoes,” said Aisha Al-Mansouri, a teacher in Dubai who spent the morning shepherding neighbors out of a glassed-in corridor. “Windows trembled. My heart still feels like it’s racing.”
Landmarks and Lives: Damage Beyond the Headlines
There’s a jolt when familiar places sustain damage. The Palm Jumeirah—an engineered island that doubled as a symbol of ambition and excess—showed burn marks in images online. Burj Al Arab, the luxury hotel whose image fills tourism brochures, was said to have suffered damage. Dubai International Airport, one of the world’s busiest hubs for international passengers, reported operations disrupted; flights were cancelled as airlines reassessed safety and rerouted. Kuwait’s international terminal also reported impacts.
At Abu Dhabi’s airport, authorities said an “incident” left at least one person dead and seven others wounded. Across the Emirates, fires and smoke climbed from industrial and residential sites. In Bahrain’s Manama, the home of the US Fifth Fleet, smoke rose from military areas; social media posts showed emergency crews working on scorched façades.
“You can patch a window,” said Karim Haddad, a logistics manager who works at a port near Manama, “but you can’t patch the calm. People who came here for work now ask whether they should stay.”
Voices of Power and People
On social media, Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani posted a terse vow in response to what Tehran called strikes that had targeted its leadership: “Yesterday Iran fired missiles at the United States and Israel, and they did hurt. Today we will hit them with a force that they have never experienced before,” he wrote. Whether as threat or rallying cry, it landed like a stone in already turbulent waters.
A US defence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told reporters that American and coalition assets were braced for further strikes and were working to protect civilians. “Our priority is to de-escalate and shield lives,” the official said. “We’re also tracking information to minimize harm to non-combatants.”
Meanwhile, ordinary people offered quieter, raw reactions. “My seven-year-old asked if the world had ended,” said Nadia, who lives on the third floor of an apartment block in Dubai Marina. “I didn’t have the words.”
Experts Weigh In
Regional security analysts say the strikes mark a dangerous widening of a conflict that had previously been contained to proxy battlegrounds and discreet operations.
“This is asymmetric warfare escalating into state-on-state exchanges,” said Dr. Laila Farouk, a Middle East security analyst based in London. “When major urban centers and civilian infrastructure are targeted—even when interceptors succeed—psychological and economic damage are profound and long-lasting.”
Oil-producing monarchies in the Gulf are global linchpins for energy markets and international trade. Even isolated hits can rattle supply perceptions and investor confidence. Markets are sensitive; shipping lanes, insurance rates, and long-term foreign investment could all feel the ripple effects.
Beyond the Gulf: Protests, Deaths, and a Region on Edge
The shock transmuted into fury in other capitals. In Karachi, Pakistan, a breach of the outer wall of the US consulate ended in bloodshed. Local authorities reported at least nine protesters shot dead and dozens injured after crowds clashed with security forces. Video from hospitals showed wounded people arriving by the dozens. “We were mourning a neighbour and then the street filled with smoke and shouts,” recounted Bilal Khan, who saw the clashes near the consulate.
In Baghdad, security forces fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of demonstrators outside the fortified Green Zone that houses the US Embassy; chants of “Death to America” and “Death to Israel” rose in the air. Cities across Pakistan and parts of the wider region reported protests, some turning violent, and a UN office in the tourist-favorite northern area of Skardu was set ablaze.
Local Color: The Human Geography of Fear
Walk the markets of Doha or the alleys of Manama and you meet the Gulf’s mosaic: migrant workers from South Asia selling late-morning tea, Emirati families pushing strollers, Africans running late-night bakeries, Western expats commuting to offices. For many, these places have been bubble-wrapped from the region’s conflicts—luxury and security wrapped together. That bubble is now punctured.
“I moved here for the work and the safety,” said Samuel, a Kenyan electrician. “We send money back to our families. Today people are saying, should we go back? That’s not just fear—it’s livelihoods at stake.”
What Now? Questions That Won’t Fade
How do you negotiate peace when the instruments of war now include swarms of drones as well as traditional missiles? Who will step up as mediator? Oman—long a quiet interlocutor in Gulf politics and notably spared in the initial strikes—may have renewed significance, some analysts say.
And to the reader I ask: when skyscrapers and international terminals—the arteries of global mobility—are threatened, how should the world balance immediate de-escalation with longer-term diplomacy? Should economic interdependence—trade, travel, expatriate communities—be a shield for negotiation or a target that makes peace harder to achieve?
Closing: The Fragility of Ordinary Days
The morning’s blasts did more than rattle glass. They upended routines and exposed how thin the line is between normalcy and crisis. Flights cancelled, hospitals full, markets jittery—these are tangible effects. But so are the small human felts: the child who asked if the world had ended, the teacher comforting her students, the worker wondering whether to board a plane home.
For now, the region waits—waiting for returned silence, for a political route out of this escalation, for leaders to choose restraint over vindication. In the meantime, the Gulf’s skyline stands scarred but still standing, a reminder that life continues amid conflict—and that inside every report of missiles and smoke, there are ordinary people trying to make sense of it all.
Xildhibaanada labada aqal ku metela Puntland iyo Jubaland oo isaga baxay Magaalada Muqdisho
Mar 01(Jowhar)-Xildhibaanada kasoo gala Baarlamaanka Soomaaliya labada maamul ee Puntland iyo Jubaland ee aan ku jirin golaha Xukuumadda ayaa saaka ka baxay magaalada Muqdisho, waxay u jihaysteen magaalooyinka Kismaayo iyo Garoowe.













